well, i think that went well, don't you?
the only way that could have been more awesome is if there had been police or something. it was totally worth scheduling travel plans around.
i'll be a little tired in the morning, but if you don't see me on the corner outside the williston federated church, it's not because i've lost interest. it's because i have found which church the perpetrator is attending and any week he's there is a week i have to go stand on their corner.
they're also a UCC church, so it will be really interesting to see how the UCC continues to not cope at all with this, especially under their smashingly successful safe churches initiative. the united methodist church district superintendent at least acknowledged the thing when she wrote that it wasn't any of their business, but the UCC conference minister says she never heard of it, which is an out and out lie since i've been standing on the corner when she goes by.
you think she might ask some questions or something in today's climate, but i think it's just symptomatic of an organization whose main mechanism for dealing with sexual misconduct complaint is a thing called the "insurance board".
i wish i was kidding about that.
uh, anyway.
i sense there is a great deal of fatigue in general surrounding this protest. people are tired of it.
the one thing i know for certain about the outcome is this: we're all going to get a lot more tired of it by the time it's over. the first year of it hasn't even passed, and i am practicing my christmas songs.
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