The whole world is watching

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For the Within Temptation song, see Whole World Is Watching.

"The whole world is watching" was a chant by antiwar demonstrators outside the Chicago Hilton Hotel during the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago.

The event was broadcast from taped footage on the night of Wednesday, August 28, the third day of the convention. Demonstrators took up the chant as police were pulling some of them into paddy wagons, "each with a superfluous whack of a nightstick," [1] after the demonstration blocked Michigan Avenue in front of the hotel.

The prescient and apparently spontaneous chant quickly became famous. The following year, it served as the title of a television movie about student activism.

The Chicago Transit Authority

On track 10 of their 1969 hit debut record album the rock band Chicago, then known as CTA (The Chicago Transit Authority) used what may be a copy of the real audio clip of the crowd chanting, "The whole world is watching." The track called, "Prologue, August 29, 1968" is 57 seconds long. The chant continues into the next song, track eleven, "Someday (August 29, 1968)" but fades away after a few seconds, only to return again in the middle of the song backed by a haunting piano beat and a ride cymbal courtesy of Robert Lamm and Danny Seraphine respectively.

In their 2008 release, Chicago reprised the chant in the third track, "All the Years". At about two and a half minutes into the track, the chant is played after a montage of other notable historical clips and concurrently with a harmonica solo.[2]

Current usage

Today, the phrase is regularly used in mainstream left movements such as the 2003 demonstrations against the Iraq War.[3] It is the title of a 1980 book about mass media and the New Left by former student activist Todd Gitlin. Rightist commentators have also used the phrase to argue for such causes as U.S. condemnation of Islamic violence.[4] The phrase is a poster tagline for the 2007 film Battle in Seattle and it is repeatedly chanted in the film. President Barack Obama used the phrase during demonstrations in Tehran over the outcome of Iranian elections in June, 2009.[5] During the 2011 Wisconsin protests, protesters in Madison, WI chanted the phrase often in reference to the large national media presence and worldwide positive response.[6][7] Protesters also chanted the phrase while being arrested and removed from the Capitol the morning of the first vote on the law they were protesting.[8] Occupy Wall Street protesters chanted the phrase on October 1, 2011,[9] when NYPD barricaded and arrested citizens on the Brooklyn Bridge in one of the largest mass-arrests of nonviolent demonstrators in US history.

Origin

The origin of the phrase is unclear. The phrase was used in the late 1950s regarding international coverage of U.S. Civil Rights events, such as the Little Rock integration crisis.[10] The 1963 Bob Dylan song "When the Ship Comes In" contains the lyric "And the ship's wise men / Will remind you once again / That the whole wide world is watchin'." Peter, Paul and Mary, who performed for the demonstrators during the convention,[11] covered Dylan's song on their 1965 album A Song Will Rise.

Don Rose, who was press secretary for the Chicago office of the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, the primary organizer of the Chicago actions, has said in several interviews that he coined the phrase prior to a press conference on Monday, August 26, at which Mobe organizer Rennie Davis spoke. Davis asked Rose what they could say about the violence of the Chicago police the night before in Lincoln Park and Rose said, "tell them the whole world is watching and they’ll never get away with it again."[12]

References

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  3. Dennis Kucinich: The Cadence of Courage
  4. Victor Davis Hanson on the War on National Review Online
  5. Obama to Iran: 'The whole world is watching', CNN.com, June 20, 2009. Retrieved March 31 2010.
  6. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EFzX4TJnUfc
  7. From Cairo to Madison, some pizza, Politico.com, February 20, 2011. Retrieved December 1, 2011.
  8. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gKOyHenT8a8
  9. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fockzr7rXys
  10. An editorial cartoon from the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette on September 11, 1957 is reprinted in Dudziak, Mary L., Cold War Civil Rights: Race and Image of American Democracy, Princeton University Press, 2000, p. 122.
  11. Log Cabin Chronicles John Mahoney Covers the 1968 Democratic Chicago Convention
  12. http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/continued/3876/the_whole_world_was_watching/