Prompted by a comment by Trent.
To my regret, I don't think I ever went on an anti-Vietnam war demo, though I did write letters and sign petitions about it. I went on a revival of the Aldermaston march in 1972, which, like the first but unlike subsequent ones, went from London to Aldermaston, not vice-versa. I fell in with a group of young people about my age (early 20s) from somewhere down south, including a pretty, lame hunchbacked girl whom I got a bit infatuated with. There was a concert in a field at the end, which included Adrian Henri reading some of his poems.
Round about 1980, there was another big CND demo, which went from the Embankment to Trafalgar Square. In the 90s, another, mainly Christian, demo supporting the Jubilee campaign followed the same route. At the beginning, a scruffy, drunk old man saw us, and said, in a loud voice, "I don't want to be offensive, but you people are the scum of the earth!". I wonder what he'd have said if he had wanted to be offensive...
I counter-demonstrated against a march by the sanctimonious twats in the 'Festival Of Light' in the early 70s. The Vietnam war was still going on, as were the Northern Irish troubles, we had stockpiles of nuclear weapons, Israel was persecuting the Palestinians, and there were many other outrages going on, but all those idiots could think of to get hot under the collar about was bare tits on telly.
My most recent demos were three of the four huge central London ones against Brexit, notable for the middle-classness of many participants, and witty placards, such as "Make politics boring again", "I am quite cross", and "Making plans for Nigel", with a drawing of Fartage being pushed off a cliff into the sea (that was mine, actually). Neil Horan was there (google him), dressed as a leprechaun as usual, with a placard saying that Nigel F. had been sent by Christ to lead Britain out of the EU. He was treated with amused tolerance, and had his soapbox plastered with pro-EU stickers.
I was on the notorious anti-BNP march n Welling against the BNP, which turned violent (I wasn't involved in any violence), and missed my coach home, ending up having to hitchhike, and getting home at 3am the next day.
Photos of the Oct. 2018 anti-Brexit march.Photos of the Mar. 2019 march.The back of Diane Abbot's head on an anti-austerity demo a few years ago.