A picture of America
Laguna Beach is known for many things -- art, eccentricity, plein air
painters, glorious sun-washed beaches and a sense of cosmopolitan joi
de vivre.
One thing it is not generally known for is patriotism.
But maybe it should be.
The town struts its stuff in that regard every year in March, when
the soft, wispy pastels of Impressionism are replaced by the vibrancy
of the good ol’ red, white and blue.
On this special day, the soft strains of surf give way to the
ear-splitting sounds of brass bands.
It’s when the town shakes off the dreamy reverie in which it
spends most of its days and decides to bust out in a riot of bright
colors and sounds.
Everybody gets involved in his or her own way, from the Water
Department to the Laguna High School-Thurston Middle School marching
band (who show their Laguna flair by donning Hawaiian shirts instead
of parade uniforms).
There’s room for everyone in the promenade: artists in off-beat
costumes; children in Scout uniforms; men in old military garb; women
in snappy hats; not to mention dogs and cats. (Pardon the rhyme.)
There’s the Marine Band and the Gay Men’s Chorus; preschoolers and
taxpayers; the Sawdust Art Festival and the U.S. Post Office.
And, saving the best for last: the Chocolate Lovers of America,
who leave sweets behind in their wake.
The parade was the brainchild of local patriot Emily Ross (related
to Betsy?), with the help of the local chapter of the Daughters of
the American Revolution -- a group that is generally considered
staunchly Conservative, with a capital “C” -- and the Exchange Club,
a group that promotes Americanism.
This, again, is not something that springs to mind when one thinks
of the “People’s Republic of Laguna Beach.”
After all, the town’s most famous inhabitant was a slightly
bedraggled, white-bearded man who stood on a prominent corner
grinning and waving at passersby -- and in any other city would have
been called a “street person.”
The Patriots Day Parade surely proves that Laguna’s palette is big
enough to paint the American picture in all the colors of the rainbow
-- which is what this country is all about.
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