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Showing posts with label civil disobedience. Show all posts
Showing posts with label civil disobedience. Show all posts

Friday, March 16, 2012

Fox News says: Obama criminalizes dissent. WATCH




URGENT! OBAMA Signs Anti-Protest Bill - FREE SPEECH & Protest will get you JAIL TIME!

The First Amendment to the Constitution prohibits the government from infringing upon the freedom of speech, the freedom of association and the freedom to petition the government for a redress of grievances. Speech is language and other forms of expression; and association and petition connote physical presence in reasonable proximity to those of like mind and to government officials, so as to make your opinions known to them.

The Declaration of Independence recognizes all three freedoms as stemming from our humanity. So, what happens if you can speak freely, but the government officials at whom your speech is aimed refuse to hear you? And what happens if your right to associate and to petition the government is confined to areas where those of like mind and the government are not present? This is coming to a street corner near you.

Certain rights, like thought and privacy and travel, can be exercised on their own. You don't need the government to cooperate with you; you just need to be left alone. Other rights, like those intended to influence the political process, require that the government not resist your exercise of them. Remember the old one-liner from Philosophy 101: If a tree falls in a forest and no one is there, does it make any noise? Here's the contemporary version of that: If you can criticize the government, but it refuses to hear you, does your exercise of the freedom of speech have any value?

When the framers of the Constitution wrote the First Amendment, they lived in a society in which anyone could walk up to George Washington or John Adams or Thomas Jefferson on a public street and say directly to them whatever one wished. They never dreamed of a regal-like force of armed agents keeping public officials away from the public, as we have today. And they never imagined that it could be a felony for anyone to congregate in public within earshot or eyesight of certain government officials. And yet, today in America, it is.

Last week, President Obama signed into law the Federal Restricted Buildings and Grounds Improvement Act of 2011. This law permits Secret Service agents to designate any place they wish as a place where free speech, association and petition of the government are prohibited. And it permits the Secret Service to make these determinations based on the content of speech.

Thus, federal agents whose work is to protect public officials and their friends may prohibit the speech and the gatherings of folks who disagree with those officials or permit the speech and the gatherings of those who would praise them, even though the First Amendment condemns content-based speech discrimination by the government. The new law also provides that anyone who gathers in a "restricted" area may be prosecuted. And because the statute does not require the government to prove intent, a person accidentally in a restricted area can be charged and prosecuted, as well.

Permitting people to express publicly their opinions to the president only at a time and in a place and manner such that he cannot hear them violates the First Amendment because it guarantees the right to useful speech; and unheard political speech is politically useless. The same may be said of the rights to associate and to petition. If peaceful public assembly and public expression of political demands on the government can be restricted to places where government officials cannot be confronted, then those rights, too, have been neutered.

Political speech is in the highest category of protected speech. This is not about drowning out the president in the Oval Office. This is about letting him know what we think of his work when he leaves the White House. This is speech intended to influence the political process.

tags: free speech news 2012 bill obama protest hr347 arrest charges secret service felony year in jail 1st amendment president congress no zones ban right to we the people judge andrew napolitano fox 829speedy human rights alex jones infowars protection civil liberty vote ron paul

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Chris Hedges at October2011 Occupy DC: The Corporate State is in Trouble

Chris Hedges at October2011 Occupy DC: The Corporate State is in Trouble

with Chris Hedges
Featured Writer
Dandelion Salad
Oct. 7, 2011


Occupy DC
Image by Chris Wieland via Flickr
on Oct 6, 2011
Between Occupy Wall Street, in New York, and the other cities it’s spread to, as well as the October 2011 movement that just began here in D.C, something seems to be happening in this country. Earlier at Freedom Plaza Chris Hedges, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter and author, tells us what this could lead to.


Chris Hedges: No way in US system to vote against banks

***
[Chris Hedges interviewed by a not-so-nice, name-calling person on CBC.]
Lang & O’Leary Exchange
CBC
Oct. 6, 2011

Interviewed by Amanda Lang and Kevin O’Leary.

http://www.cbc.ca/video/#/News/TV_Shows/Lang_&_O%27Leary_Exchange/1308689786/ID=2149202610

see

Worse than the Cold War or Vietnam – America Today by Timothy V. Gatto
From a Young Marxist to the Wall Street Occupation – About Tahrir Square and Capital by Konstantin Kaminskiy
Either you are a rebel or a slave by Chris Hedges + Bernie Sanders on #OccupyWallStreet
Chris Hedges: Occupy Wall Street Interview – We have a moral imperative to fight for life
Chris Hedges: Time for Civil Disobedience!

October2011 on Dandelion Salad
http://vodpod.com/dandelionsalad/tag/occupy+wall+street
http://vodpod.com/dandelionsalad/tag/october2011

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Tim DeChristopher's Courageous Bid to Save Our World by Peter Yarrow


In March, Tim DeChristopher was convicted of two felony counts for a nonviolent act of civil disobedience. Acting out of his deepest convictions and his abiding concern for the survival of humankind, Tim bid on oil and gas leases on federal land that he didn't have the means to pay for. On Tuesday, he could be sentenced to a maximum of 10 years in prison for his actions.
Tim DeChristopher, who disrupted a federal auction of oil and gas leases, now faces as many as 10 years in prison. (Courtney Sargent / Deseret News)


The auction Tim disrupted was being conducted during the final weeks of the George W. Bush administration, in what many believed was a push to sell one last batch of public leases before President Obama took office. Tim's intention at the December 2008 auction was to prevent the parcels, some of them on scenic land near Arches and Canyonlands national parks, from going to oil and gas companies.
On the eve of Tim's trial, I went to Salt Lake City to give a concert for his supporters at his church with my daughter, Bethany, and cellist Rufus Cappadocia. I will return to Salt Lake City to support him and his cause on Tuesday.Tim is a hero to me, the kind of hero Peter, Paul and Mary stood up for consistently over the last 50 years. 
Throughout American history, acts of civil disobedience have led to change. Think about the Underground Railroad that helped escaped slaves to freedom, or about the courageous actions of people like Rosa Parks, who refused to stay in the back of the bus simply because of their skin color. Without this kind of defiance of unjust laws, our country would likely still be denying people of color basic freedoms.
Now Tim has taken a stand against federal energy policies and the way they further global warming. At our concert for him, Bethany and I sang "If I Had a Hammer" and "Blowin' in the Wind," the songs Peter, Paul and Mary sang at the 1963 March on Washington where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his historic "I Have a Dream" speech. Why? Because Tim's act of civil disobedience grew out of a long American tradition of conscience.The judge should and will render his judgment in the case of DeChristopher, or "Bidder 70" as he was known at the auction. 
Part of committing an act of civil disobedience is facing the penalties. But because Tim's act was part of an attempt to prevent greater harm to humankind, I hope the judge will be merciful and will give him a token or suspended sentence.At his trial, Tim was prevented from explaining the ethical and moral motivation for his acts to the jury. It is appalling that both the judge and the government's prosecution team have pursued Tim's civil disobedience trial as if he were a simple criminal who broke the law without reason or conscience. Doing so deprived him of the opportunity to sway the jury with the moral force of his motive.In their sentencing memo, the government's attorneys wrote: 
"A significant prison term will promote respect for the law.... To be sure, a federal prison term here will deter others from entering a path of criminal behavior." 

The same might have been said of King, had our government been so odiously disrespectful of his moral courage at the time.The prosecution has maintained that Tim's actions cost the Bureau of Land Management — and hence taxpayers — hundreds of thousands of dollars. In fact, after the auction was concluded, an environmental group got an injunction against many of the leases on the grounds that the environmental consequences of drilling hadn't been adequately considered.
 Subsequently, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar pulled back the majority of them for further review. Eleven of the 14 auction parcels on which Tim made the highest bid later were pulled back by the government for reanalysis, so his action cost the government nothing on those. As to the remaining three parcels, if they are brought to auction again, they might well fetch more than Tim's original bid. 
So how did this cost the government money?
It's true that Tim entered the auction building with the intention of impeding its progress, but the specifics of his actions were not premeditated. He has said that the option of becoming a bidder didn't enter his mind until he got to the registration desk, at which point he realized that registering as a bidder might be the best way to derail the auction, or at least to save some parcels of lands from despoliation.
His objective, of course, was to call the entire process into question and ignite public concern over the relationship between such auctions and global warming's ominous shadow. I believe he achieved this mightily.
There is a massive complicity in America today between the corporations that fund elections and the officeholders they elect. Actions like Tim's are aimed at disrupting that complicity. For our children, for our country and for the world, we should honor his courage and self-sacrifice and pledge to follow in his footsteps, each in our own way.

Thursday, May 12, 2011

LGBT & Handicapped Protest GOP Cuts and Anti-Gay Amendment



Video by Bill Sorem
St. Paul, MN, May 11, 2011. Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transexual (LGBT) groups and Minnesota’s handicapped joined forces at the Minnesota State Senate session to protest the proposed constitutional amendment banning gay marriage and a number of cuts to services as part of the GOP Cuts Only Budget.
The protest against the amendment was very emotional and principled, but the effort failed as the Senate passed the Constitutional Amendment by a vote of 38 to 27. It now goes to the House before it will be placed on the 2012 state ballot. There was no further action on social service cuts, but the senate session was interrupted by noisy acts of civil disobedience in the senate gallery. Four people were removed from the building, but none were arrested. See more : I’d Rather Go To Jail Than Die In A Nursing Home.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Monday Reportback from ADAPT in Washington, DC

Washington, DC

  • May 7th, 2011 7:57 pm ET
By Martina Robinson
Disability Examiner

On Monday, members of the nonviolent direct action group ADAPT which has launched a campaign called "Defending Our Freedom" took their message of no block grants in Medicaid to the Halls of Congress.  The group is in direct opposition to Senator Paul Ryan's plan to block grant Medicaid.  The Ryan proposal, activists feel, would reduce available services and force more people into institutions.

Activists were unusually quiet marching to the  Hill.  Not one chant was heard as marchers lined the hallways.  Even as activists moved into the Rotunda there was not a sound, accept for subdued chatter and whirring of wheelchair motors.  Then the energy of almost 300 activists was unleashed as rounds and rounds of "Free our brothers,  free our sisters, free our people now!" suddenly exploded through the Capitol.  The rotunda acoustics are amazing!  The Capitol police were stunned and moved in to arrest, but changed their minds when activists quieted down and ADAPT's leadership team went into negotiate.

Several members of Congress came to visit the activists while they were in the Rotunda and by 6:25 pm the negotiations had failed and police were moving in with the intent to arrest this time.  The last person to speak to activists was Representative John Lewis.  Representative Lewis was himself arrested with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. during the civil rights movement of the 1960's.

He told activists that there was no shame in going to jail to fight an injustice.  He said this just as activists, many of whom used wheelchairs, were being led away by police.  Some ADAPT members speculated that there would not have been so many arrest had Representative Lewis not spoken.  All and all, 91 members were arrested Monday.

The early arrestees could still make out the chants of "I'd rather go to jail then die in a nursing home!" through the ceiling of the hallway they were led down which was one floor below the Rotunda, from those still waiting to be arrested who were above them.


Mug shots were taken. Property was bagged.  If arrestees needed medicine, they had to ask an officer to retrieve it.  Battery chargers for wheelchairs were kept with individuals, however, and the police were prompt in bringing medicines when asked for.  Going to the bathroom was an issue.  Police are not trained in the provision of personal care assistance (PCA) services and at first were not even aware of where the wheelchair accessible bathroom was!  Fortunately, a few PCA's got arrested and the officers seemed to be a quick study.  Activists received water, half a sandwich, and in one case ice for a swollen ankle.

Among the arrested where Bobbi Wallach, who has been previously arrested for civil disobedience over the institutionalization issue. Ms. Wallach moved into her own apartment last month after 4 and a half years in a nursing home.  She says the home didn’t want to let her go because they claimed she required two people to lift her.  However, she credits the Center for Disability Rights located in Rochester for finding the loophole that allowed her to be evaluated by an independent service.  As a result, she was able to prove that she only needed one PCA at a time and move out.  Ms. Wallach says, “I’m in my own home and loving it.  I make my own decisions.  I have all my choices and all my rights back now.”

Another arrestee was Heiwa Salovitz who recently moved from Connecticut to Texas where he volunteers with ADAPT of Texas.  He hopes to get a job soon “helping real people gain their freedom.”

 The first release happened at 3:11AM Tuesday morning.  The last group was released at 6:30.  ADAPT members, arrested or not, are supposed to be lined up by 10AM Tuesday.  Those arrested are due in court on May 26th in Washington, DC.

Disabled Wis. protesters arrested outside Paul Ryan's DC office


Washington - A group of Wisconsinites with disabilities vowed Wednesday to keep protesting the Ryan budget after many of them were arrested this week demonstrating in congressional office buildings.

"Representative Ryan is going to be seeing us again sooner or later. . . . We aren't going away," said Jerome Holzbauer, a retired Milwaukee schoolteacher who has cerebral palsy.
Holzbauer was arrested Monday with 90 others from Wisconsin and other states while protesting Ryan's proposal to convert the Medicaid entitlement into block grants to the states. The group had occupied the rotunda of the Cannon House Office Building.
Another story:
UPDATE: At about 6:30 p.m. EST, Capitol police began arresting ADAPT members who refused to leave the rotunda. The organization released a brief statement as the arrests began:

Tonight, Capitol Police have begun arresting ADAPT members from all over the country, who have remained in the Cannon House Office Building since midday. The ADAPTers want Representatives Paul Ryan, John Boehner and Michelle Bachmann to publicly withdraw their support for Medicaid budget cuts and Medicaid state block grants. Without this commitment, ADAPT has decided to make a point that we are willing to do whatever it takes to defend the right of people with disabilities and seniors to live in our homes, not nursing homes and institutions. It is unacceptable for our own government to treat the 60 million Americans who rely on Medicaid like garbage.

[A]about 100 people have been arrested so far, many of them chanting “I’d rather be in jail than in a nursing home!” He said Ryan sent his chief of staff to speak with the protesters but that Speaker of the House John Boehner refused to speak to the organization. Representatives who talked to the group and listened to their demands included: John Lewis (D-Ga.), Danny Davis (D-Ill.), Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.), and Barney Frank (D-Mass.)

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Dharna for Bank of America, LA, April 15th, tax date

April 15th (tax day) 2011 was marked by mass protests at Bank of America's from New York to Los Angeles. Most of these protests included music, bull horns, drums, slogan chanting, speeches, and actual occupations of banks. While I can appreciate all these methods they don't really fit my personality and I wanted to try something more personal. I decided I would preform a modified version of the ancient Hindu practice of DHARNA wherein a person who feels wronged will fast and meditate on the offenders doorstep until the wrong is corrected....or the protestor starves to death. My version was to take a vow of silence for the day and meditate until the bank closed or I was forcibly made to leave.
I invited some friends to join me but knew all along I would be doing it alone. I was able to have a friend film most of it. He began filming about 45 minutes after I began and missed getting footage of private security surrounding me, insulting me, and blowing cigarette smoke in my face. I never moved or acknowledged their presence. MORE BELOW THE VIDEO



After an hour and a half of sitting I moved to standing meditation (Buddha prescribed 4 postures for meditation. sitting, standing, laying down, and walking) and about half an hour later the LAPD came to talk to me. I gave them a printed letter with the 1st & 4th Amendments and an explanation of what i was doing. They read the note and I could tell they weren't sure what to do and since I wouldn't speak I had to write in a pad to communicate. I was told that the sidewalk in front of any business is private property and that I was trespassing. I pointed to the first Amendment on the letter and they told me it didn't matter this was private property and that I would have to leave or be arrested. I told them (even though it was clearly evident) that I wasn't blocking any doorways, customers, or pedestrians. They said "We know and we're sorry. We wish everyone would protest this way but you will have to leave or we will arrest you".
I honestly think they knew what they were doing was wrong and felt bad about it. I continued with standing meditation for another hour or so on the corner where they said it was legal for me to be.
During all this I never spoke and only opened my eyes enough to let a bit of light in. I received 3 "god bless yous", 3 people tried to give me money, I was called a terrorist, a homeless man ate his lunch squatting before my sign, and I heard several voices with Indian accents saying "this is very good. you are very good."
I plan on doing this sort of action more and more and am looking for some solid meditators to join me. The ideal would be 108 of us sitting silently in front of The Federal Reserve. If interested get in touch.

Special thanks to Josh & Timmy Eagle.

May ALL being be happy & well. Namaste,
Cockroach

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Useful info on demonstrating and civil disobedience

http://www.actupny.org/documents/CDdocuments/CDindex.html

Civil Disobedience Index


"Those who profess to favor freedom, yet deprecate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground. They want rain without thunder and lightening. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters. This struggle may be a moral one; or it may be a physical one; or it may be both moral and physical; but it must be a struggle. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will."

– Frederick Douglass, African-American abolitionist

The history of Civil Disobedience is a long and international one.
ACT UP practices a form that comes from a variety of progressive movements.
Below are several pages describing some of the history, theory, and practice of civil disobedience.

Many of these sections were taken (with love) from the Handbook for Nonviolent Action available from the War Resister's League in New York City.



    see also the following documents: