Freedom of Speech Rapidly Deteriorating
Dear
friends,
The
below article from The Nation gives some shocking examples of how
our freedom of speech has been and continues to be severely eroded. Please
help your friends and colleagues to wake up to what is going on by spreading
the news. Take care and have a good day.
With
best wishes,
Fred
http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20040816&s=hightower
Bush Zones Go National
by JIM HIGHTOWER
The
Nation [from the August 16, 2004 issue]
At
the 2000 GOP nominating convention in Philadelphia, candidate Bush created a
fenced-in, out-of-sight protest zone that could only hold barely 1,500 people
at a time. So citizens who wished to give voice to their many grievances with
the Powers That Be had to:
(1)
Schedule their exercise of First Amendment rights with the decidedly
unsympathetic authorities.
(2)
Report like cattle to the protest pen at their designated time, and only in
the numbers authorized.
(3)
Then, under the recorded surveillance of the authorities, feel free to let
loose with all the speech they could utter within their allotted minutes
(although no one--not Bush, not convention delegates, not the preening
members of Congress, not the limousine-gliding corporate sponsors and
certainly not the mass media--would be anywhere nearby to hear a single word
of what they had to say).
Imagine
how proud the Founders would be of this interpretation of their revolutionary
work. The Democrats, always willing to learn useful tricks from the
opposition, created their own "free-speech zone" when they gathered
in Los Angeles that year for their convention.
Once
ensconced in the White House, the Bushites institutionalized the art of
dissing dissent, routinely dispatching the Secret Service to order local
police to set up FSZs to quarantine protesters wherever Bush goes. The
embedded media trooping dutifully behind him almost never cover this
fascinating and truly newsworthy phenomenon, instead focusing almost entirely
on spoon-fed soundbites from the President's press office.
An
independent libertarian writer, however, James Bovard, chronicled George's
splendid isolation from citizen protest in last December's issue of The
American Conservative (www.amconmag.com).
He wrote about Bill Neel, a retired steelworker who dared to raise his humble
head at a 2002 Labor Day picnic in Pittsburgh, where Bush had gone to be
photographed with worker-type people. Bill definitely did not fit the message
of the day, for this 65-year-old was sporting a sign that said: The Bush
Family Must Surely Love the Poor, They Made so Many of Us.
Ouch!
Negative! Not acceptable! Must go!
Bill
was standing in a crowd of pro-Bush people who were standing along the street
where Bush's motorcade would pass. The Bush backers had all sorts of Hooray
George-type signs. Those were totally okey-dokey with the Secret Service, but
Neel's...well, it simply had to be removed.
He
was told by the Pittsburgh cops to depart to the designated FSZ, a ballpark
encased in a chain-link fence a third of a mile from Bush's (and the media's)
path. Bill, that rambunctious rebel, refused to budge. So they arrested him
for disorderly conduct, dispatched him to the luxury of a Pittsburgh jail and
confiscated his offending sign.
At
Bill's trial, a Pittsburgh detective testified that the Secret Service had
instructed local police to confine "people that were making a statement
pretty much against the President and his views." The district court
judge not only tossed out the silly charges against Neel but scolded the
prosecution: "I believe this is America. Whatever happened to 'I don't
agree with you, but I'll defend to the death your right to say it'?"
This
was no isolated incident. Bovard also takes us to St. Louis, where George
appeared last year. About 150 sign-toting protesters were shunted off to a
zone where they could not be seen from the street, and--get ready to spin in
your grave, Jimmy Madison--the media were not allowed to talk to them,
and protesters were not allowed out of the protest zone to talk to the
media.
Now
meet Brett Bursey. He committed the crime of holding up a No War for Oil sign
when sensitive George visited Columbia, South Carolina, last year. Standing
amid a sea of pro-Bush signs in a public area, Bursey was commanded by local
police to remove himself forthwith to the FSZ half a mile away from the
action, even though he was already two football fields from where Bush was to
speak. No, said Brett. So, naturally, they arrested him. Asked why, the
officer said, "It's the content of your sign that's the problem."
Five
months later, Brett's trespassing charge was tossed on the rather obvious
grounds that--yoo-hoo!--there's no such thing as a member of the public
trespassing on public property at a public event. But John Ashcroft is
oblivious to the obvious, so the Justice Department of the United States of
America (represented in this case by--can you stand it?--US Attorney Strom
Thurmond Jr.) inserted itself into this local misdemeanor case, charging our
man Brett with a federal violation of "entering a restricted area
around the president." Great Goofy in the Sky--he was 200 yards away,
surrounded by cheering Bushcalytes who were also in the "restricted
area."
Ashcroft/Thurmond/Bush
attempted to deny Bursey's lawyers access to Secret Service documents setting
forth official policy on who gets stopped for criticizing the President,
where, when and why. But Bursey finally obtained the documents and posted
them on the South Carolina Progressive Network website, www.scpronet.com; they reveal that what
the Secret Service did goes against official policy.
Then
there's the "Crawford Contretemps." In May of 2003 a troupe of
about 100 antiwar Texans were on their way by car to George W's Little
Ponderosa, located about five miles outside the tiny town of Crawford. To get
to Bush's place, one drives through the town--but the traveling protesters
were greeted by a police blockade. They got out of their cars to find out
what was up, only to be told by Police Chief Donnie Tidmore that they were
violating a town ordinance requiring a permit to protest within the city
limits.
But
wait, they said, we're on our way to Bush's ranchette--we have no intention
of protesting here. Logic was a stranger that day in Crawford, however, and
Chief Tidmore warned them that they had three minutes to turn around and go
back from whence they came, or else they'd be considered a demonstration,
and, he reminded them, they had no permit for that. (Tidmore later said that
he actually gave them seven minutes to depart, in order to be "as fair
as possible.")
Five
of the group tried to talk sense with Tidmore, but that was not possible.
Their reward for even trying was to be arrested for refusing to disperse and
given a night in the nearby McLennan County jail. The chief said he could've
just given them a ticket, but he judged that arresting them was the only way
to get them to move, claiming that they were causing a danger because of the
traffic.
This
February, the five were brought to trial in Crawford. Their lawyer asked
Tidmore if someone who simply wore a political button reading
"Peace" could be found in violation of Crawford's ordinance against
protesting without a permit. Yes, said the chief. "It could be a sign of
demonstration."
The
five were convicted.
The
Bushites are using federal, state and local police to conduct an undeclared
war against dissent, literally incarcerating Americans who publicly express
their disagreements with him and his policies. The ACLU and others have now
sued Bush's Secret Service for its ongoing pattern of repressing legitimate,
made-in-America protest, citing cases in Arizona, California, Virginia, Michigan,
New Jersey, New Mexico, Texas--and coming soon to a theater near you!
If
incarceration is not enough to deter dissenters, how about some old-fashioned
goon-squad tactics like infiltration and intimidation of protesters? In May
of 2002 Ashcroft issued a decree terminating a quarter-century-old policy
that bans FBI agents from spying on Americans in their political meetings and
churches. Not only were federal agents "freed" by Bush and his
attack dog Ashcroft to violate the freedoms (assembly, speech, privacy) of
any and all citizens, but they were encouraged to do so. This unleashing of
the FBI was done in the name of combating foreign terrorists.
Likewise,
in May of last year, the Homeland Security Department waded butt-deep into
the murky waters of political suppression, issuing a terrorist advisory to
local law enforcement agencies. It urged all police officials to keep a
hawk-eyed watch on any homelanders who have "expressed dislike of
attitudes and decisions of the US government."
With
the FBI on the loose, other police powers now feel free to join in the
all-season sport of intimidating people. In Austin, even the Army was caught
snooping on us. At a small University of Texas conference in February to
discuss Islam in Muslim countries, two Army officers were discovered to be
posing as participants. The next week two agents from the Army Intelligence
and Security Command appeared on campus demanding a list of participants and
trying to grill Sahar Aziz, the conference organizer. Alarmed by these intimidating
tactics, Aziz got the help of a lawyer, and the local newspaper ran a story.
The Army quickly went away--but a spokeswoman for the intelligence command
refused even to confirm that the agents had been on campus, much less discuss
why the US Army is involved in domestic surveillance and intimidation.
In
California an antiwar group called Peace Fresno included in its ranks a nice
young man named Aaron Stokes, who was always willing to be helpful.
Unfortunately, Aaron died in a motorcycle wreck, and when his picture ran in
the paper, Peace Fresno learned that he was really Aaron Kilner, a deputy
with the sheriff's department. The sheriff said he could not discuss the
specifics of Kilner's infiltration role, but that there was no formal
investigation of Peace Fresno under way. He did insist, however, that there
is potential for terrorism in Fresno County. "We believe that there
is," the sheriff said ominously (and vaguely). "I'm not going to
expand on it."
If
the authorities think there is terrorist potential in Fresno (probably not
real high on Osama's target list), then there is potential everywhere, and
under the Bush regime, this is plenty enough reason for any and all police
agencies to launch secret campaigns to infiltrate, investigate and intimidate
any and all people and groups with politics that they find even mildly
suspicious...or distasteful.
The
attitude of police authorities was summed up by Mike van Winkle, a
spokesperson for the California Anti-Terrorism Information Center (another
spinoff of the Homeland Security Department--your tax dollars at work). After
peaceful antiwar protesters in Oakland were gassed and shot by local police,
van Winkle [Note: I do not make up these names] explained the
prevailing thinking of America's new, vast network of antiterrorist forces:
You can make an easy kind of link that, if you have
a protest group protesting a war where the cause that's being fought against
is international terrorism, you might have terrorism at that protest. You can
almost argue that a protest against that is a terrorist act. I've heard
terrorism described as anything that is violent or has an economic impact.
Terrorism isn't just bombs going off and killing people.
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