Showing posts with label first amendment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label first amendment. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Occupy Riverside Challenges Indefinite Military Detention


http://la.indymedia.org/news/2011/12/250637.php

by Rockero Monday, Dec. 26, 2011 at 6:11 AM 
rockero420@yahoo.com
Friday, December 23, 2011
RIVERSIDE (CA) - Occupy Riverside demonstrated at the offices of Ken Calvert and Barbara Boxer to protest their support of the latest effort to codify the police state.
Occupy Riverside Cha...
Calvert and Boxer are both agents of the 1% who shamelessly claim to represent the interests of voters in Washington D.C. Their actions, however, are an integral component of an oppressive economic and social system that disempowers the vast majority of people, concentrates wealth and power in very few hands, and is near to destroying the planet.

One means the world's ruling class has of preserving its privilege is the use of the state for political repression, and, while some states are overtly autocratic and have no need for delicately-worded legal rationalizations, the United States government has an image to protect (mostly among white folks with middle class values who continue to think within the narrow parameters sanctioned by television) and must therefore engage in these legislative rituals to justify the ever-increasing imposition of government power over the individual.

The as-yet unsigned1 "National Defense Authorization" act is a nefarious piece of legislation that is annually meritorious of opposition because for the past 48 years, it has been the means by which the wars and war preparations have been funded. This year, however, certain senators and congresspeople have included provisions that allow for the indefinite military detention of anyone the president deems has "supported al-Qaeda, the Taliban, or associated forces."2 It is left to the president to determine what procedures to use to determine who fits into this category.

If signed into law, the act's passage would erase a long tradition, oft associated with democratic governments, of allowing those accused of crimes to challenge the accusers in public trials. This right is supposed to be guaranteed by the sixth amendment to the Constitution.

Additional concerns about the act arise from the trend of criminalization of dissent. Police abuse, infiltration by authorities, the compilation of "Red files," and outright harassment, intimidation, deportation, and assassination have historically been used to weaken movements for social change. There are already laws on the books that criminalize "interference" with economic activity (i.e., your exercising your right to not work), and the London police department's inclusion of Occupy London on a recent list of terrorist groups3 sets a precedent that other agencies and governments are likely to follow.

Nationwide, the occupy movement has taken the lead in opposing the act and its provisions. Eleven comrades were arrested in Washington DC for standing against the bill4, and Occupy Tampa marched on Obama's campaign reelection headquarters, promising the candidate that "If you fail to veto this bill in its entirety due to these provisions, you can expect members of occupations all over the country to dedicate ourselves to act against your political interests in the 2012 election and beyond."5 And out in Colorado, our creativity shone through the dramatic funeral Occupy Fort Collins held for the Bill of Rights.6 Occupys held actions in Minneapolis, Houston, Des Moines, and Portland.

Occupy Riverside has been urging the community to call Obama and ask him to veto the legislation since it passed. We produced a flyer that showed the Constitution going through a meat grinder and handed it out to spread awareness, and on Friday held rallies outside the offices of the politicians. Noon saw a march to Calvert's office that drew about 40 people, and a 5:30 march on Boxer's downtown headquarters featured angry speeches, spontaneous chalk expression, and the requisite encounter between the city's official "Festival of Lights" and Occupy Riverside's Festival of Rights, which took on the task of informing the citizenry about the act using the people's mic.

At both rallies, protesters also expressed concern about SOPA, another legislative proposal, which could open the doors to further censorship of the internet, and Bradley Manning, who is currently in military detention and is being tried by a military tribunal for allegedly blowing the whistle on US abuses in Iraq.

One young woman was among the first speakers:

"I'm a little angry [...] I think that this has everything to do with what we're doing here. I think that this has everything to do with the effect that we're causing in the world, we're making people think again, and that's scaring people. And I think that--honestly, I think that's good."

She ended with a word to the apathetic or incredulous:

"This isn't about being a terrorist. This isn't about being a criminal. This is about being a person who has free thoughts, and who can think for themselves, who has actions that they'd like to do for themselves, and will no longer be able to."

One man spoke about the military and its role in the trial of Bradley Manning.

"The military is losing respect in my eyes. I do not support the troops. The troops who are running this kangaroo court get no support. The only troops I support are those who have renounced Bush's and Obama's wars. I don't see many of 'em. Where are they? José--José renounced the wars. He's a member of Occupy Riverside."

Another man spoke about a similar law in his home country:

"What I would like to share with you is what happened in my country, in El Salvador, during the war. When the fourteen families, the rich people in the country, felt that htey were threatened by the popular movement, they introduced this famous word that we are all very familiar with: terrorism. So--you know, rich people is very creative when they strt defining who is a terrorist, because as soon as they felt that the system of privilege that they have been living through so many years, hundreds of years. My teacher, all of a sudden, was a terrorist. A few days later when they defined that he was a terrorist, he was killed. Community activists: they fell into the category of terrorist, and they were killed. I was already a union activist back there, so I fell into the category of terrorist because I was fighting for better wages for my coworkers. So you know what they did at my home? They sent a death squad to my home to look for me and my brother. I was not there, but they still killed three people in my home. Several members of my family were badly injured. And that's the reason why I left the country, because this kind of law are the road that these governments follow to persecute people with impunity. Because anyone who keeps the title of terrorist, then, you know, there is no consideration. There're no laws! They are put in jail, and eventually, if they can, they kill people. So it's quite--this new legislation, is threatening civil liberties in this country so bad."

It is likely due to this sort of popular pressure that Obama has refrained from signing the bill up to this point, but despite the stalling, few entertained any genuine hope that he would veto the measure. Nonetheless, inland empire activists felt the need to take action in order to demonstrate to our neighbors that the occupy movement on the frontlines and will remain there in defense of fundamental human rights, whether they be the right to earn a dignified living or, in this case, the right to habeus corpus and trial by jury.



1. White House. "Pending Legislation" 26 December 2011. http://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/pending-legislation

2. US Senate. "National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Engrossed in Senate [Passed Senate] - ES)," Subtitle D--Detainee Matters. http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/F?c112:2:./temp/~c112t5Lxtu:e548990:

3. Malik, Shiv. "Occupy London's anger over police 'terrorism' document." Guardian, 5 December 2011. http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/dec/05/occupy-london-police-terrorism-document

4. Associated Press. "US Park Police arrest 11 protesters outside White House, including some from Occupy DC." Washington Post, 20 December 2011. http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/courts-law/us-park-police-arrest-11-protesters-outside-white-house-including-some-from-occupy-dc/2011/12/20/gIQA86Wy6O_story.html

5. Levey-Baker, Cooper. "Occupy Tampa to march on Obama office to protest National Defense Authorization Act." Florida Independent, 16 December 2011. http://floridaindependent.com/61259/occupy-tampa-obama-national-defense-authorization-act

6. Buczynski, Beth. "Occupy Fort Collins Holds Funeral For The Bill Of Rights" Care2, 22 December 2011. http://www.care2.com/causes/occupy-fort-collins-holds-funeral-for-the-bill-of-rights.html

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Outside of Calvert's office

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Who would Jesus detain?

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National Defense my ass!

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Stop kidnapping and torture Stop the NDAA

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Defend my rights no the NDAA

Stop torture

99%

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Indefinite Detention Do Not Speak Do Not Occupy

Be Human

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National Detain America Act

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Outside of Boxer's office

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Veto the NDAA

This could be you!

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Detain Wall Street Terrorists

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NDAA is war against free speech

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Throw away the NDAA!

Monday, February 28, 2011

People's Poetry Benefit for Jeremy Marks

http://la.indymedia.org/news/2011/02/244613.php

People's Poetry Benefit for Jeremy Marks
by Rockero Sunday, Feb. 27, 2011 at 11:49 PM
rockero420@yahoo.com
Saturday, February 26, 2011

NORTH HOLLYWOOD - For the sixth consecutive year, the Community Rights Campaign, an initiative of the Labor/Community Strategy Center, held a night of youth expression of poetic resistance at the NoHo Actor's Studio. A standing-room audience, predominantly made up of youth of color, took part in the evening's poetry recital and open mic, which doubled as a fundraiser for the legal defense of Jeremy Marks, an 18-year-old arrested by Los Angeles Schools Police Department and charged with attempting lynching for filming an act of brutality by a member of the department against a fellow student.

People's Poetry Bene...
marks.jpg, image/jpeg, 613x402

The Community Rights Campaign has focused on organizing high school students at Locke, Roosevelt, Cleveland, and Westchester high schools against truancy tickets, which channels them into the criminal "justice" system, in favor of a police review board to receive and investigate complaints about police, and against the budget cuts which are gutting public education, in addition to generally fomenting a culture of resistance among Los Angeles' disempowered youth.

In typical Strategy Center style, a lively round of chants and drumming energized the crowd prior to a welcome from two of the youth organizers. They introduced the campaign and gave an overview of Marks' case.

The first set of performers shared works based on their own experiences of criminalization at schools. They were followed by an a capella rendition of Lauryn Hill's "I Get Out."

The second set consisted of young performers articulating their experiences with being stereotyped as "gang members" only to find that that stigma has been officialized through membership in a police gang database.

Prior to the last set, a youth organizer shared a rundown of the campaign's advances this year. "So far this year, we've stopped the expansion of municipal code 45.04, which would've given LASPD the right to ticket students on campus. Through our work, we've been able to end the collaboration between LASPD doing seeps at Roosevelt. We've also--through our work at Roosevelt--we were able to get sixteen tickets dropped in court this past Wednesday. This past Wednesday! We wouldn't have been able to do that without the support of the principals, teachers, parents, community members all working together to get that done."

The last scheduled group of poets recited compositions relating their personal and community struggles to the larger context of systematic oppression and resistance thereto.

Following the third round, the emcee introduced Rochelle Pitman, Jeremy Marks' mother, who gave a few words of thanks.

She was followed by a series of performers, many of them collaboratives, who approached the open microphone.

Following the performance, attendees were welcomed into the back room where food was served and community-building conversations were held. While there, Jeremy Marks' grandmother, Alice Pitman, addressed the group and explained how her family's tragedy has been a consciousness-raising experience for her and her hope that the struggle for change will bring about justice for those yet to tread the path of Los Angeles' public high schools.

"If this child hadn't been to jail, first of all, we wouldn't all be in this--in this center tonight, this gathering, to be informed of what's going on." She continued, "I didn't understand, 'Well, why is this happening?' [...] I sat in court for seven months and I didn't understand. Now I'm understanding what's going on now. We're together on this now. And this one incident will help millions of children, millions of children. Thank you very much."

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Atheist speaks at Montclair church

http://la.indymedia.org/news/2009/02/224915.php

Atheist speaks at Montclair church
by Rockero Monday, Feb. 23, 2009 at 2:18 AM
rockero420@yahoo.com

Atheist speaks at Montclair church: Addresses censorship and church-state separation violation in Rancho Cucamonga February 22, 2009 MONTCLAIR, California -- Dan Barker, influential atheist and co-president of the Freedom from Religion Foundation, addressed a full house today at the Monte Vista Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Montclair, a quiet community on the western end of San Bernardino County known more for its shopping mall than as a bastion of religious tolerance and freethought. One topic on the minds of many in the audience was the recent controversy surrounding a FFRF-sponsored billboard reading "Imagine No Religion" in the nearby city of Rancho Cucamonga. Despite the foundation's contract with the billboard company to display the message for a month, the sign was censored after a mere five days. Legal action against the city is pending.

Atheist speaks at Mo...

Meanwhile, in the neighboring city of Chino, a group of right-wing evangelicals held a three-day conference that, according to the local paper, attracted thousands of people and focussed on "biblical prophecy." These evangelicals teach that economic troubles and violence in the Middle East are signs of the "End Times," often called the "Tribulation." Through these teachings, which also demonize Islam, feminism, secularism, and homosexuality, they bring about tribulations indeed: war, homophobia, sexism, domestic violence, closed-mindedness, and white supremacy are all part of the same system that seeks to monopolize religious "truth" and execute it through public policy.


Needless to say it was a relief to hear a voice of reason in these troubled times, and one whose prescriptions could very well help bring about a more tolerant, peaceful society. And it was even more encouraging to see that the lecture was so well-attended. Visitors filled the primary parking lot as well as the overflow lot, and every seat appeared to be taken.

The service began with Barker, who is also an accomplished musician, performing the song "Beware of Dogma" on the piano. "Did you know the tango was outlawed by the church?" he asked in a spoken interlude. "The tango was sinful, sensuous, evil. So what better reason to start with a tango?"

A member of the congregation led the service, and seeing the number of visitors present, began with a brief explanation of Unitarian Universalist beliefs.

"We believe in the freedom of religious expression; we believe in the tolerance of religious ideas. We believe in the authority of reason and conscience; we believe in the neverending search for truth. We believe in the unity of experience; we believe in the worth and dignity of each human being. We believe in the ethical application of religion. We accept and acknowledge, gays, lesbians, and transgenders, so welcome all."

After some announcements and opening rituals, including the lighting of the chalice, friendship time, a recitation, and a hymn, the service leader introduced the speaker, explaining his local connections. "Dan chose the life of a preacher, and from 1968-72, attended Azusa Pacific University. He was an associate pastor at churches in La Puente, Arcadia, and Standard, a town in the foothills north of Yosemite." And later, "On January 16, 1984, this pastor and accomplished Christian musical composer sent out a letter, from the mailbox in front of Chaffey High School in Ontario, by the way, to more than 50 colleagues, friends, and family members announcing his newfound atheism."

Barker began by talking about the growth in atheism and agnosticism. "Twenty years ago when I started doing these talks, and started working for freethought,I could count five or six groups around the country that were atheist, skeptic, humanist, whatever you want to call them. Today, the Secular Student Alliance [has] about 150 college groups that have sprouted up." He emphasized the spontaneity of the growth, as well as the increased demand for atheist materials. "The success of all these atheist books, Dawkins, and Hitchens and Harris and Dennett shows that there's a market, there's a hunger, there's a drive."

He described the foundation's activities, including a PR campaign called "Wake up America." "Let's try putting up some billboards around the country to to fight back, to have equal time. The first one we put up was a stained-glass motif, it was simple, it said, 'Beware of Dogma.'" It was the second billboard, however, which was placed in Rancho Cucamonga: "Imagine no Religion."

According to Barker, "someone in the city got complaints and called the billboard company and suggested that this 'Imagine no religion' was not appropriate. So the billboard company took it down, they refunded the money, and [...] destroyed the sign. We could've reused it!"

The foundation filed suit against the with the U.S. District Court on November 28, claiming the removal "conveyed a message that religion is favored, preferred and promoted by the city of Rancho Cucamonga," a violation of the establishment clause.

Apparently, Rancho Cucamonga is not alone in its intolerant attitudes toward atheism, as Barker went on to relate problems in other cities, including sites important to the history of atheism in the US such as Dayton, Tennessee (the site of the Scopes trial) and Dover, Pennsylvania, (where a judge ruled against the teaching of "intelligent design" as science).

The billboards are designed to show people that "[W]e atheists are not barging into churches and dragging people out of the pews and saying, 'you should stop!' When was the last time an atheist knocked on your front door? It's not what we do. We're live and let live. It's a free country, but we want a place at the table. We want to be part of that quilt, that fabric of America."

He went on to talk about how he became an atheist, which was an interesting voyage beginning in the evangelical mindset, heading toward moderation, and ending with atheism and advocacy. As an evangelical: "So, after a while I would turn and look at you, sitting on the bus next to me, and chit-chatting for a while, and 'Excuse me for saying this, but it seems to me that you are going through some real struggles in your life right now.'" Then, in the role of his unfortunate seatmate, and with a look of bewilderment on his face, "How does he know?? [...] You'd be surprised how many people fall for that. But I was that kind of person, and I didn't change my mind lightly."

But his work as a composer a musician exposed him to other types of Christians. "I started getting invitations from churches that were not as extremely absolutistic as I was, and it made me uncomfortable. I met other flavors of Christians, and that started me on a process."

He ended with some of the merits of atheism.

This enlightening lecture provided a welcome alternative to the extremist view receiving so much attention less than ten miles away.

Dan Barker
by Rockero Monday, Feb. 23, 2009 at 2:18 AM
rockero420@yahoo.com

Dan Barker...

Dan Barker

by Rockero Monday, Feb. 23, 2009 at 2:18 AM
rockero420@yahoo.com

Dan Barker...

Freedom

by Rockero Monday, Feb. 23, 2009 at 2:18 AM
rockero420@yahoo.com

Freedom...

the other one said "Peace"


"Imagine No Religion" - talk by Dan Barker
by Rockero Monday, Feb. 23, 2009 at 2:18 AM
rockero420@yahoo.com

audio: MP3 at 55.5 mebibytes