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Dissent Is Essential to Democracy

By Amy Goodman, King Features Syndicate. Posted August 14, 2008.


So why are people being arrested for lawful protest?
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The bulwark against tyranny is dissent. Open opposition, the right to challenge those in power, is a mainstay of any healthy democracy. The Democratic and Republican conventions will test the commitment of the two dominant U.S. political parties to the cherished tradition of dissent. Things are not looking good.

Denver's CBS4 News just reported that the city is planning on jailing arrested Democratic convention protesters at a warehouse with barbed-wire-topped cages and signs warning of the threat of stun gun use. Meanwhile, a federal judge has ruled that a designated protest area is legal, despite claims that protesters will be too far from the Democratic delegates to be heard.

The full spectrum of police and military will also be on hand at the Democratic convention in Denver, many of these units coordinated by a "fusion center." These centers are springing up around the country as an outgrowth of the post-9/11 national-security system. Erin Rosa of the online Colorado Independent recently published a report on the Denver fusion center, which will be sharing information with the U.S. Secret Service, the FBI and the U.S. Northern Command. The center is set up to gather and distribute "intelligence" about "suspicious activities," which, Rosa points out, "can include taking pictures or taking notes. The definition is very broad."

Civil rights advocates fear the fusion center could enable unwarranted spying on protesters exercising their First Amendment rights at the convention. Documents obtained by I-Witness Video, a group that documents police abuses and demonstrations, revealed that the CIA and the Defense Intelligence Agency were receiving intelligence about the protests at the 2004 Republican National Convention in New York City. The growing problem is that legal, peaceful protesters are ending up on federal databases and watch lists with scant legal oversight.

Former FBI agent Mike German is now a national-security-policy counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union. He said, "It's unclear who is actually in charge and whose rules apply to the information that's being collected and shared and distributed through these fusion centers." Maryland State Police were recently exposed infiltrating groups like the Baltimore Coalition Against the Death Penalty. German explains how police expand "beyond normal law-enforcement functions, and start becoming intelligence collectors against protest groups. The reports that we obtained ... make clear that there was no indication of any sort of criminal activity. And yet, that investigation went on for 14 months, and these reports were uploaded into a federal database. ... When all these agencies are authorized to go out and start collecting this information and putting it in areas where it's accessible by the intelligence community, it's a very dangerous proposition for our democracy."

After Barack Obama became the presumptive Democratic nominee, the protest coalition in Denver splintered, as many were motivated originally by the anticipated nomination of the more hawkish Hillary Clinton. An anarchist group, Unconventional Denver, actually offered to call off its protests if Denver would redirect the $50-million federal grant it is receiving for security to "reinvest their police budget toward real community security: new elementary schools; health care for the uninsured; providing clean, renewable energy." The plea has not been answered. The city, meanwhile, is stocking up on "less-lethal" pepper-ball rifles and has set aside a space for permitted protesting that some are referring to as the "Freedom Cage."

In the Twin Cities on the evening Obama was giving his Democratic acceptance speech in June, the St. Paul Police Department arrested a 50-year-old man peacefully handing out leaflets promoting a Sept. 1 march on the Republican National Convention. After mass arrests at the RNC in Philadelphia in 2000 and roughly 1,800 arrests in New York City in 2004, ACLU Minnesota predicts hundreds will be arrested in St. Paul, and is organizing and training 75 lawyers to defend them.

For now, the eyes of the world are on the Beijing Olympics. Sportswriter Dave Zirin is reporting on the suppression of protests that are occurring there. He has an interesting perspective, as he is a member of the anti-death-penalty group infiltrated in Maryland. He told me, "Our taxpayer dollars went to pay people to infiltrate and take notes on our meetings, and it's absolutely enraging ... a lot of this Homeland Security funding is an absolute sham ... it's being used to actually crush dissent, not to keep us safer in any real way." The lack of freedom of speech in China is getting a little attention in the news. But what about the crackdown on dissent here at home? Dissent is essential to the functioning of a democratic society. There is no more important time than now.

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See more stories tagged with: protest, democracy, dissent, conventions

Amy Goodman is the host of the nationally syndicated radio news program, Democracy Now!

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The response in Denver has been hysterical
Posted by: fanny666 on Aug 14, 2008 3:59 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Hysterical" meaning both "over the top, Chicken-Little" and "really funny", I suppose. For instance, The Denver City Council recently outlawed possession of buckets-full of urine and feces... apparently a pre-emptive strike against a popular (?) protest tactic. A group of supposed anarchists offered to drop their protests, if the $50 million slated for security would be used to help people instead. I personally think this gives the libertarian left a bad name- as if anarchists support violence. I'm an anarchist and I don't support violence. The biggest (or at least loudest) group calls themselves Re-create '68 ... I personally think that re-creating 1968 would be a bad idea, and Rush Limbaugh is hoping they do have riots, and further discredit the Left. I hope they stick to non-violence.

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Wrensis
Posted by: wrensis on Aug 14, 2008 4:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just to add to the irony Obama's arena speech will coincide with the 45th anniversary of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

At least we were still allowed to March in the 60's. Where would Obama be today without our having the right to peaceful protest.

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What First Amendment rights? They don't enforce themselves.
Posted by: LMNOP on Aug 14, 2008 11:33 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Civil rights advocates fear the fusion center could enable unwarranted spying on protesters exercising their First Amendment rights at the convention.

Is this for real? We haven't had this right in America since before the 2002-03 protests.

In a country where the President can declare you an enemy combatant at his whim and pleasure, which could result in your being whisked away in the dark of night without charges, without your family being notified, without report or acknowledgment of your captivity, without arraignment, without a trial or attorney, to a facility outside of the United States, to be tortured if desired for an indefinite period without judicial review of any kind or any other recourse - you have no rights. Some might argue that the Supreme Court might be able to help you (5-4, of course, Kennedy willing). Maybe. But the Court is one judge away from that being out of the question as well.

Surely Amy knows this. She saw what happened to peaceful assemblies of protesters in 2002-03: marginalized, harassed, brutalized, infiltrated, incarcerated and publicly ridiculed and jeered at by Toby Keith and his flag-waving audience. It is dangerous to speak or think otherwise in the land of the free and the home of the brave.

And this is the so-called liberal convention. Imagine what the Republicans would do to protesters in Minnesota.

And yes, Amy, America is not a democracy. Or a republic. Nor does it have a Constitution in effect any longer. If it were, the President and Vice-President would have been impeached and the troops in Iraq withdrawn by now as per the voter mandate of 2006. Instead, with "impeachment off the table" and the so-called opposition party fully funding the war, you've got an autocracy or oligarchy of sorts: an aristocracy, plutocracy, corporatocracy, kleptocracy.

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» Mate in four Posted by: LMNOP
» RE: Mate in four Posted by: Lincoln fan
Do law enforcers have a conscience
Posted by: mahembar on Aug 15, 2008 10:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I find it peculiar that in a society, particularly one which claims to be one that espouses freedom, the enforcers seem not to share the same freedoms that protestors do. Is it that the security apparatus is brainwashed by the state to enforce the beliefs of those in power even though they may be wrong? If there were 10,000 protestors at a convention, there would be presumably 2,000 recognizable security guards, police officers and national guard, not to mention the informers in the crowd who would gladly pepper spray their grandmothers to get overtime on their paychecks. These are the ones who should be shamed. These are the ones who claim to be just doing their job. These are the ones, who say they were just following orders. These are the ones who like to bully and can do so with impunity. It is they who lack conscience. They can't be recognized under their helmets, bullet proof vests, full body armor and they have big clubs and shields to protect them as well. The real menace to peaceful assembly are these mentioned. It was not that long ago that a protest group in Canada were infiltrated by a plain clothes police officer who attempted to "get things going" but were pointed out to police by the protestors. They were immediately arrested but when it was brought to their attention that they were undercover, they quietly whisked them away. The act was brought up in parliament by an opposition leader, Jack Layton, but as quickly as the incident arose it was just as quickly silenced. Guaranteed somethings going to happen at the convention and guaranteed it will start with the enforcers. Have a nice day!

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So why are people being arrested for lawful protest?
Posted by: Dboy on Aug 15, 2008 1:34 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If people are being arrested for lawful protest, then why bother keeping the protests lawful at all?

dboy

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Freedom is not Free!!!!
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Aug 19, 2008 11:04 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The real crime here after Sept.11,2001 fear has been used as a weapon against the American population! That has enabled this debacle of an Administration to cannibalize, imperialize, corporatize, manipulize, terrorize, and embezzle from we the people to enable profiteering by the rich!!!

As this larcenist band of brothers has revealed, those that have power are corrupted and abuse their powers! And in these times those that have the power are not willing to relinquish that power, this includes law enforcement as they too have been co-opted into believing they are helping to provide information to the "Intelligence Community"! To take a quote from Frederick Douglass "Power concedes nothing without a demand"!

As the Speaker of the House said "IMPEACHMENT is off of the TABLE". The nerve, IMPEACHMENT is the table! We the people deserve nothing less!

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WHY ARE WE HAVING THIS DISCUSSION OF DEMOCRATS AND REPUBLICANS? This election is over either way
Posted by: Cardinal Spellman on Aug 19, 2008 6:27 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The media are to blame for the 2008 election. This country needs third party politics... a concept I strongly felt would occur in 2008. It's too late to mess around with this now. Look to 2012!!!

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2012
Posted by: wagnerrocks@gmail.com on Aug 20, 2008 8:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The ball of shit that is the American political system keeps rolling downhill toward the future!? 2012 is just another illusionary place where we hopeless dreamers expect the world to finally come to it's senses and return the once proud freedoms and protections back to the people. 2008 is certainly a place where no change at all is happening. We all slip and slide and talk into the wind while the shit ball continues to grow and gather speed while stinking up the air around us. Sorry for the unappealing imagery, but it's another shitty day in the USA.

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Do these conventions matter?
Posted by: ErHoff on Aug 22, 2008 11:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What if they held a convention and nobody came?

The current one and a half party system America suffers under does not promote democracy, most Americans don't get it, that is the irony.

Pelosi gets on her knees for Cheney and Bush, as do most Democrats, instead of defending the Constitution of the United States. People like Cheney, Bush and Pelosi are enemies of the United States, and should be tried and convicted.


Why don't the republicans and democrats just hold their convention rallies in some zeppelin stadium.

My vote will not be a wasted vote; my vote will be done in accordance with reason and conscience: I will vote for Nader. Why won't you, if you really want to do something progressive?

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» The problem with Nader: Posted by: improperly_sedated
What About...
Posted by: droscify on Aug 22, 2008 8:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The fact that A, its always been this way?

- In the sixties do you remember fire hoses? How about the actual shooting of protesters over certain periods in our history?

Fact is, our side has to take some casualties if we want to stand up to fascists. So I guess the real question is, Is freedom worth fighting and possibly dying for? If to you it is, then you still have the same free speech we've always had here in America. You nostalgic types without a real knowledge of history are really starting to piss me off

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» RE: What About... Posted by: Noella
because COPS are more interested in THEIR HR DOSSIERS & TOYS
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Aug 25, 2008 9:24 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
you heard me:

IN THEIR 'protect me' TOYS, being scared, running in packs to 'crisis' events where they can hang out & aggress...

...& KEEPING THEIR HR DOSSIERS TIDY for their next promotion.

***WHAH!!! you want me to make JUDGEMENT calls & go out on a limb to think about how best to serve the community? I just wanna bust some heads & party! gimme a new toy... I wanna see people CRINGE when I tell them what to do!! ***


they don't need social skills or any understanding of law or civil rights... why?

because we give them badges & toys & only hire the grunts that smashed beercans on their heads in High School

Take a LOOOONG look at the losers in high school who went on to become cops.

now ask yourself... do you trust that undercover cops should be put into your fire departments to spy on you??

*sniff* sniff * sniff * I smell smoke, better bust down that door! could be cooking terrorist goodies or meth!! damned hippie peaceniks!!


these are the same goons who **pretend to be protesters** so they can start 'riot' excuses & let their buddies loose on you with their toys, chemicals & fearful "Little Boy" aggressions.

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And the answer is...
Posted by: MartianBachelor on Aug 25, 2008 10:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
> So why are people being arrested for lawful protest?

Because it has little or nothing to do with 'democracy'. It's a coronation. By private invitation only.

Thus, dissent is sorta like raining on the DNC's big parade through their gated neighborhood.

Hope they all remembered to bring their umbrellas and hip-waders...

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Agreed: "Things are not looking good."
Posted by: talkville on Aug 26, 2008 12:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Lawful protest"???!!

Protest is a matter of truth; it is a matter of liberty; it is a matter of defense of interests; it is a matter of dignity; it is a human response... .

Since when, and according to who, is protest a Crime? since when, and according to who is protest a Sin?

When a Thug or Thugs steal, dis-possess, oppress and otherwise exploit, by "lawful and "unlawful" methods, means and procedures, one could very well reasonably and justifiably conclude that: protest is in order.

Amy's right: "Things are not looking good."

In fact, for most, it's looking worser and worser... protest is in order; and it is and can be no Crime nor any Sin. These are matters of justice. In lands where dissent is understood as 'wrong', 'criminal' or 'sinful', there can be no democracy, there can be no liberty, there can be no justice.

"Things are not looking good."

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Freedom
Posted by: LarryB on Aug 26, 2008 3:16 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When we lose dissent, we lose our freedom. Pushing dissent out of sight and into cages is a big step in that direction.
I don't care what party you support, anyone who cares about freedom should be concerned. This suppression will be on display at both Democratic and Republican conventions. If neither party's candidate expresses outrage at this, it will be a good indication that neither man cares about our Constitution.

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"enter the 'two-party' or else" AT&T Denver DemCon PR GreenZone...
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Aug 29, 2008 8:41 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dennis Kucinich: "Wake up America": Every day we get the color orange, while the oil companies, the insurance companies, the speculators, the war contractors get the color green"

the ONE thing corrupt MONEY & POWER have learned is to *create a PR perimeter* & to create a 'GreenZone' of embedded media & FUN

Greenwald@Salon:
- The AT&T Convention in Denver - gee, I wonder what happened to those ‘wiretapping‘ issues?
- AT&T thanks the Blue Dog Democrats with a lavish party (updated below (with video added) - Update II)

Why are the Police Protecting Big Money from Public Scrutiny in Denver? - Jane Hamsher, FireDogLake reprinted | Rights & Liberties |

Media Trapped at the DNC - Veracifier

we are OUR OWN MEDIA: police civil abuses outside the AT&T GreenZone in Denver-just beyond the PR perimeter
Marshall McLuhan - The Media is the Message:

Police Trap Peaceful Protesters AT&T Democratic Convention in Denver
A calm political protest quickly turned chaotic as anxious police take out their toys

"The Police Were Itching For A Fight" - DNC Protesters - TheUpTake Collective

Shocking Video of Police Brutality Against Woman at DNC Protest - CodePink
FEAR THE PACIFIST IN A PINK TUTU! Smack her throat with a baton! haul her off as she testifies to Press!"

MEANWHILE THE MAINSTREAM PRESS CHARACTERIZES PROTESTERS AS 'futile', 'pathetically disgruntled Utopianists' or VIOLENTLY ATTACKING 'anarchists'

But just in time for a new administration (and the bundles of cash always at the ready for the expanding HomeLand Security market), comes a complete "surveillance in a box" system called the Intelligence Platform! According to New Scientist, German electronics giant Siemens has developed software allegedly capable of...:

"pooling data from sources such as telephone calls, email and internet activity, bank transactions & insurance records...sorts through this mountain of information..." (Surveillance Made Easy, New Scientist 23Aug08)

...the firm has sold the system to some 60 countries in Europe & Asia. Which countries? Well, Siemens won't say.

However, privacy and human rights advocates say the system bears a remarkable resemblance to China's "Golden Shield," a massive surveillance network that integrates huge information databases, internet & email monitoring, speech & facial recognition platforms in combination with CCTV monitoring. ...


China’s All-Seeing Eye: Rolling Stone NAOMI KLEIN
“With the help of U.S. defense contractors, China is building the prototype for a high-tech police state. It is ready for export… ”


Spread Love, not corporate dependence,

BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian.com
"do no harm"

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Democracy? What democracy?
Posted by: LeftWright on Sep 2, 2008 12:09 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This republic has not known democracy for decades, if not longer.

Perhaps more people will now begin to see behind the facade and realize that they live in a high-tech gilded cage.

Naked American fascism is now becoming more common every day.

9/11 truth exposes the depth and breadth of the corruption that is now rampant in corporate and government elite circles. Investigate the events of 9/11/01, understand the true history of the U.S. or risk being controlled by those who attempt to rewrite it as it is happening.

Wake up, brothers and sisters!

The truth shall set us free. Love is the only way forward.

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