148 lines
6.7 KiB
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148 lines
6.7 KiB
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From fork-admin@xent.com Mon Sep 30 17:56:35 2002
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Mon, 30 Sep 2002 15:08:23 +0000
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From: bitbitch@magnesium.net
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To: Gregory Alan Bolcer <gbolcer@endeavors.com>
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Cc: Fork@xent.com
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Subject: Re[2]: A moment of silence for the First Amendment (fwd)
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Date: Mon, 30 Sep 2002 11:08:21 -0400
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>>
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>> http://www.post-gazette.com/columnists/20020905brian5.asp
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GAB> I thought this nekkid URL was going to be about the
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GAB> infringement of 1st amendment rights for broadcasters
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GAB> and proposed campaign finanice restrictions preventing them
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GAB> from making money on advertisements that are deemed
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GAB> thinly veiled campaign contributions by some arbitrary
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GAB> government board. As it was posted to "discussion" I
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GAB> thought there'd be some.
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GAB> Instead it's a Post-Gazette column by Brian O'Neill
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GAB> lamenting the fact that some people know how to
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GAB> fill out a permit so that they can take advantage
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GAB> of their right to peaceable assembly. Obviously
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GAB> he's poking fun at the idea that specific groups
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GAB> get specific "zones" and that it's not up to the
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GAB> police to decide what messages and signs get put into
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GAB> what zones to most expediently keep order.
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Oh thats right Greg. Because was explicitly clear that the pro-Bush
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folks went out and did the permit dance. So where in the article is
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this again?
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Lets get something straight here. This -is- a First Amendment issue.
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Public streets, provided one isn't blocking traffic, generally tend to
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be sorta ok, at least from my last interpretation of Con Law a few
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years ago (I'll feign ignorance wrt the fact that laws may have
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changed, and the specific facts in this case are weak). IF this guy
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_was_ merely holding a sign (which it seems was the case for all the
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pro-bush folks) he did nothing wrong. He certainly didn't do enough
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of a wrong to warrant a disorderly conduct charge.
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I'll play with your perspective though. Lets assume a few things.
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If I walk into the city office and tell them I want to peacably
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assemble against Bush, do you think they'll give me a permit?
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Probably not. So I lie. Then the cop does what happened in this
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scenario. HE walks up, checks my permit and finds out that I
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falsified my statement to get this said document. He arrests me.
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End of story.
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GAB> The problem is that politics have gotten so muddied
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GAB> nowadays, that shouting down and unpeaceably disrupting
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GAB> political rallies that you don't agree with has become
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GAB> common practice. The courts have constantly ruled
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GAB> that there are some restrictions on the first amendment.
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GAB> They teach you that your very first year of law school.
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I'll agree with Owen on this one. Muddied my ass. How hard is it to
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chose between a Republocrat or a Demipublican? Not very. Shouting
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down has grown to become the answer because the government, over a
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span of years, and with the help of the Courts -has- limited the
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rights we have as citizens under the First Amendment. If you
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question the policy about terrorism, or drugs, or Iraq, or Bush in
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general, you're aiding terrorism. If you challenge the beliefs of
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the folks attending the various shadowy G8 conferences, you're an
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anarchist, and you're herded off to a 'designated protest spot' miles
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away from anything. Part of the point of speech is to be -heard-.
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I can scream on my soapbox in the forest somewhere, and while thats
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speech, its not effective speech. People are screaming and shouting
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over the political figures because they cannot be heard in any other
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way.
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GAB> I think that given the information as laid out by the story,
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GAB> Mr. O'Neill has confused free speech with action. Free
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GAB> speech or even protected speech as practiced by almost
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GAB> every American seems to involve the ability to communicate
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GAB> an idea to an unknown audience. Action involves directing
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GAB> a specific comment to a specific well-defined individual or audience
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GAB> that has immediate, harmful, and sometimes physical
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GAB> effects that is easily forseeable by any reasonable person.
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Getting back to my original point. How do you communicate an idea to
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an unknown audience, if you're miles from where the audience is? How
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do you bypass the rules for being -miles- away from the audience
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without violating the rules of the regime? I don't think Mr. Nell was
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throwing pies at Bush. A sign, the last time I checked, didn't cause
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physical injury, or even emotional harm. If I remember Cohen v.
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California, 403 U.S. 15 (1971), its not the individual speaking that
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has the requirement to desist, but the individual listening who has
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the option to leave.
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Just my .02, while its still considered legal.
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--
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Best regards,
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bitbitch mailto:bitbitch@magnesium.net
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