Tag Archives: free speech

Go Stephanie!

Stephanie Miller Outfoxes FOX News

Miller faces Hannity and Colmes in a showdown on coverage of Cindy Sheehan. Miller does quite well for herself in face of the opposition.

Commentaries on last week’s rallying events

NOTE: If you decide to submit a Letter to the Editor or Opinion Piece, please also send it to Dee so that it can be published here, just in case the papers decide not to publish it!

Here it is, folks – Today’s commentaries on last week’s events surrounding the visit of the Terrible Three to Utah (Rumsfeld, Rice, Bush). I would urge everyone to read these and formulate your own responses. Contacts and guidelines are below the links to the commentaries.

Salt Lake Tribune
Commentary
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Here it comes…….More Media Monitoring

The Pentagon is accepting bids for a $20 million contract to “monitor” the media for tonality in its coverage of Iraq. The Pentagon’s position is that this is “necessary” in the war on terrorism.

Pentagon Moves Toward Monitoring Media

Friday September 1, 2006 1:16 AM
AP Photo USGF101
MATTHEW PERRONE
AP Business Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) – The U.S. command in Baghdad is seeking bidders for a two-year, $20 million public relations contract that calls for monitoring the tone of Iraq news stories filed by U.S. and foreign media.

Proposals, due Sept. 6, ask companies to show how they’ll “provide continuous monitoring and near-real time reporting of Iraqi, pan-Arabic, international, and U.S. media,” according to the solicitation issued last week.
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U T A H   V O I C E S

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                            Press Contact: Greg Felice       

August 14, 2006                                                                                   801-979-2210

                                                                                                            utahvoices@gmail.com

 

Concerned Utahns of all affiliations putting politics aside to stage protest during President Bush’s visit

A recently formed group of Utah citizens including veterans, professionals, retirees, students, business owners, and clergy, is massing an entirely new kind of rally to coincide with President Bush and Secretary Condoleeza Rice’s visit to the American Legion convention.

The rally will be on August 30th, 2006, from 11am-1pm on the West Side of Washington Square Park, and is expected to draw thousands.

“Even here in Utah, the reddest state in the nation, we feel an obligation to speak out. More and more Americans are agreeing on one point: The Bush administration and its supporters in Congress are hurting America.” says Penny Breiman, a local businessperson and one of the event’s participants.

With organizers comprised of Utahns from both sides of the political spectrum, interest in the event has been unprecedented.

“You hear Utahns everywhere voicing serious concerns about this administration, in hushed tones. We think it’s time point out the elephant in the corner”, states David Pace, another participant. “Republicans and Democrats are gravely concerned about the Bush administration, with the misguided war in Iraq as the tip of the iceberg. We want leadership for a safe, strong, and prosperous America. We want a way forward that encourages America’s growth while integrating common-sense policies on the environment. We’re just not getting that from this administration, or from the rubber stamp congress that supports them.”

Reflecting the broader audience of those concerned, the atmosphere of this event is decidedly centrist. “I’m dressing nicely for the event, and I’m asking my friends to do the same.”, says Misty Fowler, who plans on attending the event.

The rally will consist of a mixture of speakers from across the political spectrum, local bands, and classical musicians, among others.


For more information, visit www.utahvoices.org.

Free Speech Zone in Today’s News

My good friend and fellow activist and sister cheerleader has her shop featured in today’s news:

The Free Speech Zone outfits progressives and extremists
Activists ‘R’ Us; Free Speech Zone outfits progressives

By Stephen Hunt
The Salt Lake Tribune


Activist proprietors Nate Smith and Raphael Cordray sit in the Free Speech Zone, a shop selling items related to left-wing ideas and issues. The merchandise includes bumper stickers and T-shirts with political slogans, and even toilet paper printed with President Bush’s face. Smith and Raphael named their store the areas to which protesters were restricted during the 2002 Olympics. (Ryan Galbraith/The Salt Lake Tribune ) after


The Free Speech Zone is not your garden-variety Sugar House retail outlet.
   Never mind the rock music, patchouli scent and posters of Malcolm X side by side with John Lennon, Martin Luther King Jr. and Utah’s own martyr, Joe Hill.
   You can tell you’re somewhere left-of-center by the large, leering puppet of President Bush in the front window – his bloody hands crushing toy soldiers bearing stickers that shout, “Bring me home!”
   The store promotes politics, protest and what owners Raphael Cordray and Nate Smith call “radical info.”
   “We are an outpost and haven for insurgent social activists deep in the heart of ultra-conservative Utah,” says Smith. Located at 2144 S. Highland Drive, the store is named after the designated “free speech zones” where protesters were obliged to gather during the 2002 Olympic Games, a restriction Cordray considers a “crackdown” on First Amendment rights.
   Since opening in April 2005, the owners say they have gained the support of local artists, activists and organizers for peace and justice, labor and human rights.
   Cordray and Smith say they played “an essential role” in organizing antiwar demonstrations in Salt Lake City last fall, and the store continues to be a rallying point for demonstrators.
   Cordray and Smith say they are currently gearing up to protest President Bush’s Aug. 30 visit to the Beehive State.
   “We intend to go beyond just business as usual,” says Smith. “It’s radical. Radical politics and social-movement building are at the foundation. A spirit of ’60s activism exemplifies what we are doing.”
   The store sells T-shirts, hats, purses, fleece baby booties and other items. Much of the clothing, as well as the bumper stickers, buttons and pins, carry political messages.
   Cordray says rolls of toilet paper with a picture of Bush on every square are particularly popular right now.
   “You lay it on the surface of the water and take aim,” she says with a smile.
   Cordray calls her shop “the anti-Wal-Mart. There’s stuff here that you can’t find anywhere else in the world.”
   She carries only fair trade products that are made in America. “The people producing the products are getting the reward,” Cordray says.
   Her suppliers include local independent artists, worker collectives and union shops. Cordray herself makes many of the clothing and jewelry items on display.
   She also sell books, including the latest incarnation of the infamous Anarchist Cookbook, titled Recipes for Disaster.
   You can also find The Heretic’s Guide to the Bible,



 

A Trouble Maker’s Handbook: How to Fight Back Where You Work and Win and $2 pocket editions of the U.S. Constitution. There are free pamphlets about civil rights, gender equality and alternative media publications.
   They are also screening free films on Friday nights at 7 p.m. through Aug. 25. They recently showed documentaries about antilogging activists in Oregon and protest actions at the 1999 Seattle World Trade Organization Convention.
   Cordray, 36, and Smith, 28, met at a protest planning meeting and are now partners in life as well as business, they said. Both work for the state and take turns at the store, which is not yet breaking even.
   “It’s not about becoming a millionaire,” says Cordray. “But I’ve got to pay the rent.”
   Cordray started out selling fleece baby booties and other handmade items at the Sunday drum circle in Liberty Park. She says she accomplished two goals by opening the store: She got in out of the weather and found an outlet for her vocal political opinions, which became more strident prior to the 2000 election, in which she supported Ralph Nader.
   Working at the store allows her to converse with like-minded people. “People come in all day long and talk about the war,” she says.
   Cordray does not support such organizations as the National Rifle Association. But she strives to sell products and promote messages that are inclusive of most other groups, including Latinos, Native Americans and the gay and lesbian community.
   Not everyone is appreciative.
   “During Gay Pride I do rainbows, and I’ve gotten lots of spit on the windows,” she says. “That’s OK.”
   But as long as it is nonviolent, Cordray supports self-expression.
   “I want people to think and feel and engage in things,” Cordray says, even things that make them angry.
   “This business is about being outspoken,” she says.
   Hey, it’s the Free Speech Zone: Say what you want to say.

Free Speech – Use It Or Lose It

That’s the motto for  Freeway Blogger , which has some great ideas for excerising one’s free speech – outside the typical rally-type events. They also have a daily web log.

 

Rocky on Democracy Now!

I got notice last week that Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson would be featured on the Pacifica Radio Program, Democracy Now! in a segment on the immigration march/rally in Salt Lake. I wasn’t able to listen to it live, but thankfully Rocky’s website has it archived. The clip has great photos of the march.

You can listen and/or watch the interview at the Salt Lake City Mayor’s Website.

Sandra Day O’Connor in SLC

I found it surprising that the online edition of today’s Salt Lake Tribune did not have on its front page the visit of Sandra Day O’Connor to Salt Lake this weekend. (However I am pleased that the top headline is students protesting immigration legislation.) The article on O’Connor appears first in the Utah section of today’s paper.

O’Connor, 76-year-old retired Supreme Court Justice, spoke of her concerns about the state affairs with the U.S. Government to an audience of “lawyers, elected leaders and dignitaries” at a dinner for the Constitutional Services Project.

“We as a nation face many challenges,” O’Connor said. “I’m worried about the stability of the constitutional system of checks and balances that has served us so well for 200 years.”

After taking dinner attendees on an imaginary trip to Phildelphia, PA of the Constitutional Convention delegates meeting during the summer of 1787, O’Connor stated: Modern Americans need to learn the same commitment to the document. Each generation has to re-commit itself to the Constitution,” she said. “It’s not simple work. It takes time and energy and the kind of commitment our forefathers had. It isn’t passed down through the gene pool.”

O’Connor sadly attested to the fact that civics education is lacking in our schools and cited some statistics of people’s misperceptions of what the First Amendment is. O’Connor stated “What matters is not whether people can recite part of the Constitution or pass a test,” O’Connor said. “What matters is that people understand the principles that give it life today.”

I feel so fortunate that I teach in a school where an integral component of the curriculum is incorporating the teaching and principles of the First Amendment.

Air America

Today marks the two year anniversary of the debut of Air America. Intended as a “voice for liberals”, it first aired on five stations.

Listeners can listen via the web to any of its shows. A featured talk show host is Al Franken of The Al Franken Show. Last August Al Franken had Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson on his show after the August 22nd protest of George Bush when GW was in town for the VFW conference. The protest attracted abotu 3,000 people. The Al Franken show also used one of my photographs of that protest on the tv version of that show and they sent me a DVD of that show as a thank you for allowing them to use the photograph.

Brace Yourselves: Patriot Act is Renewed

I have posted some pieces here on the Patriot Act Extension Proposal and the debate over its renewal.

It’s official.

Yesterday the U.S. House narrowly voted to renew the Patriot Act in a “cliffhanger vote”.

The vote was 280-138, just two more than needed under special rules that required a two-thirds majority. The close vote caught senior Republican aides in both chambers by surprise.
Nonetheless, the vote marked a political victory for Bush and will allow congressional Republicans facing midterm elections this year to continue touting a tough-on-terror stance. Bush’s approval ratings have suffered in recent months after revelations that he had authorized secret, warrantless wiretapping of Americans.

Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, had this to say: “I rise in strong opposition to this legislation because it offers only a superficial reform that will have little if any impact on safeguarding our civil liberties.”

Provisions of the renewed act:
The package renews 16 expiring provisions of the original Patriot Act, including one that allows federal officials to obtain “tangible items” like business records, including those from libraries and bookstores, for foreign intelligence and international terrorism investigations.
Other provisions would clarify that foreign intelligence or counterintelligence officers should share information obtained as part of a criminal investigation with counterparts in domestic law enforcement agencies.
Forced by Feingold’s filibuster, Congress and the White House have agreed to new curbs on the Patriot Act’s powers.
These restrictions would:
— Give recipients of court-approved subpoenas for information in terrorist investigations the right to challenge a requirement that they refrain from telling anyone.
— Eliminate a requirement that an individual provide the FBI with the name of a lawyer consulted about a National Security Letter, which is a demand for records issued by investigators.
— Clarify that most libraries are not subject to demands in those letters for information about suspected terrorists.
The legislation also takes aim at the distribution and use of methamphetamine by limiting the supply of a key ingredient found in everyday cold and allergy medicines.
Yet another provision is designed to strengthen port security by imposing strict punishments on crew members who impede or mislead law enforcement officers trying to board their ships.