Mayra. 21. Senior at uni. Queer. Preferred pronouns are she/her. History major, Psych/Japanese minor. Interests: the educational system, Homestuck, languages, feminism, GSM (Gender and Sexual Minorities) rights, sewing, theatre, Les Miserables, Ib, and writing/drawing. Fights windmills in her spare time.
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"Anti-Occupy" law ends American's right to protest

WASHINGTON, D.C., August 1, 2012 — I was stunned upon hearing a news report about a protest going on in China. Teachers, parents with their young, school-age children and pro-democracy activitists (one estimate was 90,000 people) marched in Hong Kong to government headquarters last Sunday to publicly protest a new required “Patriotism” class, to be taught in the school system starting in 2015. The protestors think that the effort of the Chinese government here is to brainwash their kids in favor of communism. 

What stunned me was that this protest, in China, against the government’s upcoming policy, at the government headquarters, would not now be tolerated here in the United States of America.

Thanks to almost zero media coverage, few of us know about a law passed this past March, severely limiting our right to protest. The silence may have been due to the lack of controversy in bringing the bill to law: Only three of our federal elected officials voted against the bill’s passage. Yes, Republicans and Democrats agreed on something almost 100%. 

We have lived through a number of protests, large and small, and if we are like most, we shrug because the protestors or their message is either irrelevant or objectionable to us, and does not affect us. This non-interest is the case even when some of the protestors and some of their messages are highly objectionable.

Recent example Number One are the military funeral protests by the Westboro Baptist Church. This very small, anti-gay group from Topeka, Kansas says that God is punishing the United States for accepting gay rights by killing US troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. They protested at the funeral of Elizabeth Edwards, wife of former presidential candidate John Edwards, because she supported gay rights. Our Supreme Court upheld the rights of these bigots to continue their protests. We hated the opinion while we recognized its correctness.

The First Amendment to our Constitution guarantees us the rights of free speech and assembly. A fundamental purpose of our free speech guarantee is to invite dispute. Protests can and have been the catalyst for positive change. Thus while we despise that protestors can burn our flag as protected political speech, and we hate that Neo-Nazis can march down our streets, we recognize the rights of these groups to do what they do and we send our troops across the world to fight for these rights. 

Last year’s “occupy movement” scared the government. On March 8, President Obama signed a law that makes protesting more difficult and more criminal. The law is titled the Federal Restricted Buildings and Grounds Improvement Act, and it passed unanimously in the Senate and with only three “no” votes in the House. It was called the “Trepass Bill” by Congress and the “anti-Occupy law” by everyone else who commented.

The law “improves” public grounds by forcing people - protestors - elsewhere. It amends an older law that made it a federal crime to “willfully and knowingly” enter a restricted space. Now you will be found guilty of this offense if you simply “knowingly” enter a restricted area, even if you did not know it was illegal to do so. The Department of Homeland Security can designate an event as one of “national significance,” making protests or demonstrations near the event illegal.

The law makes it punishable by up to ten years in jail to protest anywhere the Secret Service “is or will be temporarily visiting,” or anywhere they might be guarding someone.  Does the name Secrettell you anything about your chances of knowing where they are?  The law allows for conviction if you are “disorderly or disruptive,” or if you “impede or disrupt the orderly conduct of Government business or official functions.”  You can no longer heckle or “boo” at a political candidate’s speech, as that would be disruptive.

After you swallow all of this and correctly conclude that it is now very easy to be prosecuted for virtually any public protest, you should brace yourself and appreciate that it is even worse. Today, any event that is officially defined as a National Special Security Event has Secret Service protection. This can include sporting events and concerts. 

The timing of the law was not coincidental. The bill was presented to the Senate, after House passage, on November 17, 2011, during an intense nationwide effort to stop the Occupy Wall Street protests. Two days before, hundreds of New York police conducted a raid on the demonstrators’ encampment in Zucotti Park, shutting it down and placing barricades.

This law chips away our First Amendment rights. Its motivation is 100 percent politically based, as it was designed to silence those who would protest around politicians giving speeches. Both Republicans and Democrats agreed they did not want hecklers at their rallies. If you want to protest a politician speaking to a crowd now, you can do so maybe a half mile or so away.

We used to have a right of access to streets, sidewalks, and public parks to  engage in political discussion and protest. The government should be able to impose reasonable limits to ensure public order, but that power must have a limit; it must never be used to quell unpopular opinion or to discriminate against disfavored speakers.  Protestors must be allowed to be in the same place at the same time as the speaker they oppose. The presence of a Secret Service Agent (remember, how do we know they are there?) should not prevent us from lawfully, non-violently organizing and demonstrating against a cause or a speaker we disfavor. 

Write to Congress. Protest this anti-protest law.

(Source: windupbirdchronicle)

ALERT from Occupy Portland

ALERT! A man named Justin James Bridges, musician & ASL translator for Occupy Portland General Assembly, was assaulted by @PortlandPolice today during camp clean out.

He was beaten repeatedly in the back and has now lost use of his right arm. Though Justin was lying on the ground in compliance, Portland Police continuously beat him in the back with clubs until his eyes rolled back in his head. Fellow protesters thought he was dead. He is now in critical care.

IF YOU HAVE ANY INFORMATION, ESPECIALLY PHOTOGRAPHIC EVIDENCE, DO NOT HESITATE TO COME FORWARD. National Lawyers’ Guild # 503-902-5340. Protect rights, protect the truth.

Please share. And if you have info or evidence, for the sake of justice, come forward.

(Source: twitlonger.com)

provocatoria:

zedweiller:

I think that the material conditions to fully eradicate sexism and racism will only exist after we start to dismantle capitalism, but we cannot reach a point where that dismantling is even possible without acknowledging that sexism and racism divide the working class against itself SO WE GOTTA TAKE OUT THE DIVIDERS!
That is, attack ruling class institutions that propagandize such shit, AND AND confront backward members of our own class, like the person on the left in this comic. 
The relationship between oppression and class struggle is deeply dialectical - success in either is built on co-prioritizing each. You can’t try to have one without the other without tipping over the whole works. 

Z, I love you so much. The following comes out of a place of love. haha
When I read “We have to take out the dividers”, my brain also reads “We shouldn’t talk about race and gender so much” or “We have to remove your identities to make ‘our’ issue more whole” and “Our issue is more important than yours”.
I almost think it’s an issue of ownership. The Occupy Movement is, without a doubt, white-male-centered. The issues that are being addressed are considered universal (not just because they are) but because they affect white men. Whereas, police brutality and poverty were previously billed by the media as problems suffered by POC and poor, single, mothers - and there was no uprising that drew months of media attention and a brand-name radical movement. Why? Because white guys weren’t affected. Now that they are on a very material level, it is all of a sudden EVERYONE ELSES job to put their silly identities away and make way for the real, true, revolution, right? WRONG. All of my problems, are your problems and all of yours are mine. Regardless if I’ve actually experienced them or not. Why don’t these activists fight racism/sexism with the passion that they do capitalism?
The material conditions that are needed to begin eradicating racism and sexism exist on an individual level, within activist communities. Those material conditions aren’t as complicated and sticky to address as the structural material conditions needed to fully eradicate sexism and racism. Those material conditions are white men who monopolize activist spaces sitting down for a second and hearing out POC and women and then proceeding to centralize discussions of race/gender (and sexuality) ALONG SIDE of critiques of corporate power and capitalism. 
That is how we start. I’m not interested in simply waiting for capitalism to fall and THEN we can talk about race and gender. It needs to happen now. It needs to stop being denied. It needs to stop taking a backseat.
I’m not denying that the relationship between race, gender and capitalism is complex, but I feel like a different complexity is being created by white activists who simply don’t want to address these issues. Talking about race and gender is only divisive because white activists make it that way. When I say something regarding race, I’m not putting all the white folks in the corner to wear dunce caps, I’m talking about real shit.
This is just another way that white male activists get to dictate the way that race is discussed. Instead of being a NECESSARY building block to a fully inclusive movement, race and gender billed as divisive because it hurts all the white folks’ feelings.

^What provocatoria said, except I’m not honestly sure about dismantling capitalism. I think it needs to be drastically reformed, but… yeah, I’m leaving the realm of Things I Know Enough About to Maintain a Discussion Over, so I’m going to shut up now.

provocatoria:

zedweiller:

I think that the material conditions to fully eradicate sexism and racism will only exist after we start to dismantle capitalism, but we cannot reach a point where that dismantling is even possible without acknowledging that sexism and racism divide the working class against itself SO WE GOTTA TAKE OUT THE DIVIDERS!

That is, attack ruling class institutions that propagandize such shit, AND AND confront backward members of our own class, like the person on the left in this comic. 

The relationship between oppression and class struggle is deeply dialectical - success in either is built on co-prioritizing each. You can’t try to have one without the other without tipping over the whole works. 

Z, I love you so much. The following comes out of a place of love. haha

When I read “We have to take out the dividers”, my brain also reads “We shouldn’t talk about race and gender so much” or “We have to remove your identities to make ‘our’ issue more whole” and “Our issue is more important than yours”.

I almost think it’s an issue of ownership. The Occupy Movement is, without a doubt, white-male-centered. The issues that are being addressed are considered universal (not just because they are) but because they affect white men. Whereas, police brutality and poverty were previously billed by the media as problems suffered by POC and poor, single, mothers - and there was no uprising that drew months of media attention and a brand-name radical movement. Why? Because white guys weren’t affected. Now that they are on a very material level, it is all of a sudden EVERYONE ELSES job to put their silly identities away and make way for the real, true, revolution, right? WRONG. All of my problems, are your problems and all of yours are mine. Regardless if I’ve actually experienced them or not. Why don’t these activists fight racism/sexism with the passion that they do capitalism?

The material conditions that are needed to begin eradicating racism and sexism exist on an individual level, within activist communities. Those material conditions aren’t as complicated and sticky to address as the structural material conditions needed to fully eradicate sexism and racism. Those material conditions are white men who monopolize activist spaces sitting down for a second and hearing out POC and women and then proceeding to centralize discussions of race/gender (and sexuality) ALONG SIDE of critiques of corporate power and capitalism. 

That is how we start. I’m not interested in simply waiting for capitalism to fall and THEN we can talk about race and gender.
It needs to happen now.
It needs to stop being denied.
It needs to stop taking a backseat.

I’m not denying that the relationship between race, gender and capitalism is complex, but I feel like a different complexity is being created by white activists who simply don’t want to address these issues. Talking about race and gender is only divisive because white activists make it that way. When I say something regarding race, I’m not putting all the white folks in the corner to wear dunce caps, I’m talking about real shit.

This is just another way that white male activists get to dictate the way that race is discussed. Instead of being a NECESSARY building block to a fully inclusive movement, race and gender billed as divisive because it hurts all the white folks’ feelings.

^What provocatoria said, except I’m not honestly sure about dismantling capitalism. I think it needs to be drastically reformed, but… yeah, I’m leaving the realm of Things I Know Enough About to Maintain a Discussion Over, so I’m going to shut up now.

(Source: bibliofemme)

provocatoria:

cuntygrrl:

youarenotyou:

some1simple:

youarenotyou:

fattiesinlove:

thecurvature:

*blinks*
Okay, I’m trying to take a really deep breath here, but …
Are you telling me that some motherfucking white dudebro actually got out a motherfucking pen and a big old sheet of poster board and seriously sat his ass down and wrote out “Why are you harassing us white kids when you could be arresting BLACK PEOPLE??? Who have serious medical conditions (i.e. addiction) but no access to treatment? ISN’T SOCIETY CONCERNED ABOUT HOW THE POLICE ARE CURRENTLY FAILING THE RACIST PRISON INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX BY PICKING ON WHITE FOLKS???”
And then
And THEN
A whole bunch of OTHER motherfuckers got on tumblr and reblogged his goddamn picture without a single fucking critical word?
Because apparently they see this sign and think “YEAH. He’s right! WE SHOULD BE ARRESTING BLACK PEOPLE INSTEAD.”
Yeah, okay, if you did not see an immediate problem with this sign the minute you saw it, I am totally fucking DONE with YOU.

I could think of about ten other things this guy could have wrote on a sign to make it more effective and less awful. 



thecurvature: You’re implying crack can only be sold by black people.

Uh… probably because the vast majority of people arrested on drug charges, especially crack, are Black. Pay attention. 
“Because of its relative low cost, crack cocaine is more accessible to poor people, many of whom are African Americans. Conversely, powder cocaine is much more expensive and tends to be used by more affluent white Americans.
The report includes recent data that indicates that African Americans make up 15 percent of the country’s drug users, yet they make up 37 percent of those arrested for drug violations, 59 percent of those convicted, and 74 percent of those sentenced to prison for a drug offense. More than 80 percent of the defendants sentenced for crack offenses are African American, despite the fact that more than 66 percent of crack users are white or Hispanic.”

losing so much faith in the occupy movement every day

A friend of mine in Seattle sent me a picture of a different sign that said this exact phrase taped to some trashcans at OccupySeattle.
It is not just this one white guy who feels this way, there are plenty of racist white folks in the Occupy movement
….but will you see people who are putting OWS on a pedestal talking about race? no. If they do, they’re trying to get you to shut up about race by appeasing you, there is no discussion or consideration of race within the Occupy Movement at large. When I say that, they’ll think “Well why don’t you get more involved and bring it up”….my response is fuck you, if you’re so fucking radical that classwarfare is coming out of your asshole….why don’t YOU bring it up? yeah, that’s what I fucking thought.

Um… I’m actually among those white people who reblogged this picture a while back, but I wasn’t aware of the racist implications when I did. I apologize, and I’ll pay closer attention in the future.

provocatoria:

cuntygrrl:

youarenotyou:

some1simple:

youarenotyou:

fattiesinlove:

thecurvature:

*blinks*

Okay, I’m trying to take a really deep breath here, but …

Are you telling me that some motherfucking white dudebro actually got out a motherfucking pen and a big old sheet of poster board and seriously sat his ass down and wrote out “Why are you harassing us white kids when you could be arresting BLACK PEOPLE??? Who have serious medical conditions (i.e. addiction) but no access to treatment? ISN’T SOCIETY CONCERNED ABOUT HOW THE POLICE ARE CURRENTLY FAILING THE RACIST PRISON INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX BY PICKING ON WHITE FOLKS???”

And then

And THEN

A whole bunch of OTHER motherfuckers got on tumblr and reblogged his goddamn picture without a single fucking critical word?

Because apparently they see this sign and think “YEAH. He’s right! WE SHOULD BE ARRESTING BLACK PEOPLE INSTEAD.”

Yeah, okay, if you did not see an immediate problem with this sign the minute you saw it, I am totally fucking DONE with YOU.

I could think of about ten other things this guy could have wrote on a sign to make it more effective and less awful. 

thecurvature: You’re implying crack can only be sold by black people.

Uh… probably because the vast majority of people arrested on drug charges, especially crack, are Black. Pay attention. 

Because of its relative low cost, crack cocaine is more accessible to poor people, many of whom are African Americans. Conversely, powder cocaine is much more expensive and tends to be used by more affluent white Americans.

The report includes recent data that indicates that African Americans make up 15 percent of the country’s drug users, yet they make up 37 percent of those arrested for drug violations, 59 percent of those convicted, and 74 percent of those sentenced to prison for a drug offense. More than 80 percent of the defendants sentenced for crack offenses are African American, despite the fact that more than 66 percent of crack users are white or Hispanic.

losing so much faith in the occupy movement every day

A friend of mine in Seattle sent me a picture of a different sign that said this exact phrase taped to some trashcans at OccupySeattle.

It is not just this one white guy who feels this way, there are plenty of racist white folks in the Occupy movement

….but will you see people who are putting OWS on a pedestal talking about race? no. If they do, they’re trying to get you to shut up about race by appeasing you, there is no discussion or consideration of race within the Occupy Movement at large. When I say that, they’ll think “Well why don’t you get more involved and bring it up”….my response is fuck you, if you’re so fucking radical that classwarfare is coming out of your asshole….why don’t YOU bring it up? yeah, that’s what I fucking thought.

Um… I’m actually among those white people who reblogged this picture a while back, but I wasn’t aware of the racist implications when I did. I apologize, and I’ll pay closer attention in the future.

(Source: hasslechassels)

URGENT FROM TAHRIR

endlessconflict:

“We are in the midst of a decisive battle in the face of a potentially terminal crackdown. Over the past 72 hours the army has launched a ceaseless assault on revolutionaries in Tahrir Square and squares across Egypt. Over 2000 of us have been injured. More than 30 of us have been murdered. Just in Cairo alone. In the last 48 hours.”

But the revolutionaries keep coming. Hundreds of thousands are in Tahrir and in other squares across the country. We are facing  down their gas, cudgels, shotguns and machine-gun fire. The army and police attack again and again, but we are holding the lines, holding them back. The dead and wounded are carried away on foot or motorbikes and others take their place.

The violence will escalate – for WE WILL NOT MOVE. The junta does not want to give up its power. We want the junta gone.

The future of the revolution hangs in the balance; those of us in the square are ready to die for freedom and social justice. The butchers attacking us are willing to kill us to stay in control.

I am crying my eyes out because the people of Egypt are pleading for help. They are DYING. Right this second, and this second and this second. And nobody is helping. Why? Why? 

People are dying for their rights, for their freedom, and they are getting no help. It’s not right. My God, what has the world come to? Why is there so much hate? 

(Source)

Signal boost. This is terrifying.

The silence needs to be broken.

Rule of Lord The Republican plan to nullify the courts and establish Christian theocracy.

lakrymosa:

livealifethatscompletelyfree:

WHAT THE ABSOLUTE FUCK???????????????????????

From Slate.com:

The Republican plan to nullify the courts and establish Christian theocracy.

124002711 Rick Santorum, Newt Gingrich, and Michele Bachmann

Photograph by Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images.

Is the United States sliding toward theocracy? That’s what Republican presidential candidates have told us for more than a year. Radical Islam, they’ve argued, is on the verge of taking over our country through Sharia law. But this weekend, at an Iowa forum sparsely covered by the press, the candidates made clear that they don’t mind theocracy—in fact, they’d like to impose it—as long as it’s Christian.

You can find video of Saturday’s “Thanksgiving Family Forum” on the Web sites of two organizations that sponsored it: CitizenLink and the Family Leader. Here are highlights of the candidates’ remarks.

1. Religious Americans must fight back against nonbelievers. To quote Herman Cain:

What we are seeing is a wider gap between people of faith and people of nonfaith. … Those of us that are people of faith and strong faith have allowed the nonfaith element to intimidate us into not fighting back. I believe we’ve been too passive. We have maybe pushed back, but as people of faith, we have not fought back.

2. The religious values we must fight for are Judeo-Christian. Rick Perry warned:

Somebody’s values are going to decide what the Congress votes on or what the president of the United States is going to deal with. And the question is: Whose values? And let me tell you, it needs to be our values—values and virtues that this country was based upon in Judeo-Christian founding fathers.

3. Our laws and our national identity are Judeo-Christian. Michele Bachmann explained:

American exceptionalism is grounded on the Judeo-Christian ethic, which is really based upon the 10 Commandments. The 10 Commandments were the foundation for our law. That’s what Blackstone said—the English jurist—and our founders looked to Blackstone for the foundation of our law. That’s our law.

4. No religion but Christianity will suffice. Perry declared, “In every person’s heart, in every person’s soul, there is a hole that can only be filled by the Lord Jesus Christ.”

5. God created our government. Bachmann told the audience:

I have a biblical worldview. And I think, going back to the Declaration of Independence, the fact that it’s God who created us—if He created us, He created government. And the government is on His shoulders, as the book of Isaiah says.

6. U.S. law should follow God’s law. As Rick Santorum put it:

Unlike Islam, where the higher law and the civil law are the same, in our case, we have civil laws. But our civil laws have to comport with the higher law. … As long as abortion is legal—at least according to the Supreme Court—legal in this country, we will never have rest, because that law does not comport with God’s law.

7. Anything that’s immoral by religious standards should be outlawed. Santorum again:

God gave us rights, but He also gave us laws upon which to exercise those rights, and that’s what you ought to do. And, by the way, the law should comport—the laws of this country should comport with that moral vision. Why? Because the law is a teacher. If something is illegal in this country because it is immoral and it is wrong and it is harmful to society, saying that it is illegal and putting a law in place teaches. It’s not just—laws cannot be neutral. There is no neutral, Ron. There is only moral and immoral. And the law has to reflect what is right and good and just for our society.

8. The federal government should impose this morality on the states. Santorum once more:

The idea that the only things that the states are prevented from doing are only things specifically established in the Constitution is wrong. Our country is based on a moral enterprise. Gay marriage is wrong. As Abraham Lincoln said, the states do not have the right to do wrong. … As a president, I will get involved, because the states do not have the right to undermine the basic, fundamental values that hold this country together.

9. Congress should erase the judiciary’s power to review moral laws. Newt Gingrich suggested:

I am intrigued with something which Robby George at Princeton has come up with, which is an interpretation of the 14th Amendment, in which it says that Congress shall define personhood. That’s very clearly in the 14th Amendment. And part of what I would like to explore is whether or not you could get the Congress to pass a law which simply says: Personhood begins at conception. And therefore—and you could, in the same law, block the court and just say, ‘This will not be subject to review,’ which we have precedent for. You would therefore not have to have a constitutional amendment, because the Congress would have exercised its authority under the 14th Amendment to define life, and to therefore undo all of Roe vs. Wade, for the entire country, in one legislative action.

Gingrich said the same strategy could secure the Defense of Marriage Act, which bars federal recognition of same-sex marriages and protects the right of states to disregard same-sex marriages performed in other states. In his words, “You could repass DOMA and make it not appealable to the court, period.”

10. Courts that get in the way should be abolished. Gingrich again:

The simplest first step which I would take is to propose—and I hope this will be a significant part of the campaign next year—I have proposed to abolish the court of Judge Biery in San Antonio, who on June 1 issued an order that said, not only could students not pray at their graduation, they couldn’t use the word benediction, the could not say the word prayer, they could not say the word God, they could not ask people to stand for a moment of silence, they couldn’t use the word invocation, and if he broke any of those, he would put their superintendent in jail. I regard that as such a ruthless anti-American statement that he should not be on the court, and I would move to literally abolish his court, so that he could go back to private practice, as a signal to the courts.

Biery’s order was an overreach. In fact, it was overturned two days later by an appeals court. But he’s only the first target of the anti-judicial purge. The next words after Gingrich’s threat came from Santorum, who said: “I agree with a lot of what has just been said here. I would go farther—one step farther, Newt. I would abolish the entire Ninth Circuit.”

11. The purge of judges should be based on public opinion. Gingrich once more:

Part of the purpose of singling out Judge Biery and eliminating his job is to communicate the standard that the two elected branches have the power and the authority to educate the judiciary when it deviates too far from the American people. And I think you would probably take that approach.

12. Freedom means obeying morality. Santorum concluded, “Our founders understood liberty is not what you want to do, but what you ought to do. That’s what liberty really is about.”

There was one voice of dissent among the candidates. Ron Paul, the libertarian congressman from Texas, argued that people should be allowed to make bad decisions, that freedom of choice in religious matters should extend to atheists, and that powers not reserved to the federal government should be left to the states. But in a field of candidates bent on legislating Christian morality and purging uncooperative judges, Paul stood alone. Protecting America is too important to let the Constitution get in the way.

William Saletan’s latest short takes on the news, via Twitter:

actually perry

that hole in my soul can only be filled

by in-and-out.

LILY

TAKE ME AWAY TO FINLANDIA

I DON’T WANT TO LIVE HERE ANYMORE

I lost a child to the Occupy movement.

itsallgone:

Just thirteen days ago I was eight months pregnant.

Everyone loved rubbing my belly.

I even wore my “Baby On Board” shirt over my gigantic stomach.

Read More

Going to say MASSIVE trigger warnings for police brutality and institutionalized victim-blaming on the part of the ex here.

This is the most heart-wrenchingly awful thing I’ve read connected to this movement. I don’t know what sickens me more—the way the cops brutalized her or her ex’s and others’ assumptions about her suffering.

Ma’am, if you’re reading this, my heart goes out to you. I can’t imagine what you must be suffering right now, and I will keep you in my thoughts or prayers—whichever you’d prefer. Please know that we are here for you, no matter what.