Don’t Cage Dissent




<http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20080813_dont_cage_dissent/>http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20080813_dont_cage_dissent/




Posted on Aug 13, 2008

By Amy Goodman

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.

Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a 
daily international TV/radio news hour airing on 
more than 700 stations in North America.

© 2008 Amy Goodman

Distributed by King Features Syndicate


A Progressive Journal of News and Opinion. 
Editor, Robert Scheer. Publisher, Zuade Kaufman.
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