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NY Times, Post & El Diario Join Demand for Right to
Protest at GOP Convention - Your Action is Needed Now

August 29!  Mark your calendars and join us in New York
City for a massive demonstration when we say NO to the
Bush administration's empire-building and war-making
agenda, NO to their domestic and foreign policies.
United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ) is organizing a
not-to-be-missed protest for Sunday, August 29th, a
curtain raiser for the Republican National Convention
which begins the following day.

We want you to know about an important development in
the preparations for this protest. NYC Mayor Michael
Bloomberg and his Parks Department have refused our
application for a permit to rally on the Great Lawn in
Central Park, the sight of huge political, cultural and
religious events in the past.

We urge you to place a call to the mayor of NYC to
protest the city's outrageous denial of our right to
rally in the single best location for this event. For
the second time in a little over a year, George W.
Bush's buddy NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg has moved to
block a major anti-war, social justice demonstration:
remember Feb. 15th, 2003!

UFPJ has launched a campaign to get Bloomberg to change
his mind. Just today, the NY Times lead editorial
supports our right to rally on the Great Lawn, and in
the past week the NY Post and El Diario, two of NYC's
major dailies, also lent their editorial support. All
three of these editorials are below.

Now we need you, people from every corner of the
country, to flood the offices of the Mayor of NYC and
the Parks Commissioner with phone calls and faxes.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg:
phone   212-788-3000
fax   212-788-9711

Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe:
phone   212-360-1305
fax   212-360-1345

If the lines are busy please keep trying!

It is important to note that our request for the Great
Lawn is part of our overall plan for the demonstration.
We have applied to the NYC Police Department for a
permit to march. We will assemble south of Madison
Square Garden and take a route going directly past The
Garden, where the Republican Convention convenes the
next day. Our march route is a straight line up 8th
Avenue and its continuation, Central Park West, before
going into Central Park. The process of securing the
permit for the march is also far from complete and we
anticipate a struggle on this issue as well.

The plan for the August 29th demonstration was designed
to enable large numbers of people to participate: it is
the safest, easiest, most logical plan for this
demonstration. One reason cited in the letter denying
us permission to rally on the Great Lawn was that such
a large crowd would cause "enormous damage" to the
lawn.

We need to be very clear: this decision is not about
how many people can fit on the Great Lawn. This is
about politics and about everyone's right to protest.

Be sure to check our web site for updates on this
struggle to secure our right to protest in NYC, as well
as information about the full range of protest,
cultural and educational activities while the
Republican Party meets in New York:
http://www.unitedforpeace.org

Finally, we need your financial support to help ensure
the success of our efforts and for the organizing of
the August 29th march and rally. Click here to make
your on-line donation:
http://www.unitedforpeace.org/donate Thank you in
advance for your generous contributions.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

EDITORIALS IN SUPPORT OF UFPJ's RIGHT TO ASSEMBLE ON
THE GREAT LAWN

New York Times [New York, NY]
May 11, 2004

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/11/opinion/11TUE1.html

Lawn vs. Demonstrators

Mayor Michael Bloomberg lobbied hard to attract the
Republican convention to New York this summer. Now it's
coming, and with it swarms of protesters. The city is
obliged to offer hospitality to both the conventioneers
and the demonstrators. A group opposed to the Bush
administration's policies has applied to hold a march
and a rally in Central Park, but the city has turned
down the request without offering a reasonable
alternative site. The city's position shows a lack of
respect for the First Amendment, and is an invitation
to disorder.

The group, United for Peace and Justice, applied last
June for permits for a march and a rally of 250,000
people on the Great Lawn in Central Park. The group
says the Great Lawn is one of the few places in
Manhattan that can accommodate a rally this big. In the
past, it has been the site of numerous large protests,
concerts and other events, including a 1982 antinuclear
rally attended by 700,000 people.

But since then, the Parks Department has invested
millions of dollars in replanting and landscaping the
Great Lawn, including an elaborate underground
irrigation system. The city claims that the area is no
longer appropriate for very large events, and it is
directing the protesters to Flushing Meadows-Corona
Park in Queens instead of Central Park, or to a
circuitous route through the streets of the far West
Side.

Neither option is acceptable. City Hall may want to
declare Manhattan to be a no-free-speech zone for
convention week, but critics have a right to gather in
the same borough as the conventioneers they are
protesting. Making a parade route available in
Manhattan is not enough. The demonstrators have a right
to a central rallying place in which they can speak and
be heard. Depriving them of that would also present a
far greater threat of spontaneous protests the police
might not be able to control.

The city has not allowed events with hundreds of
thousands of people on the Great Lawn since it was
rebuilt in 1996, though it has given permits for
ticketed events sponsored by large corporations. The
carefully protected lawn is now lush and beautifully
landscaped, but at a cost. Allowing the exercise of
free speech is just as much a key function of the
city's parks as allowing softball or in-line skating.

The Parks Department's dismay at the possible
destruction of the grass and shrubbery is
understandable. But if the mayor wants to protect the
greenery, he is obligated to find an equally good place
for the demonstrations. In this era of highly scripted
conventions, the protests outside the convention hall
may offer the most authentic political discourse of the
week. When the nation watches what happens in New York
during the convention, we want everyone to fully
appreciate the glories of the city, and the way it has
come back from the disaster of 9/11. But viewers also
need to see a New York that is and always has been a
place in which political expression is valued and
protected.

==========

New York Post [New York, NY]
April 30, 2004

http://www.nypost.com/postopinion/editorial/19853.htm

EDITORIAL

LEFTIES ON THE LAWN

A gaggle of lefty agitators wants to convene in Central
Park this summer to give President Bush a little grief.
But the Parks Department says no, because they might
bend the grass.

Well, too bad about that. "Keep Off The Grass" appears
nowhere in the First Amendment.

United for Peace and Justice applied for a rally permit
for the park's Great Lawn for Aug. 29, the opening day
of the Republican National Convention.

The Parks folks said no on Wednesday, citing possible
damage to the lawn.

And, sure - it is a great lawn.

But it happens to belong to the people of New York
City.

If it were in Boston, it would be called the Common - a
space set aside by law and tradition for the vigorous
expression of political opinion.

And if the lawn is harshly used, the solution seems
clear enough: Plant a new lawn. Grass seed is cheap.

We hold no brief for the views of United for Peace and
Justice; indeed, the War on Terror is meant precisely
to secure peace and justice for Iraqis - as well as
guarantee for Americans the right to demonstrate
peacefully in public.

No matter what some groundskeeper-cum-bureaucrat in
City Hall thinks.

==========

El Diario [New York, NY]
May 3, 2004

http://www.eldiariony.com/noticias/detail.aspx?section=25&desc=Editorial&id=891296

EDITORIAL

The right to protest (with a permit)

The New York City Police Department has announced that
groups that want to demonstrate during the Republican
National Convention this summer must submit their
applications for permits by Tuesday, June 15. That`s 11
weeks before the convention kicks off.

So much for spontaneity. Some organizations are bigger
and more organized than others. Already there are
groups complaining about a process that requires
grassroots organizations to commit themselves to the
type of protest they want to hold and where. After all,
the U.S. Constitution guarantees ``the right of the
people to peaceably assemble." Nowhere does it say we
have to give three-months notice.

There are also concerns that forcing groups to apply
this early allows the city government to pick and
choose which groups are approved and which are not.
Already one group, United for Peace and Justice, has
been denied a permit to hold an anti-war rally in
Central Park. The organizers were told that the 250,000
people who were expected for the rally would do too
much damage to the park, a curious explanation since
events that draw that many people or more are common in
this famous public space. The group is appealing the
decision.

We understand the city`s need to plan for the safety
and security of New Yorkers and the many visitors who
are expected for the convention, to be held Aug. 30 to
Sept. 2. But flexibility is also needed given the
shifting nature of politics in general and the
constantly changing aspects of issues of particular
concern these days, including: the depressed economy
and unemployment, the ongoing 9/11 inquiry and the war
in Iraq.

We remind city, state and federal law enforcement
agencies that they are charged with keeping us safe and
secure, but also with upholding our constitutional
rights, including the right of the people to assemble.
We urge the Bloomberg administration and law
enforcement agencies to work in cooperation with the
groups that plan to put that right into action this
summer.

===========================================
ACTION ALERT * UNITED FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE
http://www.unitedforpeace.org
_______________________________________________________

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DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
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CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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