Archive for November 23rd, 2003


Connect the dots

Connect the dots


F.B.I. “scrutinizes” antiwar rallies



The Federal Bureau of Investigation has collected extensive information on the tactics, training and organization of antiwar demonstrators and has advised local law enforcement officials to report any suspicious activity at protests to its counterterrorism squads, according to interviews and a confidential bureau memorandum.


The memorandum, which the bureau sent to local law enforcement agencies last month in advance of antiwar demonstrations in Washington and San Francisco, detailed how protesters have sometimes used “training camps” to rehearse for demonstrations, the Internet to raise money and gas masks to defend against tear gas. The memorandum analyzed lawful activities like recruiting demonstrators, as well as illegal activities like using fake documentation to get into a secured site.


Why is the FBI snooping into activities that they themslves say are completely legal? Golly, could there be a political agenda?


Peaceful FTAA demonstrators in Miami attacked, beaten, jailed



Police have attacked protestors with tear gas, pepper spray, concussion grenades, stun guns and by shooting activists with rubber bullets. Medics have not been allowed in through the police lines to treat the injured.


Protestors have been grabbed, seemingly at random, and taken off the street in snatch operations conducted by police in unmarked vehicles. The police are also directly targeting the legal support for the demonstrators, including National Lawyers Guild Legal Observers. Many who have been taken away have been beaten.


From an ANSWER newsletter



Under Bush and Ashcroft the exercise of First Amendment rights has become synonymous with terrorism. Today’s front page report in the New York Times revealing that the FBI was targeting the recent national anti-war demonstrations in Washington and San Francisco must be understood as the tip of the iceberg,” said Mara Verheyden-Hilliard attorney with the Partnership for Civil Justice and the National Lawyers Guild. The Partnership for Civil Justice and the NLG are litigating First Amendment cases against the FBI, Secret Service and Washington DC police as well as other law enforcement authorities for their unconstitutional disruption actions against political demonstrators.


The FBI is ”investigating” demonstrations at the same time that police went berserk in Miami. These facts are not unconnected.


Ok, ok, I’ll let you in on a little secret. We at the ANSWER Coalition do, in fact, have planning meetings. To demonstrate (hey, that’s a pun!) just how devious and cunning we are, we post meeting times and locations in plain sight on websites, and the meetings are open to whoever walks in the door. Sshhh. Don’t tell the FBI.

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Rent a protestor

Rent a protestor



Lobbysmith.com allows anyone to hire a lobbyist, protestor or advocate OR provide lobbying, protest or advocacy services for others.


At first I thought this might be a satire site. It’s not! Someone has put considerable time, thought, and effort into LobbySmith. And if enough people join in, it could prove a surprisingly useful resource. Check it out…

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RefDesk.com

RefDesk.com


This amazing website packs a stupendous number of useful links onto the home page, and displays them all neatly and in a highly readable format - not an easy task! There are links to reference tools, dictionaries, headlines, newspapers, detailed subject categories, government links, and lots more.


The newspaper page, for example, lists newspapers from all 50 states and multiple countries as well - a highly practical and helpful list. And the site has many more lists like this. It gets 800,000 hits a day, has a miniscule number of ads, and, as mentioned, about a zillion handy links. Basically run as a labor of love, the editor is doing the yearly fundraiser to keep it going - so PayPal him if you can!


You may have heard of the editor’s son, who apparently learned from Dad how to present lots of information on a text-based website in a readable, logical format.

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From the fine folks at…

From the fine folks at Draft Nader 2004


The Ralph Nader bobblehead doll

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U.S. actions in Central Asia…

U.S. actions in Central Asia spell ‘blowback’



Many of the ingredients necessary for Islamic radicalism exist in Central Asia — especially U.S. support for repressive regimes.


Kazakhstan, a former Soviet Republic in Central Asia and the world’s ninth-largest country, is oil-rich and pro-American, has an increasingly repressive government awash in corruption and a 47 percent Moslem population. Those are many of the conditions that have allowed radical Islam to take root in the Middle East.


The Bush administration, by appeasing Kazakhstan for its oil and accommodation of U.S. troops, risks contributing to the creation of a new Iraq or Afghanistan on a giant scale.


This is just the beginning of a plausible Central Asian nightmare scenario. Numerous other former Soviet republics, including Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Kyrkyzstan, are similarly ripe for Islamic radicalization in a region that stretches from Europe to China.

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Yahoo shatters world yodelling record!

Yahoo shatters world yodelling record!


Bavarians plot retaliation.

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