[Rhodes22-list] Politics - Chicago Gang

Brad Haslett flybrad at gmail.com
Sat Sep 27 14:45:09 EDT 2008


They said if GW Bush were elected President 1st Amendment rights would
be violated, and they were right!

>From the Fredrickburg Free Lance Star-

 Signs of liberty
September 27, 2008 12:19 am

NOT ALL COUNTRIES guarantee their citizens the right to virtually
unbridled freedom of speech. The United States does. Would someone
please tell the campaign of Sen. Barack Obama? And the dozing
guardians of liberty at the University of Mary Washington?

Mr. Obama, the Democratic nominee for president, is scheduled to speak
at a rally at the university today. The public is invited to this
forum, on property it, the public, owns. However, signs and banners
will not be allowed, according to the organizers and compliant campus
officials. Suddenly, UMW is a First Amendment-Free, or at least a
First Amendment-Crippled, Zone, subject to the self-serving
preferences of politicos. Why does an Obama rally--or a McCain rally
or a Nader rally--justify taking a little off the top of Americans'
most fundamental rights?

A UMW spokeswoman says that the Obama campaign required the
sign-and-banner ban. That campaign tells us that the ban is for
"security" reasons. But a spokesman for the U.S. Secret Service,
responsible for protecting presidential candidates, says that the
service has no objection to signs at rallies, provided that no "part
of the sign could be used as a weapon"--e.g., a heavy metal pole or a
sharpened stick. Finally, the McCain campaign tells us, "We encourage
people to make signs at our events."

Regarding today's event, one would expect better from a campaign
bearing the name of a former professor of constitutional law. (See
Ambrose Bierce's definition of a lawyer: "one skilled in circumventing
the law.") And one would expect much better from a university that, in
pursuit of a day of celebrity, a boost in prestige, and profits from
its book store's planned commemorative Obama T-shirts (now scotched),
shaves away an American liberty purchased by men who turned white snow
red and dry dirt wet with their sacrificial blood. This is a lot to
swap for a mess of pottage. Remarks the Rutherford Institute's John
Whitehead, who has turpentined the Bush administration's civil-rights
record, "The Secret Service has a better free-speech viewpoint than
the college."

The First Amendment guarantees the freedoms of religion, speech, the
press, peaceable assembly, petition of the government. Will one who
aspires to the title Defender of the Constitution begin inhibiting
these First Freedoms even before he is in office--at a public
university?

Free speech means you have the right to hold up a sign, to unfurl a
banner, to wear a T-shirt or create music, to pass around
handbills--or newspapers--expressing your views at any public event.
This is doubly true at campaign rallies--quintessential political
forums--where such expressions are subject only to narrowly drawn
"time, place, and manner" restrictions. Says Kent Willis, chief of the
ACLU-Virginia and a Fredericksburg resident: "Mary Washington may be
able to impose some restrictions on the size of signs or the materials
used in them, but we do not believe the school can legally ban all
signs at an outdoor political event to which the public is invited."

Furthermore, the very speech we must be most careful to protect is
that which is most onerous to us. Our natural inclination is to shut
up the Other Side. The problem is, many days we are the other side.

America's fundamental freedoms--more in danger of being whittled away
than stolen in one fell swoop--must be defended everywhere, including
in our own backyard. The Obama campaign and Mary Washington need to
back off this odious policy. An opinion printed in Magic Marker should
never be contraband at an open American political event--and if that
emblazoned thought interferes with the atmospherics of some partisan
stagecraft specialist, that is a bearable tragedy.

Today's Obama-Biden rally is set for 5:15 p.m. Gates open at 3 p.m. We
hope the event, part of a history-making campaign, packs the campus.
If you go and wish to take a sign, feel free to cut out the box below,
write your own message, paste it to some cardboard, and show off your
point of view. Or make your own sign or banner from scratch.

We trust that the tonic of Jefferson and Madison is still the drink of
choice at the college up the hill. That libation doesn't mix well with
tincture of Tiananmen.


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