salto mortale

Monday, August 16, 2004

RETURN OF THE MAN

stormtroopersI feel like Chicago '68 is coming.

Here's the link.

WASHINGTON, Aug. 15 - The Federal Bureau of Investigation has been questioning political demonstrators across the country, and in rare cases even subpoenaing them, in an aggressive effort to forestall what officials say could be violent and disruptive protests at the Republican National Convention in New York.

F.B.I. officials are urging agents to canvass their communities for information about planned disruptions aimed at the convention and other coming political events, and they say they have developed a list of people who they think may have information about possible violence. They say the inquiries, which began last month before the Democratic convention in Boston, are focused solely on possible crimes, not on dissent, at major political events.

But some people contacted by the F.B.I. say they are mystified by the bureau's interest and felt harassed by questions about their political plans.

"The message I took from it," said Sarah Bardwell, 21, an intern at a Denver antiwar group who was visited by six investigators a few weeks ago, "was that they were trying to intimidate us into not going to any protests and to let us know that, 'hey, we're watching you.' ''

The unusual initiative comes after the Justice Department, in a previously undisclosed legal opinion, gave its blessing to controversial tactics used last year by the F.B.I in urging local police departments to report suspicious activity at political and antiwar demonstrations to counterterrorism squads. The F.B.I. bulletins that relayed the request for help detailed tactics used by demonstrators - everything from violent resistance to Internet fund-raising and recruitment.

In an internal complaint, an F.B.I. employee charged that the bulletins improperly blurred the line between lawfully protected speech and illegal activity. But the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel, in a five-page internal analysis obtained by The New York Times, disagreed.

The office, which also made headlines in June in an opinion - since disavowed - that authorized the use of torture against terrorism suspects in some circumstances, said any First Amendment impact posed by the F.B.I.'s monitoring of the political protests was negligible and constitutional.

The opinion said: "Given the limited nature of such public monitoring, any possible 'chilling' effect caused by the bulletins would be quite minimal and substantially outweighed by the public interest in maintaining safety and order during large-scale demonstrations."


Hey, FBI: I know someone planning a violent demonstration. It's my left nut. And it's planning to MAKE A ROMANCE INSIDE YO MAMA, BITCH.

Suppression and repression piss me the fuck off. My parents asking if I "should go protest," with that concern in their voices: that pisses me off. Not at my parents, but at our atrophied, decaying political system. When you need to sign a loyalty oath to hear the FUCKING VICE PRESIDENT (who is a GODDAMNED AGNEW RETREAD, SERIOUSLY) speak at PUBLIC EVENTS, and the right of protest is being consistently undermined, and protest is considered unsafe, and "you never know what might happen?"

I'm fuckin' pissed. And that's why I'm going to NYC.

Fucking hyperbole isn't even necessary. That's scary.



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