So Much for Free Speech at the Olympics

No political activism permitted at Beijing Games: IOC
scopical.com.au
7 May 2008

dnkf00041943-200.jpgThe International Olympic Committee is seeking to tighten it’s grip on potential political activism at the Beijing Summer Games in August.

Authorities are bracing themselves for widespread protests following the largely unsuccessful worldwide passage of the Olympic flame.

The IOC said overnight that it was now seeking to clarify rules relating to political activism by athletes, including high-level scrutiny of athletes comments and coverage.

It comes as Australian cyclist Cadel Evans wore a ‘Free Tibet’ t-shirt while competing during the Liege-Bastogne-Liege race in Belgium last month.

The IOC says that “no kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas”. Continue reading “So Much for Free Speech at the Olympics”

The Rape of Europa

Here’s a trailer for the newly released feature documentary film about the fate of art in the Third Reich and World War II. The film, based on the landmark history by Lynn H. Nicholas, is now playing at select theaters. Check out the schedule at www.therapeofeuropa.com.

via artdaily.org

Camp for Climate Action

Anti-Heathrow Protest Set to Grow
Reuters
August 13, 2007

contrails-image.jpgLondon, England — More climate change campaigners are expected to arrive on Monday to join protests against expansion plans at Britain’s Heathrow airport.

The protesters began arriving at the “Camp for Climate Action” on Sunday, erecting marquees and setting up toilets on land north of Heathrow, one of the world’s busiest airports.

They say they have “legally occupied” the site, which is on the route of a proposed third runway at Heathrow and is around 800 meters from the headquarters of airport operator BAA, owned by Spanish construction and services group Ferrovial.

Organizers say up to 3,000 people will attend the week-long demonstrations due to start on Tuesday with “24 hours of mass action” promised for next Sunday. Continue reading “Camp for Climate Action”

NYPD Releases All 2004 RNC-Related Documents

2007_05_nornc.jpg

The NYPD decided not to appeal a judge’s decision that the NYPD should declassify its surveillance documents from the 2004 RNC, so it has set up a special NYPD RNC Documents website with the documents. Of course, you have to scroll down to the very bottom for a zip file of the 600 pages of documents. And what’s above the documents is the NYPD’s rather thorough explanation/ defense justifying why it did such extensive surveillance of disparate groups and people, listing various terror incidents between 2001 and the convention as well as other incidents of protest. Here is Police Commissioner Ray Kelly’s statement:

“I think a close examination of the documents is going to show that the New York City Police Department did an outstanding job in protecting the City during the Republican National Convention. People wanted to come here and shut down the City, to replicate what happened in Seattle, Montreal and Genoa. We simply didn’t let that happen, and I think it’ll just underscore the outstanding work of the men and women of the Department. In terms of gathering information, the vast majority of information that was gathered was open-source information. It was gathered from the Internet; these groups that were coming here were advertising what they were going to do “” bragging about what they were going to do. It wasn’t particularly difficult to get the vast majority of this information.”

Good to know that the NYPD is watching all of us, including MSNBC and the Sierra Club. The NY Times has all the documents plus highlights which people and/or groups were mentioned in the documents. Here are but a few:

ACT UP, Sierra Club, City Council members (Charles Barron, David Weprin, Bill Perkins), Sept. 11 Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, Johnny Cash Bloc, MSNBC, A31 Coalition, NYCLU, NOW, Planned Parenthood, New Yorkers Against Gun Violence, Stuyvesant High School Students, Westboro Baptist Church, Indymedia, Democratic National Committee, Coalition of Fire and Police Unions, Grandmothers Against War, Falun Gong, Arab Muslim American Foundation, Time’s Up, Billionaires For Bush, United for Peace and Justice, The Surveillance Camera Players, ACLU, Hip Hop Summit Action Network, The Federation of East Village Artists, Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign, Restaurant Opportunity Center of New York

The NYCLU’s executive director Donna Lieberman said, “These documents paint a picture of a surveillance program that was broad, clumsy, and often unlawful. The NYPD failed to differentiate between unlawful behavior and behavior that is not only lawful but should in fact be cherished and protected. Today the public can finally bear witness to that failure.” The NYCLU also offers an index of the groups monitored as well as the documents released yesterday, plus others previously released.

And City Councilman Charles Barron told the NY Times’ Sewell Chan, “First of all, I”™m going to be getting some legal advice. I”™m not going to let this go. This is ridiculous that you would spy on democratic, legal, political activity. This smacks of former fascism. It certainly is selective spying. It is absurd that people in this city can”™t exercise their constitutional right to protest without being spied on by the police.”

Photograph by ireallylovecake on Flickr

   Originally by Jen Chung from Gothamist on May 17, 2007

The First Amendment Can Take a Joke

Rendering of the new Newseum building, Washington, D.C.

Margaret Engel is the managing editor of the Newseum, which will re-open Oct. 15, 2007 in new headquarters on the Mall in Washington, D.C.. She wrote this article specifically for the April 1, 2007 launch of ArtofthePrank.com. – JS


April 1 is a lighthearted celebration in America, but joking the other 364 days often gets civic pranksters in trouble.

It”™s not that anything goes on April Fool”™s Day, it just seems that the public gets the punchline that day, before quickly returning to a grim analysis of what is and what isn”™t acceptable.

Although the First Amendment is supposed to defend our freedom of speech, press, religion, assembly and the right to petition our government, the reality is that officialdom often can”™t take a joke. Continue reading “The First Amendment Can Take a Joke”