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Subject: Bush/Cheney campaign considers civil rights obscene!

Written By: MooRocca on 10/21/04 at 4:46 pm

As published at:
http://www.kgw.com/news-local/stories/kgw_101504_news_bush_teacher_peaceful_protest.33035f77.html

Medford teachers thrown out of Bush rally
01:05 AM PDT on Friday, October 15, 2004
By kgw.com and AP Staff



CENTRAL POINT, Ore. -- Three Medford school teachers were threatened with arrest and thrown out of the President Bush rally at the Jackson County Fairgrounds Thursday night, after they showed up wearing T-shirts with the slogan "Protect our civil liberties."

All three women said they were carrying valid tickets for the event that they had received from Republican Party headquarters in Medford, which had been distributing event tickets to Bush supporters.

Teacher Janet Voorhies said she simply wanted to bring a message to President Bush, but did not intend to protest.

"I wanted to see if I would be able to make a statement that I feel is important, but not offensive, in a rally for my president," said Voorhies, 48.

The women said they were angered by reports of peaceful protesters being thrown out of previous Bush-Cheney events. They said they chose the phrase, "Protect Our Civil Liberties," because it was unconfrontational.

"We chose this phrase specifically because we didn't think it would be offensive or degrading or obscene," said Tania Tong, 34, a special education teacher.

The women got past the first and second checkpoints and were allowed into the Jackson County fairgrounds, but were asked to leave and then escorted out of the event by campaign officials who allegedly told them their T-shirts were "obscene."

Democrats were quick to pounce on the incident and claimed the GOP has routinely sought to disclude anyone from public appearances by President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney who might question the administration. There was no immediate comment from Republican officials.

"Thursday's actions in Oregon set a new standard even for Bush/Cheney - removing and threatening with arrest citizens who in no way disrupt an event and wear clothing that expresses non-disruptive party-neutral viewpoints such as "Protect Our Civil Liberties," said Adam Green, a spokesman for the Oregon Democratic Party.

When Cheney visited Eugene last month, the Register-Guard newspaper reported that Perry Patterson, 54, was cited for criminal trespassing for blurting out the word "No" after Cheney claimed that the Bush administration had made the world safer.

In a separate and unrelated case Thursday, two protesters were arrested in nearby Jacksonville, outside the historic inn where President Bush was spending the night.

A few hundred people were demonstrating peacefully there, but police moved to disperse the crowd after a few protesters allegedly put their hands on police officers. City officials said police fired projectiles known as "pepper balls" -- similar to paint balls, but filled with cayenne pepper to break up the demonstrators.

Subject: Re: Bush/Cheney campaign considers civil rights obscene!

Written By: MaxwellSmart on 10/21/04 at 4:57 pm

The new fascism tolerated a plethora of opinions because it was better PR to let them in and ignore them than to make a stink.  It's at once frightening and encouraging to see the reversion to old-style fascist tactics--a prerequisite of loyalt before you can join the crowd, and ejection for all dissent, even implied dissent.

This is the true color of the Republican Party, yellow.  They are insecure people.  They are afraid their popularity is just a mirage of their own creation and the teeming millions really hate them.  I believe they are bracing themselves for the consequences of whatever malfeasance they are planning on Election Day.  After November 2nd, hatred for the Republicans will go from simmering orange to explosive red.

Subject: Re: Bush/Cheney campaign considers civil rights obscene!

Written By: Don Carlos on 10/22/04 at 2:12 pm

And by contrast, Chucky posted a thread that clearly shows Kerry engaging in a diologe with hecklers at one of his "front porch" rallies.  I guess one candidate has the "cojones" and brains to take them on, while the other travels in another world of his own making.  A telling contrast.

Subject: Re: Bush/Cheney campaign considers civil rights obscene!

Written By: Hairspray on 10/27/04 at 9:11 am

Frankly, I'm not surprised. There have been many similar incidents, most of which do not make the headlines. The scariest part is that this still won't make a bit of difference to the lot out there under the Bush spell.

To those folks, I say -

                Snap out of it, people!

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