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Anti-terrorism bill makes masks criminal offenses

From: "Lysander Zimmerman" <LAMZ_-at-_sympatico.ca>
To: "Anarchist Information" <a-infos-en_-at-_ainfos.ca>
Date: Tue, 27 Nov 2001 00:07:07 -0500

I wonder who this legislation is aimed at?!?!? Now they are going to
criminalize anonymity at a time when police attempt to videotape everyone at
demonstrations. They want to build a database of faces to use with facial
recognition technology.

WELL.....it's time that EVERY protester shows up to EVERY PROTEST wearing a
mask to tell these fascists where to go!

Next time a call for an action goes out, **make sure you include a call to
wear a mask**.

PLEASE READ AND PASS ON.... VERY IMPORTANT ARTICLE

http://www.truthout.com/11.27E.anti.terrorism.htm

New anti-terrorism bill makes face paint and masks criminal offenses in
public forums
Civil rights and media latest casualties of our times
By Brenda Norrell

Lakota Journal Correspondent

RAPID CITY, S.D. -- American Indians say the new regulations aimed at
fighting terrorism limit civil rights while giving the National Security
Administration advanced powers to monitor e-mail and cell phone calls,
places Indigenous peoples at risk of being detained on suspicion and makes
it a criminal offense to wear face paint or bandanas in public forums.

The 125-clause anti-terrorism bill, expected to be in effect by Christmas,
makes it a criminal offence to refuse a police officer's request to remove
hand and face coverings, such as masks and face paint, in certain
situations.

Native people involved in the human rights struggle of Zapatistas and other
Indigenous peoples worldwide are equally alarmed by President Bush's plan to
establish military tribunals to prosecute foreigners, in lieu of United
States courts, on charges of terrorism. The military tribunal could hand
down death sentences.

Eulynda Toledo-Benalli, Dine' founder of First Nations North and South, said
the United States was founded on the terrorism and bioterrorism of
Indigenous peoples.
Benalli said the most recent limitations on civil liberties are alarming in
the context of history, including the genocidial spread of smallpox to
Indian people.

"How can a nation state, like the United States, an imperialist state, take
such actions when their very principles of 'democracy' were founded on
terrorism and bioterrorism.

"As far as I'm concerned, they need to clean up their acts, face the truths,
and realize their roots of terrorism committed against the first sufferers
and survivors of their terrorist acts before they accuse anyone else --
maybe then I will believe their 'truths.'

"It's really ironic to hear the myth of 'freedom' perpetuated in the U.S."
Benalli said Indigenous peoples have become prisoners of democracy.

"First of all, as an Indigenous person, having been colonized and in the
colonizer's minds 'conquered,' we continue to be what one of my friends
calls 'prisoners of democracy.'

"We cannot make our decisions towards self-determination without negotiating
and getting a seal or stamp, or an okay by the great white father in
Washington."

Meanwhile, critics say the media is the latest casualty of the times. They
charge the mainstream media produces parrot-like repetitions of federal
press releases, bows to government-imposed censorship and reports the war in
Afghanistan as cheerleaders for the Bush administration.

In Albuquerque, Benalli said the effect of corporate takeovers of the media
are obvious in the layoff of a longtime investigative television reporter
from Acoma Pueblo, Conroy Chino, by KOB-TV.

"Rather than seeing Conroy as necessary to our rightful place as Indigenous
peoples in media as a first and foremost reason to keep him in the media,
the corporation decides 'they cannot afford him.'"
Benalli, founder of First Nations North and South uniting the struggles of
Indian people in the Americas, has organized Navajo and Lakota support for
Indians in Chiapas, offering exchanges for culture, agriculture and weaving.
She said Indigenous peoples in other countries face the same restrictions on
their voices and human rights as in the United States.

"The imperialist nations, especially the European nations continue to
silence and marginalize the voices of Indigenous peoples."

In an open letter to President Bush, Nobel Peace Prize winner Rigoberta
Menchu Tum of Guatemala, said it is time for Indian people to stop dying in
other peoples' wars.

Menchu Tum said President Bush, in summoning the peoples of the world to
war, voiced fear in a nation which fails to recognize the genocide of
Indigenous peoples.

"In the name of progress, pluralism, tolerance and liberty, you leave no
choice to those of us who are not fortunate enough to share this sense of
liberty and the benefits of the civilization you wish to defend for your
people, we who never had sympathy for terrorism since we were its victims.

"We, who are proud expressions of other civilizations; who live day to day
with the hope of turning discrimination and plunder into recognition and
respect; who carry in our souls the pain of the genocide perpetrated against
our peoples; finally, we who are fed up with providing the dead for wars
that are not ours: we cannot share the arrogance of your infallibility nor
the single road onto which you want to push us when you declare that 'Every
nation in every region now has a decision to make: Either you are with us or
you are with the terrorists.'"

Benalli said an ironic excuse for reducing civil liberties in the United
States is the attacks by terrorists.
"The first terrorists that entered our homelands were the Europeans. Never
forget that in 1637, 700 men, women and children of the Pequot Tribe
gathered for their annual Green Corn Dance in an area now known as Groton,
Connecticut."

here, English and Dutch terrorists massacred the 700 Pequots. The next day
the Governor of Massachusetts Bay colony declared a day of Thanksgiving,
thanking God that they eliminated over 700 Pequots, she said.

"For the next 100 years, every Thanksgiving Day, ordained by a Governor or
President, was to honor that victory, thanking God that the battle had been
won.

"There after, genocide continued to the extent of bio-terrorism in the form
of smallpox blankets to wipe out another group of Indigenous peoples."

Meanwhile, the monitoring of e-mail messages and cell phone conversations by
the federal government has many Indian people alarmed and suspicious of the
motives.

Time magazine reports the National Security Administration now has advanced
measures to monitor e-mail and cell phone calls. The article, "When Terror
Hides Online," says investigators are searching for hidden images of
terrorists plots, but the broad search powers alarm those concerned with the
protection of civil rights.

"Law enforcement is increasingly targeting terrorists' technology," Time
reports. "After the Sept. 11 attacks, the FBI reportedly installed
additional Carnivores, devices it has been using to surreptitiously read
e-mail, on Internet service providers.

"The National Security Agency uses Echelon, a top-secret wiretapping device,
to monitor e-mail, cell phones and faxes worldwide. And the antiterrorism
law passed last month broadened law enforcement's powers to grab Internet
communications," Adam Cohen writes in Time's edition on Nov. 14.

Now, the anti-terrorism bills includes a provision for Internet providers to
maintain billing records for criminal investigations.

The anti-mask and face paint law is especially troubling to American Indians
and peace demonstrators who could face one month in jail under the new law
for wearing face paint, bandanas or masks.

They say Congress passed the anti-terrorism law and Bush signed it into law
while America and the media were not paying attention.

In November, demonstrators outside CNN in Atlanta, protesting the lack of
coverage of Afghanistans facing starvation, were arrested on charges of
violating an anti-mask law for wearing bandanas. The law dates back to times
of arrests of members of the Ku Klux Klan.

The three arrested on anti-mask law violations and other charges occurred
while about 200 protesters chanted, "CNN, half the story, all the time," at
CNN Center Nov. 11.

Meanwhile, on the floor of the Senate, Sen. Russell Feingold, D-WI, tried to
repel the anti-terrorism legislation as an attack on the Constitution.

"It is crucial that civil liberties in this country be preserved. Otherwise,
I'm afraid terror will win this battle without firing a shot."




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