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The Office
of the Community Lawyer in Winsted, CT, has organized a roadshow about
the attack on civil liberties. The SAVE the Bill of (Your) Rights! Roadshow
has hit the road in Connecticut to alert citizens about the USA PATRIOT
Act and to build a citizens' movement to pass community resolutions condemning
the Act.
Since September
11, fears of further terrorist acts have resulted in the adoption of the
USA PATRIOT Act and several Executive Orders. The USA PATRIOT Act gives
the FBI and the CIA greater rights to wiretap phones, monitor e-mail,
patrol internet use, snoop on medical, financial, library and student
records, inspect bookstore purchases, spy on political activities and
search homes and offices without prior notification. The Act also allows
non-citizens to be deported or detained indefinitely without judicial
appeal, and often without access to legal counsel. The Administration
has ordered secret military tribunals for suspected terrorists and so-called
enemy combatants -- even if they are U.S. citizens.
Because the
new laws go too far, threatening several fundamental rights guaranteed
to by the Bill of Rights, 150 communities across the nation and three
states have adopted resolutions calling for the repeal of the USA PATRIOT
Act. New Haven, Hartford, and Mansfield, have already done so and the
Roadshow encourages other Connecticut communities to adopt similar resolutions.
We do not have to sacrifice fundamental freedoms, the bedrock of our democracy,
in order to combat terrorism.
At each show,
speakers such as Teresa Younger, Executive Director of the CCLU, and Charlene
LaVoie, Community Lawyer, engage the audience about the USA PATRIOT Act
and other executive initiatives that trample our civil liberties. The
Roadshow has already visited Winsted, Torrington, Middletown, Guilford,
Washington, Glastonbury, Willlimantic and Woodbury. Shows are planned
for Bridgeport, New Milford, Litchfield and maybe your town. Each show
is free and open to the public.
The Roadshow
features a video, "Scenes from an American Life", produced by
a local, grassroots group, the Our Town Project. The video depicts a series
of vignettes that traces the lives of an activist family after their loyalty
is questioned because they openly disagree with the war in Iraq. Based
on some actual events since the passage of the USA PATRIOT Act, the scenes
illustrate the government's violations of citizens' rights. Also at the
Roadshow, are select pieces from "Between Fear and Freedom,"
an art exhibit from the New Haven Edge Festival.
Grassroots efforts ARE making a difference! Congress is starting to listen;
last month the House voted to defund "sneak & peak" searches
authorized under the USA PATRIOT Act which allow federal agents to search
your home without notifying you before or after. And Attorney General
Ashcroft is also feeling the pinch and feels compelled to kick off his
own 'counter-tour' to defend the PATRIOT Act. But the AG's talks are not
open to the public (although were paying the tab!). The AG will be speaking
to invited guests only - law enforcement officials and certain members
of the press. This is surely a sign of mounting anxiety in the face of
grassroots activism and the resulting Congressional scrutiny.
The War on
Terrorism and the associated fear of further attacks cannot be used as
an excuse to operate a secret government that shreds the Bill of Rights.
The Roadshow
schedule:
July 10, 2003 Winsted Town Hall at 7pm
July 14, 2003 Torrington City Hall at 7:30pm
July 21, 2003 Church of Holy Trinity, Middletown at 7pm
July 24, 2003 Nathaniel Greene Community Center, Guilford at 7:30pm
July 31, 2003 Gunn Memorial Library, Washington at 7pm
Aug 7, 2003 Welles-Turner Library, Glastonbury at 7pm
Aug 13, 2003 Windham Textile and History Museum, Willimantic at 7pm
Aug 19, 2003 Woodbury Public Library, Woodbury at 7pm
Sept 8, 2003 Bloodroot Restaurant, Black Rock, Bridgeport at 7pm
Sept 16, 2003, First Congregational Church, New Milford at 7pm
Oct 2, 2003 Litchfield Community Center, Litchfield at 7pm
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