Martin Luther King: "Why I Am Opposed to the War in Vietnam"
Speech given April 30, 1967 at Riverside Church, New York (transcript).
Happy MLK Day everyone, let's do our best to remember the real Martin Luther King who gave the ultimate sacrifice for social justice. and avoid buying into the image put out by the racist corporate media.
Human Rights Day: "The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness"
The these for the 15th Annual Rochester Commemoration of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was based on a book written by Michelle Alexander: "The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness." Speakers included Ream Kidane with a call for solidarity and action, Dr. Marvin McMickle giving the Keynote Address, and Rosemary Rivera, Ricardo Adams, and Maurice Miller--dedicated activists and community members--sitting on a panel relating their experiences of mass incarceration. The event took place at the Downtown United Presbyterian Church (121 N. Fitzhugh St.) in Rochester, NY on December 10, 2012. Part I has the Call to Solidarity and Action and Part 2 has the panelists and the audience Q&A.
Part I:
Part II:
Victory on Barlett Street: Windom Bey Family Get Back their Home for the Holidays after 18 year Struggle and Several Protests
City's Foreclosure Machine Stopped and Turned Around By Community Resistance
On Friday, December 21, 2012 at 1pm at 33 Bartlett St., Rochester, NY the Windom Bey family, Take Back the Land Rochester, and other community members will gather, hold a press conference and announce an incredible turnaround and victoryfor Windom Bey family. The Windom’s struggle and the community protests became front page news of the Democrat and Chronicle and the Daily Record over the summer as the family became deadlocked with the City of Rochester in their fight to stay in their home of 40 years following an unjust tax foreclosure. After two planned eviction blockades twice thwarted the eviction of the family from their home, the City and investor Sure Luck Homes 017, LLC changed their tuned as the Windom Bey family closed on the house last Friday getting the home back in their name. After an 18 year struggle with the City of Rochester and later American Tax Funding and Sure Luck Homes 017, LLC the family now has the house back, giving them clean title for the time after being in the house almost 40 years.Timeline of the Protests
EVICTION PROTEST I
· On June 7, 2012 the Windom Bey family and community groups protested the eviction at 33 Bartlett street and were preparing to set up an eviction blockade
· Special Assistant to the Mayor Darryl Porter showed to the protest announcing that the Mayor’s office had negotiated a 10 day stay of the eviction in hopes a settlement could reached
EVICTION PROTEST II
· On June 20, 2012 community members began showing up at 33 Bartlett with sleeping bags and tents answering a call to action by the family and Take Back the Land to construct an “Eviction Watch Encampment” and blockade to prevent the removal of theWindom-Bey family
· At 5:30pm on the June 20, many of the protesters were once again met by Special Assistant to Mayor, Darryl Porter, sitting on front porch of 33 Bartlett with the news that under pressure, the City of Rochester had negotiated an indefinite stay of the eviction with the investor-owner of the property
CITY HALL PROTEST
· On September 10, 2012 Eddie and Mary Windom Bey (who were still facing an imminent eviction), Take Back the Land Rochester, Band of Rebels, Metro Justice, and other community members gathered at the front gathered at the front steps of Rochester City Hall to protest Mayor Richards' actions to block a settlement with the current owners which would have allowed the family to buy back their longtime home and fix it up (the City who had Sure Luck Homes, LLC under contract, was making the family sign waiver of all liability for the City's mistakes at 33 Bartlett, as a condition of theWindom’s repurchasing the house from Sure Luck).
· After the protest a city official announced to the Democrat and Chronicle that the City would no longer be pursuing the liability waiver, removing the main obstacle to a settlement
· With obstacles removed, on December 14, 2012 all the documents were signed to turn the house over the WindomBey family
Video report from the Windom Bey home on December 21, 2012:
SEE ASLO:
- Community Groups Join Family In Protest at City Hall to Defend Their Home (September 10, 2012)
-
Fenced In: Eddie Windom Bey talks about his battle with an illegal fence (Video by Shawn Dowd)
Turning Points Family Center Opens
Turning Points is a resource center for families whose lives are touched by incarceration. Precious Bedell is the director and Rochester Indymedia had the chance to sit down with her and find out more about this new resource in town. The interview was conducted on November 28, 2012. Turning Points is located at St. Stephen's Episcopal Church (350 Chili Ave., Rochester, NY). The center is open every Wednesday from 3:30 - 5:00 PM. Have questions or need direction, call at: 585-328-0856.
Visions and Voices - an audio-visual exploration of the southwest quadrant neighborhood in Rochester, New York
The people’s history and the history of evolving communities is often an unwritten one. Throughout the engagement with personal life stories, I witnessed how in many ways - often hidden and unexpected - people contribute and build community. I learned about shared visions and shared challenges, about community resilience and how we can build alternatives by seemingly small acts just as well as widely recognized community initiatives. Both are equally important.
Over the last few months, I stepped towards a deeper understanding and insight of the people’s history of the community and neighborhood in which I have lived and worked in for ten months.
Geographically, I refer to the southwest quadrant of Rochester, encircling the Genesee River, South Plymouth Avenue, Samuel McCree Way, Genesee Street, and Ford Street.
This project has been a continuous process of active listening in which my audio-visual editing and my written words reflect the essence of what I heard.
I have gratitude for the spirit of generosity I met: people sharing their stories, dreams, hopes, fears, sorrows and joys of life and of their communities. Through this project, I am reminded of the richness of experience and of stories that live in each person and how these are interwoven in people’s physical environment and in their web of relationships.
I invite you to join me in a spirit of openess and curiosity to engage with these glimpses of the complexity of human experience and being-in-the-world.
Anna-Kristina Pfeifer
In collaboration with the M.K. Gandhi Institute for Nonviolence in Rochester, New York
Is our sky pink? Josh Fox, Fracking, and Dirty Engergy
The Sky Is Pink by Josh Fox
Josh Fox does a follow-up documentary to his hit Gasland about the propaganda & misinformation that the hydraulic fracking industry puts out. He refutes the claims that fracking is clean & safe by the industry.
Here are the hard FACTS behind this documentary in case you wanted to refute the claims yourself.
http://www1.rollingstone.com/extras/theskyispink_annotdoc-gasl4final.pdf
Ever heard of fracking?
If not, you are not alone. However, be warned: once you learn about this dirty energy you'll become angry, you might become a little frightened, but most of all we hope you'll become involved, because communities across the country are counting on us.
So what is fracking, and who is getting fracked?
Hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking", is the process of drilling and injecting fluid into the ground at high pressure in order to fracture shale rocks to release natural gas inside. First, deep wells are drilled straight down through the aquifer. Next, millions of gallons of water laced with chemicals are pumped down, breaking apart the rock and freeing trapped natural gas along with other dangerous materials.
There are more than 27,000 wells in the US and each well uses 1-8 million gallons of water and 80-300 tons of chemicals each time it's fracked. However, only 4 states have robust drilling rules in place. Can you believe that the fracking industry remains exempt from Clean Water, Safe Drinking Water and Clean Air Acts, hazardous waste disposal, and other federal regulations?
Not only are companies dodging regulation and pumping a toxic cocktail of chemicals into the earth, but fracking operations are contaminating major water sources, speeding up climate change, and polluting our air. Communities across the country are living with these devastating impacts of fracking; that's why communities in California, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and other states are demanding that fracking be banned. In fact, Vermont has already banned fracking in the state.
Something has got to change.
Believing that this way of extracting natural gas is one of the dirtiest ways to produce energy, Yoko Ono and her son Sean Lennon started the Artists Against Fracking campaign. The effort is bringing together a group of nearly 200 artists, musicians, and filmmakers who are raising awareness of this dirty energy and rallying public support for clean alternatives. Their fight is starting first with a nationwide push to pressure New York Governor Cuomo to permanently ban fracking in the state. Join the movement by sharing this video with your friends.
Indymedia Uncut: Nine-Tenth's of the Law; Author Talks About Property and Resistance in the U.S.
Hannah Dobbz, author of Nine-Tenths of the Law: Property and Resistance in the United States (AK Press, 2012), came to Rochester to speak about her new book. She presented on November 3, 2012 at the Flying Squirrel Community Space. The 1st video is her talk and the 2nd is the Q&A.
Rochester Rallies in the Snow for Palestine
Rochester's first snow of the season didn't stop members of the Palestenian community and their supporters from gathering in front of the Federal Building on November 30. The demonstration was to commemorate the recent United Nations resolution declaring Palestine a "Nonmember Observer State." While this does not give Palestenians land or statehood, it is one of the first actions by an international body recognizing their existence. The United States opposed the resolution. In recent weeks 160 Palestenians and 6 Israelis have died in Gaza. The Israeli government has increased construction of Israeli settlements on Palestenian land as retribution. The rally was called by a Christian-Muslim advocacy group for Palestenian children. Christians, as well as Muslims in Israel are considered second-class citizens. It was supported by the International Socialist Organization, Rochester Against War and several local Christian, Jewish and Muslim peace groups.
Supporters hold a picture of Yassir Arafat. A new investigation is to be opened into the death of the former Palestenian leader.
This sign appeared on a bus shelter near the rally. The US provides $2 billion to $5 billion a year in military aid to Israel, but it cannot provide health care for its own citizens. This sign should not need to exist.
From Tea Lights to Torches: Delinquent Alternatives to Transgender Day of Remembrance and the Trans Attacks to Come
Original source: http://www.anarchistnews.org/node/19528
As thousands of people in cities all across the world gathered on November 20th to memorialize the 23 transgender women that were murdered in the past year as named by transgenderdor.org, some of us decided to skip the opportunity of silently listening to the politicians of the “trans community” recite the names of our dead over candlelight, romantic as it sounded. Instead we ventured into the mist and fog of a northwest autumn night and put up some graffiti as small gestures of antagonism towards the state, the bashers and the leftists who use the blood of trans women to build campaigns of hate crime legislation and reform. We are against hate crime legislation because we are against prisons, against the infuriating portrayal of police as protectors, against rising for their judges in their detestable courtrooms, against (though not surprised in the least by) the way that such legislation is used to defend those in positions of power and because we are, at heart, hate filled criminal enemies of civilized society.
By the end of the night several walls and surfaces had been subject to the vandalism of the trans symbol, circle a’s, the largely sprayed proclamation “Too Many Trans Deaths, Not Enough Dead Pigs” and 20 feet of silver letters across a darkly painted business rooftop reading “Vengeance for Shelley Hilliard!!!! (A) Bash Back!”
Shelly Hilliard, also known as Treasure, was a 19 year old trans woman from Detroit who was identified by a tattoo earlier this month after her burned torso was found on the side of the highway. Krissi Bates was found stabbed to death in her Minneapolis apartment in January in a brutal murder that was described as “over-kill.” Tyra Trent was strangled to death in her Baltimore apartment in February. Miss Nate Nate Eugene Davis was shot and left behind a Houston dumpster in June. Lashai Mclean was shot in the street in Washington, DC in July. Camila Guzman was stabbed to death by a john in New York City in August. Gaurav Gopalan died from trauma to the head in September and Chassity Vickers was shot in Hollywood just four days ago, on November 16th.
These are just a few examples of transsexual homicides in the US alone that made headlines this year. Women whose lives and deaths get summed up by reporter after snake-eyed reporter who can barely manage to contain their contempt for the queer and make no effort whatsoever to disguise their disdain for anyone alleged to have been a criminal or whore. Funeral services become the rushed lowering of mangled corpses into the ground, in anticipation of a grave on which to spit. This was exemplified by the pastor of Lashai Mclean’s funeral, who repeatedly referred to her by male pronouns and went as far as to incite a mass walk out of the many trans attendants by claiming that “When you live a certain lifestyle this is the consequence you have to pay.”
While we remember our dead let us not forgot about those still struggling, especially those who are facing charges and/or living lives in cages.
In June Catherine Carlson was sentenced to 10 years in an Idaho prison after being convicted of first degree arson, unlawful possession of a bomb, using a hoax destructive device, and indecent exposure. Before her conviction she had locked herself in her trailer for years and left only when necessary, approximately once every ten days when she needed food and could no longer subsist off of coffee alone. Every time she left her home she was taunted by police. Despite having had her name legally changed for over three decades, she couldn’t get her given name removed from her license. She was jailed on four occasions for driving without a license in her stubborn and inspiring refusal to acknowledge the state’s attempt at controlling her gender. Eventually this torment led to rupture. Catherine constructed what appeared to be four pipe bombs, left them next to a propane tank, set her trailer and her truck on fire, and walked down the highway naked until being stopped and arrested. She is currently being held in the hole of a men’s prison despite having had sex reassignment surgery.
On the night of June 5th in Minneapolis, Chrishaun “CeCe” McDonald was harassed outside of a bar for being black and trans and had a glass smashed in her face. A fight broke out and minutes later her attacker, Dean Schmitz, had been fatally stabbed. CeCe was arrested, charged with murder, got bailed out after a month in isolation and is currently awaiting trial.
Three trans women were arrested in connection to a flash mob attack on a New York City Dunkin Donuts that happened on Christopher St the night of May 16th. Christopher St is a street with a rich history of queer and trans resistance (including the Stonewall Riots) and an apparent inability to rid itself of the fierce homeless trans youth it is known for despite decades of gentrification and “quality of life” campaigns. During the flash mob, two dozen transgender youth stormed the shop, threw chairs, destroyed expensive coffee machines and looted goods. Those arrested have been charged with assault, criminal mischief, menacing, rioting and criminal possession of a weapon.
In August, off duty officer Kenneth Fur took it upon himself to remind us that police are the absolute enemy. He became angry when three trans women in DC refused complicity in his entitled assumption that his pig salary could buy any trans body he encountered on the street. So angry, in fact, that he climbed onto the roof of their car and shot the passengers inside. One woman was grazed by a bullet, one was shot in the hand and the brother of one of the women was shot in the chest. The cops were kind enough to show up and escort the injured individuals to the hospital…in handcuffs.
A few days ago Brooke Fantelli was repeatedly tased in El Centro, Ca by a Bureau of Land Management ranger. Brooke was stopped for public intoxication while taking pictures in the desert. After being ID’ed the ranger told her, “You used to be a guy.” and then tased her with her hands up. Once she was on the ground he tased her again, this time in the genitals.
Also this month, Andrea Jones was arrested for indecent exposure, or more accurately, for exposing the legal system as the brutally illogical apparatus of control that it is. Andrea went topless in a Tennessee DMV after they refused to change the gender on her ID to female. As a “male”, she said, she had the legal right to take off her shirt. She was jailed for three weeks, lost her job and will most likely have to register as a sex offender. As usual, cops and CO’s are free to rape us and expose us to sexual violence meanwhile charging those they take hostage as “sex offenders.” Those most vulnerable to this tactic of the state are the gender variant, queer inmates and black men who are demonized in racist smear campaigns by the media as “rapists” every time a cop gets shot.
Finally, we want to mention Amazon, a transsexual lesbian who has been in prison for the past 30 years and is serving life in California. In a letter that was published in a Black and Pink newsletter earlier this year she says “I am from Gender Anarky Collective in the prisons. We are a militant organization fighting for transsexual medicine in the form of female hormones and sex-corrective surgery, and against all forms of hate, genocide and discrimination by cops or prisoners alike, and are also a self defense structure and will fight, have fought, and are fighting for ours on the yards. I am currently in the hole for ‘battery on an inmate with a weapon.’ Two other girls are here with me, one for three counts of assault on staff who jumped on her. We survive by aggressive self defense.” She then proceeds to denounce activism and engagement in politics, describing instead the necessary “post-apocalyptic civil war madness” that the myth of social peace works desperately to keep us from. “Prison is government. No government in the world is going to allow anyone to deconstruct its prisons, come what may. Therefore, to actually abolish prisons, the government must be destroyed, overthrown.”
Here’s to the end of the capitalist system that the police imprison us to protect and to freedom for trans women, and freedom for us all. As our hearts burn with the loss of our loved ones, may their cities burn as well.
Dean Schmitz was not the first and he will not be the last!
VENGEANCE NOT REMEMBRANCE! WE WILL NOT REST IN PEACE!
I'm Opting Out. This holiday season, won't you join me?
I'm in line with hundreds of people behind me and hundreds more ahead of me. Even at 8:30 AM, Denver International Airport is getting crowded. As I approach the conveyer belt and the ProVisionTM Millimeter Wave Check Point Screening System, I take off my shoes, jacket, and belt. I put them in a bin. Then I take my laptop out of my backpack and put it in a bin. All go on the belt to be x-rayed and scrutinized by a group of agents behind glass. A man in an official Transportation Security Administration uniform asks if I have anything on me. I tell him that I have my license and my boarding pass in my pocket and that I am opting out of going through the enclosure that takes a radio-wave image of your naked body—with your clothes on—used to highlight any threats to the security of this closed system of commerce and air travel.
The TSA agent has a head of coarse black hair with whitening sides. He wears glasses and leans over one of the glass walls corralling people toward the security screening checkpoint. He looks at me, somewhat incredulously when I tell him I'm opting out, and tells me that it's perfectly safe and that there is no radiation. I tell him I know, (even though there have been no longterm studies of the effects of the radio waves and that a scientific debate about health effects still surrounds the machines--not to mention that in 2010, the unions representing the pilots for American Airlines and US Airways recommended their pilots get pat-downs rather than body scans) and that I don't think the TSA is any kind of real security—it's false security—especially when our government continues to murder people daily overseas.
Let us not forget that it wasn't technologically sophisticated, motivated-for-no-reason, individuals who packed explosives in their shoes or on their persons to take down buildings--symbols of American global dominance--for no reason (except the stated reason that they hate us for our freedom--which is completely preposterous), but well-trained, principled, and motivated individuals who, with no more than box cutters, high-jacked four planes flying two of them into the World Trade Center and one of them into the Pentagon. A a third crashed before reaching its target in Washington, DC. It brings Margaret Mead or even Bill Maher to mind.
He tells me to step aside and wait for another male screener to pat me down. He seems annoyed. I step aside. Usually when I opt out of going through the body scanner, the TSA agent tells me it's safe and then smiles and points to where I should wait. Occasionally, I'll get a security agent who wants to tentatively feel out my politics. Once they realize I have a political point of view that differs from theirs, they retract. My interaction in Denver with this TSA agent was no different.
I watch people as they continue through the lines and through the body scanners. It reminds me of the descriptions of slaughter houses, except things aren't so grisly at the end. It's not a cruel, literal death, but perhaps a figurative death—of both the individual and the Constitution. Apparently no one has told them that this kind of imaging is akin to a strip search. In order to be strip searched, the police need reasonable suspicion. In the case of these body scanners, there is no reasonable suspicion. People go through the machines, they are mass strip searched, and in some circumstances their images end up on the internet [1, 2, 3]--because the government was storing images of individuals in direct opposition to what it told the public. Not like we haven't seen this kind of double speak before. So, aside from concerns about the lack of data looking at long-term exposure to radiation and radio waves, there is another equally unnerving issue at play: privacy.
In 2010, a case was brought by the Electronic Privacy Information Center against the TSA. EPIC “sued in the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals to challenge the TSA's unilateral decision to make body scanners the primary screening technique in U.S. airports.” Three frequent air travelers added their names to the suit: security expert Bruce Schneier, human rights activist Chip Pitts, and the Council on American-Islamic Relations Legal Counsel Nadhira Al-Khalili. EPIC's suit against the TSA—a component of the Department of Homeland Security—“sought the suspension of the body scanner program, pending independent review and public notice and comment rulemaking,” based on “the Administrative Procedure Act, the Privacy Act, the Video Voyeurism Prevention Act, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, and the Fourth Amendment.”
EPIC's legal arguments in the suit are awesome and deserve to be quoted fully:
In EPIC v. DHS, No. 10-1157, Petitioners argued that DHS violated the Administrative Procedure Act when it failed to act on EPIC's May 31, 2009 petition to the agency and when it refused to process of EPIC’s April 21, 2010 petition. The Administrative Procedure Act states that each agency shall give an interested person the right to petition for the issuance, amendment, or repeal of a rule. Courts have found that petitioning parties are entitled to a response on the merits.
EPIC also argued that the DHS Privacy Office failed to comply with its statutory mandate to protect travelers’ privacy. The DHS Chief Privacy Office prepared an inadequate Privacy Impact Assessment of the TSA’s body scanner test program that failed to identify numerous privacy risks to air travelers. Also, the DHS Chief Privacy Office failed to prepare any Privacy Impact Assessment concerning the TSA’s current body scanner program. The TSA’s current body scanner program is materially different from the TSA’s body scanner test program. The program erodes, and does not sustain, privacy protections relating to the use, collection, and disclosure of air traveler’s personal information.
EPIC asserted that the body scanner program violates travelers' Fourth Amendment rights. Courts have required that airport security searches be minimally intrusive, well-tailored to protect personal privacy, and neither more extensive nor more intensive than necessary under the circumstances to rule out the presence of weapons or explosives. Searches are reasonable if they escalate in invasiveness only after a lower level of screening discloses a reason to conduct a more probing search. EPIC argues that the TSA’s body scanner program fails to meet these standards because the TSA subjects all air travelers to the most extensive, invasive search available at the outset. EPIC asserts that the TSA searches are also far more invasive than necessary to detect weapons. Alternative technologies, including passive millimeter wave scanners and automated threat detection, detect weapons with a less invasive search.
EPIC argued that the TSA’s body scanner program violates the Privacy Act because it creates a system of records containing air travelers’ personally identifiable information. The system of records is under the control of the TSA, and the TSA can retrieve information about air travelers by name or by some identifying number, symbol, or other identifying particular assigned to the individual. However, EPIC argued, the TSA failed to publish a “system of records notice” in the Federal Register, and otherwise failed to comply with its Privacy Act obligations.
EPIC asserted that the TSA’s body scanner program violates the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which bars the government from placing a substantial burden on a person's exercise of religion even if the burden arises from a rule of general applicability unless the government demonstrates a compelling governmental interest, and uses the least restrictive means of furthering that interest. The TSA's use of body scanners violates the RFRA because the capture and transmission of naked images of individuals offends the sincerely held beliefs of Muslims and other religious groups. Muslims believe in maintaining modesty and covering their bodies. Body scanners enable the capture and viewing of naked human images that violates this belief and denies observant Muslims the opportunity to travel by plane in the United States as others are able to do.
Lastly, EPIC argued that the TSA's body scanners violate the Video Voyeurism Prevention Act of 2004, which specifically prohibits the intentional “capture [of] an image of a private area of an individual without their consent . . . under circumstances in which the individual has a reasonable expectation of privacy,” when such circumstances are known. As the documents that EPIC obtained through FOIA litigation demonstrate, the devices are specifically designed to capture such images. Furthermore, as evidenced by the ground swell of grassroots opposition, the public is clearly voicing a reasonable expectation of privacy.
On July 15, 2011, the D.C. Circuit court of appeals ruled that the TSA did, in fact, violate the Administrative Procedure Act when it failed to conduct a public notice and comment rulemaking. The Court ordered the agency to "promptly" undertake a public notice and comment rulemaking.
Because the agency failed to initiate the required notice and comment rulemaking, EPIC twice filed motions asking the Court to enforce it's own order - the first on October 28, 2011 and the second on December 23, 2011. The Court declined these motions. But after a year of agency inaction, on July 17, 2012, EPIC filed a Petition for Writ of Mandamus, asking the Court to enforce its own order and force the agency to initiate the notice and comment rulemaking process within sixty days.
In its Petition for Writ of Mandamus, EPIC cited D.C. Circuit caselaw that shows that a one year delay is unreasonable as a matter of law. EPIC also urged the Court to take into consideration the health risks presented by the machines, which weigh heavily in favor of a transparency rulemaking process which would allow for independent review and democratic process.
Along with EPIC, the American Civil Liberties Union, the National Human Rights Commission for South Korea, and Britain's Equalty and Human Rights Commission have all made strong recommendations to their governments to cease using body scanners until legal and ethical questions can be answered in ways that do not disgregard the civil and human rights of travelers.
But I digress.
The TSA agent looks at me quizzically. He's trying to figure out what I mean when I say false security. He doesn't comprehend—or at least he doesn't let on. He points to all the machines and TSA agents in the check point area and intones that this landscape of people, dividers, officials, weapons, scanners, and other technology isn't false, or fake, but real, effective security. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] I tell him it doesn't matter as long as the government continues its global, hegemonic policies where might makes right (and committing war crimes, crimes against humanity, and over-riding international law in the norm and not the exception). He informs me that it's a post 9-11 world and things have changed, much like the way things changed during the nuclear Cold War.
Neither of us is listening. I wonder if he's a retired cop or solider. I tell him nothing will change until we stop terrorizing others. He turns away from me looking at the people walking through the body scanners. Little else is said in the exchange. I wonder as I wait to be patted down what he makes and what kind of working conditions he has. Of course, since neither of us are listening, those questions won't be posed or answered.
I am eventually taken and patted down and told I am good to go.
Now at this point, I could wax poetically about the terror caused by the United States. I could also go into an in-depth history of American exceptionalism that lead to some people pushing back. I could look at the U.S.'s definition of terrorism and then the international definition of terrorism and show that we are guilty of all kinds of horrible criminal acts that would never be tolerated if they were perpetrated on this country.
I could go in-depth about cases of people with disabilites being humiliated [1, 2], women being sexually assaulted [1, 2, 3], children being invasively touched and searched [1, 2, 3, 4], property and money being stolen [1, 2, 3, 4], racial profiling [1, 2, 3], or the new forms of seemingly innocuous conversation that suddenly turn into an interrogation [1, 2]--all perpetrated by TSA agents. I could talk about the TSA's next generation of radio wave scanners meant to hide more of the naked body images and look for anomolies; of course before you enter the chamber, the agent has to make an assumption about your gender and push the blue-for-boys button or the pink-for-girls button. Heaven help the TSA if you are a gender nonconforming individual or a transgender person! All one has to do is read the news or review the Master List of TSA Crimes and Abuses. It's pretty sickening.
No, I'm not going to go any further in drawing a picture of how out of control the TSA, the DHS, and the United State government are. Do a search; you can find out all about it. What I am going to do is ask you to resist this horrifying machine. This holiday season, if you are willing and able, ask to opt out and get patted down. Bring a camera like Carlos Miller did [1, 2] or an audio recorder and document your experience. There are horror stories and if you are getting unwarrented attention, do what is best for you. But try it out. It's easy to get frustrated in holiday traffic and pine for efficiency and swiftness. But in that longing, we're letting the government--and the corporations making a ton of money off of this technology and the legislation to mandate it--make us believe that we have no rights and that anything is reasonable in a post-9-11 world. Well, it's not reasonable and it needs to change.
See you in the opt-out line!