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NEWS & LETTERS, AUGUST-SEPTEMBER 2003

Californians rally against PATRIOT Act

San Francisco--A campaign against the USA PATRIOT Acts I and II kicked-off here on July 7. The rally heard from an Oakland high school organizer (bottom left in photo montage), who related her principal’s suppression of any opposition to the war: from throwing away all of her leaflets to calling in the FBI to intimidate and terrorize three students who made a disparaging remark about Bush in their class. She ended by saying that her principal’s every oppressive measure was in fact legal under the PATRIOT Act.

Another speaker, an Iraqi-American (center), related the persecution faced by her son, a UC Davis student, whose car was towed and who was held in jail though he broke no laws. The police’s “excuse” for the harassment was that the car registration was with his mother at home, not with him.

A Japanese-American preacher (right), whose parents were interned during World War II, said that the difference between then and now is that then no one spoke up. Now he reported his entire congregation signed a petition to oppose the PATRIOT Act.

A reporter, who was fired from the SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE for being arrested in an anti-war demonstration, spoke not of his own case, but of the OAKLAND TRIBUNE story which brought to light that the brutal attack on the peaceful demonstrators at the Oakland port came after the California Anti-Terrorism Information Center warned that this anti-war protest is a “terrorist act.”

The unity of the many emerging voices represent a new challenge to the increasing intrusion into all aspects of our lives by this government.

--Urszula Wislanka

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