192 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
192 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
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this is ATI, activist times, inc.
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Sunday, 23feb97 11:40pm
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Start with the numbers run?
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Sure, this is /P/ /A/ /P/. With the pap #'s run for this week.
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www.lollapalooza.com/history/1991 has really neat things about the violent femmes.
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www.newageinfo.com/prod/20.htm will tell you whether baba Ram Dass is "here now,"
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or "somewhere else now."
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www.ratical.com
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www.adbusters.org
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www.algonet.se/~Annapa
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1800-39guess. Tell Mr. Marciano to sew his own clothes.
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1800-Meatout. Info about the Great American Meatout.
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1800-anarchy is still artrock t-shirts and paraphanelia shop.
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Bucks County Pennsylvania last I knew. AH's hometown.
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516-922-wine is still Jackie Martling's jokeline.
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619-239-king is still mojo nixon's home phone. (Answering machine.)
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1800-eatshit is always busy. (I didn't like their driving anyhow.)
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DENNIS RODMAN IN A MILK MUSTACHE: Now That's Complex.
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a poem by Marc Weisenheimer
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Tormented? Driven Witless? Whipsawed by Confusion?
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Don't wait for your mustache to remind you.
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Cravings.
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It won't leave you feeling fat.
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Moos you can use; only in the refrigerated section.
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True to the original recipe; the finest blend of Wool.
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Think about it.
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Suddenly, things are getting personal.
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Milk.
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Where's your mustache?
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Wait 'til you taste us now.
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Yum.
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Mommy, when I grow up will I get breast cancer?
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America has been asking for it for thirty years.
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All the rules have changed.
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I had no idea it would grow the way it did,
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SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Milk
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Now Greatly Reduces Risks to Your Health.
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Hey, let's talk about the "F word."
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Drink 3 glasses of skim milk a day and you'll be
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Fat.
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Milk.
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Where's your mustache?
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SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Milk
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Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.
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Http://www.whymilk.com
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THIS IS THE CALENDULAR SECTION
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February is fashion bashin' season.
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Feb 26. Welfare Walk, Boston. 1800-939-4600 for info. Ask for Grace.
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Mar 1. March Against Hunger. sananda@northcoast.com for info.
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Mar 20. Great American Meatout. 1800-meatout for info.
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Apr 24-30. International TV Turnoff week.
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Jun 21. March from Philly to NYC. Storm the UN. (Date Tentative.)
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Jul 27 to Aug 6. World Youth Festival. Havana Cuba.
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Nov 28 Buy Nothing Day.
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Oct '97. Media & Democracy Congress. common@icarus.weber.edu for info.
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YET ANOTHER SLAPP: A Guess Inc. Lawsuit
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Against A Literary Reading in Los Angeles
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by Julia Stein
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Guess Inc., the designer jeans company, is suing the literary reading I
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organized September 8, 1996, at Midnight Special bookstore in
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Santa Monica, CA.
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Their suit charges libel and slander, and is part of a large
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libel/slander suit against the garment workers' union UNITE and Common
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Threads, a women's group to which I belong which is trying to help improve
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working conditions for garment workers. Common Threads and the Los
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Angeles/local/National Writers Union co-sponsored the literary reading. The
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lead lawyer for Guess Inc. is Daniel Petrocelli who recently represented
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the Goldmann family in the O.J. Simpson civil trial. Petrocelli is part of
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a 100-lawyer legal firm Mitchell , Silberberg and Knupp.
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In spring, 1996, I joined Common Threads; UNITE, the Union of Needle
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trades, Industrial and Textile Employees, was starting a campaign to
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unionize Guess Inc., the largest garment manufacturer in Los Angeles. My
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grandmother was a garment worker. I've written poetry about garment workers
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publishing them in my two books of poetry as well as written a long piece
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of literary criticism about American fiction on garment work dating from
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1810 to the present.
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On September 5, 1996, I attended a Labor Day Picnic Common Threads put on
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for Guess garment workers at Echo Park Lake. I heard at least five workers
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give testimony that they had been fired for trying to organize a union and
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one woman said she had been harassed on the job. The National Labor
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Relations Board sued Guess Inc. for illegally firing workers; in February,
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1997, 12 workers were recently reinstated on their jobs and received
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backup.
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At the Sept. 8, 1996, "Justice for Garment Workers" literary reading at
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Midnight Special I was M.C., read my poetry. Mary Helen Ponce, a
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Mexican-American prose writer, read from her acclaimed autobiography Hoyt
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Street.. Carol Schwalberg, fiction writer and treasurer of the National
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Writers Union/Los Angeles local, talked about the N.W.U. and read her
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story. story. None of us spoke about Guess. Edna Bonacich, a full professor
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of sociology at the University of California at Riverside and co-author of
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a book in the apparel industry, spoke at the reading for Common Threads
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about the campaign against Guess. The lawyer for Common Threads, Larry
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Rosenzweig, said that he read a legal declaration from one Joe Vargas who
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spied on the literary reading on behalf of Guess.
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Enrique Flores, a garment worker who lost his job when Guess took their
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clothing away from his employer, Kelly Contractors, spoke at the reading
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about his working conditions and losing his job. The December 16 issue of
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U.S News & World Reports has a cover story titled "Sweatshop Christmas"
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which includes material on Guess, particularly Kelly Contractors. At this
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shop the owner said that "he was paying his employees the minimum wage
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(about $200 a week), but they say they often made a little as $120" per
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week. Kelly workers Cristobel Perez and Emilia Hernandez said they had
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"forced overtime with no pay" and that "to avoid falling short {in pay}
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Perez and Hernandez took work home." Industrial homework is illegal in
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California.
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The lawsuit denies that Guess does business with sweatshops saying that
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plaintiff has "been praised and recognized by the DOL (federal Department
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of Labor) for its efforts on behalf of gamrment workers. On January 31,
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1997, the DOL announced that for the first time it was taking a company,
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Guess Inc,. off the Trendsetters List, a list of companies who monitor its
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contractors adequately to avoid sweatshops. Guess Inc. was put on
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probationary status indefinitely. In mid-January Guess Inc. announced that
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it was moving its production from Los Angeles to Mexico, Peru and Chile.
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Harry Youtt, lawyer/writer and grievance chair for the LA local/N.W.U has
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characterized this suit as a S.L.A.P.P suit (Strategic lawsuit against
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public participation), a suit corporations are frequently filing to harass
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and shut up critics. So many of these suits have been filed that the
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California state legislature has passed an anti-S.L.A.P.P. statute. Both
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the lawyer for UNITE and the lawyer for Common Threads have asked the judge
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to throw out this lawsuit, invoking the anti-S.L.A.P.P suit statute.
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The first court hearing for this Guess lawsuit occured December 23, 1996,
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at the Santa Monica courthouse. The judge postponed ruling on the motion
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from UNITE's lawyers to dismiss the case.
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If you want to help, please write or call Paul Marciano, president of
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Guess. Ask him to end the lawsuits against Common Threads and UNITE :
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1-800-39Guess or www. Guess.com
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snail mail: Paul Marciano
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Guess? Inc.
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1444 S. Alameda St.
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Los Angeles, Ca 90021
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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hey all kind brothers and sisters committed to ending poverty and
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homelessness:
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at one time, slavery was legal in the united states. it took the
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abolitionists 100 years, but their movement succeeded, despite the fact that
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they were fighting a capitalistic empire, racism and intolerance.
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there's a new breed of abolitionists out to conquer slavery again. this time
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people aren't chained to individual masters but to an unrealistic, corrupt
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and greedy society that keeps them imprisoned in poverty. and just like our
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predecessors, i know we're going to win.
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and, like our predecessors, we have established an underground railroad to
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support the movement. this modern day version supports the poor people's
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movement. in philly, we're most committed to the kensington welfare rights
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union, but the model supports any grassroots organization of poor and
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homeless working in the movement. the idea is that poor people are leading
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the way with members from the underground railroad as allies in every way.
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we are committed to the struggle to not only build a movement, but to making
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very real changes in the social structure. we participate in rallies, civil
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disobedience, marches, educationals, strategy sessions and procurement of the
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basic needs for members in the movement. the underground railroad meets
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every monday night at temple university, main campus, ritter annex, broad &
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cecil b moore aves, room 580 at 6:00pm. for more info call 724-1908 or email
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me...stay kind...theresa
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"Winning means that I've defeated all the negative bullshit in my life.
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Because it's not just winning. You can work your ass off and not win
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and still be a healthy and successful individual, as long as you gave
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everything you had to give."
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--Dennis Rodman. Interview magazine. Feb '97
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LIBERATION THEOLOGY CORNER:
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Or Was That Libation Theory???
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by Prime Anarchist
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Two concrete thoughts come from the metaphor of original sin.
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1) Clothing.
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2) Meat.
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(ed. note. The Anarchist chooses to leave it at that for now.)
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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THIS BROUGHT ON BY A RELENTLESS NEED TO KNOW:
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Does anyone remember when Reagan or Bush passed legislation allowing
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a president to TAKE OVER ANY NETWORK he so chooses in times of national emergency?
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Was that an ammendment, or an emergency order, or what? Does anyone
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remember? Let us know if you're clear on that. I just remember the event. First I
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thought about network as CBS, NBC, CNN etc. Then about 5 years ago I was
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thinking it might be ambiguous enough for someone to commandeer MCI or
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AT&T, GTE and/or SPRINT.
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Then just the other day I was taking a Prime Anarchist Moment of Thought
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and it occurred to me the letter, proclamation or edict or whatever it is might even
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be open ended enough to allow the requisitioning of say the entire infosupohiway.
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Just a prime example of thinking too much.
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Well this has been another issue of ATI, a prime anarchist production.
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ATI subscriptions will always be free.
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Address all correspondence to
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marco99@juno.com
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