254 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
254 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
The Free Journal/ASCII Edition
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Volume I, Issue 3
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Copyright 1991 Sameer Parekh (Individual articles copyright by author)
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Editor-in-Chief: Sameer Parekh
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(fj@infopls.chi.il.us)
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This is the Free Journal. Submissions are welcome. Some
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characters have the high bit set. Distribute at will; cite authors.
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(Or editors if no author is given.)
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This is not meant to be an electronic newsletter. This is
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meant to be an example of on-paper underground newspapers to educate
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the masses about freedom and similar issues.
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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The Sixth Amendment
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Amendment IV
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The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses,
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papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall
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not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause,
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supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the
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place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
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I think this aspect of the Bill of Rights is one of the most
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hurt by the War on Civil Liberties. I will list a few examples. Many
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other examples can be found from the Pittsburgh Press's articles
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Presumed Guilty. Write to The Pittsburgh Press, 34 Boulevard of the
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Allies, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15230, and they will probably send it
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to you.
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The forfeiture laws that have been passed make a mockery of
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the rights outlined in the fourth amendment. On the mere suspicion of
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a law enforcement officer, someone is subject to lose nearly
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everything they own. In Volusia County, Florida, the police stop cars
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for contrived violations. If large quantities of cash are found, the
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police usually confiscate it, assuming that it is drug money, and if
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the person is a minority, you can be sure that the money will be
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taken. Victims can retrieve their cash by proving that they obtained
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it through legal channels. Makes a mockery of Òinnocent until
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proven guiltyÓ too.
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When warrants are issued these days, they do not specifically
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list what is to be seized or searched for. In the case of Bruce
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Esquibel of Chicago, the Secret Service had suspicion that illegal
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activities were going on on his Apple //e computer. The warrant gave
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the Secret Service permission to seize not only his Apple //e, but his
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2 Macs, which were in no way related to their suspicion. In addition,
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no charges have been filed against him yet he still lacks his
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expensive equipment.
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In the case of Steve Jackson Games, an Austin, TX-based
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role-playing game publisher, the Secret Service had the slightest
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suspicion that one of his employees was a close friend of Legion of
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Doom member Craig Neidorf. The Secret Service then stole all of Steve
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Jackson Games' computers, and the manuscript for the new game which
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would be their main offering for the new year. Steve Jackson had to
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lay off approximately 8 of his 17 employees. In addition to lacking
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any solid evidence, the raid was abysmally planned; for example, a
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laser printer was taken because they Òneeded the ribbon for
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evidence.Ó
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In Hudson, New Hampshire, the police broke into the home of
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Bruce Lavoie at 5 A.M. and shot him dead. An anonymous informant told
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them that they should expect guns at his house and thus should enter
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with guns drawn. Mr. Lavoie had no guns.
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--Sameer Parekh
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The Fifth Amendment
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Amendment V
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No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise
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infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury,
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except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the
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Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor
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shall any person be subject to the same offence to be twice put in
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jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case
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to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or
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property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be
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taken for public use without just compensation.
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People are deprived of life, liberty, and property
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every day in the War on Rights. As I stated in my previous article
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about the fourth amendment, people lose their homes, cars, and farms
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on the slightest suspicion that any wrong-doing was going on.
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In one case, Willie Jones was flying to purchase supplies for
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his nursery business. He carried cash because his suppliers liked to
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deal with cash. At the airport, an agent suspected that he would be a
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drug dealer and searched him, finding the cash. It was taken because
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the agent assumed the money was from drugs. We all KNOW that blacks
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don't have large amounts of money unless they are drug dealers, don't
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we?
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In a report by the San Francisco Examiner, it was reported
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that 80% of the people whose property is stolen are NEVER CHARGED WITH
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A CRIME. Some people may say, ÒMost of those people must've been
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drug dealers.Ó I say, ÒInnocent until proven guilty.Ó
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In the case of the Detroit police, during raids in which they
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steal people's homes, they give the children teddy bears. in order to
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Òreduce the painÓ of the their new status of homelessness.
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In addition, the money received by public auctions of these
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forfeitures are used for many purposes by police departments,
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including but not limited to, better squad cars, paid vacations,
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recreation activities, and similar Òperks.Ó The more they steal,
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the better their chances of getting another pool table in the rec.
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room.
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--Sameer Parekh
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A Taste of 1776
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ÒWe hold these truths to be self-evident: That all men are created
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equal; that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable
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rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of
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happiness; that, to secure these rights, governments are instituted
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among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the
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governed; that whenever any form of government becomes destructive of
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these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or abolish it, and
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to institute and new government, laying its foundation on such
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principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall
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seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness. Prudence,
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indeed, will dictate that governments long established should not be
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changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience
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hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are
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sufferable, then to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which
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they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations,
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pursuing invariably the same object, evinces a design to reduce them
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under absolute despotism, IT IS THEIR RIGHT, IT IS THEIR DUTY, TO
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THROW OFF SUCH A GOVERNMENT, [Emphasis added --SP] and to provide new
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guards for their future security. . ."
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--Thomas Jefferson
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An Apology for the 200th Anniversary
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This is an apology. Last week I thought I could organize a
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rally for the 200th anniversary of the Bill of Rights. Until Friday,
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I had the secure support of one other person. Friday, after school,
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some people said that they would support me.
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I apologize to these people. Saturday night I was very
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depressed. I spoke to the one person who supported me before Friday
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and he said that he would be unable to make it. I realized that I did
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not plan enough. I feared that the death of the Bill of Rights would
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be the death of me on this 200th anniversary due to my depression. I
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am still depressed.
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Today I gave up. I thought no one would be going. I felt an
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incredible lack of meaning in my life. Then at 9:20, I got a call.
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Someone was at the station with a few people. However, she said that
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it would be futile going because most of them had to leave. I
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apologize to these people. I fear that I lack the inner strength to
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go about my plans. However, I hope that this failure will not stop us
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from planning better next time and succeeding.
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However, I do not apologize towards those who only said,
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Òmaybe.Ó You may have been more truthful than me, but I was
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planning on going, although I may have failed in that respect. I hope
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that the next time such a situation arises I will not fail so
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grievously. I have decided to plan our next action far in advance.
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Thus, our next action will be in the spring. In the spring
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more people might be willing to stand outside to demonstrate. Upon
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discussion with others, I will decide the specifics. I will probably
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choose a more important location where we know of specific violations
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of our rights.
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Meanwhile, this is still a free forum for people to air their
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ideas. If you have an idea, write about it, and give it to me. I
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will not make my decisions based upon the opinion expressed in the
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document but whether I and others whom I ask to comment think it
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expresses the point well.
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And let us mourn the passing of the Bill of Rights on this its
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200th anniversary.
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--Sameer Parekh
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Do We Have a Future?
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The massive cutting of trees occurs most often in the now
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densely forested region of the Pacific Northwest. This practice is
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now devastating sizable portions of forests daily. It boggles my mind
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that there are actually inhabitants there who are against the
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perpetuation of these forests. It is all about the future. Do we
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want posterity to experience lavish timberlands? Do we want those few
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white-collar overseers to receive paper money to produce wastelands?
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Money is in no way comparable to the natural beauty of earthly
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forests. It is true that the groves do grow back, but they are
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clearcut once again in another 100 years; the cycle then continues
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from there. These forests are artificially replanted in rows. How
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can this be natural? The process makes things easier for the
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companies to come back and clearcut once again. Another issue
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concerning this topic is the wildlife involved. Should we humans
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knock down the homes of the spotted owl, or any other animals for that
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matter? I might be considered a ÒBambi Lover,Ó but I would like
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to know why one ÒsuperiorÓ race should kill out another, and if
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in fact we are superior then cannot we use our heads to figure out
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substitutions, rather than who has the most powerful bombs? There has
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to be ways of preserving this natural splendor and all of its
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creatures. These thoughts of magnificence in nature will soon be
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thought that live only in the past. We need to transfer our
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technology from firepower to preservation. Something must impel
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accomplishment soon.
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--Dave Maurath
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[Ed. note--in a book review in the Fall '91 issue of Whole Earth
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Review a chart is given illustrating total military expenditures of
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the world in one year s. the amount of money it would take to fix the
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environment. It would only take approximately one quarter of the one
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trillion dollars spent on the military to fix the environment. -SP]
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First they came for the Communists,
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and I didn't speak up,
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because I wasn't a Communist.
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Then they came for the Jews,
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and I didn't speak up,
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because I wasn't a Jew.
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Then they came for the Catholics,
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and I didn't speak up,
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because I was a Protestant.
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Then they came for me,
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and by that time there was no one
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left to speak up for me.
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-- Rev. Martin Niemoller, 1945.
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The Reverend Neimoller was a German who constantly was
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criticizing the Nazi government from 1933-37. He was arrested for
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treason in 1937, and after the war played a major part in the
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reconciliation of the powers. He recieved the Lenin Peace Prize in
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1967, and died in 1984.
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Amendment VI
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In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the
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right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State
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and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which shall
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have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the
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nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the
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witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining
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Witnesses in his favor, and to have the assistance of counsel for his
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defence.
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In the case of Manual Noriega, a government needed to be
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overthrown in order to get him and try him very far from Òthe
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district wherein the crim shall have been commited.Ó The War on
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Drugs is trying to apply its draconian laws to other countries now
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too. I would also assume that it would be sort of tough to get an
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impartial jury for his trial.
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In addition, in the Steve Jackson Games case, he was not
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Òinformed of the nature and cause of the accusation.Ó Many
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people assumed that the government was trying to exercise prior
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restraint on their new role-playing game. This was not their intended
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purpose, but for all intents and purposes it could have been, due to
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the even shakier nature of the real reason. (In fact, one of the
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pieces of ÒevidenceÓ that lead to the seizure was the discussion
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of ÒKermitÓ on a bulletin board system. Kermit is a program
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which enables simple file-transfer over phone lines, but the Secret
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Service thought it was some sort of Òpassword-guessingÓ
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program.)
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--Sameer Parekh
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ÒI sound my barbaric yawp over the roofs of the world.Ó
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-- Walt Whitman
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ÒI donÕt think that atheists should be considered as citizens,
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nor should they be considered patriots.Ó
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-- George Bush
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