February 5, 2006



Protests: The View From The Other Side

Posted by Eric Jaffa
Friday February 03rd 2006, 7:51 am
Filed under: SpeakSpeak, Free Speech, Government, Media Watch

From the New York Times via Tom Tomorrow:

The demonstrators arrived angry, departed furious. The police had herded them into pens. Stopped them from handing out fliers. Threatened them with arrest for standing on public sidewalks. Made notes on which politicians they cheered and which ones they razzed.

Meanwhile, officers from a special unit videotaped their faces, evoking for one demonstrator the unblinking eye of George Orwell’s “1984.”

“That’s Big Brother watching you,” the demonstrator, Walter Liddy, said in a deposition.

Mr. Liddy’s complaint about police tactics, while hardly novel from a big-city protester, stands out because of his job: He is a New York City police officer. The rallies he attended were organized in the summer of 2004 by his union, the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association, to protest the pace of contract talks with the city.

Now the officers, through their union, are suing the city, charging that the police procedures at their demonstrations — many of them routinely used at war protests, antipoverty marches and mass bike rides — were so heavy-handed and intimidating that their First Amendment rights were violated.

There is a video of NYPD tactics against protesters in rotation on “Current TV.” I’m proud to say that I helped get it on TV, by urging visitors to this website and other websites to vote it up at the “Current TV” website. The video is “Made in USA” by Voytek. You can watch it online here.

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