Showing posts with label Green is the New Red. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Green is the New Red. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 06, 2011

NYC EVENT AND RAFFLE - THIS WEDNESDAY 12/7!

WHAT: Red to Green: Political Panic from McCarthyism to ‘Eco-Terrorism’ Panel
discussion with Robert Meeropol, Will Potter and Jenny Synan with an introduction by
Rachel Meeropol plus an AMAZING raffle

WHEN: 6:30-8:00, Wednesday, December 7th
WHERE: Community Church of New York (40 East 35th Street, between Park and Madison
Avenues)

COST: Free entry; raffle tickets are $2 each or three for $5.

Every year we commemorate Daniel’s arrest with an event on or around December 7th.
This year’s event will link advocates, activists and concerned individuals to think
critically around the Red and Green scare, and ongoing repression of political
dissidents in the United States. On the sixth anniversary, Family & Friends of
Daniel McGowan, The Rosenberg Fund for Children, Will Potter of GreenIsTheNewRed and
the Center for Constitutional Rights are hosting this panel discussion. In addition
to the panel, we’re planning on doing a raffle to raise money which goes to Daniel’s
commissary account in prison and any future legal expenses.

PURCHASE RAFFLE TICKETS NOW! You may change the quantity on the next page to
purchase as many packs of tickets as you’d like. You do not have to live in NYC to
participate in the raffle, but you do need to be in the U.S. because of shipping
costs. If you cannot make the event, we will mail you your prize.

****GO HERE TO GET YOUR RAFFLE TICKETS!****
http://supportdaniel.org/blog/?p=41

RAFFLE PRIZES:
IFC Membership (The Cineaste Plus One) ($120 value)
BORF signed limited-edition Support Daniel print ($100 value)
Bluestockings membership & t-shirt
Dr. Bronner’s Holiday Gift Basket ($50 value)
If A Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front DVDs
Livescribe Echo 4GB smartpen + 4-pack of Livescribe Dot Paper ($150+ value)
1/2 Gallon Wilder Brook Farm Maple Syrup
Art by Elektra KB ($250 value)
Sparrow Media Shirts: One, Two, and Three
Fingerless mitts hand-knitted by Sarah Paul (mother of Jonathan Paul, Daniel’s
co-defendant!)
Support Daniel McGowan T-shirt
Support Daniel McGowan Water Bottle
Green is the New Red book donation and signed posters
A pair of tickets to the Spectacle Theater
Two gift certificates to Book Thug Nation
1 acupuncture session with Famous
Pie Any Means Necessary: The Biotic Baking Brigade Cookbook
$75 worth of Books from Justseeds
Let Freedom Ring, edited by Matt Meyer
Eco-Warriors by Rik Scarce
Subscriptions to Fifth Estate
The Will of the Many by Marrianne Maeckelbergh
Books by Brian Tokar (“Toward Climate Justice” and “Agriculture & Food in Crisis“)
2012 Justseeds/Eberhardt Press Organizers
Books from Crimethinc. (Recipes for Disaster and Work), Eberhardt Press, Combustion
Books, Burning Books (Buffalo, New York)
Wind(s) from below: Radical Community Organizing to Make a Revolution Possible
Team Colors Posters
DVDs from Whispered Media (Boom and We Interrupt This Empire)
Certain Days: Freedom For Political Prisoners 2012 Wall Calendar
One year subscription to 4StruggleMag

Event Co-Sponsored by:
The Center for Constitutional Rights
The Rosenberg Fund for Children
Green is the new Red
Family and Friends of Daniel McGowan

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Does the Government Treat Nonviolent Environmental Activists Worse Than Extremists Who Aim to Kill

By Brittany Shoot, AlterNet
Posted on May 13, 2011, Printed on May 14, 2011

When you think of domestic terrorists, you don't tend to think of
university undergraduates who engage in civil disobedience. But
alongside men who are responsible for hundreds and even thousands of
deaths, Tim DeChristopher has been labeled a terrorist and was recently
convicted in federal court. His crime? At a sale where public land was
auctioned off to private companies, he placed false bids alongside corporate
giants to inflate the prices. Though Interior Secretary Ken Salazar later
suspended the sale of most of the land, aggressive legal action was taken against
DeChristopher's rather smart, strategic and truly non-violent resistance. He's
currently awaiting sentencing and could receive up to 10 years in prison.

In his new book, Green Is The New Red: An Insider's Account of a Social Movement
Under Siege, which is based on years of research and his popular blog
of the same name, journalist and activist Will Potter delves into
stories like DeChristopher's and the widespread, disproportionate
crackdown on so-called eco-terrorism since 9/11. With personal insight
-- Potter was once questioned by the FBI for handing out anti-cruelty
leaflets in a Chicago suburb -- he explores how animal rights and
environmental activists like DeChristopher concerned with civil disobedience
and property destruction as a consciousness-raising tactic are labeled domestic
terrorists as part of a modern-day Red Scare, the Green Scare.
Other domestic and foreign terrorists, who take dozens of lives as part
of extremist groups, are given far less media scrutiny and treated as
mentally unstable outliers by authorities.

"An unspoken tenet of any terrorism definition is that it does not apply
to the systemic violence of people in positions of power against the
powerless," Potter writes. "It only applies when the flow of violence is
redirected upstream, against government." An engaging, enlightening
probe into the federal government's chilling effect on free speech and
activism, Green Is The New Red is part personal narrative, part journalistic
inquiry, part handbook for at-risk activists.
Brittany Shoot: Part of what you discuss in the book --
whether or not to use violence to raise awareness and force social
change -- is perhaps the longest-running debate among leftist activists.
How do you think violent action, even without human or animal
casualties, influences public opinion of social justice advocacy?

Will Potter: I would extend that debate to the term "violent action."
I can remember back to the mid- to late-'90s when Earth Liberation
Front (ELF) and Animal Liberation Front (ALF) crimes seemed to be a bit
more prominent, and there was a lot of debate about what the word
"violence" means, and I think that's an important one to have, too. That
automatically shapes the severity and tenor of the discussion when
you're talking about destroying an SUV. In the book, I talk a bit about
this and why I don't believe destroying property fits my and most
people's conception of what the word "violence" means.

BS: Many of the activists you profiled are discussing or
campaigning for the end of different types of cruelty and destruction.
For example, people who seek to end horrific abuses of animals might
break windows in a laboratory, or environmentalists might burn an SUV,
yet the public conversation then focuses on property destruction rather
than the ways humans systematically use, torture, and kill animals or
the devastating effects of climate change.

WP: Right! I never mean to downplay the severity of property crimes,
but I think we, as a country, have totally lost perspective. Burning an
SUV can be dangerous, and it's a serious crime. It cost someone money,
and it caused some harm. But you know, Osama bin Laden was just
murdered. I've seen some really interesting discussions about this on
Facebook within animal rights and environmental circles. A friend of
mine said to someone who was going on about the greatness of Osama's
death, "You've condemned groups like the ALF in the past for doing
things like releasing animals or for breaking windows. But it's OK to
cheer on this bloodshed?" The assumption with all of that is that
property destruction or violence or illegality or radical action --
whatever you want to call it -- is always more appropriate if it's in
line with systems of power. I think that's really the issue right now.

BS: In light of the ways the post-9/11 climate of fear
fuelled debates about domestic terrorism, how do you think Osama bin
Laden's death could alter the public discussion about eco-terrorism?
WP: What has stood out to me in the past couple of days is how little
we as a country have changed -- or to put it another way, how much this
rhetoric, these policies, and this way of viewing the world has become
institutionalized. President Obama made a statement in which he said
that Osama bin Laden may be dead but we will never forget the legacy of
what has happened.

I would actually argue that we have forgotten. We really have
forgotten what and how much things have changed. We have forgotten the
uproar that existed surrounding the Patriot Act that was passed in the
middle of the night. We have forgotten how national security policies
were completely overhauled in the name of fighting terrorism. We have
forgotten when "terrorism" was not a household word heard on the news
every single day. We have forgotten all of these things. To me, Osama
bin Laden's death really represents a pivotal moment in a long chain of
events that is becoming more and more everyday life. I don't want to be
pessimistic, but I don't think his death will lead to much change
because it has become such a big part of not just the Bush
administration but the Obama administration. Now that this threat has
been killed, there will be another threat.
BS: In some ways, this doesn't seem like it should be a
partisan issue, but as you point out, the legal maneuvers and chilling
effects passed under the second Bush administration have continued --
much to many people's disappointment -- since President Obama took
office. Why do you think that is?

WP: Going into the Obama administration, there was certainly reason
to believe that he would be different. The example I use in the book is
from a senate committee hearing on ecoterrorism where he submitted a
letter of opposition, saying the hearing was a misplaced priority, a
waste of government resources, scaremongering -- it was really
fantastic. But since being in office, his policies not just on so-called
ecoterrorism but about national security issues in general have been
quite awful. He has supported extraordinary rendition, which is sending
people to other countries to be tortured. He supported immunity for the
telecoms that illegally spied on Americans. The list goes on and on. I
don't know if that means that there's no possibility of change with the
Obama administration, but like you said, I think a lot of people are
quite disappointed. And I think if more people knew the extent of how
much Obama has not only supported but gone even further than the Bush
administration, I think there'd be a lot more outrage.
BS: How do laws like the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act and
the vague legal definition of terrorism in general contribute to the
government's ability to label eco-activists as criminals or worse?

WP: I'd argue there are two strategies going on at the same time that
make this happen. One is pushing the limits of existing laws. So, for
instance, with the [multi-agency ecoterrorist criminal investigation]
Operation Backfire cases, the government pushed for terrorism
enhancement penalties, which had never been used against
environmentalists or animal rights activists before. They did this to
officially classify them as terrorists and chalk this up as a victory in
the war on terrorism. It has also led to disproportionately harsh
treatment of ALF prisoners in the case.
The other simultaneous tactic is to push for new laws that go even
further. The most important example is the Animal Enterprise Terrorism
Act, which passed in 2006. It took an already an already vague and broad
law called the Animal Enterprise Protection Act and expanded it so much
that it could be used to target non-violent civil disobedience as
terrorism.

So you have these two things going on -- ambitious prosecutors, and
then ambitious corporations and politicians -- not that they're
necessarily working in lockstep all the time but their combined efforts
are what are really dangerous because all of it is in line with people's
personal self interests. The prosecutors want a victory to show their
relevance and to show a victory in the war on terrorism. The politicians
want a victory to show that they're relevant to corporations and
deserve their support. As a result, we're getting some pretty outrageous
court cases.

BS: In the book, you write about the discrepancies in public
rhetoric between different types of activists. Why do you think some
violent extremists, like people who murder abortion providers and bomb
clinics, are treated as less of a threat by the FBI than less violent
environmentalists who don't harm living beings but may engage in
property destruction?

WP: What we've had is a complete inversion of reality in a lot of
ways because the most violent, politically-motivated crimes -- for
instance, by the anti-abortion movement, militia groups, Aryan Nations,
KKK -- meant to instill fear in the general public to push an agenda --
in other words, terrorism -- are not being labeled terrorism, either
through media campaigns or in the courtroom or in legislation.
Meanwhile, groups that have never actually harmed a human being in more
than thirty years of so-called radical actions and extremism --
according to their opponents -- are the number one domestic terrorism
threat.

As part of my work, I went through Homeland Security documents and
FBI documents and one thing that really stood out was that, actually in
the FBI annual terrorism reports, it does not list violence by
anti-abortion extremists or any of these groups -- Aryan Nations, tax
protestors, or people who have murdered human beings, sent anthrax
through the mail, or flown planes into buildings. In fact, in the FBI's
report after September 11, it said in the first five years after 9/11,
every act of domestic terrorism was committed by animal rights and
environmental groups. In that same time period, crimes of physical
violence [by other radical groups] were occurring that didn't receive
that label.

BS: Tell me about some of your personal safety and security
concerns as someone who both reports on and is involved in heavily
monitored, aggressively prosecuted activism.
WP: I wanted to talk about this a lot in the book, and in fact, in
some ways, a main character in the book is fear because it's there in
every courtroom, in every interaction; it's kind of behind the scenes in
every component of this story. For me, it's not something you think
about -- and this was something I heard from everyone I interviewed for
the story as well -- you just have to go about doing your work.
Now, you'd kind of be out of your mind if you didn't, at some point
over the years, say, "Hey, all of this terrible stuff is going on. The
FBI has come to my door. Maybe I should think about whether people are
paying attention." And, it's unsettling to find information about my
speeches and articles in counterterrorism documents.
A real issue I've had in doing this work is feeling like it
contributes to public fear in some ways, by raising awareness of these
issues and makes people feel more afraid and makes people wonder if
they're on terrorist lists. I always try to emphasize that our fear is
being used as a tool. The way we combat that fear is by being open about
it and by talking to people -- talking to your friends and to your
community, talking about it through your work and fighting it head on.

BS: How can we get beyond the fear?

WP: I think the most important thing through all of this -- the
reason I wanted to write about this -- is that when people learn what is
going on, sometimes the first response is fear, and it can be
overwhelming, intimidating, and depressing. But I also firmly believe
that the more we learn about this, it can also be empowering. Tying back
to what we talked about before, going through all of these court
documents and interviewing people everyday, it is overwhelming but it's
also empowering because you realize what these corporations and
politicians are doing. It's not magic. It's not a superpower. These are
campaigns that have been done throughout history to social movements,
and they're largely the same tactics. I think by taking a close look at
what's going on, we can see it for what it is and be better able to
fight back against it.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Marie Mason is Being Denied Visitors and Mail in a Special Prison Unit

by Will Potter on March 16, 2011 Green is the New Red


Marie Mason was arrested three years ago and charged with destroying genetic-engineering research and logging equipment. Her crimes did not cause any physical injury. Leading up to her sentencing, the FBI had warned that “terrorists” might attend the hearing. She was sentenced to nearly 22 years in prison. As I wrote at the time, Mason’s sentence was twice that of violent racists who assaulted African Americans on the night Barack Obama was elected president.

From the outset, Mason–a mother of two–was facing the longest prison term of anyone associated with the Earth Liberation Front. Then in August, 2010, she was transferred to FMC Carswell in Fort Worth, TX, which is described by the Bureau of Prisons as providing “specialized medical and mental health services to female offenders.”

Since being transferred to FMC Carswell, she has been denied all visitors except immediate family. Every single request by non-family has been turned down. In addition, for months she has not been receiving mail (prison officials say they have not officially refused any correspondence). Marie Mason is not being held in solitary (as she was previously at FCI Waseca), but she reports that she is being housed away from the general prison population, in a special prison unit.

Special Prison Unit

At least one other political prisoner is also housed there. In 1984, Helen Woodson and others entered a Missouri nuclear missile silo with sledgehammer and jackhammer. They said they were inspired by the Book of Isaiah, which says “They will beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks. Nation will not take up sword against nation, nor will they train for war anymore.” Woodson is scheduled for release in September, 2011, after 27 years in prison. [Update: To clarify, that 27 years has been cumulative. Woodson was briefly released from prison during that time, but she committed additional non-violent political crimes and was sent back.]

I have written extensively on secretive prisons called Communications Management Units, which radically restrict prisoner communications with the outside world. Daniel McGowan, an Earth Liberation Front prisoner, and Andy Stepanian, of the SHAC 7, were both imprisoned in a CMU. (These prison units were recently covered by both The Nation and NPR).

The Bureau of Prisons has not responded to my inquiries about the CMUs, nor about Mason’s conditions at FMC Carswell. However, Mason’s supporters and attorneys report that federal officials have repeatedly denied that FMC Carswell is a CMU.

Disproportionate Treatment

Whether or not that is true, it’s clear that Mason is being singled out for harsher treatment than other so-called “eco-terrorists,” and harsher treatment than other prisoners at that facility. Her restrictions on visitation are actually more extreme than those for CMU prisoners, who are allowed non-contact visits with family and friends.

Mason’s case truly puts on display the unaccountable, unchecked power that the government has acquired in the name of fighting “terrorism.” Like many other defendants, Mason was labeled a “terrorist” from day one, and that label has followed her into the courtroom, through a draconian sentence, to these disproportionately harsh prison conditions.

As the president backpedals on his pledge to close Guantanamo, and alleged Wikileaks conspirator Bradley Manning is inhumanely being held naked and shackled, it should be clear that this is fundamentally about a lack of checks and balances on government power.

“An evening like this”

Marie Mason’s support committee reports that she has faced these three difficult years with strength and courage, and she continues to do so. She has been particularly interested in her artwork and poetry. Here is an excerpt of one of her poems, dated August, 2008:

An evening like this: summer sunset…

The air no cooler than my blood, and still, so still

The tiny humming of mosquitos hovering in my line of sight

I will remember this when I cannot see the sun for days on end.

Please visit SupportMarieMason.org to write her a letter and donate to her support fund.

Wednesday, March 09, 2011

Supreme Court Will Not Hear SHAC 7 Case

by Will Potter March 7, 2011 Green is the new Red

shac 7

The Supreme Court announced today that it will not review the case of the SHAC 7, a landmark First Amendment case in which a group of animal rights activists were convicted as “terrorists” for running a controversial website.

The campaign of the SHAC 7 didn’t involve anthrax, pipe bombs, or a plot to hijack an airplane. They ran a website. On that website, they posted news about the campaign — legal actions like protests and illegal actions like stealing animals from labs — and unabashedly supported all of it.

For this they faced a slew of conspiracy charges, including conspiracy to violate the Animal Enterprise Protection Act and commit “animal enterprise terrorism.”

The defendants lost at the trial level, and were sentenced to between one and six years in prison. Upon appeal, the Third Circuit issued a sweeping ruling. It held that SHAC’s fiery rhetoric constituted a “true threat” (even though they were never accused of destroying property, or violence, or inciting such activity) because illegal conduct has taken place in the same campaign.

To put it another way, the court held that the First Amendment rights of a group of people could be restricted based on the past actions of others.

For instance, one of the defendants, Josh Harper, gave two speeches in which he talked about the campaign, and also his personal, theoretical support for the Animal Liberation Front and “black faxing.” The appellate court noted:

Harper’s personal conduct does not cross the line of illegality; to punish him simply on the basis of his political speeches would run afoul of the constitution. However, his conduct… does provide circumstantial evidence from which a jury could have reasonably inferred that Harper was involved in a conspiracy to violate the AEPA.

The Supreme Court has denied writ of certiorari in the case, which means the case will not be heard. In short, the appeals court ruling stands, and this is the end of the line for the SHAC 7.

The chances of a case being heard by the Supreme Court are incredibly slim, of course. But I’m a bit surprised the court will not hear the SHAC 7 case. The Supreme Court recently ruled that Westboro Baptist Church (the “God Hates Fags” folks) have the right to protest military funerals. Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. wrote that their conduct “is certainly hurtful and its contribution to public discourse may be negligible,” but it is protected, nonetheless.

All but one of the SHAC 7 defendants have been released from prison, so this ruling was not about prison time. It was about the precedent that this type of ruling may set, particularly in the context of the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act. And it was about whether that label, “terrorist,” should follow these activists for the rest of their lives.

Even if you do not agree with the SHAC campaign, or animal rights campaigns in general, the Supreme Court’s refusal to hear this case has chilling implications for all activists of all social justice movements.

UPDATE: Here’s a response from Lauren Gazzola, one of the SHAC 7:

“Today has been a hard day, because I think that the Supreme Court’s denial of our cert. petition was wrong. Not just legally wrong, but morally wrong. In that sense, I’ve had many hard days over the past several years. Right now though, I’d like to tell you about one of the easiest.

A few weeks ago I gave a talk about the SHAC 7 case to a law school class. Before I got up to speak, the professor showed undercover footage from inside of HLS. It was the first time I’d seen it since getting out of prison and I broke down. When it ended, the Executive Director of the National Antivivisection Society got up to introduce me. “It’s hard to know where to start,” she began.

I was next up and still slightly shaky from having seen the footage. I had planned to begin by thanking the professor for inviting me,
thanking NAVS for sponsoring the event, and thanking the students for attending. Instead I told the class, “I know exactly where to start.

I spent three-and-a-half years of my life trying to put HLS out of business and three-and-a-half years in prison for it. Every single day was worth it and I’d do it again.” Today, I’d simply like to repeat this: I’d do it again. It was all worth it.”

Saturday, March 05, 2011

Tim DeChristopher’s Inspirational Speech After He Was Convicted

by Will Potter on March 3, 2011 Green is the New Red


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cae5Pr7CHgk&feature=player_embedded#at=51

Tim DeChristopher gave a moving speech after he was found guilty today. In
a few months, he will be sentenced. He faces up to 10 years in prison.

“Everything that went on inside that building tried to convince me
that I was alone, and that I was weak. They tried to convince me that
I was like a little finger, out there on my own, that can easily be
broken. And all of you out here were the reminder, for all of us, that
I was… connected to a hand, with many fingers, that could unite as one
fist. And that fist could not be broken by the power in there… All
those authorities in there wanted me think like a finger. But our
children are calling to us, to think like a fist.”

Thanks to Rising Tide North America for the link.