About me: I value freedom-- especially freedom of speech and expression. I disagree with the censorship and control of MySpace, which is only one step away from China's Internet policy where anything critical of the government is kept from dissident eyes.
This terrible trend is soon to find its way to the Western world as companies are stepping up to price out the Internet and make it only a tool for marketing and the largest companies. There are already plans to destabilize the Internet and force online users to move to the free-access-but-government-controlled Internet 2, which will be dominated by mainstream media of all kinds and leave little or no room for free speech and other freedoms, especially in the case of smaller voices and bigger truths.
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"When liberty is taken away by force it can be restored by force.
When it is relinquished voluntarily by default it can never be
recovered." (Dorothy Thompson)
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The U.S. Attorney's Office agreed to reduce fines and drop criminal liability charges filed Monday against more than 50 people attending the annual Rainbow Family gathering in the Santa Fe National Forest near Cuba, N.M., according to one of the pro bono attorneys representing the defendants.
Since June 14, Forest Service law-enforcement officers reported 320 incidents at the Rainbow gathering, including seven arrests and 120 notices of violation for offenses ranging from drug possession to not wearing seat belts, according to Forest Service spokesman Lawrence Lujan. The rest were warnings.
Some of the people arrested were local residents from nearby communities, however, and not Rainbow gatherers, according to Albuquerque attorney John McCall, who represented some of the defendants.
"We had some local ranchers who were driving their trucks, chasing down their cows, an open (alcohol) container between their knees and not wearing their seat belts," McCall said.
McCall said some of the people cited for marijuana possession had medical marijuana cards. Others were cited for leaving their dogs off-leash, riding in the back of pickups and leaving a fire unattended.
Garrick Beck, a Santa Fe business owner and public-information volunteer for the Rainbows, said the citations were an excuse for the officers to search Rainbow family vehicles and "harass them." The Rainbow family has no official spokesperson or leader. Instead, it manages its gatherings through volunteers.
Beck said it was unfair to require the Rainbow gatherers to drive 240 miles round-trip for the hearing when they could have simply paid the fines by mail.
An estimated 1,500 people were already camped in the Parque Venado east of Cuba by Monday afternoon, with more arriving daily. Between 10,000 and 12,000 peopl
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The Rainbow Gathering and the U.S. Forest Service continue to trade charges over the festival that is expected to draw 10,000 people to a Northern New Mexico forest by Independence Day.
Festival participants accuse the federal agency of wasting money, violating their rights by ticketing them for dirty license plates and requiring them to appear in federal court in Albuquerque.
"The federal government may see a small profit in the fines gatherers pay," says a news release from an Albuquerque lawyer representing many of the participants in the gathering, "but that is little compared to its unnecessary spending of hundreds of thousands of dollars to intentionally interfere with citizens exercising their First Amendment right to peaceably assemble on public lands."
The Forest Service says it's protecting participants by busting people for using drugs and alcohol, which have already caused one overdose and other dangerous situations.
"Our responsibility in law enforcement is to help prevent these situations from escalating and aggressively promote for the public safety and health," said Gene Smithson, incident commander for law enforcement for the Forest Service. "We continue to focus on ensuring the Gathering is a safe and peaceful event for all those involved and to work closely with Gathering participants in good faith."
More than 200 people so far have had to travel 240 miles round-trip from the site in the Santa Fe National Forest near Cuba, N.M., to Albuquerque to see U.S. Chief Magistrate Lorenzo Garcia regarding various misdemeanors, drug and traffic offenses, such as not having valid insurance, license plates, registration and safety equipment. Forest Service spokeswoman Denise Ottaviano said only six of the arrests have been for felonies — assault on a federal officer, theft of government property, damage to government property and conspiracy.