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- Xref: sparky misc.legal:23293 talk.abortion:57956 talk.politics.misc:69779
- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!sgigate!sgi!wdl1!bard
- From: bard@cutter.ssd.loral.com (J H Woodyatt)
- Newsgroups: misc.legal,talk.abortion,talk.politics.misc
- Subject: Re: The Supreme Court Upholds Freedom of Speech
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.012131.2766@wdl.loral.com>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 01:21:31 GMT
- References: <1993Jan19.184005.14778@csc.ti.com> <1993Jan19.212210.6509@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu> <griswoldj-220193093948@jlg_mac.bntley.ingr.com> <1jqe2lINN8cf@shelley.u.washington.edu>
- Sender: news@wdl.loral.com
- Reply-To: bard@cutter.ssd.loral.com
- Organization: Abiogenesis 4 Less
- Lines: 74
-
- In article <1jqe2lINN8cf@shelley.u.washington.edu>, tzs@stein.u.washington.edu (Tim Smith) writes:
- # >> True. But you won't have to look very hard at all to discover that
- # >> citizens have a right to enter a legal place of business without being
- # >> assaulted or having their way physically blocked.
- # >
- # >This statement could also be used against most people that are out on
- # >*strike* when they are picketing their place of *employment*.
- #
- # More interesting is to ask what is the difference between the following:
- #
- # 1. Blocking streets and buildings to protest abortion.
- #
- # 2. Blocking streets and buildings to protest a war.
- #
- # 3. Blocking streets and buildings to protest a veto of a bill.
- #
- # 4. Blocking streets and buildings to protest a jury verdict that
- # you don't like.
-
- As someone who is willing to take to the streets every now and then to
- vent spleen about various atrocious acts of State, please allow me to
- provide some clues.
-
- All of the above activities can fairly be grouped under the broad
- category of civil disobedience. Non-violent civil disobedience has
- historically been an effective means of promoting change, and it has
- the added plus of keeping casualties low, usually.
-
- However, the activities brought to the attention of the Supreme Court
- in the Bray vs. Alexandria case (which spawned this accursed thread)
- go beyond simple civil disobedience in one arguably important way:
- Operation Rescue does not simply block streets and randomly selected
- buildings, it blockades women's health clinics that provide abortion
- services.
-
- The argument goes that what O.R. does is more than simply civil
- disobedience to protest the availability of legal abortion, it is a
- conspiracy to deprive a class of women of their constitutional right
- to legal abortion united by a significant animosity toward the class
- of women targeted by their actions. The pro-abortion-rights take on
- Alexandria vs. Bray was that the Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871, which was
- designed to protect unspecified classes of people from conspiracies to
- deprive them of their constitutional rights, applies in the case of
- anti-abortion activists blocking access to health clinics, and can be
- used to grant federal authority to keep clinics open in the absence of
- adequate state action.
-
- The Supreme Court has historically interpreted the Ku Klux Klan Act of
- 1871 as requiring `class based animus' on the part of any alleged
- `conspiracy,' and the pro-abortion-rights argument goes that
- protestors who block access to women's health clinics *are* acting
- with `class based animus' -- that clearly, any organization that holds
- that the State has a compelling interest in controlling the
- reproductive systems in the bodies of a specific class of people, and
- only those people, is self-evidently hostile to such a class.
-
- The Supreme Court disagreed. This has absolutely nothing to do with
- freedom of speech, and nothing to do with the effectivity of civil
- disobedience in the effecting of political change. The whole argument
- is over whether one can participate in an organized blockade designed
- to deprive women access to a women's health clinic without having any
- animosity toward the women so deprived.
-
- The Supreme Court said in a 5-4 decision, basically, ``Yes.'' -- that
- one can be completely free of animosity towards women while engaging
- in activity explicitly designed to prevent them from exercising the
- freedom to control their own reproductive systems.
-
-
- --
- +---------------------------+ I wasn't expecting it. When Danny Elfman
- | J H Woodyatt | sang the words, `goo goo ga choo,' Sunday
- | bard@cutter.ssd.loral.com | night, I cracked. Some horrors are too
- +---------------------------+ large to shade out.
-