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Quotes

Madonna to Break a Bad Law in St. Petersburg Russia

I will come to St. Petersburg to speak up for the gay community and to give strength and inspiration to anyone who is or feels oppressed. I am a freedom fighter. I don’t run away from controversy, I will speak during my show about this ridiculous atrocity.
Madonna
Nastassia Astrasheuskaya reports for Reuters:

U.S. pop singer Madonna has promised to defy a recent law against homosexual “propaganda” in Vladimir Putin’s hometown of St. Petersburg on her upcoming tour through Russia this summer.

Calling the legislation, which imposes fines for promoting homosexuality among minors, a “ridiculous atrocity” on her Facebook page, she said she would address the issue during her show.

“I will come to St Petersburg to speak up for the gay community, to support the gay community,” she said. Her Russian tour begins in August, months after the Moscow opening of her private gym named after the artist’s 2008 album “Hard Candy”.

Homosexuality, punished with jail terms in the Soviet Union, was only decriminalized in Russia in 1993, but much of the homosexual community remains largely underground as anti-gay prejudice runs deep.

The legislation was signed into law in March by St. Petersburg mayor and Putin-ally Georgy Poltavchenko.

It imposes a fine of up to 500,000 roubles ($17,100) for spreading what the bill calls homosexual “propaganda” that could “damage the health, moral and spiritual development of the underaged”, defined as those under the age of 18.

The law has caused concerns among the gay community that it could be used to clamp down on Russia’s rare public displays of homosexuality, such as gay parades.

Gay rights activists in Moscow and St. Petersburg, have scheduled two “Slavic gay parades” during Madonna’s tour according to the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender website GayRussia.eu.

Numerous attempts to hold gay protests in Moscow, ruled illegal by the authorities, have ended in multiple arrests and clashes with ultra-Orthodox believers who say homosexuals should be punished or treated in hospital for “illness”.

In 2010 the European Court of Human Rights fined Russia for banning homosexual parades in Moscow, in what gay rights activists described as a historic victory.

Madonna sparked protests by Russian Orthodox church activists on a visit to Moscow in 2006, when she sang “Live to Tell” on a crucifix while wearing a crown of thorns. ($1 = 29.2875 Russian roubles)

 

More at the St. Petersburg Times.

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Quotes

T.W.I.H.: MLK Leads War Protest of 5,000

Those of us who love peace must organize as effectively as the war hawks. As they spread the propaganda of war, we must spread the propaganda of peace.
Martin Luther King, Jr

History.com reports that:

This week in 1967, Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., led a march of 5,000 antiwar demonstrators in Chicago. King first began speaking out against armed intervention of Vietnam in the summer of 1965. In addition to his moral objections to the war, he argued that involvement in waging war was fiscally irresponsible. He was strongly criticized by other prominent civil rights leaders for attempting to link civil rights and the antiwar movement.

Here are some excerpts from a speech he made that day:

Poverty, urban problems and social progress generally are ignored when the guns of war become a national obsession. When it is not our security that is at stake, but questionable and vague commitments to reactionary regimes, values disintegrate into foolish and adolescent slogans.
Those of us who love peace must organize as effectively as the war hawks. As they spread the propaganda of war, we must spread the propaganda of peace. We must combine the fervor of the civil rights movement with the peace movement. We must demonstrate, teach and preach, until the very foundations of our nation are shaken. We must work unceasingly to lift this nation that we love to a higher destiny, to a new plateau of compassion, to a more noble expression of humaneness.

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Quotes

Japanese Whaling Short Quota, Blame Peaceful Resisters

There were definitely sabotage campaigns behind the figure."
Japanese Fisheries Agency Official

The BBC reported on Friday that with the season over, the Japanese Fisheries Agency announced their whalers accumulated less than a third of their annual goal. In total, 266 minke whales were caught and one fin whale. Though there has been an international ban on commercial whaling for over 25 years, their objective is to catch about 1,000 of the mammals annually “for scientific research.”

The agency holds anti-whaling activists responsible for the whalers’ lack of success.

AFP spoke with an agency official who said, “The catch was smaller than planned due to factors including weather conditions and sabotage acts by activists. There were definitely sabotage campaigns behind the figure.”

One group involved in the peaceful resistance is called Sea Shepherd. They trail the Japanese fleet and make attempts to disrupt its hunt by positioning their ship between the harpoon and the whales while spraying water cannons into the air to block whalers from taking accurate shots.

While the agents of the state in Australia have pursued legal action against agents of the state in Japan in the International Court of Justice, the brave activists are being the change they want to see in the world and are having an impact today despite the great risk to themselves.

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Quotes

Academia Criticizes California’s Three-Strikes Law

"A grossly excessive sentence can serve no rational legislative purpose, under either a retributive or a utilitarian theory of punishment. It is gratuitously extreme and demeans the government inflicting it as well as the individual on whom it is inflicted."
-- Concurring opinion of the California Supreme Court in People v. Deloza, 18 Cal.4th 585 (1998), in regards to a 111 year sentence imposed under the three strikes law.

A sociology professor in California has published a study that argues against the effectiveness of that state’s infamous Three Strikes law.

 

Robert Nash Parker, director of the Presley Center for Crime and Justice Studies at the University of California at Riverside, says that Three Strikes has had “no impact on violent crime,” despite 18 years of implementation and the population saturated with the draconian perception of the law.

Walkway parallel to the UCR sociology department, where a challenge to insane laws may have been committed. Perhaps ironically.

Since 1994, various convictions have counted as “strikes”  (Note: video at top automatically starts).   A felon’s sentence for a second “strike”  is doubled, and the third strike conviction carries a sentence of 25 years to life in prison.

Parker’s article won’t be published until the Spring 2012 edition of the California Journal of Politics and Policy, but already agents of the criminal justice system in the state have predictably refuted his findings.  District Attorney Paul Zellerbach simply called Parker’s findings  “absurd,”  admitting that the threat of having another strike on a defendant’s record played a part in that defendant’s plea agreement (while at the same time, as a judge he had full power to toss out a person’s strike entirely), inexplicably then trying to argue that the sentencing threats of either the second or third strike somehow prevented other crimes from occurring.

 

What has Three Strikes done for California?  Only overcrowded the state prison system, Parker’s study concludes–the violent crime rate has been on a decline nationally; and states that do not have a Three Strikes law have fared the same as California and other states that have similar laws.

 

 

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Quotes

Russians Protest against Putin in Saint Petersburg

"We have monarchy and not democracy in our country, and we should be honest about that at least, and say that we have monarchy."
Irina Mitrophanova

Despite years of propaganda showing Vladimir Putin as a popular leader of the Russia, demonstrators gathered in Saint Petersburg on Saturday to protest against him, at one time chanting “Putin is a thief.”

With the presidential election just over a week away, and three months after parliamentary elections in December, one protester, a lawyer by the name of Irina Mitrophanova said she was there because “We have monarchy and not democracy in our country, and we should be honest about that at least, and say that we have monarchy.”

Putin was handed the presidency in 1999. The law for term limits at the time only allowed him two consecutive, 4-year terms in 2000 and 2008, both of which he allegedly won.

In 2008, the term limit law was changed to six-years instead of 4, effective this year. If the Russian people are denied a fair election next week, Putin may be the de-facto monarch until 2024…unless of course, the Russian government changes the “law” again.

Video attached: Putin demonstrates his qualifications to control other people. Belting out the Pravda!

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Quotes

Over 1,000 Tibetans Protest Sunday, Gov’t Denies it Happened

Monks did not comply with police orders to hand over the body, and more than 1,000 people gathered to hold a vigil on Sunday evening.
International Campaign for Tibet

The International Campaign for Tibet said Monday that, “The 18-year-old monk, identified as Nangdrol, set himself alight Sunday in Sichuan province’s Rangtang county.”

Over 1000 gathered in Sichuan Sunday night to attend a vigil for the deceased young man.

The AFP also reported that “An official surnamed Huang, who works for the finance department of the Rangtang government, denied the self-immolation and gathering had taken place.”

22 Tibetans have self-immolated within the last year as a response to the martial law imposed on Tibetan businesses and monasteries by agents of the Chinese government.  State agents are preemptively surveilling places of worship 24-hours a day and cutting phone and Internet communications for some in the region in an effort to control the individuals who live free.

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