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Dead Constitution See other Dead Constitution Articles Title: Now that the government’s made toast of the others, it sticks a fork in the 1st Amendment, too Now that the governments made toast of the others, it sticks a fork in the 1st Amendment, too Posted on April 1, 2016 by Becky Akers billofrights0624_image A filmmaker recently revealed why he shot his movie abroad rather than at home: he fears his government. Can you identify the regime he escaped? We moved to Germany, because we did not feel comfortable in _____. We felt like we were at risk [in ____]. We didnt know what [____s agents] might do, so we ended up in Munich
Was the producer referring to North Korea? China? Russia, perhaps? Nope. Oliver Stone was speaking about the good ol USSA. He didnt know what the NSA might do, given that his upcoming movie, Snowden, presents Heroic Ed as a historical figure of great consequence. So he moved production overseas. Even there, the feds long arm shook its fist at him: Problems arose with companies that had connections to the U.S., he said:
BMW couldnt even help us in any way in Germany. Funding also posed problems. No studio would support [the film, Stone] said. It was extremely difficult to finance
Eventually, financing came through from France and Germany.
Its a very strange thing to do (a story about) an American man, and not be able to finance this movie in America. And thats very disturbing, if you think about its implications on any subject that is not overtly pro-American. They say we have freedom of expression, but thought is financed, and thought is controlled, and the media is controlled. This country is very tight on that, and theres no criticism allowed at a certain level. Perhaps Stones feigning. After all, pretending paranoia over the NSA is brilliant publicity for a picture about the agencys arch-enemy, Ed Snowden. But what if he isnt? How far weve fallen, that two-bit politicians and bureaucrats tyrannize powerful producers into seeking asylum! Regardless of your opinion of Stone and Snowden, a government so hostile to dissidents, to freedom of thought and of expression, should not only shame but very much worry us. If the feds can intimidate a Hollywood honcho as influential as Stone, what chance do the rest of us stand against them? Nor is Stone the only casualty of this war on the 1st Amendment. Conservative radio host Glenn Beck is under investigation after a comment he made on his radio show when talking about GOP front-runner Donald Trump
It seems that Beck and his producer, Stu Burguiere, were joking on-air; the latter mocked Becks comment about Trump, to which Beck replied, If I was close enough and I had a knife. Really. I mean the stabbing just wouldnt stop. Both men insist that Beck was responding to Burguiere and in no way threatening to stab Trump. But that doesnt matter to the Secret Service. It will conduct an appropriate follow-up investigation. Seriously? Have these bullies nothing better to do on our taxes? Again, regardless of our opinion of Glenn Beck, the governments surveillance and its stifling of his speech should terrify us. And especially so because such censorship is moving from entertainments moguls to us: Attorney General Loretta Lynch acknowledged
that there have been discussions within the Department of Justice about possibly pursuing civil action against so-called climate change deniers. Yep, our rulers aim to punish those who reject a discredited myth. Ergo, they are investigating legal theories that justify such abhorrent totalitarianism and there is one, believe it or not, which may be even more tragic than this ham-fisted censorship: Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.)
[drew] a comparison between possible civil action against climate change deniers and civil action that the Clinton administration
The Clinton administration? This despotism is 25 years old?
pursued against the tobacco industry for claiming that the science behind the dangers of tobacco was unsettled. Actually, such despotism is far older than a quarter-century: it dates back a full one, to 1919 and the Supreme Courts wickedness in Schenck v. United States. When President Woodrow Wilson dragged reluctant Americans into World War I, he had to draft men for his army: sensible citizens refused to die in European trenches. Dissidents published pamphlets against such legalized kidnapping, urging its victims to resist. The government arrested two Socialists for distributing this literature; they protested that the 1st Amendment protected such speech. Naturally, the judiciary defended the Feds warmongering:
in many places and in ordinary times, the defendants, in saying all that was said in the circular, would have been within their constitutional rights. But the character of every act depends upon the circumstances in which it is done. The most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theater and causing a panic. What a false analogy! Shouting Fire! in a theater is an issue of property rights, not of speech; it pertains to the 1st Amendment as much as robbing a gun shop does the 2nd Amendment (and in a free country, the theaters owner, not rulers, would decide his response to the jerk threatening his business). Yet the modern state bases much of its infringing of the 1st Amendment on this deranged decision. No wonder we endure such travesties as prosecuting trespassers on trumped-up civil-rights charges. Against all evidence, Americans insist that their country is free. We cannot build a shed on our property without buying a bureaucrats permission; ditto to owning guns and certain drugs. We board planes only after submitting to official sexual assault. We light our homes with the bulbs our rulers prefer, and we fill our cars with gas whose formula the EPA dictates at prices it artificially inflates. If a cops so inclined, he can murder us with impunity. Bureaucrats and politicians have invalidated de facto most of the Bill of Rights; theyve curtailed and encroached on the few freedoms left until our liberties are too weak to do us any good or our rulers any harm. But because we can still mildly criticize those who lord it over us, Americans cooperate with our masters in calling ourselves free. Poster Comment: Jefferson was right, we need a revolution every 20 years just to keep the government honest. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: BTP Holdings (#0)
A nation of sheep, must have have its minders.
There are no replies to Comment # 1. End Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
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