Arrested
For Reading The Constitution
Only pro-war groups are allowed freedom of speech in police state
Amerika as cops kidnap people who recite the very document they
swore an oath to protect and uphold
Peaceful onlookers
were arrested by police for reading the Constitution while a pro-war
group was allowed full freedom of speech in Washington DC recently
in another flagrant example of how American cops are now the
enforcers of a tyrannical police state.
Police are required to swear an oath to uphold and defend the
Constitution but this didn't stop them from kidnapping members of
the Code Pink group, who gathered on a nearby sidewalk to calmly
express their disagreement with a Neo-Con pro-war event taking place
nearby by reading the bill of rights.
The pro-occupation group "Vets for Freedom" held a rally at Upper
Senate Park, Washington DC, on Saturday September 22nd. Their guest
speakers included Neo-Con criminals John McCain, Johny Isakson and
Joe Lieberman.
Watch the video.
A common theme of
the event was that U.S. troops in Iraq were there to "protect the
freedom" of the Iraqi people, but this freedom didn't seem to apply
to the group of American citizens that decided to use their first
amendment right of free speech to voice their dissent.
Five members of Code Pink were arrested, one for reading the
Constitution, as police refused to say what the charges were and
refused to answer any questions while demonstrators were hauled into
paddy wagons.
The events echo
similar incidents across the pond in Britain,
where a woman was questioned by police
and entered into the anti-terror database for reading a mainstream
newspaper that had an anti-war headline.
Much to the chagrin of Neo-Con trolls who attempted to skew the
events seen in the video by claiming the Code Pink group were
heckling parents of slain U.S. soldiers, one of the five arrested
was an Iraq veteran herself.
"Screw you, anonymous coward. I served my country honorably and
proudly - and with my head, not my knees. Dissent is patriotic. If
you want to work for a king, go flip burgers," retorted one
individual in response to
Neo-Cons who tried to justify the arrests
on Internet messageboards.