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The Sons and Daughters of Liberty
Village Voice ^ | 6/21/2002 | Nat Hentoff

Posted on 06/24/2002 5:42:22 AM PDT by Free Fire Zone

Nat Hentoff

'All of Us Are in Danger'

The Sons and Daughters of Liberty

n 1756, in Boston and other cities and towns, the coming of the American Revolution was speeded by mechanics, merchants, and artisans who organized against British tyranny. Calling themselves the Sons of Liberty, they set up committees of correspondence in the colonies to spread detailed news about British attacks on their liberties. They focused on the general search warrant, which allowed customs officers to invade and ransack their homes and offices at will.

In the spirit of the Sons of Liberty, on February 4 of this year, some 300 citizens of Northampton, Massachusetts, held a town meeting to organize ways to—as they put it—protect the residents of the town from the Bush-Ashcroft USA Patriot Act. On that night, the Northampton Bill of Rights Defense Committee began a new American Revolution. Similar committees are organizing around the country.

Speakers at that town meeting were defying John Ashcroft, who threatened dissenters in his testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee last year. He denounced those "who scare peace-loving people with phantoms of lost liberty. . . . Your tactics only aid terrorists, for they erode our national unity and diminish our resolve. They give ammunition to America's enemies."

But speakers at the meeting emphasized that the USA Patriot Act and the the succession of unilateral Ashcroft-Bush orders that followed apply not only to noncitizens but also to Americans in that very hall. William Newman, director of the ACLU of Western Massachusetts, pointed out that law enforcement agencies are now permitted "the same access to your Internet use and to your e-mail use that they had to your telephone records"—and may overstep their authority. "The history of the FBI," Newman warned, "is that they will do exactly that."

Also speaking was University of Massachusetts professor Bill Strickland, whom I first met when he directed the Northern Student Movement during the civil rights campaigns of the 1950s and 1960s. Said Strickland, "The elements of the Patriot Act place all of us in danger."

One result of that meeting was a petition, signed by over 1000 Northamptonites, urging the town government to approve a "resolution to defend the Bill of Rights." Thanks to a persistent organizing drive, that resolution passed the Northampton city council by a unanimous vote on May 2. It targets not only the USA Patriot Act but also all subsequent actions by Ashcroft and others that "threaten key rights guaranteed to U.S. citizens and noncitizens by the Bill of Rights and the Massachusetts Constitution."

Among those key rights: "freedom of speech, assembly, and privacy; the right to counsel and due process in judicial proceedings; and protection from unreasonable searches and seizures."

The city of Northampton officially asks, from now on, that "federal and state law enforcement report to the local Human Rights Commission all local investigations undertaken under aegis of the [USA Patriot] Act and Orders; and that the community's congressional representatives actively monitor the implementation of the Act and Orders, and work to repeal those sections found unconstitutional.

"

This is a signal to the mostly passive members of Congress that actual voters are watching them.

In April, similar resolutions to defend the Bill of Rights from the Bush administration and from complicit members of Congress afraid to challenge Ashcroft were passed in the nearby towns of Amherst and Leverett. And Dr. Marty Nathan, of the ever industrious Northampton Bill of Rights Defense Committee, informs me that "the city councils of Ann Arbor and Berkeley passed civil liberties resolutions in January," as did the Denver city council in March and the city council in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on June 17. Other cities are also preparing resolutions.

You would think this grassroots movement to secure our liberties would be of interest to the national media, but I have seen little of it on television or in the print press.

To find out about these campaigns around the country, and about a range of organizing tools, you can visit the Northampton Bill of Rights Defense Committee's Web site, and its links: www.gjf.org/NBORDC.

At the town meeting in Leverett, Massachusetts, Don Ogden, who initiated the resolution, noted—and I hope the FBI transmits this to John Ashcroft—that "it is truly Orwellian doublespeak to call such unpatriotic efforts a 'patriot act.' "

Like Northampton, the town of Amherst also passed its resolution unanimously. Select Board Person Anne Awad did not at all see Ashcroft's "phantoms of lost liberty," but rather a clear and present danger to our constitutional rights.

"As members of the Select Board," she said, "we want to know that all residents and visitors to our town feel safe. We do not want to support profiling of particular types of people. If one group is viewed suspiciously today, another group will be added to the list tomorrow."

A further indication that many Americans are ahead of their representatives in Washington in wanting to be safe from Ashcroft is an April 24 Associated Press report: "Despite the fear of future terrorist attacks, a majority of Americans are unwilling to give up civil liberties in exchange for national security, according to a Michigan State University study. Nearly 55 percent of 1488 people surveyed nationwide said they don't want to give up constitutional rights in the government's fight against terrorism. . . .

"The telephone survey, sponsored by the National Science Foundation, was conducted from November 14 through January 15 and has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.7 percentage points." Sixty-six percent "opposed government monitoring of telephone and e-mail conversations."

The original Sons of Liberty were an instrumental cause of the American Revolution, and they spread the liberating news without an Internet. Think of how much more and swifter organizing can be done on the Web now. Let me know, at the Voice, what other towns and cities are doing to keep the Bill of Rights alive. Please do not use e-mail.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 06/24/2002 5:42:22 AM PDT by Free Fire Zone
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To: Free Fire Zone
Powder..Patch..Ball FIRE!

Bump for later!

2 posted on 06/24/2002 5:51:49 AM PDT by BallandPowder
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To: BallandPowder
"...the town government to approve a "resolution to defend the Bill of Rights.""

Hmmm. Do you think any of them have ever read the BOR? I'll bet they'd be surprised to learn what the second amendment says.
3 posted on 06/24/2002 5:59:26 AM PDT by babyface00
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To: Free Fire Zone
"We do not want to support profiling of particular types of people. "

Aside from this line I can kind of support what they are saying.

4 posted on 06/24/2002 6:04:15 AM PDT by Kerberos
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To: Free Fire Zone
What a pathetic attempt to tie the Sons of Liberty (created by Samuel Adams beginning in Boston) and the Committees of Correspondence (actually launched by Thomas Jefferson in Williamsburg, Virginia) to the cause of leftists who think protection against our enemies should not take place.

One of the main functions of the Committees of Correspondence was to gather information about what our then-enemies, the British, were doing in every locality, and communicate that to patriots across the country. In short, Ashcroft, the F.B.I. and others are doing part of what the Committees did then.

Beyond the fact that this article reminds people of our history with some accuracy (it confuses the creation of the Sons and the Committees together), this article is bullsh*t. Not surprising, considering the author and the publication.

Congressman Billybob

Click for latest: "This Column Is About Nothing."

5 posted on 06/24/2002 6:31:12 AM PDT by Congressman Billybob
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To: BallandPowder
Sorry,I Think That It Is"Powder,Ball,Patch"!If the weapon had riflings in the barrel(therefor,a rifle),the ball was less likely to roll out by accident.If it was a "musket"(smooth-bore),you had to ensure that all remained in place by ramming a patch last.
6 posted on 06/24/2002 9:50:48 AM PDT by bandleader
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To: bandleader
I ram the ball down with the patch. Whatever. Always put the powder first.
7 posted on 06/24/2002 10:04:18 AM PDT by Mr Ducklips
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To: bandleader
Powder..Patch..Ball FIRE!

BZZZZZ Wrong!

You obviously have never fired a smokepole before. Powder first then the patch is fitted over the muzzle and the ball is forced down the muzzle with a ball-starter and then plunged down the barrel until it makes contact with the powder using a ramrod. The PATCH is what provides the barrel to ball contact that prevents gas blowby and also allows the rifling on the barrel (if not a smoothbore) to impart the spin on the ball that provides stability...
This is your blackpowder lesson for today.

8 posted on 06/24/2002 12:21:57 PM PDT by BallandPowder
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To: BallandPowder
When paper "cartridges" were used especially in smoothbores, most of the paper ended up on top of the ball I believe.

Regards

J.R.
9 posted on 06/24/2002 12:30:42 PM PDT by NMC EXP
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To: NMC EXP
Powder..Patch..Ball FIRE!

BZZZTT Wrong!

When paper "cartridges" were used especially in smoothbores, most of the paper ended up on top of the ball

Paper cartridges originally were used as a type of speedloader. The paper was wrapped around the base of the slug and powder was filled and twisted shut. When loading the paper twist was torn, powder dropped into barrel and then the paper patch/slug combination was plunged down to the powder. With the advent of breechloaders, nitrated paper was used so that when the breech was closed the paper twist was clipped off exposing the powder. The percussion cap then fired the charge upon drop of the hammer... Paper cartridges only had a very short duration of history in firearms as when brass cartridges came on the scene they were so superior that the older cartridge technology disappeared in a few short years.

10 posted on 06/24/2002 1:11:49 PM PDT by BallandPowder
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To: BallandPowder
I've never fired a front stuffer using a paper cartridge. The guy I saw doing it bit off the powder end of the paper, dumped the powder, put the ball/empty paper combo over the muzzle ball first and rammed it home -- hence more paper on top.

A bit of trivia -- when the brits were still in India and using muzzleloaders with paper cartridges, the paper was treated with tallow to make it water resistant. A lot of their troops were muslims. The opposition started the rumor that the paper was treated with lard. This set off a mutiny among the muslim troops because they were trained to bite off the end of the paper to load. I do not recall the year.

Regards

J.R.
11 posted on 06/24/2002 1:30:41 PM PDT by NMC EXP
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