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N.O.W. and the Re-Definition of Extortion
Pro-Life Task Force ^ | 12/20/02 | Walter M. Weber

Posted on 12/23/2002 12:25:49 PM PST by Cup of Joe

A group of people sit down and block the entrance to a business. The leader tells the owner, "We'll leave when you change your policies." Another group of people sit down and block the entrance to a business. The leader of the second group tells the owner, "We'll leave when you pay me $500."

The National Organization for Women (NOW) says.....


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: now; prolife
A group of people sit down and block the entrance to a business. The leader tells the owner, "We'll leave when you change your policies." Another group of people sit down and block the entrance to a business. The leader of the second group tells the owner, "We'll leave when you pay me $500."

The National Organization for Women (NOW) says there is no legal difference between Group One and Group Two. Both, NOW claims, are "extortionists."

Why is NOW making what appears to be a ridiculous argument? Because that's the only way NOW can defend its use of the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act against pro-life protestors.

When Congress was considering RICO, Senators like Ted Kennedy and organizations like the ACLU voiced concern that RICO could be used as a weapon to crush protesters. When RICO was passed in 1970, the Vietnam War was a hot issue and the 1960's civil rights protests against segregation were recent events. So Congress, to alleviate those concerns, carefully spelled out which crimes could fall under RICO. Offenses characteristic of mobsters - crimes like murder, kidnapping, arson, robbery, extortion, illegal gambling, and dealing in narcotics - were included. However offenses associated with protesters - like trespass, obstruction, disorderly conduct, even assault, battery, resistance to arrest, and rioting - were left out of RICO. Clearly RICO targets organized crime, not organized protest.

NOW, nevertheless, sought to shoehorn its ideological arch-enemy - the pro-life movement - into RICO. In the case of NOW v. Scheidler, NOW concocted the theory that Operation Rescue-style sit-ins and other technically illegal social protest tactics qualify as "extortion," and thus "racketeering," under RICO. Amazingly, NOW convinced a federal trial judge and a three-judge federal appeals court to buy into NOW's distorted reading of "extortion."

But the day of reckoning has come. In April 2002, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to review the Scheidler case, and at oral arguments before the Court on December 4, 2002, the Justices probed NOW's peculiar legal theory with pointed questions. In the process, NOW's theory emerged in all its glory.

Would NOW's version of extortion really target virtually all illegal protest activity? The answer must be yes when you consider NOW's argument. NOW's attorney conceded that, under NOW's view, if feminists were to threaten to damage a country club's golf course - unless the club stopped discriminating against women - that would be extortion. According to NOW, demonstrations for gender equality, if they cross the line into illegal tactics (trespass, obstruction, property damage), become extortion and racketeering.

Does NOW's version of extortion produce absurd results? Consider the reasoning of NOW's attorney who contended that forcing a person to write (or not write) something is extortion, but that forcing someone to speak (or not speak) something is not. NOW says the difference is that a pen is "property," and interfering with the free use of a pen is the "obtaining of property," a requirement of extortion.

The Supreme Court should put a speedy end to such nonsense. There is a world of difference between someone who pressures a business for a payoff, and someone who pressures a business to change its policies (e.g., to stop polluting, to stop selling porno, to stop discriminating against women, etc.). NOW's failure to grasp this difference is bad policy, bad logic, and bad law.

1 posted on 12/23/2002 12:25:49 PM PST by Cup of Joe
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To: Cup of Joe
Big Bump.
2 posted on 12/23/2002 12:30:19 PM PST by leadpenny
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To: Cup of Joe
Does Burke know that NOW has turned against her and will soon insist she leave Hootie and Augusta alone...
3 posted on 12/23/2002 12:30:57 PM PST by trebb
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To: Cup of Joe
NOW needs to be stopped. Hags united will be hags defeated!
4 posted on 12/23/2002 12:35:38 PM PST by TLBSHOW
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To: Cup of Joe

NOW's failure to grasp this difference is bad policy, bad logic, and bad law.

Why Abortion Isn’t Important

Here is one of the (to my mind) greatest philosophers produced by England in the last century, telling people-especially other philosophers-that sometimes it is better to walk away than to argue. Why? Because a person's conscience can become so corrupt, and lead to such equally corrupt rationalizations, that to engage them in serious argument about those rationalizations is both pointless-being unlikely to have the slightest impact on their thinking-and...

5 posted on 12/23/2002 12:40:33 PM PST by Remedy
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To: leadpenny
bump
6 posted on 12/23/2002 12:41:32 PM PST by LiteKeeper
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To: Cup of Joe
Rush made a comment that NOW's membership was less than 2,000 strong. They are smaller than some number of PTA organizations in almost any given state. So, given their numbers, they do not represent 'Women'.

Secondly, NOW was absolutely silent during the Clinton years. They said nothing about rape(s), sexual harassment, lies and extortion then.

Why would anyone listen to them now? They have neither significant numbers, nor an intellectually honest moral principle which guides them.
7 posted on 12/23/2002 12:43:41 PM PST by Hodar
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To: Hodar
Thirdly, the majority of NOW's membership is lesbian, and the organization is not interested in what normal women are interested in -- i.e., happy homes and good children.
8 posted on 12/23/2002 1:46:18 PM PST by lady lawyer
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To: Cup of Joe
It's much worse than that. NOW's position is that protesting on public property in front of an abortion mill, if it "delays" or "hinders" any womyn desiring to kill her unborn child, constitutes extortion. No illegal acts need be committed; merely expressing a pro-life opinion in the wrong place is now illegal.

The next step is to remove the "in the wrong place" caveat, and demonize any pro-life activity at all as "hate speech". They are already going after CPC's, to shut them down for the "crime" of trying to persuade womyn not to abort.

9 posted on 12/23/2002 1:55:41 PM PST by Campion
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To: leadpenny
read later
10 posted on 12/23/2002 11:36:30 PM PST by LiteKeeper
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To: LiteKeeper
Chaplain, I was trying to connect my thoughts on these two threads:

13 arrested after protest at Ithaca military recruiting office

11 posted on 12/23/2002 11:53:08 PM PST by leadpenny
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