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lou raptakis – RI Future http://www.rifuture.org Progressive News, Opinion, and Analysis Sat, 29 Oct 2016 16:03:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.25 Highway protest bill represses free speech, discourages activism http://www.rifuture.org/highway-protest-bill-represses-free-speech-discourages-activism/ http://www.rifuture.org/highway-protest-bill-represses-free-speech-discourages-activism/#respond Thu, 19 Mar 2015 12:30:32 +0000 http://www.rifuture.org/?p=46228 Continue reading "Highway protest bill represses free speech, discourages activism"

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highwayshutdownA bill being considered by the state Senate would make interfering with traffic on a street, sidewalk, or highway, a felony. A felony, we should remember, carries minimum prison sentences, and directly or indirectly disenfranchises people for life. The bill, introduced in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests that swept the nation this winter, is sponsored by state Senators Lou Raptakis, Frank Lombardo, Frank Lombardi, Mike McCaffrey and Paul Jabour, who purport to want to protect public safety. There has been a great deal of outcry about the possibility of blocking ambulances during protests. This sort of objection and these sorts of laws, however, are manifestations of the systematic repressions that protests like Black Lives Matter seek to change.

For one, both the United States and Rhode Island prisons are full to overflowing (I know—I teach community college classes in the RI Adult Correctional Institution). As a nation, we also know that we have a problem with mass incarceration. In fact, it is one of the few bipartisan issues that currently has any traction. Filling more prison beds with nonviolent activists does not help.

Designating people felons disenfranchises them—in some ways formally and directly, and in other ways informally and indirectly. Convicted felons can vote in Rhode Island, but that is not the case everywhere, and there are almost universal employment and housing consequences for those with felony convictions. If every Rhode Islander who participated in blocking highways during the Black Lives Matter protests was convicted of felonies, a substantial portion of the activists in our state would not only be locked away for some time, but permanently relegated to second-class citizenship. To suggest that the bill has another purpose is to engage in delusion.

The threat of felony convictions would, of course, discourage activism, which is a grave mistake. Activists—indeed, civil disobedience—is responsible for some of the greatest social transformations in history, including the suffrage and civil rights movements, to name just two. Activism and civil disobedience have an important place in American democracy.

Third, ambulances are routinely deterred from highways for reasons unrelated to protest. Several months ago President Obama visited Providence, and the highway was shut for several miles during his stay, necessitating a full detour around the city for many of us to get home. There was no outcry about closing highways for such an occasion.

Fourth and finally, because of the bill’s language and the great degree of police discretion it implies, the legislation could scoop up the homeless, further criminalizing poverty. The bill targets anyone that “stands, sits, kneels, or otherwise loiters on any federal or state highway” and that “could reasonably be construed as interfering with the lawful movement of traffic”—meaning, of course, that those who live on the streets would be prosecutable for simply being there.

The First Amendment protects our right to free speech. To turn over the decision of determining when a protest has become “interference” effectively passes off that right to free speech to the discretion of the officers patrolling the event. The bill is on the table in Rhode Island, but it has tremendous implications for freedom of speech elsewhere, and could powerfully affect the climate of activism in the entire country.

Senator Raptakis, for example, thinks that highway blockades are “not the best way to protest.”

Hearing this, I am reminded of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s famous remarks from the Birmingham Jail about the “moderate, who is more devoted to ‘order’ than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: ‘I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action’; who,” King concludes, “paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man’s freedom.”

Let’s let this bill die.

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RI Progress Report: Tax Increases in Woonsocket, Graduation Rates Drop and Lou Raptakis to Run for Old Seat http://www.rifuture.org/ri-progress-report-property-taxes-hs-graduation-and-lou-raptakis/ http://www.rifuture.org/ri-progress-report-property-taxes-hs-graduation-and-lou-raptakis/#comments Tue, 20 Mar 2012 11:29:58 +0000 http://www.rifuture.org//?p=3978 Continue reading "RI Progress Report: Tax Increases in Woonsocket, Graduation Rates Drop and Lou Raptakis to Run for Old Seat"

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What’s the plan to fix budget problems in Woonsocket? A special 13 percent supplemental tax increase this spring. But here’s the problem with that plan. According to the Projo: “the special assessment will cost the average homeowner about $350 in a city where the median family income is about $770 a week.”

— Lou Raptakis, a former state senator, tells East Greenwich Patch that he is going to run for his old seat. Raptakis ran for Secretary of State two years ago and very conservative Glen Shibley ended up winning his seat. EG Patch also reports that Peter DiSimmone, of Narragansett, plans to challenge Sen. Dawson Hodgson, whose district now includes a stretch of that town in addition to East Greenwich and North Kingstown.

— Yes, financial problems of cities and towns is a huge issue for Rhode Island. But so is this one: the number of people who are graduating from high school is dropping. According to a study, RI is one of 10 states in the country to see a decline and, at 75.3 percent, we’re not below the national average.

— Dan McGowan lists the 15 most influential political operatives in Rhode Island. Congrats to Kate Brock, of Ocean State Action, whom McGowan calls, “the face of the progressive left in Rhode Island.” Ray Sullivan, of Marriage Equality Rhode Island, also makes McGowan’s list.

— Did you see where Ernie Almonte said he was thinking of running for governor but doesn’t know if he’ll run as a Republican or as a Democrat? This is the problem with the Democratic party in Rhode Island – it really isn’t all that different from the GOP.

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