Here’s a phone interview I did for Sound + Noise over the weekend on recent dissent and repression in the Pacific Northwest.
In the wake of the recent hearings of Leah-Lynn Plante and Matt Duran, Sound+Noise has been working with academics and activists to bring this act of government-sponsored political oppression into the scrutiny of the public arena.
It needs to be said, now, that these two individuals are non-violent political activists who have had their basic human rights and freedoms violated by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigations. They have each been brought before a Grand Jury (a secret judicial body that privately determines the need to apply formal charges, without the aid or presence of a defense attorney) and now face jail time.
In order to better understand the climate around this issue, Sound+Noise Editor Sam Maroney recently spoke with recent MA History graduate at the UofA Rylan Kafara.
Rylan Kafara is the founder of a blog called The Past Is Unwritten, and teaches a class on the history of punk with the Edmonton…
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This entry was posted on 2012/09/18 at 12:51 and is filed under "Intellectual" Sources, Punk and Protest. You can subscribe via RSS 2.0 feed to this post's comments.
Tags: activism, activists, anarchism, anarchy, Authorities, civil liberties, cultural analysis, dissent, domestic terrorism, domestic terrorists, FBI, federal indictment, felony, free speach, government oppression, government repression, Grand Jury, greenisthenewred, human rights, Leah-Lynn Plante, Matt Duran, McCarthy era, non-compliance, Pacific Northwest, political thought, Portland, Punk
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