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Silent protesters harassed, ejected from US Senate hearings
By Barry Grey in Washington DC
13 January 2007
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Incidents at two Senate hearings on Bushs Iraq war plan
provide a telling commentary on the state of American democracy.
On Thursday, during the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
hearing on Bushs plan to escalate the war in Iraq, this
reporter was sitting across the aisle from a young man who was
determined to register his opposition to the war by silently holding
up a small sign bearing an antiwar slogan.
This elementary and non-confrontational expression of political
thought prompted repeated warnings from armed police stationed
in the conference hall. Two of them surrounded the silent, seated
man several times to demand that he put away his sign. Each time
he lowered the sign for a time, and then raised it again after
a few minutes.
This affront to authority had to be stopped at all costs, and
finally the police grabbed the man and dragged him out of the
hall. No more war! No more lies! he shouted as he
was being hustled out of the supposed temple of American democracy.
The incident was mentioned only as a footnote in a few of the
voluminous press reports on the hearing that appeared Friday,
and misrepresented so as to place the onus on the victim. He was
removed, it was said, after he began shouting antiwar slogans.

On Friday, two women from the Code Pink antiwar group were
sitting quietly behind me at the Senate Armed Services Committee
hearing on the war. They were wearing pink tops bearing antiwar
emblems. Suddenly two armed police surrounded one of them and
demanded that she hand over her shoulder bag so they could search
it.
Neither she nor her companion had said or done anything to
provoke such a violation of her privacy rights, a clear breach
of the Fourth Amendment ban on warrantless searches and seizures.
Nor was there any chance that she was hiding a weapon or explosive
device, since all those who enter federal government buildings
in the nations capital have to put their bags through a
screening device and walk through a police-manned metal detector.
Evidently the police were looking for something else of great
dangeran antiwar sign. They came up empty-handed and the
woman was allowed to remain.
See Also:
Iraq escalation heightens political crisis
in Washington
[13 January 2007]
Washington think tank bars WSWS reporter
An incident that says much about the US capital
[9 January 2007]
Observations on the opening of the 110th
US Congress
[8 January 2007]
Brookings Institution preview of the
Democratic Congress: Snapshot of an establishment in crisis
[5 January 2007]
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