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ISSE condemns police assault on University of Florida student
Statement of the International Students for Social Equality
(US)
19 September 2007
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The following statement was issued by the International
Students for Social Equality in the United States. It is available
to download and distribute in PDF format.
Click
here to join the ISSE and help build a chapter at your school.
The International Students for Social Equality condemns Mondays
brutal attack on a student at the University of Florida as an
outrageous violation of democratic rights and free speech. The
journalism student was tackled, handcuffed, assaulted with a Taser
stun gun and arrested by university police during a forum held
by Democratic senator and 2004 presidential candidate John Kerry.
The assault on the student, Andrew Meyer, a 21-year-old senior
in the College of Journalism and Communications, occurred after
Meyer pointedly questioned Kerry on the refusal of himself and
the Democratic Party to pursue charges of voter fraud in the 2004
elections, seek to impeach President Bush, or oppose preparations
for war against Iran.
Kerry said nothing while six police officers grabbed the student
in the midst of his questioning of the senator and proceeded to
shock him at least once with a Taser gun. On Tuesday, Kerry refused
to condemn the actions of the police. The police must have
had a reason to make their decision, Kerry said, adding
that the attack on the student was a law enforcement issue.
The incident began when Meyer approached an open floor microphone
during a question-and-answer session. Citing a book by journalist
Greg Palast, who documented voting irregularities in the 2004
elections, Meyer said, [Palast] said you won the 2004 electionisnt
that amazing? There were multiple reports of disenfranchising
of black voters on the day of the election in 2004 in Florida
and Ohio.
Kerry quickly interrupted, So whats the question,
whats the question? One of a group of campus police
and officials standing directly behind Meyer approached him and
told him to leave the microphone.
Speaking to the campus police, Meyer said, Hes
been talking for two hoursI think I can have two minutes,
thank you very much. He then asked the senator, with so
many outstanding instances of fraud already being reported during
voting, How could you concede on the day?
Meyer next asked Kerry, If youre so against [invading]
Iran, how come youre not saying, Lets impeach
Bush now? Impeach Bush now before he can invade Iran!
Meyer pointed out that a Republican-controlled Congress had impeached
Clinton on completely frivolous grounds.
He then asked, Were you a member of Skull and Bones in
college with Bush?
At that point, the microphone was cut off and police grabbed
Meyer by the arms and began to pull him out of the auditorium.
Meyer protested, shouting, I havent done anything!
Theyre arresting me! I havent done anything!
After being dragged to the back of the auditorium, Meyer briefly
pulled his arms free before being grabbed around the neck and
tackled by the police officers. They proceeded to shock him with
a Taser gun, pull him out of the auditorium, and arrest him.
The police attack, captured in numerous video recordings, prompted
gasps, shouts and protestations from the audience. In contrast,
Kerry was utterly indifferent. As Meyer lay on the floor crying
out for help, Kerry quipped, After they take him out of
here Ill answer his question. Unfortunately, hes not
available to come up here and swear me in as president.
Outside the auditorium, the campus police told Meyer he was
under arrest for inciting a riot. He was taken to
Alachua County jail and booked on charges of resisting arrest
with violence, a felony, disturbing the peace and interfering
with school administrative functions, a misdemeanor. The charges
carry up to five years in prison.
This Gestapo-like assault on a student who was simply exercising
his right of free speech and in no way threatening the senator
or disrupting the meeting is symptomatic of an effort to create
a climate of fear, intimidation and repression on college campuses
around the country.
In recent months, a number of professors have been fired or
forced to resign after campaigns by right-wing organizations.
Norman Finkelstein, a highly respected scholar and critic of Zionism,
was denied tenure at DePaul University because of his views. University
of Colorado professor Ward Churchill was fired in July on the
specious grounds that his dissident interpretations of US history
constituted historical falsification. The University of California
at Irvine last week rescinded a deanship offer to prominent law
professor and critic of the Bush administration Erwin Chemerinsky,
before reinstating the offer after a public uproar.
These are only the most prominent episodes of a more general
campaign. Organizations such as CampusWatch are witch-hunting
academics who hold left-wing views and are critical of the militarist
and anti-democratic policies of the government. They are doing
so under conditions where growing sections of students and youth
are moving into opposition to the entire political establishment.
The questions raised by Meyer reflect the sentiments of broad
sections of the population. His arrest provoked a protest of several
hundred students at the University of Florida on Tuesday.
Every student should ask himself or herself: If this is how
the authorities react to one student asking questions at a public
forum, what will be the reaction to the development of mass protests?
The treatment of Meyer is a warning to students all across the
country.
Behind the attack on democratic rights lies the growing social
polarization in Americaa country where students are forced
to take on huge debts, record numbers of working families are
thrown out of their homes, and millions are driven into poverty
as a result of corporate downsizing, while hedge fund managers
rake in billions of dollars a year. The indifference of Kerry
to the treatment of Meyer reflects the real attitude of the politicians
of both partiesmany of them millionaires like Kerryto
the people.
As opposition to the war in Iraq and future wars escalates,
combined with social anger over growing inequality and economic
insecurity, the response of the political establishment will be
repression. The apparatus has already been set up, with the support
of both parties, in the vast expansion of domestic spying and
the buildup of the police powers of the government.
The ISSE demands that all charges be dropped against Andrew
Meyer. We further call for a criminal investigation into the conduct
of the University of Florida police. This is not the first incident
involving the use of a Taser gun against an unarmed student. In
November 2006, University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) police
used a Taser gun against an unarmed student as he was leaving
the library.
The ISSE, the student organization of the Socialist Equality
Party, has launched a campaign to build chapters all across the
country. We are fighting for the development of an international
movement against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the growing
threat of war against Iran that is based on a break with the Democratic
Party and all of the parties of the corporate ruling elite.
We say that these wars cannot be ended by appeals to Congress
or the Democratic Party. They can be ended only through the independent
mobilization of working people, students and youth in a struggle
against the capitalist system that is the root cause of war. We
call on students at the University of Florida and around the world
to build the International Students for Social Equality and join
the fight for international socialism.
Videos of the incident are in wide circulation on the Internet.
(Student
Brutally Tasered by Police at John Kerry Q&A; UF
Student Tasered at John Kerry Q & A)
To find out more abut the ISSE or help build a club at your
school, click here.
See Also:
Join the International Students
for Social Equality! Build ISSE chapters at your college or high
school!
[20 August 2007]
Following fight over academic freedom:
University of California, Irvine hires constitutional scholar
[18 September 2007]
An attack on academic freedom
Critic of Zionism denied tenure at US university
[18 June 2007]
California: UCLA student
victim of police brutality
[21 November 2006]
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