Government attempting to restrict use of National Mall Take action right now to defend free speech rights!
Click this link to send your letter
|

Updates
|
Groups Sue Department of Interior for Release of National Mall Records
Monday, May 19, 2008
Complaint argues that the Bush Administration is illegally withholding documents
|
|
Uncovering Secrets
Friday, May 9, 2008
Freedom of Information Act Requests Demand Government Release National Mall Documents
|
|
National Mall Redesign Could Seriously Restrict Free Speech
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
from AlterNet
|
|
Join Us to Defend Free Speech Rights on the National Mall
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Take action today
|
|
Statement in Defense of Free Speech Rights on the National Mall
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Sign the statement! Build the campaign!
|
|
Washington Post: The Battle To Remold the Mall
Sunday, January 20, 2008
Preservation Proposals Spark Debate Over Protest Rights
Published January 20, 2008
|
|
NY Times Editorial: A Step Toward a Free Great Lawn
Friday, January 11, 2008
A New York Times Editorial published January 11, 2008
|
|
We are writing to you with an urgent appeal to take action now. Unless people around the country take action, the Bush Administration's Interior Department will be able to quietly work behind the scenes to deliver a knockout punch to free speech rights. By the time Bush leaves office on January 20, 2009, the National Mall might be off limits.
The National Park Service (NPS) has launched a new initiative, similar to that launched to exclude protests from New York City's Great Lawn. It will be used to further restrict or ban protest on the Mall from current levels. This is a component of a nationwide campaign of corporate-sponsored organizations working in partnership with government entities that claim that protests, rallies and demonstrations harm grass or "green space" or "natural resources" and must therefore be restricted or banned or shunted off to designated protest pits. A lawsuit filed by the Partnership for Civil Justice on behalf of the National Council of Arab Americans and the ANSWER Coalition successfully overturned regulations in New York City that were used to prevent mass assembly protest in the Great Lawn of Central Park during the Republican National Convention. Those planning to reduce access to the National Mall have stated that they saw New York City's Great Lawn policies as a model for their activities.
The NPS has set up a "public-private" partnership that allows business interests and real estate developers -- in coordination with the government -- to determine the future of the Mall. The NPS has announced proposals that include creating a designated protest zone; barring any structures, like rally stages, that might temporarily block an unobstructed view from the Washington Monument to the Capitol; and making the Mall completely off-limits for undetermined periods so that the grass can rest.
Right now, you can write to the National Park Service to demand no restrictions on the right of the people to assemble. We have set up an easy-to-use mechanism that will allow your message to be sent directly to the NPS and the Secretary of the Interior. Click this link to send your message. Please tell a friend about this important fight for free speech.
The government is hoping to push through their plans as quietly and with as little resistance as possible to claim that there is "consent" by the public to new restrictions. The time to act is now. Please click this link to send your letter to the National Parks Service and the Secretary of the Interior.
The National Mall has been associated for decades as the site for mass assembly protest and gatherings. On January 18, 2003, the ANSWER Coalition organized a demonstration of 500,000 prior to the invasion of Iraq. The Nation of Islam led the Million Man March in 1995 on the Mall. The National Organization for Women sponsored the March for Women's Lives bringing more than a million people to the Mall in 2004. A huge gathering for immigrant rights took place on the Mall in 2006 as part of a nation-wide outpouring. From the Bonus Marchers of the early 1930s, to Dr. King's Poor People's March of 1968, and the anti-war Moratorium of 1969, the Mall is the historic anchor for the exercise of free speech rights in the United States. The people of the United States will not relinquish this cherished right.
|