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Conference turris::womannotes-v3

Title:Topics of Interest to Women
Notice:V3 is closed. TURRIS::WOMANNOTES-V5 is open.
Moderator:REGENT::BROOMHEAD
Created:Thu Jan 30 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 30 1995
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1078
Total number of notes:52352

203.0. "trading women for CLOTH??" by CADSYS::RICHARDSON () Thu Jun 14 1990 10:04

    Well, happy FLAG DAY, everyone!      <flame ON!>
    
    Grumble!!!!!!!
    
    While I was getting the laundry and breakfast going this morning before
    heading in to DEC, I turned on the TV to catch the weather report
    (since I have a bunch of yard work to do tonight if possible).  The
    Today Show was busy interviewing a bunch of !(&#*(!@# politicians who
    are busy attempting to jam aan anti-flag-burning constitutional
    amendment through congress.
    
    Gimme a break!  These are the same politicians who did not manage to
    get passed an amendment to protect the rights of the majority of the
    Ameircan adult population (a majority of which I am a member), and they
    instead want to protect the "rights" of a symbolic rectangle of
    inanimate cloth!!!!!!!!!   What a bunch of fools they must take us for!
    
    
    /Charlotte!!
    
    (Thanks; I feel MUCH better now...)
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203.1What stupidity!HYSTER::DELISLEThu Jun 14 1990 10:2221
    Thank you Charlotte, for entering this note.  I was just going to enter
    on e on this subject, tho couldn't decide where to enter it.
    
    You are absolutely right.  This absolute absurdidity at its worst.  I
    am furious that the politicians take us for such fools that they
    honestly think we want to pass an amendment to the Constitution (for
    Cr*st sake!!!) on this stupidity!!!@!!!!!
    
    They are simple minded, obnoxious fools!!!!
    
    I have already checked what my two Senators think of this - they are
    opposed thank heavens, otherwise they'd be off my voting list come the
    next election.
    
    This will be an interesting issue to follow.  It will raise a lot of
    heat, a lot of strong opinion.  But I think it will be a great surprise
    to many of those politicos down there in D.C. that people DO NOT agree
    with what they're trying to do.  I do not bellieve in messing with the
    Bill of Rights on this silly triviality.  Get down to some REAL issues
    you politicians!!!!
    
203.2We gotta stop this nowCGVAX2::CONNELLTrepanation, I need it like a hole in the headThu Jun 14 1990 10:5512
    I caught the tail end of an interview with the senator who is trying to
    do this. I believe it is a modification to the 1st ammendment that is
    being pushed. I was horrified when I heard this. How else will they try
    to modify it in the future? Take away free speech, the right to
    assembly? Holy Horsehockey. I hope everyone will call their senators
    and reps and give a resounding NNNNOOOOO to this. I'm scared to death
    at the thought of what could happen and I agree that the burning of the
    flag is something that shouldn't be done in protest. If you don't like
    whats going on work to change it or leave. This scares the s*** out of
    me though.
    
    Phil
203.3LUNER::MALLETTBarking Spider IndustriesThu Jun 14 1990 11:1419
    re: .1
    
    � I am furious that the politicians take us for such fools that they
    � honestly think we want to pass an amendment to the Constitution. . . 
    � They are simple minded, obnoxious fools!!!!. . .I think it will be 
    � a great surprise to many of those politicos down there in D.C. that 
    � people DO NOT agree with what they're trying to do.  
    
    While I oppose a flag anti-defammation amendment, I can't really
    agree that those involved in the political process are "fools".
    And while I understand that many people don't want such an 
    amendment, I think there's ample evidence to suggest that many
    people, perhaps a majority, do.  I think that in this election
    year, few politicians are unaware of the possible impact that
    voting against such an amendment might have on their careers.
    I think that might make them any number of things, but foolish
    isn't one of them.
    
    Steve
203.4Get ready for the 21st century!SPARKL::CICCOLINIThu Jun 14 1990 11:159
    re -1 free speech is pretty much gone and following closely on its
    heels is your privacy, your freedom of religion and your protection 
    against unreasonable searches.  Laws are increasingly being forged
    and enforced by people you don't vote for, (the Supreme Court - all 
    judges at every level, actually), your police force has turned against
    you and now works for the local governments, (raising money), and NOT 
    for you or your protection.  And the government structuring of fines
    and fees, (in which you have no voice), is beginning to amount to
    little more than extortion.  Who you gonna call?!
203.5LUNER::MALLETTBarking Spider IndustriesThu Jun 14 1990 11:3433
    re: .4
    
    �  re -1 
    
    By "-1" did you intend to point to .3?
    
    � free speech is pretty much gone. . .
    
    Major disagreement here.  The way you phrase it, it sounds as 
    if there's little difference between this country and, say,
    North Korea or the People's Republic of China.
    
    � Laws are increasingly being forged and enforced by people you don't 
    � vote for, (the Supreme Court - all judges at every level, actually), 
    
    I don't buy this notion.  While it's clear to me that the judicial
    branch has a significant effect upon the law by their interpretations,
    the laws that they interpret are "forged" by a different segment
    of the government.
    
    � . . .your police force has turned against you and now works for the 
    � local governments, (raising money), and NOT for you or your protection.
    
    Would you care to elaborate on that?  It strikes me as an extremely
    generalized statement, but I may be misinterpreting it.
    
    � And the government structuring of fines and fees, (in which you have 
    � no voice), is beginning to amount to little more than extortion.  
    
    I suggest that few if any of us know what it's like to live in a
    society in which we truly have *no* voice.  
    
    Steve
203.6From bad to worseROLL::GASSAWAYInsert clever personal name hereThu Jun 14 1990 11:5815
    Well, the deal now, from what I've heard is going on in Louisiana,
    is that it won't be illegal to burn the flag, but the penalty for
    assaulting someone who is burning the flag will only be $25.  They
    interviewed some people on the street about this new proposed
    legislation, they thought the $25 fine was appropriate for the crime.
    
    Gee, I could get twice that for going 50 in the 40 zone.  Such is the
    sanctity of human life. 
    
    I could put in a comment regarding Louisiana's stand on the rights of
    unborn life vs. the rights they give born life....but I don't know if
    it's really worth it.   It doesn't seem like we're talking about
    rational people.
    
    Lisa
203.7NAVIER::SAISIThu Jun 14 1990 13:3710
    I think the whole flag burning thing is outrageous.  It surprises
    me that politicians that are so rabidly anti-communist can turn
    around and do things as repressive as the countries they condemn.
    I want to make a bumper sticker that says:
    
    		Ideas Before Icons
    		Save the 1st Ammendment

    Anyone know how to make your own?
    	Linda
203.8Nah, they're just lazyBLUMON::GUGELAdrenaline: my drug of choiceThu Jun 14 1990 14:037
    
    My take on this thing: it seems our Washington legislators don't
    want to do any *real* work, such as finding a solution to a hard
    (and real!) problem such as the federal deficit.
    
    Nah, much easier to take a non-issue, make it into an issue with the
    media's help, and try to push through a simple 'solution'.
203.9PROXY::SCHMIDTThinking globally, acting locally!Thu Jun 14 1990 14:0717
Sandy:

>                     <<< Note 203.4 by SPARKL::CICCOLINI >>>
>
> Laws are increasingly being forged and enforced by people you don't
> vote for, (the Supreme Court - all judges at every level, actually), ...

  Sorry, but it's not that way.  *YOU*, Sandy Ciccolini may not have
  voted for the current complement of the judiciary, but "you" in the
  general sense certainly did.  There was no doubt that the 1984 pres-
  idential election was going to set the course of the Supreme Court
  for the remainder of the Century, and so it did.  The same for the
  rest of the federal judiciary.  And I didn't see any effort to change
  that direction in the 1988 election, so the great unwashed obviously
  approves of the new direction or doesn't give two sh*ts either way.

                                   Atlant
203.10LUNER::MALLETTBarking Spider IndustriesThu Jun 14 1990 14:3315
    I absolutely agree that focusing attention on this issue
    takes legislators attention away from issues that I consider
    to be far more important and, to some degree, I think that
    some of those people feel it's an "easy" issue to deal
    with.
    
    On the other side of the coin, I wonder what you, as a 
    legislator up for re-election, would do when letters and
    calls by the thousand start to pour in urging you to support
    such a flag protection amendment.  What would you say to
    those about choose between voting for you or your opponent?  
    
    By the way, your opponent supports the amendment.
    
    Steve
203.11a sorry stateTOOK::CURRIERThu Jun 14 1990 14:5310
    .8 hit it right on the nose.  
    
    Of more import to us all - spending dropped for the third month in a
    row nationwide.  Although using the R word seems to be met with 
    derision, this really is an indicator of a recession.  Do you suppose
    that this will be front page news?
    
    Something's wrong with the media.  They provide the soap-boxes.
    
    
203.12I'm back again...CADSYS::RICHARDSONThu Jun 14 1990 14:5526
    Don't get me wrong, it's not that I think that burning an American flag
    is an especially meaningful gesture of protest, I just think that
    amending the constitution to protect the "rights" of an inanimate
    object like a flag is silly, very silly.  I wish the elected officials,
    if they must amend the constitution, would do so in a meaningful way,
    not in order to make political hay with constituents who can't tell the
    symbol from what it symbolizes.  And I would rather they spend my tax
    money doing something real!  There are plenty of real, urgent problems
    around to be solved.  Flag-burning is NOT one of them!
    
    On the other hand, if I was feeling more cynical than usual, I might
    say that if these politicos are spending all their energy on this silly
    non-issue of non-importance, at least they aren't doing active harm to
    anything else.... though you could view it as an attack on the
    guarantee of free speech (and be right, too).
    
    But I am feeling angry instead of cynical.  I would rather have an
    amendment to make unconstitutional silly laws forbidding me to carry
    things over a certain weight, or to work more than a certain number of
    hours straight (which are still on the books in some places;
    Massachusetts, for all its faults, has a state ERA already) while not
    forbidding my husband, a tiny man several inches shorter than I am with
    a bad knee, who was on crutches up until a month or so ago, to do the
    same things.
    
    /Charlotte, again
203.13FSHQA2::AWASKOMThu Jun 14 1990 15:2613
    If I were a legislator faced with mail on this, I'd probably make
    up a form letter, and start it off with the quote about disagreeing
    with what you have to say, but defending your right to say it.
    Followed up with the quote that the purpose of government
    is to protect the minority from the tyranny of the majority.
    
    
    <set mode semi-sarcastic>
    And then blather about what current work I'm doing on issues *I*
    regard as important - like increasing government spending in our
    district. 
    
    Alison
203.14disgustSKYLRK::OLSONPartner in the Almaden Train Wreck!Thu Jun 14 1990 15:2913
    re .11-
    
    > Something's wrong with the media.  They provide the soap-boxes.
    
    Bingo!  The politians couldn't get away with so much demagoguery
    if the press didn't pander to them.  When is an investigative
    journalist going to really find out why the Justice Dept isn't
    going after the S&L crooks?  When is the corruption of the national
    legislature going to be hammered into the electorate?  Why is the
    4th Estate pandering to the entrenched elites?  They're going along 
    to get along.   This nonsensical flag amendment is typical.
    
    DougO
203.15"none dare call it treason", but it isXANADU::FLEISCHERwithout vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63)Thu Jun 14 1990 16:5039
re Note 203.13 by FSHQA2::AWASKOM:

>     <set mode semi-sarcastic>
>     And then blather about what current work I'm doing on issues *I*
>     regard as important - like increasing government spending in our
>     district. 
  
        Your opponent would probably use an out-of-context quote
        from this letter, or a paraphrase, in a campaign ad. :-{

        "The Flag" is an incredibly emotional issue for many people. 
        As recent elections have demonstrated, the emotional issues
        are the ones that seem to motivate voters.  The "Bill of
        Rights" is more of an intellectual issue for many people
        (many wouldn't recognize the First Amendment if you showed it
        to them).

        Note that we celebrate "Flag Day" (which happens to be today;
        how convenient that the Supreme Court announced its decision
        the Monday before Flag Day!).  We don't celebrate "Bill of
        Rights Day" or "Freedom of Speech Day."  This year is the
        bicentennial of the Bill of Rights, and the only organization
        which seems to be celebrating it is a tobacco company (for
        possibly ulterior motives).

        Maybe I'm not a real, red-blooded American.  I probably would
        not get that upset if I saw somebody burning a flag in
        protest.  I would and do get VERY upset when I see an
        individual proposing to limit the First Amendment.  It is the
        latter that would offend me to the point that I would be
        tempted to assault the perpetrator.  To me, tampering with
        the Bill of Rights is very close to treason.

        Bob

        P.S. Real red-blooded Americans get angry when the right to
        own assault weapons is threatened.  Perhaps if I owned one of
        those, then I really would have the right to say anything I
        pleased! :-}
203.17Discussion moved to 206.*EARRTH::MALLETTBarking Spider IndustriesThu Jun 14 1990 19:0110
    re: .13 (Alison)
    
    � . . .the purpose of government is to protect the minority
    � from the tyranny of the majority.
    
    Now that's an interesting idea.  One question, though: what
    is government's role in representing the majority and protecting
    it from a tyranny of the minority?
    
    Steve
203.19?SNOC02::WRIGHTPINK FROGSFri Jun 15 1990 01:138
    a question........
    
    I understand what you are discussing but am puzzled as to how it
    relates to the title of this topic.
    
    		Holly
    		a puzzled Aussie
    
203.20RUBY::BOYAJIANA Legendary AdventurerFri Jun 15 1990 03:3715
    re:.4
    
    	� Laws are increasingly being forged and enforced by
    	people you don't vote for, (the Supreme Court [...] �
    
    I disagree with the sentiment. The Supreme Court seems to me to
    have been (at least with most of its decisions in the last couple
    of decades, at least) quite fair and objective (much to the chagrin
    of the Executive Branch, too). With respect to the subject that
    prompted this topic, recall that the whole reason behind the
    legislators wanting to amend the Bill of Rights to outlaw flag-
    burning was *because* the Supreme Court ruled that flag-burning
    was a freedom protected by the First Amendment.
    
    --- jerry
203.21***co-moderator redirection***LYRIC::BOBBITTthe universe wraps in upon itselfFri Jun 15 1990 09:317
    A new discussion of the role and purpose of government has started in
    206....
    
    Please take further discussion on that topic there....
    
    -Jody
    
203.22LUNER::MALLETTBarking Spider IndustriesFri Jun 15 1990 09:508
    re: .19 (Holly)
    
    I apologize for getting sidetracked (in .17) by an earlier
    comment.  I've created a new topic for a generalized 
    discussion on the role of government (206, thanks for the
    help, Jody).
    
    Steve