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Topic: Politics > Politics-USA
User: "Harry Hope"
Date: 01 May 2005 06:59:20 PM
Object: Yes, folks, it's come to this.
http://www.progressive.org/mcwatch04/mc042705.php
April 27, 2005
Secret Service Searches Home of Protester
By Matthew Rothschild
Renee Jensen of Elkins, West Virginia, likes to express herself.
She has put up as many as a dozen signs in her yard over the past
year, protesting the war in Iraq, Bush and Cheney, and the crackdown
on civil liberties.
Some of her signs have said:
"Mr. Bush, You're Fired."
"Mr. Ashcroft, We Prefer Our America Remain the Home of the Free and
the Brave."
"Mr. Cheney, What You Sow You Shall Reap. Those Who Destroy the Earth
Will Be Destroyed."
"Mr. Rumsfeld, Human Beings Are Not Just Collateral Damages, but
People with Hopes, Dreams, Relationships, and Lives to Live."
"O, Evil Doers, Bush and Cheney Are Destroying America. I Cry Liberty
and Stand for Our Constitution."
"Love One Another: War Is Dead Wrong."
Her vigorous exercise of free speech has not been well received.
One day in early January, her signs were vandalized.
"I had gone to the movies, and when I came back, all my signs were
stolen," she tells The Progressive.
"And one had been turned over, and someone wrote, "We love George
Bush" on it."
The mayor of Elkins, Judy Guye, tried to use a city ordinance to make
Jensen take her signs down.
"Guye had said she believes Jensen's signs pose a potential traffic
hazard, since people driving by her house often stop or slow down to
look at them," Paul J. Nyden wrote in an article for the Charleston
Gazette on January 16.
Nyden pointed out that the mayor, "a Republican, had a pro-Bush sign
in her own front yard."
Guye backed off.
But those were the least of Jensen's problems.
In the fall, the Secret Service gave her a call.
"They said they wanted to ask me some questions," she recalls.
"I said sure. They said someone called them and said I had signs up in
my yard that were threatening the President. I said I did have some
signs in my yard, but I wasn't threatening the President. The worst
I've ever said was that he's an Evildoer. And this Secret Service man
specifically asked me about the sign about Mr. Cheney. He said,
"That's from revelations." I said, "Yes, I have no desire to destroy
anybody. I'm just quoting out of the Bible."
His name, she said, was Agent Brian Atkins.
Then on January 11, she had some unexpected visitors.
"I was actually taking a nap, and there was a knock on my door, there
was a West Virginia State Trooper and a Secret Service agent," she
says, identifying them as Trooper R. J. Boggs and Agent James Lanham.
"They asked to come in. And I let them. And they started interviewing
me."
Jensen, who at the time was running for city council, asked why they
were there.
"Apparently someone had made a statement that I'd been canvassing door
to door and had said I wanted to cut President Bush's head off," she
says.
"I told Agent Lanham that I was running for city council, but I hadn't
started my door-to-door campaign yet and I never had said anything
like that."
This didn't satisfy them, though.
"They conducted an extensive interview about my background, my family,
and any political organizations I belonged to," she says.
"I told them I belong to the ACLU and that's about it."
They continued to pry, she says.
Agent Lanham "asked me several times to sign a form about releasing my
medical records, and I refused," she says.
"That was kind of annoying. And he asked to search my house. He didn't
have a search warrant, but I said go ahead. And they took some
pictures of me and some pictures of my signs."
Before they left, she says, "I had to sign a statement that I never
threatened the Presidentís life."
The Secret Service office in Charleston refused to give a comment to
the Gazette, and a phone call from The Progressive to the Secret
Service in Washington was not returned.
Though she hasn't heard from the Secret Service since, Jensen is not
happy about the power citizens have to rat their neighbors out for
merely expressing political views they disagree with.
"It's very easy for other people to call up the Secret Service or the
Department of Homeland Security," she says, "and say things about you
and have you investigated."
__________________________________________________________
What ever happened to "The Land of the Free"?
Harry
.

User: "The Pretzel"

Title: Re: Yes, folks, it's come to this. 02 May 2005 12:32:19 AM
"Harry Hope" <rivrvu@ix.netcom.com> wrote in message
news:hara71tsrov3rdbsi1l0549efpcm0tnkee@4ax.com...


http://www.progressive.org/mcwatch04/mc042705.php

April 27, 2005

Secret Service Searches Home of Protester

By Matthew Rothschild

Renee Jensen of Elkins, West Virginia, likes to express herself.


She has put up as many as a dozen signs in her yard over the past
year, protesting the war in Iraq, Bush and Cheney, and the crackdown
on civil liberties.

Some of her signs have said:

"Mr. Bush, You're Fired."

"Mr. Ashcroft, We Prefer Our America Remain the Home of the Free and
the Brave."

"Mr. Cheney, What You Sow You Shall Reap. Those Who Destroy the Earth
Will Be Destroyed."

"Mr. Rumsfeld, Human Beings Are Not Just Collateral Damages, but
People with Hopes, Dreams, Relationships, and Lives to Live."

"O, Evil Doers, Bush and Cheney Are Destroying America. I Cry Liberty
and Stand for Our Constitution."

"Love One Another: War Is Dead Wrong."

Her vigorous exercise of free speech has not been well received.

One day in early January, her signs were vandalized.

"I had gone to the movies, and when I came back, all my signs were
stolen," she tells The Progressive.

"And one had been turned over, and someone wrote, "We love George
Bush" on it."

The mayor of Elkins, Judy Guye, tried to use a city ordinance to make
Jensen take her signs down.

"Guye had said she believes Jensen's signs pose a potential traffic
hazard, since people driving by her house often stop or slow down to
look at them," Paul J. Nyden wrote in an article for the Charleston
Gazette on January 16.

Nyden pointed out that the mayor, "a Republican, had a pro-Bush sign
in her own front yard."

Guye backed off.

But those were the least of Jensen's problems.

In the fall, the Secret Service gave her a call.

"They said they wanted to ask me some questions," she recalls.

"I said sure. They said someone called them and said I had signs up in
my yard that were threatening the President. I said I did have some
signs in my yard, but I wasn't threatening the President. The worst
I've ever said was that he's an Evildoer. And this Secret Service man
specifically asked me about the sign about Mr. Cheney. He said,
"That's from revelations." I said, "Yes, I have no desire to destroy
anybody. I'm just quoting out of the Bible."

His name, she said, was Agent Brian Atkins.

Then on January 11, she had some unexpected visitors.

"I was actually taking a nap, and there was a knock on my door, there
was a West Virginia State Trooper and a Secret Service agent," she
says, identifying them as Trooper R. J. Boggs and Agent James Lanham.

"They asked to come in. And I let them. And they started interviewing
me."

Jensen, who at the time was running for city council, asked why they
were there.

"Apparently someone had made a statement that I'd been canvassing door
to door and had said I wanted to cut President Bush's head off," she
says.

"I told Agent Lanham that I was running for city council, but I hadn't
started my door-to-door campaign yet and I never had said anything
like that."

This didn't satisfy them, though.

"They conducted an extensive interview about my background, my family,
and any political organizations I belonged to," she says.

"I told them I belong to the ACLU and that's about it."

They continued to pry, she says.

Agent Lanham "asked me several times to sign a form about releasing my
medical records, and I refused," she says.

"That was kind of annoying. And he asked to search my house. He didn't
have a search warrant, but I said go ahead. And they took some
pictures of me and some pictures of my signs."

Before they left, she says, "I had to sign a statement that I never
threatened the Presidentís life."

The Secret Service office in Charleston refused to give a comment to
the Gazette, and a phone call from The Progressive to the Secret
Service in Washington was not returned.

Though she hasn't heard from the Secret Service since, Jensen is not
happy about the power citizens have to rat their neighbors out for
merely expressing political views they disagree with.

"It's very easy for other people to call up the Secret Service or the
Department of Homeland Security," she says, "and say things about you
and have you investigated."

__________________________________________________________

What ever happened to "The Land of the Free"?

Harry

Welcome to good ol' McCarthyism. Isn't this the kind of thing that happened
during the Salem witch trials? Have a problem with a neighbor? Call him a witch.
Call him a communist. Now simply lie and tell the authorities your neighbor
threatened King Georgie the IVth's life.
.

User: "submariner"

Title: Re: Yes, folks, it's come to this. 09 May 2005 07:44:29 AM
"Harry Hope" <rivrvu@ix.netcom.com> wrote in message
news:hara71tsrov3rdbsi1l0549efpcm0tnkee@4ax.com...


http://www.progressive.org/mcwatch04/mc042705.php

April 27, 2005

Secret Service Searches Home of Protester

By Matthew Rothschild

Renee Jensen of Elkins, West Virginia, likes to express herself.


She has put up as many as a dozen signs in her yard over the past
year, protesting the war in Iraq, Bush and Cheney, and the crackdown
on civil liberties.

Some of her signs have said:

"Mr. Bush, You're Fired."

"Mr. Ashcroft, We Prefer Our America Remain the Home of the Free and
the Brave."

"Mr. Cheney, What You Sow You Shall Reap. Those Who Destroy the Earth
Will Be Destroyed."

"Mr. Rumsfeld, Human Beings Are Not Just Collateral Damages, but
People with Hopes, Dreams, Relationships, and Lives to Live."

"O, Evil Doers, Bush and Cheney Are Destroying America. I Cry Liberty
and Stand for Our Constitution."

"Love One Another: War Is Dead Wrong."

Her vigorous exercise of free speech has not been well received.

One day in early January, her signs were vandalized.

"I had gone to the movies, and when I came back, all my signs were
stolen," she tells The Progressive.

"And one had been turned over, and someone wrote, "We love George
Bush" on it."

The mayor of Elkins, Judy Guye, tried to use a city ordinance to make
Jensen take her signs down.

"Guye had said she believes Jensen's signs pose a potential traffic
hazard, since people driving by her house often stop or slow down to
look at them," Paul J. Nyden wrote in an article for the Charleston
Gazette on January 16.

Nyden pointed out that the mayor, "a Republican, had a pro-Bush sign
in her own front yard."

Guye backed off.

But those were the least of Jensen's problems.

In the fall, the Secret Service gave her a call.

"They said they wanted to ask me some questions," she recalls.

"I said sure. They said someone called them and said I had signs up in
my yard that were threatening the President. I said I did have some
signs in my yard, but I wasn't threatening the President. The worst
I've ever said was that he's an Evildoer. And this Secret Service man
specifically asked me about the sign about Mr. Cheney. He said,
"That's from revelations." I said, "Yes, I have no desire to destroy
anybody. I'm just quoting out of the Bible."

His name, she said, was Agent Brian Atkins.

Then on January 11, she had some unexpected visitors.

"I was actually taking a nap, and there was a knock on my door, there
was a West Virginia State Trooper and a Secret Service agent," she
says, identifying them as Trooper R. J. Boggs and Agent James Lanham.

"They asked to come in. And I let them. And they started interviewing
me."

Jensen, who at the time was running for city council, asked why they
were there.

"Apparently someone had made a statement that I'd been canvassing door
to door and had said I wanted to cut President Bush's head off," she
says.

"I told Agent Lanham that I was running for city council, but I hadn't
started my door-to-door campaign yet and I never had said anything
like that."

This didn't satisfy them, though.

"They conducted an extensive interview about my background, my family,
and any political organizations I belonged to," she says.

"I told them I belong to the ACLU and that's about it."

They continued to pry, she says.

Agent Lanham "asked me several times to sign a form about releasing my
medical records, and I refused," she says.

"That was kind of annoying. And he asked to search my house. He didn't
have a search warrant, but I said go ahead. And they took some
pictures of me and some pictures of my signs."

Before they left, she says, "I had to sign a statement that I never
threatened the Presidentís life."

The Secret Service office in Charleston refused to give a comment to
the Gazette, and a phone call from The Progressive to the Secret
Service in Washington was not returned.

Though she hasn't heard from the Secret Service since, Jensen is not
happy about the power citizens have to rat their neighbors out for
merely expressing political views they disagree with.

"It's very easy for other people to call up the Secret Service or the
Department of Homeland Security," she says, "and say things about you
and have you investigated."

__________________________________________________________

What ever happened to "The Land of the Free"?

Harry

Awwww, Bush is afraid of a girl. The country's lucky he did dodge the draft.
.

User: "Starshine Moonbeam"

Title: Re: Yes, folks, it's come to this. 02 May 2005 04:12:44 AM
In article <hara71tsrov3rdbsi1l0549efpcm0tnkee@4ax.com>, Harry Hope
(rivrvu@ix.netcom.com) dropped a +5 bundle of words...


http://www.progressive.org/mcwatch04/mc042705.php

April 27, 2005

Secret Service Searches Home of Protester

By Matthew Rothschild

Renee Jensen of Elkins, West Virginia, likes to express herself.


She has put up as many as a dozen signs in her yard over the past
year, protesting the war in Iraq, Bush and Cheney, and the crackdown
on civil liberties.

Some of her signs have said:

"Mr. Bush, You're Fired."

"Mr. Ashcroft, We Prefer Our America Remain the Home of the Free and
the Brave."

"Mr. Cheney, What You Sow You Shall Reap. Those Who Destroy the Earth
Will Be Destroyed."

"Mr. Rumsfeld, Human Beings Are Not Just Collateral Damages, but
People with Hopes, Dreams, Relationships, and Lives to Live."

"O, Evil Doers, Bush and Cheney Are Destroying America. I Cry Liberty
and Stand for Our Constitution."

"Love One Another: War Is Dead Wrong."

Her vigorous exercise of free speech has not been well received.

One day in early January, her signs were vandalized.

"I had gone to the movies, and when I came back, all my signs were
stolen," she tells The Progressive.

"And one had been turned over, and someone wrote, "We love George
Bush" on it."

The mayor of Elkins, Judy Guye, tried to use a city ordinance to make
Jensen take her signs down.

"Guye had said she believes Jensen's signs pose a potential traffic
hazard, since people driving by her house often stop or slow down to
look at them," Paul J. Nyden wrote in an article for the Charleston
Gazette on January 16.

Nyden pointed out that the mayor, "a Republican, had a pro-Bush sign
in her own front yard."

Guye backed off.

But those were the least of Jensen's problems.

In the fall, the Secret Service gave her a call.

"They said they wanted to ask me some questions," she recalls.

"I said sure. They said someone called them and said I had signs up in
my yard that were threatening the President. I said I did have some
signs in my yard, but I wasn't threatening the President. The worst
I've ever said was that he's an Evildoer. And this Secret Service man
specifically asked me about the sign about Mr. Cheney. He said,
"That's from revelations." I said, "Yes, I have no desire to destroy
anybody. I'm just quoting out of the Bible."

His name, she said, was Agent Brian Atkins.

Then on January 11, she had some unexpected visitors.

"I was actually taking a nap, and there was a knock on my door, there
was a West Virginia State Trooper and a Secret Service agent," she
says, identifying them as Trooper R. J. Boggs and Agent James Lanham.

"They asked to come in. And I let them. And they started interviewing
me."

Jensen, who at the time was running for city council, asked why they
were there.

"Apparently someone had made a statement that I'd been canvassing door
to door and had said I wanted to cut President Bush's head off," she
says.

"I told Agent Lanham that I was running for city council, but I hadn't
started my door-to-door campaign yet and I never had said anything
like that."

This didn't satisfy them, though.

"They conducted an extensive interview about my background, my family,
and any political organizations I belonged to," she says.

"I told them I belong to the ACLU and that's about it."

They continued to pry, she says.

Agent Lanham "asked me several times to sign a form about releasing my
medical records, and I refused," she says.

"That was kind of annoying. And he asked to search my house. He didn't
have a search warrant, but I said go ahead. And they took some
pictures of me and some pictures of my signs."

Before they left, she says, "I had to sign a statement that I never
threatened the Presidentís life."

The Secret Service office in Charleston refused to give a comment to
the Gazette, and a phone call from The Progressive to the Secret
Service in Washington was not returned.

Though she hasn't heard from the Secret Service since, Jensen is not
happy about the power citizens have to rat their neighbors out for
merely expressing political views they disagree with.

"It's very easy for other people to call up the Secret Service or the
Department of Homeland Security," she says, "and say things about you
and have you investigated."

__________________________________________________________

What ever happened to "The Land of the Free"?

Harry

Hey, just curious, weren't we saying Russia was evil for doing these
things back in the 80's?
--
Starshine Moonbeam
mhm31x9 Smeeter#29 WSD#30
sTaRShInE_mOOnBeAm aT HoTmAil dOt CoM
.


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