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Tom Cotton Clearly Hates The First Amendment – Betches

Early this week, protesters around the country organized to stop or delay car traffic in several major cities San Francisco, Seattle, Chicago, and New York to draw attention to the ongoing horrors in Gaza. Their tactics included no threats and no attacks; they didnt do any physical damage to the infrastructure or harm anyone. Instead, following a long tradition, these protesters simply used nonviolent civil disobedience as a means of challenging government policy. They wanted lawmakers to hear their message, and they were willing to make major (and peaceful) disruption to do it.

So naturally, U.S. Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas called for these protests to be met with violent reprisals. According to this federal elected official, when stalled in traffic by peaceful protesters, drivers should leave their vehicles and use force against their fellow citizens over a minor disruption. Not exactly what democracy looks like.

Of course, this isnt the first time Senator Cotton has called for violence against people using their First Amendment rights. In an infamous 2020 editorial for The New York Times, Cotton suggested that the George Floyd protests should provoke a military response. At that point, thousands of Americans in almost every locale had emerged from pandemic protocols to engage in one of the largest mass protests in U.S. history, and Tom Cotton thought the appropriate government response was threatening to shoot citizens with bullets that they paid for. In the moment, his defense of this unconstitutional reaction rested on the thin distinction between protesters and rioters. Four years later, hes not even trying to be subtle: He wants to attack people who politically disagree with him, and he thinks its okay for his ideological fellow travelers to do the same.

Such blatant disregard for constitutional rights isnt new: That contempt led to the violent dispersion of the infamous Bonus March where WW1 veterans camped out, seeking their promises benefits, produced many of the iconic images of abuse from the Civil Rights Movement, including the photographs of children being hit by firehoses and attacked by dogs, and forced anti-war protesters into free speech zones during the 2004 Republican convention in New York. As frequently as citizens have used our right to peaceably assemble for the government we want, the one we have has deployed force and condoned violence to undermine us.

But just because it is a common response doesnt make it a fair or acceptable one. Over the decades, we have had aggression and abuse against nonviolent protest normalized with comments from the likes of Senator Cotton, who has put himself in the company of Bull Connor and George Wallace with his brutal disregard for peaceful political disagreement. Leaders like him introduce instability and conflict to the simple and necessary act of demanding more from our government, and in doing so, make all of us less safe.

The reason Senator Cotton and his ilk bring violence to bear when citizens ask for improvement is because they cant win the argument on the merits. Its no coincidence that he signed onto the defense of January 6th insurrectionists who tried to capture and possibly kill members of Congress while turning around and attacking peaceful protesters trying to stop a war. He doesnt want to limit violence; he wants to wield it.

But the right to peaceably assemble remains foundational to a democratic society, and we should use every attack on that right as an opportunity to defend it. The ability to nonviolently protest and petition our government comes from the miseries of the Revolution, when the Founding generation had their demands for equality returned with a volley of gunfire. Almost two and a half centuries later, Senator Cotton shows why that right is immortal, by becoming the tyranny we were built to reject.

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Tom Cotton Clearly Hates The First Amendment - Betches

Supreme Court allows police officers suit to move forward against Black Lives Matter leader – The Hill

The Supreme Court allowed a police officers lawsuit against a Black Lives Matter leader to move forward Monday.

In a brief order, the justices turned away activist DeRay Mckessons First Amendment appeal, meaning he must face the lawsuit brought by the anonymous officer who was injured during a 2016 protest.

Days after police fatally shot Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge, La., Mckesson organized a protest at which demonstrators blocked a highway outside a local police station. 

As police cleared the roadway, the officer, identified as John Doe, was hit with a rock-like object and suffered brain trauma, among other injuries, court filings show.

Mckesson did not throw the object, and it is undisputed that he never authorized the violence. But the officer claims that Mckessons leadership at the event still makes him liable for the unidentified culprits actions.

Its not the first time the justices have confronted the case. In 2020, the Supreme Court in an unsigned decision called the First Amendment issue undeniably important, but the justices sent the case back to first get clarity on whether state law would allow the officer to seek damages in the first place. 

Louisianas top court eventually responded that it would, and the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals then issued a ruling rejecting Mckessons First Amendment defense and allowing the lawsuit to proceed closer to trial.

Mckesson then brought his First Amendment claim back to the high court. But in a brief, unsigned order, as is typical, the Supreme Court refused to review that 5th Circuit ruling.

It is unfathomable under this Courts First Amendment jurisprudence that a State would hold a protest leader liable in damages for a third partys independent conduct that the leader himself neither incited, directed, authorized, nor ratified, attorneys at the American Civil Liberties Union, which represents Mckesson, wrote in their petition.

The case largely rested on the relevance of a 1982 Supreme Court decision that found the NAACP could not be sued for supporting a local boycott of white merchants during the Civil Rights Movement that at times turned violent.

Mckesson argues that the precedent forecloses the lawsuit against him.

The anonymous officer, however, distinguishes his lawsuit by arguing that Mckesson unlike the NAACP engaged in illegal activity by organizing a protest to block a roadway. The injuries were a foreseeable consequence of that allegedly illegal activity, the officer claims.

There is nothing un-American or unconstitutional about chilling speech designed specifically and effectively to engage police officers, where time after time the time, the place and manner of the speech has resulted in looting, property destruction, business closures, personal injury, economic loss, bystander and police injury, the anonymous police officers attorney wrote in court papers.

The time, place and manner of delivering First Amended protected speech matters.

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Supreme Court allows police officers suit to move forward against Black Lives Matter leader - The Hill

Hamas leader to visit Turkey for talks with Erdogan – Reuters

  1. Hamas leader to visit Turkey for talks with Erdogan  Reuters
  2. Erdogan to host Hamas chief Haniyeh in Turkey this weekend  The Times of Israel
  3. Hamas Leader Haniyeh Set To Meet Turkish President Erdogan - I24NEWS  i24NEWS

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Hamas leader to visit Turkey for talks with Erdogan - Reuters

Hamas leader Haniyeh to visit Turkey for talks with Erdogan – The Times of Israel

Were really pleased that youve read X Times of Israel articles in the past month.

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Hamas leader Haniyeh to visit Turkey for talks with Erdogan - The Times of Israel

Hamas Chief To Visit Turkey This Weekend, Says Turkish President Erdogan – NDTV

The Turkish leader has forged friendly ties with Ismail Haniyeh, who is based in Qatar. (File)

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Wednesday he will host the leader of Palestinian group Hamas, Ismail Haniyeh, in Turkey this weekend.

"The leader of the Palestinian cause will be my guest this weekend," Erdogan, an outspoken critic of Israel, told lawmakers.

Private television channel NTV reported that the two men would meet on Saturday at the Dolmabahce palace in Istanbul.

Their last meeting was in July 2023 when Erdogan hosted Haniyeh at the presidential palace in Ankara alongside Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas.

Erdogan has been one of the strongest critics of Israel since the start of the war in Gaza, sparked by the group's attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.

The attack claimed 1,170 lives, mostly civilians, Israeli figures show.

Israel has responded with a ground and air offensive that the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said has killed at least 33,899 people, mostly women and children.

The Turkish leader has forged friendly ties with Haniyeh, who is based in Qatar.

Erdogan last week offered Haniyeh condolences for the death of his three sons and some of his grandchildren in an Israeli strike in Gaza.

Erdogan has called Israel a "terrorist state" and accused it of conducting a "genocide" in Gaza. He has called Hamas "liberators" or "mujahideen" fighting for their land.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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Hamas Chief To Visit Turkey This Weekend, Says Turkish President Erdogan - NDTV