Free speech is a crucial right for all Americans
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Thank God -- oh, perhaps I shouldn’t say that. Thank goodness we have
Paul Blank of Corona del Mar, the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and
Transgender Community Services Center of Orange County -- the fourth
largest such community center in the United States -- and the ACLU to
protect the people’s rights. The city of Costa Mesa imposed 17 -- I
repeat 17 -- burdensome and unreasonable conditions on the permit for
the Dyke March Organizing Committee that are over and above four
similar conditions imposed on other groups in the community.
City bureaucrats, in response to a threatening lawsuit, have
lowered this to 12. Do the math! It is still eight more -- yes, eight
-- than the city imposes on other groups that Blank, the Gay,
Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Community Services Center of Orange
County -- the fourth largest such community center in the United
States -- and the ACLU are trying to protect. Somebody bless ‘em.
(You fill in the blank.)
Just because the city backed down on some of its unreasonable
restrictions is no reason to withdraw the lawsuit. The city’s
response? Quoting Paul Clinton in Wednesday’s Daily Pilot,
“Councilman Mike Scheafer, an insurance agent himself, said the
restrictions were designed to protect the city from legal risk. He
said the group is still required to present financial responsibility
in the form of insurance coverage.”
Hey, maybe Scheafer could write the policy.
With the help of these freedom-loving citizens, the rights of all
Newport-Mesans and any organization that attempts the freedom to
assemble in the city of Costa Mesa will be upheld. I’m surprised they
needed the ACLU lawsuit. Tony Rackauckas, Bill Lockyer and John
Ashcroft himself should be suing the city.
As Blank says, “we are not asking to be treated any differently
than any other group which applies for a special events permit from
the city of Costa Mesa. We are just asking that all groups be treated
the same and be held to the same conditions - conditions that do not
interfere with any group’s constitutional right to free speech and
peaceful assembly. We believe the city’s permit scheme vests
unbridled discretion in city officials and places unconstitutional
restrictions on First Amendment rights. We are fighting not only on
our own behalf, but on behalf of other groups who may follow.”
You can’t argue with that.
ERIC CHRISTENSEN
Costa Mesa
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