AltWeeklies Wire

A Tale of Two Cities: The RNC You Saw and the One You Didn'tnew

There was carefully crafted show inside the Excel Energy Center, and a street-level populist protest in which hundreds were tear-gassed and arrested, including prominent journalists. In the arena, the nomination of Sarah Palin palpably energized the Republican delegates, but events away from the arena were more revealing.
The Texas Observer  |  Elizabeth DiNovella  |  09-24-2008  |  Politics

Dozens of Journalists Arrested at RNCnew

As McCain spoke Thursday night about America's obligation to confront "threats to peace and liberty in our time," armed agents were busy cuffing and detaining nearly 400 people a half-mile away. Most were protesters who had overstayed their permit -- many were journalists and bystanders. I was one of them.
City Pages (Twin Cities)  |  Matt Snyders  |  09-10-2008  |  Politics

Shepard Fairey and Robert Indiana Cause Trouble at the DNCnew

Fairey and company spent seventeen hours in jail, first at the infamous "Gitmo on the Platte" warehouse the city set up for DNC protesters. But he wasn't the only artist to get caught in the tentacles of DNC security.
Westword  |  Staff  |  09-08-2008  |  Politics

RNC Dispatch: Democracy in St. Paulnew

While Republicans gestured inside, police stole the streets from the people.
LEO Weekly  |  Sam Stoker  |  09-07-2008  |  Politics

RNC Protest Arrests: Minneapolis, Meet Beijingnew

Some of the dimmer and, frankly, underreported stories of the Beijing Olympics were those of the political dissidents and protesters who were arrested, detained and shipped away, far from the ostentatious opening ceremonies and cheering crowds. Three weeks later in America at the Republican National Convention, we are seeing a similar disassembling of civil liberties; and unlike the Chinese, we have a Constitution guaranteeing our rights.
INDY Week  |  Lisa Sorg  |  09-04-2008  |  Commentary

Streets of Rage: How Bush and the GOP Mobilized Half a Million Peoplenew

All week, people have invoked George W. Bush's name in anger and ridicule in documentaries, art shows, poetry readings, even die-ins, all part of the convulsion of creative dissent that his presidency has unintentionally unleashed.
The Village Voice  |  Tom Robbins and Jennifer Gonnerman  |  09-02-2004  |  Politics

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