| |
Throw
Your Hands In The Air...
04.15.03
transmission: website
Rewind.
Dateline...back in the day: You're in a dark dirty old warehouse
deep in the bowels of Milwaukee, Madison, Chicago, Minneapolis, or wherever.
The vibe is so thick you can taste IT! No alcohol, No drugs, No worries,
No rules, No bullshit. A temporary autonomous zone for you, a thousand
new friends, and a big wall of bass blaring THE MUSIC. A voice comes
out over the sound system. It's a familiar one, probably Mr. Bill or Hyperactive.
"Throw you're hands in the air you pussy motherfuckers!" You
don't think about it, you just do it and scream at the top of your lungs.
Hands in the air fearless, you're dropping bass. That's just the
way it goes. And it feels great, it feels right...it feels, period
Fast Forward.
Dateline...today: The ecstasy scare was out of control not too
long ago. The threat of terrorism has become an excuse to get inside of
and control peoples lives. You're at an event, any event, in any place.
This time the vibes not as thick as it used to be and the good times aren't
always so great, but you make the best of it because you want to hear
the music. A voice comes out over the sound system, but it's not the same
voice as before. This one is more demanding and more pissed off. It has
a mustache too. "Everybody put your hands in the air...YOU'RE
UNDER ARREST!"
(You're under arrest is used figuratively here, not literally. This law
targets promoters and venue owners specifically. In essence it also targets
the party goers because with promoters and venue owners out of business
then there's no parties.)
So welcome to the future. The RAVE Act (now called the Illicit Drug
Anti-Proliferation Act) is the law of raveland. What does it all mean?
Where do we go from hear? No one really knows for sure. All that we do
know is we as promoters have some serious concern any time giving people
a night out to remember can result in numerous years in prison or several
thousand dollars in fines. I guess if punishment wasn't an issue then
we'd all be thieves, drug dealers, arms traders, prostitutes, or whatever.
Well, that's what they think anyway.
Once again we're passing on the news from the Drug Policy Alliance.
Stay tuned...
-------------
Subject:
RAVE Act Passes - Tell Ashcroft Not to Abuse It
Date: Fri, 11 Apr 2003 13:03:05 -0700 (PDT)
From: Drug Policy Alliance <alerts@actioncenter.drugpolicy.org>
Dear Members,
Subscribers
and Friends,
I do not normally use our alert channel to send a personal message. However,
I wanted to let you know that the Illicit Drug Anti-Proliferation Act
(also called the "RAVE Act"), which was attached to the AMBER
Alert bill, passed both the House and Senate late yesterday (April 10).
The RAVE Act threatens free speech and musical expression while placing
at risk any hotel/motel owner, concert promoter, event organizer, nightclub
owner or arena/stadium owner for the drug violations of 3rd parties -
real or alleged - even if the event promoter and/or property owner made
a good-faith effort to keep their event drug-free. It applies not just
to electronic-music parties, but to any type of public gathering, including
theatrical productions, rock concerts, DJ nights at local bars, and potentially
even political rallies. It gives heightened powers and discretion to prosecutors,
who may use it to target events they personally don't like - such as Hip-Hop
events and gay and lesbian fundraisers.
Sadly, the RAVE Act was added to the AMBER Alert bill conference report
at the very last minute by Senator Biden (D-DE), its original sponsor.
The AMBER Alert bill creates a system for responding to child abduction.
It has nothing to do with drug policy. The RAVE Act had not passed even
a single committee in the House or Senate this year. One senator's pet
issue made a mockery of the Democratic process - becoming law without
any public hearing or opportunity for input whatsoever.
You should be aware that your letters and faxes clearly had an effect.
(FYI - you sent Congress 13,000 faxes this week alone!!) For example,
the word "rave" was removed from the version of the bill that
passed. Eliminating such blatant discrimination is a victory for our continued
freedom of speech. Also, the original bill suggested that prosecutors
should view the sale of water and the presence of glowsticks or massage
oil as evidence of drug use. These ludicrous "findings" were
completely removed thanks to you.
President Bush will sign this child abduction bill, which means the RAVE
Act will become law as well. We will be working with the legislators who
opposed this provision - such as Senators Durbin, Kennedy and Leahy and
Representatives Conyers and Scott - for its repeal. In the meantime, however,
it is up to all of us to be the watchdogs of its enforcement.
Attorney General John Ashcroft will have to make decisions about its enforcement
priority among the many public safety issues the Department of Justice
handles. He must be held responsible when he implements this scheme. We
want him to know that he is not free to shut down our dance clubs, our
festivals and our freedoms. We will be watching the activities of law
enforcement and prosecutors, and we will act when our rights are violated.
You can help us by faxing Attorney General Ashcroft here.
http://actioncenter.drugpolicy.org/action/index.asp?step=2&item=1581
We thank our many partners in this effort for your hard work: EM:DEF,
ROAR, Buzzlife Productions, Davey D., electronic dance and music organizations
throughout the U.S., club owners, hotel organizations, beverage and licensing
groups, the ACLU and many, many others. But most of all, I want to say
thank you personally to our members and supporters.
You truly deserve credit for reacting so quickly and so forcefully. It
has really been amazing. When Bill McColl, our Director of National Affairs,
told me about this issue last June he said that he thought the RAVE Act
would pass in about 2 weeks. You proved us wrong. It took 10 months, a
change in control of the Senate, backroom maneuverings and substantial
changes to the bill. I'm proud of the hard work of our members, friends
and our coalition. Rest assured we will continue to work together to mobilize
opposition and advocate to fix this dangerous law.
Sincerely,
Ethan Nadelmann
Executive Director
Drug Policy Alliance
|
|