In March 2009, Iraq War veteran Lt Dan Choi went on MSNBC and came out as a gay soldier. His 'thanks' for that was to be kicked out of the army under the Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy which was supposed to allow service members a level of privacy and end the witch hunts but instead just provided more fuel for them.
This took place after Barack was sworn in -- despite the fact that Barack ran on the promise of ending Don't Ask, Don't Tell. While Barack couldn't see to find his voice on the issue, Dan Choi had no problem using his own. This included his 2010 actions such as chaining himself to the White House fence. That's what he goes on trial for now.
It actually picks up from 2011. Dropping back to the August 31, 2011 snapshot:
Turning to the US where a DC federal court has put a trial on hold. Jessica Gressko (AP) reports
that Judge John Facciola has put the case on hold because he
feels Dan "Choi has shown, at least preliminary, that he is being
treated differently because of the subject of his protests" and "the
nature of his speech or what he said." John Riley (Metro Weekly) adds
that "the government prosecutor told the court she intended to file a
writ of mandamus (or writ of prohibition) against Mag. Judge John
Facciola for allowing Choi's defense team to investigate and pursue a
defense of vindictive prosecution by the U.S. government against Choi
for actions related to his First Amendment rights."
The trial is now on hold. What's going on? Lt Dan Choi
is an Iraq War veteran and was a member of the US military until he
decided to refuse to live in any closet and came out to the world in
order to embrace truth, life and equality back in March 2009.
Choi told reporters at a news conference outside the federal courthouse Monday, after the trial recessed for the day, that he rejected the government's plea bargain offer because he believes the law and regulation used to arrest him is unconstitutional.
"I believe there is no law that, in the history of this country, abridges freedom of speech, assembly, or the right to protest for redress of grievances, which were clear and made plain by all of the defendants," he said.
So today's trial was put on hold August 31, 2011. This morning Dan Tweeted:
Speaking to Adam Kokesh. on Adam vs. the Man last week, Dan explained:
The federal law does not just apply to the White House. It applies to every federal land where the Park Police have jurisdiction to arrest people. And so the consequences of case law, precedent that comes out of this, case law if the judge makes an opinion that says, "All you need to do is fail to obey" -- usually you have fail to obey with some kind of safety concerns, some violence, some kind of complaint, some kind of damage -- there was nothing. There was not an iota of evidence so far, just the obedience and hypotheticals.
The following community sites -- plus the Pacifica Evening News, Jody Watley, Antiwar.com, Adam Kokesh, L Studio, On the Wilder Side, Cindy Sheehan and Ms. magazine's blog -- updated last night and this morning:
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Don't mess with his drones or his manicure3 minutes ago
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THIS JUST IN! HIS FACE IS RED!3 minutes ago
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Sat. March 30th: Long Island Peace March19 minutes ago
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Beyond The Crush, Episode 3-J Dusi Wines5 hours ago
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Guantanamo8 hours ago
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Smash9 hours ago
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The banks, Obamacare9 hours ago
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NBC advises . . .9 hours ago
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Sleazy John Edwards just got sleazier9 hours ago
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The New Normal9 hours ago
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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