Re: The right to Protest
Why yes, indeed I said that. But then someone brought up the "slanting" of the news. Which is, of course, a different issue. A vague charge of bias if it is valid should be able to defended with specific examples of bias. <br />I will grant that it was not particularly flattering of this president, or this administration. What I can't find is any evidence that the facts were misrepresented. That is the role of the press in a free society<br /><br />OTOH, the right to protest is a time honored right that goes all the way back to the Boston Tea Party, not to mention Henry David Thoreau's treatise on Civil Disobedience. If people break the law, put them in jail, have a trial, and a public airing of the issues. It is how democracy works. If the laws are just and right, they will be upheld and reinforced.<br />My point was that had Rosa Parks, and others like her, not challenged the law that forced her to ride on the back of that bus, she'd still be required to ride on the back of that bus. It is how this imperfect world works.