Sunday, July 07, 2013

Here we go again -- another artist suppresing Nuremberg Law

There is so much to be proud of in our City of St. Augustine since John Regan became City Manager. The list is long.
But tomorrow night, City Commissioners are being asked to extend the zone of anti-music, anti-artist, anti-busker discrimination, exclusion and add to our City's ignominy created by William B. Harriss, erstwhile City Manager. Enough.
These ordinances are addictive, and appeal to Tinpot Napoleon social dominators -- people who see the government as a bullet in their guns.
Let's tell the merchants and commercial landlords to stop creating problems.
Let's tell them to talk to their neighbors -- to get along with the buskers, instead of stalking them with cameras.
Let's tell them to make requests if they don't like the musical selections.
Let's tell them to call the 7th Circuit mediation program, instead of the SAPD.
Stop criminalizing art, music and entertainment.
Stop referring to landlords and merchants as "residents" and buskers as "them" (or as "Gypsies" or "vermin," as in the recent past).
Stop dividing "us" from "them."
Stop dividing young from old.
Stop dividing rich from poor.
Stop dividing us.
Stop making St. Augustine look like a sick place that is still run by hick hacks -- the people who ruined our 400th celebration with racist bigotry seen worldwide.
As Bill Clinton said (in another context), "they're themming us to death."
We don't need "Jim Crow" laws attacking the First Amendment (again).
We don't need Nuremberg Laws make it a crime to make a living.
These are working people, and this is an anti-worker ordinance.
As the Supreme Court's DOMA decision proved, founding lawmaking on hatred is like building a castle out of sand in the tidal zone in a hurricane -- they lose.
If they pass this ordinance, it should and will be overturned by a federal judge
The City of St. Augustine should and  must make available City property, such as the courtyard of the Casa de Hidalgo, for buskers.
The City of St. Augustine must welcome buskers, as in then-Mayor George Gardner's March 24, 2003 plan (reprinted above).
No more discrimination and First Amendment violations, please.
Likewise, the hideously walled Spanish Garden, run by the St. Augustine Foundation, must at last be re-opened to the public, including street musicians.  It is public property, given to the people of Florida, and it is being wrongfully fenced off as the world's dullest private park, selectively used as Foundation bosses desire, as are other properties formerly owned by our State of Florida. 

Ronald Reagan said at the Berlin Wall, "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall."   In Ronald Reagan's spirit, our City must say, "Mr. Proctor, tear down this wall."

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