Going downtown to protest the NRA & GOP in #Houston tomorrow? Please be prepared and take care of yourself. Allow me to offer tips based on my decades of experience as a lawyer (tho this is NOT legal advice), activist, and person who hates hot weather. A thread:
Practically speaking, be prepared for the weather. Hydrate, wear sunscreen & a hat, sturdy walking shoes, have a minor first aid kit (bandaids, mostly), a soft plastic water bottle, and a couple of small quick snacks in case you have a dizzy spell.
Commit to be safe & nonviolent, but have a plan for things getting bad. Have a place to meet your friends if you have to disperse quickly. Don't wear jewelry or baggy clothes that can be grabbed and yanked. Let someone know if you are going alone & check in when you get home.
If you want to commit civil disobedience, which is legit but which can get you arrested, do it only as part of pre-arranged plan with a group of people providing support. Don't risk you own safety or others' safety by making this up on the spot. Seriously, just don't.
Do not bring or carry ANYTHING that the police or an opponent can claim you used or construe as or treat as a weapon. Assume it will used against you. That means no wooden flagpoles. No wooden stakes on signs. No metal water bottles. No umbrellas.
Remember, you may not intend to use anything as a weapon & you may be committed to nonviolence. You cannot control what the police might claim about your intentions. Sorry to be cynical, but this is the NRA. It'll be hot out. GUNS WILL BE PRESENT.
And look, even if you assume the absolute BEST intentions about the police, very, very few are well-trained or experienced with managing protests. Hope for the best, but assume the worst. And consider that even if you are willing to risk something, those around you may not be.
For real. This is critical. Don't make a decision that can affect others. Don't do something that gets someone else arrested, trampled, or shot. You can't make those decisions for other people.
I'm not trying to tone police or tell people what they should and should not do. Civil disobedience is a legit option in many cases and for some people, but it includes an obligation to the larger crowd.
Respect the role of legal observers. They are not there to take sides or provide legal advice. They are there to document what happens so that if things go wrong, there is a record and people will have recourse.
Likewise, respect the requests of demonstration organizers. They may know things you do not, as they are connected to a network of people who can see different parts of the crowd. They're trying to keep you safe and keep the focus on the targets of the demonstration.
When in doubt, step out of the way and sit down. If you're sitting with your back against the wall away from the action, it is hard for anyone (cops) to falsely accuse you of instigating violence or breaking other laws.
And here's a reminder that Discovery Green is not exactly public property. Different rules apply there. And keep in mind that while you can be on a public sidewalk, rules change once you are on private property or in the street. nonsequiteuse.wordpress.com/2017/07/14/pub…
The First Amendment: "Congress shall make no law...abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances." Note that it has limits.
I'll add to this if I think of other things but please:
- Be safe.
- Speak up.
- Demand accountability from elected officials who again and again ask for thoughts and prayers, but prioritize Guns Over People.
OK adding to the #Houston#NRAconvention demonstration thread - do not get into spaces so tight they prevent a quick exit. Think of how quickly (horrible to say) the Astroworld concert turned deadly because of barricades & loud crowds.
Be very aware of your exit routes when you protest, and do not let yourself get trapped against a barricade.
Watch out for others.
Don't press in.
Don't push through or push anyone.
Step back.
Don't get swept up.
Sincere or not, some are asking about eggs & fruit as weapons. Assume a bad actor will misconstrue or weaponize that tomato before you make the decision to throw it. A pie in the face is battery, even whipped cream on a paper plate.
Whatever it is, remember: 1- you can't control how others will react. 2- you don't get to opt anyone else into civil disobedience without their consent. 3- if your protest goal is holding people accountable, consider whether it serves that purpose to become the story yourself.
And as someone else whose account is locked points out, if you're wondering about tampons & pads, when we protested at #txlege, they made su throw those out to get into the capitol.
And there are laws against assaulting people with (or battering, or even mailing to people) any bodily fluids. That starts with spit and gets, well, more, um, substantial.
Another good point (sorry to the person who added - can't find you) - phone chargers/extra batteries are great to have. Just have a place to stash them so no one calls them projectiles/weapons.
Other things to carry-Sharpies for writing key info on your arm, your ID and a few bucks but not your whole wallet. Your necessary keys. but not your whole key ring. And a backpack is fine, but pockets are better. Bags can be grabbed and (broken record) used as a weapon.
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If you've heard about the Texas Democrats who left the state in order to break quorum and stop some really bad legislation, & you think they are somehow 'not doing their job' or 'running and hiding,' you should know a few things that might change your mind. 1/ #txlege
In the regular legislative session after a catastrophic power grid failure during a winter storm that killed hundreds of Texas, Republicans passed NO substantial regulations to fix to the grid or protect consumers. apnews.com/article/texas-… 2/
They did try to pass really punitive bills to restrict access to voting. Bills contained things like different rules voting in counties bigger than 1M people than in smaller ones. Guess what? In Texas, the big counties vote Democratic. texasobserver.org/lines-wait-vot… 3/
You can print it on paper and call it a poll but that doesn't make it true. A short thread about the specious assertion @ChuckDeVore just made to the Senate Ctte on State Affairs re: #SB1 in #txlege. 1/
We repeatedly heard lawyers from the state AG's office say they do not proactively seek out election fraud cases to prosecute - they only react to complaints they receive. 2/
DeVore said that according to his math - and keep in mind, he's a Republican politician from California, not a statistician - for every Deputy AG working on election fraud, the state could get 12 convictions every 12 months, implying more attorneys would = more convictions. 3/
Count Every Vote / Every Vote Counts: A Story About Commitment to Fairness and Democracy
This is a story about my friend @LongoriaTx, Harris County's new Elections Administrator, & her runoff election in 2019 for Houston City Council against the incumbent.
Runoff election night, as we watch returns, the race tightens. At the evening's end, Longoria is losing by 12 votes to the incumbent council member. It's time for provisional ballots to be reviewed and cured if possible. We don't know which way those ballots will break.
After much 'that's not how we do it usually, but okay if you wanna,' Longoria & the incumbent's campaigns get a list of 558 names of people who voted provisionally. The list is lacking in key info, like which "John Smith" in District H is the one who voted a provisional ballot.
Weird numbers being reported in #txlege#tx148 race - Harris Votes shows 91,593 registered voters total in the district. Their results have Penny Shaw, the Democrat, winning the traditionally Democratic district 38,158 to the GOP candidate's 21,780.
Those Harris Votes numbers are in line with past elections in this same seat ~ usually around 50-60K votes cast. The district is entirely within Harris County, so all the numbers shown on Harris Votes should be all the votes there are in the race. Then, it gets weird.
Texas SoS website & @KPRC2 show LaRotta (R) with 173,311 votes to 37,470 Shaw (D). That's 212,781 total votes, which is more than twice the number of registered voters in the district.
We need to talk about institutional racism and ableism in Texas & Gov. Abbott's press conference just now about the #COVID19 phased response that will #OpenTexas starting May 1st. #txlege#hounews A thread -
Abbott repeatedly urged that we must take care of vulnerable populations, which he seemed to be using synonymously with the elderly/people over 65. The elderly are not the only people more vulnerable to this virus. Different disabilities & health statuses can make ppl vulnerable
But Abbott stressed the elderly, saying that although they were a small (maybe 25%) of those infected, they are >75% of those who die from it. So he was talking clearly about a disproportionate impact on the elderly being a reason to take extra care.