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MORE you can do to stop the RAVE bill!

by anarcho tekno grrl
RAVE bill scary! kill! kill! call senators and tell them to put a "hold" on the bills and vote against any "unanimous consent request"! more info. below...
so... i dont' like calling "my" senators either, but this bill is scary and could have far-reaching effects, including making it much easier for police to crack down on benefit parties AND jail and fine the organizers. very scary.

More YOU Can Do to Stop the RAVE Bill:

Call Senators Boxer + Feinstein and ask them to put a HOLD on the bills and to vote against any "unanimous consent request."

even if you've called/written already! more below:


(A Drug Policy Alliance and Dance Safe Joint Action)

As you may know, a bill to give federal prosecutors
the ability to shut down musical events they don't
like is rapidly moving through the Senate, and could
be voted on as early as this week. We have flooded the
Senate with almost 20,000 faxes and thousands of phone
calls. We need Californians to call Senators Boxer and
Feinstein and ask them to put a hold on this bill -
even if you have already contacted them.

IT IS URGENT THAT YOU ACT RIGHT AWAY. If the anti-rave
Senate bill is enacted, property owners may become too
afraid to rent or lease their property to groups
holding hemp festivals or putting on all-night dance
parties, effectively stifling free-speech and banning
raves and other musical events!!

ACTIONS TO TAKE

** Call Senator Boxer's DC office. Tell her that you are
very concerned about the civil liberties and free
speech implications of S. 2633 (the RAVE Act). Urge
her to put a "hold" on the bill and to vote against
any "unanimous consent request". Boxer's DC office is
202-224-3553. After you call her DC office, call her
California office that is closest to you and say the
same thing.
Fresno - 559-497-5109;
Los Angeles - 213-894-5000;
Sacramento - 916-448-2787;
San Bernardino - 909-888-8525;
San Diego - 619-239-3884;
San Francisco - 415-403-0100

** Call Senator Feinstein's DC office. Tell her that you
are very concerned about the civil liberties and free
speech implications of S. 2633 (the RAVE Act). Urge
her to put a hold on the bill and vote against any
"unanimous consent request". Feinstein's DC office is
202-224-3841. After you call her DC office, call her
California office that is closest to you and say the
same thing.
Fresno - 559-485-7430;
Los Angeles - 310-914-7300;
San Diego - 619-231-9712;
San Francisco - 415-393-0707

** Forward this alert to your friends, family, and
co-workers.

MORE INFORMATION

The Senate is considering legislation that would give
federal prosecutors new powers to shut down raves or
other musical events they don't like and punish
businessmen and women for hosting or promoting them.
The bill (S, 2633), also known as the Reducing
American's Vulnerability to Ecstasy Act (RAVE Act), is
moving very rapidly and could be considered by the
full Senate as early as this week. (A similar bill is
also pending in the House.)

S. 2633, sponsored by Senators Durbin (D-IL), Hatch
(R-UT), Grassley (R-IA) and Leahy (D-VT), expands the so-
called "crack house statute" to allow the federal
government to fine or imprison businessmen and women if
customers sell or use drugs on their premises or at their
events. Property owners, promoters, and event coordinators
could be fined hundreds of thousands of dollars or face up
to twenty years in federal prison if they hold raves or
other events on their property. If the bill becomes law,
property owners may be too afraid to rent or lease their
property to groups holding hemp festivals or putting on
all-night dance parties, effectively stifling free-speech
and banning raves and other musical events.

The new law would also make it a federal crime to
temporarily use a place for the purpose of using any
illegal drug. Thus, anyone who used drugs in their own
home or threw an event (such as a party or barbecue) in
which one or more of their guests used drugs could
potentially face a $250,000 fine and years in federal
prison. The bill also effectively makes it a federal
crime to rent property to medical marijuana patients and
their caregivers, giving the federal government a new
weapon in its war on AIDS and cancer patients that use
marijuana to relieve their suffering.

Health advocates worry that the bill will endanger our
nation's youth. If enacted, licensed and law-abiding
business owners may stop hosting raves or other events
that federal authorities don't like, out of fear of
massive fines and prison sentences. Thus, the law would
drive raves and other musical events further
underground and away from public health and safety
regulations. It would also discourage business owners
from enacting smart harm-reduction measures to protect
their customers. By insinuating that selling bottled
water and offering "cool off" rooms is proof that owners
and promoters know drug use is occurring at their events,
this bill may make business owners too afraid to
implement such harm-reduction measures, and the safety of
our kids will suffer.

The RAVE Act punishes businessmen and women for the
crimes of their customers and is unprecedented in U.S.
history. The federal government can't even keep drugs out
of prisons, yet it seeks to punish business owners for
failing to keep people from carrying drugs onto their
premises. If this bill passes, federal authorities will
have the ability to scare business owners away from using
or renting their property for all-night dance events, as
well as any other "politically incorrect" event.

For more information on this bill, go to
http://thomas.loc.gov/ and under "bill number" search
for S2633.
########

Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by Janet Jones
People don't have to go to a rave if they don't want to! They can leave at ANY time. Don't punish those whose throw them just because those who don't go are mad. Leave us a little freedom!
by Rock Dog
I can see how the experience of going to "stadium" concerts and other venues to see bands will also likely be affected by this ludicrous legislation.


Perhaps the venues will have security conduct thorough strip searches at the entrance (and you thought airport security was a pain), to make sure their asses are covered, as, if somebody brings in a joint, blunt, or other illicit substance, the venue owners and promoters, etc., could face massive criminal penalties.
by iman
if
S. 2633 (the RAVE Act) broadly expands Section 416(a) of the Controlled Substance Act (21 U.S.S. 856(a)), also known as the "crack house statute", to allow the federal government to fine or imprison businessmen and women if customers or tenants sell, use, or manufacture drugs on their premises or at their events
then
Could we not bring charges agains the private/public prison system
if
their customers/tenants (prisoners) sell use or manufacture drugs on their premises.

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