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#9
Pseudo? They were the most politically vocal metal band of all time (note that I said metal, not folk). Here's one of the many examples from their website:
[quote]A Statement by Zack de la Rocha of Rage Against the Machine
Working to ensure the legal rights that all us presume to enjoy certainly has turned out to be controversial!

Let me say straight up that tonight's benefit is not to support cop killers, or any other kind of killers. And if there were no question about the guilt of Mumia Abu-Jamal, we would not be holding this concert.

But whether Jamal is guilty, or is himself the victim of an outrageous miscarriage of justice, is precisely what is at issue. Tonight's benefit seeks to answer that question by allowing Jamal to have the fair and impartial judicial review that he was denied by the state of Pennsylvania.

The proceeds from tonight's event go, not to Mr. Jamal, but to pay for the investigators, forensic experts, and lawyers needed to get an unbiased hearing of this case in the federal courts.

Parents should be proud that their children are attending and standing up for the rights to which all people are entitled.

Rage Against the Machine and the artists participating tonight are hardly along in questioning what has happened to Mr. Jamal. Among those who have questioned the Pennsylvania proceedings are Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Nobel laureate and head of South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission; Ronald Hampton, Executive Director of the National Black Police Association; The European Parliament, meeting in Strousbourg; and Amnesty International, who are with us at the concert tonight.

We first heard of this case some years back when the Fraternal Order of Police and Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole pressured National Public Radio into censoring a Series of commentaries on prison life recorded by Mr. Jamal. Then Pennsylvania prison authorities put Mr. Jamal into punitive confinement as punishment for writing his first book, Live from Death Row, published by Addison-Wesley.

We began to ask ourselves, shouldn't political dissidents in THIS country enjoy the same rights that the U.S. government demands for political dissidents in Chine or Iran?

When we looked into the case, we found that Mr. Jamal was a prominent radio journalist in Philadelphia. He frequently reported cases of police misconduct on the air and was threatened along with other journalists by then Mayor Rizzo. He had no criminal record, but as we later learned, he had an enormous FBI surveillance file that had been kept on him since he was 15 years old.

His trial in 1982 was nothing short of a travesty. He was denied the funds necessary to hire expert witnesses, his court-appointed attorney did not interview a single witness before putting them on the stand, he was denied the right to represent himself, and then he was barred from attending his own trial when he continued to protest these outrageous acts. Important evidence was withheld from the defense by the police and prosecution. Witnesses were induced to change their testimony. And the state used its preemptory challenges to knock off prospective jurors on the basis of race.

Perhaps the most absurd allegation against Jamal is that he confessed to shooting Officer Daniel Faulkner. Jamal had been shot by Officer Faulkner and was beaten by other police arriving at the scene. Two months later, when Mr. Jamal filed police brutality charges, the police officers who were with him that night suddenly "remembered" that he had confessed. This was accepted by the court, even though the emergency room doctor and written police reports from that evening said that Jamal had made no statement.

We were then shocked to find that when he was granted a hearing on whether his first trial was unfair and whether he should be granted a new trial, this hearing was conducted by the same judge who had conducted the original trial that was in question.

This judge was a former member of the Fraternal Order or Police, and had pronounced more death sentences than any other sitting judge in the country
[Image: AppealtoReason.jpg]
"I looked up and saw you;
I know that you saw me.
We froze but for a moment
In empathy."-Rise Against
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Messages In This Thread
[No subject] - by UnknownH - 01-16-2005, 02:58 PM
[No subject] - by Wisemon - 01-18-2005, 05:00 PM
[No subject] - by The Anti-Wisemon - 01-20-2005, 07:54 AM
[No subject] - by Wisemon - 01-20-2005, 09:14 AM
[No subject] - by UnknownH - 01-20-2005, 03:31 PM
[No subject] - by Wisemon - 01-20-2005, 04:19 PM
[No subject] - by The Anti-Wisemon - 01-21-2005, 08:39 AM
[No subject] - by Wisemon - 01-21-2005, 03:12 PM
[No subject] - by UnknownH - 01-21-2005, 03:47 PM
[No subject] - by milk me! - 01-22-2005, 05:47 PM
[No subject] - by Wisemon - 01-23-2005, 01:42 AM
[No subject] - by The Anti-Wisemon - 01-23-2005, 08:21 AM
[No subject] - by Wisemon - 01-23-2005, 11:50 AM
[No subject] - by UnknownH - 01-23-2005, 04:28 PM
[No subject] - by Wisemon - 01-23-2005, 05:20 PM
[No subject] - by The Anti-Wisemon - 01-23-2005, 11:40 PM
[No subject] - by Wisemon - 01-24-2005, 01:44 AM
[No subject] - by The Anti-Wisemon - 01-24-2005, 02:50 AM
[No subject] - by UnknownH - 01-24-2005, 05:16 PM