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"Ricardo Dominguez on virtual sit-in's and the upcoming
trial against on-line activists in Germany. Hans Peter Kartenberg
e-mailed the co-founder of The Electronic Disturbance Theater
(EDT) on 2005-6-12.
[german]
so oder so: On your website at thing.net there was a call
for a virtual sit-in on the website minutemanproject.com from
May 27th to May 29th 2005. Who are the minutemen and what
was the idea of that action?
Swarm The Minutemen was an e-action developed by a group
of activists in the San Diego, California and Tijuana, Mexico
border along with Electronic Disturbance Theater (EDT), in
order to call attention to The Minutemen. The Minutemen are
are a non-governmental group of people vowing to patrol the
US/Mexico border with guns in order to stop migrant people
from crossing the border. They represent an intensification
of the trend of violence towards migrant people and people
of color that has increased since 9/11. They have recieved
right wing state goverment support from Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
and from anti-immigrant media. EDT called for a three day
virtual sit-in in solidarity with Swarm who had called for
a number of e-actions to take place: a 24/7 telephone call
campaign, a fax action, an e-mail action and sound pollution
actions on the border. Since the Minuteman say they love the
silence of the desert - because they can hear the dirty rats
(the people trying to cross the border) making noise - by
creating lots of loud sounds it would keep the Minutemen from
finding, stopping and harassing these people. These on/off
line actions took place on the same days the Minutemen were
holding a convention in Las Vegas.
so oder so: How were the effects of the campaign?
More than 78,500 people from around the world joined the
non-violent mass virtual sit-in on sites hosted around the
world against the MinuteMen. It seems that in a time when
almost all the space in the United States has been privatized
and free speech zones have been reduced to cages topped with
barbed wire, the internet can still serve as a commons where
people can gather together to create positive social change.
There were reports that at times the MinuteMenProject.com
server was not responding and at times the WakeUpAmericaFoundation.com
server was unresponsive as well. Apparently the swarm had
an effect. Within the MinuteMen circles the action was discussed
as well.
so oder so: 2001, you were visiting the activists who
organized the first virtual sit-in in Germany -- they had
been inspired by the Electronic Disturbance Theater. 13.000
people took part in the sit-in at the Lufthansa-website to
protest against the business the company was doing with the
German state, transporting people who are deported from Germany.
I was invited by 'no one is illegal' and 'Libertad!' to speak
in different cities in Germany in June 2001 about the history
of Electronic Civil Disobedience (ECD) and Electronic Disturbance
Theater's (EDT) use of mass non-violent direct action online
since 1998. I helped to spread the word about the Virtual
Sit-In on Lufthansa during the yearly shareholder meeting
on June 20th. I spoke to small and large groups of activists,
the media, artists and hacktivists.
so oder so: Was the Lufthansa-action any different from
the sit-in's organized in the US?
This action functioned exactly like our recent SWARM action.
The 'Deportation class' action followed all the protocols
of transparency that had been established for ECD since the
first 'netstrikes' by the Italian activist communities in
the mid 90's. All the activist and artist announced the dates
and reasons for the actions online, in streets and inside
the shareholders meeting - nothing was hidden. This is important
because ECD is about bringing together real bodies and digital
bodies in a transparent manner which is the same tradition
as Civil Disobedience - that people are willing to break a
law (like blocking the street) to uphold a higher law.
so oder so: On June 14th, Andreas-Thomas Vogel, he is
the one who registered the domain libertad.de, where in 2001
a call for the Lufthansa action had been published, will be
prosecuted in a high-security-courtroom in Frankfurt, where
on other ocassions terrorist trials are being held.
ECD should be judged by local, national and international
courts as a civil act of disobedience and not as a crime.
As Dr. Dorothy E. Denning of Georgetown University stated
in her testimony before the Special Oversight Panel on Terrorism
Committee on Armed Services in the U.S. House of Representatives
on May 23, 2000: '... EDT and the Electrohippies view their
operations as acts of civil disobedience, analogous to street
protests and physical sit-ins, not as acts of violence or
terrorism. This is an important distinction. Most activists,
whether participating in the Million Mom's March or a Web
sit-in, are not terrorists.' Lufthansa and the German government
knew who, what, when and why these actions were going to take
place. ECD is not a secret and anonymous 'cracking' into servers
and enslaving in order to set off Distributed Denial of Service-attacks
(DdoS). These actions do only represent one or two hidden
people that the media spends so much creating as a site of
fear. ECD is the unbearable weight of human beings on-line
in a civil and transparent protest - whose main goal is to
question and spread information about what they feel is a
social condition that must be corrected to create a better
society for all. This act of transparency is important for
civil society and the courts to understand - ECD is and should
be treated as another digital condition intimately tied to
the long and deep Western tradition of Civil Disobedience
- nothing more and nothing less.
Swarm the Minutenmen
http://www.swarmtheminutemen.com/
Swarm e-action site
http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ecd/swarm/swarm.php
Electronic Disturbance Theater
http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ecd/ecd.html
Info on the trial against the Lufthansa action
http://www.libertad.de/online-demo
Deportation class e-action site
http://go.to/online-demo
Dr. Dorothy E. Denning on 'Cyberterrorism'
http://www.cs.georgetown.edu/~denning/infosec/cyberterror.html
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