The Arab American News, Sunday, 05.26.2013, 12:45am
  Home
  FAQ
  RSS
  Links
  Site Map
  Contact
  النسخة العربية
Israel fears war of attrition in Golan U.S. Congress unanimously moves toward full trade embargo on Iran St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital born and built from Arab American heritage  Arab American launches mayoral run  No primary election for Dearborn Heights municipalities 
::| Keyword:       [Advance Search]

All News  
  Community News
  Arab World
  World
  U.S.A
 » Commentaries
  Elections
  Opinions
  Art & Culture
  Crime
  Sahtak
 
U.S.A
 
Pro-Palestine bus ads finally allowed to run in watered-down form
Thursday, 03.15.2012, 12:09am
SEATTLE — A long-running dispute over Pro-Palestinian bus ads in King County, Washington state finally came to some fruition this month as ads were allowed to run on buses, but the message was different from what was originally intended.

The new ads are part of a campaign titled, "I'm a Palestinian," with the saying "equal rights for all” underneath. The messages will run with pictures of everyday Palestinians on 12 Metro Transit buses. 

The ads were sponsored by SeaMAC, the Seattle Mideast Awareness Campaign devoted to the Palestinian cause, which attempted to launch an ad in 2010 with the message, "Israeli war crimes...your tax dollars at work" with a picture of a demolished house by an Israeli military strike.

The 2010 ads were denied by a federal judge on the basis of threats made by those opposed to the ads in a move that drew the ire of the ACLU civil liberties organization, which helped with the legal defense.

The judge said that officials had a reasonable basis for limiting the content of the ads on public buses, citing safety concerns in part because "threats of violence and disruption from members of the public (from e-mails, phone calls, and anonymous photographs) led bus drivers and law enforcement officials to express safety concerns, and the court finds that it was reasonable" for the cancellation of the ads according to court documents.

SeaMAC said that censorship had taken place but was not able to win their court challenge. The new ads are modeled after the similar 'I'm a Mormon' campaign and will run for four weeks while the ACLU continues to represent SeaMAC in its appeal against King County.  



Related Articles:
» Arab American community fails to commemorate Al-Nakba Day
» Nakba: 65 years later, and we’re winning
» Arab League land-swap offer angers Palestinians
» First-ever West Bank marathon includes vigil for Boston victims, highlights Palestinians’ plight
» Fundraising dinner helps raise awareness, aid for Gaza


Other Articles:
Hacker group Anonymous crashes AIPAC's website (03.15.2012)
Obama signs bill making certain protests illegal  (03.14.2012)
Minnesota anti-shari'a bill dropped by lawmaker who introduced it  (03.14.2012)
Retired generals to Obama in Washington Post: No war with Iran  (03.14.2012)
Two lawmakers ask for repeal of NDAA indefinite detention and torture provisions (03.12.2012)
::| Hot News
U.S. Congress unanimously moves toward full trade embargo on Iran
As scandals mount, White House springs into damage control
Abe Foxman rationalizes blanket spying on American Muslims
Stephen Hawking joins academic boycott of Israel
FBI releases photos of two suspects in Boston bombings
U.S. immigration reforms prioritize labor over families
UC-Berkeley passes Israeli divestment bill
White House boosts support for Syrian opposition as Congress pushes for military intervention
Obama’s retreat to Neocon strategies
Obama’s one-sided embrace of Israel angers Palestinians 

   
[Top Page]