Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/09/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Daniel Ridings wrote: >FYI, several of my parishioners from semi-rural CT went in to NYC, not >to protest, just to see the spectacle, and were summarily rounded up off >the sidewalk and forced inside storefronts by police, while the Cheney >motorcade went through. Not "detainment," strictly speaking, but close >enough for discomfort. > > Hey! That's exactly what they do in Zimbabwe when Mugabe's motorcades passes through! Kewl. :( Daniel ---------- That's an interesting comment. I'm 38, and as a kid in the 70's I remember scary news stories of Idi Amin's entourage detaining and even brutalizing whole city blocks of citizens as his motorcade drove through towns. I was just a kid, but I guess these Idi Amin horror stories really stuck in my head, because that was the first thing I thought about reading this report of the rounded up parishioners. For the record and to the would-be flamers, I pay lots of taxes, LE has helped me out on more than one occassion, I have relatives who have served in military and intelligence, and I'm a cultural non-relativist when it comes to matters both political and ethical. But to get back to PHOTOGRAPHY, I bought my Leica M6 to take pictures, and not just of b'day parties. My M6 is small enough to take anywhere and take pictures of the important places and events around me. By gum, that's the photographic modus operandi and ethos that Oskar Barnack invented or enabled or whatever. I want my money's worth from my new Leica, not needless (note this adjective) conflict with authorities. If someone want's to see my drivers license and verify that I'm a constitutionally protected US citizen and then let me go about my business, that's very fine with me. But anything more is ripping me off both as a US citizen and as a Leica user. I just bought my first Leica lens - 28/2, yeah! - and I didn't spring for some of the worlds finest glass to be told I can't use a tripod in lots of public places around Washington, DC. My hands are a little shakey, and using a tripod is the classic way around this. I'm not sure how tripod usage got on the "watch list" of security folks, but it did, and it diminishes the value I get out of my newly, and for me dearly, acquired Leica glass. From the Leica snaps of the detention activities under discussion, you can clearly see that some (many?) of the harrassed folks were men and women in their late 40's or early 50's, by all appearances most likely reasonably well-off US tax payers. Harrassing and detaining such people is a complete disgrace. I don't care if they were marching for "Pro-Life" or "Anti-Bush" or whatever. Citizens deserve some respect, plain and simple, and common sense tells us this is particularly true for well behaved law abiding middle class citizens where there's just no just cause for suspicion. And if they were only taking some photographs of good old American political activity.... I just can't fathom the current goings on. This is about photography. I was a liberal youngster, but I heard President Reagan's stories of the Soviet evil empire most weeks of the first eight years of the 1980's. The themes were largely about restrictions on free speech. Banned books. Restricted access to photocopiers. And yes, restricted ability to take and publish photographs. I heard about brave freedom cells who took photographs and wrote stories and published their work in underground magazines. "Samizdat" I think it was called. Photography, like writing and like the exercise of free assembly, is the activity of a free people in a self-governing and therefore largely transparent society. President Reagan's life was almost taken, and yet our society did not degrade to the current state of affairs - surveillance, harrassment and intimidation. A few evil blokes hijacked some planes and destroyed some buildings with truly horrifying consequences. But I'm dumbfounded how this has led to the current "police state" such as it is. I'm not a fan of President Bush, but I honestly don't think he's particularly interested in harrassing middle aged folks protesting the Iraq war or taking pictures or whatever. I don't really think many or even most of the NYPD are individually interested in doing so either. After all, these are our own people - ourselves, our own daughters and aunts and mothers and brothers. This is about photography. So how did we arrive here? Who is in charge? When can we just go out with our Leicas into any American city and snap away again without fear of harrassment or even detention (!) ? When will we freely photograph in - and again take pictures of - President Reagan's "Shining City Upon A Hill" ? God bless our fair land. Scott