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When Did Dancing In The Thomas Jefferson Memorial Become A Crime?

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A group of visitors to the Jefferson Memorial was arrested last Saturday for dancing inside the memorial. Images pulled from Adam vs. the Man video.

The words of Thomas Jefferson, some written more than 200 years ago, have shaped American ideals. Today, many of these impressive, stirring words adorn the interior walls of his memorial. The Thomas Jefferson Memorial stands as a symbol of liberty and endures as a site for reflection and inspiration for all citizens of the United States and the world.

Those words are on the homepage of the National Park Service's website for the Jefferson Memorial. But does the memorial stand "as a symbol of liberty and endure as a site for reflection and inspiration for all citizens of the United States and the world"? Some might wonder following an incident this past Saturday at the memorial in which U.S. Park Police brusquely -- some might say excessively, what with the use of chokeholds and knees pinning heads to the memorial's floor -- arrested a number of visitors in the memorial for ... quietly dancing.

Thomas Jefferson, our country's third president, valued liberty highly, as a review of his quotations attests:

"I would rather be exposed to the inconveniencies attending too much liberty than to those attending too small a degree of it."

"The boisterous sea of liberty is never without a wave."

"..I have sworn upon the altar of god eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man."

That last entry comes from an inscription within the memorial, an irony that can't be escaped in the wake of the arrests.

When did dancing become a sign of protest, and when was it outlawed in the memorial? How do you measure reasonable force vs. excessive force when police are arresting those behind passive acts of civil disobedience? Would those questions, which might come to mind after watching the following video, have been moot if the Park Police had simply ignored the dancers?

Now, the dancing was not spontaneous, and likely had its roots in a similar incident in 2008 when Mary Oberwetter was arrested in the memorial for dancing in celebration of Thomas Jefferson's birthday.

Ms. Oberwetter's lawsuit against the National Park Service, for a violation of her First Amendment rights, was initially dismissed by a federal judge and her appeal of that also failed, on this past May 17. In its ruling, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit held that the Jefferson Memorial should have a “solemn atmosphere" and that silently dancing was an inappropriate form of expression there.

Furthermore, the appellate judges agreed with the lower court that the interior of the open-air memorial is "not a public forum," and so any demonstrators must first obtain a permit. Demonstrations that require permits in the Park Service's National Capital region are defined as "picketing, speechmaking, marching, holding vigils or religious services and all other like forms of conduct which involve the communication or expression of views or grievances, engaged in by one or more persons, the conduct of which has the effect, intent or propensity to draw a crowd or onlookers. [The] term does not include casual park use by visitors or tourists which does not have an intent or propensity to attract a crowd or onlookers."

Against those regulations, the appellate court wrote:

Although silent, Oberwetter’s dancing was a conspicuous expressive act with a propensity to draw onlookers. True, it occurred close to midnight on a weekend, making it less likely that a crowd would gather. But the question is not whether her dancing was likely to attract attention at that particular time. As with the other prohibited activities of “picketing, speechmaking, marching, [and] holding vigils or religious services,” expressive dancing might not draw an audience when nobody is around. But the conduct is nonetheless prohibited because it stands out as a type of performance, creating its own center of attention and distracting from the atmosphere of solemn commemoration that the Regulations are designed to preserve.

     

Furthermore, the judges added:

National memorials are places of public commemoration, not freewheeling forums for open expression, and thus the government may reserve them for purposes that preclude expressive activity. Oberwetter points out that the Jefferson Memorial is located within the National Park system, and that public parks are quintessential examples of traditional public forums.  Even so, we have recognized that our country’s many national parks are too vast and variegated to be painted with a single brush for purposes of forum analysis. “Presumably, many national parks include areas—even large areas, such as a vast wilderness preserve—which never have been dedicated to free expression and public assembly, would be clearly incompatible with such use, and would therefore be classified as nonpublic forums.”.... In creating and maintaining the Jefferson Memorial in particular, the government has dedicated a space with a solemn commemorative purpose that is incompatible with the full range of free expression that is permitted in public forums.

     

What would Thomas Jefferson think?

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Comments

You mean like the absolute regulation and enforcement of a no dancing rule? 

Yeah,  that's what this country needs ;more doing what you're told to do.  Because,  you know,  that worked so well for our ancestors in colonial America.  

My right to swing my arm ends at your nose.  Dancing hurts no one.  This is authoritarianism for the sake of being in charge and forcing people to obey.  Full stop.  There is no other purpose.  

Air of solemnity.  That's hogwash.  Why do they get to decide how I honor of finding fathers? Or finding fathers were as celebratory as they come. They met in taverns,  for crying out loud.  


They might have been out to provoke a response but they deliberately did a non-threatening, nonviolent, quiet thing, to show how even that can get you judo slammed on the floor with 4 police officers on top of you in America. Watch the video notice how they purposely weren't resisting, but the police were still repeatedly screaming, "Stop resisting! Stop resisting!" Did you notice how the only thing they were shouting was their own rights? Don't try and let the police off on this one, dancing gets treated this way in Saudi Arabia for Christ sake!


The people who did this planned this out and were doing this on purpose to get this on camera and claim that they're patriots for free speech, freedom of expression and what not.. They aren't. they're just a bunch of liberals wasting the time and energy of officers that would rather just be patrolling the area instead of arresting someone. 


Probably best to use guns. That would really work!  

So unnecessary to over react like that.  Ignore them and they'll go away.


Crusaders


Those cops should be arrested for drawing attention to themselves since that's what's illegal.

 

So the law is "don't do anything that would draw attention to yourself at the memorial". Which means don't do anything the cops don't want you to, since you could blow a bubblegum bubble and they could say it drew their attention. Or you could dance or pose for a photo, or sing or do a cartwheel or even just stretch your hands to the sky or otherwise express an emotion and it would be probable cause or justifiable arrest, since emotions draw attention. What if you were to cry as you thought about how stifled and suppressed our nation is that at a memorial for Thomas Jefferson who valued freedom, who is a symbol and hero of freedom, that at that very memorial for him expressions of emotion are outlawed to such an extreme degree that even crying could be something you could be arrested for. A sad fucking state indeed. And that some people think this is normal or they are happy to see the dancers shut down, they want to see emotion locked behind bars and fined and hidden and repressed. Joy to guns and killing and repressing your emotions until you buy an automatic weapon and go to your local school and gun down the young children there to save them from growing up and being exposed to such a sad state of humanity where they will learn to despise their fellow human and hide all emotions for fear of being arrested for displaying something "inappropriate". The comments on here supporting this repression are no surprise, though. It is this culture that creates this distance, this hate and detachment, this desire for order in the chaos to the point that they are willing to give up basic human behavior and stifle freedom. It's no wonder the killings continue and no one gives a fuck.


I agree. By the responses to the officer warning them not to dance, you can tell that they WANTED to cause a disturbance. Then, they post these videos and say the police are the bad people here?? That's the comical part to me, but so many jump on their wagon and defend them, while bashing the police! I hope that those bashing never need the help of an officer.. They should be required to call someone who only wants to cause a disturbance in their time of need! 


How is shoplifting a victomless crime? Your argument is invalid.


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