Quote:

It's started in many locations with denying these people the freedom to assemble.




Assemble where, exactly? If it's public property fine but how about private property like say, your house?

They've completely blocked off your house, your driveway, the whole area yet you have a very important medical appointment that if you miss you might actually die. Do they have the right to assemble there?

What if they've set up their protest camp in front of a federal courthouse so people with legitimate legal business can't get in? Everybody knows how jammed up court schedules are and this has been on the calendar for months now. Maybe you're a plaintiff in the class action lawsuit against BP Oil and you're a witness secheduled for today. Do they have the freedom to assemble and block access there?

Just last night on the news I saw a bunch of them filling up a bank branch so nobody could get in the bank. Say your retired mother who uses a walker and takes cabs happens to bank there and needs to talk to the branch loan officer about her reverse mortgage loan because she needs the money, the drop dead date is tomorrow morning and if she doesn't get it done now, she loses out. The cabs can't get through and there's no way with a walker she's going to attempt to get by those people. Do they have the right to assemble then?

What about the private person who owns the park in the Wall Street area? It's his private property and they've completely taken it over. Is that in the constitution and are you saying you don't believe in private property rights?

Get real, man.

Bob


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