[Politech] EPIC "Freedom 2.0" event in DC 5/20 and spy museum [priv]

From: Declan McCullagh (declan@private)
Date: Tue May 18 2004 - 19:27:39 PDT

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    -------- Original Message --------
    Subject: EPIC - May 21 - Int'l Spy Museum
    Date: Tue, 18 May 2004 13:20:52 -0400
    From: Marc Rotenberg <rotenberg@private>
    To: Declan McCullagh <declan@private>
    
    Declan -
    
    Could you forward to your list? This should be a great
    opportunity for people in the DC area. General conference
    information is at http://www.epic04.org/
    
    Marc.
    
    ------------------------------------------
    
    
    
    PRESS RELEASE
    May 18, 2004
    
                     INTERNATIONAL SPY MUSEUM OPENS NEW
                        EXHIBIT ON TERROR IN AMERICA
    
                   Conference in Washington, DC to Explore
                   Privacy, Open Government, and Democracy
    
    
    WASHINGTON, DC - Just in time for the EPIC policy conference
    "Freedom 2.0," the International Spy Museum opens a new exhibit that
    provides unprecedented insight into terror on American soil from the
    Revolutionary War to the War on Terrorism.
    
    Admission to a special showing at the Spy Museum on Friday, May 21
    is for attendees at "Freedom 2.0: Distributed Democracy, Dialogue
    for a Connected World." The conference is open to the public.
    Registration information is available at http://www.epic04.org/.
    Registration will begin Thursday, May 20 at 3 pm at the Washington
    Club on Dupont Circle.
    
    "The Enemy Within: Terror in America - 1776 to Today," the only
    museum exhibit to provide historic perspective on acts of terror
    that have taken place on American soil, opened May 13, 2004 as the
    International Spy Museum's first special exhibit.
    
    "The Enemy Within" will reveal nine major events and periods in U.S.
    History when Americans were threatened by enemies within its
    borders: depicting how the government and public responded,
    illustrating the corresponding evolution of U.S. counterintelligence
    and homeland security efforts, and examining the challenge of
    securing the nation without compromising the civil liberties upon
    which it was founded.
    
    Marc Rotenberg, President of EPIC, said, "Attendees at Freedom 2.0
    will have an extraordinary opportunity to view this timely and
    important exhibit. To understand the threats to our nation --
    both from acts of terrorism and the loss of liberty -- we should
    look closely at how the United States has responded during
    similar periods in the past."
    
    EPIC has been among the leading civil liberties organizations in
    the United States calling for a careful examination of the
    government's proposals to expand police powers after 9-11. EPIC
    has also successfully pursued several Freedom of Information Act
    cases, including one against the Attorney General John Ashcroft
    and another against the former director of the Total Information
    Awareness program John Poindexter.
    
    "Public understanding of the nature of terrorism and the responses
    of government is a critical requirement for an effective response
    to future threats of terrorism. EPIC's open government requests
    combined with the Spy Museum's extraordinary exhibit help promote
    a vital public debate," said Rotenberg.
    
    The following dramatic moments in U.S. history - all frightening,
    and destabilizing events - represent times when Americans have felt
    threatened within their own borders. Each precipitated legislation
    and/or new counterintelligence measures and provoked debate about
    protecting both citizens and civil liberties.
    
    *  The City of Washington Captured and the White House Burned -
    August, 24 1814
    
    During the War of 1812, the City of Washington was captured and the
    White House, Capitol, and other major public buildings were torched
    by British troops-aided by information provided by a few Americans.
    
    *  Manhattan Hit by Massive Explosions in New York Harbor - July 30,
    1916
    
    German secret agents, aided by American collaborators, blew up a
    munitions depot in New York Harbor showering Manhattan and the
    Statue of Liberty with shrapnel and debris. Acts of German sabotage
    on America soil like this contributed to America 's entry into World
    War I, and inspired the passage of the 1918 Espionage Act, still in
    effect today, and the growth of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
    
    *  Anarchist Bombs Target American Leaders - June 2, 1919
    
    When the home of Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer was bombed by
    an anarchist and plots for more bombings were revealed, both the
    public and the government clamored for tighter law enforcement and
    more restrictive legislation for immigrants, resulting in the
    roundups, deportations, and public outrage associated with the now
    infamous "Palmer Raids."
    
    *  30,000 Ku Klux Klan Members Parade Down Pennsylvania Avenue -
    August 8, 1925
    
    The nation's oldest hate group, Ku Klux Klan, has risen three times
    in the nation's history. Each time, the group changed, evolving from
    small vigilante groups inflicting terror on former slaves after the
    Civil War; to a politically powerful organization of four-million
    members in the 1920s expanding its targets to include immigrants,
    Jews, and Catholics; to the violent groups of the1960s attacking
    African Americans and civil rights workers. Today, a diminished Klan
    is only one among many white supremacist groups.
    
    *  American Helps Japanese Pilot Terrorize Hawaiian Island After
    Pearl Harbor Attack - December 7, 1941
    
    A Japanese pilot returning from the Pearl Harbor attack,
    crash-landed on the Hawaiian Island of Nihau, and with the support
    of a Japanese American, took hostages and terrorized the community.
    This incident, little remembered today, perpetuated fears about
    Japanese Americans-fears that ultimately led to the unprecedented
    incarceration of thousands.
    
    *  Kremlin Launches one of the first Cold War Attacks against the
    U.S. - April 1945
    
    Near the end of WWII, the Kremlin harshly condemned American
    Communists for softening their commitment to a worldwide communist
    revolution. The Communist Party of the United States snapped to
    action, ousting its moderate leader and reestablishing itself as a
    highly militant and subversive organization-and fueling America 's
    fears that American Communists would become Stalin's tool for the
    overthrow of the U.S. government.
    
    *  Radical Group Explodes Bomb in the U.S. Capitol - March 1, 1971
    
    Protests over the war in Vietnam War and civil rights turned violent
    during the "days of rage," and extremist groups, such as the Weather
    Underground and the Black Liberation Army, took action.
    
    *  Massive Bomb Destroys the Federal Building in Oklahoma City -
    April 19, 1995
    
    The Oklahoma City bombing, the deadliest act of terrorism on U.S.
    soil in the 20 th century, awakened Americans to the threats posed
    by domestic extremists-especially the virulently anti-government
    right-wing groups.
    
    *  Beyond September 11 th - Terrorism Today
    
    In the aftermath of September 11, 2001 initiatives by the U.S.
    government to root out terrorists elements in the country have
    irrevocably changed the lives of Americans.
    
    The Enemy Within will support these stories with historic
    photographs, themed environments, interactive displays, film,
    artifacts, and video. Exhibit highlights include:
    
    * 	A timeline that traces over 80 acts of terror that have taken
    place in the U.S. from the 1776 to today, including the
    Revolutionary War plot to kidnap George Washington, the events of
    Bloody Kansas prior to the Civil War, John Brown's Raid on Harpers
    Ferry, 1960s Church bombings in the South, and the attacks on the
    World Trade Center in 2001.
    
    * 	 Former FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover's Personal Telephone -
    used during the 1960s by Hoover to communicate with the President
    and key leaders.
    
    * 	 APL Badge and ID Card (1917) - carried by Operatives of the
    American Protective League (APL) who spied on their fellow Americans
    on behalf of the U.S. Justice Department during World War I.
    
    * 	 Anarchist Globe Bomb (c. 1886 ) - presented as evidence in
    the trial of the men tried in connection with the Chicago Haymarket
    riot (replica).
    
    *  Ritual Klan Red Robe (c. 1965) - worn by the Klan "Kladd," the
    elected Klan officer who presided over the secret rituals and
    ceremonies of the Ku Klux Klan.
    
    *  Klan "Business Cards" - ominous warnings to innocent Americans
    that their every move was being "watched."
    
    *  Weather Underground Video Presentation - featuring an exclusive
    interview with ex-Weather Underground member Bernadine Dohrn, filmed
    for the exhibition.
    
    *  Fragments of the Planes that hit the World Trade Center (2001) -
    recovered following the attacks on September 11, 2001 and used as
    evidence by the FBI in their ensuing investigation.
    
    *  Under Seige - a powerful eight-minute film exploring the
    terrorist threat today, initiatives by the U.S. government to root
    out terrorists elements in the U.S., the balance between civil
    liberties and national security, and the impact on the daily lives
    of Americans. It features a range of interviews with leading
    thinkers, including Daniel Pipes, Director of the Middle East Forum,
    Akbar S. Ahmed, the Ibn Khaldun Chair of Islamic Studies and
    Professor of International Relations at American University in
    Washington, DC Steven Emerson, terrorist expert and investigator,
    and Morris Dees,  co-founder and Chief Trial Counsel of the
    Southern Poverty Law Center.
    
    *  Visitor Polling Station - this unique computer interactive
    provides visitors the opportunity to express their own opinions on
    questions raised in the exhibition about how the nation has
    responded to the historical events presented. The questions were
    developed in consultation with The Gallup Organization, and
    additional historical questions enable visitors to see how Americans
    responded to similar questions posed by The Gallup Poll at that time
    in history.
    
    The International Spy Museum the only public institution in the
    world dedicated to presenting the world history of espionage,
    features the largest permanent collection of international
    spy-related artifacts on public display.  Through interactive
    exhibits with state-of-the-art audiovisual effects, film, and
    hands-on components, the Museum traces the evolution of espionage
    through the people who practiced the profession and it provides a
    context for guests to better interpret the role intelligence plays
    in current events.
    
    "Freedom 2:0: Distributed Democracy, Dialogue for a Connected World"
    will bring together civil society leaders, academic experts, and
    government decision makers to explore the critical challenges facing
    the Information Society - the protection of privacy, the
    transparency of government, the promotion of the Public Voice, and
    the need to assess the reliability of electronic voting systems.
    
    Speakers include Senator Patrick Leahy, who will receive the EPIC
    Champion of Freedom Award, Rep. Rush Holt, who has introduced
    legislation to improve the reliability of electronic voting systems,
    Ambassador David Gross, who leads the US delegation to the United
    Nations World Summit on the Information Society, Vinton G. Cerf,
    Chairman of ICANN, Nuala O'Connor-Kelley, Chief Privacy Officer for
    the Department of Homeland Security, and Giovanni Buttarelli,
    Secretary General of the Italian Data Protection Authority.
    
    The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) is hosting the
    Freedom 2.0 conference. EPIC is a public interest research center in
    Washington, D.C. established in 1994 to focus public attention on
    emerging civil liberties issues and to protect privacy, the First
    Amendment, and constitutional value. Well regarded for its
    innovative and effective advocacy, EPIC is celebrating its tenth
    anniversary this year.
    
    The Freedom 2.0 conference is open to the public. Registration
    information is available at http://www.epic04.org/. Registration
    will begin Thursday, May at 3 pm at the Washington Club on Dupont
    Circle.
    
    MEDIA INQUIRIES
    
    Amanda Abrell
    Media Relations Manager
    International Spy Museum
    202-654-0946
    http://www.spymuseum.org/
    
    EPIC Conference office (for registration information)
    Paul Henning, Coordinator
    301-261-2557
    http://www.epic04.org/ (Conference homepage)
    
    Marc Rotenberg, EPIC President
    202-483-1140
    http://www.epic.org/ (EPIC homepage)
    _______________________________________________
    
    
    
    
    
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