发信人: choi (choi), 信区: Taiwan
标 题: Re: 一个法律问题 (转载)
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Tue Apr 1 11:38:33 2008)
【 以下文字转载自 ChinaNews 讨论区 】
发信人: choi (choi), 信区: ChinaNews
标 题: Re: 一个法律问题
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Tue Apr 1 11:37:51 2008)
It may depend on how many people you have, where the place will be, and so
on.
If it is just one person, the prospect to block traffic is minimal. The
number of persons makes a difference: ten or a hundred.
If the place is private or a (public) park, it may need consent of the owner
--in the latter case, the city agency in charge (which may have a small
office in the park).
Apparently you missed my posting a week ago in this board. I lived in Boston
, and a decade aho I alone wanted to protest against district attorney
himself. I did not think I needed a permit (due to the First Amendment and
court rulings in this regard), but in advance I asked local police station
any way, to make sure. The officer in the front desk said no permit was
needed, but added that I could not stand still--instead I must walk in a
circle (which you see frequently in television and in reality). Yes, I could
shout slogan and no, I could not block traffic (road traffic or door of a
business or homeowner). Massachusetts law prohibits protest in front of
state courts but federal law does not have that (so one can protest in front
of a FEDERAL courthouse). I randomly chose a place in front of a bank to
protest. A security man came out politely to ask me why I was protesting.
The moment he heard that my protest had nothing to do with the bank, he and
the bank left me alone.
【 在 annandale (xiaxie88) 的大作中提到: 】
: 如果我们要在DC发动谴责西藏事件中的暴力行为和强烈要求中国政府在西藏真正地实
行民族区域自治的示威游行(比如利用樱花节设置看板或者在中国大使馆门前举行),
需要向美国的哪一级政府申请许可?审批时间需要多长?
--
※ 来源:·WWW 未名空间站 海外: mitbbs.com 中国: mitbbs.cn·[FROM: 65.217.]
|