December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

John Brown

December 23, 1859: The Liberator – an anti-slavery newspaper in Boston, Massachusetts – published a poem entitled Old John Brown, praising the bravery and sacrifice of a white anti-slavery crusader executed in Virginia on December 2:

Old John Brown
Not any spot six feet by two
Will hold a man like thee;
John Brown will tramp the shaking earth,
From Blue Ridge to the sea,
Till the strong angel come at last,
And opes each dungeon door,
And God’s Great Charter holds and waves
O’er all his humble poor
And then the humble poor will come
In that far-distant day,
And from the felon’s nameless grave
They’ll brush the leaves away;
And gray old men will point the spot
Beneath the pine-tree shade
As children ask with streaming eyes
Where ‘Old John Brown’ is laid.
News Music/Underground RR

During 1860s: African Americans sang of their dream for freedom and equality before the Civil War, during it, and long after. Though its origin is sometimes disputed, Follow the Drinking Gourd is still thought of as a song used by “riders” on and “conductors” of the Underground Railroad system used to help slaves escape to safety and freedom by using coded directions. The “drinking gourd” likely refers to the North Star in the Little Dipper’s handle.

Follow the drinking gourd

Follow the drinking gourd

For the old man is a waitin’

For to carry you to freedom

Follow the drinking gourd

When the sun comes up

And the first Quail calls

Follow the drinking gourd

For the old man is a waitin’

For to carry you to freedom

Follow the drinking gourd

The riverbank will make a mighty good road

The dead trees show you the way

Left foot, peg foot travelin’ on

Following the drinking gourd

The river ends between two hills

Follow the drinking gourd

There’s another river on the other side

Follow the drinking gourd

(next BH, see July 8, 1860 or see Pre-20th for expanded NM chronology)

Chuck Cooper

December 23. 1953: the University of Tennessee men’s basketball team arrived in McKeesport, Pennsylvania to play Duquesne University. When the all-white team from Tennessee arrived to find that their opponents planned to play their Black center and star player, freshman Chuck Cooper, Coach John Mauer from Tennessee called a meeting. The Tennessee coach announced that both he and his players refused to play the scheduled game if Duquesne allowed their Black player to compete.

The two coaches argued for two hours, until the Duquesne coach finally agreed that he would not play Mr. Cooper “unless he had to, in a close game.” So committed to segregation, the University of Tennessee men’s basketball team walked off the court and forfeited the game entirely, rather than risk having to play even for a short time against a Black player. More than 2,600 fans who had already congregated in the gym were sent home after Tennessee forfeited. Chuck Cooper would later become the first Black player drafted by an NBA team.  [EJI story] (next BH, see May 17, 1954)

MARTIN LUTHER KING

December 23, 1963,: FBI officials met and formalized a plan to “neutralize” Dr. Martin Luther King. The vendetta against King included wiretapping, bugging, planting spies in his organizations, sabotaging speaking appearances, and sending both him and his wife Coretta a notorious “blackmail” tape purporting to record him in extramarital activities. (BH, see January 8, 1964; MLK, see January 5, 1964; MLK & FBI, see November 21, 1964)

Medgar Evers

December 23, 1992: a Mississippi state judge reversed an earlier order and set bond at $100,000 for Byron De La Beckwith, who faced his third trial in the 1963 killing of the civil rights leader Medgar Evers. Beckwith was freed later after a benefactor who did not want to be identified came forward with $12,000 cash required for his release, said a defense lawyer, Merrida Coxwell.(BH, see February 25, 1993; Evers, see January 26, 1994)

Colin Kaepernick

December 23, 2019: Nike’s new True to 7” shoe with former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick sold out on the first day of its North American release, according to the company’s website.

“This Air Force 1 season, Nike partnered with a collective of collaborators to design an AF1 that connects to their life personally. Colin was identified because we believe his voice and perspective inspire many generations on and off the field,” said a Nike spokesperson in an email.

The $110 black-and-white shoe sports an embroidered portrait of Kaepernick on the heel tab, reflective Swoosh and his personal logo on the tongue. [CNBC article] (next BH, see February 10, 2020; next CK, see June 3, 2020, or see CK for expanded story)

Botham Shem Jean

December 23, 2019: U.S. District Judge Barbara Lynn ruled the city of Dallas was not liable for off-duty police officer Amber Guyger who fatally shot Botham Jean in his own apartment on September 6, 2018.

The ruling left the 31-year-old Guyger as the sole defendant in the suit, which argued that she used excessive force and that better police training could have prevented Jean’s death. It made a large financial settlement unlikely.

In her brief ruling, Lynn wrote that she was upholding a magistrate judge’s decision and dismissing the city because the suit failed “to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.” [CBS News story] (next B & S, see February 23, 2020)

Daunte Wright Verdict

December 23, 2021: a jury found Kimberly Potter, the former police officer who said she mistook her gun for her Taser when she fatally shot Daunte Wright during a traffic stop in Brooklyn Center, Minn was convicted of two counts of manslaughter, a rare guilty verdict for a police officer that was likely to send her to prison for years.

The jury had deliberated across four days before agreeing on guilty verdicts for Potter, a 49-year-old white woman who testified that she had never fired her gun in her 26 years on the police force in Brooklyn Center until she shot a single bullet into the chest of Wright, a 20-year-old Black man who had been driving to a carwash in April. [NYT article] (next BH, see January 5, 2022)

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

Japan and Vietnam

December 23, 1940: the rising power of Japan in Vietnam encouraged nationalist groups to revolt from French rule. The American Consul in Saigon reported that “thousands of natives have been killed and more are in prison awaiting execution.” He described “promiscuous machine-gunning” of Vietnamese civilians” by French soldiers. (see February 8, 1941)

Cardinal Spellman

December 23, 1966: Francis Cardinal Spellman, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of New York and military vicar of the U.S. armed forces for Roman Catholics, visited U.S. servicemen in South Vietnam. In an address at mass in Saigon, Spellman said that the Vietnamese conflict was “a war for civilization—certainly it is not a war of our seeking. It is a war thrust upon us—we cannot yield to tyranny.” Anything “less than victory is inconceivable.” (see Dec 27)

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Technological Milestones

December 23, 1947: John Bardeen, William Shockley and Walter Brattain invented the transistor was at Bell Labs In acknowledgement of their accomplishment, Shockley, Bardeen, and Brattain were jointly awarded the 1956 Nobel Prize in Physics “for their researches on semiconductors and their discovery of the transistor effect.” (see January 27, 1948)

Kidney transplant

December 23, 1954: Dr. Joseph E. Murray performed the first human kidney transplant at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts. He will receive the Nobel Prize.  (see April 12, 1955)

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

JFK

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

December 23, 1960: many consider John F Kennedy’s inaugural speech as one of the most famous of all inaugural speeches. It was on this date that Ted Sorensen, John Kennedy’s close adviser, sent telegrams to a select group asking for suggestion on it.

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Cold War

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

December 23, 1962: Cuba released the last 1,113 participants in the Bay of Pigs Invasion in exchange for food worth $53 million. (see Bay of Pigs for expanded chronology; next Cold War, see Dec 24)

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

December 23 Music et al

December 23, 1963: Capitol Records issued a memo to its sales people and regional managers across the country, outlining an extensive “Beatles Campaign” using various promotional items – from major music magazine trade ads and a fake tabloid Beatles newspaper (reprinted in the thousands), to Beatle buttons, Beatle stickers, Beatle wigs, and a battery-powered, “Beatles-in-motion,” bobble-head-like, window display for music stores. (see Dec 24)

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Native Americans

“No Salmon, No Santa”

December 23, 1963: Native-American activists in the state of Washington marched at the state capital on this day to protest the loss of historic fishing rights. Some carried signs reading “No Salmon, No Santa.” The governor of Washington invited them in, listened politely, and then dismissed them with no promise of acting on their complaints. The protest reflected an escalating conflict with the state game commission, which had undertaken tougher enforcement of existing state fishing regulations. A number of the protesters had been arrested several times.

Survival of American Indians

In 1964: Survival of American Indians (SAIA) forms and stages “fish-ins” to preserve off-reservation fishing rights in Washington state. Those who participated in the fish-ins later helped the occupiers on Alcatraz. Fishing and land rights protests continued throughout the 1960s and early 1970s. (see March 9, 1964)

Native Claims Settlement Act

December 23, 1971: President Nixon signed the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) after an 11-year effort,  The settlement gave Alaska Natives 44 million acres of land and $962.5 million. This act became a model for struggling indigenous movements around the world. (see January 15, 1972)

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

World Trade Center

December 23, 1970: the North Tower of the World Trade Center topped out. (see July 19, 1971)

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

December 23, 1975: Peter Seitz  ruled (the Seitz decision) that Major League Baseball (MLB) players became free agents upon playing one year for their team without a contract, effectively nullifying baseball’s reserve clause. The ruling was issued in regard to pitchers Andy Messersmith and Dave McNally. (see October 6, 1976)

Environmental Issues

December 23, 1982: the Missouri Department of Health and the federal Centers for Disease Control (CDC) informed residents of Times Beach, Missouri that their town was contaminated when the chemical dioxin was sprayed on its unpaved roads, and that the town will have to be evacuated and demolished. By February, the federal and state governments had spent $36 million to buy every house in town except one (its owners, lifelong residents of Times Beach, refused to sell). In 1985, the city was officially dis-incorporated. (see February 3, 1984)

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

FREE SPEECH

Indecency banned

December 23, 1988: as directed by a new federal law, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on this day banned all alleged “indecency” on radio and television, replacing an existing policy that had allowed “indecency” between midnight and 6 a.m. (see June 21, 1989)

Lenny Bruce

December 23, 2003: New York Governor George Pataki granted comedian Lenny Bruce a posthumous pardon for his obscenity conviction on November 4, 1964, in New York City. Bruce’s iconoclastic style of humor involved searing attacks on American hypocrisy about sex, race relations, and religion. He became the role model for many later stand-up comics whose humor had a political orientation. (see October 15, 2005)

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Dissolution of Yugoslavia

December 23, 1990: in a referendum on Slovenia’s independence from Yugoslavia, 88.5% vote in favor of independence.(see  Yugoslavia for expanded chronology)

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Terrorism

William Higgins

December 23, 1991: Major Jens Nielsen of the Royal Danish Army, who was attached to the United Nations Observation Group in Beirut found the remains of William Higgins, USMC beside a mosque near a south Beirut hospital. Higgins had been kidnapped on February 17, 1988 (see June 25, 1991)

Oklahoma City Explosion

December 23, 1997: after deliberating for six day, a jury acquitted Terry Nichols, of actually detonating the bomb, but convicted him of conspiring with Timothy McVeigh to use a weapon of mass destruction. They acquitted Nichols on the charges of first degree (premeditated) murder, but convicted him on the lesser charge of involuntary (unintentional) manslaughter in the deaths of the federal law enforcement officers. (see February 26, 1999)

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

AIDS

Philadelphia movie

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

December 23, 1993: the movie, Philadelphia, opened. It was the first major Hollywood movie to focus on AIDS. (NYT review)

Leading cause of death

In 1994 AIDS became the leading cause of death for all Americans ages 25 to 44. (see September 22, 1995)

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

Utah block blocked

December 23, 2013: U.S. District Judge Robert J. Shelby denied Utah state lawyers’ bid to temporarily stop gay marriage while the appeals process played out. The State then in turned to a Denver-based federal appeals court in their bid to put a stop to gay couples getting married, saying the state should not be required to abide by one judge’s narrow view of a “new and fundamentally different definition of marriage.”

Ohio block blocked

December 23, 2013: Judge Timothy S. Black of the US District Court of the Southern District of Ohio ruled that Ohio must acknowledge same-sex marriages on death certificates and went further in his decision to say that lower courts were now applying the recent historic Supreme Court decision striking down the federal ban on recognition of such unions. Black wrote, “This conclusion flows from the Windsor (DOMA) decision of the United States Supreme Court this past summer, which held that the federal government cannot refuse to recognize a valid same-sex marriage.” (NYT article)

Alan Turing

December 23, 2013: Turing was granted a pardon under the Royal Prerogative of Mercy by the Queen, following a request from the justice secretary, Chris Grayling. Announcing the pardon, Grayling said: “Dr Alan Turing was an exceptional man with a brilliant mind. His brilliance was put into practice at Bletchley Park during the second world war, where he was pivotal to breaking the Enigma code, helping to end the war and save thousands of lives. His later life was overshadowed by his conviction for homosexual activity, a sentence we would now consider unjust and discriminatory and which has now been repealed. Dr Turing deserves to be remembered and recognised for his fantastic contribution to the war effort and his legacy to science. A pardon from the Queen is a fitting tribute to an exceptional man.” (see Dec 31)

Blood donations

December 23, 2014: the Food and Drug Administration announced that it would scrap a decades-old lifetime prohibition on blood donation by gay and bisexual men, a change that experts said was long overdue and could lift the annual blood supply by as much as 4 percent. The F.D.A. had enacted the ban in 1983, early in the AIDS epidemic. At the time, little was known about the human immunodeficiency virus, which causes the disease, and there was no quick test to determine whether somebody had it. But science — and the understanding of H.I.V. in particular — has advanced in the intervening decades, and on Tuesday the F.D.A. acknowledged as much, lifting the lifetime ban but keeping in place a more modest block on donations by men who have had sex with other men in the last 12 months. (see Dec 26)

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

December 23, 2017: California Gov. Jerry Brown announced pardons or sentence reductions for some 150 convicted criminals, including two Cambodian refugees facing deportation and a woman who has spent 33 years in prison despite a bungled plea deal that could have freed her decades ago.

The pardons of Rottanak Kong of Davis and Mony Neth of Modesto could be seen as another poke at the Trump administration’s hard-line policies on immigration.

Both men came to the United States as children when their families fled the Khmer Rouge government that killed millions of its own people. They were recently detained as part of a federal immigration roundup, although a California-based federal judge has temporarily halted the deportation of hundreds of Cambodian refugees.

Kong was sentenced to a year in Stanislaus County jail in 2003 for joyriding. He served seven months. Neth was convicted in 1995, also in Stanislaus County, on weapons and receiving stolen property charges. He also served his sentence.

Brown’s pardons said both men had become law-abiding citizens and paid their debts to society. (see January 3, 2018)

December 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Chas Hodges from the Outlaws talks about Joe Meek

Telstar the song

On December 22, 1962, more than a year before the Beatles arrived in the United States and became the British Invasion’s avant garde, the Tornados became the first British band to have a #1 hit in the US.

“Telstar” remained as the top of the Billboard Hot 100 chart until January 11, 1963.

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Rudy Van Gelder

Joe Meek was both the composer and recording engineer for the song. By 1962 the recording studio had become an instrument as much as simply a space in which to record sound. In the US, the first most famous recording engineer was Rudy Van Gelder. He is best known for his work with jazz musicians in his Englewood Cliffs, NJ studio.

Van Gelder explained that he was an engineer and not a producer. He was not in charge of the sessions he recorded; he did not hire the musicians or play any role in choosing the repertoire. He did have the final say in what the records sounded like.

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Joe Meek

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Joe Meek was born on April 5, 1929 to a farming family in Newent, England. From the beginning his interests revolved around music. He loved tinkering with electronics, even recording and cutting discs in his backyard shed and creating sound effects and music for plays.

Early on Meek moved to London and got a job at IBC, one of the UK’s major recording studios.

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Sound

Sound Engineer Joe Meek

Meek became one of the UK’s most popular engineers, but his style demanded independence and independence was not what a studio like IBC was in the habit of giving.

He left IBC when presented with the opportunity to design and run Lansdowne studios. Despite successes there as well, Meek wanted more and ambition met opportunity in July 1958 when popular American artists Les Paul and Mary Ford had a hit “Put a Ring On My Finger,” a Meek composition.

Meek created a recording studio at 304 Holloway Road, basically an apartment.  (Interestingly, Van Gelder’s first recordings were done in his parents’ home.)

Sound, not decor, mattered to Meek.

From an Independent article: One of Meek’s recording artists, Screaming Lord Sutch, used to tell stories about recording conditions inside 304 Holloway Road. In the cramped little flat, there would be a bass player on the stairs. Meek would be at his homemade controls. The guitarist would be strumming away in the front room. The vocalist would be somewhere else and – to round it off – extra percussion would be provided by somebody stamping up and down in the bathroom.

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Influence on musicians

Like himself, there were musicians who wanted more independence than the established studios provided. Meek’s studio was the place for them and Meek wanted them there.

Meek gave guitarists Jimmy Page, Steve Howe, Ritchie Blackmore, and others the opportunity create their own sound and style.

From the Meek siteJoe pushed the very limits of imagination, innovating such techniques as close miking instruments, dampening a bass drum with blankets, direct injecting electric guitars, using compression aberrations (pumping and breathing) like an instrument, blowing the EQ high into the red as a practice of embracing artifact noise and rhythms, and the incorporation of sound effects that painted a wide array of atmospheres and aural landscapes.

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Meek Sued

In March 1962, Jean Ledrut, a French composer, accused Meek of plagiarism, claiming that Meek had copied  “Telstar” from “La Marche d’Austerlitz”, a piece from a score that Ledrut had written for the 1960 film Austerlitz. The a lawsuit prevented Meek from receiving royalties from the record.

Austerlitz was not released in the UK until 1965 and Meek was unaware of the film when the Ledrut filed the lawsuit. The courts sided with Meeks in January 1967, three weeks after Meek’s death.

Sound Magician Joe Meek

1960s

The so-called good ol’ days of the 1960s were good for many, but not all. Being gay,  likely bipolar, and a workaholic who slept perhaps one day a week facing increased pressure from larger studios trying to minimize Meeks’ success created a situation that was beyond Meeks’ ability to manage.

On February 3, 1967 Meek shot and killed his landlady and then himself.  February 3, 1959 was the day Buddy Holly died in that infamous plane crash. On February 3, 2003, the most famous American recording engineer, Phil Spector, shot and killed Lana Clarkson.

Today a plaque in front of 304 Holloway Road commemorates his presence. It is on the wall between the Holloway Express Grocery Store and the Titanic Café and Restaurant (noted for its “all day English breakfasts”).

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Sound Magician Joe Meek

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Pledge of Allegiance

December 22 Peace Love Art ActivismDecember 22, 1942: Congress amended the Flag code to replace the Bellamy salute with the the hand-over-heart salute. The Bellamy salute  had been the salute described by Francis Bellamy to accompany the American Pledge of Allegiance, which he had authored. During the period when it was used with the Pledge of Allegiance, it was sometimes known as the “flag salute”. During the 1920s and 1930s, Italian fascists and Nazis adopted salutes which were similar in form, resulting in controversy over the use of the Bellamy salute in the United States. (see PoA for expanded chronology)

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

Napalm

French propaganda film:

December 22, 1950: the French use napalm against Viet Minh forces for the first time. (see February 25, 1952)

James T. Davis

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

December 22, 1961: one of the first American battlefield fatalities in Vietnam–Specialist 4 James T. Davis died. He served as a 3rd Radio Research Unit advisor to elements of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN). Davis is honored on Panel 1E, Line 4 of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. See James T Davis for expanded story.(see Davis for more about him)

Peace delegation to Hanoi

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

December 22, 1972: a peace delegation that included singer-activist Joan Baez and human rights attorney Telford Taylor visited Hanoi to deliver Christmas mail to American prisoners of war (they will be caught in the Christmas bombing of North Vietnam). (see Dec 25)

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

December 22 Music et al

December 22, 1962 – January 11, 1963: “Telstar” by the Tornados #1 on the Billboard Hot 100. Joe Meek wrote it. Jean Ledrut, a French composer, accused Meek of plagiarism, claiming that the tune of “Telstar” had been copied from “La Marche d’Austerlitz”, a piece from a score that Ledrut had written for the 1960 film Austerlitz. The a lawsuit prevented Meek from receiving royalties from the record.  Courts resolved the issue in Meek’s favor, but not until three weeks after his suicide in 1967. Austerlitz was not released in the UK until 1965 and Meek was unaware of the film when the lawsuit was filed in March 1963. (see February 10, 1968)

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

University of Alabama

December 22, 1963: Tuscaloosa, Alabama Police Chief William M. Marable said that he had both statements and physical evidence to support charges that five National Guardsmen set off explosions near the University of Alabama. (BH, see Dec 23; UA, see January 8, 1964)

Sam Cooke

December 22, 1964:: Sam Cooke’s A Change is Gonna Come released. (see Change Is Gonna Come) (see In February 1965)

George Whitmore, Jr

December 22, 1972: Brooklyn DA Eugene Gold announced he was reopening the case in view of an affidavit obtained by TV journalist Selwyn Raab from Elba Borrero’s sister, Celeste Viruet, who lived near Borrero at the time of the assault but had since returned to her native Puerto Rico. The affidavit stated that before Borrero identified George Whitmore, Jr. police had shown her a photo array and she had identified another person as her assailant. (see George Whitmore for expanded chronology)

Howard Beach incident

December 22, 1986: three arrests were made of local teenagers in the Michael Griffith December 20 Howard Beach incident; the accused were Jon Lester, Scott Kern and Jason Ladone. (BH, see In February 1987; Howard Beach, see February 10, 1987)

Byron De La Beckwith

December 22, 1997: The Mississippi Supreme Court upheld the conviction of Byron De La Beckwith in the 1963 assassination of the civil rights leader Medgar Evers. The court said the 31-year lapse between the ambush slaying and Mr. Beckwith’s conviction did not deny him a fair trial. (Evers, see January 21, 2001)

Rainey Pool murder

In 1998: after more than twenty-eight years, five men were indicted for the murder of Pool (April 12, 1970).   Two of the five men had severed trials. (Pool, see June 30, 1999; BH, see Mar 12)

Murders of Three Civil Rights Workers

December 22, 2014: the Associated Press interviewed Edgar Ray Killen inside the Mississippi State Penitentiary, his first interview since his conviction on state charges of manslaughter in 2005. He steadfastly refused to discuss the “Freedom Summer” slayings of three civil-rights workers. He said he remained a segregationist who does not believe in race equality but contends he bears no ill will toward blacks.

Killen had first contacted an AP reporter 18 months earlier. In his first letter on March 3, 2013, he made clear that no conversation with a reporter would result in a confession.

“That is not where I am coming from after 50 years of silence,” Killen wrote. “I have never discussed the 1964 case with anyone — an attorney, the FBI, local law nor friend — and those who say so are lying.”(BH, see January 28, 2015; Murders, see May 26, 2016)

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

December 22, 1966:  Lucy Burns died in Brooklyn, NY.(see August 30, 1967)

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Cultural Milestones

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

December 22, 1967: Chicago businessman Michael Butler was planning to run for the U.S. Senate on an anti-war platform. He watched the Public Theatre’s production of Hair several times and joined forces with Joe Papp to reproduce the show at another New York venue after the close of its run at the Public.

Papp and Butler first moved the show to The Cheetah, a discotheque at 53rd Street and Broadway. It ran for 45 performances. (CM, see January 22, 1968; Hair, see April 29, 1968)

Beavis and Butthead

December 22, 1992: MTV first broadcast Beavis and Butthead.  One of the most well-known aspects of the series was the inclusion of music videos and the negative criticism by the characters of those videos.(see July 15, 1995)

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Native Americans

December 22, 1969: native-American civil rights activists had occupied Alcatraz Island on November 20, 1969, and held it for 18 months, until June 1971. One month after the occupation began, on this day, the protesters launched a pirate radio station called Radio Free Alcatraz.

Alcatraz Island had been the home of a federal penitentiary until President John Kennedy ordered it closed in 1963. At that point, Native-American activists argued that it was traditional Native-American land and launched several protests around it. The island became a national park in 1972. (see Feb 22)

Native American Rights Fund

In 1970: the Native American Rights Fund (NARF) founded. It is the oldest and largest nonprofit law firm dedicated to asserting and defending the rights of Indian tribes, organizations and individuals nationwide.

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Falklands War

December 22, 1981: General Leopoldo Galtierirose rose to the Presidency of Argentina in a coup that ousted General Roberto Viola. (see April 2, 1982)

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Dissolution of the USSR

December 22, 1989: the Romanian army defected to the cause of anti-communist demonstrators, and the government of Nicolae Ceausescu was overthrown.

Ceaușescu and his wife Elena fled.

Brandenburg gate

December 22, 1989: the reopening of Berlin’s Brandenburg gate. [NYT article] (see Dec 25)

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

TERRORISM

December 22, 2001: a Paris–Miami flight was diverted to Boston after passenger Richard Reid attempted to detonate explosives hidden in his shoe. (see Dec 27)

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Jack Kevorkian

December 22, 2005: Kevorkian was again denied parole by a board. (see JK for expanded chronology)

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

December 22, 2009:  Brandon Piekarsky, 18, and Derrick Donchak, 19 pleaded not guilty in federal court to a hate crime in the death of Luís Ramírez, an immigrant. Piekarsky and Donchak were arraigned in Wilkes-Barre on charges stemming from the July 12, 2008 beating death of Ramírez. (next IH, see January 5, 2010; see Ramirez for expanded chronology)

National Security Entry-Exit Registration System

December 22, 2016: the Obama administration dismantled a dormant national registry program for visitors from countries with active terrorist groups — a program that then President-elect Donald J. Trump had suggested he would resurrect. The government had created the registry after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, but it  had not been in use since 2011, so the move was largely symbolic and appeared to be aimed at distancing the departing administration from any effort by the new president to revive the program, known as the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System, or Nseers. (see January 11, 2017)

Travel ban exceeds scope

December 22, 2017: a three-judge panel of the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Seattle ruled against President Trump’s latest travel ban, saying that the ban had exceeded “the scope of his delegated authority,” but that it was ultimately for the Supreme Court to decide.

The ruling affirmed the decision of a federal judge in Hawaii who ruled on October 17 that the order was unlawful on statutory grounds.

The ruling was a procedural but important step. On December 4, the Supreme Court allowed the ban — the third version issued by the Trump administration — to take effect and encouraged the appeals courts to rule on the case, a sign that it intended to take up the matter. The Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit is considering a similar ruling out of Maryland.

Neal Katyal, who argued the case before the Ninth Circuit court for the state of Hawaii, hailed the decision. “We are very pleased the Court of Appeals recognized that the president’s latest travel ban is flatly illegal,” he said, “and that his order defies the law Congress has laid down.”  [NYT article] (see Dec 23)

Shutdown

December 22, 2018: with Democratic leaders refusing to provide funds for President Trump’s wall project, Trump refused to negotiate a budget impasse and the a partial shutdown of the federal government began. (CNN article) (IH & TW, see Dec 25)

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

Don’t Ask Don’t Tell

December 22, 2010: President Obama signed the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell repeal into law. (see January 31, 2011)

North Carolina stalemate

December 22, 2016: North Carolina Republicans, who controlled both houses of the legislature, could not agree on a way to repeal House Bill 2.

The  law, signed by Governor Pat McCrory on March 23, curbed legal protections for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people, and requires transgender people in public buildings to use the bathroom that corresponds with the gender on their birth certificate. The law had prompted economic boycotts, lawsuits, political acrimony and contributed to the McCrory’s defeat in November. (LGBTQ, see Dec 29; North Carolina, see March 15, 2017)

Transgender/military

December 22, 2017: two courts ruled against the Trump administration’s order regarding transgender persons and the military.

  1. the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in Washington handed down an order that set aside another attempt by the Trump administration to prevent transgender people from joining the United States military.

The order, detailed in a six-page document, stated that President Donald Trump’s administration had “not shown a strong likelihood that they will succeed on  the merits of their challenge” to earlier court orders that had rejected the ban.

  1. The District Court for the Central District of California became the fourth court to issue a nationwide preliminary injunction against the president’s ban. The first such order was issued on October 30 in Doe v. Trump.

“Finding the Plaintiffs have established injury-in-fact as it pertains to the Accession, Retention, and Sex Reassignment Surgery Directives, and finding this case      ripe for adjudication, the Court DENIES Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss,” the court wrote. “Additionally … the Court GRANTS Plaintiffs’ Motion for Preliminary  Injunction.” (LGTBQ, see Dec 28; transgender military, see Dec 29)

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Beat Generation

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

December 22, 2014: James Irsay, the owner of the Indianapolis Colts, donated $10,000 for the Lowell Celebrates Kerouac Committee, a Massachusetts organization that keeps Beat Generation writer Jack Kerouac’s legacy alive.

Treasurer Steve Edington said the organization reached out to Irsay knowing he was huge Kerouac fan. Irsay paid $2.4 million for Kerouac’s original “On the Road” manuscript in 2001, and in 2007 allowed it to be displayed in Lowell, Kerouac’s hometown.  (see February 11, 2015)

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Birth Control & FREE SPEECH

December 22, 2014: U.S. appeals court Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III wrote that a North Carolina law requiring women seeking an abortion to have an ultrasound of the fetus performed and described to them was unconstitutional because it forced doctors to voice the state’s message discouraging the procedure.

Wilkinson, of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, upheld a district judge’s decision striking down the 2011 law, which was passed by North Carolina’s Republican-led legislature over a veto by then-Governor Beverly Perdue, a Democrat.

“The state freely admits that the purpose and anticipated effect … is to convince women seeking abortions to change their minds or reassess their decisions,” Wilkinson wrote in a unanimous ruling by a three-judge panel in Richmond, Virginia.

The state cannot commandeer the doctor-patient relationship to compel a physician to express its preference to the patient,” the appeals court ruled, stating that “this compelled speech provision” violated the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment. (NYT article) (WH, see March 9, 2015; FS, see March 30, 2015)

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Cannabis

December 22, 2023: President Joe Biden on Friday issued a proclamation expanding a marijuana pardon initiative he began last year by including for the first time people who committed cannabis possession offenses on federal properties.

“Criminal records for marijuana use and possession have imposed needless barriers to employment, housing, and educational opportunities,” Biden said in a statement. “Too many lives have been upended because of our failed approach to marijuana. It’s time that we right these wrongs.”

“Just as no one should be in a federal prison solely due to the use or possession of marijuana, no one should be in a local jail or state prison for that reason, either,” the president continued. “That’s why I continue to urge governors to do the same with regard to state offenses and applaud those who have since taken action.” [MM article] (next Cannabis, see January 12, 2024, or see CAC for expanded chronology)

December 22 Peace Love Art Activism