Sunday, December 28, 2025

Ten examples of tilting against windmills

Friends,

I got a call from the White House, as it seems the president is quite concerned about my criminal career. [Not really.] The minion who called indicated there was a discussion about revoking my citizenship.  So why not self-deport to Poland?  My response is that there is much for me and others like me to do as fascism is knocking on the door.  He responded that the president is not going to like my response.

Below are some of the good times that I and many others needed to do to speak out against injustice.  These acts of resistance are accompanied by great memories of so many good people who had the courage in trying times to say Not in My Name. Many of them are no longer with us, but I will always try to remember what they did while they were with us. Living in the US Empire means there will always be times to conspire, which means breathe together, and engage in nonviolent civil resistance.  Did we accomplish very much?  I will let others answer that question.  The policies of  the Trump administration will offer many risk arrest opportunities. Kagiso, Max  

On April 9, 2024, sixty three members of Christians for a Free Palestine were arrested in the Dirksen Senate Office Building cafeteria and charged with Obstruction.  Sixty one of them paid $50 to end the legal case.  Janice Sevre-Duszynska and Max Obuszewski requested a trial.  This was one of the longest legal experiences for Obuszewski in his career of resistance, as the two activists were convicted on January 23, 2025.  They were sentenced as follows: ninety days of unsupervised probation, $50 Victims of Violent Crime free and suspended sentences of thirty days for Obuszewski and five days for Sevre-Duszynska.

On July 18, 2019, 70 people, mostly Catholic, were arrested by the U.S. Capitol Police for “unlawfully demonstrating in the rotunda of the Russell Senate Office Building.” The Franciscan Action Network, a Catholic human rights group, planned the protest calling the border facility conditions a human rights violation and "contrary to religious teachings."  Most of the arrestees held pictures of children kept in deplorable and unsanitary conditions, without access to showers for weeks, and sleeping on concrete floors without blankets, and being detained incommunicado.

Sixty people paid $50, a chance to end the legal process.  The other ten, including Janice Sevre-Duszynska, Max Obuszewski, Ardeth Platte, Carol Gilbert, Kathy Boylan and Michael Walli, requested a trial. The Anti-Trump Ten were scheduled to be arraigned in D.C. Superior Court on August 21. However, the government later decided not to prosecute.   

On October 2, 2004, some twenty two members of the Iraq Pledge of Resistance were arrested on the Ellipse for protesting the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. Max Obuszewski, Maria Allwine, Ellen Barfield and others were charged with “closures and public use limits. “ Twenty one defendants were convicted on March 16, 2005.  I filed a continuance as my brother Kenneth died.  As result of this motion, the judge dismissed my case.

On March 1, 2003, eight members of the Iraq Pledge of Resistance, including Max Obuszewski and Maria Allwine were arrested inside the Towsontown Center in Towson.  We were handing out leaflets condemning an upcoming invasion of Iraq in the food court. Later we discovered that a number of Baltimore County police officers in the National Guard were in Kuwait preparing for an invasion.  For that reason, we were incarcerated much longer than necessary.  I had one wrist handcuffed to the wall for sixteen hours.  I was uncuffed to go to the bathroom and to be interrogated by the Baltimore County Red Squad.

We were never brought to trial, but we did appear in court on February 10, 2004 before District Judge Bruce Lamdin for a stet hearing.  Normally, this is a simple pro forma matter.  The prosecutor simply indicates the government’s decision to place the case on the stet docket, and the defendants agree.  Finally, the judge acknowledges that the case is being moved from the active to the inactive docket. 

However, Judge Lamdin was intent on establishing that he was in charge, as he became verbally belligerent and said there will be no statements “in my courtroom.”  He threatened to arrest us or to place us on trial.  There was no reason for his threats, and two of us filed letters of complaint with the administrative judge.  So it was not a surprise to discover that others were outraged by Lamdin’s courtroom demeanor. Having appeared before hundreds of judges in my cases starting back in 1984, generally the judges are respectful.  However, every so often I would appear before a judge who can be cantankerous.    

On July 20, 1994, Max Obuszewski was arrested for leafletting at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory indicating his opposition to nuclear weapons research.  On January 9, 1995 Howard County District Court Judge Louis Becker sentenced him to 30 days in jail and ordered him to report to the Howard County Detention Center on Martin Luther King’s birthday.  When Max goes to jail, he fasts from any solid food.

On July 15, 1991, five members of the Baltimore Emergency Response Network were arrested in Senator Paul Sarbanes’ office in Baltimore urging him to vote in favor of cutting off aid to death-squad El Salvador.  Arrestees included Michele Naar, Greg Boertje, Mike Bardoff, Carol McKusick and Max Obuszewski. While they were arrested and spent a night in jail, the senator’s office declined to press charges.  

On April  27, 1987, we closed down the Central Intelligence Agency as 560 of blocked three entrances and were arrested.  I was in an affinity group with Phil Berrigan, and in waves we blocked the main entrance.  For whatever reason, Phil was released and I was charged with  obstruction of free passage.  I then was taken to the Fairfax County Detention Center.  I think I spent three days in jail with George Figgs, john Heid and many others.  Dan Ellsberg was also arrested. I was released from jail, and never called to attend a trial.  Presumably, the court would have been overwhelmed if the government put several hundred protesters on trial.

Size

On April 27, throngs protesting U.S. Foreign Policy snarled traffic in McLean, VA.  The actual number of protesters was estimated to be 1,500. The nonviolent protesters, well organized remnants of the tens of thousands who gathered in Washington over the weekend for a "Mobilization for Justice & Peace in Central America & Southern Africa" were met by more than 200 Fairfax County and federal police, many dressed in riot gear and carrying chemical Mace. Waves of singing and chanting activists, many of them students and clergymen, linked arms and sat cross-legged in the access road leading to the Central Intelligence Agency's gates while police methodically dragged or carried their limp bodies into waiting wagons. The result was a strikingly cordial display of civil disobedience, with most protesters and authorities cooperating in an orderly process of arrests, handcuffings and bookings that began in the predawn chill shortly before 7 a.m. and was over four hours later. A handful of minor scuffles occurred, but order was quickly restored and no serious injuries were reported.

The target of most of the protesters was U.S. policy in Nicaragua, where the Reagan administration has pursued a "secret war" against the Sandinista government through funding and covert aid to the antigovernment contra rebels. In addition, the protesters took issue with the American government's policy of "constructive engagement" with the minority white regime in South Africa. Many of the activists, who regard those stances and the accompanying violence as immoral, spent the weekend in the capital calling attention to their issues with a benefit concert Friday night, a march of 75,000 Saturday and a special interfaith worship service Sunday. They arrived in busloads from around the nation, a cross section of trade unionists, clergy, liberal activists, blacks, whites, Hispanics, middle-class Americans and the homeless. Most of those arrested were charged with "obstruction of free passage" by Fairfax police, a misdemeanor carrying a maximum penalty of one year in jail and a $1,000 fine. The activists succeeded in blocking vehicles from entering the main CIA gates at Dolley Madison Boulevard and Georgetown Pike, and the cheering crowds chanted, "Hey, hey, CIA, you didn't get to work today."

The protesters started gathering around 6 a.m. in a staging area at Langley Fork Park, next door to the agency about six miles from Washington. Organizers using bullhorns ,issued final instructions to the milling demonstrators who stood in knots under oak trees at the side of the main entrance. It was a predominantly young and almost entirely white crowd, with a large contingent of students and a smattering of clerics. Marching over to the main agency gate, police helicopters hopping the air overhead and a half-dozen robe-clad Buddhist monks thumping "prayer drums" long the route. Shortly before 7 a.m., with a few straggling demonstrators still arriving and CIA employees unable to get into the facility from the south entrance off Dolley Madison Boulevard, traffic in the area slowed to a crawl, backing up on the George Washington Parkway and Georgetown Pike. When organizers announced over the public address system that roads in the vicinity were snarled, the demonstrators whooped and clapped their approval. The worst of the tie-up was over in about an hour, according to authorities.

One Fairfax County policeman, a veteran of the "May Day" disruptions in 1971 in which hundreds of thousands of Vietnam War protesters converged on Washington, said the contrast with yesterday's affair was sharp. "That was different," said Officer D.A. Stopper, who was at the McLean District station where 262 of those arrested yesterday were taken and processed. "That one was more frightening. These are just regular people." Several in the crowd carried signs imploring the Reagan administration to "boycott South Africa, not Nicaragua." Others paraded gruesome photographs of maimed youngsters in Central America, the victims, according to the demonstrators, of CIA intervention in the region. Others carried placards around their necks with the names and dates of those killed, maimed or missing in Nicaragua, El Salvador and South Africa. Across the road from the mass of protesters at the main gate were three college Republicans from Towson State University in Baltimore County, bearing a large American flag and demonstrating against the demonstrators. "They're willing to get arrested and I'm willing to lay down my life," said Karl Strohminger, who wore a button proclaiming "I'm a contra too"-a reference to the U.S.- backed rebels who seek to over- throw the government of Nicaragua.

 On September 29, 1986, fourteen anti-apartheid advocates were arrested on Johns Hopkins University Homewood campus. The Baltimore Anti-Apartheid Coalition worked closely with the student group, Coalition for a Free South Africa, at Johns Hopkins University. On April 10, 1986, the student coalition erected a shanty on the lower quad on the Homewood Campus. The anti-apartheid coalitions were in the midst of a struggle to get the university to divest from its stock portfolio any companies doing business with apartheid South Africa.

 Three right-wing students firebombed the shanty.  This convinced the administration to take it down.  A group of students and community activists sat around the structure to prevent it from being bulldozed. Some 14 were arrested, mostly Hopkins students, but also two community activists, Mary Benns and Max Obuszewski, and a Morgan State student. Baltimore state's attorney Kurt Schmoke decided not to prosecute the protesters.

April 14, 1986 was a national day of protest against “Contra” aid. And 43 members, including Max Obuszewski, of the Baltimore Emergency Response Network marched with 1040 forms stating no tax dollars to the Contras taped to their shirts.  They performed a die-in outside the Fallon Federal Building, and were arrested. Philip Berrigan was wiring a wire, as he was miked for an upcoming episode on “Sixty Minutes.”  That segment was about the Plowshares movement, and also included ?Dan Berrigan. 

A trial was scheduled for June 4, 1986.  However, it was cancelled as allegedly there were police errors.

Oct. 29, 1984—I engaged in my first political arrest at the White House gate with Peter DeMott, Bob Burkett, and Jim Berrigan.  Bob had heard that people were being arrested for praying.  However, a Park Police officer indicated if we did not leave, we would be arrested for incommoding.  So Bob dropped out, another protester knelt and all four of us were arrested.  I would find out years later that the person who replaced Bob was a drug dealer who shared his profits with the peace community.  He met Phil & Dan Berrigan in the federal prison in Danbury, CT.  The three others paid the $50 citation, while I went to trial in D.C. Superior Court.  In a bench trial, I was found guilty and paid a $50 fine.

Donations can be sent to Max Obuszewski, Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 431 Notre Dame Lane, Apt. 206, Baltimore, MD 21212.  Ph: 410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski2001 [at] comcast.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/

"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs

 

 

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