Protest The War on Electronic Music!
Last Sunday there was a "demonstration" event that was  a free daytime outdoor rave just to get people from  all areas of the scene together to stand up against  injustice. At that event, Lisa Smith (aka DJ Shiva)  gave a speech. Here she is what she said: 

It all started with jazz. From the 30's right up until the twenty-first  century,  music has been the catalyst for creating long lasting cultural movements  that  defied convention and inspired generations to come. To the defenders of the  status quo, music is also a very dangerous thing. Jazz was accused of  corrupting young white children, exposing them to black music as well as  tempting them with the demon drugs.   In the 40's it was swing. Raging dance parties were an escape from the  reality of war and the fear of fascism spreading throughout Europe.   Skip to the 50's for the beginnings of Rock & Roll. They called it "the  devil's music", for it too had the power to corrupt youth with sex and  drugs.  From Little  Richard's overt sexuality to Elvis and his gyrating hips, rock n roll  inspired fear and hysteria throughout mainstream America. And with good  cause, because from rock and roll came the next step:   Protest music in the 60's...people using music as a way of bucking the  system  and telling the status quo (and the war effort) to go to hell. And of  course,  whether a participant or just a historical observer, we've all heard the  lurid tales of drug use.   Skip to the 70's, with disco and eventually the upset of the modern  world...PUNK ROCK. And of course, tales of drug use were never far behind  for  either movement.   In the 80's, hip hop brought tales of black ghetto life both good and bad to  the forefront of American awareness. Groundbreaking in its approach, it too  was vilified for opennes about drug use (whether sad tales of addiction or  celebrations of cannibis).   And then we come to the 90's and the early 00's...and the movement that's  scaring moms and dads all over suburbia is "rave music". Music started in  economically ravaged Detroit, taken overseas and used as the soundtrack for  huge overnight parties and then brought right back to the states, electronic  music has  developed artistically and commercially and is now a major force in musical  culture. And of course, the stigma of "demon drugs" is not far  behind. Rave and electronic music culture has been scapegoated  for introducing evil drugs into the mainstream  society. The truth is less spectacular: the drugs are  already there. This country has been fighting a failing battle with  drugs for decades, and despite record amounts of money  being thrown at the problem, drug use is going up, not  down. We spend more money to fight drugs in the US  than any other country, and yet we have the highest  drug use of any country. And so far, we are dealing  with a government that would rather continue the  constant barrage of abuses associated with the drug  war, then admit their strategy is a failing one. And now, they've given up  on  trying to arrest drug  dealers, and are attacking electronic music culture.  It's easier to arrest promoters and DJs; we don't  shoot at them. And we're an easy target due to the  massive amounts of sensationalist media coverage and  misinformation that has been fed to governmental  authorities and law enforcement agencies. The problem with this attack is  that it's a witch  hunt; an obvious ploy to satisfy political agendas and  concerned parents groups, while at the same time  trampling the constitutional rights of everyone  involved in the music culture under attack. And it's happening right here in  Indianapolis. Mayor  Bart Peterson, along with IPD Chief Jerry Barker and  Marion county Sheriff Cottey have decided that  electronic music events are dangerous dens of inequity  that introduce children to rampant drug use and  unprotected sex. And they're using their power as city  officials, along with labyrinthine permit processes,  to destroy an entire culture, arguably based on the  actions of a statistical few. It's no secret that you'll find illicit  substances at  electronic music events, just as it's no secret that  you'll find them at just about any musical event. Look  around at your local mall, school or sporting event,  I'd bet money you'll find drugs there too. And unlike  most of these, promoters at electronic music events  have made a concerted effort to keep drugs out.  Everything from strict searches at the door, to  increased security forces patrolling events have been  used to try to discourage drug use and keep negative  elements out. Local promoters even had IPD officers  working events for quite a while, until IPD officers  were ordered by the city to discontinue working  security for these events. It seems city officials are  more interested in their "image" than the actual  safety of event attendees. Of course, some drugs make it into events no  matter  how tough the searches. It's statistically impossible  to keep all drugs out; if the entire country has  failed to do it, I'm not sure how they expect event  promoters to accomplish a miraculously drug free  atmosphere. So instead of working with electronic music promoters,  the city of Indianapolis has decided to shut us down.  Chief Barker pledged at a recent IPD "rave summit"  that he will shut electronic music events down  "wherever and whenever they occur". No due process; no  communication with event promoters...just shut em  down. Doesn't it feel great to live in America? This is an outrage. It is a  direct attack upon our  first amendment rights to free speech and peaceful  assembly. It is the unfortunate effect of an entire  country declaring war upon its own people because of  fear and hysteria surrounding drugs. It is a city  government using its power over the media and the  people to destroy a vital musical subculture because  it's too lazy to go after the real criminals. According to reports from the  IPD rave summit,  officials expected event promoters to run. They  expected us to slink away in the night like the dirty  criminals they have painted us as, but instead the  opposite is happening. Instead, the sometimes disparate factions of our  community are coming together to fight for a musical  culture we have strived for years to build. Instead,  we're organizing our forces and demanding to be heard.  Instead, we are holding our government accountable for  its antagonistic efforts to criminalize something so  integral to all our lives as music. We refuse to be demonized and attacked  without  response. We refuse to be treated as criminals when  our only crime is wanting to dance and celebrate  electronic music. We refuse to be vilified and tossed  aside based on theactions of a minority of drug  abusers and we refuse to let our rights be trampled  under a glut of drug war-fuelled hysteria. We demand to be heard by our  elected officials and law  enforcement officers that are in their positions to  SERVE "we the people", not attack us. We demand a  clear, documented approach to the permit processes  necessary to hold legal events. We demand that police  officers be made available for the safety of our  events, as they would be for any other non-electronic  event. We demand the same rights afforded to every  citizen of this state and this country. And just in case anyone forgot: we  ARE citizens. We DO  vote. We know our rights. We know that political  careers can end at the ballot box. We know that we  have the power to send the ultimate message of  disapproval to Mayor Peterson, and we won't forget  this attack on our culture come election day. It's ironic that Mayor  Peterson  chose the eve of his  proposed Indianapolis Cultural Initiative to instigate  a city wide witch hunt on electronic music. While one  finger is pointing to the arts as a way of building  community and recognition for Indianapolis, the other  finger is pointing at OUR art and OUR culture and  demanding its destruction. To further fuel the irony, he also chose the same  month as the city-wide Indy Jazz Fest, touting the  virtues of a musical form that was attacked and  vilified in the 30's much the same way as electronic  music is today. It is up to those of us here today and out community  as a whole, to help Mayor Peterson understand these  ironies--to understand the history of musical  movements, their vilification, and history's  subsequent redemption of all of them. It is up to us  to make this city understand that electronic music is  an important culture that has revitalized music as a  whole, moving it firmly into the 21st century. We make  the music that will influence generations to come, and  we will not go down without a fight. It may come as a surprise to Mayor  Peterson, Chief  Barker and Sheriff Cottey that electronic music  promoters, DJs and musicians are very much interested  in creating safe, secure, legal and drug free events  for the enjoyment of our music. Many of us have  struggled and starved for years to build a scene in  Indianapolis that is respected in cities twice our  size, and we want our DJs, musicians and artists to be  recognized as the world class artists they truly are,  without risking arrest simply for choosing a form of  music that has been persecuted and criminalized by the  media and city authorities. Our city government and law enforcement  officials  must  recognize that our culture will continue, but we would  like to continue with the help and cooperation of the  city. Cooperation is the key: is our city willing to  do what it takes and make a real effort to help  electronic music promoters throw safe events, or is  our musical culture doomed to be just another  throwaway generation to be demonized and ostracized by  the masses, only to be accepted and used by those  masses when it suits their purposes?  That is the question I pose to Mayor Peterson, city  authorities and the local media. Are you going to  treat us like criminals simply because we choose to  dance to weird electronic noise all night, or are you  going to step up to the plate and move the city of  Indianapolis into the twenty-first century? While the authorities ponder the  question, I know what  we will be doing. We'll be spreading the word. We'll  be organizing. And no matter what, we'll be dancing.
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