Freewayblogging workshop

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We're going to have a freewayblogging workshop

Saturday, May 6, 2006, 10:00am to noon
at Activist San Diego, 4246 Wightman St in City Heights.

Yeah!! THIS SATURDAY!!

You're invited and if you would like to help out please let me know.


Contents

But you don't have to wait

I have posted over a hundred times, always solo.==

Here's some strategy tips I use:

1) Use wire to tie blogs to the fence. Get the wire from the dumpsters or buy "tie wire" at hardware store. Use a box or little step stool and tie (twist) the wire at the top to slow down those tearing down posts (kids mostly).

2) Over passes are great. Look at existing signs to see how big your letters need to be. 8inch will work; try it out and if it doesn't look good, try again. post just before rush hour

3) Side fences are great. Put the blog near a sign (like the one by the Lake Jennings sign); drivers will look over at that sign and see your blog. I've had some last over 30days.

4) Are you near the Coaster or trolley? blog a fence along the tracks.

Number 1: be careful out there!

If you would like to get together and paint and post, let me know.

peace,

Peter

http://beachblogger.net/pics/index.php?title=freewayblogging_workshop&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1

workshop

intro

be careful. have fun.

Stay off the freeway itself. Post signs on the outside of the fence. Don't stop on freeway shoulders. Watch out for cars. Don't run with sissors.

Wear a hat (but one that won't blow off in the wind or if you have to run). Be discrete and observent, watch out for trouble and avoid it. Dress discretely (leave the IMPEACH! t-shirt at home).

If you get challenged say that you were just taking it down.

slogans:

slogans

impeach; the war is a lie; more

reading the news and web sites for ideas

e-mail lists

how to:

classic: cardboard mining, white paint, black paint, brushes, projector

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projectors

The advantages of classic cardboard blogging are:

  1. cheap
  2. fast
  3. easy
  4. flexible

Use latex and acrylic paint, buy miss-mixed paint at the paint store. Buy acrylic paint on sale at art supply stores. I use a brush to slap the white paint on the cardboard, set up a production line and plan ahead where to lean each piece to dry. Do the small ones first then the taller ones can be leaned over the smaller without getting stuck to the fresh paint. Spread out the paint good; saves paint and dries faster. Set up some kind of an easel to hold each piece and project the slogan on it; I just paint the letters while projecting, no tracing. Use a brush almost as wide as the letters. Spread out the paint to save paint and so it dries faster.

Large signs can be folded or rolled up to carry them.

it's fun, it's easy! I just painted this cardboard, 4 nice big ones and 7 good sized ones. The stack on the floor I cut up from some white boxes I found, they'll make great side fence signs, 16 of those. I had the paint, I did it one piece at a time and it didn't cost me a dime! Took about 1 hour and I had to clean up the garage some first!

Spread the paint out good and it dries fast!

duct tape and foam core

http://freewayblogger.blogspot.com/2005/12/as-easy-as-it-gets.html

posting: bungy cords and tie wire, step stool

http://beachblogger.net/pics/index.php?title=a_blogs_eye_view&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1

cluster blogging

typical cluster blog

Print out stickers or hand letter slogans with a marker. I like to put the First Amendment on there.

Another benefit of the stickers on the back is you know which way is up. Always check that you have the sign hung the right side up.

other ideas

paint on vinyl

legalities

first amendment rights, where and how to post, what to say and do if you are confronted.

The following is from the freewayblogger:

Is it Legal? (from freewayblogger.com)

YES and NO

YES!

Free political speech is a fundamental right under the First Amendment. It is your right as a citizen to display non-commercial signs and banners, with some exceptions. Rules regarding signposting along roadways vary from state to state, and locality to locality. So, call your local department of transportation to find out more. Ask for public relations and say you'd like to put up some American flags and "Support the Troops" signs... they will likely be more than helpful. Don't feel bad if that's not precisely what you intend to put up: this is America, and the rules apply equally to all points of view.

NO!

Again, the rules vary from state to state, but here in California, your right to political self expression ends exactly 600 feet from the Interstate, and failure to comply may run afoul of the law notwithstanding that nothing in the Streets & Highways Code or Outdoor Advertising Act expressly bars political expression in those areas. Although it remains unresolved whether they are constitutional, some local laws may be used to keep you from speaking out on the roadways. The stated reason for limiting your right to political expression is that such signs present a safety hazard due to their being a "visual distraction" to drivers, which is perfectly reasonable just as soon as they move every damn billboard, commercial sign and jumbo-tron screen 600 feet from the freeway as well. So long as my local car dealer's allowed to show commercials on a thousand square foot TV right next to the 405, you can call my piece of cardboard a visual distraction, but I'm not buying it. Going by those rules, the only people allowed to address commuters are those who either rent or own billboards, which may be fine for the sake of capitalism, but it's bad for America.

free speech is meaningless unless it extends to everybody

We feel that free speech is meaningless unless it extends to everybody: not just to those who can afford it. When the founders of this nation said that everyone was entitled to freely express their political opinions, they didn't mean we could hammer up a sign out in the woods somewhere, they meant we could hammer it up right in the middle of the town square. Why? Because that's where all the people were.

It is our contention that the town square of colonial times has now become the interstate: for better or for worse, that's where all the people are. With this in mind, we feel it is our God-given and constitutionally-granted right to post our messages on the interstates, freeways, or wherever-the-hell-else-we-think-people-will-read-them and we're willing to fight for this right all the way to the Supreme Court.

But you'll have to catch us first.

"Protest beyond the law is not a departure from democracy; it is absolutely essential to it."

Howard Zinn

National Lawyers Guild, Los Angeles Chapter, Right to Protest info

Legal Briefing for Activists at the Republican National Convention

Know Your Rights: What to Do If You're Stopped by the Police

http://www.aclu.org/police/gen/14528res20040730.html

  1. Think carefully about your words, movement, body language, and emotions.
  2. Don't get into an argument with the police.
  3. Remember, anything you say or do can be used against you.
  4. Keep your hands where the police can see them.
  5. Don't run. Don't touch any police officer.
  6. Don't resist even if you believe you are innocent.
  7. Don't complain on the scene or tell the police they're wrong or that you're going to file a complaint.
  8. Do not make any statements regarding the incident. Ask for a lawyer immediately upon your arrest.
  9. Remember officers' badge and patrol car numbers.
  10. Write down everything you remember ASAP.
  11. Try to find witnesses and their names and phone numbers.
  12. If you are injured, take photographs of the injuries as soon as possible, but make sure you seek medical attention first.
  13. If you feel your rights have been violated, file a written complaint with police department's internal affairs division or civilian complaint board.

Related links

Harrasment of photographers

How to spot a Terrorist

My trip to the Station

taking and posting photos

camera basics. how to take pictures: be careful, don't crash. where and how to post pictures.

Take pictures before you post them, nothing looks better than 3 or 10 signs leaned up against the wall ready to go!

Find a spot where you can post a sign and get a picture from the side of the freeway outside the fence. It's nice to have a sign on a side fence that you drive by every day, find a spot near home that you can walk to. Be careful, avoid confrontations, circle around or come back later.

Think about which way the sun is shining, keep the sun behind you for the best picture. Good advice for rush hour: I blog the west bound lanes in the morning and the east bound in the evening which around me works out for the best light and the most traffic.

Post pictures to the yahoo group and send them to http://freewayblogger.blogspot.com/ at freewayblogger at thingie yahoo dot com.

hands on making and painting

We will have lots of cardboard (white) ready to paint and the paint and brushes too! An overhead projector. Tape and foam core to try out.

Practice posting on a section of fence with wire or bungy cords.

Coloring books for the kids!

Prizes

T shirts, DVDs, paint brushes, bungy cords, more!!!

links

http://freewayblogger.com/
http://freewayblogger.blogspot.com/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/SCFreewaybloggers
http://beachblogger.net/pics/index.php?cat=16
http://beachblogger.net/pics/index.php?blog=3&cat=28