Young Americans for Liberty – Ole Miss Chapter

Same Constitution ~ New Revolution

Archive for the ‘Group Activism’ Category

Members of CAN and UMC Speak Out

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Last Monday, members of the Ole Miss chapter of CAN (Campus Antiwar Network), UM Constitutionalists, and Young Americans for Liberty were the few to speak out against the war criminal Colin Powell during his well paid visit to the campus. 

CAN Protests War Criminal

 

The protest was a great success. With only a few dissenting voices, CAN was able to make the front page of the campus newspaper.  They not only were able to make the paper, they actually were part of the story describing Colin Powell’s speech. Thanks to student activists, members of the community for once were allowed to witness dissent to the corruption that is so shamelessly ignored by the media in our country. I want to congratulate everybody who took part in the protest. This was a great step in waking up the campus.

Written by jdhead

February 13, 2009 at 10:03 pm

Ole Miss YAL Meet Congressman Ron Paul at Houston “End the Fed” Rally

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Nine members of Ole Miss YAL attended the “End the Fed” Rally in Houston, Texas last Saturday to voice their opposition of the unconstitutional Federal Reserve. Dr. Ron Paul was the featured speaker of the event. Each group member who attended the rally was able to hug or shake hands with their favorite Congressman.

Without Ron Paul there would be no UM Constitutionalists; our close group of friends would remain isolated from one another, a distant group of strangers. Ron Paul’s tireless devotion to peace and freedom has inspired us to unite our efforts in the struggle against unjust government. We will continue to fight for the principles that unified our group and motivated our efforts of political activism. We will continue to inspire others the way Dr. Paul inspired each of us. We are eternally grateful for Dr. Paul’s guidance and inspiration.

Pictures from the rally are below:

Dr. Paul speaking at the Rally

Dr. Paul speaking at the Rally

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Written by University of Mississippi

December 2, 2008 at 11:26 pm

Group President Justin Head’s Speech

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Written by University of Mississippi

November 19, 2008 at 8:09 pm

Posted in Peace Rally

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Adam Kokesh Peace Rally Video

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Below is the video of our featured speaker and friend of the UM Constitutionalists, Adam Kokesh of the Iraq Veterans Against the War:

Written by University of Mississippi

November 17, 2008 at 12:23 am

Posted in Peace Rally

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Peace Rally A Success!

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For all who attended the Peace Rally on Thursday night, thank you for joining us in protesting war and motivating the community to spread the message of peace. We were very impressed with the enthusiasm and size of the crowd at the Square. Many of us feel re-energized in our activism and inspired by some of the powerful speeches and songs performed at the rally. We will be sharing all of the highlights with videos on this site, but for now we only have Darrell Castle’s speech. Mr. Castle was the vice-presidential candidate for the Constitution Party in the 2008 election. We are very grateful for his participation in the rally. His speech is below, divided into three parts:

Written by University of Mississippi

November 15, 2008 at 8:33 pm

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Peace Rally Video Trailer

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Check out this video produced by group president Justin Head, and start getting excited… the rally is less than a week away!

Written by University of Mississippi

November 7, 2008 at 4:18 pm

Posted in Foreign Policy, Peace Rally

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Invitation to our Peace Rally on November 13th

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Written by University of Mississippi

October 30, 2008 at 8:19 pm

Posted in Group Activism

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Same Constitution, New Revolution

Welcome to the official website of the UM Constitutionalists.  We are an active political group at the University of Mississippi made up of devoted members who share a common political ideology.  We are interested in exerting a real influence in American politics by revealing and emphasizing truths about the conditions of contemporary governance.  Our outlook is rather simple in principle: We believe in the Constitution; we believe in limited government, both domestically and internationally; and we believe in “Liberty and Justice for all.”

Thanks for visiting our site, please feel free to look around and explore the different issues in which we have explained our stance thus far.  We plan on publishing many more blog entries from several group members in the near future, so come back soon!

Written by University of Mississippi

October 15, 2008 at 2:21 pm

Posted in Group Activism

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Asma’s Empty Seat

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“Each man must for himself alone decide what is right and what is wrong, which course is patriotic and which isn’t. You cannot shirk this and be a man. To decide against your conviction is to be an unqualified and inexcusable traitor, both to yourself and to your country, let men label you as they may.  If you alone of all the nation shall decide on way, and that way be the right way according to your convictions of the right, you have done your duty by yourself and by your country–hold up your head.  You have nothing to be ashamed of”

-Mark Twain

Ole Miss witnessed a political event this weekend that would make the founders of our nation proud. The stars and stripes of liberty that so many generations of Americans have fought and died to defend glistened in the warm Mississippi night, casting light upon the civilian duty to defend freedom against tyranny. America’s enduring soul pried open a window to the past, when the spirit of freedom pumped so fervently through the hearts of Americans that when Patrick Henry cried “Give me liberty or give me death!” he was merely representing the convictions of his fellow countrymen. This momentous occurrence was not the hosting of the Presidential Debate, but the audacious act of one young woman leaving her seat vacant at the most anticipated national spectacle her college campus had seen in generations.

It couldn’t have been an easy choice for eighteen year old Asma Al-Sherri, a political science and pre law freshman at Ole Miss. The 150 student tickets were highly contested, most of which were distributed through a lottery in which tickets had to be earned by attending debate-related events. Thousands of students made efforts to win the tickets, to experience an historical exhibition through their own eyes. Most of the lottery winners were overflowing with excitement when their names were called, wasting no time to call their parents and friends to tell them “I won! Look for me on TV!” Most of the ticket winners were thrilled with the prospect of seeing the next president on their own campus. But not Asma. Asma had already made her decision not to attend and never faltered when the opportunity came to light.

What could compel a young woman who defines herself as “extremely patriotic” and fascinated with politics to refuse such an opportunity? For Asma, patriotism required such a refusal. She does not believe that either candidate in Friday night’s debate represents the principles of what it means to be an American. These virtues have been abandoned by the two major parties today, she contends, and she would not honor the two politicians competing for the presidency with her presence. “I was thinking about the jeopardy of my civil liberties and how they have been stepped upon… Obama and McCain have both voted for legislation that has denied us certain civil liberties that are protected in the Constitution,” she writes in a Facebook note, “I refuse to have to worry about choosing the lesser of two evils.” Asma’s patriotism resides not in the glorified battle between corporate candidates, but in the freedoms authorized in the Constitution and Bill of Rights, the documents that define America’s devotion to liberty. She spent the entire day with her student group the “UM Constitutionalists,” talking to community members about the breaches of their civil liberties and the afflictions of an interventionist foreign policy. “This is more important,” she told me with an extraordinary sense of humility.

Asma’s vacant seat is reminiscent of other actions of noncompliance in American history that we have come to know as the most courageous deeds of our past: the signing of the Declaration of Independence, the schemes of the slave abolitionists, and the nonviolent protests of the Civil Rights Movement to name a few. But as in the case of these great Americans, Asma was not concerned with her own historical legacy. She left her seat unoccupied “in the name of liberty;” for a cause she believes is in the best interest of the entire nation.

America would be a better place if we all stood up for our convictions as steadfastly as this courageous young patriot. Asma has bestowed a symbol of inspiration for freedom lovers everywhere, reminding us that our duty as citizens is to defend liberty against its enemies, especially during times when the enemy is concealed beneath the prevailing rhetoric of our political institutions.

-Dan Blazo

Written by University of Mississippi

October 12, 2008 at 8:16 pm

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