Video: Amy Goodman Stopped at the Canadian Border, Searched, Questioned
Amy Goodman is the darling of the media on National Public Radio here in the USA. She
finds out firsthand about what is entailed when Anti Free Speech or
Dissent Legislation is passed in Canada...or the USA.... or Britian. Think about
this. Very interesting. She was detained at the Border, Questioned in detail and given two
days to complete her talk in Vancouver BC. This is highly irregular! Just like David Icke
and Alex Jones have been detained, searched, questioned, and probed before they were let
in the country. Free Speech?.... I think not. Be warned.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RF0_JcxKv5k
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6nkfubjYzEE&feature=channel
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ej92dDSE1OU&feature=channel
While traveling to Vancouver, Canada to speak at the Vancouver Public Library at a
benefit for community radio stations, Democracy Now! host Amy Goodman and her two
colleagues were detained by Canadian authorities. Amy was questioned extensively about the
speech she intended to give; their car was gone through by armed border guards, and their
papers and laptop computers were scoured. The armed interrogators were particularly
interested in whether she would be speaking about the upcoming Vancouver 2010 Winter
Olympics
While traveling to Vancouver, Canada to speak at the Vancouver Public Library at a benefit
for community radio stations, Democracy Now! host Amy Goodman and her two colleagues were
detained by Canadian authorities. Amy was questioned extensively about the speech she
intended to give; their car was gone through by armed border guards, and their papers and
laptop computers were scoured. The armed interrogators were particularly interested in
whether she would be speaking about the upcoming Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics
Amy Goodman weighed in on Democracy Now about her detention at the Canadian border and
what it might mean for assuring that there is still a free press in Canada and that
journalists are not intimidated into not covering stories that the government thinks are
harmful to corporate interests.
Full segment and transcript available at Democracy Now.
JUAN GONZALEZ: That report from Kathy Tomlinson of CBC. But, AmyThanksgivingtell us more about exactly what happened when you were stopped.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, Juan, it was really incredible. It was Wednesday, the evening before Thanksgiving, and were headed to the Vancouver Public Library, driving up from Seattle. When we got to the border, I thought it was just going to be routine. We handed in our passports. They stopped for a minute, and they flagged us. They told us to pull over, and its pouring rain outside. We pulled the vehicle over. We had to get out and go into the facility.
JUAN GONZALEZ: And you were there with Dennis
AMY GOODMAN: With Dennis Moynihan and with Chuck Scurich. Were on our Breaking the Sound Barrier tour. And while folks here were eating turkey, we thought wed go talk turkey in Vancouver and talk about the columns in Breaking the Sound Barrier with Canadian listeners to Democracy Now!. Three community radio stations in Vancouver run Democracy Now!
So, we pulled in, went into the border facility. Its a large hangar-like space. And they start going through our car, but were now inside. And then the border patrol call me up to the counter. And the guard
JUAN GONZALEZ: And obviously, to cross into Canada, people dont need visas, they just
AMY GOODMAN: No, thats right.
JUAN GONZALEZ:need to show identification.
AMY GOODMAN: You need your passport. And we were very surprised. It was almost empty, this whole hangar, so we were clearly singled out.
And I go up to the counter, and the guard says, I want your notes.
I said, My notes?
He said, The notes for the talk tonight.
I was completely taken aback. I went out to the car, and I brought in the copy of Breaking the Sound Barrier. And I came in, and I said, Well, this is my new book, and its a book of columns. So I actually read from the columns.
He said, I want the notes.
I said, Well, these you can think of as my notes.
And he said, What are you talking about?
And I said, Well, I actually start with the last column, which is a columnas I was saying in this report to Kathy Tomlinsonabout Tommy Douglas.
Now, for people in the United States, hes not as famous a name. But in Canada, hes considered the greatest Canadian. Tommy Douglas is the Premierwas the Premier of Saskatchewan who brought, who pioneered the Canadian national health care system. And, interestingly, hes the grandfather of the actor Kiefer Sutherland, right? Kiefer Sutherlands mother is Shirley Douglas, the actress; his father, Donald Sutherland. But his grandfather was Tommy Douglas.
And, so I said, Ill be talking about Tommy Douglas. Actually we were at the Douglas border crossing.
And he said, What else?
I said, What else? Well, global warming.
What else? he said.
I said, The global economic meltdown.
What else? he said.
I said, Well, Ill also be talking about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
What else are you talking about? he said. And
JUAN GONZALEZ: Now, is it your sense that this was some rogue customs agent or that he had basically been alerted
AMY GOODMAN: There with another
JUAN GONZALEZ:and had gotten instructions to do this kind of questioning?
AMY GOODMAN: He was working with a group of customs agents, with the border guard. I mean, theyre armed. Another border guard now has the book, and hes reading it. But theyre also inputting everything I say. This border guard is handwriting all notes about what I say. And then the other border guard is going to the computer and inputting everything.
Then, they say, What else?
And I say, Thats about it.
And he says, What about the Olympics?
I said, The Olympics? You mean when President Obama went to Copenhagen to push for the Olympics to come to Chicago?
And he said, And you didnt get them.
I said, I know we didnt get them.
He said, No, Im talking about the Olympics here in 2010, in Canada.
I said, No, I hadnt planned to talk about the Olympics.
Youre denying that youre talking about the Olympics.
JUAN GONZALEZ: Did you even know theres an Olympics in 2010 in Canada?
AMY GOODMAN: This was not my topic, right? This is not so much news in the United States.
I really didnt know what he was referring to. And he kept pushing. He was clearly incredulous. And at my surprise, he disbelieved me even further. He clearly did not think I was telling the truth. He kept pushing, Youre denying youre talking about the Olympics? I said, That wasnt my plan for tonight.
Of course, as the reporter had asked me, And what if you said yes. What would have happened then?
Anyway, he finally tells me to sit down. And they go out and they combed through the car. I got very alarmed at what was happening, and I walked outside to where the guards were going through the car. One is on my colleagues computer, as if it was his. You know, hes justthe computer was set up and he was going through it. They were rifling through the papers and everything. They told me to get back inside. I went back inside.
Finally they came in. Were now over an hour and a half late to the talk. And they say for me to follow them into a back room. I go with them into a back roomthe border guardsand they take my picture. They make four copies of the picture. They take Dennis and Chucks pictures. Individually, one by one, they take us in the back, one by one.
And then they attached them to what they called a control document. I said, I wasnt aware we needed a visa. And they said, These are control documents. And they stapled them into each of our passports. And I opened it, and it saidthe control documentthat we had to leave by Friday. We were coming in on Wednesdaythat we had to leave by Friday.
Then we were allowed to leave. We saw they had been through both of my colleagues computers, both Dennis and Chucks computers. I dont know if they had gone into mine. And they had gone through the car. And we eventually arrived an hour and a half late to the talk.
JUAN GONZALEZ: Amazing.
AMY GOODMAN: To say the least, it was
JUAN GONZALEZ: This is from our friendly Canadian neighbors.
AMY GOODMAN: Yeah, this was, to say the least, extremely jarring. I felt completely violated, I mean, personally and professionally. You know, and for journalism overall. Because this is not only a violation of freedom of the press, you know, the idea that, you know, the state is going into your papers, your documents, your sources, everythingbut also a violation of the publics right to know. Because if journalists feel there are things they cant report on, that theyll be detained, that theyll be arrested, or theyll be questioned, theyll be interrogated; this is a threat to the free flow of information. And thats the publics loss, thats democracys loss
Eastern