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NEWS & LETTERS, March 2002 

Phil Gramm blasted

Memphis, Tenn.—Students from Rhodes College and citizens from Memphis recently protested against Texas Senator Phil Gramm, allegedly one of the collaborators of the California energy crisis and the Enron scandal.

Led by Rhodes College Greens and members of other local progressive groups, the protesters sent Phil Gramm a "TELL-ON-GRAMM" as soon as he started speaking:

TELL-ON-GRAMM for Mr. Enron from the American People:

- Justify your sponsoring a bill that allowed Enron to control energy markets.

- Justify your taking $101,350 from Enron and then doing their bidding.

- Justify your voting against campaign finance reform.

- Your wife was on the audit committee of Enron; justify your claiming a victim role in this bankruptcy when she had oversight of the company's finances.

- Justify your sponsoring legislation that returns banking to the 1920s in terms of consumer protection.

- Justify your sponsoring of Fast Track for the Free Trade Agreement for the Americas.

- Justify your sponsoring legislation that expands NAFTA.

- Justify the death of 4,000 Afghan civilians and your statement, "This is not about justice. This is about war."

- Justify your sponsoring of legislation that would allow oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

- Justify your voting against protecting Coho salmon.

- And finally, the American people want you to justify your opposition to affirmative action.

Reactions to the interruption and his speech varied from laughter and applause to stark anger and shock and inspired vigorous questioning of his neo-liberal trade policies, his lack of concern for the economic plight of poor people, and his record of voting against the environment and social justice.

When I heard Gramm was coming to Rhodes College, I knew we had to do something. My campus has a heavy right-wing leaning. We alienated some people in the audience, but I doubt that many of the fur-coat-wearing, upper-class people in the audience would ever even think of voting for a Democrat, much less a Green or a Red.

The speech was an orchestrated event to spread Gramm's ideology. The speech was not set up so that there could be a frank and open discussion of ideas.

This Senator has significantly helped to kill and hurt thousands, if not millions. The environment is significantly degraded because of his votes. A protest was in order. Questioning would have been too easily controlled. The man could have said, "No more questions," and he would have walked away. The issue of Enron would never have come up.

We alienated people, but they will get over it. College Greens is on better footing than before.

—Student activist

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