Monday, May 27, 2019

Medford Community Media, CORI CHECK AND HANDJOBS

Mark Rumley's New Show
CORI CHECKS AND HANDJOBS

Only in Medford

LOOK AT THE EVIDENCE

1)MARK RUMLEY DEMANDS CORI CHECK

2)JOE VIG CAN'T WAIT TO BRING THIS IN TO A COURT OF LAW

3)EVER HEAR OF RIGHT TO PUBLIC SPACE

RUMLEY'S HORSE-SHIT IS TO TELL YOU IT IS A PRIVATE SPACE AT THE HIGH SCHOOL

THAT FLIES IN THE FACE OF PUBLIC ACCESS

RUMLEY'S IS DEAF AND BLIND TO THE WORD PUBLIC

OATH OF OFFICE VIOLATED?
The Right to Public Space. Many of the commonly defended human rights (freedom of expression, of assembly, of information, of movement, etc.) depend on the availability of physical public space. Their absence, especially in the suburbs, routinely hinders the rights of citizens.Mar 10, 2015




VULGAR MAYOR MUCCINI-BURKE LAUGHS AT HAND-JOB BY DONATO ON CITY COUNCILOR MICHAEL MARKS IN FRONT OF 2 LITTLE KIDS, ALLEGEDLY JOHN FALCO'S CHILDREN, AND A STUDENT RUNNING THE CAMERA



FATHER OF THE YEAR HIMSELF, 
JOHN FALCO, WITH HIS 'WHAT? ME WORRY?' ALFRED E. NEWMAN LOOK AT THE CITY COUNCIL

_____________________________________________________________
Harmful, disruptive, or grossly offensive behaviour in public spaces has long been.

YOU CAN HEAR DONATO YELLING 'MARTHA...HELP...CLEAN MY MESS (MESSES) UP ...AGAIN!"

THE LATE PAT FIORELLO SAID
THE CAMERA DON'T LIE
TURN THE PHOTO UPSIDE DOWN AND REMOVE ALL DOUBT

RUMLEY'S PAL DONATO GIVING A HANDJOB TO MARKS!

OH, AND YOU HAVE TO HAVE A CORI CHECK BECAUSE YOU AREN'T PART OF THE SICK, SEXUALIZED CLUB

PERVERTS




persons are simply denied entry, for no stated reason. English law now ... Harmful, disruptive, or grossly offensive behaviour in public spaces has long been.



by Jordan Cosby

In 1968, the French Marxist philosopher, Henri Lefebvre, stated that the right to the city is “like a cry and a demand,” and Don Mitchell, Professor of Geography at the Maxwell School of Syracuse, in the aftermath of 9/11 exclaimed that it is a right bourne from struggle that must be heard now more than ever and put into practice.[1] Today we turn once again to the right to the city, especially in terms of the right to occupy public space in peaceful protest. In the wake of the 2016 Presidential election, the nation finds itself rallying around deportation, climate change denial, the abortion ban, Islamophobia, and various other social grievances. Public space is required to engage in political protest, although it is important to understand that the idea of public space and its role in urban life has never been guaranteed. Therefore, the Trump Era requires a new wave of urgency for planners to join in the struggle to help preserve the right to public space for political protest and civic engagement.