Civil disobedience leads to free hot dogs | The Cricket | The Salt Lake Tribune
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The Cricket
Sean P. Means
Sean is the movie critic and columnist for The Salt Lake Tribune. Follow him on Twitter @moviecricket.
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Civil disobedience leads to free hot dogs
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Steve Griffin | The Salt Lake Tribune With their wrists zip tied together protestors hold hands as they block Main Street and 400 south following sentencing of Tim DeChristopher at the federal courthouse in Salt Lake City, Utah Tuesday, July 26, 2011. Bryan Cahall, of North Carolina, sings and plays the guitar at left.
Published on Jul 27, 2011 09:10AM

The downside of civil disobedience: The threat of jail time.

The upside of civil disobedience: Free hot dogs!

Monday afternoon, 26 protesters were arrested for blocking downtown Salt Lake City traffic. They did so in response to Judge Dee Benson handing down a two-year federal prison sentence to Tim DeChristopher for sabotaging a federal lands auction - though the harsh sentence is really for DeChristopher being uppity and not showing contrition.

(Funny how Benson, who said during the trial that DeChristopher's intent was inadmissable in his defense -- ""We’re not here about why he did it. We’re here about whether he did it," the judge said -- used DeChristopher's post-auction intent as an excuse for throwing him in prison.)

Those 26 protesters are being treated to free food by City Dogs, a vegetarian/vegan hot-dog cart usually parked at 300 South and 200 East. City Dogs owner Jesse Fruhwirth (a former writer for City Weekly) has offered a free lunch to any protester who was tied up at the federal courthouse Monday.

The offer isn't limited to those 26 protesters, though. According to the City Dogs blog, "If you weren’t at the court house yesterday, commit your own act of civil disobedience on behalf of climate justice or any other type of justice, document it with pictures, and you too get free lunch from City Dogs – today or any day. That’s a standing offer."

Fruhwirth helpfully links to DeChristopher's protest group, Peaceful Uprising, which suggests ways to be civilly disobedient. So grab your copy of Thoreau, grab a hot dog, and do some good in the world.

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