No trivial censorship at Hayner: Librarians bust out the banned books – Alton Telegraph

Local libraries celebrate Banned Books Week

Scott Cousins, scousins@thetelegraph.com

Morgan Berry, Hayner Library circulation manager, works with a display she set up for Banned Books Week in the downtown library branch on Belle Street in Alton. The annual event, Sept. 22-28, is sponsored by the American Library Association.

Morgan Berry, Hayner Library circulation manager, works with a display she set up for Banned Books Week in the downtown library branch on Belle Street in Alton. The annual event, Sept. 22-28, is sponsored by

Morgan Berry, Hayner Library circulation manager, works with a display she set up for Banned Books Week in the downtown library branch on Belle Street in Alton. The annual event, Sept. 22-28, is sponsored by the American Library Association.

Morgan Berry, Hayner Library circulation manager, works with a display she set up for Banned Books Week in the downtown library branch on Belle Street in Alton. The annual event, Sept. 22-28, is sponsored by

No trivial censorship at Hayner: Librarians bust out the banned books

ALTON Charlottes Web has animals talking like humans.

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn has racial themes and language.

Alice in Wonderland has drug-related themes and is written by someone who was kind of strange.

The Holy Bible has, obviously, religious themes.

And Captain Underpants has a same-sex couple and is somewhat anti-authoritarian.

Someone, at one time or another, has tried to ban them all.

Banned Books Week, Sept. 22-28, celebrates books that are difficult to deal with and encourages people not only to read them but to talk about them. Since the early 1980s, the annual event sponsored by the American Library Association and a coalition of other groups celebrating the freedom to read.

The biggest thing is showing that libraries are a place that are completely against censorship, said Morgan Berry, downtown circulation manager for the Hayner Public Library. We are here to provide materials of all kinds. A library is a place for everybody.

On Monday Berry put together a display of banned or challenged books, as well as the reasons. She also noted that book covers decorating the counter included a large number of banned books.

Books are being challenged all the time, she said, often for reasons that are trivial.

Top banned/challenged books of 2018

1. George by Alex Gino: banned, challenged, and relocated because it was believed to encourage children to clear browser history and change their bodies using hormones, and for mentioning dirty magazines, describing male anatomy, creating confusion, and including a transgender character

2. A Day in the Life of Marlon Bundo by Jill Twiss, illustrated by EG Keller: banned and challenged for including LGBTQIA+ content, and for political and religious viewpoints

3. Captain Underpants series written and illustrated by Dav Pilkey: series was challenged because it was perceived as encouraging disruptive behavior, while Captain Underpants and the Sensational Saga of Sir Stinks-A-Lot was challenged for including a same-sex couple

4. The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas: banned and challenged because it was deemed anti-cop, and for profanity, drug use, and sexual references.

5. Drama written and illustrated by Raina Telgemeier: banned and challenged for including LGBTQIA+ characters and themes.

6. Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher: Reasons: banned, challenged, and restricted for addressing teen suicide.

7. This One Summer by Mariko Tamaki, illustrated by Jillian Tamaki: banned and challenged for profanity, sexual references, and certain illustrations

8. Skippyjon Jones series written and illustrated by Judy Schachner: challenged for depicting stereotypes of Mexican culture

9. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie: banned and challenged for sexual references, profanity, violence, gambling, and underage drinking, and for its religious viewpoint.

10. This Day in June by Gayle E. Pitman, illustrated by Kristyna Litten: challenged and burned for including LGBTQIA+ content.

11. Two Boys Kissing by David Levithan: challenged and burned for including LGBTQIA+ content

Source: American Library Association

The one that surprised me the most was Charlottes Web, she said, because I remember reading that growing up.

At the Wood River Public Library, displays on some of the bookshelves show some of the banned books. The library also is running a contest in which patrons can guess which banned book is shredded in a jar.

I think its important to show people that people continue to challenge these books, said circulation clerk Amy Gibbons, who helped put up the display.

There are so many reasons they are banned, or challenged, or whatever, she said. But its important to us at the Wood River Library to know that we do not censor our materials. We believe its important for people to make their own decisions or read what they want to read.

Gibbons said she did not recall any attempts at Wood River to ban or challenge any books. They once got complaints about a magazine cover, she said.

I think it was a Rolling Stone magazine, Gibbons said. There were several people who were not happy with the cover. I think there was partial nudity on the cover and we had several patrons ask us to remove that.

They were told that it is not something the library does.

In 2018, the ALAs Office for Intellectual Freedom tracked 347 challenges to library, school and university materials, resulting in 483 challenges or bans.

A common theme in many of the books are LGBT themes and sexuality. Many of the books on the 2018 list are repeats from one or more previous lists.

Ive seen a lot of the LGBTQ themes, Gibbons said. Some people are still uncomfortable with that sort of thing.

That has been the biggest, Morgan said. Especially now that they are coming out with more childrens books that have same-sex parents or talk about transgender.

She also said anti-cop or anti-authority issues are also cited as the reason for banning or challenging a book.

Morgan said one of the things people can do is simply know what they are reading.

Every book has a synopsis, she said. Every book has reviews you can read.

Some of the challenged/banned books over the past few years include the Pulitzer Prize-winning To Kill A Mockingbird for its racial themes; The Holy Bible for its religious viewpoint; The Hunger Games trilogy for being anti-ethnic, anti-family, offensive language, occult/satanic themes and violence; and Brave New World for insensitivity, nudity, racism, religious viewpoint and being sexually explicit.

Both Morgan and Gibbons agree there is a big difference between censorship and providing guidance. Gibbons said the appropriateness of literature for specific age groups is something that needs to be considered.

We have different levels, she said. Obviously our childrens books are separated from the adult books.

If a 6-year-old comes to me and asks me for a book recommendation obviously Im not going to steer them toward this area, she said, pointing to the adult section.

Both also said it is important for parents to discuss what their children are reading.

When you give children the freedom to choose what theyre going to read, with some parameters, obviously, it helps them to grow as a person and figure out what they like to read, Gibbons added.

For more information, visit the ALA online at http://www.ala.org or http://www.bannedbooksweek.org.

Reach reporter Scott Cousins at 618-208-6447.

See the rest here:

No trivial censorship at Hayner: Librarians bust out the banned books - Alton Telegraph

China: Sinisation of the Catholic Church, Censorship, and Repression – FSSPX.News

Fr. Anthony Yao Shun, age 54, was ordained bishop of Jining on August 26th, in the Our Lady of the Rosary Cathedral of Jining in the north of the country. Jining is the most important diocese of Inner Mongolia, home to about 70,000 Catholics. The ceremony was presided over by Bishop Paul Meng Qinglu, Bishop of Hohhot, Vice President of the Patriotic Association (official) of Chinese Catholics (CCPA), reported Elgises dAsie(Churches of Asia), the information bureau of the Foreign Missions of Paris.

Bishop Stephen Xu Hongwei, appointed coadjutor bishop of the diocese of Hanzhong, in Shannxi province, was ordained on August 28 in St. Michaels Cathedral of Hanzhong. The Press Office of the Holy See confirmed that these two ordinations took place under the Sino-Vatican Provisional Agreement, the pope accepted Bishop Yao and Bishop Xu before signing the Agreement.

Indeed, explains Sandro Magister on his blog Settimo Cielo on August 31st, both of the new bishops had been elected to this role, last April, by assemblies of priests, religious, and laymen of the respective dioceses, all of them selected by the Chinese authorities, brought together at a hotel and instructed on whom to vote for. And in both cases it was the Chinese pseudo-episcopal conference, made up only of bishops officially recognized by the government, that presented the new bishops to Rome, which accepted them. The precise terms of the accord between the two sides are still secret, but it is abundantly clear that this is how it works.

The official media of the Peoples Republic of China have shown, with photos, that Bishop Yao Shuns episcopal ordination was conducted without any particular tension and in accordance with the provisions of the Agreement. On the Vaticans side, they also stressed the consensus that directed the appointment of the new Bishop of Jining. On August 26, Gianni Valente, in Vatican Insider, the Holy Sees official media, wrote, the choice of the new bishop prompted the emergence of an important unanimous consent by the Holy See, the diocesan community, and the political apparatus around the profile of the candidate. And the Vaticanist congratulates himself that the Provisional Agreement concluded between the Holy See and the government of Beijing on the appointment of Chinese bishops provides the mechanism for finding solutions that are always in keeping with the apostolic nature of the Church, by keeping the door open for frank and direct discussion with the Chinese political authorities.

Meanwhile, the sinisation of Catholicism is a reality that is progressing in China, supported by the Chinese Communist Party, to correspond with the directives issued by President Xi Jinping in 2015. According to these directives, says Elgises dAsie (EDA), appear the censorship and modifications of classic texts in textbooks. Words such as God, Bible, or Christ have been removed from Hans Christian Andersen, Daniel Defoe, Anton Chekhov, Leo Tolstoy, and Victor Hugo, eliminating any religious reference. At the beginning of the year, explains the agency of the Foreign Missions of Paris (MEP), the Publishers of Popular Education, related to the government, published a textbook for the pupils of CM2 (middle school) level, containing four extracts from the works of foreign authors that have been censored to match the wishes of the Chinese Communist Party. Censorship that has spread throughout Chinese education, to the university where some teachers condemn and confiscate classics containing religious words. In fact, from now on, religions must assimilate to Chinese culture and submit to the Party. Sinisation consists in exalting national patriotism against foreign religions like Christianity. According to observers, this campaign against Christianity is due to fears that China will become the most Christian country in the world by 2030, as predicted by some sociologists, such as the American Fenggang Yang of the University of Purdue. (see DICI No. 375, August 2018) For more critical observers, sinisation also serves as a shield against democracy, human rights, and the rule of law.

This is the case in Hong Kong, which Beijing would like to totally subjugate, by removing certain rights, in force since 1997, on freedom of conscience and freedom of religion. Religious practice is free there, contrary to how it is in Mainland China.

Since March 31, the island of Hong Kong has opposed the government law to facilitate extradition to Mainland China. In recent weeks, the confrontations of the anti-extradition movement with the police have shown the first appearance of great police violence to suppress the movement. For this reason, writes Fr. Bernardo Cervellera director of the AsiaNews agency, a key issue of the protesters is the opening of an independent investigation into the excessive use of force by police, suspected of being in cahoots with certain local mafias, and of being led, advised, and supported by the Chinese Peoples Armed Police.

The Italian agency Foreign Missions explained on September 7 that several shopping centers located near subway stations had become the scene of the anti-extradition movement protests, as a sign of protest against police violence in the subway. In fact, AsiaNews continues, the authorities refuse to broadcast the videos of the evening of August 31, when the police went down into the Prince Edward Station indiscriminately hitting protesters and passengers and spraying stinging gas. And after expelling journalists and photographers, the police spent long hours in the station. The movement is asking for the videos of this police intervention to be broadcast, as since then some protesters have disappeared. Although the government denies that there were deaths in the August 31 assault, groups of young people have deposited flowers and messages in front of the station, says AsiaNews.

It is also necessary to explain why the majority of the demonstrators are young (nearly 60% are under 29 years old), continues Cervellera, in an article of September 9th. Above all, there is the anger and disappointment that for two years the government has been deaf to the demands of democracy; and that adds to the frustration of seeing government policy that does not support social housing, but facilitates the growth of expensive buildings and luxury apartments. So that young people cannot plan to buy a house or a home to establish a family. Finally, there is the immigration policy imposed by China that facilitates the entry into the territory of Chinese graduates, ready to work for wages lower than those of the people of Hong Kong. This is dropping the labor market to the point where many young people in Hong Kong are forced to emigrate to find work.

Cardinal Joseph Zen Ze-kiun, bishop emeritus of Hong Kong, wrote on his blog on September 2, addressing the authorities: Accept at least two requirements: remove the evil law and set up an independent investigation committee. If its a yes, I hope everyone will accept a truce, if not, October 1 [National Day] may be a great tragedy. This October 1, 2019 Beijing hopes to celebrate with panache 70 years of the Peoples Republic of China. Will it be a new Tiananmen, as in 1989?

View original post here:

China: Sinisation of the Catholic Church, Censorship, and Repression - FSSPX.News

Censorship and Contemporary Banned Books – Pinnacle

The Hate You Giveby Angie Thomas andEleanor and Parkby Rainbow Rowell have become two of the most popular young adult books of the last five years.The Hate You Givefollows the story of Starr Carter, who lives somewhat of a double life between her interactions in her mostly African American neighborhood and attending a mostly white private school.

After she witnesses the shooting of her childhood friend via police brutality, she must deal with the aftermath. Eleanor and Park,takes place in the late 1980s and follows the blossoming love story between Eleanor Douglas and Park Sheridan and their story involving themes of domestic abuse and body image. At the surface, these two books do not have much in common. However, both of these novels have been challenged by censorship and the banned book system.

Books can be censored by school districts for many different reasons. In the case of Angie Thomas novel The Hate You Giveand Rainbow Rowells novelEleanor and Park, violence and vulgarity are the largest contributing factors to their removal from library shelves, even though these claims may not be the real reasons behind their removal; instead, themes involving sexual undertones and references to political movements are their hidden reasons for removal, causing major controversy in the literary community.

According to the American Library Associations (ALA)website, the largest threats associated with banned books include violations of the First Amendment like access to information, access to library resources due to issues like the digital divide, academic freedom and the rights of students and minors within the public school system.

In the case of Angie Thomas and Rainbow Rowells novels, the biggest arguments made by school boards against their respective novels hide under the disguise of larger issues such as vulgar language instead of focusing on the true messages and important themes in the novels.

According to Vanessa Diaz of BookRiot, a website the tracks contemporary book bans,The Hate You Givewas removed from a Texas school district for use of, four-letter expletives to the use of the N-word. in late 2017. It is suggested, however, that the real reason for the ban was the material within the book which was heavily inspired by the Black Lives Matter Movement and the police brutality that has raided news channels and social media over the last five years.

In the case ofEleanor and Park, a challenge in an Oregon school district was made with a similar claim. According to the Intellectual Freedom Blog, which is run by the ALA, the true reason that it was pulled from shelves was for sexual issues and undertones in the novel. The article even quotes a parent calling the book, Its is the most profane and obscene work we have ever read in our lives, says Kristin Pekoll of Intellectual Freedom Blog.

The controversy surrounding banned books like Rowell and Thomas novels are ridiculous and even harmful to society as many believe censorship in any capacity should be looked upon as scary especially when it is made by a governing body, including school boards. The parents should ultimately be the ones to create boundaries on the things that children should and shouldnt be interacting with.

I was considered a sheltered kid myself, not allowed to read things such as the Harry Potterseries orTwilightuntil my parents felt I could make my own decisions. I still had the option to through school and it was really up to me when I was not around my parents, to choose what to read and what not to read. For that I am grateful. Many books that may contain harsher themes that I read when I was younger such asThe Fault In Our Starsby John Green orTo Kill A Mockingbirdby Harper Lee have been challenged for other reasons but had I not read them, their impact and how they shaped me into who I am would have not existed. I think the same thing goes forThe Hate U GiveandEleanor and Park.

While I have never read those books-even though they are both on my to be read lists-I know of many people who have been deeply impacted by these novels for one reason or another. To censor or ban these books from student consumption in one way or another is truly wrong especially when the true reasons behind their removal from schools and libraries are hidden or not publicly discussed.

Read more from the original source:

Censorship and Contemporary Banned Books - Pinnacle

YouTube reverses the not-so-subtle censorship of Steven Crowder and others – Reclaim The Net

Critics of YouTube's business and tactics, specifically those coming from the conservative portion of the US politics and society, repeatedly cry foul declaring this Google-owned, super influential platform as one that is habitually using its power to sway users effectively towards its own vast preference as a global video giant.

But could YouTube at the same time be deliberately putting in many roadblocks, some more subtle than others all the way to the ultimate goal of suppressing legitimate, conservative online voices?

The evidence seems to point that way.

This question has not merely been an ongoing accusation made by observers and active participants who theorize bad intent on the part of Big Tech but in fact, this has also been a question put forward by some Google insiders, in their public testimonies that support similar claims all boiling down to accusing YouTube of being motivated by bias, fueled by some very real real world politics and allegiances.

And that activity, if true, would be something very disappointing to normal users not only in the US, but around the world where the myth of an objective, knowledge-based, data-driven, scientific search result might still be strong with Google and its various services.

That said the case of comedian and political commentator Steven Crowder might, overall, provide one of the most obvious examples clearly proving the accusation of YouTube employing a negative, multi-pronged approach to what the social media giant sees as the problem namely, suppressing online opinions it disagrees with but doing it on ideological and political grounds.

Granted in an ideal world and a true democracy, this is not even something that should emerge as a problem after all, a democracy's genuine freedom of speech and a capitalist system's genuine transactional nature should be enough to satisfy both parties in any YouTube/Creator relationship.

Nevertheless, something is clearly amiss and here we are, just over a year ahead of the next US presidential election, looking at how Google/YouTube are choosing to position themselves within their own truth.

Right now, Steven Crowder's YouTube channel is emerging as the poster child for all the different ways YouTube might go after creators it eventually seems to want to squeeze out of the platform while not exactly deciding to outright remove them.

If a creator clearly violated YouTube's terms of service and/or guidelines, they would be an easy to ban. But if, like in Crowder's case, the platform had no objective reason to get rid of them the platform seems to just continues to look for other ways to downgrade their content.

YouTube's actions, and the aftermath

Earlier in the year, YouTube demonetized Crowder's channel after the comedian's brand of humor happened to mash badly with that of a rival content creator, Carlos Maza. Long story short: YouTube at the time erred on the side of censorship and demonetized Crowder's channel without outright banning him.

But now, YouTube seems to be fighting its ideological enemies far more subtly by making them dissipate all the way to disappearing in that all-important segment the search results.

In a new video this week, Crowder tells his followers about YouTube's latest censorship tactic and what it means for the channel, as well as for the rest of the conservative movement.

YouTube's policy, Crowder explains, means that while subscribed audience members might be as present as ever, and providing as many clicks on videos as before and often more than before conservative channels such as his are finding it super difficult to grow their audiences right now.

This sounds illogical: a channel like Crowder's, that has managed to grow views on its videos nearing a million views per clip easily squeezing out progressive favorites like The Young Turks must also surely be able to grow its own subscriber base on YouTube? Apparently, not so.

Crowder says in the video that this is indeed not the case and expressing doubt that this highly unlikely turn of events might have happened as anything organic on the internet. Overall Crowder's recommendations from YouTube are down.

In fact he found out that searches on YouTube for Steven Crowder consistently returned results for pretty much anything such as mentions and references in other creators' videos but not results to his actual channel. The same was true for other conservative commentators and organizations.

In the wake of this, some progress has been made, judging by Crowder's recent tweet and others, like political commentator Mark Dice who tweeted to say that YouTube has quietly fixed it. FINALLY. Crowder highlighted how the search results looked before and after his lawyer contacted YouTube about the issue.

Dice's original complaint had to do with YouTube burying results about his own channel at the bottom of any search of his own name something that appeared to be a common enough tactic on the part of YouTube.

The internet needs your voice more than ever.

Read more from the original source:

YouTube reverses the not-so-subtle censorship of Steven Crowder and others - Reclaim The Net

Censorship leaves us in the dark: Keep the light on! – Del Rio News Herald

Yesterday ended Banned Books Week. This years theme was Censorship Leaves Us in the Dark: Keep the Light On! The American Library Association wants us to know:

Books are still being banned and challenged today. A challenge is an attempt to remove or restrict materials, based upon the objections of a person or group. A banning is the removal of those materials.

While books have been and continue to be banned, part of the Banned Books Week celebration is the fact that, in a majority of cases, the books have remained available. This happens only thanks to the efforts of librarians, teachers, students, and community members who stand up and speak out for the freedom to read.

I am betting you have read a banned or challenged book or two in your day perhaps one of these classics?

The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

The Lord of the Flies by William Golding

1984 by George Orwell

Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

Animal Farm by George Orwell

Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell

The Call of the Wild by Jack London

The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien

Now, I must admit that there are books on library shelves that I would not choose to read or even recommend others to read. BUT, as a professional librarian, I agree with the following statements provided in the American Library Associations Banned Book Week press kit:

Censorship by librarians of constitutionally protected speech, whether for protection or for any other reason, violates the First Amendment.

As Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan, Jr., in Texas v. Johnson, said most eloquently:

If there is a bedrock principle underlying the First Amendment, it is that the government may not prohibit the expression of an idea simply because society finds the idea itself offensive or disagreeable.

If we are to continue to protect our First Amendment, we would do well to keep in mind these words of Noam Chomsky: If we dont believe in freedom of expression for people we despise, we dont believe in it at all.

Or these words of Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas (The One Un-American Act. Nieman Reports, vol. 7, no. 1, Jan. 1953, p. 20): Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions. It is the one un-American act that could most easily defeat us.

Keep the light on so you can read (whatever you want)!

Willie Braudaway strives to make life better as a librarian, genealogist, and member of various community organizations. Contact her at librarywillie@hotmail.com.

See the rest here:

Censorship leaves us in the dark: Keep the light on! - Del Rio News Herald

Joe Biden wants to censor Rudy Giuliani – Whats on Politics – Politics

According to the camp of former VP and now presidential candidate Joe Biden, Pres. Donald Trumps personal attorney, Rudy Giulianishouldnt be allowed to appear in television interviews, or be covered by any major news networks.

Bidens top campaign advisers recently wrote an email to news executives demanding them not to give airtime to Giulianiin any media channel after the former NYC mayor, in several talk shows, repeatedly called for investigations on the Bidens for what he said were apparently corrupt dealings with Ukraine and China, while Biden was vice president.

The Daily Beast, which first reported the existence of the said request letter, said it was sent to CBS News, Fox News, NBC News, and CNN arguing that it is editorially irresponsible to book the presidents personal lawyer to appear in their shows.

We are writing today with grave concern that you continue to book Rudy Giuliani on your air to spread false, debunked conspiracy theories on behalf of Donald Trump,Bidens campaign team wrote.

While you often fact check his statements in real time during your discussions, that is no longer enough. By giving him your air time, you are allowing him to introduce increasingly unhinged, unfounded and desperate lies into the national conversation, the letter reportedly drafted by top aides Kate Bedingfield and Anita Dunn, said.

We write to demand that in service to the facts, you no longer book Rudy Giuliani, a surrogate for Donald Trump who has demonstrated that he will knowingly and willingly lie in order to advance his own narrative, it added, noting that Giuliani is not a public official, and holds no public office that would entitle him to opine on the nations airwaves.

Heres a copy of Team Bidens demand letter calling for censorship on Giuliani:

I didnt know that the emboldened Biden campaign team is that powerful now that they are actually demanding for censorship.

For those not closely watching the news, the former New York City mayor has been making the rounds on television shows defending Donald Trump from the Ukraine controversy that has resulted to the Democrat led House launching a formal impeachment inquiry against the President. Giulianihas also blasted the liberal lawmakers for not investigating evidence of Bidens possible corruption that he claims has been hiding in plain sight for months.

Your obligation is to provide the American people with an informed, fact-based and responsible coverage and debate of critical issues, the letter from Bidens team further read.

While you have been aggressive in pushing back on him in real time, it is well known that the dedicated liar always has the advantage, pushing out outlandish falsehoods and disinformation in the knowledge that it is hard for the corrections to catch up, the letter further said.

Responding to the demand of Bidens camp, Trumps 2020 campaign manager Brad Parscale tweeted:

Can we request the removal of Democrats on TV that push hoaxes? Wait, but then who would do the interviews?

Giuliani has insisted he didnt work with anybody to get dirt on Joe Biden, saying that whatever information he has about the corruption allegations against the Biden was handed by the Ukrainians.

The basis of Democrats impeachment inquiry against Donald Trump is a phone call he made with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky, where he suggested that Ukraines new leader look into Bidens claims about the firing of prosecutor Viktor Shokin. On the same call, Trump separately sought Ukraines help in investigating foreign interference in the 2016 elections.

Zelensky has already stated there was no pressure from Trump during the conversation to investigate anything.

Back to Biden; his move to pressure Ukraine was on record. Biden has acknowledged> on camera that when he was vice president, he successfully pressured Ukraine to fire prosecutor Shokin, who was investigating the natural gas firm Burisma Holdings where son Hunter Biden had a high position on the board.

Critics of Biden have argued that Hunter gets paid tens of thousands of dollars, despite having limited relevant experience to the industry. The vice president, was also on record threatening to withhold $1 billion in critical US aid to Ukraine if Shokin was not fired.

Heres Giulianis response:

From the moment you read The New York Times article in 2015 and you saw that Biden got away with having his son pulling down millions from the crookedest oligarch in Russia, you knew this was going to happen. I prosecuted corruption, Democrats and Republicans. I can smell this.

They are silencing me because I showed up with an affidavit and an accuser who is willing to stand up and point the finger at Joe Biden and say youre a crook. And I have the proof and I have the documents and Ive got the witness will say the corroboration because there are more witnesses where he came from and they are not going to escape this,Giuliani said.

Its scandal after scandal covered up by a compliant crooked press, the former New York mayor, added.

From threatening to withhold a critical aid to Ukraine if the prosecutor investigating them is not fired, now, Biden is coming after Giulianiso the former mayor will be silenced.

Looks like Biden is in the habit of demanding the removal of those who are investigating him.

But then again, even if he got exposed, that doesnt mean there will be consequences. At least not with Democrats in Congress.

See more here:

Joe Biden wants to censor Rudy Giuliani - Whats on Politics - Politics

On Censorship – The Catholic Thing

We must do things, I have been sometimes told, because everyone is doing them.

At an early age, I was first exposed to this sort of reasoning, and the reverse of the coin: we must not do things because nobody is doing them. It struck me as a weak argument. I made a mental note, never to use it.

But it is stronger than first appears. If the great majority in any society were to do entirely as they pleased, we would have anarchy: genuine anarchy, not the kind that Hollywood celebrates in movies. Ones life would be worth little, and anyone who wished to survive to the end of the day would go about heavily armed.

Perhaps thats why God made most of us conformists, why the world is discernibly ordered, and man is able, however vaguely, to distinguish up from down, good from evil, the beautiful from the ugly and so forth. But God also gave us freedom, and the consequences of our choices, not only to ourselves but to others.

Gentle reader may suspect that I am making an argument for censorship. I am.

It is in the nature of any culture, society, civilization (choose your weapon) to introduce signposts. Focus our eyes, and we may see them everywhere, even along paved roads. We have laws, too, not always hung in signs, but available for public inspection. And there are unwritten laws.

Consider the law, Thou shalt do no murder. This has been spelled out in detail, with exceptions, and acts of murder may be tried in our courts, but we didnt actually invent the law. It was written into our hearts; it was inscribed on a tablet to Moses long before we were born.

We use the criminal code merely to finesse this natural law; we use lawyers and legislators to get around it, should it turn out to be inconvenient in certain circumstances. Abortion, euthanasia, and whatever will come next, are now among our exceptions.

Freedom is our watchword. Freedom from children, freedom from grandparents always assuming they are unwanted are now among our man-made goods. Freedom from such constraints as being a man or a woman, or being rich or poor, or from any other accident of our being, have been added to the watch list.

It is true there are some traditionalists like me, who regret the overthrow of the moral order, and sometimes even those who support it have twangs of conscience that need to be suppressed. But in the main, society is progressive. We go along to get along.

In the olden time I refer here to very deep ancient history, going back to my childhood we went along with ideas wed inherited, and kept our little murders to ourselves. Today, we have begun to put them on Facebook.

Why not?

Recently a younger acquaintance decided to have herself killed. She had cancer; things were not looking up. Her case shocked me in two especial ways. One, she was a brave soul, who was doing a sterling job of facing down adversity. Two, she was what we call a conservative, who had cheerfully taken heat for various politically incorrect views. She even had Christian tendencies.

Yet she suddenly opted for the exit plan, and quickly found support among her friends, who gathered round the execution bed with smiles of encouragement. When Id queried her life/death choice privately, her argument was in effect, Everyone is doing it.

The stigma had lapsed, gone. The advocates for killing off the old and the ill, even the young and depressive, had overturned the stigma. This made overturning the law a cinch. And by the time the law had been changed, demeaning human life becoming an important step forward, the bulk of society had come round.

Everyone is doing it, in a certain sense. It is convenient. They dont all have themselves executed, for some human instincts have survived, but this everyone would like to have the option should they ever find themselves desiring it.

Pain is no fun. I admit that. The notion that it could have not only a physical, but a moral purpose, has been extinguished. The idea that suicide is self-murder is now taken to be ridiculous. The old laws that banned it could not be enforced (the person who commits suicide has gotten away with it, from a glib point of view). They could only punish those who assisted.

Many things once unthinkable were thinkable all along. Murder is a good example. Infanticide, for instance, is something that must have occurred to many mothers, in moments of child rearing. But one throws a fit instead, perhaps breaks something, or makes a joke of it. You wouldnt actually do what was unthinkable.

It was unthinkable, narrowly, because the laws of God were reinforced by the laws of the State, and of the culture. You did not go there because, Nobody goes there. Except those who do, and become infamous as a consequence.

Among the travesties of the Right (well leave the Left alone for a brief moment) is that censorship is the enemy of freedom. Those on this side are inclined to argue that everyone has the right to his opinion, except those who cry Fire! in cinemas. Let any who disagree with anything make their argument, and then we will vote.

We should have learned, in our wild ride since the sixties (or from the Garden of Eden, should we wish to trace it back), that this view is nave. Some things ought to remain as unthinkable as they were in those old, oppressively Christian times, when dissent was censored.

There is nothing wrong with censorship. Even those on the Left take pride in what they censor: racism, sexism, transphobia, whatever. Unfortunately, by their perverse definitions, they give censorship a bad name.

The real question is not whether censorship is a good thing, but what we should censor.

*Image:An Unhappy Family or Suicide(Une famille malheureuse ou le Suicide) by Octave Tassaert, 1852[Muse Fabre, Montpellier, France]

2019 The Catholic Thing. All rights reserved. For reprint rights, write to: info@frinstitute.org The Catholic Thing is a forum for intelligent Catholic commentary. Opinions expressed by writers are solely their own.

Visit link:

On Censorship - The Catholic Thing

How Media Censorship Affects the News You See

Although you may not realize it, media censorship takes place in many forms in the way you get your news. While news stories are often edited for length, there are many subjective choices that are made which are designed to keep some information from becoming public. Sometimes these decisions are made to safeguard a person's privacy, others to protect media outlets from corporate or political fallout, and yet others for concerns of national security.

This is probably the least controversial form of media censorship. For instance, when a minor (someone under age 18) commits a crime, his or her identity is concealed to protect them from future harm -- so he or she isn't turned down from getting a college education or a job. That changes if a minor is charged as an adult, like in the case of violent crime.

Most media outlets also conceal the identity of rape victims, so those people don't have to endure public humiliation. That was not the case for a brief period at NBC News when it decided in 1991 to identify the womanaccusing William Kennedy Smith (part of the powerful Kennedy clan) of raping her. NBC later reverted to the common practice of secrecy.

Journalists also protect their anonymous sources from having their identity exposed for fear of retaliation. This is especially important when informants are highly placed individuals in governments or corporations that have direct access to important information.

Every day, someone commits a heinous act of violence or sexual depravity. In newsrooms across the country, editors have to decide whether saying a victim "was assaulted" suffices in describing what happened.

In most instances, it does not. So a choice has to be made on how to describe the details of a crime in a way that helps the audience understand its atrocity without offending readers or viewers, especially children.

It's a fine line. In the case of Jeffrey Dahmer, the way he killed more than a dozen people were considered so sick that the graphic details were part of the story.

That was also true when news editors were faced with the sexual details of Pres. Bill Clinton's relationship with Monica Lewinsky and the accusations of sexual harassment Anita Hill made about then-U.S. Supreme Court justice nominee Clarence Thomas. Words that no editor had ever thought of printing or a newscaster had ever considered uttering were necessary to explain the story.

Those are the exceptions. In most cases, editors will cross out information of an extremely violent or sexual nature, not to sanitize the news, but to keep it from offending the audience.

The U.S. military, intelligence, and diplomatic operations function with a certain amount of secrecy. That confidentiality is regularly challenged by whistle-blowers, anti-government groups or others who want to remove the lid on various aspects of U.S. government.

In 1971, The New York Times published what's commonly called the Pentagon Papers, secret Defense Department documents detailing the problems of American involvement in the Vietnam War in ways the media had never reported. The Nixon administration went to court in a failed attempt to keep the leaked documents from being published.

Decades later, WikiLeaks and its founder Julian Assange are under fire for posting more than a quarter million secret U.S. documents, many involving national security. When The New York Times published these U.S. State Department papers, the U.S. Air Force responded by blocking the newspaper's website from its computers.

These examples show that media owners face a difficult relationship with the government. When they approve stories containing potentially embarrassing information, government officials often try to censor it.

Media companies are supposed to serve the public interest. Sometimes that's at odds with the conglomerate owners who control traditional media voices.

Such was the case when The New York Times reported that executives from MSNBC owner General Electric and Fox News Channel owner News Corporation decided it wasn't in their corporate interests to allow on-air hosts Keith Olbermann and Bill O'Reilly to trade on-air attacks. While the jabs seemed mostly personal, there was news that came out of them.

The Times reported that O'Reilly uncovered that General Electric was doing business in Iran. Although legal, G.E. later said it had stopped. A cease-fire between the hosts probably wouldn't have produced that information, which is newsworthy despite the apparent motivation for getting it.

Cable TV giant Comcast faces a unique charge of censorship. Shortly after the Federal Communications Commission approved its takeover of NBC Universal, it hired FCC commissioner Meredith Attwell Baker who had voted for the merger.

While some denounced the move as a conflict of interest, a single tweet is what unleashed Comcast's wrath. A worker at a summer film camp for teenage girls questioned the hiring through Twitter. Comcast responded by yanking $18,000 in funding for the camp.

The company later apologized and offered to restore its contribution. Camp officials say they want to be able to speak freely without being hushed by corporations.

Critics often lambast media for having a political bias. While viewpoints on the editorial pages are clear to see, the link between politics and censorship is harder to spot.

The ABC news program Nightline once devoted its broadcast to reading the names of more than 700 U.S. servicemen and women killed in Iraq. What appeared to be a solemn tribute to military sacrifice was interpreted as a politically-motivated, anti-war stunt by Sinclair Broadcast Group, which didn't allow the program to be seen on the seven ABC stations it owned.

Sinclair is the same company that a media watchdog group says called more than 100 members of Congress "censorship advocates" for raising concerns to the FCC about Sinclair's plans to air the film, Stolen Honor. That production was blasted for being propaganda against then-presidential candidate John Kerry.

Sinclair responded by saying it wanted to air the documentary after the major networks refused to show it. In the end, bowing to pressure on several fronts, the company aired a revised version that only included parts of the film.

Communist countries that once stopped the free flow of information may have largely disappeared, but even in America, censorship issues keep some news from reaching you. With the explosion of citizen journalism and internet platforms, the truth will now have an easier way of getting out.

Visit link:

How Media Censorship Affects the News You See

Censorship – Definition, Examples, Cases – Legal Dictionary

The term censorship refers to the suppression, banning, or deletion of speech, writing, or images that are considered to be indecent, obscene, or otherwise objectionable. Censorship becomes a civil rights issue when a government or other entity with authority, suppresses ideas, or the expression of ideas, information, and self. In the U.S., censorship has been debated for decades, as some seek to protect the public from offensive materials, and others seek to protect the publics rights to free speech and expression. To explore this concept, consider the following censorship definition.

Noun

Origin

380 B.C. Greek Philosopher Plato

The word censorship is from the Latin censere, which is to give as ones opinion, to assess. In Roman times, censors were public officials who took census counts, as well as evaluating public principles and moralities. Societies throughout history have taken on the belief that the government is responsible for shaping the characters of individuals, many engaging in censorship to that end.

In his text The Republic, ancient Greek philosopher Plato makes a systematic case for the need for censorship in the arts. Information in the ancient Chinese society was tightly controlled, a practice that persists in some form today. Finally, many churches, including the Roman Catholic Church, have historically banned literature felt to be contrary to the teachings of the church.

Many of Americas laws have their origins in English law. In the 1700s, both countries made it their business to censor speech and writings concerning sedition, which are actions promoting the overthrowing of the government, and blasphemy, which is sacrilege or irreverence toward God. The idea that obscenity should be censored didnt gain serious favor until the mid-1800s. The courts in both countries, throughout history, have worked to suppress speech, writings, and images on these issues.

As time went on, contention arose over just what should be considered obscene. Early English law defined obscenity as anything that tended to deprave and corrupt those whose minds are open to such immoral influences, and anything that might suggest to the minds of the young of either sex, and even to persons of more advanced years, thoughts of a most impure and libidinous character. This essentially meant anything that might lead one to have impure thoughts. This definition carried over into early American law as well.

However, that definition was vague enough to raise more questions than it answered in many circumstances. These included:

Censorship in America took a turn in 1957, when the U.S. Supreme Court declared that adults cannot be reduced to reading only what is fit for children, ruling that it must be considered whether the work was originally meant for children or adults. Still, the Court acknowledged that works that are utterly without redeeming social importance can be censored or banned. This left another vague standard for the courts to deal with.

Censorship in America is most commonly a question in the entertainment industry, which is widely influential on the young and old alike. Public entertainment in the form of movies, television, music, and electronic gaming are considered to have a substantial effect on public interest. Because of this, it is subject to certain governmental regulations.

The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibits suppression of an individuals right to free speech, stating Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press This is a principle held dear by those protesting censorship in any form. In the U.S., censorship of obscene materials in entertainment is allowed, in order to protect children from pornography and other offensive things. The problem with government sanctioned censorship is the risk of violating the civil rights of either those producing the materials, or those wishing to view them.

The issue of censorship in the film industry has, at times, been quite contentious. In an effort to avoid the censorship issue, while striving to protect children and conform to federal laws, the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) instituted a self-regulating, voluntary rating system in 1968. In the 1990s, the MPAA updated its rating system, making it easier for parents to determine what is appropriate for their children, based on the childrens ages.

The MPAA rating system has a number of ratings:

Rather than censoring movies or their content by exclusion of content, MCAA ratings are assigned by a board of people who view the movies, who consider such factors as violence, sex, drug use, and language when assigning ratings. The board strives to assign a rating that a majority of parents in the U.S. would give, considering their needs to protect their children.

An X rating was part of the MCAAs original rating system, and signified that no one under the age of 16 would be allowed, regardless of parental accompaniment. The X rating was replaced by the NC-17 rating in 1990.

Internet censorship refers to the suppression of information that can be published to, or viewed on, the internet. While many people enjoy unfettered access to the broad spectrum of information racing across the information highway, others are denied access, or allowed access only to government approved information. Rationales for internet censorship range from a desire to protect children from content that is offensive or inappropriate, to a governments objective to control its peoples access to world news, opinions, and other information.

In the United States, the First Amendment affords the people some protection of their right to freely access the internet, and of the things they post to the web. Because of this, there is very little government-mandated filtering of information that originates in the U.S. The issue of censorship of certain content, especially content that may further terrorism, is constantly debated at the federal government level.

As an example of censorship, the following countries are known for censoring their peoples internet content:

In the mid-1960s, Sam Ginsberg, who owned Sams Stationery and Luncheonette on Long Island, was charged with selling girlie magazines to a 16-year old boy, which was in violation of New York state law. Ginsberg was tried in the Nassau County District Court, without a jury, and found guilty. The judge found that the magazines contained pictures which, by failing to cover the female buttocks and breasts with an opaque covering, were harmful to minors. He stated that the photos appealed to the prurient, shameful or morbid interest of minors, and that the images were patently offensive to standards held by the adult community regarding what was suitable for minors.

Ginsberg was denied the right to appeal his convictions to the New York Court of Appeals, at which time he took his case to the U.S. Supreme Court, on the basis that the state of New York had no authority to define two separate classes of people (minors and adults), with respect to what is harmful. In addition, Ginsberg argued that it was easy to mistake a young persons age, and the law makes no requirement for how much effort a shop owner must put into determining age before selling magazines intended for adult viewing. The Court did not agree, holding that Ginsberg might be acquitted on the grounds of an honest mistake, only if he had made a reasonable bonafide attempt to ascertain the true age of such a minor. The conviction was upheld.

See the article here:

Censorship - Definition, Examples, Cases - Legal Dictionary

Censorship | Encyclopedia.com

Dissident historical views on Western colonialism were regularly censored, and historians and others holding such views were often persecuted. In the following entry, a representative sample of these dissident views is discussed. The examples are taken from a continuously updated worldwide database of the censorship of history covering views produced between 1945 and 2005. To demarcate this survey more precisely, it is worth noting that it is not on censorship of views prior to 1945; nor on Eastern colonialism; nor on precolonial history; nor on powers that annexed other territories; nor on minorities or majorities whose past is labeled (semi)colonial by some of their members; nor on independent states whose past is labeled (semi)colonial by opposition members or as subject to imperialist influences by the government; nor on independence as a result of partition instead of colonialism; nor on occupation during a war.

After a look at the evidence for archival destruction, cases of censorship of professional and popular history will be reviewed. Three groups of censors are considered: colonial powers, former colonial powers, and former colonies. Discussion of these groups is centered around three themes: colonialism in general, its start (the conquest and accompanying crimes), and its end (anticolonial resistance and nationalism).

Archives form the infrastructure of historical research. There is a longby its very nature poorly documentedhistory of archival destruction by colonial powers. Although they fall outside the chronological scope of this entry, it is tempting to recall first two early examples from Mexico and Congo.

In the fifteenth century the Aztecs of Mexico destroyed documents not in line with their view of the past, which endorsed continuation of the revered Toltec civilization. One century later, Spanish conquistadores burned the pagan Aztec and Mayan archives.

In the mid-nineteenth century Portuguese colonists set fire to the archive of the kings of Congo, built up since the sixteenth century. When this territory (together with other regions) became the Congo Free State (18851908) and the private possession of the Belgian king, Leopold II (18351909), the possible transfer to Belgium of sovereignty over Congo was discussed twice, in 1895 and in 1906 to 1907. Leopold II gave detailed instructions to destroy or transfer to the royal palace the archives of the Congo. "Je leur donnerai mon Congo, mais ils n'ont pas le droit de savoir ce que j'y ai fait" ("I shall give them my Congo, but they have no right to know what I have done there"), he said. It is estimated that probably half of the population died in Leopold's Congo. The surviving archives were examined by German forces occupying Belgium during World War I, but the archives were subsequently treated carelessly until the late 1940s.

Within the survey period of this entry, cases of colonial mismanagement of archives are documented for Africa and the Caribbean. In Kenya, many official records on the Mau Mau rebellion (19521956) were destroyed by the British before independence. When in 1962 Algeria became independent, the French government exported all the official documents they could to France, thus taking with them vital sources of Algerian history. In what was to become Zimbabwe, much material relating to African history and to the activities of Africans was removed from the files open to the public at the national archives after the emergence of the Rhodesia Front government in 1962, an act glossed over by recataloguing. From 1979 to 1980 the Rhodesian government destroyed documents produced by its security and intelligence services.

Switching to the Caribbean, a recent case was the postponement in late 2000 of the publication of an official history of Dutch decolonization policy in the Caribbean between 1940 and 2000, written by Gert Oostindie and Inge Klinkers. Quoting too abundantly from the post-1975 Dutch Council of Ministers minutes and other top-level documents, the authors had to delete certain data, particularly data concerning the personal policy views of politicians and civil servants, before the volumes could be published in mid-2001.

Evidence that former colonies destroyed colonial archives is sporadic. Under Equatorial Guinea's first president, Francisco Macas Nguema (19241979), for example, school textbooks of the colonial period and large parts of the national archive were condemned as "imperialist" and publicly burned.

Colonial powers did not welcome unfavorable interpretations of their rule, as the following examples about the British and Portuguese show.

In India, the British banned Marxist-inspired "economic-nationalist" interpretations of Indian history, such as pleas for economic independence based on historical arguments and criticism of "landlordism" and nineteenth-century deindustrialization, at schools and universities. The 1946 edition of W. C. Smith's Modern Islam in India: A Social Analysis, published in London and describing the transformation of the traditional Muslim community into a modern society during the preceding seventy-five years, was not allowed into India because of its alleged communist approach, despite the fact that an earlier edition had been published in Lahore in 1943. A pirated version appeared without the author's consent in 1954, after Pakistan's independence, again in Lahore.

Interestingly, two of India's leaders wrote histories while staying in British prisons: Future prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru (18891964) wrote The Discovery of India, and future president Rajendra Prasad (18841963) authored India Divided. Both works were published in 1946. The latter book, arguing from an Indian nationalist viewpoint but emphasizing unity between the historical traditions and political ideals of Hindus and Muslims, went through three editions before India's partition in 1947. Before his Discovery, Nehru had also written a world history in prison.

In 1962 Portugal declared British historian Charles Boxer persona non grata for drawing attention to Portugal's record of control in its colonies in a series of lectures in the United States. Boxer denied the frequent assertion of Prime Minister Antnio Salazar (18891970) that the Portuguese had always had good relations with black Africans and that the latter were themselves Portuguese; Boxer showed that most colonizers believed in white superiority and that race prejudice prevailed. In an earlier paper, he described seventeenth-century Portugal as a "disintegrating power." Portuguese historian Armando Corteso suggested that Boxer return his (many) Portuguese honors. The Portuguese press labeled Boxer dishonest, and his books were no longer sold. His 1969 classic, The Portuguese Seaborne Empire, 14151925, was not translated into Portuguese until 1977. In 1954 British journalist and historian of Africa Basil Davidson experienced an episode similar to Boxer's.

Colonial conquests were very sensitive events, especially when accompanied by atrocities, as demonstrated by examples from the United States and Belgium. As a student, the future dissident and revisionist Philippine historian Renato Constantino was briefly arrested in 1939 and interrogated by the American colonial authorities at Fort Santiago in Manila because he had written an article exposing American atrocities perpetrated against the Filipino population during the "pacification campaign" of 1899 to 1902. Constantino was released after he declared that his source was The Conquest of the Philippines by the United States, 18981925 (1926), a book published uncensored in New York by Moorfield Storey and Marcial Lichauco in 1926. This incident made Constantino determined to reexamine Philippine history.

In 1959 (a year before the independence of the Belgian Congo) the Belgian Royal Academy of Colonial Sciences refused twice to publish papers of its member, historian and missionary Edmond Boelaert, because they contained evidence of abuses committed in the early phases of Congo's colonization. The papers were eventually published long after Congo's independenceand the author's deathin 1988 and 1995 respectively.

Research into anticolonial resistance and nationalism had the power to demonstrate that the colonized possessed historical agency, and such research therefore demolished part of the ethnocentric legitimation upon which colonial power rested. In Australia, a dissertation by Allan Healy critically approaching the history of Australian colonial control over Papua New Guinea (which lasted until 1975) and presenting the case for more rapid political devolution of power was put under lock and key in the library of the Australian National University between 1959 and 1962. In the French Maghreb, a region in northwestern Africa, research in contemporary history was ignored for being too sensitive. In 1952 the sale of French historian Charles-Andr Julien's new book, North Africa on the March: Muslim Nationalism and French Sovereignty, was blocked by the colonial administration after it aroused controversy for its anticolonialist stance. Julien's first book, History of North Africa: From the Arab Conquest to 1830 (1931), which supported demands of North African nationalists for colonial reform, had already earned him the hostility of many French in the Maghreb.

In 1967 Terence Ranger, a British historian deported from Rhodesia in 1963, published Revolt in Southern Rhodesia 189697: A Study in African Resistance. It became a classic history of the Chimurenga revoltthe Shona name for the 1896 to 1897 uprisings of the Ndebele and Shona people against the imposition of British colonial ruleand inspired blacks to compare the revolt with their own uprising against the Rhodesian regime after its 1965 Unilateral Declaration of Independence from Britain. Ranger's book was banned until independence in 1980. Ironically, the Rhodesian army reportedly used it as a textbook in counterinsurgency.

After independence was granted to their colonies, Western countries remained sensitive to statements about their former colonial role. For example, Years of the Century, a 1979 Portuguese television series that included a personal view of the Estado Novo (New State; the Portuguese dictatorial regime from 1932 to 1974) by a left-wing historian, was canceled after complaints from the Catholic Church about the first episode. The film explicitly attacked the Catholic hierarchy's support of the Estado Novo repression of black nationalists.

The first stages of colonization proved to be problematic in Australia, Germany, and Belgium. In June 1992, in Mabo and Others v. State of Queensland, the Australian High Court recognized that the concept of terra nullius (Australia as "a land of no one" before European settlement began in 1788) was a fiction, thereby strengthening Aboriginal claims to ancestral lands. This "Mabo judgment" (after Aboriginal leader Eddie Mabo [19361992]), called historic, reversed a historical view of Australia's past in which the role of Aboriginals was downplayed. The ruling led to protracted debatesknown as the "History Wars" and yet unfinishedabout British colonialism in Australia and the fate of the Aboriginals.

In Germany, a journalist who in 1965 attacked the Koloniallegende (the emphasis on Germany's achievements in its pre-1918 colonies without mentioning the violence) on television received death threats. Another person living abroad had to cope with censorship threats by the German foreign office after pointing out parallels between the genocide of the native Herero in German South-West Africa (present-day Namibia) in 1904 and that of the Jews and the Poles in Europe during World War II.

For the Belgians, the crimes against humanity committed in the Congo Free State remained a sensitive subject until well into the 1980s. Beginning in 1975 diplomat Jules Marchal published several books in Dutch and French on those crimes under a pseudonym. For eight years he could not gain access to the archives of the Belgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

In another case, retired Lieutenant-General mile Janssens, chief of staff of the Force Publique (the army in the Belgian Congo) until 1960 and president of the patriotic committee Pro Belgica (established in 1980 to commemorate the 1830 foundation of Belgium) wrote a letter in 1986 to the minister of national education about historian and anthropologist Daniel Vangroenweghe. Janssens accused Vangroenweghe of libeling King Leopold II in his 1985 Dutch-language book Red Rubber: Leopold II and His Congo by writing about the crimes committed in the Congo Free State. Janssens also questioned Vangroenweghe's position as a secondaryschool history teacher. When members of parliament supporting Pro Belgica asked questions about the affair, the minister established a commission of school inspectors, which concluded that the charges were unfounded.

Janssens also wrote to the publisher who translated Vangroenweghe's book into French, as a result of which a publisher's note was printed in the 1986 French-language edition to warn readers of its controversial nature. Vangroenweghe was asked to sign a statement that he would take all responsibility in the eventuality of a lawsuit. Although the French-language edition sold out in a few months, it was not reprinted. Pro Belgica also published rebuttals of Vangroenweghe's "lies." In the course of the affair, Vangroenweghe was threatened in anonymous letters, and his public lectures on the subject were interrupted by former colonials and attended by the secret police.

The final stages of colonialism proved to be delicate subjects in the Netherlands and France. In the Netherlands, the 1984 publication of a volume in the official war history, Kingdom of the Netherlands in World War II, dealing with the Dutch East Indies and the later Indonesia, led to a protracted lawsuit. The suit was finally decided against the petitioners (representatives of part of the community of those who formerly lived in the East Indies, organized as the Committee for the Historical Rehabilitation of the Dutch East Indies) in April 1990. They had accused the author, historian Loe De Jong, of portraying too negatively the role of the colonial administration. They also objected to passages about war crimes committed by Dutch troops against Indonesian nationalists from 1945 to 1949, and they asked the state to commission "a less prejudiced historian" to rewrite the history of colonial relations.

The 1987 manuscript of De Jong's next volume, also about Dutch-Indonesian relations from 1945 to 1949, was leaked to the press by two military reviewers and evoked strong protests from veterans because it contained a forty-six-page section entitled "War Crimes." Some veterans demanded nonpublication of that part, sued De Jong for libel, or published denials of his claims. The defamation case, including the demand for nonpublication, was dismissed in 1988, chiefly because the controversial statements were made in a manuscript, not a published book. When the volume was finally published, the title of the provocative section was changed to "Excesses." A few years later Dutch war veterans sued novelist Graa Boomsma on similar charges; the case was dismissed.

In France, the violent Algerian independence struggle (19541962) proved traumatic. Gillo Pontecorvo's 1966 film The Battle of Algiers treated the theme and was banned. Shot on location in Algiers in 1965 with the assistance of the Algerian government, the film gave a sympathetic account of the Algerian fight and criticized the use of torture by colonial authorities. The French ban lasted five years; the film's eventual release was delayed because cinema managers were intimidated. The Battle of Algiers was also banned in Uruguay in 1968 because it was seen as indirectly condoning the Tupamaro guerrilla, a National Liberation Movement very active at the time.

A 1996 issue of the Algerian daily Libert was seized by the French police because it included an article commemorating the anniversary of a pro-independence demonstration by Algerians in Paris on October 17, 1962. The demonstration had ended in a bloodbath. The article mentioned a death toll and the disappearance of as many as two hundred people instead of the official tally of three deaths and sixty-four injured. In 1998 Maurice Papon, the chief of the Paris police at the time, sued historian Jean-Luc Einaudi for libel because the latter had written in the newspaper Le Monde that the 1962 events constituted a "massacre perpetrated by the police on Papon's orders." In addition, Einaudi denounced the removal or destruction of several relevant archives. In 1999 the court ruled that the statement had been defamatory; damages were not awarded, however, because the court also ruled that Einaudi's method had been careful. Only in the same year did the French National Assembly officially acknowledge that France had fought a "war," rather than "an operation for keeping order," against Algerian nationalists from 1954 to 1962.

In former colonies, colonialism was widely condemned, with little reason for substantial differences of opinion. One example reveals, however, that the role of locals could be thorny. In 1977 the Indonesian Film Censorship Board banned Saija dan Adinda, a Dutch-Indonesian film directed by Fons Rademakers. The 1976 film, an adaptation of the nineteenth-century novel Max Havelaar, told the story of the corrupt and exploitative practices of the local gentry under Dutch colonial rule. The board declared that the ban was imposed because the film created the impression that colonialism was good and that the people were exploited by the local gentry rather than the Dutch.

If evidence for censorship of colonialism in general was understandably scarce, the reverse was true for its beginning and end. In some cases, episodes of colonial conquest were extremely difficult to interpret, as examples from Mexico and South Africa prove.

From 1950 to 1951 a Mexican scientific commission devoted thirty-seven sessions to verifying the authenticity of the bones of Cuauhtmoc (the last Aztec emperor and a national symbol of resistance to European imperialism), which had been "discovered" shortly before. When the commission found no proof of the bones' authenticity, and thus was unable to satisfy national pride, it was confronted with extreme hostility in the press. In 1975 a new commission came to the same conclusion as the 1951 group.

In the run-up to the 1992 quincentenary marking the arrival of Christopher Columbus (14511506) in the Americas, an intense debate raged in Mexico about whether it was legitimate to describe this "discovery" as the start of an encounter between the Old and the New World. In South Africa, two books published in 1952 criticized the celebration of three hundred years of white settlement and looked at South Africa's history as a struggle between oppressors and oppressed. The books, Three Hundred Years: A History of South Africa by Mnguni (Hosea Jaffe) and The Role of the Missionaries in Conquest by Nosipho Majeke (Dora Taylor), had to appear under pseudonyms and were banned. Both books anticipated the work of radical historians in the 1970s.

The early stages of colonialism were sometimes problematic. In February 2005, a 6-meter (19.5-foot) statue of the Leopold II was reerected in Congo after it had been removed on the orders of President Mobutu Sese Seko (19301997) in 1967. It was taken down again just hours later, reportedly because several ministers opposed having a memorial to a man who had caused so much exploitation and death.

The last stages of colonialism, however, were by far the most sensitive in the former colonies.

Latin America. There are many examples in Latin America, where independence from Spain and Portugal came in the early nineteenth century for most colonies. In 1976, during the military dictatorship, Uruguayan historian Alfonso Fernndez Cabrelli was arrested and held without trial. He was accused of "an attempt to subconsciously influence the reader of his book The Uruguayans" (Boletn informativo 1979, p. 6) by drawing parallels between Uruguay's hero of independence, General Jos Artigas (17641850), and the revolutionaries Camilo Torres (19291967) and Che Guevara (19281967). The book was called excessively critical of "the measures taken by the authorities to preserve the values of our nationality against the penetration of Marxism" (Boletn informativo 1979, p. 6).

In the 1980s the Colombian Academy of History directed comparable criticism to some authors of history textbooks. The author Rodolfo Ramn de Roux was accused of omitting or ridiculing the most important figures of the independence period and of overemphasizing contemporary history. His New History approach was labeled Marxist and unpatriotic. A similar approach used in a textbook by Silvia Duzzan and Salomn Kalmanovitz was equally condemned. An academy member declared in a newspaper that the textbook depicted Spaniards and Creoles unfavorably, thus inciting hatred against them. Despite the academy's attitude, the text-books continued to be used in schools.

Elsewhere, analogous cases were noted. In Peru, historian Heraclio Bonilla was criticized in the 1970s for his revisionist interpretation of the Peruvian independence movement. Bonilla's work was attacked for unpatriotically debunking the nation's traditional heroes and overemphasizing socioeconomic factors.

Under the Argentinean dictatorship (19761983) of General Jorge Videla and others a historical study, From Montoneros to Caudillos, was banned because its title contained the forbidden word Montonero (adopted by left-wing Peronists in memory of the irregular armies of gauchos who fought against Spanish troops during Argentina's independence wars of 1810 to 1816).

In 1983 in Mexico, the National Autonomous University of Mexico planned a production of Martyrdom of Morelos (1981), a play by Vicente Leero. Leero's portrayal of Mexican independence hero Jos Mara Morelos (17651815) as someone who under torture betrayed the names, strategies, and troop strengths of other rebel commanders caused a great stir, especially because President Miguel de la Madrid (b. 1934) had "adopted" Morelos as his spiritual mentor from the past. Some rehearsals were reportedly interrupted, a controversial actor playing the part of Morelos was replaced, and precautions against violent protests were taken on opening night.

In Cuba, finally, prominent independence leaders such as Jos Mart (18531895), Mximo Gmez (18361905), and Antonio Maceo (18451896) formed part of the pantheon inspiring and legitimizing the government of Fidel Castro (b. 1927) and were, as such, sensitive subjects.

Asia. In Asia, problems were comparable. In 1952 the Indian Ministry of Education appointed an editorial board to compile an official history of the Indian freedom movement, to be published in conjunction with the centenary celebration of the 1857 revolt of Indian soldiers (sepoys). In 1954 board director and historian Romesh Chandra Majumdar presented a draft of the first volume to the other editorial board members; after a delay he learned from the minister of education that some board members had criticized his draft as exaggerating the role of Bengal in the freedom movement.

Equally controversial was the starting date of the freedom movement in India, situated by Majumdar in 1870. Others preferred to designate the 1857 revolt itself as the beginning of the movement, or even the thirteenth centuryimplying that Muslims were foreigners in India, an assumption undermining the Congress Party's ideal of India as a secular democracy.

A third point of conflict was the nature of the 1857 revolt (was it a national war of independence or not?). Majumdar resigned and the editorial board was dissolved in 1955. The government entrusted the work to National Archives director Surendra Nath Sen, whose book Eighteen Fifty-Seven appeared in 1957. The same year Majumdar published his own findings as The Sepoy Mutiny and the Revolt of 1857.

In Indonesia, Pramoedya Ananta Toer, a nominee for the Nobel Prize for Literature, wrote persuasive anticolonial novels. Imprisoned at Buru Island, Pramoedya was not allowed to write in the 1970s. In the evenings, he told his fellow inmates stories about the incipient nationalist movement in the early twentieth-century Dutch East Indies entirely from memory. When Pramoedya was finally allowed to write in 1975, the other inmates gave him paper and did his duties while he transformed the stories into a set of four historical novels.

When the quartet was published after Pramoedya's release in 1979 and proved immensely popular, each of the volumes was banned. Susandi, the head of the investigation team at the office of the Indonesian attorney general, claimed that the books represented a threat to security and order and that the author "had been able by means of historical data to smuggle in Marxist-Leninist teachings." The ban was also partially inspired by fear that analogies would be drawn between the abuses committed by the Dutch colonial power and those of the regime of President Suharto (b. 1921), who ruled Indonesia from 1967 to 1998.

The son of a school headmaster, Ananta Toer Pramoedya was born February 6, 1925, in Blora, East Java, Indonesia. Imprisoned by each of Indonesia's three twentieth-century governments for alleged subversive political activities and writings, he is widely considered Indonesia's most estimable writer.

In his fictional works, Pramoedya has created insightful and forward-looking characters who challenge traditional political doctrines through thought and action. The complex political history of the Indonesian islands serves as the context for many of Pramoedya's works, which are also marked by his experiences during World War II.

After Japan's surrender at the end of World War II, the Dutch tried to regain the islands of the East Indies. However, Indonesian nationalist sentiment led several paramilitary rebel groups to engage the Dutch in a four-year struggle for control of the country. While serving as a soldier in this nationalist movement, Pramoedya was captured and jailed in 1947.

While serving in a Dutch forced labor camp, Pramoedya wrote The Fugitive, which was published several months after his release in 1949. The book, which earned him an Indonesian literary prize, marked Pramoedya's emergence as a politically influential author. In 1990, some forty years after it was originally published, The Fugitive became Pramoedya's first novel widely available to English-speaking audiences.

Once out of prison, Pramoedya developed several leftist affiliations, though he never became a communist. He served as a leading figure in Lekra, a socialist literary group, and visited Beijing in 1956, expressing support for that country's communist revolution. Among his significant publications of the period was a defense of Java's Chinese minority community. In 1965, after the failure of a coup aimed at overthrowing the by-then independent Indonesian government, Pramoedya was deemed an enemy of the state on account of his earlier leftist associations. The author's library, notes, and manuscripts were burned, and he was held without trial for fourteen years on the prison island of Buru in eastern Indonesia.

For the first seven years of his incarceration, Pramoedya was denied access to paper and pencil. Lacking these rudimentary tools of his trade, he composed stories in his head. Upon his release in 1979, Pramoedya turned those prison stories into a historical tetralogy, based loosely on the life of Tirto Adisoerjo, an early Indonesian nationalist.

The Indonesian government has suppressed Pramoedya's works, citing alleged Marxist-Leninist leanings and elements of class conflict that pose a potential threat to society. Some observers have viewed these bans as an attempt to quell liberalism and debate among Indonesians.

Pramoedya's work has been circulated in the form of "illegal" photocopies, at great personal risk to Indonesian readers, and has remained largely inaccessible to foreigners. In addition, journalists have often been denied permission to interview him and the Australian translator of the Buruquartet was expelled from Java. When asked to describe his feelings about his works being banned, Pramoedya told the Washington Post: "I consider it an honor. To do creative work you must be prepared to pay, and this is one of the costs" (North, p. D5, April 1988).

Africa. In Africa also, independence struggles left their uncertain legacies. In Kenya, the interpretation of the independence movement, and especially of one part of it, the Mau Mau rebellion (19521956), was a predominant subject of debate among historians because the conclusions of the debate had direct implications for the legitimacy of the authoritarian leadership. Mau Mau was an uprising of members of the Gikuyu, Kenya's largest ethnic group, against British colonial rule to obtain land and freedom. Writers with a Marxist-inspired interpretation of the rebellion risked persecution.

Kenyan novelist Ngugi wa Thiongo, who wrote fiction on the Mau Mau, spent the last year (1978) of the presidency of Jomo Kenyatta (18911978) in prison because one of his recent plays had dealt with Kenyans who collaborated with the colonial administration by serving in the Home Guard during the Mau Mau rebellion. Ngugi's play also treated the struggle over land between a peasant farmer and a rich landowner. In the words of Eliud Njenga, the Kiambu district commissioner, "it promoted the class struggle." The play was "too provocative, would make some people bitter and was opening up old graves." After his release and much further harassment, Ngugi eventually went into exile until his temporary return to Kenya in 2004.

Another Kenyan victim, this time under the government (19782002) of President Daniel arap Moi (b. 1924), was Marxist historian Maina wa Kinyatti, known for his controversial work on Mau Mau. It cost him six years of imprisonment under severe duress (19821988), an eye disease, and exile afterwards.

At the other side of the interpretation spectrum, neoconservative historian William Ochieng, who viewed Mau Mau as an internecine struggle among the Gikuyu, stayed relatively aloof from criticism until a group of Mau Mau veterans in 1986 demanded that his writings be banned from the schools. The veterans also decided to commission the "correct" historiography of the Mau Mau rebellion. In an official reaction, President Moi declared that he could not allow history to be written in a way that might divide the Kenyans and that any history of the Mau Mau rebellion should provide a correct account of independence. As late as October 2001, dozens of members of the Kenyan nongovernmental group Release Political Prisoners were detained for several days on charges of holding an illegal meeting because they had commemorated Mau Mau day.

Elsewhere in Africa, books about left-wing leaders who were assassinated during or as a result of decolonization, like Ruben Um Nyob (19131958) in Cameroon or Patrice Lumumba (19251961) in Congo, were confiscated and banned, partly because the books implicated their country's rulers. Such was the fate of Patrice Lumumba: The Fifty Last Days of His Life (1966), a book written under a pseudonym by Belgian scholars Jules Grard-Libois and Jacques Brassinne, and Cameroon's National Problem (1985), edited by historian Achille Mbembe.

In Namibia, the crimes committed by the South West Africa People's Organization (SWAPO), a black African nationalist liberation movement, before the 1990 independence caused controversy. In 1996 president and former SWAPO leader Sam Nujoma (b. 1929) attacked German Lutheran Church pastor Siegfried Groth, who for many years had actively supported SWAPO's antiapartheid struggle, in a television broadcast to the nation. The reason was Groth's NamibiaThe Wall of Silence: The Dark Days of the Liberation Struggle, a 1995 book that included eyewitness accounts of the torture and disappearance of detainees in the SWAPO preindependence exile camps in Zambia and Angola. The detainees had been accused of internal dissent or of spying for South Africa. Although the book sold out quickly, some two thousand people called for its banning and for public burning at a rally celebrating the sixth anniversary of Namibia's independence.

From this survey, five conclusions can be drawn. First, popular history channels were watched as closely as academic history. Second, reasons for archival destruction, removal, and secrecy by colonial powers can be subsumed under three factors: political (legitimation of abusive power), military (erasure of traces of crimes and rebellions), and cultural (ethnocentric depreciation of the historical sources of subjected peoples).

Third, colonial powers censored historical works about colonial violence written by both national and "indigenous" scholars; those works were banned at home and in the colony. More surprisingly, colonial powers also attempted quite often to attack criticism by foreign scholars.

Fourth, for former colonial powers, precarious subjects that were liable to censorship or taboo status mainly related to wars in the earliest and last stages of colonialism. Unofficial interest groups were players as important as governments. Frequently, conflicts had to be decided in court. In the long run, violent conquest and violent decolonization came to be seen as adversely affecting the democratic legitimation of power and the construction of a national identityin short, they came to be seen as sources of shame.

Finally, in former colonies, the last stage of colonialism was the most explosive period. Remarkably, censorship attempts were often not directed at representations of the role of the former colonial power, but at portrayals of former anticolonial resistance leaders. Left-wing explanations for this crucial period were seldom cherished. Historians had to portray the country's heroes of independence very carefully: praising them could powerfully suggest comparison with, and criticism of, present leadership, and blaming them could provoke retaliation by veterans and the establishment.

see also Anticolonialism; Lumumba, Patrice; Portugal's African Colonies.

Boletn informativo (Newsletter of Amnesty International) (February 1979): 6.

De Baets, Antoon. "Censorship and Historical Writing." In A Global Encyclopedia of Historical Writing, edited by D. R. Woolf, 149150. New York and London: Garland, 1998.

De Baets, Antoon. "History: Rewriting History." In Censorship: A World Encyclopedia, Vol. 2, edited by Derek Jones, 10621067. London and Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn, 2001.

De Baets, Antoon. "History: School Curricula and Textbooks." In Censorship: A World Encyclopedia, Vol. 2, edited by Derek Jones, 10671073. London and Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn, 2001.

De Baets, Antoon. Censorship of Historical Thought: A World Guide, 19452000. London and Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2002.

De Baets, Antoon. "Defamation Cases against Historians." History and Theory: Studies in the Philosophy of History 41 (2002): 346-366.

Jones, Derek, ed. Censorship: A World Encyclopedia. 4 vols. London and Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn, 2001.

Simpson, J., and J. Bennett. The Disappeared: Voices from a Secret War. London: 1985.

The rest is here:

Censorship | Encyclopedia.com

American Censorship – The Government’s Act of Altering Media

Lower back pain has become widely common. To some extent, this is connected with our sedentary lifestyles. Lack of exercise, especially when combined with a desk job, which requires you to stay put at an office for hours, will inevitably cause back pain. However, there are other factors that play a role in the equation. For example, your position impacts the way in which your back feels. And most notably your office chair is more important than it may seem at first glance.

The best office chairs can actually offer relief, promoting healthy blood flow and adjusting the body in the correct position. So, how do you choose an office chair if youre dealing with lower back pain? Well, our guide will introduce you to a range of top products on the market. Aside from that, we will outline the main considerations that go into this lengthy shopping process.

Herman Miller Classic Aeron Chair Loaded Posture Fit

PRICE$$$$

Dimensions : 26 x 28 x 24

Weight : 48 pounds

Features : Tension Control / Rear tilt Lock/ Forward tilt/ Lumbar support

Herman Miller Embody Chair

PRICE$$$$$

Dimensions : 28 x 27 x 38.2

Weight : 51 pounds

Features : Tilt limiter / Adjustable seat depth / Fully adjustable arms

Herman Miller Sayl Task Chair

PRICE$$$$

Dimensions : 26 x 24.5 x 37

Weight : 38 pounds

Features : Suspension back / 93 percent recyclable

Flash Furniture Mid-Back Black Mesh Swivel Task Chair

PRICE$

Dimensions : 34.4 x 26.2 x 25

Weight : 11.25 pounds

Features : Tilt Lock Mechanism / Tilt Tension Adjustment Knob

Our first recommendation is this chair manufactured by Herman Miller. The reason why this is listed as one of the best office chairs for a back pain is its unique design. It is created specifically to support a healthy posture even if you often find yourself shifting positions throughout the day. We all know that staying put for hours can be quite uncomfortable.

At the same time, this chair is suitable for people of various sizes. Expressly, it conforms after your bodys shape, while distributing the weight evenly.

Furthermore, another unique characteristic is the presence of elliptical weaving threads. More specifically, the Classic Aeron Chair incorporates a patented tilt, which is referred to as the Kinemat kilt. This aims at mimicking the bodys pivot points.

The contoured back diminishes the pressure exercised on your back, ensuring your comfort. The padded arms are adjustable, meaning that you can customize them as you find best.

Check The Latest Price on Amazon!

Our list continues with another product manufactured by the renowned Herman Miller. The Embody Chair distinguishes itself through its unique design, which is great, particularly in regard to adjustability and customization.

That is to say, you benefit from complete adjustability, which is great news if youre struggling with back pain. This includes the position of your armrests and the actual seat position. However, our favorite thing about it is that each time you sit in the chair, the backrest automatically adjusts to your spine.

This is thanks to the dynamic matrix of pixels, as Herman Miller puts it. That is to say, whenever you change your position, the chair adjusts right away.

What is more, the item includes a handy fine-tuning knob designated for the headrest. Therefore, you can customize it depending on your preferences.

Nevertheless, a potential drawback could be that the chair doesnt have a headrest. At the same time, you dont have the alternative of adding a headrest, if you consider it necessary for your comfort.

What is more, if you prefer sitting close to your desk, you might find the lack of back-and-forth adjustability frustrating. Overall, though, this is a good investment.

Check The Latest Price on Amazon!

This is another product manufactured by Herman Miller. It has reached our list for many reasons. Most importantly, though, it is unbelievably comfortable; even if it might not seem like it at first glance.

Of course, the innovative, modern design is a major draw. This would make it the perfect addition to a modern office facility. Expressly, the concept behind the creation of the chair is identical to the one used for designing the Golden Gate Bridge.

The backbone of the chair represents a unique characteristic namely a Y tower. This offers optimal back support. Another feature that is exclusive to this chair is represented by the ArcSpan on the chairs back.

The purpose of the elastomer strands is to help you preserve a correct posture throughout the day. Nonetheless, in some areas, the strands remain flexible; therefore, enabling you to move freely.

Plus, you might be pleased to find out that this is an environmentally friendly item no less than 93 percent of the chairs construction is recyclable. And while there are contradicting opinions concerning its comfort level, some people say that it is excellent for back pain.

Hence, we could say that this is a pretty subjective topic it depends on your preferences and needs, for the most part.

Check The Latest Price on Amazon!

If your budget is limited, then you might find this chair a good alternative. The price is definitely appealing, but its reassuring to know that it offers optimal lumbar support. This should be a priority for each person that works at a desk.

Even if the design is rather simplistic, it does the trick. However, its worth mentioning that you dont have the option of adjusting the lumbar support. Still, weve found it to work quite well; therefore, you might not even feel the need to customize it.

The mesh back provides decent support, while being comfortable. As a matter of fact, weve found it to be surprisingly comfortable, even during prolonged periods of use. Thats simply because it conforms to your sitting position.

Concurrently, it offers decent ventilation.

Of course, you still have the standard ways of adjusting the chair were referring to tilt and height. Still, its limitations shouldnt be overlooked. In fact, taller people might consider this a major inconvenience, as it could jeopardize their comfort.

Check The Latest Price on Amazon!

Ergohuman High Back Swivel Chair with Headrest

PRICE$$$$

Dimensions : 26 x 27.5 x 51

Weight : 64 pounds

Features : 3 position tilt-lock / Tilt tension control / Tilt lock

The Steelcase Leap Chair

PRICE$$$

Dimensions : 24.8 x 27 x 43.5

Weight : 48 pounds

Features : LiveBack technology / 94% RECYCLABLE / Height-adjustable lumbar support

AmazonBasics Mid-Back Mesh Chair

PRICE$

Dimensions : 25.2 x 24 x 40.4

Weight : 23.1 pounds

Features : Contoured mesh back / Pneumatic seat-height adjustment

Modway Articulate Ergonomic Mesh Office Chair

PRICE$$

Dimensions : 27.5 x 26 x 41.5

Weight : 36 pounds

Features : Breathable mesh back, passive lumbar support

This chair has been designed with a core purpose in mind ergonomics. More specifically, you can customize it almost completely, depending on your preferences.

In fact, each individual component can be customized the headrest, the backrest, the seat depth, chair height, and the armrests, in an attempt to enjoy optimal comfort.

Thanks to the synchro-tilt mechanism, as well as the seat depth adjustment, your back will get the support it needs whether youre reclining or sitting upright.

Moving on, the mesh fabric is quite comfortable. Nevertheless, as a potential drawback, the material is quite sticky, which can be frustrating.

At the same time, you might find it a bit inconvenient that the armrests dont lock in place. Additionally, they have the tendency of moving quite easily. Overall, in regard to the construction of the chair, we can say that it is sturdy and durable.

Check The Latest Price on Amazon!

Right now, this is one of the best-selling chairs on the market. The reason why we have chosen to include it on our list is its optimal lumbar support. What makes it so great is the LiveBack technology.

Basically, the LiveBack technology features an adjustable tension knob. You use it in order to increase or decrease the firmness of the curve of the backrest.

Plus, there is also a height-adjustable lumbar support. This moves throughout the lower back. That is to say, you should expect to experience noteworthy pain relief in this respect.

This is what really makes a difference in terms of back support. Thanks to the natural glide system, the seat glides forward. Thus, you can effortlessly recline without leaving your reach zone, while remaining focused on your work.

Expressly, you can embrace different postures, to diminish the static load exercised on the spine. Additionally, thanks to the lower back firmness control, you can set the level of firmness to remain consistent. This will contribute to maintaining the lower spines natural curve.

Check The Latest Price on Amazon!

This is another optimal budget option for an office chair suitable for back pain. In truth, the price is surprisingly affordable for what this item has to offer: that is great comfort and support.

At the same time, we like that the chair is entirely adjustable. Specifically, thanks to the simple pneumatic controls, you can either lower or raise the seat. Moreover, if you wish, you may even rock back in the chair. Due to its adjustability, you can embrace a comfortable, correct seating position, which is fundamental when you have a bad back.

Moving on, also in regard to the design of the chair, the back is covered in mesh. If you have a look at the way in which its constructed, youll notice that it is designed in order to facilitate lumbar support which is pretty great, especially for the price.

Even if other chairs on our list might be infinitely more comfortable, we think that the price tag makes up for it.

Check The Latest Price on Amazon!

This is another item that is worthy of your attention. In other words, it provides excellent value, considering the features it comes with. Firstly, it is described as an ergonomic office chair, offering adequate lumbar support.

At the same time, in order to maximize your comfort, the chair is generously padded. We could say that it is constructed with daily use in mind; thats because the chair feels sturdy and durable. To that end, it is suitable for people weighing up to 331 lbs.

Furthermore, you can choose from the incline or recline function and lock it in place, whenever you feel like it, of course.

As noted by some reviewers struggling with back problems, thanks to this chair, the severity of the pain is alleviated.

On the other hand, there have been some complaints about the height of the armrests. Truthfully, the armrests locked at the lowest position are still too high. This could be an inconvenience, in terms of comfort. So, keep this in mind if you are looking to get this chair.

Check The Latest Price on Amazon!

Steelcase Leap Desk Chair with Headrest

PRICE$$$$$

Dimensions : 25 x 27 x 52.5

Weight : 65 pounds

Features : Patented LiveTechnology / Highly Adjustable arms

DXRacer Classic Series Big and Tall Chair

PRICE$$$

Dimensions : 24 x 27 x 51

Weight : 66 pounds

Features : Additional lumbar support cushion

Read this article:

American Censorship - The Government's Act of Altering Media

Censorship | Define Censorship at Dictionary.com

[sen-ser-ship]

ExamplesWord Origin

Show More

Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, Random House, Inc. 2019

The CDA was passed not in the name of censorship but in the name of protecting children from stumbling across sexual material.

Jordan also banned it, and Malaysia, Egypt, and Indonesia subjected it to their censorship boards.

To many of us, that smacks of censorship, the highest offense to our pride in self-publicity.

So this startling move towards Internet censorship should come as no surprise.

Ironically, Trotter had succeeded in tightening a censorship bill but failed to stop the movie.

Show More

Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

1590s, "office of a censor," from censor (n.) + -ship. Meaning "action of censoring" is from 1824.

Show More

Online Etymology Dictionary, 2010 Douglas Harper

See original here:

Censorship | Define Censorship at Dictionary.com

Censorship Synonyms, Censorship Antonyms | Thesaurus.com

Patricia forgot her censorship as the spirit of the explorer rose in her.

The Duc wondered what a censorship would let pass if there were one.

No: she had heard too much of it; it made you almost wish for a Censorship of the Press.

The newsletters, of course, might be under the censorship of Rome and Naples.

The discovery of a new spot on the sun is evidently a case for the censorship.

I call the censorship chaotic because of the chaos in its administration.

He got the impression that she put off all censorship from either her feeling or her expression.

A few voices, however, were raised in favour of a censorship.

I wish to claim no censorship over the style and diction of your letters.

How absurd, how inadequate this all is we see from the existence of the Censorship on Drama.

More here:

Censorship Synonyms, Censorship Antonyms | Thesaurus.com

Godless Comedy YouTube Censorship – Godless Comedy

Nobodys feelings were consulted during the making of this video. Anyone who has a problem with that can drop dead.

A Word To The Google Feminists on BitChutehttps://www.bitchute.com/video/YA0GQNtI8lQ/

A Word To The Google Feminists on LiveLeakhttps://www.liveleak.com/view?i=e06_1519057581

A Word To The Google Feminists on Vimeohttps://vimeo.com/256448828

A Word To The Google Feminists on PewTubehttps://pewtube.com/user/patcondell/Rftaqvx

German women have had enough. Please share this video widely. #120dbhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RJxU8iiyOS0

Restricted by YouTube, A Word To The Criminal Migrant, subtitled in Arabic, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Portuguese, Punjabi, Spanish, Swedishhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9e_vcSut0A

Interview with a woman from the #120db videohttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4QJ3wYi_Fug

A German woman speaks out about the rape of her countryhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=itKmpVnAemc

German journalist (part 1): Like many other women in Germany, I no longer feel safe.https://voiceofeurope.com/2018/01/interview-with-a-german-journalist-like-many-other-women-in-germany-i-no-longer-feel-safe/

German journalist (part 2): More and more citizens wake up and realise that something is totally wrong here.https://voiceofeurope.com/2018/02/german-journalist-more-and-more-citizens-wake-up-and-realize-that-something-is-totally-wrong-here/

Afghan rapes 13 year-old girl after being released from prison for attempted rapehttp://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5353915/Afghan-asylum-seeker-18-rapes-girl-13-Germany.html

Anti-rape pants sell out quickly in Germany.https://voiceofeurope.com/2018/02/german-women-in-fear-new-anti-rape-pants-sell-out-very-quickly

Swedish volunteers patrol Malm streets after wave of gang rapeshttps://www.rt.com/news/414083-malmo-rapes-street-patrols/

Swedish police warn women not to go out alone at nighthttps://www.thelocal.se/20160308/backlash-begins-after-swedish-women-told-not-to-go-out-alone

Migrants raped woman in wheelchair. Swedes have had enough.https://acidmuncher.wordpress.com

Nearly half of Swedens women afraid to go out after darkhttp://www.breitbart.com/london/2016/03/04/scared-sweden-almost-half-of-women-afraid-to-be-out-after-dark-in-europes-rape-capital/

Only 1 in 5 foreign rapists in Sweden deportedhttp://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4302128/Foreigners-not-deported-Sweden-rapes.html

A glimpse into life at Google, a bubble of hysterical bigotry and safe space paranoiahttp://thefederalist.com/2018/01/10/19-insane-tidbits-james-damores-lawsuit-googles-office-environment/

Worker suing Google says the company is dominated by a racist man-hating hate grouphttps://www.theverge.com/2018/1/12/16885560/david-gudeman-james-damore-google-lawsuit-misandrist-liberal-hate-group-accusation

Everyone is free to download this video and post it to their own account if they wish, as long as it is not edited in any way (including the title) and not monetised.

You can download audio versions of all my videos athttp://patcondell.libsyn.com/

Subscribe via iTunes at http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewPodcast?id=262679978

Follow me on Gabhttps://gab.ai/patcondell

Twitterhttp://twitter.com/patcondell

Websitehttp://www.patcondell.net

Read the original post:

Godless Comedy YouTube Censorship - Godless Comedy

Sen. Chris Murphy calls for more Silicon Valley censorship …

Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy thinks removing Infowars was a good first step and says tech giants should censor more content. (murphy.senate.gov)

Sen. Chris Murphy thinks tech giants banning Alex Jones Infowars is a good start, but says the survival of our democracy depends on sites like Facebook and YouTube removing additional content.

Infowars is the tip of a giant iceberg of hate and lies that uses sites like Facebook and YouTube to tear our nation apart. These companies must do more than take down one website. The survival of our democracy depends on it, Murphy, D-Conn., tweeted on Monday.

The controversial Jones and his Infowars content were removed from Facebook, YouTube, Apple and Spotify this week. Jonesis a notorious conspiracy theorist who has been widely criticized for polarizing content, including discredited claims about the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting. Many staunch Infowars critics condemned the tech giants decision, noting that censoring him could result in further actions against people who arent accepted by the mainstream media which appears to be exactly what Murphy wants.

Murphy wrote that Facebook and Apple and YouTube have gotten so big they sometimes seem like the government, but reminded his 704,000 followers that the technology giants arent publicly controlled.

They are private companies that shouldnt knowingly spread lies and hate. They took a good first step today by removing Infowars, Murphy wrote.

Murphys Twitter account was filled with negative reaction to his call for additional censorship.

Talk radio host Tony Bruno responded, Thanks for confirming your hatred of the First Amendment Chris. You do realize this is not what Democracy looks like, don't you?

In other words you won't rest until you control the entire message. You won't be happy until you dictate everything we get to hear. I didn't like Jones but you scare me far more, a user said.

Another user added, Youre advocating censorship, how progressive!

Conservative commentator Ben Shapiro explained to Murphy, Youre a governmental official and there is a thing called the First Amendment.

Murphy bills himself as a strong voice for job creation, affordable health care, education, stricter gun laws and progressive foreign policy. He has been among the Senates most liberal members and attacks President Trump on a regular basis.

Murphy recently said Trump is waging a very deliberate assault on the American health care system and called for Connecticut to create its own insurance mandate.

Murphy is seeking re-election in November.

Brian Flood covers the media for Fox News. Follow him on Twitter at @briansflood.

The rest is here:

Sen. Chris Murphy calls for more Silicon Valley censorship ...

Censorship of Facebook – Wikipedia

BangladeshEdit

Bangladesh (like Iran, China and North Korea) had banned Facebook before - the Bangladeshi ban operated for a short period of time[when?]. The Awami League-led government of Bangladesh announced a countrywide ban on Facebook and other social-network websites. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina (in office from 2009) proposed the establishment of an Internet monitoring committee with the help of Bangladesh's intelligence services. Right-wing political parties and groups in Bangladesh protested against bloggers and others they had considered "blasphemous" at the time of the proposal. Extremists in the country had murdered eight secularists , including atheist blogger Ahmed Rajib Haider, who was fatally stabbed in February 2013. National riots over the country's war-crimes trials resulted in the deaths of 56 people between 19 January 2013 and 2 March 2013.

On 18 November 2015 the same Awami League government banned Facebook again on the eve of the final judgement of Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami leader Ali Ahsan Muhammad Mujahid and Bangladesh Nationalist Party leader Salauddin Kader Chowdhury. Both the politicians and previous minister have been issued a death sentence by the War Criminals Tribunal and the review board of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh has finally given their judgement in favour of the previously given one.

The Bangladesh government lifted the ban on 20 December 2015. Facebook is accessible in Bangladesh as of late 2017.

In China, Facebook was blocked following the July 2009 rmqi riots because Xinjiang independence activists were using Facebook as part of their communications network.[5] Some Chinese users also believed that Facebook would not succeed in China after Google China's problems.[6] Renren (formerly Xiaonei) has many features similar to Facebook, and complies with PRC Government regulations regarding content filtering.

As of 20 August 2013, there have been reports of Facebook being partially unblocked in China.[7] However, according to the "Blocked in China" website, Facebook is still blocked.[8] Facebook is not blocked in Hong Kong and Macau.

Facebook was blocked for a few days in Egypt during the 2011 Egyptian protests.[9]

In July 2011, authorities in Germany began to discuss the prohibition of events organized on Facebook. The decision is based on numerous cases of overcrowding by people who were not originally invited.[10] In one instance, 1,600 "guests" attended the 16th birthday party for a Hamburg girl who accidentally posted the invitation for the event as public. After reports of overcrowding, more than a hundred police were deployed for crowd control. A police officer was injured and eleven participants were arrested for assault, property damage and resistance to authorities.[11] In another unexpectedly overcrowded event, 41 young people were arrested and at least 16 injured.[12]

In 2015, during the European migrant crisis with large numbers of immigrants entering the country unregulated, a broad discussion about the problems of mass immigration and politics of the actual government took place in social media. Early in 2016, a Bertelsmann company called "Arvato" was mandated to erase comments and contents from Facebook.[13] In the summer of 2016, police in fourteen German states began coordinated raids on the residences of individuals who praised the Nazi regime or referred to refugees as "scum" in a private Facebook group.[14] A law known as NetzDG went into effect starting in 2018 which mandates all websites in Germany, including Facebook, censor such illegal content.[15] A spokesperson for Facebook announced the company's opposition to the law on the grounds that it would lead to overblocking.[16]

The Hungarian government doesn't want to ban pages, but Facebook itself decided to ban a conservative website. Nobody can write posts or private messages if it contains the string "kuruc.info" or link to this conservative website.

The Indian government imposed a one-month ban on Facebook, Twitter, and other social networking sites in Kashmir Valley in 2017, due to public safety because the Indian government believed social media were being misused by anti-national and anti-social elements backed by Pakistan Army and Pakistan intelligence agencies including Inter-Services Intelligence. The ban was also placed to cut communication between the rebels, who were countering the efforts made by the Indian Army. [17]

After the 2009 election in Iran, the website was banned because of fears that opposition movements were being organized on the website.[3] However, after four years of the blocking of Facebook website, as of September 2013, the blocking of both Twitter and Facebook was thought to have been lifted without notice.[18]Iranians lost unrestricted access to Facebook and Twitter the next day, leaving many people wondering whether the opening was deliberate or the result of some technical glitch.[19]

In September 2016, the Cabinet of Israel has said to have agreed with Facebook to remove content that is deemed as incitement.[20][21][22] This announcement came after top Facebook officials met with the Israeli government to determine which Facebook accounts should be deleted on the grounds that they constituted as incitement. The Israeli interior minister's office has said that they agreed with Facebook representatives to create teams that would figure out how best to monitor and remove "inflammatory content" online. Critics of Israels policies are not happy with this move as they claim this is being used as a way to silence outspoken Palestinian civilians, activists and journalists. The activists argue that when they post material meant to critique alleged occupation, Israel sees it as encouraging violence.[23]

Facebook was blocked for a few days in Malaysia during the 2011 Egyptian protests.[9]

The Information and Communication Technologies Authority (ICTA) of Mauritius, ordered internet service providers of the country to ban Facebook on immediate effect, on the 8 November 2007 because of a fake profile page of the Prime Minister. Access to Facebook was restored on the next day.[24][25][26]

On February 5, 2008, Fouad Mourtada, a citizen of Morocco, was arrested for 43 days due to the alleged creation of a faked Facebook profile of Prince Moulay Rachid of Morocco.[27][28]

In April 2016, North Korea started blocking Facebook, "a move underscoring its concern with the spread of online information," according to The Associated Press. Anyone who tries to access it, even with special permission from the North Korean government, will be subject to punishment.[4]

On May 19, 2010, Lahore High Court ordered Facebook to be blocked. Facebook was blocked until May 31 after a competition page encouraged users to post drawings of Muhammad. The controversial page named Draw Muhammad Day had been created by a Facebook user in response to American cartoonist Molly Noriss protest to the decision of US television channel, Comedy Central to cancel an episode of the popular show South Park over its depiction of Mohammed. Noris had however disavowed having declared May 20 Draw Muhammad Day and had condemned the effort and issued an apology. The ban, implemented by the PTA, also resulted in a ban on YouTube and restricted access to other websites, including Wikipedia.[citation needed]

On 25 November 2017, the NetBlocks internet shutdown observatory and Digital Rights Foundation collected evidence of nationwide blocking of Facebook alongside other social media services, imposed by the government in response to the violent Tehreek-e-Labaik protests.[29][30][31] The technical investigation found that all major Pakistani fixed-line and mobile service providers were affected by the restrictions, which were lifted by the PTA the next day when protests abated following the resignation of Minister for Law and Justice Zahid Hamid.[32] Other websites including Twitter, YouTube and Dailymotion were also reportedly blocked by order of the PTA.[33]

In March 2018, Facebook was blocked in Sri Lanka due to racial hate speeches being rumored around the country via the social media which has caused many riots in the country by extremist groups. However this decision is not permanent.[34][35]

The Syrian government explained their ban by claiming the website promoted attacks on authorities.[36][37] The government also feared Israeli infiltration of Syrian social networks on Facebook.[36] Facebook was also used by Syrian citizens to criticize the government of Syria, as public criticism of the Syrian government used to be punishable by imprisonment.[36] In February 2011, Facebook was un-blocked from all ISP's and the website remains to be accessible.[38]

In November 2012, Tajikistan blocked access to Facebook in response to comments posted online, spreading mud and slander about President Emomalii Rahmon and various other officials.[39]

In the United Kingdom on April 28, 2011, the day before the wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton, a number of politically motivated Facebook groups and pages were removed or suspended from the website as part of a nationwide crackdown on political activity. The groups and pages were mostly concerned with opposition to government spending cuts, and many were used to organize demonstrations in a continuation of the 2010 UK student protests.[40][41][42] The censorship of the pages coincided with a series of pre-emptive arrests of known activists.[43] Amongst the arrestees were a street theater group planning an effigy beheading performance in opposition to the monarchy.[44]

A Facebook spokesman said the pages were disabled as part of a routine sweep because they were created with fake personal profiles, a violation of the companys term of service. In this case a number of the Facebook personal profile pages represented causes, rather than real people. Facebook "offered to help convert the profiles to pages that are designed to represent companies, groups or causes."[42] The spokesman went on to say that "the Met Police did not ask Facebook to take down this content."[41]

In March 2018, fascist far-right hate group Britain First, was removed by Facebook. The pages of the leaders of the party were also taken down following their arrest and incarceration.

Facebook was blocked in Vietnam for two weeks in May 2016 due to protest of dissidents.[45]

The rest is here:

Censorship of Facebook - Wikipedia

Project Censored – The News that Didn’t Make the News and Why

Project Censored interrogates the present in the same way that Oliver Stone and I tried to interrogate the past in our Untold History of the United States. It not only shines a penetrating light on the American Empire and all its deadly, destructive, and deceitful actions, it does so at a time when the Obama administration is mounting a fierce effort to silence truth-tellers and whistleblowers. Project Censored provides the kind of fearless and honest journalism we so desperately need in these dangerous times.Peter Kuznick, professor of history, American University, and coauthor, with Oliver Stone, of The Untold History of the United States

Project Censored brings to light some of the most important stories of the year that you never saw or heard about. This is your chance to find out what got buried.Diane Ravitch, author of The Death and Life of the Great American School System.

Hot news, cold truths, utterly uncensored.Greg Palast

Project Censored continues to be an invaluable resource in exposing and highlighting shocking stories that are routinely minimized or ignored by the corporate media. The vital nature of this work is underscored by this years NSA leaks. The world needs more brave whistle blowers and independent journalists in the service of reclaiming democracy and challenging the abuse of power. Project Censored stands out for its commitment to such work.Deepa Kumar, author of Islamophobia and the Politics of Empire and associate professor of Media Studies and Middle Eastern Studies at Rutgers University

The staff of Project Censored presents their annual compilation of the previous years 25 stories most overlooked by the mainstream media along with essays about censorship and its consequences. The stories include an 813% rise in hate and anti-government groups since 2008, human rights violations by the US Border Patrol, and Israeli doctors injecting Ethiopian immigrants with birth control without their consent. Other stories focus on the environment, like the effects of fracking and Monsantos GMO seeds. The writers point out misinformation and outright deception in the media, including CNN relegating factual accounts to the opinion section and the whitewashing of Margaret Thatchers career following her death in 2013, unlike Hugo Chavez, who was routinely disparaged in the coverage following his death. One essay deals with the proliferation of Junk Food News, in which CNN and Fox News devoted more time to Gangnam Style than the renewal of Ugandas Kill the Gays law. Another explains common media manipulation tactics and outlines practices to becoming a more engaged, free-thinking news consumer or even citizen journalist. Rob Williams remarks on Hollywoods deep and abiding role as a popular propaganda provider via Argo and Zero Dark Thirty. An expose on working conditions in Chinese Apple factories is brutal yet essential reading. This book is evident of Project Censoreds profoundly important work in educating readers on current events and the skills needed to be a critical thinker.-Publishers Weekly said about Censored 2014 (Oct.)

For ages, Ive dreamed of a United States where Project Censored isnt necessary, where these crucial stories and defining issues are on the front page of the New York Times, the cover of Time, and in heavy rotation on CNN. That world still doesnt exist, but we always have Project Censoreds yearly book to pull together the most important things the corporate media ignored, missed, or botched.Russ Kick, author of You Are Being Lied To, Everything You Know Is Wrong, and the New York Times bestselling series The Graphic Canon.

[Censored] should be affixed to the bulletin boards in every newsroom in America. And, perhaps read aloud to a few publishers and television executives.Ralph Nader

Buy it, read it, act on it. Our future depends on the knowledge this col-lection of suppressed stories allows us.San Diego Review

Those who read and support Project Censored are in the know.Cynthia McKinney

At a time when the need for independent journalism and for media outlets unaffiliated with and untainted by the government and corporate sponsors is greater than ever, Project Censored has created a context for reporting the complete truths in all matters that matter.... It is therefore left to us to find sources for information we can trust.... It is in this task that we are fortunate to have an ally like Project Cen-sored.Dahr Jamail

Project Censored is one of the organizations that we should listen to, to be assured that our newspapers and our broadcasting outlets are practicing thorough and ethical journalism.Walter Cronkite

One of the most significant media research projects in the country.I. F. Stone

In another home run for Project Censored, Censored 2013 shows how the American public has been bamboozled, snookered, and dumbed down by the corporate media. It is chock-full of ah-ha moments where we understand just how weve been fleeced by banksters, stripped of our civil liberties, and blindly led down a path of never-ending war.Medea Benjamin, author of Drone Warfare, cofounder of Global Exchange and CODEPINK.

Most journalists in the United States believe the press here is free. That grand illusion only helps obscure the fact that, by and large, the US corporate press does not report whats really going on, while tuning out, or laughing off, all those who try to do just that. Americansnow more than everneed those outlets that do labor to report some truth. Project Censored is not just among the bravest, smartest, and most rigorous of those outlets, but the only one thats wholly focused on those stories that the corporate press ignores, downplays, and/or distorts. This latest book is therefore a must read for anyone who cares about this country, its tottering economy, andmost important whats now left of its democracy.Mark Crispin Miller, author, professor of media ecology, New York University.

Project Censored shines a spotlight on news that an informed public must have... a vital contribution to our democratic process.Rhoda H. Karpatkin, president, Consumers Union

Censored 2014 is a clarion call for truth telling. Not only does this volume highlight fearless speech in fateful times, it connect the dots between the key issues we face, lauds our whistleblowers and amplifies their voices, and shines light in the dark places of our government that most need exposure.Daniel Ellsberg, The Pentagon Papers

Activist groups like Project Censored... are helping to build the media democracy movement. We have to challenge the powers that be and rebuild media from the bottom up.Amy Goodman

[Censored] offers devastating evidence of the dumbing-down of main-stream news in America.... Required reading for broadcasters, journalists, and well-informed citizens.Los Angeles Times

Continued here:

Project Censored - The News that Didn't Make the News and Why

Project Censored The News that Didn’t Make the News and Why

The staff of Project Censored presents their annual compilation of the previous years 25 stories most overlooked by the mainstream media along with essays about censorship and its consequences. The stories include an 813% rise in hate and anti-government groups since 2008, human rights violations by the US Border Patrol, and Israeli doctors injecting Ethiopian immigrants with birth control without their consent. Other stories focus on the environment, like the effects of fracking and Monsantos GMO seeds. The writers point out misinformation and outright deception in the media, including CNN relegating factual accounts to the opinion section and the whitewashing of Margaret Thatchers career following her death in 2013, unlike Hugo Chavez, who was routinely disparaged in the coverage following his death. One essay deals with the proliferation of Junk Food News, in which CNN and Fox News devoted more time to Gangnam Style than the renewal of Ugandas Kill the Gays law. Another explains common media manipulation tactics and outlines practices to becoming a more engaged, free-thinking news consumer or even citizen journalist. Rob Williams remarks on Hollywoods deep and abiding role as a popular propaganda provider via Argo and Zero Dark Thirty. An expose on working conditions in Chinese Apple factories is brutal yet essential reading. This book is evident of Project Censoreds profoundly important work in educating readers on current events and the skills needed to be a critical thinker.-Publishers Weekly said about Censored 2014 (Oct.)

Project Censored interrogates the present in the same way that Oliver Stone and I tried to interrogate the past in our Untold History of the United States. It not only shines a penetrating light on the American Empire and all its deadly, destructive, and deceitful actions, it does so at a time when the Obama administration is mounting a fierce effort to silence truth-tellers and whistleblowers. Project Censored provides the kind of fearless and honest journalism we so desperately need in these dangerous times.Peter Kuznick, professor of history, American University, and coauthor, with Oliver Stone, of The Untold History of the United States

Activist groups like Project Censored... are helping to build the media democracy movement. We have to challenge the powers that be and rebuild media from the bottom up.Amy Goodman

One of the most significant media research projects in the country.I. F. Stone

Project Censored brings to light some of the most important stories of the year that you never saw or heard about. This is your chance to find out what got buried.Diane Ravitch, author of The Death and Life of the Great American School System.

For ages, Ive dreamed of a United States where Project Censored isnt necessary, where these crucial stories and defining issues are on the front page of the New York Times, the cover of Time, and in heavy rotation on CNN. That world still doesnt exist, but we always have Project Censoreds yearly book to pull together the most important things the corporate media ignored, missed, or botched.Russ Kick, author of You Are Being Lied To, Everything You Know Is Wrong, and the New York Times bestselling series The Graphic Canon.

[Censored] should be affixed to the bulletin boards in every newsroom in America. And, perhaps read aloud to a few publishers and television executives.Ralph Nader

Censored 2014 is a clarion call for truth telling. Not only does this volume highlight fearless speech in fateful times, it connect the dots between the key issues we face, lauds our whistleblowers and amplifies their voices, and shines light in the dark places of our government that most need exposure.Daniel Ellsberg, The Pentagon Papers

Project Censored shines a spotlight on news that an informed public must have... a vital contribution to our democratic process.Rhoda H. Karpatkin, president, Consumers Union

Those who read and support Project Censored are in the know.Cynthia McKinney

Project Censored is one of the organizations that we should listen to, to be assured that our newspapers and our broadcasting outlets are practicing thorough and ethical journalism.Walter Cronkite

Project Censored continues to be an invaluable resource in exposing and highlighting shocking stories that are routinely minimized or ignored by the corporate media. The vital nature of this work is underscored by this years NSA leaks. The world needs more brave whistle blowers and independent journalists in the service of reclaiming democracy and challenging the abuse of power. Project Censored stands out for its commitment to such work.Deepa Kumar, author of Islamophobia and the Politics of Empire and associate professor of Media Studies and Middle Eastern Studies at Rutgers University

Buy it, read it, act on it. Our future depends on the knowledge this col-lection of suppressed stories allows us.San Diego Review

In another home run for Project Censored, Censored 2013 shows how the American public has been bamboozled, snookered, and dumbed down by the corporate media. It is chock-full of ah-ha moments where we understand just how weve been fleeced by banksters, stripped of our civil liberties, and blindly led down a path of never-ending war.Medea Benjamin, author of Drone Warfare, cofounder of Global Exchange and CODEPINK.

[Censored] offers devastating evidence of the dumbing-down of main-stream news in America.... Required reading for broadcasters, journalists, and well-informed citizens.Los Angeles Times

Hot news, cold truths, utterly uncensored.Greg Palast

At a time when the need for independent journalism and for media outlets unaffiliated with and untainted by the government and corporate sponsors is greater than ever, Project Censored has created a context for reporting the complete truths in all matters that matter.... It is therefore left to us to find sources for information we can trust.... It is in this task that we are fortunate to have an ally like Project Cen-sored.Dahr Jamail

Most journalists in the United States believe the press here is free. That grand illusion only helps obscure the fact that, by and large, the US corporate press does not report whats really going on, while tuning out, or laughing off, all those who try to do just that. Americansnow more than everneed those outlets that do labor to report some truth. Project Censored is not just among the bravest, smartest, and most rigorous of those outlets, but the only one thats wholly focused on those stories that the corporate press ignores, downplays, and/or distorts. This latest book is therefore a must read for anyone who cares about this country, its tottering economy, andmost important whats now left of its democracy.Mark Crispin Miller, author, professor of media ecology, New York University.

View original post here:

Project Censored The News that Didn't Make the News and Why

Banned Books That Shaped America | Banned Books Week

The Library of Congress created an exhibit, "Books that Shaped America," that explores books that "have had a profound effect on American life." Below is a list of books from that exhibit that have been banned/challenged.

(To learn more about challenges to books since the inception of Banned Books Week, check out the timeline created by ALA.)

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain, 1884

The first ban of Mark Twains American classic in Concord, MA in 1885 called it trash and suitable only for the slums. Objections to the book have evolved, but only marginally. Twains book is one of the most-challenged of all time and is frequently challenged even today because of its frequent use of the word nigger. Otherwise it is alleged the book is racially insensitive, oppressive, and perpetuates racism.

The Autobiography of Malcolm X, Malcolm X and Alex Haley, 1965 (Grove Press)

Objectors have called this seminal work a how-to-manual for crime and decried because of anti-white statements present in the book. The book presents the life story of Malcolm Little, also known as Malcolm X, who was a human rights activist and who has been called one of the most influential Americans in recent history.

Beloved, Toni Morrison, 1987

Again and again, this Pulitzer-prize winning novel by perhaps the most influential African-American writer of all time is assigned to high school English students. And again and again, parental complaints are lodged against the book because of its violence, sexual content and discussion of bestiality.

Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, Dee Brown, 1970

Subtitled An Indian History of the American West, this book tells the history of United States growth and expansion into the West from the point of view of Native Americans. This book was banned by a school district official in Wisconsin in 1974 because the book might be polemical and they wanted to avoid controversy at all costs. If theres a possibility that something might be controversial, then why not eliminate it, the official stated.

The Call of the Wild, Jack London, 1903

Generally hailed as Jack Londons best work, The Call of the Wild is commonly challenged for its dark tone and bloody violence. Because it is seen as a man-and-his-dog story, it is sometimes read by adolescents and subsequently challenged for age-inappropriateness. Not only have objections been raised here, the book was banned in Italy, Yugoslavia and burned in bonfires in Nazi Germany in the late 1920s and early 30s because it was considered too radical.

Catch-22, Joseph Heller, 1961

A school board in Strongsville, OH refused to allow the book to be taught in high school English classrooms in 1972. It also refused to consider Cats Cradle as a substitute text and removed both books from the school library. The issue eventually led to a 1976 District Court ruling overturning the ban in Minarcini v. Strongsville.

The Catcher in the Rye, J.D. Salinger, 1951

Young Holden, favorite child of the censor. Frequently removed from classrooms and school libraries because it is unacceptable, obscene, blasphemous, negative, foul, filthy, and undermines morality. And to think Holden always thought people never notice anything.

Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury, 1953

Rather than ban the book about book-banning outright, Venado Middle school in Irvine, CA utilized an expurgated version of the text in which all the hells and damns were blacked out. Other complaints have said the book went against objectors religious beliefs. The books author, Ray Bradbury, died this year.

For Whom the Bell Tolls, Ernest Hemingway, 1940

Shortly after its publication the U.S. Post Office, which purpose was in part to monitor and censor distribution of media and texts, declared the book nonmailable. In the 1970s, eight Turkish booksellers were tried for spreading propaganda unfavorable to the state because they had published and distributed the text. This wasnt Hemingways only banned book A Farewell to Arms and Across the River and Into the Trees were also censored domestically and abroad in Ireland, South Africa, Germany and Italy.

Gone With the Wind, Margaret Mitchell, 1936

The Pulitzer-prize winning novel (which three years after its publication became an Academy-Award Winning film) follows the life of the spoiled daughter of a southern plantation owner just before and then after the fall of the Confederacy and decline of the South in the aftermath of the Civil War. Critically praised for its thought-provoking and realistic depiction of ante- and postbellum life in the South, it has also been banned for more or less the same reasons. Its realism has come under fire, specifically its realistic portrayal though at times perhaps tending toward optimistic -- of slavery and use of the words nigger and darkies.

The Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck, 1939

Kern County, California has the great honor both of being the setting of Steinbecks novel and being the first place where it was banned (1939). Objections to profanityespecially goddamn and the likeand sexual references continued from then into the 1990s. It is a work with international banning appeal: the book was barred in Ireland in the 50s and a group of booksellers in Turkey were taken to court for spreading propaganda in 1973.

The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald, 1925

Perhaps the first great American novel that comes to the mind of the average person, this book chronicles the booze-infused and decadent lives of East Hampton socialites. It was challenged at the Baptist College in South Carolina because of the books language and mere references to sex.

Howl, Allen Ginsberg, 1956

Following in the footsteps of other Shaping America book Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman, Allen Ginsbergs boundary-pushing poetic works were challenged because of descriptions of homosexual acts.

In Cold Blood, Truman Capote, 1966

The subject of controversy in an AP English class in Savannah, GA after a parent complained about sex, violence and profanity. Banned but brought back.

Invisible Man, Ralph Ellison, 1952

Ellisons book won the 1953 National Book Award for Fiction because it expertly dealt with issues of black nationalism, Marxism and identity in the twentieth century. Considered to be too expert in its ruminations for some high schools, the book was banned from high school reading lists and schools in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Washington state.

The Jungle, Upton Sinclair, 1906

For decades, American students have studied muckraking and yellow journalism in social studies lessons about the industrial revolution, with The Jungle headlining the unit. And yet, the dangerous and purportedly socialist views expressed in the book and Sinclairs Oil led to its being banned in Yugoslavia, East Germany, South Korea and Boston.

Leaves of Grass, Walt Whitman, 1855

If they dont understand you, sometimes they ban you. This was the case when the great American poem Leaves of Grass was first published and the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice found the sensuality of the text disturbing. Caving to pressure, booksellers in New York, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania conceded to advising their patrons not to buy the filthy book.

Moby-Dick; or The Whale, Herman Melville,1851

In a real head-scratcher of a case, a Texas school district banned the book from its Advanced English class lists because it conflicted with their community values in 1996. Community values are frequently cited in discussions over challenged books by those who wish to censor them.

Native Son, Richard Wright, 1940

Richard Wrights landmark work of literary naturalism follows the life of young Bigger Thomas, a poor Black man living on the South Side of Chicago. Bigger is faced with numerous awkward and frustrating situations when he begins working for a rich white family as their chauffer. After he unintentionally kills a member of the family, he flees but is eventually caught, tried and sentenced to death. The book has been challenged or removed in at least eight different states because of objections to violent and sexually graphic content.

Our Bodies, Ourselves, Boston Womens Health Book Collective, 1971

Challenges of this book about the female anatomy and sexuality ran from the books publication into the mid-1980s. One Public Library lodged it promotes homosexuality and perversion. Not surprising in a country where some legislators want to keep others from saying the word vagina.

The Red Badge of Courage, Stephen Crane, 1895

Restricting access and refusing to allow teachers to teach books is still a form of censorship in many cases. Cranes book was among many on a list compiled by the Bay District School board in 1986 after parents began lodging informal complaints about books in an English classroom library.

The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne, 1850

According to many critics, Hawthorne should have been less friendly toward his main character, Hester Prynne (in fairness, so should have minister Arthur Dimmesdale). One isnt surprised by the moralist outrage the book caused in 1852. But when, one hundred and forty years later, the book is still being banned because it is sinful and conflicts with community values, you have to raise your eyebrows. Parents in one school district called the book pornographic and obscene in 1977. Clearly this was before the days of the World Wide Web.

Sexual Behavior in the Human Male, Alfred C. Kinsey, 1948

How dare Alfred Kinsey ask men and women questions about their sex lives! The groundbreaking study, truly the first of its scope and kind, was banned from publication abroad and highly criticized at home.

Stranger in a Strange Land, Robert A. Heinlein, 1961

The book was actually retained after a 2003 challenge in Mercedes, TX to the books adult themes. However, parents were subsequently given more control over what their child was assigned to read in class, a common school board response to a challenge.

A Streetcar Named Desire, Tennessee Williams, 1947

The sexual content of this play, which later became a popular and critically acclaimed film, raised eyebrows and led to self-censorship when the film was being made. The director left a number of scenes on the cutting room floor to get an adequate rating and protect against complaints of the plays immorality.

Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston, 1937

Parents of students in Advanced English classes in a Virginia high school objected to language and sexual content in this book, which made TIME magazines list of top 100 Best English-Language Novels from 1923 to 2005.

To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee, 1960

Harper Lees great American tome stands as proof positive that the censorious impulse is alive and well in our country, even today. For some educators, the Pulitzer-prize winning book is one of the greatest texts teens can study in an American literature class. Others have called it a degrading, profane and racist work that promotes white supremacy.

Uncle Tom's Cabin, Harriet Beecher Stowe, 1852

Like Huck Finn, Of Mice and Men and Gone With the Wind, the contextual, historically and culturally accurate depiction of the treatment of Black slaves in the United States has rankled would-be censors.

Where the Wild Things Are, Maurice Sendak, 1963

Sendaks work is beloved by children in the generations since its publication and has captured the collective imagination. Many parents and librarians, however, did much hand-wringing over the dark and disturbing nature of the story. They also wrung their hands over the babys penis drawn in In the Night Kitchen.

The Words of Cesar Chavez, Cesar Chavez, 2002

The works of Chavez were among the many books banned in the dissolution of the Mexican-American Studies Program in Tucson, Arizona. The Tucson Unified School District disbanded the program so as to accord with a piece of legislation which outlawed Ethnic Studies classes in the state. To read more about this egregious case of censorship, click here.

Go here to see the original:

Banned Books That Shaped America | Banned Books Week

FACT – Freedom Against Censorship Thailand …

[FACT comments: Readers should be aware that Thailands MICT is continuing its plan to consolidate the current ten international Internet gateways (IIG) into a single gateway to facilitate monitoring and censorship.

Even worse, the official Thai government documents leaked by TNN show that MICT is implementing plans to compromise encrypted SSL Internet transactions to pursue Thailands Great Firewall strategy.

If this still does not worry the ordinary person who relies on the Internet every single day, SSL is what makes online banking secure, among many other sorts of Internet transactions and all online commerce possible.

Put away that credit card!]

Single Gateway .... SSL

Thai Netizen Network: May 26, 2016

“Single Gateway” ?????? ?.?????????????.?.?.????? ??????????????????????????????? SSL

20 ...

7 SSL (Secure Socket Layer) Public-key encryption

7 public-key encryption

SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) TLS (Transport Layer Security) https

... (..) .. . 19 2559 (.) 20 [ 15 20 (4)] 15 [ 9 15] SSL public-key encryption 15

20 ...

15

163/2557 ( . () 12/2557 19 .. 2557) (SSL : Secure Socket Layer)

163/2557 4 1. (SSL : Secure Socket Layer) 2. (International Internet Gateway)

163/2557

Man-in-the-Middle Attack

15

(url) (block list) https:// https://www.facebook.com/thainetizen https://www.facebook.com https://www.facebook.com/thainetizen https://www.facebook.com

... (.) 2559 . 2 3

http://chn.ge/1U9aVzS

5 ...

%MCEPAS%MCEPASTEBIN%

Download (PDF, 3.35MB)

mict-computer-crime-rational-slides-201605

Like Loading...

View original post here:

FACT - Freedom Against Censorship Thailand ...