Daily Archives: March 12, 2012

Global media watchdog names enemies of Internet

Posted: March 12, 2012 at 8:43 pm

PARIS (AP) The Arab Spring is changing the face of Internet freedom, according to Reporters Without Borders, which released its latest "Enemies of the Internet" list Monday.

The annual report classifies as "enemies" countries that severely curtail freedom of expression on and access to the Web. It also draws up a list of states "under surveillance."

The group added Bahrain to its enemies list, citing a news blackout and harassment of bloggers in an attempt to quell a yearlong Shiite-led rebellion against the Sunni monarchy.

The country had previously been under surveillance.

"Bahrain offers a perfect example of successful crackdowns, with an information blackout achieved through an impressive arsenal of repressive measures: exclusion of the foreign media, harassment of human rights defenders, arrests of bloggers and netizens (one of whom died behind bars), prosecutions and defamation campaigns against free expression activists, disruption of communications," the Paris-based group's report said.

But the Arab Spring the name given to a cascade of revolts across the Arab world has also led to the opening up of some regimes.

Libya, where the repressive rule of Moammar Gadhafi was thrown off in a violent revolt, was removed from the list of countries under surveillance.

"In Libya, many challenges remain but the overthrow of the Gadhafi regime has ended an era of censorship," the report said.

The group said that the Arab Spring had also highlighted the importance of the Internet and therefore the importance of protecting access to and expression on it.

"The Internet and social networks have been conclusively established as tools for protest, campaigning and circulating information, and as vehicles for freedom," the group said. "More than ever before, online freedom of expression is now a major foreign and domestic policy issue."

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Global media watchdog names enemies of Internet

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Liberty comes from behind to win title

Posted: at 8:42 pm

By: BY BENJAMIN CATES | For The Register & Bee Published: March 12, 2012 Updated: March 12, 2012 - 9:20 AM

HIGH POINT, N.C. You dont usually think of a team learning something from a win. That phrase is typically reserved for squads on the losing side.

But after top-seeded Liberty defeated host High Point, 81-73, to capture its 14th Big South tournament championship and earn another automatic bid to the NCAA tournament, the Lady Flames walked away knowing a little more about themselves.

With senior center Avery Warley limited to just 23 minutes of action after being hampered by foul trouble early, Liberty had to look elsewhere for a spark. Enter junior guard Devon Brown.

Luckily for Liberty, Brown really enjoys playing in the Millis Center. She scored a career-high 29 points here in a win over High Point in 2010.

Brown (24 points, 14 rebounds) took grit and determination to another level on Sunday.

Devon Brown is as good as they get, Liberty coach Carey Green said. This was an outstanding game. She wanted to win and she wanted to go to the Big Dance.

Freshman guard Reagan Miller added 15 points and eight assists and Warely (14 points, 12 rebounds) still found a way to get her 15th double-double of the season by adding eight points when Liberty needed them in a critical second-half stretch.

While they cruised to the finals with big wins over UNC-Ashville and Charleston Southern, Liberty struggled to overcome a scrappy, physical High Point squad that looked to knock off them off for the second time this year. The two teams previously split a pair of meetings this season.

Liberty found it difficult to contain junior guard Erin Reynolds as the Panthers squeaked by the Lady Flames by four points in January. A month later, the Liberty needed double-digit scoring from five players to down the Panthers.

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Liberty comes from behind to win title

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Solange Knowles' Son Julez Accused Of Making Illuminati Hand Sign

Posted: at 8:42 pm

Solange Knowles' son Julez has been accused of making an Illuminati hand sign by one of the star's Twitter followers.

The youngster was celebrating his ninth birthday party over the weekend and proud mother Solange was busy snapping away. One photo which she posted on her Twitter page, shows the Julez throwing up a rockstar hand sign, however, one Twitter user interpreted this as him pledging allegiance to the Illuminati.

"@solangeknowles Cute. But do you know that he's throwing up the baphomet hand sign? The bloggers will have a field day with this pic Solange," the Twitter user wrote.

Solange seemed to ignore the attack on her son, and instead focused on making Julez birthday special.

"Julez is having a Bey Blade Battle at the house today," she wrote.

"My plan of action... get the moms feeling good on sangrias.... get the kids feeling good on cookies."

What do you make of the Illuminati rumours surrounding the Carter and Knowles families?

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Solange Knowles' Son Julez Accused Of Making Illuminati Hand Sign

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Editorial Board: The right of protection

Posted: at 8:41 pm

DOES THE Second Amendment protect an individual right to carry a gun outside the home?

Last week, a federal judge in Maryland concluded that it does and in the process struck down a Maryland licensing provision for carrying concealed weapons in public.

Judge Benson Everett Legg of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Maryland issued a thoughtful and measured decision but one that should be reviewed by the federal appeals court.

Marylands laws concerning concealed-carry permits are among the countrys most restrictive. To obtain such a permit, an applicant must undergo a criminal background check and provide employment verification and medical and psychiatric history. The board that assesses requests must also take into account an applicants propensity for violence or instability, and it must determine that the applicant has a good and substantial reason to carry a concealed weapon. Security guards, armored-car drivers and others whose professions expose them to danger often meet this latter requirement, but permits may also be issued to those who prove that carrying a concealed weapon is necessary as a reasonable precaution . . . against apprehended danger.

Until 2009, Raymond Woollard was one of the roughly 47,000 individuals in possession of a Maryland concealed-carry permit. Mr. Woollard obtained the permit in 2003 after his intoxicated son-in-law broke into Mr. Woollards home and threatened the family. The state renewed Mr. Woollards permit in 2006, shortly after the son-in-law was released from prison, but it refused to do so three years later after concluding Mr. Woollard could no longer prove he needed the permit for self-protection. Mr. Woollard sued, arguing that the states licensing scheme stomped on his Second Amendment rights.

Judge Legg agreed, building on the 2008 Supreme Court decision that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to keep and bear arms. The court emphasized the saliency of the right especially in the home and especially for self-defense. Judge Legg concluded that the Constitution and the high courts holding must also be read to protect an individuals right to carry weapons outside the home. Marylands good and substantial requirement impermissibly infringed on that right, he said.

A citizen may not be required to offer a good and substantial reason why he should be permitted to exercise his rights, Judge Legg concluded. The rights existence is all the reason he needs.

Maryland will appeal, as it should. Judge Legg makes a serious argument that the Maryland law impermissibly burdens the individual with proving he is entitled to exercise his rights; the burden should be on the government to show why an individual should be stripped of that right.

But the state has a duty to protect public safety, and careful oversight of who can walk around with lethal weapons may be a legitimate component of that. Judge Legg too quickly dismisses as a rationing scheme the states compelling interest in maintaining order in the public arena. Second Amendment rights should be respected, but public safety need not be thrown out in the process.

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Editorial Board: The right of protection

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