Monthly Archives: February 2014

CAFETERIA MAN (DIRECTOR INTERVIEW) – Video

Posted: February 15, 2014 at 7:40 am


CAFETERIA MAN (DIRECTOR INTERVIEW)
Independent Film Director, Richard Chisolm discusses his film CAFETERIA MAN with FSTV. CAFETERIA MAN premiers Tuesday, Feb. 18th @9pm ET only on Free Speech TV.

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Mihir S Sharma: Cultural straitjackets

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India's penal code, written by occupiers in the aftermath of a devastating revolt that was more, perhaps, about cultural imperialism than the political kind, is increasingly shown to be a thing of its time, one increasingly distant from ours. Section 377 is out of phase with an age that understands sexual freedom is an essential part of personal freedom. But Section 295A, which criminalises speech that offends religion, has nowhere near as much notoriety.

It should, perhaps. The recent withdrawal by Penguin India of an "alternative history" of Hindus and Hinduism by Professor Wendy Doniger demonstrates the degree to which the persistence of such laws on the statute book can have what is called a "chilling effect" - in which private parties control their own speech or that of others to comply with an all-encompassing law. In its much-delayed explanation for the withdrawal, the publishing house blamed Section 295A in particular, although the only immediate case on its hands was a civil, not a criminal, complaint. However, if the civil case was close to being lost, criminal charges might well have been filed soon - specific complaints are referred to in the annexure of the agreement that Penguin signed.

Much time has been wasted mis-allocating blame for the withdrawal of Professor Doniger's book. Yes, naturally the set of petitioners - obscurantist and fundamentalist voices led by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh's point man on "education" - would like to see books banned. That isn't surprising. What did you expect? It's the RSS. They're not fans of alternative histories, unless they're the ones writing it. They are being true to themselves by objecting to it. Yes, naturally Penguin India eventually withdrew when faced with a determined opponent linked to a powerful family of social organisations that includes the party expected to rule this country next year. What did you expect? They are a private sector company whose responsibility is to their shareholders and duty is to maximise profits. Which shareholder wants to see cash bleed into legally defending an asset that is depreciating fast, like a four-year-old hardback? And spare me the self-righteous claptrap about the "commodification" of books and knowledge. If you don't want writing commodified, then don't sign a contract with a profit-maximising company. Release it, for free, on the Internet. Penguin India, too, is being true to itself by withdrawing.

The blame rightly belongs, as always, to what shapes such people's decisions: the law. In this case, the law empowered the objectors and disempowered those who did not - Penguin, the author, and her potential readers. In that absence, it is a bit much to high-handedly demand a firm we don't own to take on the costs of working to change or defy the law. If enough of us care enough, perhaps there is a special market for "books that can be legally challenged", and we should pay a litigation premium for them over and above the regular price - intellectual blood money, paying for our access to possibly forbidden thought.

Or, perhaps, we should just focus on changing the law. Like much else in the Indian Penal Code, Section 295A is a defacement of India's claim to being a modern, liberal culture. There are other such - most of all, perhaps, the First Amendment to the Constitution that unnecessarily and dangerously restricted free-speech provisions. But amending the Constitution is harder than changing the penal code. That, at first, should be the focus of all those who are outraged.

Laws that put culture in a straitjacket do not deserve to survive. For there are always those who will take advantage of such provisions, to use state power to quench dissent. It is intriguing, after all, to examine the complaints of those who think Professor Doniger's book is a fit target for their ire, and are choosing to fire over the shoulders of an illiberal state. Irrespective of the merits of Professor Doniger's book - which I encourage you to judge for yourself - it is worth examining, for clues to the culture spawned by such laws, the nature of the anger at her project. Professor Doniger wishes, she claims, to give voice to the many different forms of Hindu practice, a dazzling and bewildering variety that nevertheless manage, in their myriad manifestations, to be recognisably Hindu. The strength of the religion lies in its ability to be different and yet compelling for any number of different people - be they Dalit or transgendered, recent converts or vague cultural legatees. This very feature of the religion is a bug to those who despise Professor Doniger; for them, any diversion from the pseudo-Abrahamic, Brahminical narrative they espouse is dangerous. Laws that control speech and culture will be used, always, by those with greater power - the guardians of what historian Vijay Prashad calls the "bourgeois" manifestation of religion, in this case - to minimise challenges to their authority. There is no free culture without free speech. There is no free religion without free speech. Laws that stifle speech in order to "protect" religion in fact do the precise opposite.

mihir.sharma@bsmail.in

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Mihir S Sharma: Cultural straitjackets

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Appeals court finds Nevada school's uniform policy unconstitutional

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SAN FRANCISCO A public elementary school decided in 2011 to require students to wear a uniform with the school's motto, "Tomorrow's Leaders," emblazoned in small letters on the shirts around a gopher, the campus mascot.

One parent objected to the uniforms and eventually sued, contending they violated the 1st Amendment's guarantee of free speech.

In a unanimous ruling Friday, a three-judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit largely agreed with her. The panel said the words "Tomorrow's Leaders" potentially violated students' right to free speech and the uniform policy must go unless the school district can justify it under a legal standard that is difficult to meet.

The "policy compels speech because it mandates the written motto, 'Tomorrow's Leaders,' on the uniform shirts," wrote Judge Jacqueline H. Nguyen, an Obama appointee, who was joined by two judges selected by Republican presidents.

The panel also found problematic a uniform exemption for students who wore the attire of national youth organizations like the Boy Scouts or Girl Scouts on meeting days.

"The exemption explicitly favors the uniforms of the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts over all other uniforms and favors the uniforms of 'nationally recognized' youth organizations over those of locally or regionally recognized youth organizations," the court said.

The lawsuit was filed against Roy Gomm Elementary School in Reno, but the ruling would affect public school uniforms in California and other Western states. Siding with the mother were a student organization and a national legal foundation that advocates for religious liberty.

Eugene Volokh, a professor of constitutional law at UCLA, who represented the mother without charge before the 9th Circuit, said public schools may enforce strict dress codes, but may not require people to wear clothing with messages, even if they don't seem particularly controversial.

"What is ideological and what is not is often in the eye of the beholder," said Volokh, a conservative 1st Amendment scholar with libertarian views. "You can't be compelled to become a moving billboard for the state's messages."

He said the school motto could be viewed as "a subtle message that glamorizes leadership and conveys the idea that people think the school is producing leaders."

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Appeals court finds Nevada school's uniform policy unconstitutional

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penguin-logo.jpg

Posted: at 7:40 am

February 14, 2014

Publisher Penguin today blamed India's "intolerant" laws for its decision to pull and pulp a book on Hinduism in the country, that sparked a furious free speech row.

Days after agreeing to withdraw a 2009 book "The Hindus: An Alternative History" to settle a court battle, Penguin India insisted it was committed to free thought and expression.

But Penguin said it also "has the same obligation as any other organisation to respect the laws of the land in which it operates, however intolerant and restrictive those laws may be."

"We also have a moral responsibility to protect our employees against threats and harassment where we can," its statement added.

Penguin drew fire from writers and champions of free speech over its decision on Monday to pull the book rather than fight the case, brought by an activist group which took offence at the depiction of the Hindu religion.

The book's author, American scholar Wendy Doniger, said she was "angry and disappointed" all copies would be pulped in India, but she defended Penguin, part of the publishing giant Penguin Random House.

Doniger also said she was "deeply troubled" about what the decision meant for free speech in India.

Booker prize-winning Indian author Arundhati Roy this week called on Penguin to explain why it "caved" in to the academics even though there "was no fatwa, no ban, not even a court order".

In an open letter to Penguin, her own publisher, Roy said: "There will soon no doubt be protestors gathered outside your office, expressing their dismay."

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Freedom Walk Africa | #ylfreedomwalk – Video

Posted: February 14, 2014 at 12:46 pm


Freedom Walk Africa | #ylfreedomwalk
FOR MORE INFO PLEASE VISIT http://YLFreedomWalk.org Young Life Africa started the Freedom Walk with a prayer walk up Mt. Kilimanjaro ten years ago. This walk...

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Small Business Phone Systems – Freedom – Video

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Small Business Phone Systems - Freedom
Freedom Your Office - Run a business from a cell phone http://milliondollarsmallbusinessphonesystem.wordpress.com/ With the help of a small business phone sy...

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Assassin's Creed IV – Freedom Cry – Osa 7 – Video

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Assassin #39;s Creed IV - Freedom Cry - Osa 7
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AC 4: Freedom Cry DLC #8 – – Video

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AC 4: Freedom Cry DLC #8 -
Assassin #39;s Creed IV: Black Flag ============================== http://www.seosprint.net/?ref=2447791 ========...

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What Are You Willing to Do For Financial Freedom? – by Auret Esselen – Video

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What Are You Willing to Do For Financial Freedom? - by Auret Esselen
"Create Lifestyle Freedom Series" ... What Are You Willing to Do For Financial Freedom? Connect with us on Facebook@ http://fb.com/myfreedomnow Global Wealth...

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Project Freedom – Breaking through to making money – Video

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Project Freedom - Breaking through to making money

By: Stephen Hales

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