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Daily Archives: February 3, 2015
Freedom of Speech (Censorship) PSA – Video
Posted: February 3, 2015 at 6:45 pm
Freedom of Speech (Censorship) PSA
AVID PSA.
By: Vlad C.
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Freedom of Speech (Censorship) PSA - Video
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Reddit shadowbans user in front of Julian Assange – Video
Posted: at 6:45 pm
Reddit shadowbans user in front of Julian Assange
I didn #39;t create this. Reddit user is shadowbanned in a AMA thread for Julian Assange after asking for his opinion on the recent censorship of gamergate. ------------------------ Transcript:...
By: Just Chill Gaming
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Indias Censorship Board Bleeped Out Bombay From a Music Video
Posted: at 6:45 pm
TIME World India Indias Censorship Board Bleeped Out Bombay From a Music Video Thierry FaliseLightRocket/Getty Images The Mumbai central railway station, today named Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, is formerly known as Victoria Terminus "I'm not calling it Constantinople or Atlantis or whatever"
Mihir Joshi, an Indian musician recording his first album last year, needed a word to rhyme with today in one of his songs and found one that he thought fit perfectly. But Indias Central Board of Film Certification disagreed, and replaced it with a beep when the music video debuted on TV over the weekend.
The word they had an issue with, much to Joshis surprise, was Bombay.
I started laughing and I said, What are you talking about? the 33-year-old singer told the New York Times.
Bombay is the former name of Indias financial capital of over 20 million people, but in 1995 it was changed to Mumbai on the demands of the right-wing party governing the city at the time. The party claimed Bombay was a symbol of British imperialism, and changed it to better represent local culture. Similar renaming initiatives were implemented in other Indian cities like Kolkata (formerly Calcutta), Chennai (formerly Madras) and Bengaluru (formerly Bangalore).
But old habits die hard, and many Mumbai citizens still refer to the city as Bombay. In fact, as the Wall Street Journal points out, there are several private and government institutions that have retained the colonial-era name.
I have nothing against the word Mumbai, Joshi added. Im not calling it Constantinople or Atlantis or whatever.
The boards decision prompted outrage from several Twitter users, whose choice of hashtag ironically made #Bombay the top trend in Mumbai on Monday.
"Mumbai" doesn't do justice to a great city's personality. Try changing Bollywood to Mollywood. Sounds funny. Stick to #Bombay #BombayVelvet
Tanvir Akhtar (@mtanvirakhtar) January 31, 2015
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Indias Censorship Board Bleeped Out Bombay From a Music Video
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How reporters are experiencing censorship on social media
Posted: at 6:45 pm
In mid-January, a number of journalists were notified by Twitter that a Turkish court had issued an order for their tweets to be removed after a judges complaint called the tweets defamatory. Many of the tweets were about a controversial court case he launched against police officers whose wiretapping investigation he had previously approved, and many of them mentioned the judge by name. Aysun Yazc, a court reporter for the daily newspaper Taraf, deleted her tweet after receiving an email from Twitter.
As a correspondent, I just shared a piece of news that was true with my followers. Sharing this kind of news with people is my job, Yazc said. Her colleague, Tarafs political editor Dicle Batrk, received a similar notification and did not delete her tweet. She says its still visible. Days later, Batrk received another email from Twitter informing her that the company may still have to remove it.
Examples of media-related censorship on social media keep piling uplast week, Facebook withheld images of the Prophet Muhammad for users in Turkey, reportedly acting in response to a court order. Social media companies dont break down their data on withheld content showing whether journalists are specifically targeted by government removal requests. But the notifications that Yazc and Batrk received point to wider evidence that journalists are experiencing censorship on social media. Where this kind of censorship occurs, it isnt isolated: In Turkey and Russia, where journalists have been impacted by removal requests on social media, theyre under pressure in other media too.
Turkey is a standout example of how gag orders (sometimes called injunctions or reporting bans) are used to stifle media coverage of breaking news. Over the past year, gag orders therewhich prohibit reporting in broadcast, print, and online mediahave coincided with removal requests on Twitter and Facebook. And Elif Akgl, freedom of expression editor for the Istanbul-based news website Bianet, said the governments use of reporting bans has spiked in that time.
There have been a lot of media bans in the last 10 years, but most concerned coverage of family courts. But when we talk about bans on political issues, there were a lot more of those in 2014, Akgl said.
But political injunctions on reporting arent limited to Turkey: Last June, Wikileaks revealed, for example, that an Australian court had issued a super-injunction (which prohibits reporting on the injunction itself) on bribery allegations against politicians from other countries.
When governments issue gag orders, social media companies can find themselves on the defensive: Though beholden to users, they sometimes comply with foreign governments requests to remove allegedly illegal content. Freedom of expression activists have criticized Facebook and Twitter for complying in countries where they do not have offices or are not subject to jurisdiction, because when court-ordered reporting bans are enforced by social media companies, through withholding journalists or their sources accounts or content, an important source of information is endangered in already restricted media environments. During the 2009 presidential elections in Iran, (the countrys press status was rated not free last year by Freedom House) media outlets from outside the country relied on news shared by Twitter users there.
Adrian Shahbaz, a researcher with Freedom Houses Freedom on the Net project, says in recent years, there have been prominent cases of media coverage being prohibited on specific topics in the UK, Israel, and Brazil, where courts have granted government-issued injunctions about topics ranging from discussions held in parliament to prominent arrests and corruption investigations. But theyre hard to enforce online.
Now governments are looking to in some cases create new laws and in other cases enforce laws that have in the past only been applicable to print media. The overall trend is that internet freedom is declining and peoples freedom to express themselves on social media is declining, Shahbaz said.
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Economic Collapse and Martial law in 2015 – Ron Paul – Video
Posted: at 6:45 pm
Economic Collapse and Martial law in 2015 - Ron Paul
Economic Collapse and Martial law in 2015 - Ron Paul.
By: Dollar collapse 2015
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Falling Oil Prices Shake Up Global Economies – Video
Posted: at 6:44 pm
Falling Oil Prices Shake Up Global Economies
Feb. 2 -- The U.S. is benefitting from lower gas prices at the pump, but that has not yet translated to a spending boom as consumer spending fell 0.3 percent in December. Bloomberg #39;s Matt....
By: Matthew Hardy
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Secession and Liberty | Ron Paul – Video
Posted: at 6:44 pm
Secession and Liberty | Ron Paul
The growing number of secession movements around the world gives rise to our topic: breaking away from current government structures that do so much harm to liberty, peace, and prosperity....
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Paul: Vaccines linked to disorders
Posted: at 6:44 pm
During the interview, with CNBC's Kelly Evans, Paul yawns, interrupts Evans and at one point motions for her to be quiet with a finger to his lips.
He also reproaches her for a "slanted" interview that he says "got no useful information because you were argumentative, and you started out with so many presuppositions that were incorrect."
RELATED: Paul, Christie show support for voluntary vaccines
Paul, who is an ophthalmologist, also asserts that he's heard of cases where vaccines have caused "profound mental disorders."
"I've heard of many tragic cases of walking, talking, normal children who wound up with profound mental disorders after vaccines," Paul said. "I'm not arguing vaccines are a bad idea. I think they're a good thing. But I think the parents should have some input."
Asked for evidence of those claims, Paul campaign spokesman Sergio Gor didn't address them and instead said that while Paul largely supports vaccines, "many" should be voluntary.
RELATED: Chris Christie sidesteps vaccine science
"Dr. Paul believes that vaccines have saved lives, and should be administered to children. His children were all vaccinated. He also believes many vaccines should be voluntary and like most medical decisions, between the doctor and the patient, not the government," he wrote in an email to CNN.
On Tuesday, Paul further clarified his stance, saying he didn't say vaccines caused disorders.
"I did not say vaccines caused disorders, just that they were temporally related -- I did not allege causation. I support vaccines, I receive them myself and I had all of my children vaccinated," Paul said in a statement. "In fact today, I received the booster shot for the vaccines I got when I went to Guatemala last year."
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Posted: at 6:44 pm
I do not recall, when I was growing up or as a young adult, ever thinking that the issue of vaccinations was a political issue. Now, thanks to the infusion of libertarian sensibilities into the body politic, and a culture in which choice is always the ace of trumps, vaccinations are a political football. It is to weep.
First, there was Gov. Chris Christie on a trip to the United Kingdom. He was trying to demonstrate his foreign policy bona fides I suppose, and certainly the issue of vaccines was not on the top of his list of things to be prepared to discuss while taking questions in the streets of London. But, the sudden outburst of measles stateside, which unlike Ebola is highly contagious, led to the question and, in his answer, Christie gave an unnecessary nod to parental choice. Somewhere, deep in the recesses of his intellect, there was a default switch that clicked on: When discussing family issues, do not forget to mention parental choice. And so he did. And so he looked very foolish.
Gov. Christie is not a libertarian in any meaningful sense of the word. But, Sen. Rand Paul swims in those waters, indeed we could say he was baptized politically in those waters. As if on cue, and ignoring the fact that for vaccines to achieve their medical benefit, we all have to take them, Sen. Paul turned to his binary view of the world in which the state is Leviathan, eager to devour first your rights and then, apparently, your children. The state doesnt own your children, he said eagerly. Parents own the children. And it is an issue of freedom and public health. The choice of the verb own to describe the relationship between children and parents is a little frightening. And, he does not square freedom and public health, which may make separate conclusions, on this issue, just leaves them out there like exclamation marks in search of a sentence.
The episode shows everything that is deplorable about libertarianism. First, and I invite my conservative Catholic friends to take special note of this, in Sen. Pauls binary vision of the state versus individual freedom there is as little room for civil society, and the Church, as there is in your worst collectivist nightmare. If it is all one or the other, there is no role for mediating institutions or, at least, they will quickly be relegated to the sidelines of political and intellectual discourse. Before the god freedom, all libertarians bow and grovel.
Second, as was pointed out by E.J. Dionne on one of the talk shows last night, the episode highlights another problem with libertarianism. While it can provide a certain cast of mind with a neat, tidy intellectual framework for explaining the world, once libertarianism gets applied to reality, it tends not to bear up very well. The real world exhibits nuance and conflicting values that must be weighed, it has exceptions to be sure, but more than exceptions it has an uncanny knack for requiring similar ideals to be applied differently in different situations. As an ideological construct, I am not much of a fan of libertarianism, but even if you are, you need to recognize, as Sen. Paul never really does, that in the application of those ideas, libertarianism tends to become either too rigid or too brittle to work.
Check out the eBook collection of Pat Marrin's "Francis" cartoons. Learn more.
When Pope Francis says that reality is superior to ideas, he is telling us Catholics something very important about the very heart of our faith. Our incarnational faith certainly recognizes the importance and value of reason, but it tethers reason to both faith on the one hand and real-lived experience on the other. Pope Benedict XVI emphasized this as well, stating in the opening sentences of his first encyclical, Deus Caritas Est: We have come to believe in God's love: in these words the Christian can express the fundamental decision of his life. Being Christian is not the result of an ethical choice or a lofty idea, but the encounter with an event, a person, which gives life a new horizon and a decisive direction. Saint John's Gospel describes that event in these words: God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should ... have eternal life (3:16). The historic vocation of the Catholic Church in civil society is to provide a bulwark against any ideology that denies the human persons transcendence. And, in our day, the principle method of denying such transcendence is choice and freedom understood as ideological constructs and political tools.
Let us be clear: This cuts against both the left and the right. It always makes me laugh when I watch MSNBC and they are discussing abortion and they warn against the dangers of having the government in the examining room and then you flip to Fox, and they are discussing the Affordable Care Act and they, too, frighten everyone with the prospect of the government in the examining room. Neither side seems to even recognize the irony because their fear of government intrusion is not principled in the least.
Libertarians, at least, get high marks for consistency. But, in a culture in which choice is the preeminent value, there are many, many things that culture cannot accomplish because they require everyone to buy in, if I may be permitted a commercial metaphor. Vaccines are ones such issue. They dont work if only half the population gets them. To work, the compliance rate has to be above 97%. Of course, in Europe, where medical care actually is socialized, very few countries require vaccinations but they have an almost 100% compliance rate nonetheless. Sen. Paul can put that sociological datum into his libertarian pipe and smoke it.
Which leads to one other aspect of libertarianism today: I do not know what they have been smoking, but they have a penchant for embracing some really bizarre ideas. In an interview yesterday, Sen. Paul did his best imitation of former Cong. Michelle Bachmann. She once said that she knew a woman whose child was vaccinated and the vaccine caused mental retardation. Yesterday, Sen. Paul noted there were many tragic cases of walking, talking, normal children who wound up with profound mental disorders after vaccines. Really? This is the medical equivalent of the Gold Standard, which many libertarians also embrace, or the idea that mammoth new trees can be genetically created to deal with climate change. Libertarianism seems almost uniquely to be the part of American politics where conspiracy theories and other idiocies find fertile soil.
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