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23narchy says...

Inconvenient truths

Dec 3rd 2009
From The Economist print edition

The most creative attempt yet to get around freedom-of-information laws?

STRETCHING the law on the disclosure of public documents has been a competitive sport among civil servants ever since the Freedom of Information (FoI) Act was passed in 2000. It requires public bodies to reveal information on request, but provides 23 get-outs, designed to protect secrets that ought to stay under wraps because they threaten national security, personal privacy and so on. The rules are often interpreted in a creative way.

Now The Economist has discovered a contender for the most inventive interpretation to date. After thinking about it for nearly two years and trying out various exemptions, the Home Office has refused to release a confidential assessment of its anti-drugs strategy requested by Transform, a pressure group. The reason is that next March the National Audit Office (NAO), a public-spending watchdog, is due to publish a report of its own on local efforts to combat drugs. The Home Office says that to have two reports about drugs out at the same time might confuse the public, and for this reason it is going to keep its report under wraps.

This is believed to be the first time that a public body has openly refused to release information in order to manage the news better. The department argues that releasing its internal analysis now “risks misinterpretation of the findings of the [NAO] report”, because its own analysis is from 2007 and predates the NAO’s findings. The argument uses section 36 of the FOI act, which provides a broad exemption for information that could “prejudice the effective conduct of public affairs”.

The information commissioner, who polices the FOI act, declined to comment because the case was still open. But his predecessor, Richard Thomas, who stepped down in June, questioned the novel defence. “Certainly my office was always quite sceptical of anything which said publishing information is going to confuse the public. If that’s the case, normally you need to put out some extra material alongside it to provide adequate explanation. It’s not a reason for withholding something.”

Sir Alan Beith, the chairman of the parliamentary Justice Committee, which oversees the FOI act, was sharply critical of the Home Office’s excuse. “That’s really scraping the barrel. On those grounds you would have to ban the various hospital reports that are coming out at the moment [see article] because the public are confused about that too. It’s not an argument for censorship, it’s an argument for an even more open and clear debate.” The Home Office was making “a quite ridiculous attempt to hide from freedom of information,” he said.

The legality of the decision is also in doubt, after the department admitted that its refusal to release the document had not been approved by a minister, as is required by law. A Home Office spokeswoman called it an “administrative error”. Retrospective ministerial authorisation was being sought as The Economist went to press.

Legally or not, the Home Office will be able to hang on to its report for now because the FOI act takes so long to enforce. The commissioner’s office is said to be ready to order the release of the report now. If it does, the Home Office has 28 days to launch an appeal, which could take a year. In the meantime, drugs policy will continue to be shaped—or not—by research that the public paid for but may not see.

Filed under: censorship

chrisbailey says...

Dangerously Funny: The Uncensored Story of "The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour"

Dangerously Funny: The Uncensored Story of "The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour"

I heard David Bianculli talk about his book on NPR's Fresh Air yesterday and was fascinated by just how courageous the Smothers Brothers were during the 60s. Sometimes you have to create a crapstorm to stand up for your principles when opposed by those in power.

Any Smothers Brothers fans out there with stories about their show in the 60s?

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jeffisageek says...

Filed under: censorship

Barry Quinn says...

My daughter just finished reading Judy Blume's novel 'Are you there God, its me Margaret?'. The book is 40 years old yet she was totally unaware that so much has changed since the book was written.

The book follows a young girl on the cusp of puberty in search for answers on religion, periods and bras. There were so few places for a young girl to turn to for advice in 1970, and so many topics that were deemed taboo (the 1980's saw a movement to try an ban the book from school boards). In contrast we appear to be awash with places to get information. And few topics are deemed so taboo you can't get an answer.

What would Margaret do if the book were written today? Would she seek answers on the blogosphere? Is there a Facebook group she might join? Perhaps a bra or panty liner brand has a site that helps tweens on the cusp? She could always just Google it or wait for Tyra and Oprah to bring it up.

I think the answer is yes, she would do one if not all of those things. They would be helpful and they would give her answers and let her know that she is just like many other girls. And that would be a minor miracle of a new medium, just as Rock and Roll was for a previous generation.

Margaret would be filled with information, data, connections and options, but would she have a better understanding?

As great as the digital age is and as affirming as the shared experience of the internet might be, I think Margaret might still seek the kind understanding a 40 year old book can offer and a 40 year blog could not ;)

Barry Quinn.
 

Photo Credit: © Joseph Szabo

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FROM: http://www.prisonplanet.com/rush-limbaugh-censors-mention-of-prison-planet-from-his-own-archives.html

Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet.com
Friday, November 20, 2009

Neo-Con talk show host Rush Limbaugh has sensationally censored any mention of Prison Planet.com from his own transcript archives after he discussed a story we had posted yesterday about Al Gore using Photoshop to insert fake hurricanes into the cover of his new book on global warming.

The original transcript posted on Limbaugh’s website accurately carried the statements he made on his show yesterday, which included the words, “And the website where this is taken place is PrisonPlanet.com.”

The transcript page also featured an image of Limbaugh with a screenshot of the Prison Planet logo behind him.

However, both the Prison Planet logo and Limbaugh’s mention of the website, owned by Texas radio host Alex Jones, have since been “memory-holed” from the Limbaugh archives.

Limbaugh originally featured a huge link at the top of his website to Prison Planet, but all links have now been deleted from the archives.
In the new version of the transcript, the words, “And the website where this is taken place is PrisonPlanet.com,” have been culled, despite the fact Limbaugh clearly said them, as can be verified via the You Tube clip at the bottom of this page.

Any links to the Prison Planet.com story, which were prominently featured all over Limbaugh’s website, have also been deleted and replaced with a similar story by Newsbusters, a Neo-Con news website.

What caused Limbaugh to order the material removed? Our guess is that he was probably bombarded with e mails from the legions of virulently retarded Neo-Cons that make up the audience of phony right-wing websites like Free Republic, on which all Alex Jones material is aggressively banned.

It’s highly unlikely that Limbaugh ordered his webmaster to link to Prison Planet.com by mistake, he knows who we are because he’s attacked us on several occasions before. But any hopes that Limbaugh may be abandoning his Neo-Con base and coming across to the Ron Paul/Libertarian perspective appear to be dashed.

As one of our forum members put it, “I knew I was too optimistic to think that Limbaugh may have had a conscience.”

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23narchy says...

What is your government doing to people behind this fence? Your tax dollars are helping keep you in the dark about it. (Press TV photo)

What is your government doing to people behind this fence? Your tax dollars are helping keep you in the dark about it. (Press TV photo)

The U.S. has blocked the release of photos showing clear evidence that the United States is responsible for torture in Iraq and Afghanistan. We think someone with access to the photos should simply leak them on the web, saving tax payers a load of cash and letting people know just what it is our twin occupations are really about. We are calling on anyone who has access to the images to leak them and anyone else to copy this message and post it in order to increase the chance of it reaching anyone who might have access.

Secretary of Defense Robert Gates won’t allow new photographs showing prisoners in Afghanistan and Iraq being abused by Americans military personnel. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has taken the issue to court, and is suing for the release of 21 color photos under the Freedom of Information Act. Ultimately, this lawsuit will win, but why waste the taxpayer dollars to hide from tax payers what they’re funding in Afghanistan and Iraq?

Federal courts already rejected the White House arguments that the photos must be kept from public view. In respponse to this, Congress — which is largely populated by people who supported both invasions, knowingly swallowing vast doses of false information as if it were fact — gave Gates new power to keep them private.

We know the U.S. military and its many contractors are involved in torture and humiliation of detainees, actions in violation of both U.S. and international law. Evidence has been published in the past and it was shrugged off under the “few bad apples” plea. We know this isn’t the case and these new photos are yet still more tangible proof of that.

If you have access to these photos, release them. If you don’t have access to these photos, please cut and paste this call anywhere you can and let’s create a viral plea to someone with the power to be a whistle blower. Don’t wait for the courts.

 

Filed under: censorship

Filed under: Censorship

  Jorge Hernandez (PHOTO: Jose Mendez / European Pressphoto Agency / October 28, 2009)

A popular music group sees itself censored--is this fair? Or is this just fighting the war on drugs in a rather heavy-handed style?

Los Tigres del Norte, Mexico's superstar norteño band, abruptly canceled its participation Wednesday in a major awards show after it was barred from performing a song critical of the government's campaign against drug cartels.

The band, best known for its corridos, or Spanish ballads, chronicling the legendary exploits of drug traffickers, had already traveled to Mexico City from homes in Los Angeles for Wednesday night's event. Organizers of the show insisted the band refrain from playing its latest single, "La Granja" ("The Farm"), the group's record label, Universal Music Group, said in a statement.

"They have to explain to us the reason for this censorship," Tigres leader Jorge Hernandez said, referring to the organizers.

"We always sing what the people want to hear, and what the people are living," added Hernandez, a vocalist who also plays the accordion that gives the Tigres their distinctive sound.

Los Tigres' repertoire spans four decades and includes so-called narcocorridos about drug smugglers. It is regarded as the first Mexican band to make the illicit business an acceptable topic in popular music. Critics complain that the music glorifies the drug trade, and a number of radio stations over the years have refused to air some cuts. Los Tigres, whose members come from the state of Sinaloa, have always maintained they are not apologists for traffickers, merely singing about reality.

It makes me think of the controversy over "Cop Killer" and over the Vietnam War, for starters. In our culture, Los Tigres would be heralded as telling it like it is--perhaps accorded the same respect as Rage Against the Machine. In Mexico, you don't criticize anything the government does, and therein lies the problem. This is why Mexico is having a difficult time adjusting to the realities of an informed citizenry. If the sentiment of the people is to lament the reality in which they live and enjoy it through popular music, then there's no threat to the existence government; there's a threat to the popularity of the government. In this way, the celebrity of the musical group makes it a legitimate critic of what's going on--a part of the social consciousness of the society that has elevated them. Celebrity success, in my book--using it to talk about what is going on and to raise awareness. No one has to be told they are suffering. To hear it in a song is to hear it articulated in a way that makes the suffering universal. Real change in Mexico won't happen if the will of the people cannot be heard.

Hence, you have a banana republic to the south where people are being murdered over drugs and the only way the Mexican government can deal with that is to crank up the phony outrage and ban a musical group.

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glennm says...

http://views.washingtonpost.com/world-wide-wilbon/wilbon/2009/10/censorship_at_fedex.html

There's something about telling people to take down these signs and not talk about their displeasure publicly which has struck a raw nerve. People who weren't especially motivated to object to the hideous parking arrangements or the cheesy nature of the gameday suddenly have crossed over and joined people who were openly angry already.

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