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Press Freedom

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Trial of Accused in Politkovskaya Murder to Be Held in Open Court

November 18, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Despite urging from the Russian prosecutors and the potential national-security implications of a case involving at least one former FSB (successor to KGB) agent, the trial of those accused of conspiring in the killing of journalist Anna Politkovskaya will be held in open court. The first trial hearings began “behind closed doors”, and Karina Moskalenko —a human rights lawyer working with Politkovskaya’s family— was allegedly poisoned while in France.

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US Ranked Number 36 in the World for Press Freedom

October 24, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

According to a new report from Reporters sans Frontiers, the United States is tied for 36th in the world for press freedom, with Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cape Verde, South Africa, Spain and Taiwan. Of the nations that rank above the US, the report lists Mali, Ghana, Namibia, Jamaica, Surinam, as well as states formerly controlled by the Soviet Union such as the three Baltic states —Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania—, and Slovakia. France ranked 35th, just ahead of the US.

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Identity Crisis: Are Conservatives Hurting their Cause by Hating Liberals?

October 20, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

It has for some time been a hallmark of American politics that conservative ideologues speak of “liberals” with disdain and condescension, and liberals view “right-wing” politics as nasty and unsavory. But the recent eruption of anger, vitriol and even violent hatred, from some individuals attending McCain-Palin rallies brings up the question of whether conservatives have blinded themselves to political reality, to the meaning of democracy, to the virtues of balance, by entertaining an irrational hatred of liberals.

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RNC’s First Night ‘Scaled Back’, Much Talk of Gustav; Journalists Detained by Police

September 2, 2008 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

The Republican party kicked off its nominating convention in St. Paul, Minnesota, last night, with a heavy focus on the plight of those displaced by Hurricane Gustav. Fortunately, the storm did not turn out to be “the storm of the century”, but it did leave over 1 million homes and businesses without electricity along the Gulf coast. So in an effort to avoid anything resembling the perceived indifference with which the catastrophic aftermath of Hurricane Katrina was met, the GOP has devoted significant time to voicing its support for efforts to send aid to the Gulf coast.

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FCC Chairman Says He Will Take Action to Prevent ISPs from Controlling Users’ Activities

July 14, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) will take regulatory action to prevent internet service providers (ISP) from blocking or controlling users’ access to online content. The announcement came from the FCC chairman after Comcast moved to manipulate internet access —limiting their freedom to navigate— who had engaged in file-sharing online services, presumably in an effort to control access to content for which the cable provider was not being paid per-content-access.

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Senate Approves Telecom Immunity, Bush Signs Expanded Wiretap Powers into Law

July 11, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

President George W. Bush yesterday signed an update to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) into law, after the Senate passed the controversial legislation, giving telecommunications firms retroactive immunity for cooperating with warrantless wiretapping conducted on American citizens, with no foundation in US law and in direct violation of the original FISA law, and the US Constitution. A federal court had ruled that the warrantless wiretaps violated the US Constitution, prompting a move by Pres. Bush and his allies in Congress to pass a new law correcting the legal problem.

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What the Market Doesn’t Know Can Hurt You, Whoever You Are

July 3, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

TheHotSpring.com :: Every participant in any system, is dependent upon the quality of information behind the major forces at play, just as any player in any system is beholden to the quality or jeopardy posed by the system’s prevailing methods. Free flow of information is the best hope of achieving the optimum level of functionality […]

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FCC Asked by Members of US Congress to Investigate Pentagon ‘Propaganda’ via Paid Military Analysts

June 11, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The Federal Communications Commission has been asked by leading members of Congress to investigate revelations about a Pentagon program to use retired military personnel, some working for defense contractors and arms manufacturers, to deliver “talking points” on US television in the months before the Iraq war. The viewing public was not informed of these officials’ special relationship to their former employer or of their ties to military contractors who stood to profit from the war.

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ABC News Comes Under Fire for Tabloid-Style Debate Questions

April 20, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

GUARDIAN BLOG CLASSES IT “WORST. DEBATE. EVER.”
Two ABC News reporters were criticized for the quality of the debate questions they posed to the two senators competing for the Democratic nomination for the US presidency. Some critics have said the questions were reminiscent of the kind of exaggerations and innuendo typical of “character-assassination” campaigns waged by […]

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Web 3.0 Must Make Information More Free, the Individual More Autonomous

March 25, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

We are on the verge of a major communications and global economic revolution, in which major media, technological advances, cloud computing and dispersed optimization, adapt to and take over new models for living and producing in human society. The New Scientist magazine reports in its March 15-21, 2008 edition that “web 3.0 will be about making information less free”.

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Whistleblower Fmr. FBI Agent Says Corrupt US Officials May Have Let Nuclear Secrets Go to Terrorists

January 9, 2008 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

Sibel Edmonds was a translator at the FBI when she overheard, in taped wiretaps, conversations that involved US officials at high levels organizing and taking bribes in exchange for dealing nuclear secrets to the black market. The Sunday Times, a London-based Rupert Murdoch-owned newspaper, has now broken the story, after years of Edmonds being turned away by the US press, due to an unprecedented “state secrets privilege” gag order. The world press is taking note, while US media outlets continue to keep quiet or not investigate.

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SPECIAL NEWS ALERT: AT&T Announces Plans to Inspect & Filter Internet Traffic & Content

January 9, 2008 :: admin :: One Comment

AT&T is proposing the implementation of new filtering technologies “at the network level” that would essentially interrupt in a definitive way the public’s freedom to access online content. The concept known as ‘net neutrality’ refers to consumers and netizens’ ability to freely gain access to any site, paid or unpaid, without major telecommunications companies programming […]

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AT&T ANNOUNCES PLANS TO INSPECT & FILTER INTERNET TRAFFIC & CONTENT

January 9, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

PLANNED FILTERING WOULD END OPEN INTERNET AS IT HAS EXISTED UNTIL NOW, REPLACING IT WITH STRATIFIED, PREMIUM-BRAND CONTROLLED CONTENT FORMAT
AT&T is proposing the implementation of new filtering technologies “at the network level” that would essentially interrupt in a definitive way the public’s freedom to access online content. The concept known as ‘net neutrality’ refers to […]

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FLAG ON THE LAPEL, A NO-ISSUE COMMENT

October 7, 2007 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

Flag on the lapel… the quality of debate in American political punditry has reached the near absurd, when months before any primary vote, nationally syndicated columnists and commentators on one of the most serious shows in political analysis attempt to assess whether or not a candidate is ‘ready’ based on the unserious question about wearing […]

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JOURNALISM STUDENT TASERED BY POLICE AFTER ASKING HARD QUESTIONS OF SEN. KERRY

September 24, 2007 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

WAS HE ELECTROCUTED BY POLICE FOR USING OBSCENITY OR FOR ASKING UNCOMFORTABLE QUESTIONS OF A POLITICIAN? WHICH OF THE TWO IS MORE UNCONSTITUTIONAL?
Last week, a journalism student attending a speech by Sen. John Kerry (D-MA), at the University of Florida, was cuffed, electrocuted and detained by police while posing a series of hard questions to […]

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NET NEUTRALITY: A NECESSARY PRINCIPLE FOR MAINTAINING GLOBAL DEMOCRATIC STANDARDS

August 9, 2007 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

THE OPEN INTERNET IS A FORCE FOR DEMOCRACY & OPEN GOV’T, NOW IT IS UNDER THREAT FROM THOSE WHO WISH TO BOTTLENECK THE FREE PRESS
The concept of ‘net neutrality’ refers to the current state of affairs in the free democracies of the world, where those who control the physical infrastructure of the Internet are not […]

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Rupert Murdoch Wins Bid to Buy Dow Jones, Wall St. Journal

August 2, 2007 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

BANCROFT FAMILY SHAREHOLDERS GIVE ENOUGH SUPPORT TO LET DEAL GO THROUGH, MURDOCH WILL CONTROL WALL STREET JOURNAL
Controversial media tycoon Rupert Murdoch, through his company Newscorp, has reportedly persuaded the Bancroft family, which holds a controlling interest in the financial company Dow Jones, to sell the firm for $5.6 billion, giving him control of the Wall […]

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‘OBJECTIVELY VERIFIABLE TRUTH NOW SUSPECT’

October 9, 2006 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

REPORT ON MOUNTING CENSORSHIP, DENIAL OF FILMS TO U.S. AUDIENCE SUGGESTS NEWS MEDIA NOW TREAT FACT ITSELF AS INHERENTLY BIASED
1. The problem as such
The foundation of a free society is a press with the freedom to criticize instruments of power and influence and to reveal wrongdoing as it actually takes place. War is not a […]

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The Illusion of the Definite & Invasive ‘Other’

May 25, 2006 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Is the United States an “English-speaking nation”, or a place where all cultures are welcome to converge, mix and evolve? To answer this question, we must consider that there is a natural human tendency to fear what is perceived as the definite and invasive “other”, that which is different and which we feel can be categorized in a way that fits our worries.

The push to establish a single national language can only be sustained on the basis of a number of false premises. We will explore seven such lies and misperceptions here, all of a particular sort, having to do with a way of rationalizing one’s aversion to difference or to change. And, in each case, it is fairly easy to illustrate how the lie works against the interests of both a democratic society and American tradition itself.

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Fmr. VP Al Gore Gives ‘Trans-partisan’ Speech on Dangers of Extra-Constitutional Abuses

January 17, 2006 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Former US Vice President Al Gore gave what is being described as an historic non-partisan speech, calling for a passionate nationwide movement to defend and uphold the Constitution of the United States. Gore gave the speech in a non-partisan context, speaking at the Daughters of the American Revolution hall, with the express support and participation of Representative Bob Barr, Republican of Georgia.

The speech was attended by both Republicans and Democrats and thousands of people who fear that new arguments made by the Executive branch for expanded police powers pose a serious threat to the nation’s system of government and the rule of law.

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Transcript of Gore Speech for Liberty Coalition, Endorsed by Rep. Bob Barr (R-GA)

January 16, 2006 :: staff :: One Comment

Congressman Barr and I have disagreed many times over the years, but we have joined together today with thousands of our fellow citizens-Democrats and Republicans alike-to express our shared concern that America’s Constitution is in grave danger.

In spite of our differences over ideology and politics, we are in strong agreement that the American values we hold most dear have been placed at serious risk by the unprecedented claims of the Administration to a truly breathtaking expansion of executive power.

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