Sharp Rise In Jailing of Online Journalists; Iran May Just Kill Them
bckspc writes "The Committee to Protect Journalists has published their annual census of journalists in prison. Of the 136 reporters in prison around the world on December 1, 'At least 68 bloggers, Web-based reporters, and online editors are imprisoned, constituting half of all journalists now in jail.' Print was next with 51 cases. Also, 'Freelancers now make up nearly 45 percent of all journalists jailed worldwide, a dramatic recent increase that reflects the evolution of the global news business.' China, Iran, Cuba, Eritrea, and Burma were the top 5 jailers of journalists."
rmdstudio writes, too, with word that after the last few days' protest there, largely organized online, the government of Iran is considering the death penalty for bloggers and webmasters whose reports offend it.
One good step towards making imprisonment and mistreatment of journalists a big international no-no would be for all the major countries to openly ban their intelligence agencies (the CIA, MI6, etc.) from using operatives posing as journalists, or hiring journalists for intelligence gathering purposes. One of the arguments a lot of these oppressive governments use when they imprison journalists is that these journalists are actually spies. And in at least some cases, they probably actually ARE spies (particularly with freelancers and bloggers with no connection to reputable news organizations). It would be nice if we could at least have the CIA come out openly and bluntly and say to the world community "We don't do this, under any circumstances" the next time some petty tyrant claims that the journalists he's caught are working for the CIA. As it is, anyone wandering into a foreign country and asking questions, journalist or not, is going to be wearing a big target on their chest that says "Possible intelligence operative." The tyrant wouldn't care if we denied it, but it would do a lot to encourage the world community to go to bat for more journalists if they had some sort of assurance that the sanctions they were imposing were on behalf of actual legitimate journalists, not James Bond wannabes with fake press credentials.
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
Are we being prepared for an American invasion of Iran? Last time I saw this much propoganda was just prior to the invasion of Iraq.
Got that, slashdot "editors"? It would be shame for yous to get tangled up with the laws, capiche? Just saying.
Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
Who does the most journalist jailing in proportion to the total population? Or to the total number of journalists in the country?
Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
There's going to be a large, violent revolution soon.
OK I get the others, but who the hell are "Eritrea"? They must do a REALLY good job of arresting reporters as I have never heard of this country before!
But I remember reading a story here just a few days ago where nearly everyone was going on about how great the world would be without journalists. Why the sudden change of heart?
Iraq (in U.S. custody): 1
Ibrahim Jassam, freelance
Imprisoned: September 2, 2008
Jassam, a freelance photographer working for Reuters, was detained by U.S. and Iraqi forces during a raid on his home in Mahmoodiya, south of Baghdad, Reuters reported. At the time of the arrest, a U.S. military spokesman told CPJ that the journalist was deemed “a threat to the security of Iraq and coalition forces.”
In November 2008, the Iraqi Central Criminal Court ruled that there was no evidence to hold Jassam and ordered the U.S. military to release him, Reuters reported. U.S. military authorities rejected the court order, saying that he “continued to pose a serious threat to the security and stability of Iraq.”
The military has disclosed no evidence against Jassam, and he has never been charged with a crime.
U.S. troops have detained dozens of journalists—mostly Iraqis—since the war in Iraq began in March 2003, CPJ research found. In at least 12 cases, journalists were held for prolonged periods without charge or due process. In all other cases, the journalists were freed without charges ever being substantiated.
How about detaining all Iranian diplomats until all jounalists are freed.
I know that technically this is not allowed, but then again, jailing innocent people is not a generally accepted practice either.
years at this. I doubt all the angst here in the states or Europe amount to a hill of beans. I see that our current Administrations new stance was accepted with glee by the leaders of Iran who more than likely feel they can now act with impunity since we have a real wimp in the White House.
Note to the current Administration, Bush didn't create the bad guys by labeling them, they were bad, he just gave us a sign.
Any successful revolution in that country is not going to come off without outside assistance. Considering that no one wants to do anything to stop them from creating a bomb who in the hell do you think is going to help their people? What? A bunch of geeks insuring their message gets out? WOW, ask me how well that helped the Chinese concerning that little incident with tanks in a certain square, ask me how well that works now when we have a new Administration that told the Chinese that human rights were not their pressing concern. We have an Administration in the US which indirectly encourages these dictatorships.
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
oh wait... looks like they are just giant dictatorship that oppresses workers, a fact that we capitalists love to take advantage of.
think of it! no unions, no free press, no environmental regulation! we could take things back to the good old days, like they were in the 1850s!
fuck 'modern progress'.
No facts, just opinion.
If I'm an Iranian and I make $0.30 a month from Google AdSense on my blog which reviews the latest Xbox games, and I use the release of Assassin's Creed II to launch into a bourbon and chocolate ice cream-fueled rant against everything Persian, and I'm arrested, am I an unjustly incarcerated journalist, or another idiot with too much time on his hands who doesn't know when to keep his mouth shut?
It's one of those fine points, I'm just asking...
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1468788&cid=30347904
i doubted the suggestion, modded insightful, that media control in iran is just like in the usa. a further insightful reply to my trollmodded comment started discussing the idea of "manufacturing consent." which i actually don't have a problem with as a description of a real negative issue with the media in the usa. however: as if such a concept is remotely like anything what they do with the media in iran
why do people not understand that no matter how much you dislike the usa or big media in the west, or how many real and genuine problems you can find with the media and civil rights enforcement in the west, that what iran is doing is far, far more vile, according to the widest range of subjective and objective measurements, and not even remotely comparable?
what iran does to its citizens and how it handles rights internally can't possibly compare to the status quo in the west if you claim the slightest amount of intellectual honesty. iran is off the charts. there is no equivalency, period
no matter how much you hate the usa or how large your grievance is with the FOREIGN policies of western governments, when you try to equate what happens in the west DOMESTICALLY with what iran does with its citizens, you only cheapen and disqualify the moral and logical basis for your opposition to the west. you make a fool of yourself, because you do not appear to be someone who is truly speaking from moral principles, you only appear to be geopolitically posturing. you're not concerned with making the world a better place. you're concerned with vendettas. you do not demonstrate a mental ability to appreciate concepts like scale, perspective, and context when formulate an equivalence between domestic rights and media manipulation in the west and iran. do you really understand what iran freely engages in in the suppression of its citizens? do you honestly want to compare that to anything the west does to its citizens?
you need to demonstrate an actual well-defined set of moral principles. if you do that, you will find a need on your own part to criticize iran for what it does to its citizens. or at the very least, if criticism of the west is your only concern, you need to stop trying to steer a discussion of the horrid crimes iran commits internally into a discussion of the far smaller set of domestic crimes committed in the west. the west is NOT innocent. however, the crimes the west commits domestically isn't even remotely as vile as what iran commits domestically. really
in regard to the subject matter of abuse of citizens and media manipulation, if in your mind you cannot help but to confuse iran and the usa's domestic policies, you only demonstrate an irrational bias on your part, not any real moral principles or logical backbone
please, by all means, be my guest, continue to criticize the west. as someone who truly and genuinely holds free expression of opinion as a bedrock principle, i support your right to speak your mind, even if i disagree with it. but one wonders how you handle the cognitive dissonance of pointing out anthills while the mountain looms in the discussion
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
(Lybia has playing such a game against Switzerland, BTW)
Ok, if you start the "let's do it too in retaliation" game, then what differences will be between you and the "eeevil bad guys" your are fighting against ? I mean appart some basic schoolyard excuse as "They started first ?".
If you lower your standards, you aren't distinguishable any more from the guys you're fighting against. If one day you win, it'll be simply a case of "meet the new boss, same as the old boss".
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
=======
They actually have a lot in common with certain conservative religious groups here in the US. Bob forbid those retards ever get their hands on the levers of power. We'd have bloggers on death row within the year.
=======
Please cite?
Errr..didnt think so...
Nice try.
Can you say PROJECTION?
Come to think of it... Seems the liberal side is all about that
Democrats trying to criminalize citizen journalism
By: Mark Hemingway
Commentary Staff Writer
12/03/09 5:10 PM EST
An amendment to a bill currently being considered by the Senate would deny ordinary citizens doing vital investigations in the public interest the same legal protections as professional journalists. If it were to become law, the change could significantly stifle important citizen journalism efforts similar to the recent ACORN expose.
The Senate is currently considering a new press shield law sponsored by Sen. Arlen Specter, D-Pa. The bill would "maintain the free flow of information to the public by providing conditions for the federally compelled disclosure of information by certain persons connected with the news media." Except that Sen. Diane Feinstein, D-Cal., and Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., want to ensure that any new journalistic protections would only apply to professional journalists and not regular citizens. An amendment filed by Durbin and Feinstein would modify the legislation to define journalists thusly:
AMENDMENTS intended to be proposed by Mrs. FEINSTEIN (for herself and Mr. DURBIN)
Viz:
In section 10(2)(A), strike clause (iii) and insert the following:
(iii) obtains the information sought while working as a salaried employee of, or independent contractor for, an entity--
(I) that disseminates information by print, broadcast, cable, satellite, mechanical, photographic, electronic, 1or other means; and
(II) that--
(aa) publishes a newspaper, book, magazine, or other periodical;
(bb) operates a radio or television broadcast station, network, cable system, or satellite carrier, or a channel or programming service for any such station, network, system, or carrier;
(cc) operates a programming service; or
(dd) operates a news agency or wire service;
In section 10(2)(B), strike ''and'' at the end.
In section 10(2)(C), strike the period at the end and insert ''; and''.
In section 10(2), add at the end the following:
(D) does not include an individual who gathers or disseminates the protected information sought to be compelled anonymously or under a pseudonym.
While the ACORN story has stung congressional Democrats and pointed out the deficiencies of the mainstream media, there's no basis for Durbin and Feinstein's amendment that seems anything other than vindictive or an attempt to protect the powerful. It's telling that bloggers on both the left and the right are in total agreement this is very bad law.
Reality is a bitch huh?
And we can't have THAT when sadly attempting to bash conservatives now can we?
MOD ME DOWN!!!!
I see a sharp rise in "country X is evil" stories.
The largest prime factor of my UID is 263267.
But they have FREE health care!
Those jailed "journalists" must be enemies of the Revolution and are attempting to take away the FREE health care from all the little brown peoples!
I wish we could put Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck in jail, but NO, some stupid Constitution keeps getting in our way!
Signed,
A "Progressive" Democrat.
like east timor
both countries are recent breakway provinces. eritrea used to be in ethiopia until 1993. east timor used to be in indonesia until 2000. eritrea was a largely muslim area in a largely christian ethiopia. east timor was a largely catholic region in a largely muslim indonesia
its a shame that religious strife holds the basis for so much grief and fragmentation in this world
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
Gee. I love the sourcing on the link about planned executions.
Maybe the US should just bomb and invade? It has worked so well, elsewhere.
"Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
"But regardless of the results, the US is still the world's worst place to be for freedom of the press. Or for anything, really."
"As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
that since bush pointed out his axis of evil of iraq, iran, and north korea, that one of the three (iraq) was invaded ostensibly because of nuclear research... and none was found. meanwhile, har har, the two that were not invaded have since accelerated their pursuit of nuclear weapons thousandfolds? hey, genius: if bush was more subtle in his approach, maybe the nuclear status of those two vile regimes wouldn't be so far along, did you consider that?
but i don't think subtly is your strong point. heavy handed arrogance appears to be the only american international attitude you appear ready to support. wow, you're such a credit to the country, thanks
mindlessly declaring your animosity to clearly vile regimes might make your chest thumping feel good, but it actually doesn't help. it in fact makes things far worse. because this atavistic animosity actually HELPS the regimes in north korea and iran: it gives them reason to crack down further yet on their long suffering populations in the name of fear of american intentions, and it actually increases their support in feelings of nationalism in the people living there. all they have to do is point at the actual words bush spoke, rather making up their own fearmongering, and everyone circles the wagons
so our current president, meanwhile, takes the INTELLIGENT and SUBTLE approach to defeating these vile regimes
but not good enough for you. he has to be criticized by idiots like yourself, who don't understand that obama's approach SERVES YOUR SAFETY AND YOUR COUNTRY BETTER
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
Number of journalists arrested in Iran: less than 5 Number of anti-Iran stories in US media: more than 100
If I just call myself a Journalist, and print up some business cards, and then murder someone-- Will I add to this statistic? If so, it's meaningless, and only demonstrates that in 2009 it's easier to call yourself a journalist without actually being one.
My Photography - http://ian-x.com
The Deathlings (comic) - http://thedeathlings.com
http://news.google.com/news?q=iran%20crackdown
http://www.amnesty.org/en/region/iran
etc
maybe you don't see the evidence because you're not making the slightest effort to see the obvious?
oh, this is where you disqualify all these observations because they are "western media". nevermind the fact you can find this news from all over the world, right? and as for blog posts: they couldn't possibly be from real iranians, its all cia propaganda, right?
all we need is a proper objective fact finding mission of actual abuse by the iranian regime on its own citizens, right? ok genius: lets go and form that fact finding mission. i think we will find the iranian government quite helpful in that regard
the iranian government distorts all media from iran... but you will not find reason to criticize the regime... until you find media that is undistorted from iran. chicken and egg, no?
or put it this way: if you find the evidence to be undependable, an assertion that all is milk and honey in iran is just as dubious as the assertion that all is not right, correct? in which case, you need to apply your mind, and look at the smoke and figure out if there is a fire
look at the amazing effort the cia is making in formulating youtube posts of abuse, of making up blogs and tweets, of all iranian observers of any ideological attitude united in their depictions of what is going on in iran, including expat iranians. and then conclude what? that the cia is really good at making shit up? pffffffft
iraq was a travesty of bad info. because of that, don't conclude ALL info you receive about american enemies is made up. or YOU compound the damage the iraq fiasco was
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
"That's probably because you don't pay much attention to the world. If you had, you may have heard of this African country called Sudan, and a particularly a region in it called Darfur..."
I've been glued to world news for most of the last five years and I had to look up Eritrea. I've also never heard of it before.
You might have made an excellent point after this phrase, or provided some details, but when I read the first line I thought to myself, "Condescending dick." So I never read the rest of your post.
but if your criticism is fucking stupid, i will criticize you for being fucking stupid
which is just as much my right of criticism as yours, right?
furthermore, bringing up bush is perfectly reasonable in this context. because it is a direct demonstration of the alternative approach to the one obama is taking that you are criticizing. it doesn't mean you support bush. it means: "what you are asking for is what bush did already, and it easily to demonstrate how fucking stupid it was"
and furthermore, if you were alive during the bush administration, why didn't you perceive that the approach bush took was so flawed? and if you could have made this observation, which really should be obvious to anyone by now, how can you find the rationale to criticize obama's approach?
bush's approach was stupid, correct? do you agree or disagree?
based on that, how can you criticize the alternative approach by obama?
and please don't bring up the abject stupidity of isolationism. if you think this is the way the usa should proceed in this world, oh man, just go study your history. it is beneath me the remedial historical lessons you should already know about why this approach is so flawed and frankly impossible for ANY country in this world to take
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
Yup...it got modded down...
As 'off topic' no less.. Nevermind that it has to do with a potential US law on journalists.
No surprise there...
The QOTD's should include:
A reality check on liberals has no place on slashdot.
======= They actually have a lot in common with certain conservative religious groups here in the US. Bob forbid those retards ever get their hands on the levers of power. We'd have bloggers on death row within the year. =======
Please cite?
Errr..didnt think so...
Nice try.
Can you say PROJECTION?
Come to think of it... Seems the liberal side is all about that
Democrats trying to criminalize citizen journalism
By: Mark Hemingway
Commentary Staff Writer
12/03/09 5:10 PM EST
An amendment to a bill currently being considered by the Senate would deny ordinary citizens doing vital investigations in the public interest the same legal protections as professional journalists. If it were to become law, the change could significantly stifle important citizen journalism efforts similar to the recent ACORN expose.
The Senate is currently considering a new press shield law sponsored by Sen. Arlen Specter, D-Pa. The bill would "maintain the free flow of information to the public by providing conditions for the federally compelled disclosure of information by certain persons connected with the news media." Except that Sen. Diane Feinstein, D-Cal., and Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., want to ensure that any new journalistic protections would only apply to professional journalists and not regular citizens. An amendment filed by Durbin and Feinstein would modify the legislation to define journalists thusly:
AMENDMENTS intended to be proposed by Mrs. FEINSTEIN (for herself and Mr. DURBIN)
Viz:
In section 10(2)(A), strike clause (iii) and insert the following:
(iii) obtains the information sought while working as a salaried employee of, or independent contractor for, an entity--
(I) that disseminates information by print, broadcast, cable, satellite, mechanical, photographic, electronic, 1or other means; and
(II) that--
(aa) publishes a newspaper, book, magazine, or other periodical;
(bb) operates a radio or television broadcast station, network, cable system, or satellite carrier, or a channel or programming service for any such station, network, system, or carrier;
(cc) operates a programming service; or
(dd) operates a news agency or wire service;
In section 10(2)(B), strike ''and'' at the end.
In section 10(2)(C), strike the period at the end and insert ''; and''.
In section 10(2), add at the end the following:
(D) does not include an individual who gathers or disseminates the protected information sought to be compelled anonymously or under a pseudonym.
While the ACORN story has stung congressional Democrats and pointed out the deficiencies of the mainstream media, there's no basis for Durbin and Feinstein's amendment that seems anything other than vindictive or an attempt to protect the powerful. It's telling that bloggers on both the left and the right are in total agreement this is very bad law.
Reality is a bitch huh?
And we can't have THAT when sadly attempting to bash conservatives now can we?
Yay, free press!
MOD ME DOWN!!!!
They did. I don't see how you're that off-topic though. They must have accidentally clicked "-1 offtopic" when trying to select "-1 inconvenient truth"
Good point. I find it fascinating that slashdot is quoting a web site called "iran video news" that is run out of Arizona. If this is the only source that is reporting Iran is "considering" the death penalty then why the fuck should we believe it? We already know that the United States runs an intense media propaganda network around the world, and used it domestically during the build up to the Iraq war. In terms of Iran's use of the death penalty, they are definitely more fascist than we are, and these executions should stop. At the same time, why don't we start looking at our OWN record? Wouldn't it be easier to end our own human rights transgressions before attacking those of other countries? We've imprisoned journalists, and we've executed people who were children when they committed their crimes, the mentally retarded, and have condemned to death many people who were probably innocent, so our high horse on capital punishment and the imprisonment of journalists is not particularly "high". We've also now started imprisoning without trial and even torture.
I am sad to see slashdot fall for this obvious propaganda. I thought you guys were good critical thinkers.
The current problems are a direct result of the messing the British and Americans have done in decades past. Iran really is right when it blames the rest of the world for the current situation. Mind you, doesn't mean they have to kill journalists, India has been screwed with a lot too, it doesn't.
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
Quick question: what is the mileage on your car? Or on your mom's car as she drives you the 1 mile to school?
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
And people thought the Republicans were bad...
Zooperman
From what I've read of the Koran, being a Muslim is an intensely self-centered act of surrender to God, in which no government or authority on earth can interfere with. You surrender your perceived control of your self and submit to God's will directly without an intercessor (Jesus or Mohammed or the Pope) because Islam is supposed to be based on the faith of Abraham, which is the progenitor to Judaism and Christianity. Historically, Mohammed never intended for a priesthood to arise (I'm basing this off Karen Armstrong's work, don't have a direct citation for you). He was emphatic that he was not to be worshipped, and the immediate founders of the ummah were not to be worshipped as well.
It appears to me that what you're referring to (regarding Islam and the state and how a Muslim can't be a muslim unless they are part of a nation state or something - you're very vague on that) is how Arab culture subsumed Islam and turned it into a political empire. Islam as politics and Islam as religion are two completely different animals, and the same can definitely be said for Christianity and Judaism. The muslim laws (shariah) you're referring to, are the collections of decisions made by later priests based on their interpretations of the Koran and given the weight of law. But they are not actually in the Koran, and they are subject to cultural interpretation and political whims. You would do better to study the Moors of Spain to see what a proper Islamic society was. As for the child-rapist thing, I would remind you that back then, it was customary for girls that young to wed men in Arab, Jewish, and even Christian culture. Hell, up until the beginning of the last century we had American Christian men marrying 12 and 13 year olds. So you're trying to pull a straw man argument there.
Your points, when you're attacking the political culture of Islam as defined by a state, are mostly valid. But you are making an error in combining Islam as political culture and Islam as religion. Unfortunately, I will concede to you that most people, many Muslims (and Christians, and Jews) make the same mistake. We are only human after all, and definitely not perfect
Here's to hot beer, cold women, and Glaswegian kisses for all.
to kick their Persian behinds one more time...
And it's amazing how many people^H^H^H^H^H^Huseful idiots in the USA that resonates with.
Thank you all so much for being simplistic tools of despots.
1. obama's nuanced approach. intelligent
2. bush's blunt approach. stupid
3. non-interventionism. DIFFERENT FUCKING SUBJECT MATTER
i thought the issue was obama's extending a hand to the iranian regime?
i did not know obama extending his hand was comparable to military intervention. oh, you didn't say MILITARY intervention? so you meant isolationism. no not that? well then what the hell is nonmilitary nonintervention? what the fuck are you saying?
here's an amazing wacky concept for you: how about obama extend his hand, and we don't intervene militarily? that sound possible to you? i think you mentioned something about constructing false binary choices? i did not know extending a hand to the vile iranian regime to undercut their self-reenforcing hostility was incompatible with military nonintervention. pfffffffft
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
are deafening
No wait, they are not.
Sorry, but you over estimate the the result.
First, it does not matter what our leaders do, as long as one American is breathing Arabian air we are in the wrong.
So whats our new White House going to do? Nothing. Just like they did the last street marches in Iran where many were killed. Oh I know our wonderful President probably stamped his feet but Iran's leadership couldn't give a rats ass about Obama. They have already dismissed him as a credible threat. Obama completely glazed over the first street marches and backs down FROM EVERYONE. Hell the only people he talks stern with are our allies. I guess he figures they are stuck with us.
Iran's leadership will kill who it wants and Obama and Company will act all knowing and loving because this is a photo op Presidency and not an action oriented Presidency. People looking to do away with oppressive dictatorships around the world one option with Obama as President, wait four years.
Look at Obama's policy on Darfur if you want to know the plight of those being oppressed and murdered world wide, more negotiation and words.
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
Dont' worry, even if they kill them, USA is still in the lead when it comes to killing journalists.
Check out Iraq statistics.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article12360.htm
should have their U.N. member status revoked. Of course, U.N. membership is already somewhat of a farce, the U.N. essentially now being a forum for cronyism, but it would at least take away another venue for people like Ahmadinejad to get up on a podium and spout hatred. Too bad we didn't keep Mossadegh around, huh?
I mean why bother reporting news. When we can have important stories like how "Country X is working on the next generation of product Y"
After the Kremlin exited Eastern Europe, the peoples of each nation in Eastern Europe rapidly established a genuine democracy and a free market. Except for Romania (where its people killed their dictator), there was no violence.
In Iran (and many other failed states), no external force is imposing the current brutal government on the Iranians. The folks running the government are Iranian. The president is Iranian. The secret police are Iranian. The thugs who will torture and kill democracy advocates are Iranian.
If the democracy advocates attempt to establish a genuine democracy in Iran, violence will occur. Why? A large percentage of the population supports the brutal government and will kill the democracy advocates.
Let us not merely condemn the Iranian government. We must condemn Iranian culture. Its product is the authoritarian state.
We should not intervene in the current crisis in Iran. If the overwhelming majority of Iranians (like the overwhelming majority of Poles) truly support democracy, human rights, and peace with Israel, then a liberal Western democracy will arise -- without any violence. Right now, the overwhelming majority clearly oppose the creation of a liberal Western democracy. The Iranians love a brutal Islamic theocracy.
The Iranians created this horrible society. It is none of our business unless they attempt to develop nuclear weapons. We in the West are morally justified in destroying the nuclear-weapons facilities.
Note that, 40 years ago, Vietnam suffered a worse fate (than the Iranians) at the hands of the Americans. They doused large areas of Vietnam with agent orange, poisoning both the land and the people. Yet, the Vietnamese do not channel their energies into seeking revenge (by, e. g., building a nuclear bomb) against the West. Rather, the Vietnamese are diligently modernizing their society. They will reach 1st-world status long before the Iranians.
Cultures are different. Vietnamese culture and Iranian culture are different. The Iranians bear 100% of the blame for the existence of a tyrannical government in Iran. We should condemn Iranian culture and its people.
but you said you were for nonintervention... as opposed to isolationism
so all i've really learned from you is that you support isolationism, but you don't even know what isolationism is
truly a person if infinite wisdom well positioned to develop a logically coherent verdict on obama's foreign policy
in response, you'll probably attack me as an obama supporter just angry that someone would have a contrary opinion of the president
rather, i fully support your right to criticize obama's foreign policy all you want. JUST FUCKING MAKE SENSE. because right now, there is absolutely no logical coherence to anything you've said
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
I seriously doubt journalists can be considered as spies
The real cover that the CIA uses for spies is that of business men traveling overseas
Some examples:
1. George HW Bush was a covert CIA operative for many years. His cover was an oil developer.
2. Valerie Plame: Also a covert operative spying on terror networks until Cheney/Novac outed her for political reprisal against her husband
"Suppose you were an idiot...and suppose you were a member of Congress...but I repeat myself." Mark Twain
You know, with a couple minutes of reading you too might be able to figure out that "trying to criminalize citizen journalism" is not the same thing as preventing the courts from getting random citizens to disclose their sources when they've spewed it as fact all over the internet.
Overreact much?
That seems somewhat easy to get around:
Set up a non-profit cooperative, which pays its employees $0.01/year in salary, and publishes Whatever. Power it by donations. Call it the I'm a Journalist Too Foundation, or something. They wouldn't even need to publish everything that's researched/posted (as you're gonna get some whackos). Include an agreement that "employees" can publish their findings elsewhere, as well -- and it sounds to me like one could ensure that anyone wanting to do any sort of investigative journalism could find a way to be technically employed as a journalist.
s/preventing the courts from getting/allowing the courts to get/g
No point in agitating Iran. The US might be able to trigger something, but it couldn't control it. There is no way that the US can CREATE a friendly client-state in IRAN. Only people who get paid to think of ways to create client states think that. The revolution, if it comes, will take its own course.
It is very important to remember that the theocratic Iranian government has a huge base of support. Students and the intelligentsia have to shift that before they can do anything.
Iran's got a big problem. It needs technology to oppress its people, but the locals who furnish the technology are the people that the government wants to oppress. Unfortunately, the government has oil money and oil money will finance the purchase of oppression-aiding technology from the "free" countries of the world.
When the oil runs out, the theocracy will die because it can't afford the oppression. The sadness is that all that oil money could be used to build infrastructure for the people for the future. But it won't. 'Tis a pity.
mod this shit down
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You know, with a couple minutes of reading you too might be able to figure out that "trying to criminalize citizen journalism" is not the same thing as preventing the courts from getting random citizens to disclose their sources when they've spewed it as fact all over the internet.
Overreact much?
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Nice try...
I'll put forth that the proposed law I cited VERY MUCH LIMITS JOURNALISM IN THE US.
Yet its seems your all for it. Afterall, you dont address the law I cited. You just obfuscate with with what you believe are 'misplaced points regarding the thread'.
Again. I say its VERY relevant.
"I don't mean to be rude, but that there is your problem. The "news" that arrives on your television or radio is highly manipulated and filtered to tailor your thinking. I highly recommend reading the blogs of ordinary citizens or "citizen journalists" in the target area along with your mainstream media. It's quite revealing."
I do mean to be rude. This need you have to talk down to people, and to imply that we're a bunch of gullible Fox-news watchers, is more prickdom.
In my post neither "world" nor "news" is capitalized, so both are meant generically. You assume I'm sticking to mainstream media, a fact that can't be supported by anything I've written. In truth I get my news from a wide variety of sources, including blogs (although most of them are as heavily slanted and error-prone as anything "big media" offers - sometimes more so).
There is more news than I have time to read. Some of it is going to get missed.
I don't think you helped yourself in getting a measured response by setting yourself up for a fall.
"I have never heard of this country before!"
You're rather asking for people to send cheeky responses back to you. Posting that Country X is not significant in geopolitical terms because you as a single individual has never heard of it is a rather weak argument. You come over as ignorant and arrogant, I am sure you're not but this is how it looks. Google will help you, (15.9 million hits for "Eritrea").
Eritrea was in the news a lot because it broke away from Ethiopia in a bloody civil war and there have been border conflicts ever since. Being a poor country it also has food crises and there are calls for international help in the news sometimes.
I just don't understand why those hoping for a promising future for Iran are against their nuclear progress.
It seems clear that nuclear is the best way forward (for Iran or any country) and those who oppose it are asking for Iran to be left behind economically.
"oh wait... looks like they are just giant dictatorship that oppresses workers, a fact that we capitalists love to take advantage of."
Yes, that's horrid. Now compare China in 1948 to today. The masses of people have never lived better. Freedom is nice, but food/clothing/shelter and physical security have much more practical value.
"This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
Boycotting only reinforces those in power, who pass the suffering on to the populace.
Note how the _US_ is blamed for how _Saddam_ kept resources from Iraqis while diverting wealth to his armed forces and government.
Anyone who believes boycotts work against people of will needs prompt LARTing.
"This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."