Archive for May, 2017

Vox Populi: ‘We need censorship of the language on TV again.’ – Savannah Morning News

Just would like to thank the Southside Fire Department and all the emergency management companies that responded so quickly and professionally after the tornado touchdown on Wilmington Island. We do appreciate them.

Does anybody out there know if Georgia shrimp season is open yet? My mouth is watering for some fresh-caught, local Georgia wild shrimp. [Editors note: The season opens June 1.]

Would somebody please explain to me what Xfinity is supposed to mean? This Comcast guy keeps talking about Xfinity and is so excited by it. Im sick and tired of hearing it.

I wish I didnt have to ride the CAT buses because they sure are filthy.

We need censorship of the language on TV again. It is ridiculous!

And for eight solid years before the election of Donald Trump, it totally revealed the rights hate.

Trump, who denigrated a Gold Star family during his campaign, should be banned for life from the sacred grounds of Arlington National Cemetery. How dare this five-time draft dodger pose and posture at the Grave of the Unknowns, at the hallowed ground where my Navy Korean War hero father-in-law is buried? Where my husband, a Vietnam War helicopter door gunner, will rest one day?

In regards to global warming, Mr. David Kyler might want to read a new research paper by Patrick Michaels from the Cato Institute. The data is refreshing and should help people living on the coast relax. Or they could both be wrong and what is or isnt happening could just be a natural process that we have to adapt to like our ancestors.

A suggestion for traffic control to Tybee Island: Instead of having officers sit on the side of the road with engines running, have several of them drive back and forth with the traffic. This will encourage lawful participation in speed limits and awareness.

I keep getting pulled over for driving much faster than my cruise control says, then being given warnings when I tell them I was on cruise. Ive had the dealership check my speedometer twice. Do the police claim you were driving faster than you were just to see if youll accept it as fact?

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Vox Populi: 'We need censorship of the language on TV again.' - Savannah Morning News

Creeping censorship in a southern Israeli town – +972 Magazine

Verbal attacks by right-wing groups and politicians in Beer Sheva are threatening both NGOs and the local university.

By Daniel Beller

A meeting at Multaqa-Mifgash, the only joint Arab-Jewish group operating in Beer Sheva. (Negev Coexistence Forum)

Over the past year various entities, including right-wing movements, have been trying to close down a joint Jewish-Arab cultural institution in the southern Israeli town of Beer Sheva. The Multaqa-Mifgash Center, founded by the Negev Coexistence Forum (NCF), operates out of a municipal bomb shelter and stages activities and events focused on coexistence. Its a unique institution in Beer Sheva, and aside from Ben-Gurion University is the only place in the city that holds discussions on fundamental, sensitive issues within the local community.

Actions taken against the NCF have included sabotaging attempts to host a panel discussion on conscientious objection featuring members of Breaking the Silence, as well as the screening of a Palestinian-Dutch film, which were canceled following threats from right-wing political activists and warning noises from the Beer Sheva municipality.

Furthermore, the municipality has previously tried to cancel a Multaqa-Mifgash film screening, prompting the councils legal advisor approached by the Association for Civil Rights in Israel to spell out that banning political activities harms freedom of expression.

On May 11, 2017, the municipality sent the NCF a letter in which it claimed that the NGO had violated the contract under which it has been using the shelter to hold Multaqa-Mifgash events since 2006. A few days later, an Association for Civil Rights in Israel attorney, Dan Yakir, responded to the municipality and rejected its claims.

A few days later, on May 14, Beer Sheva council member Ortal Perlman Shmueli announced that she and fellow city councilors from Shas, Yisrael Beitenu and LIkud would be seeking to ban the NCF from using the municipal shelter. Later on, Shmueli posted on Facebook that the goal had been achieved and that the organization had been removed from the shelter. The Beer Sheva municipality stated afterwards that the only thing which had been requested was a clarification of the groups activities.

NCF CEO Haia Noach explained that the shelter used by Multaqa-Mifgash is the only one out of 60 assigned to NGOs that is used for shared Jewish-Arab activities We demand that the municipality immediately step back from canceling the assignment of the shelter [to us], and we intend to fight with every tool we have in order to guarantee Multaqa-Mifgashs can continue.

The NCF is not alone: on Wednesday, Jewish Home MK Bezalel Smotrich summoned an emergency debate in the Knessets Education Committee on Ben-Gurion University and its president, Professor Rivka Carmi. Smotrich claimed that the university supports BDS, pointing at a series of statements made by the academic staff and conferences he alleged had been held on its premises.

Jewish Home MK Bezalel Smotrich at a Knesset committee hearing, November 28, 2016. (Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90)

The debate featured a broad spectrum of participants, including representatives from the Ministry of Strategic Affairs, the Justice Ministry, Ben-Gurion University, the Council for Higher Education, the Anti-Defamation League, student organizations, and a range of different government departments, including the Prime Ministers Office. Carmi, who received a tidal wave of criticism from Beer Sheva residents, was forced to respond to the allegations thrown at her by Smotrich and members of far-right group Im Tirtzu. (It should be noted that the committee of university heads fiercely condemned Carmis summons to the hearing.)

Ben-Gurion University seems, over the last few years, to have become a greenhouse for people who delegitimize the IDF and the State of Israel, Smotrich wrote prior to the debate. In particular, there is a growing discourse among faculty members against the State of Israel. Professor Neve Gordon, for example, said that the most accurate way to describe Israel today is as an apartheid state. And Dr. Eyal Nir, who said: I call on the world to come and break the necks of these bastards (right-wing activists).

Professor Carmi read out her response during the hearing. The current debate held under a baseless and degrading heading and accompanied by wild and violent online incitement against me does no credit to its initiator, she said. Carmi detailed contributions by the university and its faculty to the fight against the boycott of Israel, and described hers and her staffs appearances in support of Israel at international forums. The hearing occasionally resembled those of the McCarthy era.

This is the third year in a row of attempts to attack the university in the same week as the meeting of its board of governors. Time and again futile claims are made and rehashed that have no relation to facts, reality, or truth. The same few academic staff who have expressed individual political opinions and signed petitions as is appropriate in a democratic state are, again and again, singled out from a faculty of over 850. They are not doing so in the name of the university, which is a pluralistic institution with many different opinions just like any other organization in Israel and the world.

Daniel Beller is a journalist, blogger and radio broadcaster based in Beer Sheva. This post was originally published in Hebrew on Local Call, where he is a blogger.

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Creeping censorship in a southern Israeli town - +972 Magazine

Diplomats concerned over Rwanda social media controls – News24

Kigali - Western diplomats in Rwanda voiced their concern on Tuesday over an order that presidential candidates must submit their social media messages to the country's election commission for pre-approval before dissemination.

"We are all concerned about this recent development and I think it is important to really understand what is behind this very, very serious limitation on the freedom of expression," said US ambassador Erica Barks-Ruggles.

The envoy was speaking at a panel on human rights organised by the European Union and attended by foreign diplomats as well as Rwanda's justice minister.

The measure giving control over social media use to the National Electoral Commission (NEC) will take effect at the start of the official campaign period on July 14 ahead of elections on August 4.

The rule states that all "messages, photographs and other campaign material" to be published on social networks must be submitted to the commission for approval at least 48 hours before they are due to be published.

It is aimed at "avoiding expressions, words, acts that can lead to acts of insecurity, the awakening of divisionism among the Rwandan population," said Kalisa Mbanda, election commission president.

Germany's ambassador Peter Woeste said other countries also faced problems of controlling hate speech, but asked whether "censorship [is] the way to go?" EU ambassador Michael Ryan described the measure as "too limiting".

Rwanda opposition figures have also criticised the move saying it will be used to block any criticism of President Paul Kagame who has been in charge of the country since 1994 and is running for a third term after changing the constitution to permit his candidacy.

Four opposition candidates are hoping to run against Kagame, if they are granted approval by the election commission.

While the constitution enshrines a multiparty system, there is virtually no opposition in the country, with the ruling Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) exerting total control over the political, social and economic spheres.

Since the end of the genocide, which killed around 800 000 people mostly from the Tutsi ethnic group in 1994, Rwanda has been praised for its economic performance and stability but criticised for its attacks and limitations on freedom of expression.

24.com encourages commentary submitted via MyNews24. Contributions of 200 words or more will be considered for publication.

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Diplomats concerned over Rwanda social media controls - News24

Mind control, shadow government, and Seth Rich: Sean Hannity’s history of pushing conspiracy theories – Media Matters for America


Media Matters for America
Mind control, shadow government, and Seth Rich: Sean Hannity's history of pushing conspiracy theories
Media Matters for America
[Media Matters, 5/24/17, 5/25/17; Fox News, Hannity, 5/19/16]. Hannity agreed to stop pushing his lies for now only after the Rich family directly pleaded for him to stop. After spending a week obsessing over conspiracy theories around Rich's death ...

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Mind control, shadow government, and Seth Rich: Sean Hannity's history of pushing conspiracy theories - Media Matters for America

How to exercise mental control in the high-pressure media world – AdNews

'Quiet the Mind' by Matthew Johnstone

Tonic Health ambassador Matthew Johnstone, who will appear at AdNews Media + Marketing Summit Melbourne on 2 August, has encouraged adland execs to become less self-obsessed, support others and seek help when needed.

Speaking at the AdNews Media + Marketing Summit Sydney earlier this month, where he openedthe talk with a guided mindful meditation session, the illustrator and former adman spoke about how to manage stress and prioritise life.

Johnstone then explained some key strategies to implement for a happier, more wholesome life.

It's never been so important in the world of media and marketing to exercise mental control, he says.

Thoughts are not facts; so often we get dragged around by the bullsh*t in our minds. We dont have to get caught in that trap, Johnstone said.

Instead, simple practices such as ensuring a good sleep, eating and drinking the right things in moderation and exercise which can be as effective in treating depression as medication can go a long way in your well-being strategy.

Johnstone also touched on the worrying statistics of suicide in Australia and the importance of speaking out in tough times rather than finding respite in vices, something very familiar to our industry.

If you are suppressing stuff and ignoring stuff and drowning in drugs and alcohol it's a little bit like being stuck in a rip. As soon as you accept youre in a rip and go with it youre usually spat out somewhere else in a safer place, he said.

Matthew Johnstone in guided meditation

For Johnstone, gratitude is paramount for well-being.

Turn your thinking into 'everything that happens to me is the best possible thing that could happen to me'. Gratitude is the best way of looking at life; accept the crap that's happening, park it and look at whats working well, said Johnstone.

Overall, Johnstone encouraged the room to take time out to mine for gems, find out what makes you tick, who has your back and your true values.

You are the authors of your own destiny so take charge and write the best book you can."

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How to exercise mental control in the high-pressure media world - AdNews