Archive for June, 2017

Wikileaks Documentary Makers Accuse Assange of Censorship – Newsweek

We are the producers of Risk , a documentary film about Julian Assange and WikiLeaks.

We unequivocally defend WikiLeaks journalistic right to publish true and newsworthy information.

The Trump administrations threats against WikiLeaks and attacks on press freedom are chilling. As Margaret Sullivan recently argued in the Washington Post, prosecuting WikiLeaks under the Espionage Act would set a dangerous precedent for all journalists.

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We were disturbed, however, to learn that Julian Assange and WikiLeaks sent cease and desist letters to our distributors demanding they stop the release of Risk: We therefore demand that you immediately cease the use and distribution of all images of the Named Participants and that you desist from this or any other infringement of the rights of the Named Participants in the future.

In WikiLeaks efforts to prevent the distribution of Risk , they are using the very tactics often used against them legal threats, false security claims, underhanded personal attacks, misdirection and with the same intentions: to suppress information and silence speech.

Filmmaker Laura Poitras speaks as former National Security Agency (NSA) contractor turned whistleblower Edward Snowden is seen on a video conference screen during an award ceremony for the Carl von Ossietzky journalism prize on December 14, 2014 in Berlin, Germany. Adam Berry/Getty

Since 2016, Assange and his lawyers have repeatedly demanded that we remove scenes from the film in which Assange speaks about the two women who made sexual assault allegations against him in 2010 and Swedens investigation which has since been discontinued.

In response to our refusal to remove these scenes, Assange and his lawyers are now claiming that Risk threatens the safety of the staff who consented to being filmed, and furthermore, that we are being sexist by including Assanges own comments about women in the film.

These arguments are not only false, they are a deliberate effort at misdirection.

Risk was filmed over the course of many years, beginning in 2011. Assange and WikiLeaks freely consented to participating in the film, knowing we were making an independent documentary. Neither WikiLeaks nor Assange have any editorial control of Risk. There were individuals who requested from the beginning not to appear in the film, and those requests were respected.

Wikileaks and their lawyers were shown the film before each public screening, most recently inside the Ecuadorian embassy in London on April 1, 2017. Each time, we invited their responses.

WikiLeaks comments have consistently been about image management, including: demands to remove scenes from the film where Assange discusses sexual assault allegations against him; requests to remove images of alcohol bottles in the embassy because Ecuador is a Catholic country and it looks bad; requests to include mentions of WikiLeaks in the 2016 U.S. presidential debates; and, requests to add more scenes with attorney Amal Clooney because she makes WikiLeaks look good.

It is only after we declined to make the changes they tried to impose that WikiLeaks raised objections to Risk . Their attempts to censor the content of the film are an effort to prevent reporting on Assanges own words. They also constitute a saddening break with WikiLeaks own ideals.

Last month, WikiLeaks lawyers published an op-ed saying they object to our editing in the United States. However, Assange has known since 2015 that we were editing in the U.S. In 2016, he signed an agreement to license WikiLeaks own footage to us and raised no objection to mailing a hard drive with footage directly to our editing room in New York City.

WikiLeaks has also repeatedly publicized their participation in Risk , most recently re-tweeting a link to the films trailer on April 10, 2017 (a tweet that has since been deleted), without raising any concerns.

In their cease and desist letter, lawyers for WikiLeaks and Assange state: The unauthorized release of the Film has caused our clients to suffer ongoing irreparable harm, and exponentially increasing damages every time a new viewer sees the Film.

All the participants in Risk agreed for years to be in the film. We have no obligation to seek WikiLeaks or Assanges authorization to release the film. In fact, our rights under the First Amendment are protected precisely because we are engaging in independent journalism. Assange himself has criticized the media for seeking permission from public figures before releasing stories.

Like WikiLeaks, our journalism has been the target of U.S. government investigation, secret grand jury, and threats by elected officials. We fully understand and empathize with the dangers WikiLeaks is facing, and we stand in solidarity with all journalists and publishers around the world currently under attack.

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Wikileaks Documentary Makers Accuse Assange of Censorship - Newsweek

POLL: Should governments be able to control the questions the media asks them? – HamiltonNews


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POLL: Should governments be able to control the questions the media asks them?
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Five Hamilton area high school students will be among 801 teens taking part in one of Canada's top incubators for youth... Enjoy areas safely. City Hall 2 hours ago. Hamilton cracks down on waterfalls parking... City of Hamilton bylaw officers will be ...
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POLL: Should governments be able to control the questions the media asks them? - HamiltonNews

San Quentin up close and personal: Top things you should know about policing this week – USA TODAY

USA TODAY 1:16 p.m. ET June 16, 2017

Have you ever wondered what life would be like inside prison? A new San Quentin State PrisonpodcastEar Hustleputs you there. Andthe topics highlighted byinmatesand podcast creators Earlonne Woods and Antwan Williams, along with community volunteer Nigel Poor, offer a dose of the expected (cellmates argue)and some of the unexpected (inmates care about fashion, who knew?). Poor, who is a visual artist, brings a "softer touch to the show," according to Woods and Williams. She helpsthe men record and edit all ofwhich is done inside the prison's media lab. Their first episode? "Cellies: Finding a roommate can be tough. Finding someone to share a 4' x 9' space with is a whole 'nother story."

The Chicago Police Board, an independent council that oversees the city's police department,is stayingthe disciplinary cases of the five officers connected to the shooting of Laquan McDonald, including Jason Van Dyke, the white officer who fired the 16 shots that killed the black teen. The board fears disciplinary action may jeopardize the officers' constitutional rights during criminal and grand jury proceedings. Van Dyke, who killed McDonaldin 2014as the young man was crossing the street,has been charged with six counts of first-degree murder, one count of official misconduct and 16 counts of aggravated battery.The other officers, who witnessed Van Dyke kill the 17 year old and were suspended without pay, are now back on police payroll.

Alicia Garza, one of the founders of Black Lives Matter(Photo: Christopher Wiggins)

The Sydney Peace Foundation is awarding a Peace Prize to the social justice movementBlack Lives Matter. The prize highlights the work offoundersPatrise Cullors, Alicia Garzaand Opal Tometi who created the movement backin 2013 after the shootingdeath of black teen Trayvon Martin by Florida neighborhood watchman George Zimmerman. In the past, the award has been given to South African civil rights activists. "This is the first time," the Sydney Peace Foundation said in announcing the award, "a movement and not a person has been awarded a Peace Prize a timely choice." The award is set to be presented to the chapter-based movement in November 2017.

New York City Police Department officers are being directed to swap out criminal summons for civil tickets for petty offenses. These misdemeanor offenses include spitting, littering, public urination, carrying an open container of alcohol, excessive noise and violations of park rules. In order to receive a civil ticket, a person must provide identification, have no more than twounanswered civil summonsesin the past eight years, and not have two or more felony arrests in the last two years. They also must not be on parole or probation.

Want more on policing? Visit policing.usatoday.com.

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San Quentin up close and personal: Top things you should know about policing this week - USA TODAY

Call for Papers: Race, Religion, and Black Lives Matter – Patheos (blog)

Edited by Christopher Cameron and Phillip Luke Sinitiere

The Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement began in 2013 the moment a Florida jury acquitted George Zimmerman of Trayvon Martins murder. Yet, the movement symbolizes far more than the moment of Martins death. It inaugurated a new moment of opposition and insurgency against white supremacys expansive obscenities, most notably against the backdrop of the Obama era, the tenure of Attorney General Eric Holder at the DOJ, and the vast expansion of the surveillance state, a long-standing tool of anti-black repression. BLM demands recognition of the dignity of black life while it mobilizes political actions of protest and policy change, including the reorganization of resources for a more just and equitable world. It requires the apprehension of police brutality, and insists on justice for state actors who perpetuate, fund, and support anti-black violence.

BLMs genesis as a hashtag by Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors, and Opal Tometi marks the historical moment of its creation in the digital era. At the same time, BLM has deep roots in the Black Freedom Struggle and can especially be seen as an extension of the Black Power movement of the 1960s and 1970s BLM, like its predecessor movements, embodies flesh and blood through local organizing, national and global protests, hunger strikes, and numerous acts of civil disobedience. Chants like All night! All day! Were gonna fight for Freddie Gray! and No justice, no fear! Sandra Bland is marching here! give voice simultaneously to the rage, truth, and hope that sustains BLM.

Commentators, journalists, and scholars such as Jelani Cobb, Angela Davis, Eddie Glaude, Marc Lamont Hill, Christopher Lebron, Wesley Lowery, Barbara Ransby, and Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor have offered incisive political coverage of BLMs past and present. Theologians and religious studies scholars, in venues such as the Journal of Africana Religions, online forums at Immanent Frame and the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs, and in books like Kelly Brown Douglass Stand Your Ground: Black Bodies and the Justice of God and Leah Gunning Franciss Ferguson & Faith: Sparking Leadership & Awakening Community have started to probe where and how religion figures into BLM from the standpoint of Christianity, humanism, atheism, and politics, among other topics.

In concert with, and building upon existing scholarship, Race, Religion, and Black Lives Matter seeks to expand and extend social, cultural, and historical analysis of the movement and its meaning in local, national, and international contexts. This volume of peer-reviewed scholarly essays adopts a capacious rendering of religion, which includes everything from subjects that address religious ideas, religions in practice, music and/or visual art, to topics of irreligion, humanism, atheism, and beyond, in its multidisciplinary assessments of BLM. Potential papers could focus on religion and BLMs intersection with: gender and sexuality; space and place; cultural production; social media; police surveillance; theology and more. We also invite papers exploring the historical foundations of BLM. Please email a 300-500 word proposal and a short CV (up to 2 pages) by August 1, 2017 to both Dr. Chris Cameron (ccamer17@uncc.edu) and Dr. Phil Sinitiere (philliplukesinitiere@gmail.com) with Race, Religion, and BLM in the subject line. The editors will select and notify contributors on or around September 1, 2017, with the expectation of full essays by January 15, 2018.

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Call for Papers: Race, Religion, and Black Lives Matter - Patheos (blog)

Russian social network VK’s office in Kiev closed – TASS

KIEV, June 16. /TASS/. Kiev-based office of the Russian social networking site VK (VKontakte) has shut down in the wake of Ukraines sanctions, the spokesman of the VK Ukrainian branch said on Friday.

"The legal entity is blacklisted in Ukraine so the office has closed," Ukrinform news agency quoted Vlad Legotkin as saying.

On May 16, Ukraine expanded the list of Russian nationals and entities subject to Ukrainian sanctions and extended earlier sanctions. The blacklist includes 1,228 individuals and 468 legal entities. Among the blacklisted entities are Russian social networking sites Vkontakte (VK) and Odnoklassniki (Classmates), and also e-mail services Mail.ru and Yandex search engine. Ukrainian Internet providers are ordered to block access to these websites in the country for the following three years.

VK representatives in Ukraine emphasized their indifference to politics and vowed to protect interests of consumers and partners. The VK press service said that the number of monthly visits to the site stood at 16 million, which had propelled it to be the most popular social network in Ukraine.

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Russian social network VK's office in Kiev closed - TASS