Archive for the ‘Censorship’ Category

DOUBLE STANDARDS – Guest Patrick Henningsen speaks out on Press TV ban – Video


DOUBLE STANDARDS - Guest Patrick Henningsen speaks out on Press TV ban
Press TV #39;s top current affairs show #39;Double Standards #39;, invites 21st Century Wire #39;s Patrick Henningsen on the program to discuss the hypocrisy and censorship by the European Commission and the UK #39;s Ofcom regulator for banning Press TV #39;s global news channel from European satellite and cable broadcasting. When it comes to broadcaster integrity, networks like the BBC and CNN should have their licenses revoked for reporting fake news and covering up internal investigations into criminal activity. http://www.21stcenturywire.comFrom:21stCenturyWireTVViews:1 0ratingsTime:12:38More inNews Politics

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DOUBLE STANDARDS - Guest Patrick Henningsen speaks out on Press TV ban - Video

PSA OUTAKE 2 – Video


PSA OUTAKE 2
"Censorship" PSA outakes filmed by Brandon Hitson, and staring Damon Jordan, and the FAM.From:Cruikshank7Views:0 0ratingsTime:00:23More inComedy

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PSA OUTAKE 2 - Video

Their View: China censorship shows leaders still have much to hide

The following editorial appeared in the Washington Post:

As China s prime minister over the past decade, Wen Jiabao was often described as a populist and reformer, sometimes nicknamed Grandpa Wen because of his folksy willingness to meet ordinary people. One of Wen s refrains was that Chinese officials at all levels should declare their personal assets, and those of family members, in an effort to fight corruption. Wen suggested that the information should be published for all to see.

On Friday, the New York Times took Wen at his word and published an eye-opening exposi that revealed that members of his family control assets of some $2.7 billion, including interests in banks, jewelers, tourist resorts, telecommunications companies and infrastructure projects, some of it held in offshore entities. The article marks yet another startling glimpse into how China s leading families, many of them descended from Mao s generation, have used their power to become fabulously wealthy. The ouster of Bo Xilai as boss of Chongqing and the subsequent prosecutions in an alleged graft and murder scandal provided another showcase example this year.

As soon as the Times article was published, China s Internet censors forgot about Wen s desire for more openness. China blocked both the English and Mandarin websites of the Times so that hundreds of millions of its citizens could not read the account online. China also rushed to block mention of the story on popular Twitter-like

A similar Web blackout was imposed this summer after Bloomberg News described the accumulation of assets by relatives of Xi Jinping, who is expected to become China s next Communist Party leader and president.

The sudden blackout belies the supposed confidence of China s ruling elite for having built an economic superpower and shows them to be utterly at odds with the global digital revolution. Their attempt to block it underscores how deeply China s rulers fear that the truth, if fully known, would undermine their legitimacy.

Beyond Wen s personal discomfit, the Chinese leaders are sitting on a powder keg. Public anger is growing at the gap between rich and poor and at an epidemic of official corruption. A survey of Chinese citizens published this month by the Pew Global Attitudes Project showed that 81 percent of those questioned agree with the statement that the rich just get richer while the poor get poorer. Half of the respondents said corrupt officials are a very big problem, up 11 percentage points in four years. Recently, a local official in Shaanxi was ousted after microblogs distributed photos of him wearing expensive luxury watches.

Rather than unplug the Internet, Wen would show more wisdom by reaffirming his earlier desire for more transparency and disclosure. In the long run, it is the only way to build trust with China s people and the only route to becoming a real superpower in today s world.

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Their View: China censorship shows leaders still have much to hide

Russian Censorship Law Goes Online

By Alex Johnston Epoch Times Staff Created: November 1, 2012 Last Updated: November 1, 2012

A woman is using a computer at the Internet caf Time Online in downtown Moscow, Russia, on May 5, 2002. Russian Internet service providers are obliged to block websites with banned material under a law that went into effect on Nov. 1, 2012. (Oleg Nikishin/Getty Images)

A law allowing the Russian government to take websites offline went into effect Thursday. It was designed to target websites harmful to childrenbut also targets sites deemed extremist.

Critics accuse the government of creating a tool that could shut down opposition websites and would create a climate of widespread censorship in Russia.

When the bill was proposed in July, Wikipedias Russian language website blacked itself outto protest the measure. It passed in July and was signed by President Vladimir Putin. Court approval is not necessary to block a site.

Press freedom watchdog Reporters Without Borderssaid the Kremlin will likely misuse the law.

We are forced to conclude that no political will exists to resolve the laws contradictions and to eliminate those that pose threats to freedom, despite criticism of the law from many quarters, the group said in a statement.

The group said that Russia is looking to redefine the meaning of what treason means and is looking to increase penalties for blasphemy convictions.

Taken as a whole, the latest legislative initiatives in the Duma [Russian Parliament] give all the appearance of a concerted attack on freedom to disseminate information, it said.In each of these bills, imprecise language and vague definitions are far too open to interpretation. We call on members of parliament to revise their proposals in light of the fundamental right to freedom of information.

Some worry that authorities could plant banned material and content on opposition websites, creating a reason to shut down the sites, according to Radio Free Europe.

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Russian Censorship Law Goes Online

Director takes Chinese censorship, business battles public

BEIJING For most of the last two decades, director Lou Ye has angered Chinese authorities by making movies that touch on sensitive subjects like sex and politics and then by screening them at foreign festivals without official approval. He's had multiple films banned, and was barred for years from even practicing his craft.

His newest work, the dark melodrama "Mystery," looked like a chance for the 47-year-old to come in from the cold. Lou received approval from China's censorship body before screening his movie at the Cannes International Film Festival in May. After the festival, he registered the $2.6 million noirish tale, made with 20% French financial backing, as an official French-Chinese co-production.

But weeks before the mid-October opening of "Mystery" in Beijing, Chinese authorities told Lou to edit two scenes containing sex and violence. They also asked him, without explanation, to cancel the co-production agreement.

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In China, the world's second-largest and fastest-growing movie market, friction between filmmakers and government regulators is a regular occurrence, yet often, the difficult back-and-forth takes place behind closed doors. This time, Lou took the fight public, posting documents online and blogging for weeks about each interaction and negotiation with authorities. The skirmish raises unsettling questions about Chinese officials' willingness to scuttle business deals and impose new censorship requirements, even after issuing approvals.

"This is the Chinese way. It's not good, but this is the way," Kristina Larsen, the French producer on "Mystery," said in a phone interview from Paris. "Basically in France, no one wants to go into co-productions with China you have this different culture, and all the censorship. It's too complicated."

Over the years, Lou has suffered repeated censorship at home and enjoyed a growing reputation abroad. Officials from China's State Administration of Radio, Film and Television banned his first film, "Weekend Lover," for two years. His 2000 movie "Suzhou River" was also banned. "Summer Palace" which chronicled a generation's political awakening and disillusionment amid the pro-democracy protests that led to the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown was submitted to the Cannes festival without government approval in 2006, and afterward Lou was prohibited from filmmaking for five years. He defied the ban to make "Spring Fever," about a doomed gay affair, and the film won best screenplay at Cannes in 2009.

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"Mystery" centers on a wife's discovery of her husband's affairs, and touches on some potentially sensitive subjects like the behavior of police. In his postings on Sina Weibo the Twitter of China Lou said officials had asked him to reduce the number of hammer blows in one bludgeoning scene from 13 to 2.

After two weeks of negotiations, Lou was able to declare a victory of sorts: He agreed only to darken the final three seconds of the bludgeoning sequence. And, to voice his displeasure, he said he would remove his name from the credits on the film though it still appears on posters and other promotional materials. The film was scheduled to open in China on Friday.

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Director takes Chinese censorship, business battles public