Congress Adds Bloggers To Press Protections
Congress Adds Bloggers To Press Protections
Great .. except if Bush pondered bombing Aljazeera, who's safe anyway ...
[web]https://www.webpronews.com/topnews/2007/ ... rotections[/web]
[web]https://www.webpronews.com/topnews/2007/ ... rotections[/web]
Yep, above were in a war zone, and a number of press have been shot in war zones where the Americans claimed it wasn't deliberate {of-course, we believe them. they have never lied}.major.tom wrote:I thought the Al Jazeera station in Bagdad was actually hit. There was a station in Afghanistan (Kandahar?) that was, I recall.
I meant the leaked memo about Bush planning to bomb Aljazeera head office in Bahrain, a supposed ALLIED COUNTRY. I wonder if they would have said Iran (or Al-Qaeda) did it [or a stray Saddam missile, like the one which hit a Kuwait shopping center]
[web]https://www.socialistworker.co.uk/articl ... e_id=11266[/web]
They have been found guilty :
[web]https://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/nort ... 637735.stm[/web]
Last edited by Mandy on Sat May 12, 2007 1:13 am, edited 1 time in total.
Thanksfaceless wrote:Mandy - what's that got to do with the topic? That's about the quickest agenda change in history!
The original article was that bloggers should be protected (freedom of speech, 1st amendment), but then I said that even people like Al-Jazeera who should have this protection as journalists were targeted outside a war zone, and hence the report about the leaked memo and the trial, but if you just read the BBC report, you would have no idea the issue was about deliberately targeting Journalists outside a war zone because you don't like what they are reporting. What do we expect from the Bush & Blair Corporation.
On that analogy, anti-war bloggers could be "targeted", and the memo provides an insight into the morality of Bush.
From memory, I think major.tom was right that their Bagdad and Afghanistan offices were both hit.luke wrote:wasn't aljazeera hit twice? in two different places? or was it only the once and the other one was just talked about?
The leaked memo was about a discussion to hit a third location : their CENTER in "friendly" Bahrain.
Which jumper? I have a few.
Though faceless you do raise an interesting point : does the protection offered by the constitution extend overseas to where US has "control". I think Congress said it did (re Guantanamo).
The original report should strengthen (at least morally) bloggers all over the world.
Though faceless you do raise an interesting point : does the protection offered by the constitution extend overseas to where US has "control". I think Congress said it did (re Guantanamo).
The original report should strengthen (at least morally) bloggers all over the world.
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major.tom
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Very good point. Any U.S. law should be interpreted as protecting the rights of American citizens or "interests" (ie. corporations)faceless wrote:It's an internal law - its repercussions only affect Americans.
In the interest of balance, I should caveat that the U.S. is not unique in selective application of the law...
I hate to be the one who is disagreeing. If you are not an America. but passing through American territory, then US laws apply. Therefore if you were extradited to US (as UK is very willing to do), you would be protected by these laws.major.tom wrote:Very good point. Any U.S. law should be interpreted as protecting the rights of American citizens or "interests" (ie. corporations)faceless wrote:It's an internal law - its repercussions only affect Americans.
In the interest of balance, I should caveat that the U.S. is not unique in selective application of the law...
US laws applies to all people once they are on US controlled territory (including Guantanamo).
The US likes to apply "extra-territoriality", i.e. they have a tendency to extend their law to other countries (e.g. via free-trade / or bilaterial agreements).
The new US law also sets a powerful precedent, i.e. bloggers the world over can now more easily say they are Press (which is bound to be referred to in China or other countries which imprison non-conforming bloggers) , so it is a PR bonanza for bloggers. I might even print badges, "I am a Blogger, watch be roar" (c) WRH
Mandy - you can argue the point all you like, but there is no connection between a normal person writing a blog and a government employee revealing secrets about military actions. No government will allow that - and I wouldn't expect them to. By comparison it would be like someone posting details of when you go out to the shops on a site for burglars and not getting trouble from it - it's just free information after all.
Maybe worth opening a thread on where freedom of information, whistle-blowing, and government secrecy intersect.
I believe the leak was embarrassing, rather than endangering military lives, and bloggs are the natural place for getting round mass-media control to publicize embarrassing items. Too many governments round the world are keen to use the "secrets" excuse to regulate and shut down bloggers.
I believe the leak was embarrassing, rather than endangering military lives, and bloggs are the natural place for getting round mass-media control to publicize embarrassing items. Too many governments round the world are keen to use the "secrets" excuse to regulate and shut down bloggers.