Ken Hagler's Radio Weblog
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Friday, May 16, 2003
 

It looks like the Radio comment server is down again.
8:42:51 PM    comment ()

American Civil Liberties Union : Press Release - ACLU Releases Report on Suppression of Dissent in a Post 9/11 America .

Taking their cue from the Bush Administration, law enforcement officials across the country have interrogated, detained and prosecuted hundreds of people for exercising their First Amendment freedoms of speech and assembly, according to a new report by the American Civil Liberties Union on the suppression of dissent since the terrorist attacks of 9/11.

"This report clearly illustrates how dangerous it has become since the terrorist attacks of September 11 to criticize the President of the United States or his policies," said Anthony D. Romero, Executive Director of the ACLU. "Government officials and political leaders must not be allowed to chill the free and robust debate that has made the American way of life the envy of nations and its Constitution a beacon to the world." 

"Freedom Under Fire: Dissent in Post-9/11 America," describes how some government officials, including local police, have gone to extraordinary lengths to squelch dissent wherever it has sprung up, drawing on a breathtaking array of tactics - from censorship and surveillance to detention, denial of due process and excessive force. 

The 18-page report finds that dissent since 9/11 has taken three principal forms: mass protests and rallies, messages on signs or clothing, and other acts of defiance by communities and individuals. These have ranged from silent vigils in parks to the passage of resolutions in more than 100 communities across the country protesting federal measures that violate civil liberties. 

The report "Freedom Under Fire: Dissent in Post-9/11 America" (ed. Link is a PDF file)

[Privacy Digest]

Unsurprisingly the incidents in this report reflect the bias of the American Completely Liberal Union, omitting incidents involving squelching of non-leftist dissent. Still, even a partial report is quite alarming.
8:41:38 PM    comment ()


It turns out the reason the Tinderbox file mentioned in the post below is so small is that there's nothing in it. However, I found a file called "Tinderbox™ temp" in the same directory, and on opening it in Tinderbox found that it contained my document.

I hope this is some sort of weird demo thing, and not a bug!
4:14:10 PM    comment ()


A picture named TinderboxTest.gif

Here is a sample document I created in "Tinderbox" to try out the agent and prototype features. The two boxes at the top ("over 5 rounds" and ".308 Winchester") are agents which automatically contain all the notes which meet their respective criteria. This is the largest note I can create using the demo version.

Three of the notes also contains pictures, but the file size of this document is only 4K. I thought that was a little odd since the pictures were pasted into the text windows, not linked in some way to the picture files. Maybe the pictures weren't saved? Since I can't open saved files in the demo, I can't tell.
2:30:34 PM    comment ()



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