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Showing posts with label media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label media. Show all posts

Saturday, July 05, 2008

"From US to Sweden, Eavesdropping Legislation Causes Online Uproar," Weely NetPulse, July 4, 2008.

its not just Americans who aren't buying into the idea of 'sacrificing liberty for security'


From the United States to Sweden, lawmakers approving government eavesdropping legislation has caused an online upheaval.

In the US, Senator Barack Obama's website is being used by his own supporters to protest his switch on telecom immunity. TechPresident has done a phenomenal job of covering the MyBO group, Senator Obama - Please Vote NO on Telecom Immunity - Get FISA Right, so we'll let them take it from here.

But its not just Americans who aren't buying into the idea of 'sacrificing liberty for security'...Swedes are causing an online uproar over lawmakers voting 'yes' to eavesdropping legislation as well.

The Swedish FRA Act, passed two weeks ago, will allow the National Defense Radio Establishment to eavesdrop on all cross-border emails, phone calls and faxes without a court order. A poll revealed that only 31% of Swedes are for the FRA Act.

Expressen, a Swedish tabloid newspaper, is responsible for creating the email script that has been used to send 6.6 million emails to flood the inboxes of the 143 Swedish lawmakers who recently voted 'yes' what has been called "the most far-reaching eavesdropping plan in Europe."

As one blogger put it, "The surveillance and information gathering will become the national standard...Privacy will be a historical artifact."

Our take - POL has been saying for a long time that somewhere, someday, online privacy issues will merge with online activism to create a firestorm. 6.6 million emails is a lot of emails - 6.6 emails in a country with a population of 9 million is a firestorm.

It will happen again and again, in lots of places about lots of issues.
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Sunday, June 29, 2008

"Senegal ALERT: Broadcasters attacked by Senegalese police," Media Foundation for West Africa, June 23, 2008.

[Stories like this one, and others at the Media Foundation for West Africa (among other places), might make a person wonder why Canadian human rights aristocrats--like Stephen Harper, Mark Steyn, and Ezra Levant--restrict their issues of choice to those that provide maximum public relations leverage. Did I just answer my own question?

Ironists will appreciate that Léopold Sédar Senghor, after whom the stadium where these journalists were beaten, was a poet and a creator of the négritude concept, which rejected French colonial racism and emphasized the importance of dialogue between cultures. He was also the first president of Senegal. There were real human rights heroes long before governments and their grinders ever thought about trying to catch the bandwagon. -jlt]

Two sports journalists were brutally beaten by Senegalese police at Leopold Sedar Senghor Stadium, Dakar on June 21, 2008.

The journalists, Kara Thioune of West Africa Democracy Radio (WADR) and Babacar Kambel Diang a reporter for the private radio station Radio Futurs Médias (RFM), were punched, kicked and beaten with electric batons.

Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) sources reported that the journalists were at the stadium to cover a post-match press briefing. Outraged by their presence, the policemen attacked, handcuffed and detained them for about half an hour, before taking them away to the hospital for medical attention.

The source said Thioune bled profusely.

Another journalist, Frank Sainworla escaped the attack.

Meanwhile, the journalist union, Union of Information and Social Communication Professionals (SYNPICS) and RFM intend to take legal action against the police for these unjust attacks.

The MFWA supports the SYNPICS and RFM proposed actions. We condemn the arbitrary use of force and call on the authorities to curtail the rising incidents of violence against journalists in Senegal.

Prof. Kwame Karikari
Executive Director
MFWA
Accra
Tel: 233 21 24 24 70
Fax : 233 21 221084
Website : www.mediafound.org
Email : mfwa@africaonline.com.gh
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Friday, June 20, 2008

Saul Hansell, "The Associated Press to Set Guidelines for Using Its Articles in Blogs," NYT, June 16, 2008.

[Coming soon to a blog near you. For those who may be planning to celebrate Nelson Mandela's 90th birthday next month (July 18), the Drudge Retort reminds us he is still on the authoritative US list of terrorists. -jlt]

Last week, The A.P. took an unusually strict position against quotation of its work, sending a letter to the Drudge Retort asking it to remove seven items that contained quotations from A.P. articles ranging from 39 to 79 words.


The Associated Press, one of the nation’s largest news organizations, said that it will, for the first time, attempt to define clear standards as to how much of its articles and broadcasts bloggers and Web sites can excerpt without infringing on The A.P.’s copyright.

The A.P.’s effort to impose some guidelines on the free-wheeling blogosphere, where extensive quoting and even copying of entire news articles is common, may offer a prominent definition of the important but vague doctrine of “fair use,” which holds that copyright owners cannot ban others from using small bits of their works under some circumstances. For example, a book reviewer is allowed to quote passages from the work without permission from the publisher.

Read the rest here =>

Read more: The A.P., Hot News and Hotheaded Blogs, iCopyright, TechCrunch's Michael Arrington: The A.P. Has Violated My Copyright..., Blogger Boycott of AP
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Wednesday, June 18, 2008

"Proposed new Broadcasting Law in Thailand deeply Concerns the World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters (AMARC), June 18, 2008.

Request for urgent action

On 10 June 2008, the Thai Cabinet approved, for submission to Parliament, a draft bill which is titled “Independent Organisation for Broadcasting and Telecommunications Bill”. The draft Bill is intended to replace the provisions of the Allocation of Telecommunications and Broadcasting Frequencies Act 2000. AMARC considers the draft Bill to be regressive in several key respects. In particular, AMARC is concerned that:

1. Previous legislation committed 20 per cent of the broadcast spectrum to not-for-profit civil society groups. The draft Bill makes no equivalent provision and has only a vague reference that the regulator - the National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission (NBTC) has the mission to support the coming together of local people to run broadcast media that are run for the benefit of the local community and not for profit.

2. The NBTC has powers to place limit on the revenue of community broadcasters with any surplus revenue to be remitted to the local administration where the community broadcaster is located.

3. The selection process for membership of the NBTC has been placed under the Minister for Information and Telecommunications (MIT), significantly reducing its independence and removing parliamentary oversight.

AMARC is also concerned by the lack of public consultation on the draft.

Action requested:

AMARC calls for international solidarity action to raise these concerns and to urge the Thai Government to re-instate previous commitments to an independent regulator, to retain 20 per cent ring-fencing of spectrum for community broadcasting (widely considered an international example of good practice) and not to introduce revenue limits on community broadcasters.

Letters of concern should be sent to:

1. Mr. Samak Sundaravej, Prime Minister
Office of the Prime Minister
Nakornpratom Road, Dusit District, Thailand 10300
Tel: 662-288-4000; Fax: 662-288-4025

2. Mr. Saneh Chammarik, Chairperson
The National Human Rights Commission of Thailand
422 AMLO Building Phya Thai Rd., Pathum wan District, Bangkok 10330, Thailand
Tel: (66) 2-2219-2980, Fax: (66) 2-2219-2940, Hotline: 1377
E-mail: interhr@nhrc.or.th

3. President of the Senate of Thailand
2 Uthong Nai Road
Dusit Sub-District, Dusit District
Bangkok 10300
Fax: 662-244-1019

4. President of the House of Representative of Thailand
2 Uthong Nai Road
Dusit Sub-District, Dusit District
Bangkok 10300
Fax: 662-244-1019

5. The Secretary-General, Office of the Council of State
1 Phra Arthit Rd., Phranakorn District
Bangkok 10200
Fax: 662-226-6201

6. Leader of The Oppositional Parties
Democrat Party
67 Setsiri Road.
Samsen, Phyathai District
Bangkok 10400
Fax: 662- 279-6086


Signed/

Steve Buckley, President, AMARC International
Ashish Sen, Vice President for AMARC Asia Pacific


AMARC is an international non-governmental organization serving the community radio movement in over 110 countries, and advocating for the right to communicate at the international, national, local and neighbourhood levels. AMARC has an International Secretariat in Montreal. It has regional sections in Africa, Latin America and Asia Pacific and offices in Johannesburg, Buenos Aires and Kathmandu.

For more information, please visit www.amarc.org or contact Marcelo Solervicens, Secretary General, AMARC International, email: secgen@si.amarc.org or Suman Basnet, Regional Coordinator, AMARC Asia Pacific, Kathmandu, Nepal; email:
suman@wlink.com.np.
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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Quill & Quire staff, "Talking copyright," Quillblog, June 14, 2008.

Expect Bill C-61, the proposed amendment to the Canadian Copyright Act, to be a big conversation topic at this year’s show. The bill was tabled on Thursday, and groups like the Association of Canadian Publishers and the Writers’ Union of Canada immediately set about wading through its various provisos. In the meantime, see news coverage here and here.

Most of the discussion, predictably, has focused on digital music and video, since that’s where most digital use falls. But at Friday’s “Another Country” BookExpo Canada conference, copyright lawyer Grace Westcott broke down for the audience what the bill could mean for books. The bill allows individuals to make one digital copy of a book or magazine for another device, for private use only. There are a number of caveats: the person copying the file must own the original and must have acquired it legally; no rights management blocks can be circumvented; the copy cannot be given away; and if the original is given away, the digital copies must be destroyed.

As has been widely reported, the bill also sets a maximum penalty of $500 per action for personal illegal downloading, though the penalty for uploading, and for downloading by breaking through a digital lock, can be up to $20,000.

Creators’ groups are, not surprisingly, pleased that the long-delayed legislation has been tabled. “We should welcome this bill,” said Westcott. “It has something for everyone.” Canadian copyright guru and users’ rights advocate Michael Geist disagrees, but that’s no surprise, either. Also dissenting was another Friday panelist, writer and consultant Ben Vershbow; he told an afternoon seminar audience that the bill appears to represent “an economic model that can only be sustained through surveillance” and is “clearly out of touch with the way media works now.”

Even supporters concede that the bill’s effectiveness is debatable. Said Westcott: “It’s a valiant attempt to keep these copies contained – and it’s virtually impossible to enforce.”
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Saturday, June 07, 2008

Josh Katz, "Facebook and the Internet Influence Egyptian Politics," finding Dulcinea, June , 2008.

Yesterday, an op-ed in the Los Angeles Times said that Egypt “is considering blocking Facebook” following the antigovernment protests in April and May that were coordinated using the popular social networking Web site.

The protests were over soaring food and oil prices and a growing gap between rich and poor in the country, according to World Politics Review. Although Egypt’s economy has been growing, “there’s been little trickle down to the 45 percent of Egyptians who continue to survive on $2 a day,” the article writes.

View the whole page on Egypt and Facebook here =>
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"Facebook's political stars," iAfrica, June 4, 2008.

China's state media on Tuesday hailed Premier Wen Jiabao as the world's sixth most popular politician on the social networking site Facebook — well ahead of US President George W. Bush.

Wen Jiabao's profile was set up two days after he rushed to the scene of the 12 May earthquake in southwest Sichuan province to oversee rescue efforts, the official news agency Xinhua reported.

It is not known who set it up. Anyone with an email address can create a profile.

However, it has apparently proved to be a hit, with more than 44 000 people registering as supporters, placing him sixth on Facebook's rankings of most popular politicians.

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Saturday, May 24, 2008

CJLY Spring Membership Drive Gets Underway

Kootenay Cooperative Radio, 308a Hall Street, Nelson, BC Canada V1L 5K4

It’s a full week of special programming, giveaways and surprises galore.

WHO : Kootenay Co-op Radio, CJLY, 93.5 and 96.5 FM

WHAT : Spring membership drive

WHEN : Sunday, May 25 - Saturday, May 31, 2008

WHERE : At the radio station: 308A Hall Street in Nelson

On the airwaves and on the Internet at www.kootnenaycoopradio.com

Details: Spring is the time of renewal and new beginnings, so if it’s your season to renew or start a membership with Kootenay Co-op Radio, mark your calendars for May 25 – 31. That’s the week for the spring membership drive at CJLY and we’re looking for fans of independent, locally-produced, high quality radio programming.

Twice yearly the station holds a membership drive that constitutes its primary fundraising effort. Other support comes from local business sponsorships. Yearly membership rates are as follows:

$25 Low-income

$45 Regular

$80 Family

$125 Organization

$600 Individual Lifetime

$800 Family Lifetime

The drive kicks off on a not-so-sleepy Sunday, May 25, with a 9:00 am broadcast from Crawford Bay on the East Shore. Then Sunday evening at 7:00 p.m. there will be special live programming and an open house at the station, 308A Hall Street. On Monday through Friday of drive week there will be chances to win free meals during the lunch hour block of programming and also a 5:00 – 6:00 p.m. discount hour whereby members can get wonderful goods and services at reduced prices! The spring membership drive concludes on Saturday, May 31 with Member Appreciation Day. The fun gets underway at 9:00 am at the station when families are invited to bring the kids to the station for waffles and to perform live on air during an extended “Kiddie Karousel” show. Until 5:00 pm on Saturday there will be an open house with live entertainment, food, prizes, and the opportunity to support independent media right here in the Kootenays. As an extra special treat, one lucky new or renewing member will win a super prize in a draw held in early June.

For more information, call the station at 250-352-9600 or

Jamie K. Donaldson
Phone: 250-352-0544
E-mail: jamiek@netidea.com

or

Ceilidh Sutherland
E-mail: ceilidh@cjly.net
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Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Do we have media issues?, May 19, 2008.

For as long as I can remember, I have loved gadgets. One of the earliest, my father, who was a print journalist, brought home a wire recorder—the same device used by Alfred Lord and his colleagues to record the voices of Homer's literary descendents practising oral literature in modern Yugoslavia. (The Singer of Tales)

As soon as I was able to understand the “means of production,” I was fascinated by the way that technology puts what I thought of as the “means of creation” into the hands of the people.

As McLuhan pointed out, this democratization of creativity is a process that begins at least as early as the written book. Augustine tells about his encounter with a medieval scholar reading aloud from a book in a library to an audience of illiterate peasants. The printing press extended this process dramatically and in Europe may have played a part in the Reformation and even the political uprisings of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. (Understanding media)

Today creative viewpoints exist on the right as well as the left, within the small business community as well as among organized labour, among market-oriented economists as well as outright socialists, among solitary hermits and great social collectivities. Today's left tends to forget that “owning the means of production” was for Marx what sex was for Freud. It was the central, motivating energy for what we now call social change. In the mid-twentieth century, Wilhelm Reich unleashed the sexual revolution by talking about sex-economics. (The Sexual Revolution)

Nicole Cohen has offered a rallying point for media activists:

“While it is critical for media activists to talk seriously about the business of producing alternative media and to find innovative ways to boost circulation, it is dangerous to believe that the only way to become commercially viable is to make content more mainstream. Alternative media exist to disseminate an oppositional or radical stance, and the development of creative sustainable business models should centre on strengthening that goal, not abandoning it” (Cohen Briarpatch May 31 07).


Lydia Masemola writes “if it wasn't for campus radio, Cancon (Canadian content) wouldn't have taken a hold even in commercial radio. Campus radio stations deserve to be recognized for developing that independent music scene” (See Kahn Briarpatch May 31 07).

The legal reality is that the Canadian broadcasting system is “effectively owned and controlled by Canadians.” The radio frequencies that it uses are public property.” This is entrenched the Broadcasting Act of 1991, which also defines Canadian broadcasting as “a public service essential to the maintenance and enhancement of national identity and cultural sovereignty.” In addition, the Act declares that information carried on Canadian airwaves should “be varied and comprehensive,””include educational and community programs,” and “provide a reasonable opportunity for the public to be exposed to the expression of differing views on matters of public concern.” (See Kahn)

So how is it going with Canada's publicly owned service exposing us to expressions of differing views on matters of public concern.

Surely one of the most volatile issues in recent months has been Mark Steyn's continuing crusade to make hate speech, um, debatable. His supporters claim that his right to free speech is being violated by the Canadian Human Rights Commission and several provincial human rights commissions.

However, Steyn doesn't appear to be fighting for the rights of indigenous leader David Ahenakew, who was stripped of the Order of Canada for hate speech. Ahenakew was recently been given a new lease on power when the courts overturned his previous conviction for likening Jews to a disease.

Those of us whose KCR shows have recently become available as podcasts on iTunes may be interested to learn that just two weeks ago iTunes banned several Jamaican reggae bands from its website on the grounds that their lyrics were explicitly homophobic. Is that censorship? Are we ok with it? Once again, should hate speech be banned? Or is it better to debate the issues openly? This is an issue in which we KCR programmers are complicit even though the web service is resident in the US.

In the wider world, the shadow of these issues reappeared when some Western publications re-published the Danish cartoons ridiculing the Prophet Mohammed. Toger Seidenfaden, executive editor-in-chief of Politiken, a leading Danish newspaper, articulates one problem: quote "there are politicians who are trying to use these issues to their political advantage, 'creating an enemy' and mobilising people against it." Fahmy Howeidy of the Egyptian publication Al-Ahram quote "cherishes freedom of expression above all else, because it has lost touch with anything holy." (For both quotations, see Shahine Al-Ahram Feb 28-Mar 5 08)

It seems I am not the only one with media issues. Do we (CJLY) have media issues? Do you?Recommend this Post


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Jennifer David, "Aboriginal language broadcasting in Canada," for APTN by Debwe Communications, November 2004. (pdf, 45pp)

from the "Executive Summary"

Background

The Task Force on Aboriginal Languages and Cultures was established in 2002 by the then Minister of Canadian Heritage, Sheila Copps. It was created as part of an initiative to revitalize and promote Aboriginal languages and cultures. A three-phase action plan was developed, with funding of $172.5 M over 11 years. The first phase is a continuation of the Aboriginal Languages Initiative. The establishment of the Task Force is the second phase.

The ten members of the Task Force are responsible for developing recommendations to guide the creation of a new Aboriginal Languages and Cultures Centre, which will
represent the third phase of the initiative. To support development of these
recommendations, the Task Force has been holding consultations, listening to
presentations, and commissioning research reports.

The Aboriginal Peoples Television Network (APTN) was asked to prepare an analysis of the role of Aboriginal language broadcasting in the revitalization of Aboriginal languages across Canada. Jennifer David of Debwe Communications Inc. was contracted to prepare the report, based on documents reviews, analysis and interviews, for submission by APTN to the Task Force on Aboriginal Languages and Cultures.

Summary of Key Issues

Broadcasting has a vital role to play in the revitalization and survival of Aboriginal languages. This, however, is often an overlooked area of language learning, and much more research must be done to quantitatively confirm the positive impact of broadcasting on language use and fluency.

There is no significant legislative protection for Aboriginal language broadcasting, rendering long-term planning impossible, engendering a sense of "second class citizens" among broadcasters, and, in some cases, denying Aboriginal broadcasters the opportunity to provide quality programming.

Some Government support exists for northern Aboriginal communications societies, under the Northern Native Broadcast Access Program (NNBAP). There are, however, other radio stations outside this umbrella that provide a valuable service in Aboriginal languages, but are not provided with adequate financial support.

Many radio stations are unable to conclusively identify the needs of their listeners. Most cannot afford to conduct meaningful audience surveys that could lead to more appropriate and successful programming and help establish corporate policies regarding Aboriginal language programming.

While the majority of Aboriginal language speakers are older, there are efforts to encourage more Aboriginal youth to speak their language. These youth are largely unaware of the opportunities for full time employment and a lifelong career that exist in Aboriginal Language Broadcasting In Canada broadcasting industry, a sector where fluency in an Aboriginal language is an important asset.

Broadcasters represent an important cultural and historical resource of archival information, including interviews with elders and several generations of political leadership, and discussions about and in various Aboriginal languages. Most radio stations and television producers are unable to keep and catalogue this valuable and irreplaceable asset, and it is slowly being lost to future generations.

Aboriginal language broadcasting has wide-reaching appeal, and attracts growing Aboriginal and mainstream audiences across Canada and internationally. The potential of both radio and TV, however, has not yet been fully tapped. Tapes of shows or CD’s of language interviews, for example, are not being widely used in other contexts to assist in revitalizing Aboriginal languages. There are some exceptions to this; but generally, Aboriginal media represent a sadly under-utilized resource for language learning.

There is currently no organization or association that would enable all Aboriginal broadcasters to meet, network and find common ground to address common issues. There is no national voice for Aboriginal broadcasters, nor is there any mechanism by which the broadcasters could work together on joint research projects or undertake valuable surveys. Such an association would be beneficial for Aboriginal-language initiatives.

Read the report, including recommendations, here =>
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Sunday, May 18, 2008

Saul Landau, "Cuba: A Half-Century of Distorted News and Counting...," NACLA, May 16, 2008.

Since January 1959, nearly half a century ago, U.S. mass media have reflected the views of the U.S. government and systematically misreported the Cuban Revolution. Few reporters have tried to understand—much less explain—the Cuban Revolution.


Since January 1959, nearly half a century ago, U.S. mass media have reflected the views of the U.S. government and systematically misreported the Cuban Revolution. This should not surprise readers familiar with the equally unrevealing journalism on revolutions in Russia and China, although notable exceptions in each case shined beacon lights on reality. In 1957 Herbert Matthews, like John Reed in Russia and Edgar Snow in China, wrote front-page stories on Fidel Castro’s guerrilla band in Cuba’s eastern mountains. He emphasized the brutality of Fulgencio Batista’s dictatorship and U.S. support for that corrupt and brutal regime, portraying Fidel as a democrat who followed a long line of Latin American revolutionaries. After the revolution triumphed, Lee Lockwood’s photojournalism for Life marked a second exception in which facts placed in context emerged from the stories.

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I have media issues: Zimbabwe

Canadian reports on the elections in Zimbabwe have been limited to anything that fits with the pose of righteous hand-wringing. Blogger Katch Up "Point on Africa" presents some supplementary viewpoints.

Catch up believes that Morgan Tsvangirai won the March elections in Zimbabwe. However, whether or not the MDC "will capture what is rightfully theirs" is a tossup.

The options?

"...placing any hope in a people’s revolution is futile....Mounting pressure on Mugabe to quit is a lullaby to a sleeping child – useless. When sanctions were placed on his country he reminded Zimbabweans how a capable leader he had been but for economic sanctions by Western enemies of progress. Chronic food, fuel and jobs shortages are taken by ZANU-PF like a natural catastrophe that it is not responsible for.

"Military intervention? AU can launch an armed solution based on the African Union (AU) charter, amended in 2003 to permit military intrusion in countries facing "a serious threat to legitimate order". So far however, AU has placed colossal hope on a peaceful resolution rather than war. If anything, Mugabe’s clout as a nationalist is still high among African presidents with most of them blaming the West in this case."

Catchup also reblogs an article by Thuo Kiragu from Kenya Imagine, a popular online idea lab. The task that cries out to one and all: "showing Bob the door." But that is easier said than done.

International concern for the suffering of Zimbabweans is tainted with hostility. For Kiragu "It was no coincidence that the choir-master, leading the chorus for the chastisement of Mugabe was Britain; the repossessed land was after all almost entirely repatriated from white Zimbabweans of British decent."

The African Union could help, but
"African heads of state have furnished Mugabe with the extra fuel he needs to keep on ruling; their respect for him as a colonial liberator. He is indeed, and his contribution to freedom struggle is greatly admired.

"His leadership errors notwithstanding, the laurels that adorn Mugabe's head for liberating his country from minority white rule will not easily fade away. Many in Africa still believe that repossessing land from white citizens who enjoyed the use of an inordinately large fraction of Zimbabwe was the very mark of the courage, one that is to be emulated. Many more still applaud the Zimbabwean leader when he tells off Western critics and advises them to put their time to better use than railing against Zimbabwe."


====

"He never fails to remind his supporters that the economy has been damaged by these sanctions and that otherwise, they well know what a capable leader he is - the years of rapid growth and service delivery after independence remain etched in many minds."

From this perspective, Mugabe comes off looking almost like an African Castro, but one accompanied by a much deeper vein of ambivalence, both for his own behaviour and for the sour grapes of Western imperialists.

Still, as Kenya Imagine puts it, "people in this Southern Africa country need desperate rescue" but "...a forceful intervention seems like the last of the cards layable, even in the name of a greater good."

All this suggests the responsibility to protect, a principle freely invoked in Afghanistan, but never mentioned regarding Zimbabwe, or Darfur or the DRC--to name just three likely candidates.Recommend this Post


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Saturday, May 17, 2008

Do you know a good East African journalist? Pambazuka News before May 30

The David Astor Journalism Awards Trust (DAJAT) is inviting nominations for its second round of professional development awards. The deadline is 30th May 2008. DAJAT searches for exceptionally promising and talented early-career East African print journalists working in English who have great potential and determination to excel in the profession, invests in their long-term career development, and aims to build an enduring peer-support network to promote strong independent journalism in the region.
The David Astor Journalism Awards Trust (DAJAT) is inviting nominations for its second round of professional development awards. The deadline is 30th May 2008.

DAJAT searches for exceptionally promising and talented early-career East African print journalists working in English who have great potential and determination to excel in the profession, invests in their long-term career development, and aims to build an enduring peer-support network to promote strong independent journalism in the region.

One award each in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda will be made this year. All nominated candidates will be rigorously assessed, the most promising will be short-listed for interviews in September, and an independent selection panel will choose the eventual winners from among three finalists in each country.

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Friday, May 16, 2008

Blind Man with a Pistol reviews Grand Theft Auto IV

The debate between continues about whether art provides us with role models (Plato) or catharsis (Aristotle). Blind Man with a Pistol reviews Grand Theft Auto IV, especially its misogyny and concludes, "It is as if the protests against the game are as simulated as the violence it represents: virtual protest for virtual violence while the real deal continues apace" (Grand Theft Reality).

Blind Man cites Jean Baudrillard (The Gulf War Did Not Take Place): "We are all hostages of media, induced to believe."

There is also a good link to an excerpt Grand Theft Childhood: The Surprising Truth About Violent Video Games and What Parents Can Do, by Drs. Lawrence Kutner and Cheryl K. Olson, co-directors of the Harvard Medical School Center for Mental Health and Media. They take the Aristotelian position.

The highlight for me was the Blind Man's description of Canada in Afghanistan: "Our government wages an imperialist act of aggression upon an unarmed nation for an act of terrorism that was neither directed at us, nor committed by those we attack; and we do it in the name of 'defence.'”

Read the whole review here =>

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Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Blair's Christian 'challenge' to the East

Asia Times online (May 14 08) reprints another story about language and culture. This one by Masayuki Tadokoro originally appeared in the The Japan Institute of International Affairs.

"Former British premier Tony Blair, who recently converted to Catholicism, apparently believes his or other Christian faiths should underpin the West in meeting the challenges from the East. But people such as Blair should start taking the 'East' more seriously, and the coming Group of Eight summit in July could be an opportunity for Europeans to start calling democratic Asians 'we' rather than 'they.'"

This organization, the Association of Japanese Institutes of Strategic Studies (AJISS) has a number of good op-ed pieces on Japan and international affairs by first-rate Japanese sources.

Still on the theme of language (and how we "think") Takakoro asks,
"Is there such a thing as the East in the first place? The 'East' literally can mean the huge area stretching beyond Turkey all the way through to Japan and containing at least three major traditional civilizations: Islamic, Indian and Chinese.

"It has always been the home of a majority of the population on this planet who have dauntingly different religions, cultures, traditions and political systems, as well as levels of economic development. Does it really make sense to talk about the 'East', except in the sense that it is geographically non-European?"

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Naming is strategic

According to Stephen Waterman, a British journalist in Washington writing for the Swiss ISN Security Watch, "guidelines leaked this month show that US diplomats are being told - and other officials advised - not to describe al-Qaida as Islamic terrorists, and not to use terms like jihadist or mujahideen when referring to the group's members and supporters."

The Office of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties in the Department of Homeland Security the guide, entitled "Words That Work and Words That Don't," to embassies along with a more detailed document "Terminology to Define the Terrorists: Recommendations from American Muslims."

Predictably, some have seen the documents as a "betrayal on the part of our liberal pacifist State Department and their appeasement-oriented minions."

Waterman says,

"The revelation that the US government might actually be shaping public messaging to take account of the way Muslims - and foreign ones at that - perceive US policy brought immediate howls of outrage.

"The right-wing blogosphere resounded to accusations of political correctness, and critics of the policy immediately demanded to know who were the experts and Islamic leaders the department had consulted." (Here, here, here, here, and here).

Representative Peter Hoekstra (Republican-Michigan), the senior Republican on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence said the guidance "smacks of McCarthyism in reverse."

The debate over language is part of a broader difference of opinion within the Establishment about "who the US is and should be fighting in its war on terror." There is another debate about whether or not the military is the appropriate agency for responding to non-state terrorism. That position also acknowledges the strategic importance of word choice in framing the issue, but is well outside the frame of the "debate" about how to "define the enemy."

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Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Phillip J Cunningham, "When the best in the West get it wrong," Informed Comment: Global Affairs

The earthquake in China offers those in the Western press a chance to do what they do best --report the facts, but it may also turn out to be field day for those who like to hit a country when it is down. Some good old-fashioned reporting would be a good change of pace for certain US and European news outlets, especially the recently maligned CNN, to repair reputations tattered for sloppy reporting on Tibet.

[...]

[In Burma] China's timely material aid was viewed as a PR exercise, while reckless US and French offers to essentially invade Burma to save it from itself, were cast in a deeply humanitarian light.

[...]

And now, another huge human tragedy, the earthquake in Sichuan....Here CNN has a chance to reverse its declining China fortunes, for the Beijing bureau is lucky to have a seasoned China hand like Jaime Florcruz at the helm....Earlier today, he quietly pointed out in a live report that the Chinese government is pretty good at marshaling resources in times of disaster.

On a not entirely unrelated topic, I have been reviewing Western media coverage of Tiananmen 1989 for an upcoming twenty-year retrospective. I worked as a freelancer for BBC at that time, and at one time or another have done work with NBC, NHK, CCTV and have contributed to China documentaries aired by CBS, TV Asahi and PBS. It is dismaying that after all this time, an event of such importance to the Chinese people is still taboo to the Chinese media. Secondarily, it is lamentable that so much of the Western coverage was narcissistic and imagination-driven.


Read the whole article =>

Cunningham's piece on Tiananmen 1989 is in the Bangkok Post under the title, "When the best in the West get it wrong." Getting it wrong is a euphemism for what he describes. =>

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Friday, May 02, 2008

GEO-4 and the dualism of journalistic balance, October 30, 2007.

On the World Report blog, texts identified as "Features" have formed the basis for the World Report broadcast. That will change now that the broadcast has moved to a 30-minute format.

It had already begun to change last October when I opened the pre-recorded format up to voices in addition to my own in the form of interviews, webcasts and recordings of press conferences. (World Report evolved from a live format in which I had appeared as a regular contributor and was interviewed in real-time by the host of Nelson Before Nine. But that's another story.)

This text didn't make it onto the blog because I wasn't sure whether to transcribe the other voices or just leave them out.

At issue was a question about the relation between the text and the broadcast which I have since resolved. So this text is out of sequence, but it presents several issues of continuing concern.

The text introduces a non-dualistic view of journalistic balance. The recordings from the GEO-4 press conference remind us that, important as climate change is, it is far from the only important environmental issue facing the planet.


Feature

Let's begin with a quotation.


“...the world’s population has reached a stage where the amount of resources needed to sustain it exceeds what is available...humanity’s footprint is 21.9 hectares/person, while the Earth’s biological capacity is, on average, only 15.7 ha/person...”

That's from a report just published by the UN Environmental Program called Global Environmental Outlook, or GEO. Actually, it's the fourth in a series, so it's called GEO-4.

Maybe it will seem strange that this report got me to thinking about our membership drive here at Kootenay Coop Radio. It's coming up in just a few weeks. We kicked off our membership drive last spring with a panel of KCR spoken word programmers talking about independent media.

I remember expressing myself then on the media's treatment of the climate change issue.
jlt: We live in an environment where the obfuscation--just as one example of media failure--where the obfuscation of industrial groups on climate change has led to roughly, almost a 30 year delay in action on climate change. And that's a massive failure. And it's a failure that we can't afford. We can't afford to have another one.

I had to wonder—was it really 30 years ago? What did people really think about climate change back then? Could I be exaggerating?

So I did a little research. GEO-4 traces its lineage back through three earlier GEO reports in 1997, 1999 and 2002, a Rio+10 conference in Johannesburg and the milestone Rio conference itself in 1992.

Most significantly, the launch GEO-4 report in 2007 was timed to coincide with the 20th anniversary of the launch of Our Common Future, the report of the World Commission on Environment and Development, aka the Brundtland Report. GEO-4 uses the Brundtland Report as a reference point to assess progress in addressing key environment and development issues.

Twenty years ago, in 1987, Brundtland commented on climate change at length and concluded that quote “the risks of global warming make heavy future reliance upon fossil fuels problematic.” endquote

This was not an extreme position or marginal issue even then.

[Brundtland: The burning of fossil fuels, and to a lesser extent the loss of vegetative cover, particularly forests, through urban industrial growth, increase the accumulation of CO2 in the atmosphere. The pre-industrial concentration was about 280 parts of carbon dioxide per million parts of air by volume. This concentration reached 340 in 1980 and is expected to double to 560 between the middle and the end of the next century. Other gases also play an important role in this greenhouse effect, whereby solar radiation is trapped near the ground warming the globe and changing the climate. After the reviewing the latest evidence on the greenhouse effect in October 1985 at a meeting in Villach, Austria, organized by the WMO, UNEP, and ICSU, scientists from 29 industrialized countries of the global south, concluded that climate change must be considered a plausible and serious probability. They further concluded that many important important economic and social decisions are being made today on major water resource management activities such as irrigation and hydro power, drought relief, agricultural land use, structural designs and coastal engineering projects and energy planning, all based on the assumption that past climatic data without modification are a reliable guide to the future. This is no longer a good assumption. The key question is how much certainty should governments require before agreeing to take action. If they wait until significant climate change is demonstrated, it may be too late for any countermeasures to be effective against the inertia stored by then in this massive global system. The very long time lags invliveed in negotiating international agreements on very complex issues involving all nations have led some experts to conclude that it's already late. No nation has the political mandate or the economic power to combat climatic change alone."



Going even farther back, the October 1976 issue of Foreign Affairs, the very moderate quarterly publication of the US Council on Foreign Relations, published a famous article on the “soft energy path” by physicist Amory Lovins under the title, “Energy Strategy: The road not taken?” Lovins states clearly that only the exact date of “irreversible changes in global climate” is in question.” That's more than 30 years ago.

Achim Steiner, the Executive Director of the UN Environment Programme, introduced the report to a press conference last week.

Steiner: At the same time as all these changes are occurring and we are faced with a phenomenon such as global warming and accelerating loss of biodiversity unprecedented extinction crises as some scientists refer to it, land degradation on unprecedented levels, the prospect of 1.8 billion people by 2025 being in severely water-constrained parts of the world. As all this is unfolding, we are actually undermining the very systems that we need in order to cope with that change. And the report points in many instances to examples of how ecosystems and their capacity to sustain and also their ability to absorb these changes and these shocks are in fact being undermined by the very trends and activities that we have attributed to individual examples of environmental degradation.

The loss of biodiversity is now at a point where 30% of all non-amphibians are threatened with extinction. Somewhere around 25% I think or 20% of mammals and 12% of birds--I would have to look at the exact statistics now. These are numbers that should make us pause for a moment. We are talking here about one-tenth, one-quarter of a group of species being threatened with extinction. We also have--and this is why I was particularly interested in inviting Professor Jeffrey Sachs to join us here--an increasing demonstration of how environmental degradation and change is forcing people into responses that ultimately put them also into conflict with each other.

We released a few months ago, a post-conflict assessment report on the Sudan which tried to draw the linkages between a long-term change in weather patterns--particularly in terms of rainfall, a significant movement south over the last 50 years of desert boundaries and arid, semi-arid land boundaries, essentially forcing communities to move under a situation of growing populations and vastly expanding livestock numbers into a situation where in Darfur today at least one of the drivers of conflict has been that environmental change.


Steiner was joined at the press conference by Jeffrey Sachs, Director of The Earth Institute at Columbia University.

Sachs: Actually this is the main, true geopolitics of our age, not the geopolitics we sometimes hear. But sustainable development is at the very center of the true geopolitics of the world, whether we're going to have peace, whether we're going to have viable economies, whether we're going to be able to get on top of critical problems like climate change. And no one should ever believe that this is about the poor. This is about every place. And we know in the United States for example we're now suffering a very severe drought all through the South--both the Southwest, which has been in drought for many years, and the Southeast which is in a particularly severe drought now. We know in Australia that there's a mega-drought the likes of which have not been seen in modern times. And it's fundamentally changing the economics and the politics of that country. It's also the case though that when these shocks hit the poorest places in the world, people die in much larger numbers and much more rapidly. And it's in the poorest places in the world where adverse climate shocks can trigger violence and war. And it's not just one thing; it's not just climate change. It's deforestation. It's great stresses on the biodiversity through overfishing, overhunting, over-harvesting. It's pollution--both indoor and outdoor pollution. It's multiple stressors. What's happened is that the world's economy and population have grown so fast that our institutions lag way behind the ability to address the impact of the society on the physical environment. Smf the message from this is that implementation is essential and life-saving and critical for global security, nothing less.


How did the media get played on the climate change issue?

I see no evidence of a conspiracy, or of government arm-twisting. But there is clearly at work a dualistic concept of journalistic balance.

The CBC is better than most at presenting what is sometimes called “the other side” or “both sides of the story.”

The operative image is of blind justice holding the scales--a balance with two pans for weighing evidence—innocent or guilty, right or wrong, good or evil, with us or against us.

But many situations in the real world require more than a single dimension.

I think of the guy in the gym who spends nearly 5 minutes just standing on top of a big exercise ball.

Or a skier carving turns down a black-diamond slope.

When we talk about balance in our diets, some try to classify foods in a dualistic way as either yin or yang—or alternately as acid or alkaline. But most of us go beyond dualism to balance the right mix of protein, fat and carbohydrate, vitamins, minerals and other nutrients.

When we talk about a balanced diet—or the balance of nature, or a balance of power—we are talking about balances that includes many more than two.

These more complex models of balance provide closer approximations of the natural scatter one finds in real situations, including people's positions on real issues of the day. The dualism of right and left doesn't cut it. Neither does for and against.

But news organizations surviving on reduced budgets and driven by imperatives of the marketplace—when they depart from the standard propaganda line at all—will run matching forit and againstit interviews so they can appear righteous--and balanced--in their presentation of “both sides.”

In such a context, interests with enough desire and money can buy the PR power to appropriate an entire side—or roughly 50%--of a manufactured debate.

News organizations are sitting ducks for corporate propaganda that seeks its share of a pie that is only going to be cut into two pieces at most.

This is what happened for 30 years with the good-science versus bad-science debate about climate change.

Today, the dualistic model of journalistic balance is being used again to shape a new debate. Is climate change an environmental problem or an economic one?

What is the solution? Carbon markets and techological innovation or strict emission controls and a carbon tax?

In reality, the environmental and economic viewpoints map just a fraction of the territory. Sheila Watt-Cloutier, the Inuit leader who was nominated this year for the Nobel Peace Prize, speaks convincingly for the view that climate change is a crisis in cultural identity—a position that applies to sub-Saharan Africa and small island cultures as well as to the Arctic.

And that's not all. Last winter (Feb 4 2006), CBC's show Canada's Next Great Prime Minister featured five youthful finalists competing to demonstrate why they should be chosen to lead the country. The judges were Brian Mulroney, Joe Clark, John Turner and Kim Campbell.

Asked what they saw as Canada's most serious security challenge, all five contestants answered "terrorism." Yet it can be and is plausibly argued that the consequences of climate change that have already happened are more serious than all the damage caused by terrorism in all of history.

I would have to say that the nearly unabated progress of climate change of the last 30 years has exposed a failure of political will in the most developed countries—warmed and comforted by a media failure rooted in the dualistic concept of balance.

The greatest risk may come from the dualism in our political system which fosters the illusion that solutions to large, many-sided challenges such as those documented in GEO-4, will be solved by deciding between Democrats and Republicans, a dualism imperfectly replicated in Canada by Conservatives and Liberals.

We could be another 30 years deciding between a carbon market and a carbon tax and no closer to a real solution. Recommend this Post


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Friday, April 18, 2008

Christopher Lydon, "The news about the news: Jay Rosen," Open Source, March 28, 2008.

[This article has text and podcast versions of the discussion between Jay Rosen and Chris Lydon. There are lots of links to articles about the impact of the Internet on journalism, the collapse of the NYT, radical transparency and John McCain's successful courting of the media on the Straight Talk Express. These are all contested positions, framings, namings. Even whether or not they are issues or important issues cannot be taken for granted. -jlt]

This seems to be the moment in which the death of the American newspaper can be foretold with some authority — by Eric Alterman in this week’s New Yorker; by the new local owners of the great old papers (“The news business is something worse than horrible,” says Sam Zell, in what sounds like buyer’s remorse over Chicago’s Tribune Company); by The New York Times itself in what has become a serial, almost daily obituary (here, for example) and by our guru and guide to the transformation of media, Jay Rosen of New York University.

Click to listen to Chris’s classroom conversation with Jay Rosen (71 minutes, 33 mb mp3)

Jay Rosen was the prophet of people-first “civic journalism” twenty years ago, before the Web gave citizen-bloggers the tools to be press lords, or at least publishers, on the cheap. In our first podcast nearly five years ago, Jay was among the first to see the breadth of the upheaval. “The terms of authority are changing,” he put it then.

His website PressThink has become the real Press Club of thinking practitioners in this drawn-out existential crisis. In James Der Derian’s Global Media class at Brown last week, Jay Rosen gave his account of the Web stars becoming institutions: Instapundit, the first distributed newsroom; DailyKos, “by far the most vibrant community I know”; The Huffington Post, rising on the power of aggregation; and “the first Web-born media company,” Joshua Micah Marshall’s Talking Points Memo and its offspring. But Jay was at his most compelling on the bad news: what feels like the inexorable, personal, cosmic, professional, civic tragedy unfolding in front of our eyes at the New York Times: