Tag Archives: organizations

The Narrative Provides No Guidance

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‪Town Moves To Ban Free Speech in Private Homes, Group Meetings‬‏ – YouTube This was one of my favorite comments from the Council: Ark. Town Council Bans Civic Group, New Organizations Though she had earlier expressed the view that the council existed to have “control” over “everything” and to “keep order when people can’t keep order…” Yes, folks, that’s Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Daily Pundit Discovery Date : 22/07/2011 19:43 Number of articles : 2

The Narrative Provides No Guidance

Tracy Morgan to Take Action, Meet with Bullied Youths

Roland Martin may not think Tracy Morgan has to apologize for his anti-gay rhetoric last week, but the actor himself is sounding truly contrite about his infamous routine in Nashville on June 3. “I know how bad bullying can hurt,” Morgan told Marc Malkin of E! News. “I was bullied when I was a kid. I’m sorry for what I said. I didn’t mean it. I never want to use my comedy to hurt anyone. My family knew what it was like to feel different. My brother was disabled and I lost my father to AIDS in 1987.” The 30 Rock star says “gay people deserve the same right to be happy in this country as everyone else. Our laws should support that.” And he will be doing all he can to ensure these words don’t ring hollow. Later this week, Morgan will sit down with gay teens who have been cast out by their families; he will also speak to those who have lost a loved one due to anti-gay violence. Moreover, the comedian will head to Tennessee next week and meet with GLADD – one of the organizations that challenged him to apologize – to take part in a press conference that protests the state’s recent passage of a bill that bars discussion of homosexuality in classrooms prior to ninth grade. He’ll alo shoot a PSA. It’s nice to hear that something good might come from the mess Morgan created.

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Tracy Morgan to Take Action, Meet with Bullied Youths

Tracy Morgan to Take Action, Meet with Bullied Youths

Roland Martin may not think Tracy Morgan has to apologize for his anti-gay rhetoric last week, but the actor himself is sounding truly contrite about his infamous routine in Nashville on June 3. “I know how bad bullying can hurt,” Morgan told Marc Malkin of E! News. “I was bullied when I was a kid. I’m sorry for what I said. I didn’t mean it. I never want to use my comedy to hurt anyone. My family knew what it was like to feel different. My brother was disabled and I lost my father to AIDS in 1987.” The 30 Rock star says “gay people deserve the same right to be happy in this country as everyone else. Our laws should support that.” And he will be doing all he can to ensure these words don’t ring hollow. Later this week, Morgan will sit down with gay teens who have been cast out by their families; he will also speak to those who have lost a loved one due to anti-gay violence. Moreover, the comedian will head to Tennessee next week and meet with GLADD – one of the organizations that challenged him to apologize – to take part in a press conference that protests the state’s recent passage of a bill that bars discussion of homosexuality in classrooms prior to ninth grade. He’ll alo shoot a PSA. It’s nice to hear that something good might come from the mess Morgan created.

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Tracy Morgan to Take Action, Meet with Bullied Youths

George Clooney ‘Completely Over’ Malaria

Clooney contracted malaria for the second time during a recent trip to Sudan. By Jocelyn Vena George Clooney Photo: Jamie McCarthy/ Getty Images George Clooney is doing just fine after contracting malaria during an early January trip to Sudan. He opened up about having the disease during an interview on CNN’s “Piers Morgan Tonight.” The full interview is set to air on Friday (January 21). “George is completely over the malaria he contracted while in Sudan during the first week in January,” Clooney’s rep told People.com . “This was his second bout with it.” The actor and activist used his bout with malaria to draw attention to needless suffering in Africa. “This illustrates how with proper medication, the most lethal condition in Africa can be reduced to a bad 10 days instead of a death sentence,” he said, according to E! News . “Malaria is a serious and sometimes fatal disease caused by a parasite that commonly infects a certain type of mosquito which feeds on humans,” the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ‘s website explains. “People with malaria often experience fever, chills and flu-like illness. Left untreated, they may develop severe complications and die.” While the disease is serious if left untreated, Clooney kept the mood light when discussing his own bout with the disease. “Well, you know, even with malaria, it’s just been fun,” he told Morgan about what it’s like to be George Clooney. “I guess the mosquito in Juba looked at me and thought I was the bar.” Earlier this month, Clooney teamed up with MTV , the Satellite Sentinel Project and other organizations to ask young people to help prevent an outbreak of civil war in Sudan by sending the message that “the world is watching.” “Frankly, our team of policy wonks and super nerds could use an injection of MTV style,” the actor joked in signature Clooney style about the project.

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George Clooney ‘Completely Over’ Malaria

Letters: AOLer Kennedy’s Assange ‘rape’ coverage deserves notice

Dana Kennedy reports that Julian Assange‘s alleged crime isn’t violent rape, but his trouble with the law “apparently stems from a condom malfunction.” David Cay Johnston writes: “If Kennedy is right, and at a minimum her report deserves to be checked out today, then our best news organizations are behaving more like (to borrow a hoary newspaper phrase) those ‘semi-official’ newspapers and broadcast outlets that reliably convey official government truths.” From DAVID CAY JOHNSTON: The first rule of journalism — check it out — seems to have been forgotten by every journalist in the world writing about the Swedish “rape” charges against Julian Assange. The exception is Dana Kennedy of AOL. Kennedy reports that the charge against Assange is not “rape” or anything close to the violent, or at least coercive, crime implied by that word. The actual crime Assange is suspected of “apparently stems from a condom malfunction,” Kennedy wrote. Put another way, in Sweden it may be a crime if a condom comes off during consensual relations. How would such a crime be proven, absent exceptionally revealing videotape or a confession? Would anyone reasonably think of this as “rape” in the everyday sense that word is used by American news organizations? Our best news organizations — The NYTimes, WashPost, WSJ, LATimes, USA Today, AP, ABC, CBS, NBC, NPR, PBS and Reuters — all used “rape” as the crime at issue with little to no nuance, clips at Google News show. None, as best I can tell, reported that the crime in question is condom slippage. While it is true that the word “rape” was attributed to Swedish authorities by each of these news organizations, that is not enough. Accurate and nuanced translations — linguistic, legal and cultural — are necessary. So is asking precisely what the law in Sweden is and what precisely the accusers assert. Asking for a statutory citation and then getting expert analysis of the law would be a smart move. As journalists we are supposed to carefully check and crosscheck facts. We are also supposed to independent. We are not supposed to take anyone’s word for it, especially not in a case where governments have a powerful interest in silencing someone. If Kennedy is right, and at a minimum her report deserves to be checked out today, then our best news organizations are behaving more like (to borrow a hoary newspaper phrase) those “semi-official” newspapers and broadcast outlets that reliably convey official government truths. Kennedy also reports that the Swedish prosecutor, Marianne Ny, “has been active in the proposed reforms of Swedish rape laws that would, if passed, involve an investigation of whether an imbalance in power between two people could void one person’s insistence that the sex was consensual.” The line above is another subtlety not conveyed in news reports I examined. Kennedy did not speak to me about this — I merely read her article by chance and was struck by how it stood out from the lazy, uncritical reporting I had read and heard. I then expected to see follow-ups that either advanced her report or knocked it down. Instead, nothing has been pursued either way. My hope here is that the top editors at the organizations named above will immediately call or email their reporters and tell them to check out Kennedy’s story and find out the actual facts. Better yet, the reporters whose bylines were atop stories about this will act on their own. Ombudsmen and reader/listener/viewer representatives should also be raising questions within their organizations and reporting on what they find out. http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/romenesko/109607/letters-aoler-kennedys-assan… added by: ras_menelik

Diddy, Jennifer Lopez, Mary J. Blige To Hit Fashion’s Night Out

Gwen Stefani, Pharrell and the Olsens will be among the celebs swarming New York on Friday night. By Mawuse Ziegbe Diddy Photo: Statia Photography/ Getty Images A bevy of celebs are stars are slated to light up Fashion’s Night Out in New York City on Friday (September 10). For the second consecutive year, stores around the city will stay open for extended hours offering drinks, DJ sets and discounts to promote the retail industry in an elaborate effort coordinated by the style bigwigs at Vogue and the Council of Fashion Designers of America among other organizations. Retailers are also bringing in big names to hawk their products and dazzle the crowds. Macy’s in Herald Square has arranged an all-star lineup that includes an appearance from Diddy , who will cruise the city in a Fashion Night Out party bus and finish things off with an afterparty at the Fifth Avenue Sean John flagship with DJs Prostyle and Envy in tow. Also slated to hit the department giant are designer Kimora Lee Simmons and Jennifer Lopez , who is promoting her fragrance Love and Glamour. Fashion-forward celebs Mary J. Blige , Nicole Richie and Victoria Beckham will hold court at the tony Fifth Ave. establishment Bergdorf Goodman. Meanwhile, child-stars-turned-fashion-moguls Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen will appear at Barneys New York. Musicians who keep a well-styled foot in the fashion world are also at the helm of several of the night’s festivities. Superproducer Pharrell Williams will be on hand for an event at the downtown outpost of his Billionaire Boys Club’s brand, where a (not-so) surprise show will kick off the event in the early evening. Designer and songstress Gwen Stefani will reportedly show up at a Broadway Sephora location. Other stars lending their celebrity to the evening’s events include “Sin City” star Rosario Dawson, who will host a cocktail party for the Italian luxury brand Bottega Venetta, and tennis champ Serena Williams who will appear at Best Buy. Supermodel Bar Rafaeli, M.I.A. prot

Shameful News Industry Willing To Sacrifice Wikileaks To Get Shield Law | Techdirt

http://techdirt.com/images/topic_journalism.gif A few weeks ago, we noted, with some disappointment, that the politicians who had been pushing for a much needed federal shield law for journalism, Senators Chuck Schumer and Dianne Feinstein, were taking the politically expedient route of adding a specific amendment designed to keep Wikileaks out of the bill's protections( http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20100804/10343410497.shtml ). Apparently, a bunch of newspaper folks have apparently stepped forward to support this move. Douglas Lee, at The First Amendment Center has an opinion piece calling those people out for sacrificing their overall principles just to get the shield law approved( http://www.firstamendmentcenter.org/commentary.aspx?id=23303 ). The whole thing is a great read, but a few key snippets: > > It doesn't seem all that long ago that representatives of the newspaper > > industry would have recoiled from working with Congress to deny legal > > protection to anyone who leaked confidential or classified documents. > > Today, however, they seem happy to be doing so. Lee the goes on to quote various industry reps distancing themselves from Wikileaks and putting it down as “not journalism.” He also quotes them admitting that they feel they have to throw Wikileaks under the bus, or the law won't get passed, and then calls them out on the impact of that decision, hinting at the fact that at least some of this might be due to traditional journalists simply not liking new upstarts that are changing the game — like Wikileaks. > > As comforting as it might be to “real” journalists to incorporate editorial > > oversight into a shield law and to use it to distinguish further between the > > “us” who are entitled to the law's protections and the “them” who are not, > > at least two dangers exist in that approach. > > First, does anyone — including the most mainstream of traditional journalists > > — really think it a good idea that Congress and judges define, analyze and > > evaluate what is appropriate “editorial oversight”? For decades, news > > organizations have struggled to resist those efforts in libel cases and, > > so far, those struggles have succeeded. If those same organizations > > now invite legislators and judges into their newsrooms to see how worthy > > their reporters are of protection under a shield law, they shouldn't be > > surprised if the legislators and judges decide to stay. > > Second, is the free flow of information really served if the act's protections > > are denied to those who don't have or practice editorial oversight? > > As Schumer acknowledged in his statement, the act already contains > > language that would limit or deny protection to those who provide or > > publish classified military secrets. Specifically exempting WikiLeaks and > > other organizations that might otherwise qualify for protection under the > > act in at least some cases seems designed not to enhance the free flow of > > information but to channel that information to mainstream sources. It is the nature of politics today to compromise principles to get things through, but this move certainly seems unfortunate — and one that I imagine many news organizations will regret down the road. added by: toyotabedzrock

Couple of The Year Award Winners

Couple of The Year Award Winners added by: poojam

‘Craigslist Killer’ commits suicide in Boston jail

Accused “Craigslist Killer” Philip Markoff committed suicide at the Nashua Street Jail in Boston, where he was being held awaiting trial in the slaying of Julissa Brisman, according to Steven Tompkins, spokesman for the Suffolk County Sheriff's Office. Markoff, 24, was pronounced dead at 10:17 this morning. He was found suffocated with a plastic bag over his head, according to a law enforcement official briefed on the investigation. While authorities are still investigating, Markoff was alone in his cell and all evidence collected so far indicates that it was a suicide, said a statement released by Boston Police Commissioner Edward Davis and Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel F. Conley. http://www.boston.com/news/local/breaking_news/2010/08/accused_craigsl_2.html added by: Stoneyroad

US Government Threatens Iceland and US Supporters of Wikileaks

The Obama administration has asked Britain, Germany, Australia, and other allies to consider criminal charges against Julian Assange for his Afghan war leaks. Philip Shenon reports. The Obama administration is pressing Britain, Germany, Australia, and other allied Western governments to consider opening criminal investigations of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and to severely limit his nomadic travels across international borders, American officials say. Officials tell The Daily Beast that the U.S. effort reflects a growing belief that WikiLeaks and organizations like it threaten grave damage to American national security, as well as a growing suspicion in Washington that Assange has damaged his own standing with foreign governments and organizations that might otherwise be sympathetic to his anti-censorship cause. American officials confirmed last month that the Justice Department was weighing a range of criminal charges against Assange and others as a result of the massive leaking of classified U.S. military reports from the war in Afghanistan, including potential violations of the Espionage Act by Bradley Manning, the Army intelligence analyst in Iraq accused of providing the documents to WikiLeaks. Now, the officials say, they want other foreign governments to consider the same sorts of criminal charges. “It’s not just our troops that are put in jeopardy by this leaking,” said an American diplomatic official who is involved in responding to the aftermath of the release of more than 70,000 Afghanistan war logs—and WikiLeaks’ threat to reveal 15,000 more of the classified reports. “It’s U.K. troops, it’s German troops, it’s Australian troops—all of the NATO troops and foreign forces working together in Afghanistan,” he said. Their governments, he said, should follow the lead of the Justice Department and “review whether the actions of WikiLeaks could constitute crimes under their own national-security laws.” Last month, a prominent pro-military group in Australia suggested that Assange may have violated Australian law through the release of the Afghan war logs, given the threat the leak may have posed to the lives of Australian troops serving in the NATO-led force. The Obama administration was heartened by the call this week by Amnesty International and four other human-rights groups for WikiLeaks to be far more careful in editing classified material from the war in Afghanistan to be sure that its public release does not endanger innocent Afghans who may be identified in the documents. “It’s amazing how Assange has overplayed his hand,” a Defense Department official marveled. “Now, he’s alienating the sort of people who you’d normally think would be his biggest supporters.” The initial document dump by WikiLeaks last month is reported to have disclosed the names of hundreds of Afghan civilians who have cooperated with NATO forces; the Taliban has threatened to hunt down the civilians named in the documents, a threat that human-rights organizations say WikiLeaks should take seriously. “It’s amazing how Assange has overplayed his hand,” a Defense Department official marveled. “Now, he’s alienating the sort of people who you’d normally think would be his biggest supporters.” The joint letter by the five groups, first revealed by The Wall Street Journal, was met by a tart response from Assange, who communicates with the outside world largely through the social-networking Internet tool Twitter. He appeared to suggest that news organizations and human-rights groups, notably Amnesty International, should help him underwrite his cost of the editing and release of more of the Afghan war documents—but that they were instead refusing to provide assistance. “Pentagon wants to bankrupt us by refusing to assist review,” he tweeted on Monday, referring to the effort by WikiLeaks to convince the Defense Department to join in reviewing the additional 15,000 documents to remove the names of Afghan civilians and others who might be placed in danger by its release. “Media won’t take responsibility. Amnesty won’t. What to do?” In a separate posting on Twitter, Assange estimated the cost of the “harm minimization review”—a reference, apparently, to the effort to edit the 15,000 documents to remove informants’ names—at $700,000. It was not clear how he arrived at that figure. The Australian-born Assange travels constantly and is said to have no real home, living instead in the homes of friends and supporters around the world. He was reported as recently as last week to be in the U.K., although he has spent significant time this year in Australia, Iceland, and the U.S. He has said he is postponing future travel to the U.S. because of fear that he faces legal sanctions here. Through diplomatic and military channels, the Obama administration is hoping to convince Britain, Germany, and Australia, among other allied governments that Assange should not be welcome on their shores, either, given the danger that his group poses to their troops stationed in Afghanistan, American officials say. They say severe limitations on Assange’s travels might serve as a useful warning to his followers that their own freedom is now at risk. A prominent American volunteer for WikiLeaks reported last month that he was subjected to hours of questioning and had his laptop and cellphones seized by American border agents on returning to the U.S. from Europe late last month. An American military official tells The Daily Beast that Washington may also want to closely review its relations with Iceland in the wake of the release of the Afghan war logs. Assange and his followers have been successful in pressing the government of Iceland, in the wake of the collapse of the country’s banking system, to reinvent itself as a haven for free speech, creating a potential home for WikiLeaks and other organizations that may violate the laws of the U.S. and other nations through the release of classified documents. added by: toyotabedzrock