The right to free speech faces the strongest challenges during times of
crisis. Whether or not any of us agree about each particular decision made
to prevent public access to sensitive information, it is the Electronic
Frontier Foundation's responsibility to chart any such efforts so that we
as a society are at least aware of what is no longer available to us.
This page attempts to convey the chilling effect that responses to the
terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, have had on information
availability on the Internet as well as some sense of the effect on people
trying to provide this information.
If you know of a anti-terrorism chilling effect that should be listed
here, please use our contact form
Feel free to mirror this page on other websites, just please link back
to the original on this page.
Websites Shut Down by US Government
DEA to Redirect Seized Websites
The U.S. Justice Department on Monday said it indicted 11 Web site
operators for allegedly selling illegal devices including bongs and
holders for marijuana cigarettes. "Mr. Ashcroft says customers who
want to visit some of their favorite drug paraphernalia websites are in
for a big surprise in the days ahead. They will be automatically
redirected to the website for the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration," Voice
of America, February 24, 2003
ATF Fails to Poindexcise Bomb Threat Info
The first three links on this page
http://www.atf.treas.gov/press/breakingnews/threat.htm now tell you:
"The Explosives, Bomb Threat and Detection Resources publications are
no longer available online. You must send in a written request to the
following to receive a copy:...", ATF, February 11, 2003
No URL Left Behind? Web Scrub Raises Concerns
The Department of Education is in the process of a massive overhaul of
its Web site to make it easier to use and to remove outdated data—and
ensure that material on the site meshes with the Bush administration's
political philosophy. The department will strip its ed.gov site of
thousands of files, many of them old and inaccessible from the site's home
page. Sometime this fall, the new Web site will be unveiled, with special
sections for teachers and researchers, parents and policy wonks. But some
researchers and government watchdogs say the department's decision to
scrap some information based on whether it comports with Bush
administration initiatives could set an unsettling precedent. The redesign
thus highlights yet another question emerging from new technology: Just
what responsibility do political officials have to preserve the products
of those who came before, particularly if their predecessors saw the
issues in a different light, Education
Week, September 18, 2002
Besieged ISP Restores Pearl Vid
The unedited video of journalist Daniel Pearl being murdered is back
online. An Internet hosting company in Virginia, which the FBI threatened
last week with federal obscenity charges, said on Monday afternoon that it
would resume distribution of the horrific 4-minute video. Pro Hosters
owner Ted Hickman said he and his customer, ogrish.com, decided to thumb
their nose at the bureau's warnings for two reasons: (1) A realization
that the FBI's threats were spurious, and the legal aid of the American
Civil Liberties Union. (2) "We have decided to take the hot seat in
this position, mainly because we and ogrish.com believe strongly in
freedom of speech and freedom of press and the First Amendment,"
Hickman said. "It's definitely something that I think people should
be able to view if they choose to," Wired,
May 28, 2002
FBI Seeks Pearl Video Ban on Net
The FBI has ordered an ISP to stop distributing the unedited video of
journalist Daniel Pearl being brutally murdered. A customer of Pro Hosters
had posted the 4-minute video on the ogrish.com site. Pro Hosters
responded by removing the video, Wired,
May 23, 2002
Security Concerns Force House To Limit Access to Documents
"Citing increased security concerns since Sept. 11, Congressional
officials have classified as "confidential" three of the four
reports issued by the House Inspector General so far this year.", LewRockwell.com,
February 5, 2002
The Bell Tolls for FreeRepublic.com
The 9th District Circuit Court of Appeals, San Francisco, will convene
to hear oral arguments in re: Washington Post and Los Angeles Times v.
FreeRepublic.com LLC, in what is perhaps the most important 1st amendment
case of the new millennium. At issue is the propensity of FreeRepublic.com
and its owner, Jim Robinson, to allow the posting of whole-length articles
from news organizations nationwide a policy the Post and Times,
respectively, assert infringe upon the intellectual property rights of
both the news corporations and of individual writers, LewRockwell.com,
February 5, 2002
Internet service remains sparse in Somalia
While the bulk of Somalia is still suffering from a lack of Internet
access, a small number of people are still able to use the Internet in
certain areas of the country. Currently, there are other companies, such
as Telcom Somalia, providing Internet service in Hargeisa and Somaliland,
two parts of Somalia that have broken away from Somalia, but are not
officially recognized by the rest of the world, Digital
Freedom Network, January 30, 2002, AllAfrica.com,
January 23, 2002, BBC,
January 22, 2002,
Somalia Back Online
A new telecommunications company has opened its doors in Somalia, two
months after the country's only internet provider and a major
telecommunications company were closed down for allegedly supporting
terrorism. "The firm, NetXchange, opened its business today ... the
Somali capital, Mogadishu," BBC,
January 22, 2002
http://www.ironvamc.com/ registered by UpLogon.com
The veterns administration has shut down individual hospital websites
hosted on non gov or edu servers, http://www.ironvamc.com/,
January 7, 2002
U.S. Shuts Down Somalia Internet, links firms to terrorism
The US believes the two companies also support Bin Laden Somalia's only
internet company and a key telecoms business have been forced to close
because the United States suspects them of terrorist links, BBC,
November 23, 2001, Newsday,
November 23, 2001, NorthernLight,
November 23, 2001, SiliconValley.com,
November 22, 2001, Slashdot,
November 23, 2001, Somalinet,
November 23, 2001
Websites Shut Down by Other Governments
Be Prosecuted for Publishing Bomb-Making Info
This article claims that Austin will be prosecuted for publishing
bomb-making information. The 18 USC provision cited forbids anyone to
teach or demonstrate the making or use of an explosive, a destructive
device, or a weapon of mass destruction, or to distribute by any means
information pertaining to, in whole or in part, the manufacture or use of
an explosive, destructive device, or weapon of mass destruction, with the
intent that the teaching, demonstration, or information be used for, or in
furtherance of, an activity that constitutes a Federal crime of violence. Cryptome,
August 12, 2002
Charges To Be Dropped Against Raisethefist.com Owner
Federal charges will be dropped against the teen-aged operator of
anti-government site Raisethefist.com, a spokesperson for the U.S.
attorney's office in central California confirmed today. Sherman Austin,
18, was arrested Feb. 2 in New York at a demonstration against the World
Economic Forum. He currently is being held in a federal transfer detention
center in Oklahoma City, enroute to his home state of California, Newsbytes,
February 15, 2002
Raisethefist.com Shutdown
Raisethefist.com was an alternative media site conversing a diversity of
subjects including anarchism, activism, and current events not reported by
mainstream media or even what passes as alternative media were reported
and commented on in an open publishing format available to the public. On
January 24, 2002 approximately 25-30 individuals, mostly federal agents,
but also LAPD, and LA Sherriffs Dept personnel according to one source,
raided the raisethefist.com founder's home fully armed, confiscated some
of his property and shut down the site along with the newly opened,
laanrchists.org site that he also recently created, IndyMedia,
January 27, 2002, Newsbytes,
January 31, 2002
Manatee County Libraries Censor Sites
You've been censored!!! The computers for public usage at the public
libraries in Manatee County Florida do not allow access to your website
eff.org., January 22, 2001
Reportedly shut down by British government because prosecutors allege
that the site was affiliated with London-based Azzam Publications and
urged support of terrorism to defend Muslims in the Caucasus,
"donating money for the Taliban," and "military training
for the battle," Wall
Street Journal / MSNBC, October 8, 2001
Sakina Securities
The Sakina
Securities website at was shut down on Oct. 5, the same day the
British government arrested Sulayman Balal Zainulabidin for allegedly
"providing training or instruction in the making of firearms,
explosives or chemical, biological or nuclear weapons and inviting others
to do the same," Wired
News / Reuters, October 4, 2001, and Newsbytes.com,
October 12, 2001
Websites Shut Down by Internet Service Provider
Al Jazeera and The Net - Free Speech, But Don't Say That
Arabic satellite TV network Al Jazeera's efforts to build an
English-language web site have run into another speed bump. Akamai
Technologies, whose "Accelerated Networks can stand up to
unpredictable traffic and flash crowds for even the largest events,"
fired Al Jazeera last week. Akamai issued a statement saying it had worked
"briefly" last week with Al Jazeera, but that it had decided
"not to continue a customer relationship" with the channel. No
reason was given for the decision, but an Al Jazeera spokeswoman told the
New York Times that companies were coming under "nonstop political
pressure" to refuse to do business with the channel, The
Register, April 7, 2003
YellowTimes.org Shut Down!
The well known alternative news publication YellowTimes org was just
shut down without explanation by its hosting company! It recently
published an article by an Iraqi nuclear scientist, Law
& Policy of Computer Communications, February 10, 2003
Everyone's Internet of Houston Shuns Websites
A Houston Internet company was entangled Wednesday in an international
controversy about Web sites that feature Palestinian and Taliban fighting
personnel. It started when a radio station run by Israeli settlers in the
war-torn West Bank broadcast a report about U.S. Web sites it said promote
Palestinian and Taliban terrorism, in possible violation of U.S. law.
Three of the Web sites can be traced electronically to equipment at
Everyone's Internet of Houston, an Internet service provider. The company
said it never knew about the sites until Wednesday. In fact, company chief
Robert Marsh said, the sites do not do business directly with Everyone's
Internet, whose services are sold and resold across the world and used to
operate about a million Web sites. Nevertheless, Everyone's Internet
blocked operation of the three sites Wednesday after being contacted by
the Chronicle. Houston
Chronicle, May 2, 2002
Palestine Type Sites Off-line
"The Hamas website, as far as have been able to determine, is
blacklisted because they have been declared a terrorist organization by
the State Department. The goal is to prevent fundraising and recruiting by
this organization." This is the link he was trying to access:
http://www.palestine-info.com/hamas/ palestine-info .org, .net, and .com
are all down, April 2002
Angelfire Abuse
Angelfire closes site discussing issues surrounding the 750 Floridian
Detainees, Counterpunch,
March 20, 2002
CIA-Backed Web Privacy Firm Closes Service
An Internet privacy firm has closed an anonymous Web surfing service
that had been partly funded by the CIA and intended to give Web users in
countries such as China and Iran a way to circumvent censors, Safeweb
and Washtech.com,
November 20, 2001
"Rage Against The Machine" fan discussion forum was
shutdown
"Because the FBI called the ISP, saying there was too much
anti-American rhetoric on that board" Guerrilla
News, October 29, 2001
allewislive.com
This site from Al Lewis, who played Grandpa on the Munsters television
show, was shut down apparently by web hosting provider Hypervine for an
unknown reason, although other information from Al Lewis is available at http://www.grandpa2000.org/,
Politech,
October 2, 2001, and USA
Today, October 16, 2001, and Internet.com,
October 18, 2001, and Wired,
October 26, 2001
azzam.com
This site reportedly provides "authentic news and information about
Jihad and the foreign Mujahideen everywhere, by providing stories of
martyrs killed in Afghanistan, Bosnia and Chechnya" and says it
doesn’t encourage readers to commit illegal acts, although it notes
that, according to Islamic tenets, "martyrdom operations are
permissible", and was apparently shut down by multiple ISPs, at least
one apparently in response to an FBI request, while the site was also
apparently at one point mirrored at the now no longer available
qoqaz.co.za, Wall
Street Journal / MSNBC, October 8, 2001
iraradio.com
This pro-IRA site which archives all Radio Free Eireann broadcasts, has
been taken down because the web service provider Hypervine felt that the
Bush administration's announcement of the new Office of Homeland
Security's activities threatened the ISP with seizure of their assets if
they continued to host "terrorist" radio programs, so the site
owners plan to reopen probably on a Canadian server after they move into
their new office later this year, Politech,
October 2, 2001, and Guardian
Unlimited, October 11, 2001, and USA
Today, October 16, 2001, and Internet.com,
October 18, 2001, and Wired,
October 26, 2001
Websites Shut Down or Partially Removed by Website
Owner
WTC Cartoon Ripped
n editorial cartoon that ridicules widows of World Trade Center victims
as greedy and shallow publicity hounds drew instant outrage last night
from the grieving survivors. Ted Rall's drawing, "Terror
Widows," abruptly yanked from The New York Times Web site yesterday,
skewers the women as getting rich from charity aid and preening for TV
cameras, NY
Daily News, March 6, 2002
Online Companies Draw Fire For Removing 'Offensive' Postings
Yahoo's message boards are erupting with the kind of free-flowing,
impassioned discussions the Internet's creators always dreamed of, with
postings about practically every aspect of the hunt for terrorists, the
capture of Kabul and mysterious plane crashes. But what's also revealing
is what is being deleted, Newsbytes,
November 19, 2001
CIA Facilities
The Central Intelligence Agency has a large number of acknowledged and
unacknowledged facilities in the United States, in addition to stations in
a number of countries around the world. This facility guide provides both
ground level views of these facilities, as well as overhead imagery of
these facilities and their surroundings, See Archived
CIA Facilities Page, October 31, 2001
Suppression Stifles Some Sites
Amid the nationalistic furor sweeping the United States in wake of the
Sept. 11 attacks, many government and private websites are yanking content
that could be deemed unpatriotic or risky to national security, Wired
News, October 25, 2001
Amazon Removes a Startling Book Jacket
Amazon.com has removed a photograph of a Arabic book jacket that shows a
plane flying through the top of a building under construction in Riyadh,
Saudi Arabia, that has a top shaped like the eye of a needle, with the
only link to the World Trade Center being that the Riyadh building is
being financed by Prince Alwaleed bin Talal bin Abdul Aziz al-Saud, whose
$10 million donation to the Twin Towers Fund was recently refused by Mayor
Rudolph W. Giuliani of New York, because along with expressing
condolences, the prince urged the United States to re-examine its policy
toward Israel, NY
Times, October 29, 2001
Bert Is Evil!
Although it is not clear if this happened due to strange reports of
Islamic fundamentalists holding posters
containing an image of Sesame Street's Bert character right next to Osama
Bin Laden, the owner of this site, Dino Ignacio, explained that he removed
the site because "I feel this has gotten too close to reality and I
choose to be responsible enough to stop it right here," Bert
Is Evil, October 18, 2001
This owner of this site explained that because "Congress is trying
to change the constitution in order to put peaceful protesters in
prison" and although "I have never burned a flag, nor do I ever
want to" he has "had so many death threats and assaulting
emails, that I choose no longer to care about this cause. I have fought an
uphill battle to protect your freedom of speech. And now I give up," The
FlagBurning Page, September 19, 2001, and Internet.com,
October 18, 2001, and Wired,
October 26, 2001
Uncached by Google
Cathy sent an email informing us - if you search for something on Google
that has been cancelled from a particular surver, you can access a
"cached" version of the page in question, but since September
11, certain 'offensive' pages are un-cached and they are no longer
available for viewing, Cathy
Collie, November 16, 2001
Google Un-Cached
Google has approached government agencies and private organizations,
offering to remove from their "cache" the web pages that were
removed from other sites, ABCNews.com
/ Good Morning America, October 15, 2001, and Contra
Costa Times, October 18, 2001
MSNBC Removes Item on Congressional Coverage Restrictions
MSNBC removed from an article formerly entitled "Ashcroft Seeks
Sweeping Powers" and now called "House
Approves $343 Billion Defense Bill" a section about how the House
Judiciary Committee's Republican staffers ordered television camera crews
to leave a hearing on terrorist attacks after Ashcroft spoke but before
civil liberties and free-speech advocates could testify, Media
Alliance Project, September 24, 2001, and Yahoo
Stop Police Abuse Group, September 27, 2001
US Government Websites That Shut Down or Removed
Information
Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
OMB Watch, a
Washington group that advocates for government accountability in budgetary
and regulatory matters, says the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry dropped a report critical of chemical plant security, Newsfactor
Network, October 4, 2001, and Newsfactor
Network, October 5, 2001
Army Corps of Engineers
The Army Corps of
Engineers site that contained information about an underground
military command center near Washington was moved behind a firewall so a
username and password are now required for access, ABCNews.com
/ Good Morning America, October 15, 2001
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
OMB Watch, a
Washington group that advocates for government accountability in budgetary
and regulatory matters, says the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention has pulled a report about lack of preparedness against a
terrorist attack using poison gas or other chemical agents, Newsfactor
Network, October 5, 2001, and USA
Today, October 12, 2001 (updated October 18, 2001), and Federal
Computer Week, October 16, 2001
Department of Energy, National Transportation of Radioactive
Materials
OMB Watch, a
Washington group that advocates for government accountability in budgetary
and regulatory matters, says the Department of Transportation has limited
access to the National Pipeline Mapping System of the Office
of Pipeline Safety, which lays out the network of high pressure
natural gas pipelines throughout the nation and the site of the Geographic
Information Services section of the DOT's Bureau of Transportation
Services (BTS) reportsthat "Recent events have focused additional
security concerns on transportation infrastructure" and "Due to
these concerns, BTS will not provide unlimited access to the geospatial
data through the Internet," Newsfactor
Network, October 4, 2001, and Newsfactor
Network, October 5, 2001, and SiliconValley.com
/ Reuters, October 11, 2001, and USA
Today, October 12, 2001 (updated October 18, 2001), and ABCNews.com
/ Good Morning America, October 15, 2001, and Federal
Computer Week, October 16, 2001
Environmental Protection Agency
OMB Watch, a
Washington group that advocates for government accountability in budgetary
and regulatory matters, says the EPA has pulled from its site Risk
Management Plans, which contain detailed information about the dangers of
chemical accidents -- such as toxic plume maps and emergency response
plans after a refinery explosion, Newsfactor
Network, October 4, 2001, and Newsfactor
Network, October 5, 2001, and SiliconValley.com
/ Reuters, October 11, 2001, and USA
Today, October 12, 2001 (updated October 18, 2001), and ABCNews.com
/ Good Morning America, October 15, 2001, and Federal
Computer Week, October 16, 2001
Federal Aviation Administration
OMB Watch, a
Washington group that advocates for government accountability in budgetary
and regulatory matters, says the Federal Aviation Administration has
pulled data from a site listing enforcement violations such as weaknesses
in airport security, Newsfactor
Network, October 5, 2001, and ABCNews.com,
October 12, 2001
What makes this more interesting is that dozens of SRS documents, if not
hundreds, were (presumably) already reviewed by proper reviewers for
public release, and then made available electronically via OSTI
Because these documents were stored on an srs.gov server, they are no
longer easily available via the OSTI search and retrieval system, And info
may still be available on Google's cache.
November 17, 2001
Geographic Information Services
OMB Watch, a
Washington group that advocates for government accountability in budgetary
and regulatory matters, says the Geographic Information Services, which
provides highly detailed maps of roads and utilities, is limiting access
to federal, state, and local government officials, Newsfactor
Network, October 5, 2001
International Nuclear Safety Center
Selecting the Reactor
Maps link from the front page of this site generates the following
message: "If you requested access to the maps of nuclear power
reactor locations, these maps have been taken off-line temporarily pending
the outcome of a policy review by the US Department of Energy and Argonne
National Laboratory," while their Power Reactors database still lists
city and state for nuclear plants around the world, International
Nuclear Safety Center, October 18, 2001
TheNuclear Regulatory
Commission is displaying only "only select content" while
"performing a review of all material" on their website, although
most of the information has been there for years and "nothing top
secret was on the Web site to begin with," according to William
Beecher of the NRC, ABCNews.com,
October 12, 2001, and USA
Today, October 12, 2001 (updated October 18, 2001), and ABCNews.com
/ Good Morning America, October 15, 2001, and Federal
Computer Week, October 16, 2001, and Contra
Costa Times, October 18, 2001
Government Puts New Controls on Public Access to Weapons Info
The White House has placed new controls on government information about
weapons of mass destruction and is telling agencies to clear Web sites of
even unclassified data that could help terrorists, SiliconValley.com,
March 21, 2002, Newsbytes,
March 21, 2002,
New York Pulls Info from the Web
The New York state government has quietly ordered its state agencies to
remove information available from government Web sites as a security
precaution. The new policy is aparently one of the most far-reaching and
restrictive of any government in the U.S., NY
Times, February 26, 2002
State Pulls Data From Internet in Attempt to Thwart Terrorists
The Pataki administration has quietly ordered state agencies to restrict
information available on the Internet, including bridge plans and
power-plant maps, NY
Times, February 26, 2002
Libraries Cull Collections to Make Feds Happy
Under federal orders, two Vermont schools destroyed copies of a document
about water supplies that had raised security concerns after the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks. The University of Vermont and Castleton College got
letters last fall from the U.S. Government Printing Office instructing
them to destroy the little-known document, "Source Area
Characteristics of Large Public Surface Water Supplies." And The Feds
recently sent out a letter to 1300 libraries across the country, asking
them to destroy a particular document about water supplies. The libraries
cheerfully complied, Politechbot,
February 12, 2002
FBI Advises Security Review of Web Content
The FBI's National Infrastructure Protection Center on Thursday advised
providers of water, energy, transportation, finance and other critical
infrastructures to evaluate the content of their Web sites from a security
perspective, Newsbytes,
January 18, 2002
White House May Restrict Government Info on Germ Warfare
The Bush administration is considering whether to restrict distribution
of government documents that describe how to make germ weapons, White
House officials said Sunday. U.S. stockpiles of offensive germ warfare
agents were destroyed nearly three decades ago as part of the 1972
Biological Weapons Convention. But the government kept the blueprints for
manufacturing such weapons, and continues to sell them, Associated
Press, January 13, 2002
On the Public's Right to Know The Day Ashcroft censored Freedom
In a memo that slipped beneath the political radar, U.S. Attorney
General John Ashcroft vigorously urged federal agencies to resist most
Freedom of Information Act requests made by American citizens, SF
Chronicle, January 6, 2002
Al-Jazeera
Bush administration national security adviser Condoleezza Rice called
network executives to request that they "exercise judgment" in
broadcasting messages from Osama bin Laden received through the Al-Jazeera
satellite network while Secretary of State Colin Powell claimed the
broadcasts may contain "some kind of message", and in response
CNN, Fox, and other networks agreed to review statements before airing
them, Associated Press, October 10, 2001
Journalists from the Voice of America who obtained an interview with
Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar managed to publish a modified version
of the interview only after struggles within the Bush administration, Washington
Post, September 26, 2001
Fellow Diego Garcians
"Appropriate authorities" ask DG web site to remind folks of
the dangers of passing useful information to potential enemies,
DG Website, September 16, 2001
Media Professionals Terminated or Suspended
Harvard U.'s English Department Cancels Lecture by Poet Who Has
Strongly Criticized Israel
Harvard University's English department has canceled a lecture planned
for Thursday by Tom Paulin, an award-winning poet and professor at the
University of Oxford, after complaints from students and faculty members
about Mr. Paulin's political views, particularly his harsh critiques of
Israel, Chronicle,
November 13, 2002
Pics and Strips
The Ombudsman of the Washington Post wrote Sunday that they substituted
the 10/13/02 edition of "The Boondocks" because it compared
President Bush to HitlerWashington
Post, October 20, 2002, U
Comics, October 20, 2002
Boondocks
The wording: - Whoa. Some people in other countries are comparing Bush
to Adolf Hitler because of his warmongering. - That's preposterous. Even I
would never compare Bush to Hitler... I mean, Hitler was democratically
elected, wasn't he?, Karlsbjerg,
October 20, 2002
N.J. Poet Laureate Won't Resign
The state's poet laureate defended a poem he wrote implying that Israel
knew of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in advance, and rebuffed the demand
of Gov. James McGreevey that he resign and apologize. Amiri Baraka
asserted that the meaning of his poem, "Somebody Blew Up
America," has been distorted. "It is a poem that aims to probe
and disturb, but there is not any evidence of anti-Semitism," Star
Tribune, October 3, 2002
Republican Taliban in Vermont
Vermont Public Television station revoked its invitation to Peter Freyne
to appear on VPT. It is not clear whether he has been permanently or
temporarily banished. But the response by VPT appears to be a case of
extreme sensitivity leading to an unfortunate muzzle on Freyne's
admittedly rambunctious mouth for referred to the conservative Republicans
of Chittenden County as the "Taliban," Free
Expression Network Clearinghouse, March 29, 2002
Another Prize-Winning Journalist Fired
His name is Tim McCarthy, and for the last seven years, he's been the
editor of the Courier, a weekly newspaper in Littleton, New Hampshire,
owned by Salmon Press. Last year, he won the "Editorial Writer of the
Year" award from the New Hampshire Press Association, and previously
he'd won that award from the New England Press Association. But on
February 13, he was fired. McCarthy cites two factors in his dismissal:
His repeated editorializing against George W. Bush's recklessness, and his
defense of a cartoonist who was under the gun for a controversial panel
criticizing the President, The
Progressive, March 9, 2002
Daniel Pearl Sequence of Events
Daniel Pearl, the Wall Street Journal’s South Asian bureau chief,
disappears on his way to a meeting with Islamic extremists in Karachi.
Pearl was investigating links between Pakistani militants and Richard C.
Reid, the alleged shoe bomber arrested on a Paris-to-Miami flight in
December with explosives in his sneakers. The Wall Street Journal and
other media receive an email from "The National Movement for the
Restoration of Pakistani Sovereignty" containing a photo of Pearl.
The group accuses Pearl of being a CIA spy and demands freedom for
Pakistani detainees held in Cuba. In an email response, The Wall Street
Journal asks for Pearl's release. A second email warns that Pearl will be
killed within 24 hours. It is later extended to 48 hours. Sheik Mubarak
Ali Shah Gilani, the fundamentalist leader Pearl was scheduled to
interview on the day of his disappearance, is arrested in Pakistan. Gilani
denies involvement. Secretary of State Colin Powell says that the U.S.
will not negotiate, MSNBC,
January 2002
CNN and Fox News receive emails claiming that Pearl is dead and his body
could be found in a Karachi cemetary. The emails turn out to be hoaxes.
Pearl's wife, a French freelance journalist who is seven months pregnant,
appeals for his freedom. Pakistani police identify Ahmad Omark Saeed
Sheikh, a British-born Islamic militant, as a prime suspect. Three men are
charged with sending the original emails; they claim the photos came from
Saeed. Saeed is arrested and flown to Karachi for questioning. Pakistani
President Pervez Musharraf says he believes Pearl is still alive. Saeed
confesses to the kidnapping and says that Pearl is already dead. Pakistan
rejects Saeed's claim and predicts a breakthrough within 48 hours.
Pakistan Foreign Ministry spokesman says that investigations are going on
with the "same intensity and vigor" as in the past. WSJ
executive Steven Goldstein says the company is hopeful that Pearl will be
freed soon. The U.S. embassy in Pakistan receives evidence that Pearl has
been killed. The U.S. State Department announces a $5 million reward for
information leading to the apprehension of Pearl’s killers; Pakistani
President Musharraf consoles the reporter’s widow at a meeting in
Islamabad. Pearl's family is creating a foundation in his name, MSNBC,
February 2002
Marian and Me
When Michael Moore's publisher insisted he rewrite his new book to be
less critical of President Bush, it took an outraged librarian to get it
back in the stores, Salon.com,
January 7, 2002
Baraboo News Republic cans Todd Persche
He was canned for expressing alternative viewpoints in his cartoons
regarding how Big Brother was "turning out civil rights upside
down," The
Progressive, January 2002
Boonducks
Aaron McGruder has seen his anti-war content comic strips stripped from
the pages of newspapers across the country, The
Progressive, January 2002 and McGruder talks about societal hypocrisy,
censorship, U.S. policy and media lunacy, Alternet,
November 5, 2001
The Spectrum Retracts a Pulitzer Prize-Winner Steve Benson's
Cartoon
The Cartoon was much a chagrin for the Spectrum when local veterans
threatened to cancel their subscriptions if it didn't issue an apology,
apology given, The
Progressive , January 2002
Publisher Halts Distribution
Publisher HarperCollins had informed Michael Moore that they will not be
selling/distributing his new book "Stupid White Men and Other Excuses
for the State of the Nation" --already printed -- because the content
is offensive. Fwded by Jordana Signer in re to message from Ann Sparanese,
Head of Adult & Young Adult Services at Englewood Public Library,
December 16, 2001
Sun Advocate Staff Reporter Jackie Anderson Forced to Quit
Her column on "War is not the only action available to us. Seeking
Justice is action. Making peace is action" was never published. In
fact, the Sun went another direction - Prowar. And Ms. Anderson was a part
of the fallout, The
Progressive, January 2002
KSCO cancels show
On Oct. 6, leftist talk-show host Peter Werbe had his program
terminated, Metro
Santa Cruz, October 24-31, 2001
Author Jailed
This is the high-profile case where the Victorian Attorney General the
Dishonorable Robert Justin Hulls is trying to jail Australia's leading
corruption author Raymond Hoser for publishing the truth in the two
"Victoria Police Corruption" books, Smuggled.com
October 31, 2001
Politically Incorrect
When ABC satirist Bill Maher said on his show, "Politically
Incorrect," that "we have been the cowards lobbing cruise
missiles from 2,000 miles away -- that's cowardly," three ABC
affiliates, including Washington's WJLA-TV, answered viewer complaints by
yanking subsequent episodes from the air, Arianna
Online, September 24, 2001, and Washington
Post, September 26, 2001
Daily Courier Fires Columnist
The Daily Courier publisher Dennis Mack fired columnist Dan Guthrie for
writing about President Bush "hiding in a Nebraska hole"
following terrorist attacks, TBO.com
/ Associated Press, September 26, 2001
National Review Cans Columnist Ann Coulter
The National Review told conservative columnist Ann Coulter her writing
is no longer welcome after one of her columns declared, "We should
invade their countries, kill their leaders and convert them to
Christianity," while the Washington Times refused to run the
terrorism column in the first place, Washington
Post, October 2, 2001
Other Employees Terminated or Suspended
Teacher Sues District For Violating Free Speech About Bin Laden
A substitute teacher filed a federal lawsuit Wednesday, saying his
school district violated his free speech rights for remarks he made that
were perceived as supportive of Osama bin Laden. John B. Gardner, 52, of
Stanton Heights, was suspended Sept. 20, 2001, after he wrote phrases in a
newspaper margin that he said were related to a book he was writing on how
to overcome adversity. He was later reinstated. One of the phrases read:
"Osama bin Laden did us a favor ... He vulcanized us, awakened us and
strengthened our resolve." Another said, "We're going to be
stronger because of it," Associated
Press, October 3, 2002
Lawmakers Protest Palestinian Speaker at Sept. 11 Conference
Conservative lawmakers are demanding that a college cancel the
appearance of a Palestinian leader at conference marking the anniversary
of the Sept. 11 attacks, but the school has refused. Colorado College
invited Palestinian leader Hanan Ashrawi to debate Israeli political
adviser Gideon Doron at the three-day conference beginning on the
anniversary. The debate is scheduled for Sept. 12, Chronicle,
August 30, 2002
Professors' Group Enters Al-Arian Fray
The American Association of University Professors said Wednesday it will
send a team of investigators to the University of South Florida this
spring to examine the university's treatment of controversial professor
Sami Al-Arian, St.
Peterburgs Times, February 7, 2002
University of South Florida Moves to Fire Computer Engineering
Professor Al-Arian
Al-Arian was banned from campus after he appeared in late September on
the Fox News Channel's The O'Reilly Factor, St.
Petersburg Times, December 20, 2001 and St.
Peterburgs Times, December 19, 2001
Photography Museum Director Resigns Over Afghanistan Exhibit
The woman who led Daytona Beach Community College's photography museum
for 10 years has resigned, claiming college administrators censored her by
telling her to cancel an exhibit on Afghanistan, Daytona
Beach News Journal, December 13, 2001
OCC Professor Reinstated, but Issue Remains
Although cleared, teacher objects to what he calls a reprimand. Muslim
students angered by his classroom remarks say little after decision, LA
Times, December 12, 2001
College Replaces Damra as Lecturer
Cleveland Islamic leader Fawaz Damra will not be teaching a Lakeland
Community College course about Islam after the college notified him that
it wants to avoid controversy,
The Plain Dealer, December 12, 2001
UM Employee Fired Over Sept. 11 Remarks
When terror struck America on Sept. 11, a University of Miami medical
technician who was turning 22 that day said aloud, ``Some birthday gift
from Osama bin Laden!'' ... Miami
Herald, November 16, 2001
UCLA Library Assistant Suspended for Critical Email
A library assistant at the University of California at Los Angeles was
suspended without pay for one week, then later returned to work with full
pay and the incident removed from his record, after sending a mass e-mail
message criticizing American support for what he called apartheid policies
in Israel and the bombing of Iraq, Daily
Bruin Online, October 4, 2001, and American
Libraries, October 15, 2001, and Daily
Bruin Online, October 25, 2001
Related Incidents
Agency Denies Dropping Project's Funding After Anti-war Comments
A programmer of a secure, free operating system claims the U.S. research
agency cut off grant money after he made an anti-war statement to a major
newspaper, but officials denied the grant had been canceled, Associated
Press, April 18, 2003
Text of Tim Robbins speech
Transcript of actor's address to National Press Club, WorldNetDaily,
April 16, 2003
Associate Justice Stephen G. Breyer's Speech on Liberty,
Security, and the Courts
First, the current situation: Post September 11 civil liberties issues
fall into three categories. The first includes the rights of detainees.
The second category involves statutes increasing the government's
information-gathering powers, for example, laws making it easier for the
government to obtain a magistrate's approval for a search or wiretap, to
proceed without approval in certain emergency situations, to listen to
certain terrorist-related lawyer/client conversations (though these
conversations cannot be introduced into evidence). The third category
includes those matters that might happen, but so far have not, for
example, trials before military tribunals. Consequently, from a judicial
perspective, the civil liberties cases involving detainees now seem more
urgent, US
Supreme Court, April 14, 2003
Supreme Court Justice Scalia Bans Media From Event Where He's
Accepting Free-Speech Award
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia banned broadcast media from an
appearance Wednesday where he will receive an award for supporting free
speech, ABCNews,
March 19, 2003
A Response to Paul M. Menges Regarding the Ethical
Considerations of Providing Polygraph Countermeasures to the Public
A St. John’s College Library visit by a former public defender was
abruptly interrupted February 13 when city police officers arrested him
about 9 p.m. at the computer terminal he was using, handcuffed him, and
brought him to the Santa Fe, New Mexico, police station for questioning by
Secret Service agents from Albuquerque. Andrew J. O’Conner, 40, who was
released about five hours later, said in the February 16 Santa Fe New
Mexican, “I’m going to sue the Secret Service, Santa Fe Police, St.
John’s, and everybody involved in this whole thing.” According to
O’Connor, the agents accused him of making threatening remarks about
President George W. Bush in an Internet chat room, American
Library Association, February 25, 2003
Santa Fe Police Detain Library Patron over Chat-Room Visit
Paul M. Menges, a federal polygraph examiner and instructor who
currently teaches the Department of Defense Polygraph Institute's
countermeasure course, argues in a recent article titled "Ethical
Considerations of Providing Polygraph Countermeasures to the Public"
(Polygraph, Vol. 31 [2002], No. 4, pp. 254-262), that publicly making
available such information is unethical and concludes with the suggestion
that it should be outlawed, Antipolygraph.org,
February 24, 2003
Scientists Discuss Balance of Research and Security
Leading scientists began talks today on whether and how to withhold
publication of scientific information that could compromise national
security. The discussions at the National Academy of Sciences follow a
raft of post-Sept. 11 restrictions on research into some 64 substances
that could be used in biological weapons. The discussions were also partly
an effort to fend off potential government censorship or other steps to
control unclassified research that the new domestic security law terms
"sensitive," New
York Times, January 10, 2003
DOJ Confirms FBI Agents Snoop in Libraries
The Department of Justice has confirmed in a letter to Senate Judiciary
Committee Democrats that FBI agents have snooped around public libraries
to learn the reading and Internet-surfing habits of suspected terrorists, L.A.
Daily Journal, January 6, 2003
Government Openness at Issue as Bush Holds On to Records
The Bush administration has put a much tighter lid than recent
presidents on government proceedings and the public release of
information, exhibiting a penchant for secrecy that has been striking to
historians, legal experts and lawmakers of both parties, New
York Times, January 3, 2003
George W. Bush's Constitution
It is hard to imagine that America would look kindly on a foreign
government that demanded the right to hold some of its own citizens in
prison, incommunicado, denying them access to legal assistance for as long
as it thought necessary, without ever charging them with a crime.
Nevertheless, that is the position that George Bush's administration has
tried to defend in the courts with regard to American citizens whom it has
deemed to be "enemy combatants," Villiage
Voice, January 3, 2003
Jailed in U.S. Snafu, Man Disillusioned
Faramarz Farahani walked into a California immigration office thinking
he was about to do his civic duty. He ended up being handcuffed, then
flown to a crowded jail at the other end of the state, where he tried to
sleep on a concrete floor in a five-day ordeal that left him bewildered, Globe
and Mail, December 26, 2002
Jewish Professors Back Divestment
The national movement to pressure universities to pull their investments
from Israel has been battered this year by critics who call it divisive
and anti-Semitic. But it has shown remarkable staying power in large part
because of an unusual group of supporters: Jewish professors. Hundreds of
college professors nationwide have signed petitions calling for divestment
from Israel, among them several dozen Jewish professors who call their
signatures an act of political conscience. As the fall semester draws to a
close, many have found themselves - not always purposely - becoming
spokesmen for a cause that has deeply split their campuses, Boston
Globe, December 21, 2002
Are We Protecting Secrets or Removing Safeguards?
Immediately after witnessing one of the planes crash into the South
Tower, my brother logged onto the Internet at his office in lower
Manhattan and starting hunting for information. He was looking for an
escape route for his wife and 4-year-old daughter, who were in their
apartment across the street from the Twin Towers. An architect, he found
Web sites that described the towers' structure and dimensions, which
helped him think through likely collapse scenarios. He used this
information to develop a plan for reuniting with his family and ultimately
gaining safe passage by police boat from lower Manhattan. But who knows if
someone else might have sought out this same information for nefarious
purposes, such as to plot the attacks themselves?, Washington
Post, November 24, 2002
Grounded
A federal agency confirms that it maintains an air-travel blacklist of
1,000 people. Peace activists and civil libertarians fear they're on it.
Barbara Olshansky was at a Newark International Airport departure gate
last May when an airline agent at the counter checking her boarding pass
called airport security. Olshansky was subjected to a close search and
then, though she was in view of other travelers, was ordered to pull her
pants down. The Sept. 11 terrorist attacks may have created a new era in
airport security, but even so, she was embarrassed and annoyed, Salon.com,
November 15, 2002
Patriot Act Causes Libraries to Review Records
Attached to each staff phone in the Berkeley Public Library is a dark
pink laminated card advising employees on how to handle subpoenas.
"If a person comes to you to serve a subpoena on the library, say
that you are not in a position to act on it," the card reads.
"Do not attempt to give them the information they are looking
for," San
Jose Mercury News, October 20, 2002
The Echelonization of America: NSA to spy domestically?
"Where do we draw the line between the government's need for
(counter-terrorism) information about people in the United States and the
privacy interests of people located in the United States? This
line-drawing affects the focus of NSA's activities, foreign versus
domestic... the type of data NSA is permitted to collect and how, and the
rules under which NSA retains and disseminates information about U.S.
persons,"U.S.
Senate, October 17, 2002
Scientists Complain that Data Disappear Under 9/11 Worries
AFTER SEPT. 11, many feared that the war on terror would inspire mass
government restrictions on free speech. And a fistful of public critics of
the war (Bill Maher and two small-town journalists) were indeed fired,
boycotted or suspended. Most of that hysteria died down soon enough - but
not at our universities, Baltimore
Sun, October 15, 2002
Press Freedom Gets Slaughtered In Survey
In the five years of the annual survey, said Kenneth A. Paulson,
executive director of the First Amendment Center in Nashville, this is the
first time "almost half of those surveyed said that the First
Amendment goes too far in the rights it guarantees. About 49% said the
First Amendment gives us too much freedom, up from 39% last year and 22%
in 2000," EditorandPublisher.com,
October 7, 2002
On Campus, Violence 'Speaks'
AFTER SEPT. 11, many feared that the war on terror would inspire mass
government restrictions on free speech. And a fistful of public critics of
the war (Bill Maher and two small-town journalists) were indeed fired,
boycotted or suspended. Most of that hysteria died down soon enough - but
not at our universities, philly.com
Daily News, October 4, 2002
Wartime Censorship Is Alive And Well and Living On Campus.
Following Sept. 11, many of us feared that the war on terror would
result in massive government restrictions on free speech. And almost
immediately after the attacks, a fistful of public critics of the war
(Bill Maher and two small-town journalists) were indeed fired, boycotted,
or suspended. Most of that hysteria died down soon enough-but not at our
universities. A year later, on college campuses, we are still suspending
professors and beating up students with unpopular viewpoints. And what's
more, we do all this under the pretext of fostering openness and free
expression. Wartime censorship is alive and well, but it's happening only
in our colleges, our "laboratories of democracy," Slate,
September 19, 2002
Rights and New Reality
Secret deportation hearings, U.S. citizens denied due process while in
custody. These evoke memories of dictatorships and undermine the health
our democracy, LA
Times, September 10, 2002
Support Rises for Internet Censorship
Information wants to be free. For years, that's been the rallying cry
for proponents of an unfettered Internet. But since Sept. 11, many
Americans are having second thoughts about what belongs online, according
to survey results released yesterday. More than two-thirds of Americans
cut officials wide slack in deciding what to keep off government Web
sites, to thwart terrorists, according to findings by the Pew Internet
& American Life Project. The month-long telephone survey queried 2,501
adults on attitudes toward, and uses of, the Internet since the terror
attacks. About two-thirds of them agree that officials should deny
information to terrorists even if that deprives the public, and a similar
percentage approves of steps already taken to strip sensitive material
from government Web sites, Star-Ledger,
September 6, 2002
Cloak of Secrecy
Douglas County librarian Jamie LaRue jumped on the Internet on Sept. 11
when he heard that planes had hit the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
He wanted to know all he could learn about Osama bin Laden, even reading
Web sites sympathetic to the apparent mastermind of the attacks. Only
later did it occur to him that his research was building a record that
might make him a suspect in the eyes of the government, Rocky
Mountain News, September 5, 2002
FBI will Tap into Personal Profiles
"Just about anything that you want to know about anybody is
available in a commercial database," said DeCastro of San Francisco.
Most people don't have a clue that such databases compile information from
a variety of sources, linking their names to their Social Security
numbers, credit profiles, employment histories, travel records, court
records, personal interests and chronic health conditions. And now, under
changes ordered by Attorney General John Ashcroft, the FBI is moving to
use commercial databases in its efforts to prevent acts of terrorism in
the United States, San
Diego Union-Tribune, September 3, 2002
Terrorist Attacks Brought New Surveillance Laws Worldwide
Governments worldwide have made it easier for authorities to augment
citizen databases and eavesdrop on telephone and online conversations in
order to fight terror, according to a survey of privacy regulations
released Tuesday. The report, written by privacy activists Electronic
Privacy Information Center and Privacy International, show the United
States was not alone in passing new laws that value increased security
over personal privacy, Chronicle,
September 3, 2002
France to Mark Sept. 11 with Terror conference, Movies,
Memorials
French and American officials will gather in Paris Sept. 11 to remember
the victims of last year's terror attacks and to discuss the challenges
posed by the war against terrorism, organizers said Tuesday. A two-day
terrorism conference begins with a ceremony in Luxembourg Gardens, where
officials will gather at an oak tree planted earlier this year in dirt
brought in from ground zero and other attack sites, Chronicle,
September 3, 2002
Protesters Planning Demonstrations for Meetings of World Bank
and IMF
Anti-globalization demonstrators, relatively subdued since the Sept. 11
terror attacks, are preparing a clamorous return to the streets this month
when the World Bank and International Monetary Fund meet, Chronicle,
September 3, 2002
Navy Begins War Exercises on Vieques While Protests Fizzle in
Wake of Sept. 11 Attacks
Fighter jets buzzed over Vieques on Tuesday as activists shied away from
their usual raucous protests, fearful of stiff jail sentences and fines in
a post-Sept. 11 climate, Chronicle,
September 3, 2002
Israel's Supreme Court Approves Expulsions of Relatives of
Palestinian Terror Suspects
In a landmark decision, Israel's Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that Israel
can expel relatives of Palestinian terror suspects from the West Bank to
the Gaza Strip, Chronicle,
September 3, 2002
North American Muslims Ponder Effect of 9/11 on Them
Convention goers say liberty, understanding coexist with profiling,
prejudice, Chronicle,
September 2, 2002, Chronicle,
August 31, 2002
Terror Concerns Cause Decline in Refugee Admissions
Tightened security imposed after Sept. 11 has, at least temporarily,
prevented thousands of people living in squalid refugee camps from
starting a new life in the United States, Chronicle,
September 2, 2002
New Anti-terror Law Strengthens Hand of German Authorities Ahead
of Sept. 11 Anniversary
New laws allowing German authorities to prosecute members of foreign
terrorist organizations and their supporters have come into force, and the
nation's security services reportedly have been put on alert ahead of the
anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, Chronicle,
September 2, 2002
Pakistan Hopes Nationals to be Released from Guantanamo Prison
Most of the Pakistani prisoners being held at the Guantanamo Bay naval
base in Cuba are not linked to al-Qaida and Pakistani authorities hope
they will be freed soon, a Foreign Ministry spokesman said Monday.
"Our impression is that the majority ... are not linked to
al-Qaida," spokesman Aziz Ahmad Khan told a news conference. "We
are in touch with the U.S. authorities for their repatriation." Khan
said as many as 58 Pakistani prisoners are currently held at the prison in
eastern Cuba where nearly 600 al-Qaida and Taliban suspects have been sent
following the Sept. 11 terror attacks, Chronicle,
September 2, 2002
WAR ON TERRORISM
Legal Affairs Spy court to review prosecutors' powers Ashcroft's appeal
for looser rules goes to panel, Chronicle,
September 2, 2002
Lindh Seeks Forgiveness
John Walker Lindh wants Americans to forgive him for joining the Taliban
military, where he met other Westerners, and is now telling federal agents
what he knows, his lawyers say, Chronicle,
August 31, 2002
Sensenbrenner Aants Answers on Act
U.S. Rep. F. James Sensenbrenner said Monday he'll play hardball with
Attorney General John Ashcroft over a congressional demand for detailed
information about the Patriot Act, the post-Sept. 11 law giving the
government broad powers to investigate terrorism. Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.)
said he would "start blowing a fuse" unless Ashcroft's Justice
Department gives answers by Labor Day week to 50 written questions about
the act raised by the House Judiciary Committee in June, Journal
Sentinel, August 19, 2002
Judge Wants More Evidence in Case of American-Born Detainee
A federal judge said Friday the government must give him more evidence
to explain why it is detaining an American-born man captured in
Afghanistan. "This case appears to be the first in American
jurisprudence where an American citizen has been held incommunicado and
subjected to an indefinite detention in the continental United States
without charges ... and without access to a lawyer," U.S. District
Judge Robert Doumar in Norfolk, Va., said, Associated
Press, August 19, 2002
INS Flouts High Court on Prisoners, Critics Say
In Zadvydas v. Davis the Supreme Court ruled the INS couldn't detain
convicted aliens indefinitely without threatening due process. But
according to a newly filed class action and a recent court ruling the INS
is doing just that. Federal Judge John Bates in Washington, D.C., freed a
Liberian jailed for nearly four years after finding the INS' assertion
that they were awaiting travel documents "simply, blatantly
false," The
National Law Journal, August 15, 2002
Internet Good Friend to Terrorists
Airmen in the 527th Space Aggressor Squadron at Schriever Air Force Base
work to make such an attack tougher. They scour the Internet for
potentially compromising information, thinking and acting like the enemy.
They can't, however, yank the information when they find it.They simply
show commanders where their base might be vulnerable. Such information
once was the domain of powerful nations with satellites, spy planes and
billion-dollar budgets. The Internet and high-quality satellite pictures
from private companies put the information a click and a credit card away.
The threat from easily available information - coined "open-source
intelligence" - is real, Gazette,
August 11, 2002
Bush Administration Routes TIPS Calls to TV Show "America's
Most Wanted"
In a development bordering on what the American Civil Liberties Union
called "surreal," the on-line magazine Salon.com today revealed
that the Department of Justice is forwarding incoming Operation TIPS calls
to the Fox-owned "America's Most Wanted" television series.Salon.com,
August 6, 2002
Dissent, Public Safety Core of Debate
Ed Whitfield and his followers just wanted to hold a peaceful
demonstration during President Bush's recent visit to the Triad, making it
clear that not all Americans are gung-ho for the war on terrorism. Police,
sheriff's deputies and the U.S. Secret Service simply wanted to protect
the nation's chief executive in a time of great national tension. The two
goals met head-on during Bush's July 25 visit, when the protesters were
stopped as they walked along a public road on which motorists traveled
freely. They had to discard their protest signs before being allowed to
proceed along Grandover Parkway in southwest Greensboro, News
& Record, August 04, 2002
Judge Orders Release of Sept. 11 Arrestee Names
The U.S. Justice Department must release in 15 days all the names of
those it has arrested and detained in its investigation of the Sept. 11
hijacked plane attacks. "The federal government's power to arrest and
hold individuals is an extraordinary one. Here, the government has used
its arrest power to detain individuals as part of an investigation that is
widespread in its scope and secrecy," U.S. District Judge Gladys
Kessler said in the 45-page ruling, Reuters,
August 2, 2002
Terrorism Measure Worries Librarians
Wisconsin librarians are agonizing over a new federal law giving FBI
agents power to demand records of what people are reading, a measure
fueled by efforts to prevent terrorism. Libraries don't like snooping into
the lives of library users, but because Congress passed the law just days
after the Sept. 11 attacks on the nation, librarians feel compelled to
comply, say library officials across southeast Wisconsin,Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel, July 8, 2002
No Data on ECC computers
No suspicious or terrorism-linked information was discovered on the
Edison Community College computer hard drives seized by Collier County
sheriff's deputies, Naples
News, July 6, 2002
Not Aware of FBI Snooping in Colorado
The FBI is prying into the nation's public library records in the name
of homeland security. But so far, not in Colorado,Rocky
Mountain News, July 5, 2002
US Cartoonists Under Pressure to Follow the Patriotic Line
Nine months after the attacks of 11 September, leading American
political cartoonists say they are under intense pressure to conform to a
patriotic stereotype and not criticize the actions of Mr Bush and his
"war on terror", Independent/UK,
June 23, 2002
FBI Checking Library Records
Ken Starr couldn't get the records, but now the FBI has a new law,
Section 215 of the USA Patriot Act and is using it. According to the San
Francisco Chronicle, about 8% of the libraries had been contacted for
information about their patron's reading habits, Washington
Post, June 23, 2002
What Country Is This?
Prisoners declared enemy combatants do not have the right to a lawyer
and the American judiciary cannot second-guess the military's
classification of such detainees, the Justice Department argued yesterday
in a brief to an appeals court, Washington
Post, June 20, 2002
MIT Seeks to Preserve Openness Amid Security Measures
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology has become the first major
academic research institution to outline a policy designed to protect
intellectual openness on campus amid growing pressure to limit access to
sensitive information and materials as part of the war on terrorism, Washington
Post, June 14, 2002
Top-Secret Prisoners in the USA
>During his six months at the Brooklyn Metropolitan Detention Center,
Anser Mehmood spent 123 days in a supermax lockdown facility, where guards
slammed his face into a wall and threatened to kill him. His crime?
Overstaying a tourist visa, AlterNet,
June 3, 2002
Homefront Confidential: How the War on Terrorism Affects Access
to Information and the Public's Right to Know
>"In the days immediately following September 11, the United
States government embarked on a path of secrecy unprecedented in recent
years. The atmosphere of terror induced public officials to abandon this
country's culture of openness and opt for secrecy as a way of ensuring
safety and security," The
Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, Spring 2002
FBI Gets More Powers for Domestic Surveillance
The FBI on Thursday won additional powers to conduct domestic
counterterrorism surveillance that critics said could trample on
Americans' constitutional rights, Reuters,
May 30, 2002, FACT,
June 2, 2002
Relevations of Pre-9/11 Attack Require Repeal of PATRIOT ACT
The storm of questions and criticism following revelations that the Bush
Administration had numerous warnings of an impending hijacking attack
before the September 11 tragedy have focused primarily on the Nixon-era
mantra, "what did he know, and when did he know it?" But, even
if a Congressional investigation agrees with Bush Administration
protestations that the warnings weren't specific enough to know what to
do, Bush Administration policy AFTER September 11 is going to require some
explaining, Boston
Herald, May 20, 2002
Police Sets Policy on Taping and Photography
"I was flying from Dublin to LA, directly over a city called
Galdthab, Greenland (which translates to "God's home") when the
pilot came over the intercom with the news that we would be returning to
Dublin and then explained why. The plane was silent. It was September 11th
and I knew instantly that life would never be the same for America. It was
the first opportunity for modern Americans to experience the reality of
war on our soil, and that is exactly what all of us experienced together,
the cold, brutal, unflinching, horror of war," Boston
Herald, May 19, 2002
Woody Harrelson on 9-11
"I was flying from Dublin to LA, directly over a city called
Galdthab, Greenland (which translates to "God's home") when the
pilot came over the intercom with the news that we would be returning to
Dublin and then explained why. The plane was silent. It was September 11th
and I knew instantly that life would never be the same for America. It was
the first opportunity for modern Americans to experience the reality of
war on our soil, and that is exactly what all of us experienced together,
the cold, brutal, unflinching, horror of war," Voice
Yourself, May 12, 2002
Secret U.S. Court OK'd 934 Warrants
Despite the war on terrorism, the government said Tuesday it requested
and won approval for fewer warrants last year for secret wiretaps and
searches of suspected terrorists and spies. The government received court
approval for 934 of the secret warrants in 2001 under a powerful U.S.
surveillance law, down from 1,003 in 2000. Experts puzzled over the slight
decline in one a measure of the war on terrorism inside the United States.
Yahoo
News, April 30, 2002
Patriot Act Hinders Net Freedoms
Some lawmakers and civil libertarians are attacking the 6-month-old
Patriot Act, saying it has "created the danger that Americans will be
afraid to communicate freely over the Internet," CNET
News.com, April 25, 2002, The
Hill, May 2, 2002
Law Makers Defend Secret Warrants
Local legislators are defending two new laws that limit public access to
court documents. The laws, which took effect this week, stop the public
from gaining access to search warrants and affidavits. It deems them
nonpublic records. Lawmakers - who unanimously voted for the measures in
the Senate and House of Representatives - said the laws protect crime
victims, informants and witnesses from criminals and the media. But civil
libertarians and First Amendment lawyers argue they invite police abuse
and curtail public scrutiny, Oakland
Press Online, April 25, 2002
Legislature Gives Police Power to Search Without Telling You Why
Two new laws, which took effect Monday as part of anti-terror efforts,
also shield from public scrutiny the reasons for police searches. Defense
lawyers and civil libertarians are outraged at the laws, which make search
warrants and supporting documents such as affidavits non-public records.
"If you think the police did secretive work before, just wait,"
defense attorney William Cataldo said. "It gives more power to the
ignorant and more power to those who would take your rights," , Oakland
Press Online, April 24, 2002
Capitol Hill Raises Free Speech Concerns in re to the
"Patriot ACT"
On Thursday, April 25, members of the Free Expression Network, Senator
Russ Feingold and Rep. Patsy Mink will mark the six-month anniversary of
the passage of the USA PATRIOT Act by raising concerns over threats to
free expression that have arisen since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
Lucy Dalglish of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press will
speak about threats to press freedom, FreeExpression.org,
April 23, 2002
On Gag Rules, Spy Tools and Freedom of Speech
JOHN ASHCROFT wants to know what you're reading. That's but one chilling
implication of the USA Patriot Act, which was rushed into law following
the Sept. 11 tragedy, ostensibly to expand the tools authorities use to
catch spies and terrorists. Combine it with new Bush administration
policies obscuring the public's view of government and limiting access to
public records and presidential papers, and what emerges is a pattern of
assaults on the First Amendment, cloaked in swagger about national
security and patriotism, Baltimore
Sun, April 22, 2002
Quilt - Pray for New York
Fiber artist Janet Ghio creates quilts in her studio in the attic of her
house. Ghio’s quilt, ‘Pray for New York,’ is now in the traveling
exhibit ‘America: From the Heart.’ When she heard stories about
everyday people committing acts of heroism on Sept. 11, Janet Ghio saw
hope. She wants people who view her “Pray for New York” quilt to see
the same thing. The Columbia fiber artist, who has been making decorative
art quilts for five years, decided to create a Sept. 11 quilt shortly
after the attacks, Digital
Missouri, April 22, 2002
The New War on Freedom Give Me Liberty, or Give Me . . . What?
Security?
Last week marked the anniversaries of three landmark events that paved
the way for the further erosion of our personal freedoms we face today -
Waco, Oklahoma, and ..., Zwire.com,
April 21, 2002
Amoral Logic of 'Collateral Damage'
Last fall, in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks, the U.S. government
launched its so-called war on terrorism, aiming first to destroy al Qaeda
and that organization's Taliban enablers in Afghanistan. Much of the U.S.
military action in Afghanistan has taken the form of bombing and other
aerial attacks on supposed enemy personnel, structures and equipment. The
situation on the ground, however, has proven to be less than transparent:
It has been difficult to distinguish friend from foe, innocuous civilian
from armed fighter. Thus, lies the 'collateral damage', Zwire.com,
April 18, 2002
High Noon for Ashcroft, Stewart, and the Defense Bar
In April 9, the attorney general of the United States strode before the
press to proudly brandish his proof that his war on terrorism is
succeeding. Brushed aside by him were the hundreds of detainees he's held
for months for minor violations of immigration regulations—without any
links to terrorism. Also ignored was that day's decision by a federal
court judge in Detroit that Ashcroft's closings of immigration hearings
around the country are unconstitutional, VillageVoice,
April 15, 2002
Congresswoman McKinney Presses for Investigation of Bush
Administration Links to 9-11
The need for an investigation of the events surrounding September 11 is
as obvious as is the need for an investigation of the Enron debacle.
Certainly, if the American people deserve answers about what went wrong
with Enron and why (and we do), then we deserve to know what went wrong on
September 11 and why. Are we squandering our goodwill around the world
with what many believe to be incoherent, warmongering policies that
alienate our friends and antagonize our allies? How much of a role does
our reliance on imported oil play in the military policies being put
forward by the Bush Administration? And what role does the close
relationship between the Bush Administration and the oil and defense
industries play, if any, in the policies that are currently being pursued
by this Administration , Truthout,
April 12, 2002
Lawyer Helped in a Terror Plot, Indictment Says
Federal prosecutors charged yesterday that a New York lawyer helped one
of her clients, an imprisoned Egyptian sheik who was convicted of plotting
a wave of terror in New York City, continue to direct terrorist operations
from his prison cell in Minnesota. Attorney General John Ashcroft, who
announced the charges in New York, said the lawyer, Lynne F. Stewart,
helped Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman pass messages to leaders of the Islamic
Group, a terrorist organization he once led in Egypt. The government
accused her of covering up her activities for Mr. Abdel Rahman, the blind
Muslim cleric who is serving a life sentence for his 1995 conviction in a
terrorist plot to blow up New York landmarks and is still regarded as the
spiritual leader of the Egyptian group, New
York Times, April 10, 2002
Secret Evidence Admitted
>A federal judge ruled Friday that the government can use secret
evidence in justifying its decision to freeze the assets of a
Bridgeview-based Islamic charity that U.S. prosecutors suspect is linked
to terrorism, Chicago
Tribute, April 6, 2002
School Shuns Speaker
For Kate Crockford, a senior at Holliston High School, Harmony Week
turned out to be filled with conflict. In light of the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks and the current crisis in the Middle East, Crockford invited a
speaker to talk Wednesday to two assemblies about civil liberties and
ethnic scapegoating - issues she deemed pertinent to the school's weeklong
examination of racism, sexism, and classism, among other matters. But
speaker Nancy Murray's portrayal of the Middle East bloodshed as an issue
of land control - with maps showing Israeli expansion into occupied
territory - rather than the result of nationalistic or religious disputes
sent some teachers and administrators reeling. School officials called off
the second assembly and asked Murray, director of the Bill of Rights
Education Project at the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts,
to leave. Teachers told Murray, who made clear that she was not speaking
for the ACLU, that they disagreed with her presentation and found it
one-sided. Crockford was stunned and disappointed. ''For adults to become
so frightened and immediately throw up a wall simply because they
disagreed with someone's opinion - I find it absolutely saddening,'' said
Crockford, 18, president of the high school's Gay Straight Alliance, Boston
Globe, April 5, 2002
Funding Cuts for Symbolism
The Missouri House sent a message to the University of Missouri
yesterday, a message worth nearly three-quarters of a million dollars.
During final House debate on the Higher Education Budget legislators
adopted three amendments that cut the budget committee's recommendations
for UM funding. The cuts were made in retaliation against University
policies and employee behavior, Digital
Missouri, April 4, 2002
Panel Faults Restricts Imposed Since 9/11
A panel that spanned a range of opinions from U.S. Rep. Bob Barr (R-Ga.)
to ACLU President Nadine Strossen --- with authorities on law enforcement
and the media in between --- Wednesday condemned legal restrictions
adopted by the Bush administration and Congress after Sept. 11, Access
Atlanta, April 4, 2002
Justice Dies in the Dark
Openness is a hallmark of this nation's legal system. The founding
>fathers knew that secret court proceedings give cover to corrupt or
tyrannical judges and sloppy prosecutors, that judges who can hide can
easily abuse power. Yet shortly after the September terrorist attacks,
immigration judges around the country slammed shut the doors of their
courtrooms, barring the public, the press and even relatives of the
oh-so-vaguely accused men and women rounded up by the thousands under
blanket orders from the attorney general. A federal judge could decide
this week whether this secrecy should stand. We hope she agrees that it
should not, LA
Times, April 3, 2002
Pro-Gov't Biase in Courtroom?
Judge T.S. Ellis III denied the defense motions. He only granted Lindh
lawyers additional access to some narrow categories of information and
held out the possibility that they could gain access to witnesses in the
future, WSWS.com
, April 3, 2002
Terrorist Web Site Hosted by U.S. Firm
A Web site glorifying recent suicide attacks in the Middle East that is
hosted by a U.S. company is sparking legal and ethical questions about
whether Internet service providers and hosting companies should be held
accountable for content on their networks and Web pages, Newsfactor
, April 2, 2002
Bookstore Privacy?
Bookstores nationwide, large and small, have chipped in about $30,000
>to help pay Meskis' legal fees as she defends reader privacy in a
battle now before the Colorado Supreme Court. Joyce Meskis resisted
Thornton police efforts to see the store's records of what was inside a
large Tattered Cover envelope found in the trash in Thornton, Rocky
Mountain News, April 1, 2002
FBI raids pro-Republicans
The target of an anti-terrorist raid in the United States last week
provided funds for an Islamic group with close ties to the Republican
party and the White House. The Safa trust, a Saudi-backed charity, has
provided funds for a political group called the Islamic Institute, which
was set up to mobilise support for the Republican party. It shares an
office in Washington with the Republican activist Grover Norquist, The
Guardian , March 25, 2002
Colin Powell Has a List. And, Trust Me--You Don't Want to Be On
It
The list in question, or rather the lists, concern groups that the
government labels foreign terrorist organizations, or FTOs, along with
funders, supporters and business entities that aid them. The State
Department list of FTOs, created by the 1996 Anti-Terrorism and Effective
Death Penalty Act and first issued in 1997, currently includes
twenty-eight groups. Since September 11, other lists have proliferated, The
Nation , March 25, 2002
Aid for Poor Urged as a Tool to Fight Terror
World leaders from Peru to the tiny Pacific island nation of Palau
seized on US security concerns yesterday to plead for more aid at a United
Nations development conference, arguing that eradicating poverty is the
best way to prevent terrorism, The
Globe , March 22, 2002
Iraq to US: Eliminate Your Weapons of Mass Destruction
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has called on the United States to
eliminate its weapons of mass destruction, suggesting it undergo
"psychiatric supervision" for its new nuclear weapons strategy
that targets seven countries, including Iraq. "America must eliminate
the first of its weapons of mass destruction before asking the rest of the
world to do the same," Saddam said on Wednesday while receiving a
delegation of chemists and pharmacology experts, Albawaba
, March 21, 2002
New Law on Secret Evidence
>Employing a controversial strategy, the U.S. Justice Department says
it plans to use secret evidence to justify the financial sanctions it
imposed on a Chicago-area Muslim charity as part of its effort to choke
off terrorist funding after Sept. 11, Chicago
Tribune, March 15, 2002
Ashcroft Personnel Moves Irk Career Justice Lawyers
Attorney General John D. Ashcroft has moved in recent months to
consolidate his control over the Justice Department's Civil Rights
Division, turning over control of sensitive issues traditionally handled
by career lawyers to more conservative political appointees. On a variety
of issues, including voting rights and employment discrimination, Ashcroft
aides have moved to limit the input of career employees, in some cases
meeting with defendants without informing the career lawyers handling the
cases or allowing them to be present, Washington
Post, March 14, 2002
USA: Post 11 September Detainees Deprived of Their Basic Rights
Six months on from the 11 September attacks, a significant number of
people detained in the USA in their aftermath continue to be deprived of
some basic rights under international law, and many appear to have been
detained arbitrarily, Amnesty
International, March 14, 2002
The War on Dissent Widens
Americans for Victory Over Terrorism (AVOT) declared their intention to
"take to task those groups and individuals who fundamentally
misunderstand the nature of the war we are facing." Those groups and
individuals, AVOT claims, need to be resisted both here and abroad. A
full-page AVOT advertisement carried in the March 10 Sunday New York Times
pointed to radical Islam as "an enemy no less dangerous and no less
determined than the twin menaces of fascism and communism we faced in the
20th century." At the same time, the $128,000 ad lambasted those at
home "who are attempting to use this opportunity to promulgate their
agenda of 'blame America first,'" AlterNet,
March 12, 2002
US Sends Suspects to Face Torture
The US has been secretly sending prisoners suspected of al-Qaida
connections to countries where torture during interrogation is legal,
according to US diplomatic and intelligence sources. Prisoners moved to
such countries as Egypt and Jordan can be subjected to torture and threats
to their families to extract information sought by the US in the wake of
the September 11 attacks, The
Guardian , March 12, 2002
9/11 Fund To Discriminate Against Gays
In an appearance on the Sunday, March 10 broadcast of NBC's "Meet
the Press," Kenneth Feinberg, the head of the September 11th Victim
Compensation Fund (a fund created by Congress and run by the Department of
Justice), said that gay partners of the heroes of September 11th will not
necessarily be eligible for the same compensation as heterosexual family
members who lost their loved ones. According to Feinberg, lots and lots of
people will receive compensation under the plan, including children,
babies, and even fetuses. And as an indication of how generous the fund
will be, even illegal aliens, who aren't American citizens and who are in
the US in violation of federal law, will receive benefits. Feinberg even
says that the Attorney General has promised that if undocumented aliens
come forward, they won't be kicked out of the country, and their employers
won't be penalized. "The attorney general, in consultation with
Immigration, etc., undocumented aliens who come forward, the families will
not suffer any consequences. They are covered by this program. They will
get a check. The employer, where we need the economic information about
the undocumented alien, will not be penalized," Feinberg told
"Meet the Press," About.com
, March 11, 2002
Australian, British and US Lawyers Challenge Detention of
Guantanamo Bay Prisoners
In an internationally coordinated campaign, Australian, British and the
US lawyers have launched a wide-ranging legal challenge to the Bush
administration’s detention of prisoners captured in Afghanistan and
currently being held in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Attorneys representing three
of the 300 Camp X-Ray prisoners—David Hicks from Australia and Shafiq
Rasul and Asif Iqbal from Britain—filed a law suit in a US federal court
in Washington on February 22 declaring that their clients were being held
illegally and in violation of US and international legal conventions, World
Socialist , March 11, 2002
China Calls U.S. Out on Human Rights
Responding to U.S. criticism of its human rights record, China returned
fire in a blistering rebuttal Monday -- a point-by-point dismantling of
American society that depicted a nation beset by crime, violent media
images, indifference to poverty and arrogant foreign policy. Despite the
harsh tenor of the Chinese report on American human rights, there was
little to indicate that it, like its counterpart report issued by the U.S.
State Department last week, would affect the increasing warmth of
Beijing-Washington relations. ``Once again the United States, assuming the
role of `world judge of human rights,' has distorted human rights
conditions in many countries and regions in the world, including China,
and accused them of human rights violations, all the while turning a blind
eye to its own human rights-related problems," the report said.
Especially notable was the document's scant criticism of the U.S. response
to the Sept. 11 attacks -- something China is loath to condemn, since it,
too, has a vested interest in fighting terrorism, a term it uses to
justify crackdowns on domestic dissent, NY
Times , March 11, 2002, YellowTimes,
March 16, 2002,
Globe Reacts to U.S. Nuclear Plan
Russia demanded answers, China said it was ``deeply shocked" and
Iran likened the United States to terrorists Monday over reports that they
had been targeted for nuclear strikes under a Pentagon contingency plan.
In its Nuclear Posture Review, the Pentagon cites the need for new nuclear
arms that could have a lower yield and produce less nuclear fallout. The
weapons, the Pentagon said, could be designed to destroy underground
complexes, including stores of chemical and biological arms. The targets
might be situated in Iraq, Iran, Syria, Libya or North Korea, a
reorientation away from cold war scenarios involving Russia, NY
Times, March 11, 2002, NY
Times, March 11, 2002
War 'Playing into al-Qaeda's Hands'
Two British scholars say the US strategy for defeating al-Qaeda is in
fact having the opposite effect. They describe the military response to
the terrorism of 11 September as "deeply counter-productive", BBC
, March 11, 2002
Civil Liberties Take Back Seat to Safety
In one of those decisions, Justice Stephen G. Breyer wrote last summer
that once immigrants enter the United States, they are protected by the
Constitution "whether their presence here is lawful, unlawful,
temporary or permanent." The spirit and letter of government policy
changed drastically after the terrorist attacks. Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft
ordered the detention of more than 1,000 foreigners suspected of posing a
security threat or believed to have information about the hijackers.
Information about the detainees has been scanty. Many have had little or
no access to lawyers and family, LA
Times, March 10, 2002
Judge Ross vs. Free Speech
"Deponent [detective Rodriguez] observed the defendant standing on
the corner at . . . Nassau Street and Maiden Lane . . . while dressed in
army fatigues . . . Holding a sign with the world trade center towers on
it with Osama bin Laden's face superimposed on the picture of the Towers.
. . . The Defendant was holding out leaflets to passersby in the area. . .
" Judge Ross denied dismissal said, "It is the reaction which
speech engenders, not the content of the speech, that is the heart of
disorderly conduct. . . . The defendant chose to disseminate his message
at a location near 'ground zero' at a time shortly after September 11. . .
. At the very least, he was aware of and consciously disregarded a
substantial and unjustifiable risk that public inconvenience, annoyance,
or alarm would result." However, the U.S. Supreme Court decisions
that declare, as in Street v. New York (1969): "It is firmly settled
that under our Constitution the public expression of ideas may not be
prohibited merely because the ideas are themselves offensive to some of
their hearers." In Terminiello v. Chicago, a landmark Supreme Court
First Amendment decision Judge Ross surely read while in law school,
Justice William O. Douglas ruled that freedom of speech is protected
"unless shown likely to produce a clear and present danger of a
serious substantive evil that rises far above public inconvenience,
annoyance, or unrest. . . . In Terminiello, a suspended Catholic priest,
Arthur Terminiello, had delivered remarks against blacks, Jews, and
Franklin Roosevelt that so enraged opponents in a meeting hall that its
windows and back door were broken "by a surging, howling mob that
hurled epithets at those who would enter and tried to tear their clothes
off." Justice William O. Douglas ruled that Terminiello's
inflammatory language did not make him guilty of disorderly conduct,
because "speech . . . may strike at prejudices and preconceptions and
have profound unsettling effects as it presses for acceptance of an
idea." Village
Voice, February 28, 2002
French: bin Laden Could Be Dead
There is ``a good chance'' that Osama bin Laden is dead, French defense
minister Alain Richard said Thursday, leaving open the possibility that
the al-Qaida leader is in hiding, NY
Times, March 11, 2002
Pakistani intelligence and Americans 'abduct' Briton
>Fresh fears about the circumstances in which alleged terror suspects
are being detained by US authorities have emerged after Pakistani
intelligence was accused last night of working with Americans to kidnap a
British man, bundling him into the boot of a car and smuggling him to
Afghanistan. The case is being closely scrutinised by British and US
lawyers who believe it reflects a trend of casual detention of terrorist
suspects in the region, with apparent disregard for international law, The
Guardian, March 9, 2002
60 Feet Under
The Washington Post blared: "Shadow Government Is at Work in
Secret." The article said President Bush had assembled a cadre of
officials to operate under the radar, out of the sunlight, NY
Times , March 3, 2002
Patriotic Stupor: White House Junta Undermining Democracy
In the months following Sept. 11 the debate about waging war on
terrorism has been understandably mute. With rare exceptions, the question
boiling out of the nation's anger hasn't been whether to fight a war or
where to fight it, but how quickly. Once it began, President Bush's
strangely paradoxical promise that the war would certainly be won but that
its duration would be open-ended should have been the first warning that
such a colossal national commitment deserves less vagueness and clearer
strategy, if not accountability. Nothing of the sort has happened, Daytona
Beach News Journal, March 3, 2002
Colleges Fear Anti-Terrorism Law Could Turn Them Into Big
Brother
Opening student computer files without their permission. Reporting on
the library books checked out by a graduate student. Collecting data on
who on campus is sending e-mail to whom. To many college technology and
library officials, these sound like invasions of privacy that are
antithetical to the traditions of academe. But these are the sorts of
actions that a new law may well permit or in some cases require. And
colleges are struggling to understand their obligations and rights under
the measure, which is only now attracting their attention and is leaving
many campus officials confused or worried, The
Chronicle , March 1, 2002
Giuliani Caused #7 WTC Collapse
The NY Times article notes that the cause of the collapse was very
similar to that which brought down the Federal building in Oklahoma City.
The similarities go much further than the interactions between diesel
fuel, the laws of physics and the strength of structural steel, Lederman
, March 1, 2002
Ashcroft Invokes Religion In U.S. War on Terrorism
Attorney General John D. Ashcroft yesterday cast the government's war on
terrorism in religious terms, arguing that the campaign is rooted in faith
in God and urging Christians, Jews and Muslims to unite in the effort.
Contrasting "the way of God and the way of the terrorists,"
Ashcroft's speech to a group of Christian broadcasters in Nashville
included some of the most explicitly religious remarks from the attorney
general since he was confirmed amid controversy over his views more than a
year ago. "Civilized people -- Muslims, Christians and Jews -- all
understand that the source of freedom and human dignity is the
Creator," Ashcroft said in prepared remarks released by the Justice
Department. "Civilized people of all religious faiths are called to
the defense of His creation. We are a nation called to defend freedom -- a
freedom that is not the grant of any government or document, but is our
endowment from God," Washington
Post, March 1, 2002
Poindexter
The agency which Poindexter will run is called the Information Awareness
Office. You want to know what that is? Think, Big Brother is Watching You.
IAO will supply federal officials with "instant" analysis on
what is being written on email and said on phones all over the US.
Domestic espionage. You want to test it out? Text-message any American
friend, The
Guardian , February 18, 2002
To Protect Top Bureaucrats, NY Times SCRUBS Its OWN Osama Bin
Laden Warning That It Published on 9-9-01
On 9-9-01 - just two days before Osama Bin Laden's attack on the US -
the NY Times published a lengthy and chilling article about Osama Bin
Laden by reporter John Burns. Some time after 9-11, the Times SCRUBBED
this article, replacing it with a completely different article that Burns
wrote on 9-12. Both articles discuss a 2-hour videotape by Bin Laden that
intelligence agencies first saw in June 2001, but ignored until September.
Why was the 9-9 article scrubbed? Read it yourself - we've UNSCRUBBED it, Democrats.com,
February 17, 2002
Bush, Oil and the Taliban
Two French authors allege that before Sept. 11, the White House put oil
interests ahead of national security, Salon.com,
February 8, 2002
Students Vent Anger Over Flag Burning
An angry conflict involving hundreds of students erupted at Fullerton
College on Thursday when one student tried to burn an American flag in the
campus quad and others tried to stop him, Orange
County Register, February 8, 2002
E-mail Use Up After Sept. 11
Following the East Coast terrorist attacks, an estimated 100 million
Americans have sent or received e-mails related to Sept. 11, expressing
emotional support and concern or seeking information about victims, a new
study released today reported, Mercury
News, February 7, 2002
Pro-Bin Laden Speech Leads to Disorderly Conduct Charge
A New York man arrested and charged with disorderly conduct near the
World Trade Center after an angry crowd threatened him for supporting
Osama bin Laden will stand trial in late February, despite his free speech
claims, Law.com,
February 4, 2002
INS Detainee Hits, U.S. Strikes Back
Shakir Baloch, a Canadian of Pakistani origin detained by the U.S.
government, had been in solitary confinement 23 and a half hours a day for
about 90 days, in a six-and-a-half-by-seven-foot cell, where the lights
were on day and night, in a special jail unit meant for violent felons,
deprived of contact with family and counsel for most of that
time—without ever having been charged with a crime, Village
Voice, February 5, 2002
White House Buys Anti-Terror Super Bowl Spots
The White House anti-drug advertising program will break two anti-terror
ads on the Super Bowl in the biggest single-event government advertising
buy in U.S. history. Media buying sources say the White House Office of
National Drug Control Policy will likely pay over $1.6 million per spot.
The drug office will get free matching spots from Fox Broadcasting Co. in
other high-profile events, CBS,
January 30, 2002
Bush Seeks To Restrict Hill 9-11 Probes
President Bush asked House and Senate leaders yesterday to allow only
two congressional committees to investigate the government's response to
the events of Sept. 11, officials said. The president said the inquiry
should be limited to the House and Senate intelligence committees, whose
proceedings are generally secret. Senate Democratic leaders want a broader
investigation, involving some committees that would be free to air their
findings. The focus of the committee probes is likely to center on
intelligence failures preceding the terrorist attacks that killed about
3,100 people, Truthout,
January 30, 2002
'Ghoulish Souvenirs' From 9-11 Attack
A Georgia company is selling commemorative medallions made with recycled
steel from the World Trade Center, angering some relatives of September
11th victims who call them "ghoulish souvenirs." "I think
it's disturbing. They're profiting off our losses," Marian Fontana
said Wednesday. Fontana, president of the Sept. 11 Widows' and Victims'
Families Association, lost her firefighter husband, Dave Fontana. The
medallions are forged from an alloy, 25 percent of which is recycled trade
center steel. They are offered on the Internet and at collectibles stores
for $29.95, CBS,
January 30, 2002
Fewer facts in media coverage
Study shows that fewer facts are reported by the media after 9/11, Salon.com,
January 28, 2002
Manhunt Puts Middle Easterners at Mercy of Ordinary Americans
The fear might seem silly if it hadn't already come true. Sometime after
September 11, a Bangladeshi Muslim driver was arrested after arguing with
a fare who quizzed him on his political views. The passenger called
authorities, who reportedly found irregularities on some of the driver's
identification documents. Friends have not heard from him and assume the
immigrant is in an INS prison, says Haq. It's the worst case so far, but
numerous tales of passenger harassment and slurs—"Osama" is a
popular one—have the drivers on edge, Village
Voice, January 22-28, 2002
Computers Enlisted to Fight Anthrax
A coalition of scientists and technology companies is asking people
around the world to use their computers' extra processing power to help
search for a cure for anthrax, USA
Today, January 22, 2002
Televising a Terrorist's Trial
The Department of Justice recently changed policy with respect to when
government information will be released under the Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA). Abandoning the Clinton administration policy of releasing
information unless it is "reasonably foreseeable that disclosure
would be harmful," the new policy allows governmental agencies to
resist FOIA requests whenever there is a legal basis to do so, USA
Today, January 17, 2002, Washington
Times, January 14, 2002
Mich. Congressman Forced to Strip
Security guards at Washington's Reagan National Airport forced U.S. Rep.
John Dingell to strip to his underwear before boarding a flight to
Detroit, Newsday,
January 8, 2002
Explosive New Book Published in France Alleges that U.S. Was in
Negotiations to Do a Deal with Taliban
The most explosive charge is that the Bush administration -- the present
one, just shortly after assuming office slowed down FBI investigations of
al Qaeda and terrorism in Afghanistan in order to do a deal with the
Taliban on oil -- an oil pipeline across Afghanistan, Truthout,
January 8, 2002
Political Dissent Can Bring Federal Agents to Door
It was 10:30 a.m. on Nov. 7 when the two men showed up. Donna Huanca was
alone, getting ready to open Houston's Art Car Museum. "They looked
like robots," she says. She told the men, dressed in dark suits and
carrying leather portfolios, that they would have to wait until the doors
opened at 11. That was when they flipped out their badges: They were
federal agents investigating reports of "anti-American activity"
at the tiny art gallery, The
Christian Science Monitor , January 8, 2002
A Religious Moment
After the names and the utterances of prime ministers and secretaries of
war are forgotten, after the madmen in the desert have been hunted down
and killed, after the capable youth of today's soldiers has been
undermined by the blessing of a long life, history will, I think, remember
this time--our lifetime--as a religious moment, both dangerous and capable
of great grace, LA
Times, January 6, 2002
Ghoulish Business Promotion at WTC site
Happy Hour on holy ground? Terror-based tourism? Dining out alongside a
mass grave? That's the new advertising campaign a coalition of business
groups led by the Alliance for Downtown NY are hoping will lure millions
of gawking tourists to the World Trade Center [WTC] disaster site, Robert
Lederman, January 6, 2002
FDNY Blasts WTC Investigation/Cover-up
A signed editorial in the January issue of Fire Engineering magazine
says the current investigation is "a half-baked farce," NY
Daily News, January 4, 2002
New Jersey Officials Barred From Learning Identities of Citizens
Who Posted Criticisms on Web
Issuing a ruling that strongly upholds the First Amendment rights of
anonymous Internet speakers, a New Jersey judge has refused an attempt by
Emerson, N.J., public officials to learn who criticized them on the
Internet, Public
Citizen, January 2, 2002
Be Wary of the Books You Buy
The antiterrorism bill gives the federal government expanded authority
to search booksellers' business records including the titles of the books
purchased by consumers, The
Progressive, January 2002
High School Student Suspended for Her Views
Katie Sierra accused of treason by Sissonville School Board Member for
wearing a T-Shirt that said, "Racism, Sexism, Homophobia, I'm So
Proud of People in the Land of the So-Called Free, The
Progressive, January 2002
New McCarthyism
FBI and Secret Service harasses Art Museum and Students residence for
exhibiting un-American symbolistic artwork, The
Progressive, January 2002
Bush to Ignore Rule on Written Notices of Intelligence Actions
President George W. Bush said he'll use presidential authority to
sidestep a rule requiring his administration to provide Congress with
written notice of U.S. intelligence activities, Bloomberg,
December 28, 2001
The Silence on Terrorism
Everyone professes to love free speech -- the president of the
University of Texas calls it the "bedrock of American liberty,"
the American Council for Trustees and Alumni supports it, the mayor of
Modesto defends it, the president of the University of South Florida --
they are all committed to free speech, AlterNet,
December 26, 2001
Federal Court Rebuffs INS on Delays
A federal judge in New York issued a significant ruling that prevents
the Immigration and Naturalization Service from using delays in the agency
as an excuse for refusing to act on a child's visa application, The
National Law Journal, December 26, 2001
Liberty on the Defensive
The political mood in this country is getting uglier as the open-ended
long war drags on. Frustrated at not seeing Osama bin Laden's head
"brought home on a stick," as one CNN commentator growled,
Americans are turning on their fellow citizens and the Constitution, In
These Times, December 22, 2001
Homeland Security, Homeland Profits
Intelligence Agencies are looking for new ways to monitor the Internet
following 9-11. Civil libertarians are concerned about privacy while
software companies stand to make billions. CorpWatch looks at the
technology already in the spy agencies' hands and the new tools that will
make it easier than ever to monitor the Web, CorpWatch,
December 21, 2001
Conservative 'Patriots' Target Liberal Academics
Course funds are threatened and professors denounced and suspended for
organising teach-ins on the war and voicing criticism of American foreign
policy. Duncan Campbell reports, The
Guardian, December 19, 2001
Sacramento Bee publisher and President Janis Besler Heaphy Booed
off Stage
Heaphy's winter 2001 commencement address for California State
University at Sacramento questioned whether the government's response to
Sept. 11 would erode civil liberties, SF
Gate , December 19, 2001
DOD Tracks Billboard Ads
Corporate America Flag billboard in Times Square, New York, attracted
the attention of the federal Department of Defense, and a visit by an
agent, Adbusters,
December 18, 2001
FBI Makes House Calls on Non-Muslims
Barry Rheingold, 60 year old retiree, express views of dissent at local
gym, FBI called in to investigate, SF
Gate, December 18, 2001
Danny Glover Under Attack
Danny Glover gave a speech on November 19, 2001 at Princeton and
affirmed his belief in opposition to the death penality even for Bin
Laden. Via Email sent from Frances F. Korten, Executive Director of the
The Positive Futures Network, publisher of YES! magazine - December 18,
2001, See also Yes
Magazine, September 19, 2001 Press Release
School Board Backs Muslim Speaker
Parents dissent on School Board decision, Columbus
Dispatch, December 18, 2001
Antivirus Firms Balk at FBI Loophole
Anti-virus software vendors have said that they do not want to create a
loophole in their security products to let the FBI or other government
agencies use their Magic
Lantern project, a virus-like program to eavesdrop on the computer
communications of suspected criminals, Silicon
Valley News and Cnet,
December 10, 2001
Buying Non-Flag US Stamps in Chicago May Red Flag You as a
Terrorist
Daniel Muller, co-oordinator of Voices in the Wilderness (a group
dedicated to nonviolence and leading opponent of U.S. sanctions against
Iraq), and his collegue Andrew Mandell were detained and questioned by a
U.S. Postal Inspector for 30 minutes on their purchase of 4,000 (non-flag)
Statute of Liberty Stamps. "The fact that they did ask for anything
but flag stamps did raise a question for the clerk," says Silvia
Carrier, a public relations officer for the U.S. Postal Inspector in
Chicago, The
Progressive, December 8, 2001
Reconstructing Afghanistan
A four-person women's delegation organized by Global Exchange traveled
to Pakistan and Afghanistan from November 20, 2001 to December 3,2001. The
purpose of the trip was to investigate the humanitarian situation in
Afghanistan and among the refugee population, to assess the consequences
of US bombing, and to talk to women¹s groups about what role they would
like to play in a transition government, Global
Exchange, December 6, 2001
Center for Constitutional Rights Opposes Domestic Spying Plan
Attorney General Seeks to Relax Restrictions on Spying on Religious and
Political Groups in the US, Corpwatch,
December 6, 2001
Dissent vs. Patriotism on Campus
Comparing the war against terrorism to the war in Vietnam is a real
stretch, but there is one similarity: Opponents of free speech are
offering up an imitation pale as it may be of the campaign they waged more
than three decades ago on the nation's college campuses, USA
Today, December 5, 2001
Conductor Held Over 'Terrorism' Comment
Frenchman Pierre Boulez had his passport confiscated in the town of
Basle where he had been conducting at a music festival last month, BBC
News, December 4, 2001
Ashcroft Seeking to Free F.B.I. to Spy on Groups
AG wants FBI to spy on EFF & other nonprofits, Yahoo
Daily News, December 4, 2001
Justice Deformed: War and the Constitution
After the brutal attacks of Sept. 11, the Bush administration began
building a parallel criminal justice system, decree by decree, largely
removed from the ordinary oversight of Congress and the courts, NY
Times, December 2, 2001
Commission on Civil Rights, DOJ Clash Over Bias Hot Line
The Department of Justice is accusing the Washington, D.C.-based U.S.
Commission on Civil Rights of failing to cooperate with law enforcement by
withholding reports made to its toll-free hot line of alleged hate crimes
against Arabs, Muslims and others in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks, Miami
Daily Business Review, November 30, 2001
White House Sought to Soften Anti- Terrorism Legislation in
Support of Tobacco Companies
The Bush administration sought to use anti-terrorism legislation, rushed
through Congress in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks, to shield U.S.
tobacco companies from foreign lawsuits alleging cigarette smuggling and
money laundering, The
Public i, November 29, 2001
Magic Lantern Where Art Thou?
Network Associates, maker of McAfee antivirus, and Symantec, maker of
Norton AntiVirus, have had officials in both their companies state that
they will disable their products from detecting the FBI's Magic
Lantern key logging trojan horse, Wired
and The
Register, November 28, 2001
Reason to be Paranoid
An occasional poster to this web-site was questioned about his political
affiliations by intelligence officers upon entering the United States.
Materials he had posted on Indymedia were mentioned, Indymedia,
November 21, 2001
Innocents Are Going to Be Locked Up
The terror bill is not needed and will lead to human rights abuses, Wartime
Liberty, The Guardian, November 21, 2001
Growing Censorship of Data
Previously available information is rapidly disappearing from libraries
and the Internet, LA
Times, November 19, 2001
Historic High Court Ruling Is Troublesome Model for Modern
Terror Trials
The Supreme Court decision upholding the tribunal provides strong
authority for President Bush's order authorizing military commissions as a
way to bring the Sept. 11 terrorists to justice, American
Lawyer Media, November 19, 2001
NYC Subway Removes Map
The Washington DC police requested that the transit fan site
www.nycsubway.org remove a map of the track layout of the Washington DC
subway system, the webmaster complied, November 18, 2001
www.meriweather.com
An aviation fan site which included button-by-button descriptions of
every control in several types of transport aircraft cockpits was
temporarily shut down in the wake of the Sept 11 attacks, the site has
subsequently resumed operations. November 18, 2001
How to Use Anthrax
A page on the
dubious usefulness of anthrax as a terrorist weapon was temporarily taken
down at the beginning of the anthrax scare, November 18, 2001
Anti-Terrorism Bill Could Impact Nonprofits
The "USA PATRIOT Act" (PL 107-56) could pose big problems for
nonprofits, especially those that advocate changes in US foreign policy or
provide social services to individuals that become targets of government
investigations, OMB
Watch, November 14, 2001
Mid-East Realities Suspends Newsletter
News, Information, & Analysis That Governments, Interest Groups, and
the Corporate Media Don't Want You To Know! MER,
November 14, 2001
Stimson Center: Censor Enviro Web Sites
In a startling plea for official censorship, Amy E. Smithson of the
Henry L. Stimson Center last week urged the government to "close
down" web sites run by environmental organizations if they publish
information about hazardous materials in local communities around the
country since such information could be used by terrorists. Stimson
Center, November 13, 2001
Conservatives Denounce Dissent
A conservative academic group founded by Lynne Cheney, the wife of Vice
President Dick Cheney, fired a new salvo in the culture wars by blasting
40 college professors as well as the president of Wesleyan University and
others for not showing enough patriotism in the aftermath of Sept. 11, Boston
Globe, November 13, 2001
Military Tribunals Around the Corner
President signed an order that would allow the U.S. military to set up
special courts to try foreigners accused in the Sept. 11 attack and
similar assaults, a White House official said, Yahoo
Daily News, New
York Times,CNN,Las
Vegas Sun, and Washington
Post, November 14, 2001
Socialist Party in South Carolina Shuts Down.
Webmaster was informed to shut down the Party's
site, November 12, 2001
Britain Placed Under State of Emergency
Britain is to be placed under a state of 'public emergency' as part of
an unprecedented government move to allow internment without trial of
suspected terrorists,
The Observer, November 11, 2001
Noam Chomsky Transcript
We are entering a period of human life that may provide an answer to the
question of whether it’s better to be smart than stupid. The most
hopeful prospect is that the question will not be answered, Frontline
magazine , November 10, 2001
Using Sedition Law Gives Government Greater Latitude
The U.S. government is relying on a seldom-used but powerful legal tool,
an 18th-century law on sedition, to investigate the Sept. 11 terror
attacks, SF
Gate, November 8, 2001
Sedation Anew?
Prosecutors seeking to hold people they suspect were in the early stages
of terrorist plots may turn anew to a very old weapon - the Civil War-era
law on sedition, Yahoo
Daily News, November 8, 2001
Let's Listen In
The Justice Department has decided to listen in on the conversations of
lawyers with clients in federal custody, including people who have been
detained but not charged with any crime, whenever that is deemed necessary
to prevent violence or terrorism, Washington
Post, November 8, 2001-- [UPDATE: 'Secret Arrests' Papers and
documents are available at The
Center for National Security Studies, February 12, 2002]
Democracy 0, Terrorism 1
The Bush Administration's Secrecy Policies, Prospect,
November 6, 2001
Comdex
COMDEX bans bags, laptops; requires ID at all times, Comdex,
November 5, 2001
Torture the Prisoners?
Newsweek columnist Jonathan Alter discusses torture, NY
Times, November 5, 2001
Student Charged with Flag Burning
A university student was charged with burning the U.S. flag in a fire
that charred more than two acres of woodland in northern Virginia, NY
Times, November 4, 2001
High-profile Sacramento Visitor Puts Free Speech to the Test
Bush visits, anti-war opinions silenced in Sacramento, Sacramento
Bee , November 4, 2001
FBI Allegedly Wants San Francisco IMC's Web Logs
The FBI contacted volunteers from the Independent Media Center
(indymedia) in San Francisco Declan McCullagh's Politech,
November 3, 2001
Military Bars Green Party Leader from Flying
As one of the U.S. Green Party's top officials, Nancy Oden is used to
controversy. But Oden never expected to be hassled by National Guard
troops at her hometown airport of Bangor, Maine on Thursday and barred
from flying out of it, Wartime
Liberty, November 3, 2001
The Index of Banned Books for Airlines Continues to Grow
Karl Marx "On Suicide" just added to banned books on airlines.
Independent
UK , November 2, 2001
Dissenters Find Colleges Less Tolerant of Discord Following
Attacks
Anger among students over Professors humor, Washington
Post,October 29, 2001
Tracking Your Trip
If you'll recall, there was controversy when the public discovered that
Amtrak was giving the DEA direct access to its ticketing/reservations
computers so that it could profile passengers. In the new
anti-bioterrorism bill going to Congress pretty soon would allow profiling
of Amtrak (and other) passengers, Wired,
October 29, 2001. And some articles (for reference) from when this story
originally broke are at: Newsmax
and Alternet
Terrorist Phone Home?
Among almost 1,000 people being held in the United States in connection
with the hijacked-airliner attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon are peoplewho made congratulatory telephone calls minutes later, NY
Times and CNN,
October 28, 2001
CNN vs. IndyMedia?
EFF has confirmed that CNN has blocked use of the word
"IndyMedia" in its online discussion groups, perhaps in response
to a report that appeared on IndyMedia charging that footage of
Palestinians celebrating in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks
were recycled from older coverage,IndyMedia,
October 27, 2001
Coming Down Hard
In name of anti-terrorism, secret meetings, votes and witness detentions
would be allowed under bills before Florida Senate Law.com,
October 26, 2001
Website Down Due to Legislation Fear
Website
shutdown due to anti-terrorism legislation fear. Webmaster's explanation,
October 26, 2001
Air France Denied Rep. Darrell Issa on a Late-Night Flight
Rep. Darrell Issa, grandson of Lebanese immigrants, says he was the
victim of racial profiling when he tried to board an Air France flight to
Paris this month, Associated
Press, October 26, 2001
Homeland Insecurity
A Sacramento journalist is taken into custody by police and forced to
destroy photos by an over-zealous National Guardsman. Apparently, the
terrorists are indeed causing instability, Sacramento
Weekly, October 25, 2001
University Takes Down the Flag
At Central Michigan University, an administrator told several students
to remove various patriotic posters (an American flag, an eagle, and so
on)from their dormitory, Central
Michigan University Life, October 25, 2001
Railfan Website Restricts Itself
Trainorders, probably the largest railfan discussion board on the
internet, is restricting what people can say about the trains they see, Trainorders,
October 25, 2001
School Nixes Traditional Costumes
McCarter Elementary says students' outfits must be patriotic The
Topeka Capital-Journal, October 24, 2001
Novel Security Measures
A Philadelphia man was kept off a recent flight because of a book he was
carrying,SiliconValley.com,
October 18, 2001
Ashcroft tell agencies to resist Freedom-of-Information requests
Attorney General John Ashcroft has issued a new statement of policy that
encourages federal agencies to resist FOIA requests whenever they have
legal grounds to do so. The new statement supersedes a 1993 memorandum
from Attorney General Janet Reno which promoted disclosure of government
information through the FOIA unless it was "reasonably foreseeable
that disclosure would be harmful." October
12th new FOIA policy statement versus Attorney
General Reno's 1993 memorandum on FOIA , fwded by Intellectual Freedom
Action News, October 17, 2001
British Broadcasters Refuse to Censor Video Statements by bin
Laden
British broadcasters yesterday refused to censor video statements by
Osama bin Laden owing to government fears that he may be sending secret
messages to his terrorist network by video, Freedom
Forum, October 16, 2001
Military Buys Exclusive Commercial Satellite Coverage of War
Zone
The U.S. military is paying for the exclusive rights to commercial
satellite imagery of Afghanistan even though its own satellites are
thought to take far better pictures, SiliconValley.com,
October 15, 2001
Bush Administration Interpretation Weakens Freedom of
Information Act
The U.S. Department of Justice issued a revised memorandum for how to
treat requests received under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) that
establishing a "sound legal basis" rather than the existing
"forseeable harm" standard for defending FOIA request refusals
in court, John
Ashcroft FOIA Memorandum, October 12, 2001, in contrast with Janet
Reno's "New Standard for Openness", October 4, 1993
Clear Channel "Bans" Songs on 1200 Radio Stations
In response to the terrorist attacks, a program director from Clear
Channel, owner of 1200 radio stations across the US, identified a list of
more than one hundred "questionable" songs "that certain
markets or individuals may find insensitive" in light of the
terrorist attack, including John Lennon's "Imagine," E!Online,
September 18, 2001, and Slate,
September 18, 2001, and Denial
from ClearChannel, September 18, 2001, and Slate,
September 19, 2001, and Mike's
Message, September 22, 2001, and Snopes.com,
October 2001
Related Links
9/11
StoriesPublished by the San Francisco Chronicle.
ABA
Human RightsThe ABA publication Human Rights devotes its entire Winter issue
to the Patriot Act and civil liberties post-9/11. Essays by such figures
as David Cole (Nation correspondent), Roger Pilon (Cato Institute),
Anthony Romero (ACLU), John Podesta (former Clinton chief of staff) are
included.
A
Sad State of AffairsA floor speech from from US Representative Ron Paul on the long
American tradition of criticizing government actions and the right of free
speech guaranteed by the US constitution.
Attack
on AmericaNews articles, links, photos, mpegs, and so on from The San
Francisco Chronicle.
Blue Ribbon CampaignElectronic Frontier Foundation campaign to prevent online
censorship
OMB
Watch Access to Government InformationA Washington group that advocates for government accountability in
budgetary and regulatory matters maintains a list of government websites
that have removed information.
Peaceful
TomorrowsAn advocacy organization founded by family members of September
Eleventh victims. Its mission is to seek effective nonviolent responses to
terrorism, and identify a commonality with all people similarly affected
by violence throughout the world. By conscientiously exploring peaceful
options in our search for justice, we choose to spare additional innocent
families the suffering that we have already experienced-as well as to
break the endless cycle of violence and retaliation engendered by war.