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the written permission from the National Coalition Against Censorship. LAST UPDATED APRIL 2005
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NCAC Censorship News Issue #101: Censorship 101: A Crash Course "Manipulation of information has been a basic matter of policy – used to overwhelm dissent." — Carl Bernstein, Vanity Fair, April 2006
There probably has been no better time in NCAC's 32-year history to go back to basics. So, in honor of CN #101, we present the following "crash course" on free speech issues, circa 2006.
Police and federal agents have infiltrated groups with no known connection to terrorism, such as the Thomas Merton Center for Peace in Pennsylvania. In New Mexico, a nurse was investigated for “sedition” after she sent a letter to the editor of a local paper criticizing the administration’s handling of Iraq and its response to Hurricane Katrina. These developments reflect an official viewpoint that dissent is suspect, if not outright treasonous. Pursuant to secret Presidential authorization, the National Security Agency has engaged in warrantless wiretapping, an apparent violation of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. Congress seems poised to rewrite the law to retroactively legitimize the program, while the CIA director has said,citing security concerns, that the reporters who broke the story (which earned them Pulitzer Prizes) should disclose their confidential sources or face possible prosecution. Sources: Polls cited: The McCormick Tribune Freedom Museum and The First Amendment Center's annual "State of the 1st Amendment" |