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NCAC Censorship News Issue #107: News From the Coalition In the run-up to this summer’s Olympics, several organizations are shining a spotlight on China’s abuses of press freedom and censorship of the Internet. PEN American Center's “We Are Ready” campaign urges the Chinese government to free over three dozen imprisoned writers. Meanwhile, the ACLU has worked to ensure that protesters along the Olympic torch relay route are free to exercise their First Amendment rights instead of being herded into “free speech zones.” The Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS) has published an analysis of abstinence-only sex education programs in Alabama. The report – available at siecus.org – reveals that students are being denied information about contraception, sexual health, and homosexuality. Meanwhile, the state is experiencing a marked increase in the incidence of sexually transmitted disease and teen pregnancy. Members of the Campaign for Reader Privacy (www.readerprivacy.org) are urging lawmakers to restore safeguards protecting the privacy of bookstore and library records that were eliminated by the USA PATRIOT Act. The American Booksellers Association, American Library Association, Association of American Publishers, and PEN American Center
The Texas Board of Education is also keeping the National Center for Science Education on its toes: proponents of creationism or "intelligent design" are one vote short of a majority on the Board, and are seeking a state-wide mandate that science textbooks include discussion of the "strengths and weaknesses" of evolution. Legislators in a half dozen other states are pressing for similar measures. A growing coalition is calling for reforms of U.S. surveillance practices, particularly with respect to restoring legal oversight of the government's wiretapping program. The Union for Reform Judaism's Religious Action Center recently called on members and supporters to write to Congress, explaining, "When government power to spy on people goes unchecked, the ability to express unpopular opinions freely and openly is eroded—a person can become the target of an investigation simply because of the organizations she participates in or the books he reads. In the fight against terror and for freedom for others, we must never abandon our commitment to our own freedom and the rule of law."
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