Entries Tagged as 'politics'

H.R. 275 Global Online Freedom Act of 2007

This bill, currently pending in the U.S. House of Representatives, would essentially hold U.S. companies accountable for working with the governments of “Internet-restricting countries” to violate citizens’ Internet freedoms.

The megacorporations are not happy. The Interactive Advertising Bureau - which counts AOL, AT&T, Fox News, Google, Reuters, Time Inc., and Yahoo! Inc. among its members - posted a letter to House Speaker Pelosi (PDF) signed by the IAB and about two dozen other business organizations. The letter claims that H.R. 275 would interfere with legitimate U.S. business operations overseas.

No doubt they are correct. But in 2004, Yahoo! Inc., an American corporation, aided the Chinese government in arresting the peaceful activist Shi Tao, who was attempting to spread his message through e-mail. This is an outrage. The United States should not turn a blind eye to such things; if it does, it will become yet another party to the suppression of free speech online. Conversely, if the bill becomes law, foreign governments will have a much harder time pressuring businesses to block Internet content, turn over private user information, and so forth.

Overall, I believe H.R. 275 will do more good than harm. Please contact your representatives and encourage them to support this bill.

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I wasn’t going to talk about politics, but this is ridiculous.

Last night’s Democratic primary in Pennsylvania failed to resolve anything. The horse race will continue, and the media will cover every second of it.

I won’t be watching. My state’s primary took place on Super Tuesday; I’ve cast my vote. And now the campaign has degenerated into pettiness and sniping. So much hate is coming from supporters of two candidates who are far more alike than not. I don’t wish to encourage the mainstream media giving more coverage to what Obama ate for breakfast than to global warming or Darfur. Also, I have my sanity to consider.

Democrats: it’s one thing to be passionate about your candidate, but if we all combine that passion with a desire for peace - not just, you know, peace somewhere out there in the world, but wherever we can practice it - I think the next few months will go much better for us, and we’ll come out stronger at the end.

The candidates might even start talking about actual issues again.

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