Burn Down The Forman of Control
Sunday, December 19, 2010
I've a new haircut. Was at Nex at Serangoon ytd with mom and older sis. It's... huge. Had steamboat buffet for lunch (mega full) then walked around. SO MANY SHOPS ZOMG. Now how often is Etude House beside Skin Food near The Body Shop? Salon at Mystique btw.
So, on Time.com now. Person of the Year 2010. Somehow it's Mark, though Julian leading...
1. Julian Assange 2. Recep Tayyip Erdogan 3. Lady Gaga 4. Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert 5. Glenn Beck 6. Barack Obama 7. Steve Jobs 8. The Chilean Miners 9. The Unemployed American 10. Mark Zuckerberg
Also reading Top 10 Quotes 2010. Joe Biden said "This is a big f___ing deal." to Obama LOL. Tony Hayward has one too. He poor thing la. CEO of BP... My personal fav is by Pope Benedict XVI;
"The greatest persecution of the church doesn't come from enemies on the outside but is born from the sin within the church." Obama's one: "I can't spend all my time with my birth certificate plastered on my forehead." LOL a lot of ppl still think he's Muslim. A little dumb. Steven Hawking has a notable one:
"Spontaneous creation is the reason
there is something rather than nothing, why the Universe exists, why we exist. It is not necessary to invoke God to ... set the Universe going." That.... Is interesting, thought provoking yet disturbing. Well, for me at least. From his book, The Grand Design. Which I hv but hvnt started reading yet. Predictable for a Physicist... Hmmm there's a Top 10 Leaks. :D Ohoh my mom says Assange is good looking. LOL. OK there are so many Top 10 lists, I gave up after browsing a while. Now, WikiLeaks stuff.
Dear President Obama:
We write to express our concern at the prospect that the US government would employ espionage laws against WikiLeaks or its founder for the release of US State Department cables. Regardless of how one views the intentions, wisdom or strict legality of the WikiLeaks release, we believe that resorting to prosecution will degrade freedom of expression for all media, researchers and reporters, and set a terrible precedent that will be eagerly grasped by other governments, particularly those with a record of trying to muzzle legitimate political reporting.
Both international law and the US Constitution prohibit criminal punishment of those who report matters of public interest except in fairly narrow circumstances. One such situation would be the release of official secrets with the effect and intent of harming the security of a nation, in the sense of genuine threats to use force against the government or territorial integrity of a country. Diplomatic embarrassment, though potentially detrimental to the interests of the government, is not itself a threat to national security. Indeed, the secretary of defense, Robert Gates, rejected "overwrought" descriptions of the release's impact and described the effect on foreign policy as "fairly modest," a characterization that finds support in Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's remarks that "I have not had any concerns expressed about whether any nation will not continue to work with, and discuss matters of importance to us both, going forward."
Even if some cognizable security threat were to be presented by a cable (only half of which are classified, and of those, most classified at low levels of sensitivity), it would be both unwise and of questionable legality to use the 1917 Espionage Act against WikiLeaks or other media who receive or republish information leaked by government employees. A distinguishing characteristic of the United States has always been its high standard of protection for speech. This leadership would be lost if the administration were to reverse the usual practice of pursuing only those who leak information and not those who receive it.
For the same reason, we urge you to reject legislative proposals that would broaden the scope of criminal sanction beyond that permitted by the Constitution and international human rights law to which the US is party. Instead, we urge you to pursue the declassification of information that is of public interest and not essential to national security, rather than to expand the scope of information subject to classification.
Once classified information is released to the public, particularly through means of mass circulation such as the Internet, a very strong presumption should attach that further restriction is unwarranted. Indeed, efforts to remove WikiLeaks and other websites from global accessibility have largely backfired by promoting mirror sites and further circulation. We note with concern government agency directives, such as that issued by the Department of Defense and the Office of Management and Budget, warning employees from accessing the classified materials that have already been published to the world on numerous websites, and reports that the Library of Congress has consequently blocked access to the WikiLeaks site. By asking people to ignore what has become widely known, such directives look ridiculous, invite widespread disobedience, and place federal employees at risk of arbitrary discipline and prosecution. Over-interpreting the 1917 Espionage Act to authorize prosecution of non-government agents who simply receive and publish leaked classified information could have similar chilling results. By that token, not only could the news media who republish the disclosed information be prosecuted, but so could all who download and read the material.
The United States government and the Department of State in particular, has been an outspoken champion of Internet freedom globally, and condemned national "firewalls" and censorship of Internet sites. To maintain its credibility, we urge you to affirm that your administration will not seek to bar services to Internet publishers, or take down websites, merely because they have published material that the government believes should not be publicly available. We also believe it is important for the administration to affirm that it will not seek to pressure or influence any private enterprise to block or undermine any such website in the absence of a legal judgment. Human Rights Watch is very concerned by private companies' denial of services to WikiLeaks in the absence of any showing that any of its publications can legitimately be restricted consistent with the international right to freedom of expression.
This is a signature moment for freedom of expression, a value that the United States has defended vigorously throughout its history, at home and abroad. Human Rights Watch urges your administration to act positively to secure the rights of the media in a democratic society, and the record of the United States as a champion of speech.
Yours sincerely,
Kenneth Roth
Executive Director
Human Rights Watch Letter taken from Human Rights Watch. The one below from Reporters Without Borders.
President Barack H. Obama The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20500 Attorney General Eric Holder U.S. Department of Justice 950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20530 Paris, December 17, 2010 Dear President Obama and Attorney General Holder,
Reporters Without Borders, an international press freedom organization, would like to share with you its concern about reports that the Department of Justice is preparing a possible criminal prosecution against Julian Assange and other people who work at WikiLeaks.
We regard the publication of classified information by WikiLeaks and five associated newspapers as a journalistic activity protected by the First Amendment. Prosecuting WikiLeaks’ founders and other people linked to the website would seriously damage media freedom in the United States and impede the work of journalists who cover sensitive subjects.
It would also weaken the US and the international community efforts at protecting human rights, providing governments with poor press freedom records a ready-made excuse to justify censorship and retributive judicial campaigns against civil society and the media.
We believe the United States credibility as a leading proponent of freedom of expression is at stake, and that any arbitrary prosecution of WikiLeaks for receiving and publishing sensitive documents would inevitably create a dangerous precedent. Members of the faculty at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism wrote to you recently warning that “government overreaction to publication of leaked material in the press has always been more damaging to American democracy than the leaks themselves.” We fully agree with this analysis.
The ability to publish confidential documents is a necessary safeguard against government over-classification. We urge you to use this debate to review the government’s policy of classifying documents in order to increase transparency in accordance with the promises made by the administration when it first assumed office.
We thank you both in advance for the attention you give to our observations. Sincerely,
Jean-François Julliard Secretary-General
Today was final TTB service of the 2010. -emo music- Combined with Adele/Denise's and Sam Liew's grp; Both me and Sam only got us in our grps. Mel is in Taiwan, Chelsea&Alethia&Sam Ho MIA; Millie presumably busy... Leaders present: Cindy, Justina, Yun Ying, Joanna, someone... And Hannah (as surprise guest LOL) Christmas Eve there's Carols by Candlelight; Anyone wanna come with me? -silence- Currently no one going w me... And I dont want alone... Oh well.
Sob. I'm 14 next yr. The number itself is frightening. Time... really passes so damn fast. Earlier this yr I still qualified for Children Price. YY was screaming that she's 20 nxt yr; And didnt want to join 'The Club'. In TackleCamp Nic said YY's spiritual maturity; Is super high, but her mental maturity... Is super low. I'm average I guess. But damnit.
I really dont wanna grow up. Anyone with me?
I don't know what you're trying to achieve, but I don't like what you're doing.
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