Archive for the ‘Censorship’ Category

Free Speech Advocates, Publishers Wrestle With Questions Of Censorship – NPR

Publisher Simon & Schuster drew strong criticism after signing conservative provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos seen here holding a press conference about the Pulse nightclub shootings. Drew Angerer/Getty Images hide caption

Publisher Simon & Schuster drew strong criticism after signing conservative provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos seen here holding a press conference about the Pulse nightclub shootings.

Free speech advocates see President-elect Trumps's testy relationship with the media and his middle-of-the-night tweets reacting to critics as evidence that he is at best insensitive to the First Amendment. And they say one recent controversy, the decision by Simon & Schuster to publish a book by social media provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos, has grown out of an atmosphere that encourages hate speech.

Now, PEN America an organization dedicated to defending the right to free speech all over the world is starting to pay more attention to what's happening on the home front. PEN is co-sponsoring a protest which will bring a host of well-known writers to the steps of the New York Public Library to protest threats to free expression.

"We need to be, as citizens, ready to come out," says PEN America executive director Suzanne Nossel, "stand together for basic rights that six months ago we might have been able to take for granted, but that we no longer can."

Nossel sees these threats coming from several directions: The President-elect's attacks on the press and his critics, the proliferation of fake news and the pattern of trolling on social media.

"People feel more free to speak their mind," she says, "even if it crosses what would have been considered boundaries of hatred or racism or misogyny, and so I think it then becomes incumbent on others to speak more loudly."

But the job of advocating for free speech has become ever more complicated in the age of social media which Nossel says can be both an incredible tool for free expression and a threat to it.

"It has a dampening effect on the depth of discourse, it can lead to this online mobbing and trolling where someone who says something controversial is then targeted, ridiculed. So this is not about the government silencing speech, but it's about speech silencing other speech."

Perhaps no one has crossed the line on social media more boldly than Milo Yiannopoulos, who was kicked off of Twitter after he spearheaded a nasty campaign against black actress Leslie Jones. Yiannopoulos likes to describe himself as a free speech fundamentalist:

Trying to suppress hateful speech doesn't make it go away.

Joan Bertin

"What the left wants to do is it wants to enable its extremists on its own side, the sexists and misandrists of feminism, the black supremacists of Black Lives Matter, they want to enable extremists on their own side, and silence the extremists on the other. Well, I don't like the extremists on either side."

Yiannopoulos, an editor at the ultra-conservative Breitbart News, seems to take delight in infuriating people with remarks that are viewed as racist, misogynistic and anti-immigrant. So it's not surprising that Simon & Schuster's decision to publish his book drew strong criticism and calls for a boycott of the company. Dennis Johnson is the head of Melville House, a small independent publisher

"Nobody in the protest is saying 'you have no right to be published,'" he says. "'You have no right, Simon & Schuster, to publish this guy, and this guy, you have no right to be published' nobody's saying that. What they're saying is, 'we're shocked and we're outraged that you would stoop so low to make a buck as to publish this purveyor of vile hate speech.'"

This is not about censoring right wing voices. This is about combating hate speech and its entry into the mainstream.

Dennis Johnson

Johnson is highly critical of a statement issued by the National Coalition Against Censorship on behalf of a number of industry groups representing publishers, authors and booksellers. The NCAC says anyone has a right to call for a boycott of Simon & Schuster but that such a protest will have a "chilling effect" on publishing. Joan Bertin, executive director of the NCAC, says similar protests have already led to censorship: "We know of instances in which books that contain certain kinds of content have been shelved, deferred, redacted, edited deeply to remove content that people might object to."

Both the NCAC and PEN America say the best response to hate speech is not more censorship.

"Trying to suppress hateful speech doesn't make it go away," says Bertin. "I mean, I think the whole idea of free speech requires us to be active participants, and when we hear ideas that we think are bad and harmful, it requires us to say 'why,' not just say 'shut up.'"

But publisher Dennis Johnson says another equally important right is at stake here: The right to protest.

"This is not about censoring right wing voices," he says. "This is about combating hate speech and its entry into the mainstream."

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Free Speech Advocates, Publishers Wrestle With Questions Of Censorship - NPR

Censorship: UC-Davis Student Protesters Shut Down Milo Yiannopoulos – Reason (blog)

Mark Reinstein/ZUMA Press/NewscomMilo Yiannopoulos, the alt-right-friendly media figure and Breitbart tech editor who is permanently banned from Twitter, was scheduled to speak at the University of California-Davis on Friday, but student-protesters mobbed the scene, forcing event organizers to cancel his appearance.

Given the unruly state of the protesters, university officials informed Yiannopoulos's hosts, the Davis College Republicans, that they could no longer guarantee anyone's safety. This prompted the CRs to cancel the event before Yiannopoulos had a chance to speak.

Martin Shkreli was supposed to speak as well, but because of the actions of irate students, his lecture did not take place, either.

The university initially remained committed to letting the event go forward, despite the administration's fervent opposition to Yiannopoulos's message. But fights broke out, according to local news reporters. Someone even poured hot coffee on a photojournalist.

Yiannopoulos next heads to UC-Berkeley, where the CRs insist that his show must go on.

It remains the case that the students who shut down Yiannopoulos at campus after campus are playing directly into his hands. By proving him right about the college left's intolerance, students ensure that Yiannopoulos will be able to continue promoting his agenda and claiming the mantle of free speech martyr. He will arrange more speaking tours, make more media appearances, and sell more books. The outrage that follows him wherever he goes is beneficial to him.

Liberal students should try a different tactic: silence, rather than silencing. Yiannopoulos believes that all publicity is good publicity, and craves the attention. Don't give it to him. If you hate him, just ignore him.

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Censorship: UC-Davis Student Protesters Shut Down Milo Yiannopoulos - Reason (blog)

Censorship on college campuses is wrong, even if it’s conservatives doing the censoring – Rare.us

In order to maintainourmoral high ground over terrorists, we banned the use oftorture. But risk of redundancy hasnt stopped two Arizona state legislators from taking a page out ofthe SJW handbook by introducing a bill that would strip state aid from schools with classes that teach progressive attitudes on race, class, and gender.

HB2120 bans all school districts, charter schools, and public colleges from allowing any courses, classes, events, and activities that promote the overthrow of the United States government, [p]romote DIVISION, resentment OR SOCIAL JUSTICE toward a race, GENDER, RELIGION, POLITICAL AFFILIATION, SOCIAL CLASS or OTHER class of people, [a]dvocate solidarity OR ISOLATION BASED ON RACE, or NEGATIVELY TARGET SPECIFIC NATIONALITIES OR COUNTRIES.

This billwhich Republican sponsor Bob Thorpe admits is in need of revisionwould presumably ban privilege walks, race theory classes, anti-Israel demonstrations, Black Lives Matter protests and a whole host of other events and courses.

I say presumably because Im honestly not sure how this bill will be enforced since its textdoes not even bother defining the term social justice.

RELATED:Why are we responding to insane PC culture with equally insane infantilism?

Is it social justice to demand reforms to a criminal justice system that overwhelmingly targets minorities? Does reading Marx or iek qualify as promoting resentment toward a social class? Does Toni Morrisons Beloved vilify white people andpromote racial isolation? Would a fundraiser for North Korean refugees negatively target North Korea?

And who wouldbe in charge of deciding which syllabi and events meet these criteria?

This bill would be the kind that grows into a monster, full of loopholes and exceptions, with its masters wielding it viciously against their enemies until the day that it finally turns and devours the arm that holdsits leash.

This is the same censorship that sends Breitbart readers into frenzies when a liberal university cancels a talk by Milo Yiannopoulos.

RELATED:Yale professor coddles students triggered by Trump victoryor is he?

HB2120 is nothing more than Trump-fueled reactionary triumphalism, driven by the patronizing pipe dream of unity, which claims that, with the election over, everyone in the country needs to come together and get on board.

No one needs to get on board with anything. This is America, and we have a beautiful tradition here of fighting each other tooth and nail. Our money says Out of many, one, but the emergence of the one doesnt obliterate the many from which it rises.

Silencing voices of dissent in the name of American unity will only lead to greater division.

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Censorship on college campuses is wrong, even if it's conservatives doing the censoring - Rare.us

American Pie (Comparison: R-Rated – Movie-Censorship.com

This comparison is between the Rated-R-Version and the Unrated Version. 11 different scenes make the Unrated Version 10,5s longer.

12:08 The R-Rated Version only shows Vickys smiling face as Kevin ejaculates into the cup. In the Unrated Version she is shown straightening her top while Kevin is in the background ejaculating into the cup.

Unrated 1 frame longer

Jim and the apple pie

31:08 While Jims father is still going to the front door, we see Jim and the apple pie. In the Unrated Version he is lying on top of it, in the Rated Version he is standing there with the apple pie, leaning on the counter.

Unrated 1 frame longer

31:12 Different shots show Jims father entering the room through the door: in the Unrated Version he sees Jim on the table, in the Rated Version on the right hand side at the counter. Then alternately Dad and Jim with the apple pie are shown.

Unrated 2 frames longer

Sex Bible

31:38 In two different sequences of scenes Kevin is shown thumbing through the Sex Bible. In the Unrated Version he first learns that his enemy is the Vibrator; then he sees some drawings of sex positions. In the R-Rated Version the vibrator is shown first, too (different shot), but then briefly Kevin and finally a drawing of the "healing Love".

No time difference

Vickys Orgasm

34:51 In two different shots Kevin checks the "Tongue Tornado".

Unrated 0,5s longer

34:54 After Kevin was shown grinning a full frame longer in the Rated-R-Version, alternative shots show Vickys orgasm.

Unrated 2,5s longer

Nadja in Jims room

44:05 The Unrated Version includes an additional shot where we see on the monitor that Nadja has put one hand unter her slip; which is followed by a close-up.

4,5s

Now the Unrated Version shows for 2 seconds a shot of the 3 guys which comes briefly later in the Rated-R-Version, together with the second part of the shot.

44:05 Again, Nadja can be seen on the monitor with her hand under her slip. 2s

44:05 In exchange the R-Rated Version now shows a close-up of Nadja. A different one than the above-mentioned shot. 1,5s

44:12 Alternative shot of the monitor: in the Unrated Version Nadja has her hand under her slip, in the R-Rated Version she hasnt. Unrated 2s longer

44:21 dito. No time difference

Originally posted here:
American Pie (Comparison: R-Rated - Movie-Censorship.com

Avatar – Movie-Censorship.com

0:00:52 The opening scene has been changed. It now starts on Earth and takes a look back into Jake Sully's past as a paraplegic war veteran. He drinks, he fights, he rusts away - aimlessly and forlorn. That only changes when he is visited by two representatives of the mining company. They ask him to take over the role of his deceased twin brother and fly to Pandora.

Further outlooks on the future of the Earth are interspersed en passant. We learn that the Bengal tiger, just like many species more, has meanwhile become extinct, but was recreated using genetic engineering. Earth is overpopulated and polluted. Most people wear respirators. Due to the quantity of people (and corpses), undertakers have degenerated into industrial facilities.

For lucidity reasons, the complete opening scene will be reproduced here. The parts of it that had already been seen in the theatrical version have been subtracted from the total runtime.

269.32 sec.

[Jake sits on his bed and pulls off his pants. Meanwhile he watches TV on the video screen.] TV reporter: "The Bengal tiger, extinct for over a century is making a comeback! These cloned tiger cubs at the Beijing zoo are the best latest of a number of species that have been cloned back into existence in the past five years." Jake Sully (off): "I became a Marine for the hardship. To be hammered on the anvil of life. I told myself, I can pass any test a man can pass."

[Jake gets terribly drunk in a bar with some friends.]

Jake Sully (off): "Lets get it straight, upfront. I dont want your pity! You want a fair deal, youre on the wrong planet. The strong prey on the weak. Thats just the way things are. And nobody does a damn thing." [Jake sees a young woman being hit by a man at the bar.]

[Jake arrives on the scene and attacks the man from behind. To his surprise, the woman tries to stop him.] Woman: "Get off! Get off of him!" [Jake and the man continue fighting.]

Jake Sully (off): "All I ever wanted in my sorry-ass life was a single thing worth fighting for."

[Without a word, the doormen throw him out of the bar and he lands on the street.] Jake Sully: "I hope you realized you lost yourself a costumer. Candy-ass bitch." [Jake lies in the gutter and senselessly yells jarhead slang.] Jake Sully: "If it aint raining, we aint training."

[Suddenly, two men approach him and look down to him.] Man 1: "It doesnt look like him." Man 2: "Its him." Man 1: "You Jake Sully?" Jake Sully: "Step off. Youre ruining my good mood." Man 2: "Its about your brother."

[Accompanied by the man, Jake enters a crematory where they ask for his brother's corpse.] Man 2: "Were looking for Sully, T." Undertaker: "In there." [The undertaker opens the cardboard coffin of his brother. Jake looks at him briefly.] Jake Sully: "Jesus, Tommy." [The undertaker closes the coffin again and authorizes cremation.] Man 2: "The strong prey on the weak. A guy with a knife took all Tommy would ever be. For the paper in his wallet. The concern of the suits was touching."

[The men turn to Jake.] Man 2: "Your brother represented a significant investment. Wed like to talk to you about taking over his contract." Man 1: "And since your genome is identical to his, you could step into his shoes, so to speak. It would be a fresh start on a new world. You can do something important. You can make a difference. And the pay is good." Man 2: "Very good." [Jake's brother is shoved into the incinerator.]

[The men turn towards Jake again.] Jake Sully (off): "Tommy was the scientist, not me. He was the one who wanted to get shot out light-years in space to find the answers. Me, I was just another dumb grunt getting sent someplace he was gonna regret."

[The camera shows Jake's dead brother slowly consumed by fire - subsequently, the picture morphs into Jack aboard the space craft.]

0:03:06 Before they take off to Pandora, an additional shot of the shuttle pilot has been added. 4.52 sec.

Pilot 1: "Copy, Venture Star. Go for de-orbit burn at 2-2-4 niner."

0:51:53 Before Jake returns to Pandora, he and Grace talk some more. Norm is jealous, because a shallow ex-marine like Jake has meanwhile been accepted into the inner circles of the Na'Vi - even though Jake does not even know the goddess Eywa. When Dr. Augustine considers a picture of Neytiri, she begins to wallow in memories and talks about Neytiri's sister Sylwanin. Jokingly, Jake tells Norm that he had a date with Sylwanin too. Dr. Augustine remarks that Neytiri's sister was dead. Apparently, this scene is meant to link to the school scene. It is obvious that Neytiri's sister had been killed by humans. 19.92 sec.

[Jake teases Norm.] Dr. Grace Augustine: "Knock it off. Its like kindergarten around here." [Jake gets into the avatar box; Dr. Augustine looks at Neytiri's picture.] Dr. Grace Augustine: "Neytiri was my best student. She and her sister Sylwanin. Just amazing girls."

Jake Skully: "I got a date with Sylwanin too." Dr. Grace Augustine: "She is dead."

1:04:56 Dr. Augustine brings Jake back and tells him to eat something. He refuses, but Dr. Augustine insists on it and he obliges. At the dining table, Jake finds a picture of Dr. Augustine as Neytiri's teacher. He asks her about what happened at the school. Dr. Augustine tells him that Neytiri's sister and some of her friends had attacked a bulldozer which had threatened them. Hoping to find shelter with Dr. Augustine, they fled into the school. However, the mercenaries pursued and killed them.

For lucidity reasons, the complete opening scene will be reproduced here. The parts of it that had already been seen in the theatrical version have been subtracted from the total runtime.

180.76 sec.

[Dr. Augustine opens the avatar box. Jake gets out.] Dr. Grace Augustine: "You were in 16 hours today."

[Jakes drives into the small lounge; Dr. Augustine gives him something to eat.] Dr. Grace Augustine: "You are still losing weight." [Jake ignores the food and drives away.] Dr. Grace Augustine: "No, you dont."

[Dr. Augustine pulls Jake back.] Jake Sully: "I gotta get some sleep." Dr. Grace Augustine: "Come back here."

[Jake sits at table again and looks at the junk food in disgust.] Dr. Grace Augustine: "Bon apptit." Jake Sully: "Today I made a kill. And we ate it. At least, I know where that meal come from." Dr. Grace Augustine: "Other body. You need to take care of this one. Okay? Get it? Lets eat it." Jake Sully: "Yeah, yeah." [Jake continues to just watch the food disgustedly.] Dr. Grace Augustine: "Here, Ill make it easy for you. Give it to me." [Dr. Augustine picks up the food and opens it.] Dr. Grace Augustine: "You look like crap." Jake Sully: "Thank you." Dr. Grace Augustine: "Youre burning way too hard." [Jake pulls the cigarette out of Dr. Augustine's mouth and throws it away.] Jake Sully: "Get rid of this shit. And then you can lecture me." Dr. Grace Augustine: "Now, I am telling you, as your boss, and as someone who might even consider being a friend someday to take some down time. Eat this, please. Trust me, I learned the hard way."

[Jake looks at a picture of Dr. Augustine and the young Neytiri at school.] Jake Sully: "What did happen at the school, Grace?"

Dr. Grace Augustine: "Neytiri's sister, Sylwanin, stopped coming to school. She was angry about the clear cutting. And one day, she and a couple of other young hunters came running in, all painted up. They had set a bulldozer on fire. I guess they thought I could protect them. The troopers pursued them to the school. They killed Sylwanin in the doorway. Right in front of Neytiri. And then shot the others. I got most of the kids out. But they never came back." [Jake gives the picture back to Dr. Augustine; she puts it on the sill.

Jake Sully: "I am sorry." Dr. Grace Augustine: "A scientist stays objective. We cant be ruled by emotion. But I put 10 years of my life into that school. They called me sanok." Jake Sully: "Mother." Dr. Grace Augustine: "Mother." [Dr. Augustine touches Jake's chest.] Dr. Grace Augustine: "That kind of pain reaches back through the link."

1:34:57 When the marines vacate the research laboratory and prepare for retaliation, Jake and Dr. Augustine talk longer. A short, but interesting extension, since it becomes obvious that the war against the Na'Vi had been desired and planned. 15.08 sec.

Dr. Grace Augustine: "You know, they never wanted us to suceed. They bulldozed the sacred site on purpose - to trigger a response. They fabricating a war. They get what they want."

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Avatar - Movie-Censorship.com