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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: homeland security, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 10 of 10
1. Inside the vacuum of ignorance

By Karen Greenberg


The most amazing fact about the more than 700 previously unseen classified Guantánamo documents released by WikiLeaks and several unaffiliated news organizations the night of Sunday, April 24, is how little in them is new. The information in these documents — admittedly not classified “top secret” but merely “secret” — spells out details that buttress what we already knew, which is this: From day one at Guantánamo, the U.S. national security apparatus has known very little about the detainees in custody. The United States does not know who they are, how to assess what they say, and what threat they ultimately pose.

Given this vacuum of ignorance, U.S. officials decided at the outset that it was better to be safe than sorry. Therefore, any imaginable way in which behavior or statements could be deemed dangerous led to individual detainees being classified as “high risk.” The result was the policy we have seen since 2002 — a policy of assessing potential danger based on details like what kind of watches the detainees wore, the way they drew on the dirt floors of their cages, and whether they had travel documents on them. In addition, the just-released documents reaffirm the fact that much of the material on the detainees apparently came from hearsay derived from what seems to have been a limited number of interrogations, some performed under circumstances amounting to torture.

It is not just the conclusions of Guantánamo critics like myself that are being verified by these newly found documents. The conclusions of the judges who have sifted through available information to determine just who deserves to be at Guantánamo and who is being held on the basis of insufficient evidence have also been reinforced. In 58 habeas cases spanning both George W. Bush’s and Barack Obama’s administrations, federal judges have determined that in 36 of the cases there is insufficient evidence to hold these individuals and that often the detention was based on information obtained through hearsay, frequently the result of torture. In other words, the little evidence that existed was largely unreliable.

The sad fact is that these documents tell us more about ourselves than about the detainees. They tell us that U.S. officials to this day know very little based on hard evidence about the majority of those who have been held at Guantánamo, that assessments of risk have all too often been based on flights of imagination that tend to enhance the sense of power and capability of al Qaeda, and that the criteria for determining risk are at best murky. Those deemed to pose a risk ranged from individual detainees who proclaimed angry threats against their guards to those who were believed to have been actively involved in terrorism.

Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld once pointed out, in reference to the failure to find evidence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, that absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. Although the quip may seem facile, it is actually a candid assessment of what has gone wrong at Guantánamo from the time it opened in January 2002. It continues to go wrong to this day. The proper, lawful, most security-minded restatement of Rumsfeld’s maxim would be this: Absence of evidence requires better intelligence, more careful judgments, and more savvy realism. Without facts, it is not only the just treatment of detainees that is at issue — it is the security of the United States itself.

Karen Greenberg is executive director of the Center on Law and Security at the New York University School of Law and author of 0 Comments on Inside the vacuum of ignorance as of 1/1/1900

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2. Homeland Security and Willful Copyright Infringement

Since when is copyright infringement a homeland security issue? Just asking....

According to a number of members of the web4lib listserv, a number of sites have been taken down by the US government, in part, for copyright infringement. Mashable has more information on the taking down of Torrent-Finder.com.

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3. What Do Firemen Do?

Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury depicts firemen burning books. It is what they do. In a story that is disconcerting for those of us who believe in the right of freedom to read, MSNBC reports that firefighters are being trained by Homeland Security in the USA in a test program. They are being trained to look for illegal materials and report people who may be "hostile, uncooperative or expressing hate or discontent with the United States."

While law enforcement officials have stringent rules that control their access to private property, fire fighters have access in order to make inspections for the purposes of preventing fires. The ACLU is concerned about the implications of this program with regard to first amendment issues.

According to New York City Fire Chief Salvatore Cassano, information related to terrorism has been passed on from firefighters to law enforcement since the program began three years ago.

It would be interesting to see what kind of information officials are collecting that they believe relates to terrorism and to what degree one needs to be "discontent" before one is reported to the government.

This would be great fodder for a dystopian novel. Oh, wait....

MTV Movies Blog reports that Tom Hanks is showing great interest in starring as Guy Montag, the “fireman” in Fahrenheit 451.

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4. BIRTHDAY TIME!!

We have TWO special birthdays this week, our very own Melanie Ford Wilson and Rama Hughes!! HAPPY BIRTHDAY!!

To celebrate, let’s share some dancing cake!!

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5. Episode 1: FOUND Magazine

Russ Roca posts a video recap of Davy and Peter Rothbart from FOUND magazine performing at Open in Long Beach.

Not only is it a great video, but - look at all that lovely art on the walls! (A nice way to sample the IF show from the comfort of your computer monitor).

likehellitsyours.jpg

From the FOUND website: “We collect FOUND stuff: love letters, birthday cards, kids’ homework, to-do lists, ticket stubs, poetry on napkins, telephone bills, doodles - anything that gives a glimpse into someone
else’s life. Anything goes…”

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6. The Illustration Friday Group Show at Open

The first ever Illustration Friday show was amazing. I was sure I’d be able to blog it as it happened - hanging the art, setting up the stage, the creation and presentation of 150 cupcakes, meeting the artists. I have no idea why I thought that, because I ended up being so busy with preparations that I barely sat down from Friday until midnight on Saturday. It was so much fun.

Sé and I stayed up very late getting the art placed within the gallery. Unpacking all the artwork (25 boxes!!) was like an early Christmas - we ooh’ed and ahh’ed over prints and held things up across the room yelling “What do you think? Is it crooked?”. Every single artist participated, and I am just incredibly awed and proud of everyone - we gave you a tight deadline and you all met it with room to spare, and gave us a wealth of beautiful, professional work to display.

I’ve put up a few photos at Flickr, and I’ll confess that I was having such a good time talking to the artists that I only took pictures as the night was winding to a close. But the show is hanging at Open (map) until January 20th, so you have plenty of time to see it for yourself!!

Front Gallery

Open II

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7. The Illustration Friday Show at Open

Illustration Friday and Open are excited to showcase twenty-five community-chosen artists at the first ever Illustration Friday gallery show!

The show begins November 3rd and runs through January 20th.

Open is located at 2226 E. 4th St. in Long Beach, CA (map).

The IF community created 678 total entries, and if you haven’t taken a look at “open“, then you are missing some of the best work of Illustration Friday yet!

Chickengirl Design
Cory Godbey
Dangermarc
Digital Scott
doni conner
Doreen Mulryan Marts
Geninne
Irina Tozzola
irisz
Jacob Souva
kristins
maja veselinovic
Manelle
Marci Senders
mike r baker
MontgomeryQ
princesstomato
Rebecca Hahn
rferg
Sparky Firepants
Sparrow
stephane Lauzon
Steve Morrison
Sweet Pea
Yara Kono

Congratulations, you guys! And many thanks to all the artists who make Illustration Friday such an inspiration week in and week out. See you at the show!

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8. A is for…

In honor of this week’s topic, I thought I’d post some of my favourite abecedaria, or alphabet collections. Some consider the abecedarium to be a poetic form - others an illustrative form. Personally, I think it is a delightful opportunity for type and illustration to tango.

n.jpg

1. Edward Gorey’s Gashlycrumb Tinies is the definitive alphabet book, in my mind.

2. Here’s a collection of Sesame Street alphabet animations, handily outlined.

3. Lastly, when I was researching abecedaria and ABC books, our own IF Blogger Steve Mack showed up in my searches numerous times with his gorgeous ABC: An Illustrated Alphabet Compendium - and he’s made it available online in Flash format!

cover.jpg

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9. Parental Advisory: Explicit Illustration

Alone by Switchsky & BaggelBoy

I consider it a compliment that Illustration Friday has grown big enough to inspire alternatives like Illustration Friday Night

. Same idea different criteria.

Illustrations above by Switchsky and BaggelBoy respectively on the topic “I think we’re alone now.”

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10. Avast ye, artistes!

Isaac the Pirate by Christophe Blain

Isaac the Pirate, by Christophe Blain, tells the ongoing story of an aspiring artist who is shanghaied days before his wedding. He is forced into service by a pirate captain who needs an illustrator to document his voyage around the world.

For any Illustration Friday visitor who also enjoys those Captain Jack Sparrow movies, this is a series of books that you have to read. The artwork is superb and the story will stir your passion for adventure AND artwork.

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