The First Step to Winning "the War on Photography" is to Know Your Rights
Via Instapundit comes this excellent law review article about how post-9/11 law enforcement locking down our rights to take pictures (even as technology makes that a whole lot easier):
Ameliorating what scholars have labeled "the War on Photography" will require the efforts of both the organized media and grassroots organizations. Both should seek to educate people about their legal rights and increase the public's awareness of abuses described. The organized media needs to dedicate the resources necessary to defend those charged with crimes and to pressure courts and legislatures to make and interpret law in a way that holds officials accountable for their actions.
These and other efforts are needed to prevent the continuation of widespread abuse of photography and newsgathering rights. The meaningful remedies needed to preserve the right to free press and expression are currently lacking. In the words of one scholar, "[t]he death of a free press can occur not only by a dictator's edict but by slow erosion, one case at a time."
Read the whole article by Morgan Leigh Manning, a former research assistant to Glenn Reynolds at the Univ. of Tennessee Law School.
Reason is doing its part in this battle. Check out our January 2011 cover story, The War on Cameras, and watch this Reason.tv documentary on the same subject:
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Torture!
Another case in Miami Beach.
This is the first time I've seen that video. That is some sickening, horrifying shit. Fuck the police.
Wasn't this discussed yesterday?
The video hadn't been posted yet though, right?
For the first time today, I've seen this reported in the MSM. Only what - ten days late?
So you can know exactly which ones are being violated when the cops beat your ass and smash your camera.
qik.com -- streams and archives any video taken.
Although eventually the cops will wise up to it and make sure to always subsequently slip some drugs in the photographer's pocket.
Where is our parasite pal, Dunphy?
I'm kind of starting to like dunphy. I give him credit for continuing to come back, and remaining cheerful despite the typical H&R warm welcome.
He's still a pig, but he's becoming OUR...OK, no he's not. But I still kind of like him...
He's condescending. No matter how egregious (like this Miami shooting), his position is always the same. You just don't understand, but I'll try to explain it in a way you can grasp. And after awhile, that gets boring.
uipped with the latest in RoboCop-like technology, Cpl. Paul Glynn can use the tiny camera mounted on his shoulder to record his interactions with drunks and loiterers along Burlington's Marketplace.
http://www.burlingtonfreepress.....dyssey=tab|topnews|text|FRONTPAGE
Someone should start a national "Film the Cops Day" when every citizen is encouraged to cheerfully take pix of the cops.
sorry -- stupid joke handle.
Wait. how does this thing work?
is good