Los Angeles is Mandating Body Cameras for Its Police Force
In a move that will hopefully set the precedent for other major American cities, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti announced earlier this week that he will be equipping body cameras on every single police officer in the city. While Garcetti's plan is to purchase 7,000 cameras, the first wave will consist of 800 cameras used in areas with high crime rates and police activity. $1.5 million in private funds has been raised for the initiative, with Garcetti's budget to include funding for the rest of the 7,000 cameras to be used citywide.
The initiative is the first step in assuring police are held accountable for their actions and to bring transparency to those who "serve the law." Garcetti elaborated further during his announcement, stating:
Out on the street, things aren’t always clear cut. These cameras will help law enforcement and the public alike find the truth — and truth is essential to the trust between the LAPD and the community, which has been a key factor in lowering crime to record lows.
It's unfortunate that it took the in flux of high-profile cases of police brutality this year to push the button, but the announcement is a step in the right direction for a safer future. There's the old adage "Who watches the watchmen?" If the initiative is successful and becomes the standard for all American cops, the answer will be everybody.
[via PetaPixel]
UK Journalists Show Support for Professional Photographers
In the always-evolving world of journalism, flexibility with multiple abilities and skills has become just as paramount as writing talents. In moves that promote both cost-cutting and finding multi-faceted workers, the world of journalism has become a realm for people with multimedia backgrounds to thrive and flourish. However, the growth towards this direction has left some of the old school behind, while others are put into uncomfortable situations where their duties happen to include aspects outside of their abilities.
Chicago served as one of the most prime examples of the changing landscape of journalism in 2013 when the Chicago Sun-Times laid off 28 full-time staff photographers to opt for journalists and reporters to handle photographic duties, oftentimes from their smartphones. The results were less than stellar, as you can see in the example below featuring the Chicago Blackhawks' Stanley Cup win later that summer - on the left is a professional photograph published by the Chicago Tribune, on the right is the photograph published by the Chicago Sun-Times.
The National Union of Journalists in the United Kingdom and Ireland have banded together to protest against the growing change in journalism by refusing to take assignments that should be assigned to professional photographers. The show of solidarity further proves the importance of keeping professional photographers on staff, but also indicates how vital proper photographs can be in crafting the story being written.
The National Union of Journalists thusly ask the question:
Who will be there to do it when [photographers are] gone? An over-stretched reporter or an unpaid member of the public simply whipping out a smart-phone to take a quick snap smacks of exploitation.
The last thing we want happening in the world is mainstream news outlets running stories with TMZ-quality photos and videos. I just shudder at the thought.
[via PetaPixel]
United States, Cuba to Renew Diplomatic Talks
Today, President Obama announced that the United States and Cuba will resume talks to better build diplomatic relations. The announcement comes on the heels of the release of American Alan Gross, who had been in captivity in Cuba for the past five years. The United States, in turn, released three Cuban spies who had been imprisoned since 2001. While the fifty-year-long embargo is still in place, the two nations will have discussions to either ease up on the restrictions or to lift the embargo entirely.
During his speech, President Obama discussed the history of the embargo and how the policy has hurt both nations, stating:
We will end an outdated approach that for decades has failed to advance our interests and instead we will begin to normalize relations between our two countries [...] These 50 years have shown that isolation has not worked. It’s time for a new approach.
Cuban President Raul Castro made a joint-announcement, stating:
We have been able to advance the solutions of some themes of interest to both nations. This decision of President Obama deserves the respect and acknowledgment of our people. This does not mean the principal issue has been resolved. The blockade which causes much human and economic damage to our country should cease.
Presidents Obama and Castro spoke on the phone Tuesday, marking the first time leaders of both nations spoke directly with one another in more than 50 years. The rekindling of national relations was conducted in secret over the past 18 months with Canada hosting talks and Pope Francis personally requesting relations be healed, going so far as to hold the final meeting between the two nations in the Vatican.
You can watch President Obama's full speech below.
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[via New York Times]
Sony Hackers Threaten Attacks on Theaters that Screen The Interview
If you're as attentive to the news as I am, I'm sure you're familiar with the controversy over the Sony hackings that have taken place over the past few weeks that have resulted in Sony computers getting bricked, sensitive information being leaked, and even full films released online. I've made a conscious decision to not report on the various hackings due to the nature of how the information was gleaned, but when serious threats are made, it's hard to turn the other cheek.
Variety is reporting that the group that has taken claim to the hacks has issued a terrorist threat targeting theaters that will be screening the Seth Rogen and James Franco-led The Interview. The full message reads as follows:
Warning
We will clearly show it to you at the very time and places “The Interview” be shown, including the premiere, how bitter fate those who seek fun in terror should be doomed to.
Soon all the world will see what an awful movie Sony Pictures Entertainment has made.
The world will be full of fear.
Remember the 11th of September 2001.
We recommend you to keep yourself distant from the places at that time.
(If your house is nearby, you’d better leave.)
Whatever comes in the coming days is called by the greed of Sony Pictures Entertainment.
All the world will denounce the SONY.
For those that may not remember, North Korea took major offense to the film when the first trailers were released earlier this summer, with the country's government denouncing the comedy as an "act of war." Indeed, the Sony hacks have been publicly seen as retaliation for the film, with even more damage teased and threatened upon the film's release on Christmas.
I'm not one to fall victim to online threats and rumors, but given the extensive threat level being made, and the fact that the group has already caused insurmountable damage across Sony Pictures Entertainment, this latest threat is hard to ignore. As somebody whose local theater is literally at the end of his block, I can honestly say I'm a tad bit concerned about the threats being made. Be careful, true believers.
[via Variety]
Flash Photography Can Detect Eye Cancer in Children
We always lament and cheer on the latest innovations in technology by focusing on all of the cool things we can do that weren't available to us beforehand, but we don't always cheer on the advancements in everyday technology that can actually save lives. This could be because the large number of us aren't constantly facing medical or health perils on a regular basis, or because we have a tendency to shy away from anything that reminds us of our mortality. Nevertheless, scientists and inventors are finding ways to utilize modern, everyday technology to effectively save lives.
The Childhood Eye Cancer Trust (CHECT) has recently begun a poster campaign in the UK to raise awareness about retinoblastoma, a deadly form of eye cancer that targets children. The four posters (which you can see below) have a special reflective ink in the children's pupils that, when taken using the flash from a camera or cameraphone, while show up white, and it's this white appearance that can indicate a tumor within the eye. In fact, the four children chosen for the posters are survivors of retinoblastoma.
While simply utilizing a camera's flash to detect whether or not a child has retinoblastoma may help, visiting an optometrist is always the safest and best route to take when worried about your loved one's health. CHECT also released a video detailing retinoblastoma and their ad campaign that you can watch below.
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[via Co.Create]
What The CIA Torture Report Says About Humanity
The Senate Intelligence Committee's report into the CIA's use of torture is finally being published, albeit in heavily redacted form. To begin, let's focus on what little positivity can be gleaned from a situation in which even our most forgiving hopes of living in a moral, compassionate society are surely set to be torn apart, piece by piece. Whatever this report may reveal and no matter how little of it is actually made public - supposedly no more than 600 pages out of 6,000 - some credit is due to the American government for the report existing at all.
Where I live, in the UK, the idea of our intelligence services being subject to any sort of accountability, or their actions challenged in any meaningful way, feels like a pipe dream at best. All we get are excuses, usually that such activities were legal - as though there has ever been an atrocity committed by a government and its agencies in history which wasn't - or 'necessary', though providing any sort of justification for that claim would supposedly endanger us all. If you thought that line about spies ending every sentence with "...but then I'd have to kill you" was nothing but a ridiculous joke, try listening to a British politician discussing defense for more than five minutes.
As this article from the Guardian reminds us, there are no investigations currently taking place into the complicity of European nations in CIA rendition and torture. It is easier to sit back and moralize about big, bad America than admit that through collaboration and acceptance, our supposed ideals and values are no less blighted by the contents of the Sentate Committee's report than our allies across the Atlantic.
But let's not skirt around the uncomfortable truth here. As the dominant superpower of Western society, the United States sets the moral standards by which most of the countries in which we live will operate. There may be differences here and there, but the culture and values we have accepted since the country's ascendancy in the aftermath of WW2 have been, at their core, defined by America. Freedom, democracy, capitalism, all ideas and institutions which have existed for a very long time, but been moulded into a shape which is today distinctly American. As we learn more about the horrors which have been perpetrated under the pretense of protecting those values, we must also admit that such actions have desecrated their meaning for all those who believe in them or live under their jurisdiction.
It is interesting to note, as mentioned in the Guardian article linked above, that the report's focus appears to have been far more on whether or not the CIA's extensive use of torture was effective as opposed to whether it was, on any level, moral. It's not difficult to understand why: in reiterating how ineffective torture was in acquiring information, it exposes the unforgivable hypocrisy of the CIA's repeated assertions to the contrary to justify their continued use of so-called 'enhanced interrogation' even though they knew it wasn't working. Not to mention that even in a society whose values are so clearly and frequently expressed as those of the US, the concept of 'morality' is nebulous at best. Make the right excuses, tell the right lies, and the definition of that word can be stretched about as far as you want it to.
Yet in framing the report around whether or not torture worked is to miss the point of why its use is so sickening. Had the CIA discovered some technique which, against all historical precedent, managed to deliver flawless intelligence each and every time, the fundamental question remains, inexorably, a moral one: is a society which allows one person to deliberately inflict pain on another a society in which we should be content to live?
My answer, unequivocally, is no. In the days and weeks to come, we will undoubtedly be repeatedly told that the use of torture saved many lives (though exactly how many, or under which circumstances, must of course remain a secret known only to the privileged few) and the people who perpetrated it were doing so to uphold our values and freedom. Wrong. Wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong. The people who perpetrated torture have not upheld our values and freedom, but burnt them to the ground by using them as justification for the suffering of others. When it comes to saving lives, even if we disregard the efficacy question, the use of such grotesque actions will only serve to galvanize our enemies and those who might be persuaded by their cause. Perhaps in the short term, attacks were prevented. But how many more will have been seeded long into the future?
And of the supposedly moral grey area in which torture is justifiable under certain circumstances? I refuse to believe that in the time it takes for torture to produce results of any sort, accurate or not, it is impossible to find an alternate method which does not involve disgracing everything we stand for. Some people's beliefs are so ingrained that they will never betray them no matter how hard they are pushed. On those people, torture is surely useless. For those whose beliefs are not so firmly set, inflicting pain will surely only reinforce the idea that such beliefs are justified and, in a state of otherwise total helplessness, resistance is the last form of victory possible. The CIA paid psychologists more than $80 million to develop torture techniques. Is it really so implausible that the same experts, with the same amount of money and the same knowledge of human psychology, could not have come up with a single more benevolent way of extracting information?
We must also not allow ourselves to believe that these events are somehow a one-off, which have never happened before and will never happen again. After all, you don't need to look very deep to see the long line of precedents in the recent and not so recent history of the United States. Meanwhile, as part of the research for a novel I'm currently writing, it was striking and shaming to see torture methods used by the British in Northern Ireland in the 70s - sleep and food deprivation, stress positions, sensory overload - reappearing as part of the Senate Committee's report. From the days of Empire to WW2, the British relationship with torture goes back a shamefully long way.
Sadly, that's true of human history in general: people's willingness to inflict pain on others from a position of power is an unwavering constant no matter how far back you look. The difference these days is that the pleas of ignorance which have traditionally been used as a shield are slowly but surely losing credibility. Whatever faults social media may have, it has been unprecedented in lifting the veil on the cruelties and abuses which have gone unspoken for centuries. Today, the only way to ignore the institutional rot which has been festering in the heart of our establishments - politics, media, policing, education, financial, religion - is to make the choice of deliberately turning away your head. We are at a crossroads where what can no longer be denied must either be rejected or accepted. That is why it is vital to not only speak up not only against torture, but other difficult subjects such as racism and the shaming of rape victims, while also arguing in favour of the values you want to see your society embodying going forward. Fairness; equal treatment for all; accountability and regulation of those in power.
Such half-hearted concessions as Barack Obama's casual acknowledgment of his predecessor's regime having 'tortured some folks' or his refusal to speak out against institutional racism in American police forces are no longer good enough. Let's stop accepting the culture of excusing rape; the redistribution of wealth from the poor to the rich in an increasingly predatory version of capitalism; the way we accept vagaries as excuses when we are told torture is the only option, or when TV shows like 24 and video games like Splinter Cell present it as heroic and infallible. Let's instead remember Star Trek: The Next Generation delivering one of the most powerful depictions of the inherent immorality and futility of torture in the 1992 episode, 'Chain Of Command: Part II' (below).
I think most people accept that secrets and confidentiality are important for intelligence agencies to be able to do their jobs effectively. That should not however give them permission to lie to the public and commit atrocities while brushing off any concerns with the patronizing and dangerous insistence that they be blindly trusted no matter what. It means they should be given the powers necessary to do their difficult work while remaining subject to rigorous oversight preventing them from abusing those powers, particularly when it comes to issues of basic human rights, privacy and freedom. On the evidence of the Snowden revelations or this latest report, it is clear that not only is that oversight not in place, but global intelligence agencies are either exploiting legal loopholes or simply lying to get around the few restrictions which do exist. It is telling and damning that the only person likely to see prison time as a result of this report is former CIA analyst John Kiriakou, the man who exposed the agency's use of torture and is currently serving two and a half years at a facility in Loretto, Pennsylvania. Some perpetrators have even been rewarded: one official who interrogated detainee Gul Rahman, who died in 2002 of hypothermia as a result of conditions at the CIA site in Afghanistan where he was held and tortured, was awarded $2,500 for his 'consistently superior work'.
The findings of the Senate Committee's report have already irrevocably damaged the ideas of freedom and democracy that are central to our way of life and what we hope distinguishes us from those who believe in oppression, hatred and murder justified by extremist ideologies. Whether those findings are allowed to disappear quietly after a few weeks once the novelty wears off or if they will continue to inform discussion about what is and is not acceptable in defense of our values will ultimately be decided by our willingness to continue fighting to build the kind of society we aspire to live in and the principles that must be applied to all without exception. Torture is not employed by those who want to hear people talk, but by those who want to hear them scream. Whether those people are called patriots or criminals is a question we will all have to answer, and sooner rather than later.
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Kathryn Bigelow's Short Film Last Days Brings Awareness to Elephant Poaching
"An elephant disappears every 15 minutes. It is our hope that this film helps to bring an activist into existence at least that often."
Kathryn Bigelow has made very pointed stances against war and terrorism in her two recent films, Zero Dark Thirty and The Hurt Locker. Not one to shy from taking activist stances, the director has collaborated with WildAid to create a short animated/multimedia film detailing the dangers of elephant poaching and its apparent link to terrorism. Last Days is an eye-opening account of how the purchase of ivory-made items indirectly lead to funding of various terrorist groups and organizations, including security footage of the Westgate Mall attack in Nairobi, Kenya back in September 2013 by al-Shabaab.
The short film directs viewers to a website asking visitors to help end ivory-funded terrorism. Those interested in helping the cause can help spread the video and message via social media using the hashtag #LastDays, or can go the extra mile and donate to various non-profit organizations that promise 100% of proceeds will go towards "putting terrorists out of business and elephants out of danger."
Again, you can learn more about the movement at this website.
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Female Ejaculation Censored From British Porn
A new set of regulations put into effect by the British government yesterday will censor female ejaculation from any UK-produced pornography. Among the sex acts to fall foul of the new rules are spanking, 'aggressive' whipping, watersports, facesitting and fisting, with the latter two among those marked out as 'life endangering'. Notions of consent have not been taken into account in compiling the list, which is already being heavily criticised for seemingly focusing on acts in which women either traditionally derive the greatest pleasure or are depicted as powerful and in control.
In interviews with Vice UK, producer and professional dominatrix Itziar Bilbao Urrutia, or Ms Tytania to her subs, called the regulations "absurd and surreal", while Jerry Barnett, founder of anti-censorship campaign Sex And Censorship, described them as "a set of moral judgements designed by people who have struggled endlessly to stop the British people from watching pornography." Director Erika Lust, writing for the Telegraph, fears the new rules will turn porn into a "boring, unrealistic, male fantasy of bimbos eagerly pleasing men as if it is their duty, where women are submissive and lack ownership of their sexuality."
Despite this widespread censorship being justified under the guise of child protection, the rules solely affect UK porn producers and in no way limit the rights or ability of viewers to seek out videos from abroad depicting the banned acts.
Few would deny that child access to pornography remains a very serious issue, especially when it comes to some of the more hardcore material which can potentially affect sexual development and expectations at a young age. At a time when casual social misogyny and the sexual mistreatment of women is finally being taken as seriously as it should, that these regulations so heavily focus on censoring depictions of female pleasure is not only damaging, but outright repellent. They enshrine in law the idea that male sexual satisfaction is more important and acceptable than that of women, while making seemingly arbitrary judgments on what is deemed 'good' and 'bad' sex between consenting adults.
In this case, such censorship represents a government attempting to enforce its outdated, puritanical and simplistic morality on a modern issue requiring more careful and considered education to help those affected better understand such essential ideas as consent, respect and the difference between sex as fantasy and in reality.
In any case, those Monty Python boys had better watch out. All together now...
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