Latest News Roundup - All posts tagged 'free speech'
Tuesday, January 25, 2011

WATCH: TVO's The Agenda on the 'New F Word'

TVO's The Agenda, with Steve Paikin, hosted a thoughtful debate last week on two recent events: the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council decision to censure a radio station for playing an unedited version of a Dire Straits song and the release of a redacted edition of Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. 

The round-table discussion includes associate professor Rinaldo Walcott, professors Eleanor MacDonald and Charles Keil, and former national policy chair for the Liberal Party, Akaash Maharaj.

All the guests are opposed to censorship or efforts to redact an artist's work, and based on the results of the poll on xtra.ca, it's a sentiment shared by many of our readers.

As Maharaj says near the conclusion of the conversation, we do ourselves and society no favours if we refuse to engage with difficult questions.

 


Bookmark and Share


Monday, November 29, 2010

Apple removes another app

Apple has pulled a controversial anti-gay marriage app from its iTunes Apple store after the company was the target of an online campaign condemning the app as "anti-gay."

Called The Manhattan Declaration, the app asked users to vote in a Christian survey and add their names to a 5,000-word declaration penned by Christian clergy.

Given Apple's history of censorship, pressuring the company to surrender to its own oft-exercised bowdlerizing nature isn't a particularly noteworthy achievement. And while it may be a victory for some, for mobile users who feel they're adult enough to manage the appropriateness of their own adult content it's another step back.

Earlier this year Apple rejected the Gay New York: 101 Can't Miss Places because of a snapshot of a naked sculpture, and just this month the company behind Jack'd, a gay networking app, was shocked to discover its app had been removed from the Itunes store by Apple for using the word "gay":

With the introduction of its new iPad, it seems Apple's "moral responsibility" now extends beyond iPhone apps into iPad editorial content. Just a few weeks ago the iPad edition of the November issue of Esquire was deemed too risqué and was delayed by Apple for four weeks.  

In a recent column on the issue of Esquire's delay, and its implications for the future of the free press, The Globe and Mail's Ivor Thorsell concluded:

Neither the iTunes model nor Apple’s culture meshes with the needs of a free press. And if Apple-compliance starts to become an editorial objective, the sudden toning-down of half-naked-lady pictures will be the least of our concerns.

Rumour has it the new iPads will come with 7" and 11" screen options, but no word yet if they'll be releasing a model for adults.


Bookmark and Share


Monday, June 28, 2010

G20 security state madness

I don't even know where to begin on the events of this past weekend.

How about here? An account by this dude of appalling treatment by police. It's a tale of unwarranted search and detention, segregation by sexual orientation and suspension of fundamental rights as Canadians. Welcome to Toronto, Dan. This piece brought to you by the good people at rabble.ca 

 

I was at College and University, the southern boundary of Queen's Park, at about 5pm on Saturday as police began to clear the so-called free-speech zone. It was appalling. I watched as a few were arrested and saw mounted police carve a group of people out of the crowd in the park and arrest them all.  

Fab magazine associate editor Matt Thomas snapped this shot on Queen St W. You know the story.  

  

Read Thomas's account of Saturday's events.  

Tonight, there's a protest planned at the Toronto Police Services headquarters at Yonge and College, starting at 5:30pm. See more info on Facebook

A Facebook group has also sprung up: Canadians Demanding a Public Inquiry into Toronto G20.


Bookmark and Share


Thursday, June 24, 2010

How Pride Toronto was convinced to rescind its ban

Pride Toronto’s (PT) announcement, on June 23, that it would get out of the censorship business altogether is a great victory for Toronto’s gay and lesbian communities. But as myriad ad hoc groups formed to organize protests against PT’s censorship of the term "Israeli apartheid" these past two weeks, the move seemed to come somewhat out of the blue.  


Xtra has learned the impasse was broken after a meeting at Liberal MPP Glen Murray’s office on the afternoon of June 18. Among those in attendance were Murray, Metropolitan Community Church of Toronto pastor Brent Hawkes, 519 Church Street Community Centre executive director Maura Lawless, Egale Canada executive director and Pride Toronto board member Helen Kennedy, and PT human rights committee member and Coalition for Free Speech member Doug Kerr. Lawyer Douglas Elliott, who also signed onto the resolution and press release repealing the ban, was not present at that meeting but became involved subsequently.

“I got called in, tried to give Helen and Tracey some names [of those who could help],” Murray told Xtra last night. “My job is to protect PT’s funding, to keep government out of dictating the content of cultural, social and political events and to try to bring the community together. That’s what I’ve been up to. We were very lucky that those people stepped forward.”

So, what was the mechanism by which a small meeting of community diplomats who have been largely silent on this almost year-old issue led to PT’s resolution to rescind the ban?

“After the meeting, I called [PT executive director] Tracey Sandilands and met with her on the Monday of this week,” says Hawkes. “I spent a lot of time talking to her and explained to her both motions. After meeting with Tracey, I asked for a meeting with the folks on the Pride board who voted in favour of the ban, or who weren’t there and so weren’t part of the initial vote. Douglas, Maura and I went to that meeting. Tracey called those five board members and said we had a proposal. The Pride board met the next evening…. that group voted unanimously to approve the two motions.”

It seems so easy. Sandilands has so far declined Xtra's request for comment but it seems implausible that PT would have chosen to rescind its choice to act as censor without the direct activist pressure applied against it these past weeks. Questions about whether or not  PT intended to sanction arrest or ejection from the parade route of those it determined in violation of the city's anti-discrimination policy were hanging in air. Much of PT's consitituency was in open revolt. Repealing the ban and insisting the city take responsibility for interpreting its own anti-discrimination policy seemed the only reasonable and viable option.  

"It’s so weird to be in the backdrop of the G20 where all this protest and violence and security and police state is unfolding," says former 2010 honoured dyke Jane Farrow. "The opportunity for us to exhibit free speech and peaceful demonstration is so important. Maybe somebody did the optics and realized we could actually do this differently. The history and reputation of Toronto as being a place for that kind of protest, dissent and free speech could be upheld. Also, you think you had trouble raising money after a little skirmish with this group, try having some violence happen in your Pride parade and see how that affects the bottom line in the next year. Maybe someone did that. It was just escalating; it wasn’t going away."

Rescinding the ban "came about because I asked people to come together to try to find a solution,” says Kerr, who adds that he did not attend the meeting at Murray’s office as a representative of the Coalition but rather in his capacity as a PT human rights committee member. “The work that the coalition and QuAIA has been doing to raise the awareness of these issues and the public community meeting, the 23 award winners who gave back their awards, the activism, all of this community engagement all over the community is part of how this happened. You can’t look to what Brent and Doug and Maura have done in isolation.”

Still Murray and Hawkes encourage everyone to congratulate and support PT staff and directors for ultimately making the right decision. And in the end, PT did do the right thing. Yesterday's announcement is a huge leap toward a successful Pride celebration for 2010.

“There are a lot of young people on the PT board without a lot political experience,” says Murray. “I dare say that in the school of sharp learning curves these folks got a crash course in community politics 101. I think many people may not have given them a passing grade a couple of weeks ago; I think a lot of people will now show them some deserved respect.”
 


Bookmark and Share


Thursday, June 17, 2010

Where did Pride Toronto's revenue come from in 2009?

As Xtra reported on Monday, Councillor Giorgio Mammoliti's motion to defund Pride Toronto was withdrawn, and Toronto city council thereby dodged responsibility for the censorship issue.

How much money did the City contribute to Pride Toronto in 2009? Take a peek at this chart, from the latest issue of Xtra:  

   

>> Read all of Xtra's coverage on the Pride Toronto censorship issue

 

Bookmark and Share


Powered by BlogEngine.NET 1.4.0.0

The Roundup

Xtra.ca's Roundup
blog is your source
for news and
analysis that has
queer people
talking.

The Roundup is
written by Xtra's
staff reporters:

Andrea Houston
andrea.houston@xtra.ca

Natasha Barsotti
natasha.barsotti@xtra.ca

 


Log in
Feed Subscribe