Media

Indybay Journalist Wins Payment and UCB-PD Agreement to Change Policies, Train Officers

Independent Journalist David Morse Settles Lawsuit with University of California Regents
Over Improper Arrest, Imprisonment, and Seizure of Photographs

University of California Agrees to Substantial Payment and to Change Its Policies and Procedures and Train Its Police
Relevance: 
Feature: 

Rogue newspapers or part of a continuum?

By Systemic Disorder

You’ve got to hand it to the old pirate, Rupert Murdoch — he’s still at the top of his form. His performance at the “Leveson commission” in London last week was, in its own way, something to behold. Denying he seeks favors for his businesses, denying he has any influence, denying he knows anything that is happening within his company.

Relevance: 

Capitalism, the State, and the left re: the sacred myth of 911

One of NATO/CIA's methods of preventing the left from legally achieving state power all over Europe is the use of false flag terrorist attacks. Listen to the radio interview here: http://www.radio4all.net/index.php/program/52317

Relevance: 

Grassroots Investigation Unravels the Government's Paranoid "al-Qaeda" Conspiracy Theory

GOOD NEWS! Nobody seems to have died on 9/11 as a result of any 'terrorist attack.' All the images of 'victims' appear to be computer-generated cartoons sourced from actors, poorly modified, replicated and cloned from one another.
Relevance: 

The UC8 Reporter: A Personal Account of Police Abuse of Power Against a Free Press

It's hard to know where to start. I'm not used to writing stories about myself. Usually, I am the one sharing news about other people through recordings and words. I cover events and publish reports to Indybay. I often report on street demonstrations, some more rowdy than others. And while I recognize the privilege my skin-tone grants me in our society and that I have not taken the types of risks war reporters do, I know enough from having seen what's happened to other journalists over the years that I am not immune from abuses by law enforcement authorities.
Relevance: 
Feature: 

Filipino journalists remember 'Maguindanao massacre'

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

ZAMBOANGA CITY, Philippines – Dozens of journalists held a prayer rally Wednesday in Zamboanga City to remember and seek justice for the brutal slayings of 57 people, among them at least 30 journalists massacred last month in Maguindanao province in the southern Philippines.

The rally marked the first month of the murders blamed by authorities to the powerful political Ampatuan clan.

Relevance: 

Philippines: Abduction and killings of journalists and politicians must be investigated

Maguindanao Massacre

Amnesty International condemns the killings of at least 21 civilians, including journalists and members of a politician’s family, in the southern Philippines province of Maguindanao, the first reported killings linked to national elections to be held in May 2010.

A group of about 45 people (latest news figure is now 57) were ambushed and abducted by about 100 armed men, according to reports. The military recovered the bodies of 13 women and eight men—some of them mutilated.
      

Relevance: 

Twincities Indymedia Presents: Democracy 101 and a brief discussion about the G20

This will be a screening of version 1 of a documentary about the recent Pittsburgh G20 Protests, and the Police Occupation of the University of Pittsburgh. This film is a collaboration between Pittsburgh Indymedia, Chicago Indymedia, Twin Cities Indymedia, and the Glass Bead Collective. Expect a future version with even more footage, and more analysis about the G20 and the Occupation of Pitt to be screened at Arise in the near future!

Taxonomy upgrade extras: 
Event date: 
Mon, 10/26/2009 - 15:30

Pages