Boing! Boing! — We Need More Anti-Freedom Articles

Boing! Boing! offers a nice example of the sort of mindless Liberalism that pervades on left wing sites these days (and while Boing! Boing! is largely a techie/culture site, its increasingly frequent political posts are mindlessly Liberal).

Boing! Boing! has posted numerous rants against the Patriot Act, some of which I agreed with and others which I didn’t. But they’ve been consistently opposed to the Patriot Act specifically and the idea of giving up civil liberties in exchange for security in general.

Unless, in doing so they can make a point against President Bush. So, for example, today we see the following post (emphasis added),

Farnaz Fassihi, a Wall Street Journal correspondent in Iraq, confirmed that a widely-redistributed letter she emailed to friends about the nightmarish situation in Iraq was indeed written by her. Too bad the WSJ doesn’t allow this reporter to write these kinds of stories for the paper.

Iraqis say that thanks to America they got freedom in exchange for insecurity,” Fassihi wrote (among much else) in the letter. “Guess what? They say they’d take security over freedom any day, even if it means having a dictator ruler.” And: “Despite President Bush’s rosy assessments, Iraq remains a disaster. If under Saddam it was a ‘potential’ threat, under the Americans it has been transformed to ‘imminent and active threat,’ a foreign policy failure bound to haunt the United States for decades to come.

Now if John Ashcroft penned a letter saying, “Guess what, Americans would prefer to live under a dictatorship rather than risk another 9/11” he’d be excoriated by Cory Doctorow and Mark Frauenfelder. But as long as the author simply advocates such an arrangement for Iraq, well, of course, that makes absolute sense.

And just for bonus points, the controversy over the fake documents that CBS used to disparage George W. Bush’s National Guard service is clearly the penultimate example of the power of blogs and distributed fact checking and information sharing to have a major impact on the mainstream media and wider culture.

When the controversy first occurred, Mark Fraunfelder was very excited apparently because he misunderstood the story, framing it as Did the White House release forged documents about Bush’s service record?. As soon as it was clear the forged documents were from CBS, not the White House, Fraunfelder completely lost interest in it.

Apparently bloggers and other Internet technologies taking on the big boys is only interesting when it targets right wingers. Bloggers catching a major news program passing along forged documents is apparently too last year to bother mentioning.

Now They’re Promoting Conspiracy Theories Over at Boing! Boing!

As I’ve mentioned previously, I really enjoy Boing! Boing! but sometimes that blog just goes off into loony insanity. For example, Cory Doctorow points to this silly conspiracy nonsense claiming that Nicholas Berg was killed by Westerns who are trying to frame al- Zaqarawi for the murder (probably the same people who faked the Daniel Pearl video) and Doctorow says of this,

The author states that a number of these will likely be explained away, but taken as a whole, this very convincingly implies that Berg was not killed by the terrorists that the CIA fingered, and may, in fact, have been killed by westerners.

For the record, note that this sentence here is erroneous because Doctorow apparently takes the conspiracy piece at face value when it says,

For a number of reasons, it does not appear that the Jordanian terrorist Abu Masab Al-Zaraqawi, who was voice identified by the CIA (and whose name was on the tape), was involved.

But the CIA has not made an official statement about whether or not Al-Zaraqawi is on the tape as the tape itself claims. Rather, newspapers have quoted an anonymous CIA source as claiming that a voice match suggested there was a “high probability” that the voice was that of Al-Zaraqawi.

Boing! Boing! — Talking to Your Children is McCarthyism!

Almost as amusing is watching the RIAA flailing around trying to find a way to stop file sharing is the ridiculous rhetoric that some web sites use to describe the RIAA’s tactics. For example, here’s Cory Doctorow on an advisory for parents that the RIAA released about file sharing (emphasis added),

The RIAA is sending out advisories to press-contacts at various media outlets about their “Are Your Kids Breaking the Law When They Log On?” campaign, which aims to scare parents into spanking their kids for file-sharing, and comes across as red-scare-era propaganda. It’s funny: Hollywood fought the Red Scare and McCarthyism tooth and nail, but today, they’re more than happy to appropriate its rhetoric and tactics.

Yes, the RIAA advisory notes that 83 percent of teens believe illegally downloading music is morally acceptable and give parents advice like,

SET HOUSE RULES AND SPELL OUT THE CONSEQUENCES OF NON COMPLIANCE. As you consider the potential consequences of illegal file swapping and the danger to your computer you can limit access to illegal sites through parental control software like Cybersitter or NetNanny or through parental controls in AOL or MSN. You can take away Internet privileges for a set amount of time if you feel your child is not obeying the rules.

Oh the horror. How will the Union ever withstand such a shocking outburst of intolerance and McCarthyism?

The only scare tactics here are Cory’s ridiculous overreach in referencing McCarthyism (it’s exactly this sort of thing that helps content companies sell things like the DMCA to Congress and the wider public. It just helps prove the RIAA’s case that those wanting to find a more reasonable solution to the copyright issue are fanatics).

You can read the full text of the RIAA advisory here on Cory’s site.

What Happened to the Fair Use Religion?

Boing! Boing! is the best weblog, period, as far as I’m concerned, but it’s amusing sometimes to watch the contradictions that show up there occasionally. For example, there was Cory Doctorow who usually runs around extolling the virtues of people producing their own media outside of the staid and boring medica corporations, but who constantly referred to Mel Gibson’s Jesus flick as Gibson’s “vanity project.” Post a novel that couldn’t get sold and that nobody’s going to read on your web site and Cory will link to it in a second — make a movie that everyone derided as a career killer and a joke and watch it become one of the biggest movies ever, and it’s a dumb “vanity project.”

Or look at this post by Xeni Jardin,

Indeed. When I first ran accross the site a month or two ago, I was surprised to see they were (without permission) posting excerpts from an article about Hustler publisher Larry Flynt that I wrote for Wired News. Seeing your work snipped out of context to promote a political agenda you’re not part of is almost as disturbing as… um… a talking, evangelical sock puppet that wants your porn.

“Without permission”??? What happened to the Holy Church of Fair Use and Mandatory Licensing at Boing! Boing!?