On April 16, Australia’s eSafety commissioner, Julie Inman Grant, issued with authoritarian glee legal notices to X Corp and Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, to remove material within 24 hours depicting what her office declared to be “gratuitous or offensive violence with a high degree of impact and detail”. […]
Tag: Freedom of Speech
Flicker Of Hope: Biden’s Throwaway Lines On Assange
Walking stiffly, largely distracted, and struggling to focus on the bare essentials, US President Joe Biden was keeping company with his Japanese counterpart, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, when asked the question. It concerned what he was doing regarding Australia’s request that the WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange be returned to Australia. […]
Russian Citizens in the Baltics Face Restrictions of Voting Rights
One of the most significant elections of this decade has been concluded in Russia with a decisive victory of President Putin. This particular campaign was marked by severe restrictions on voting rights for a large portion of the population – Russian citizens living abroad, specifically in the West, with the […]
The Campaign To Free Assange: Reflections On Night Falls
There was much to cherish about Night Falls in the Evening Lands: The Assange Epic, part of a global movement to publicise the importance of freeing WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange.
Imperial Venality Defends Itself: Day Two of Julian Assange’s High Court Appeal
On February 21, the Royal Courts of Justice hosted a second day of carnivalesque mockery regarding the appeal by lawyers representing an ill Julian Assange, whose publishing efforts are being impugned by the United States as having compromised the identities of informants while damaging national security. Extradition awaits, only being […]
Identifying Imperial Venality: Day One Of Julian Assange’s High Court Appeal
It was clear that things were not going to be made easy for Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks founder who infuriated the US imperium,
Comparing The Cases Of Julian Assange And Alexei Navalny
The Assange case legally involves the U.S., UK, and Sweden, but the Navalny case legally involves only Russia but has been taken up by all of the countries that are trying to conquer Russia.
Italy’s Media Revolution: The “Giorgia’s Notes”
The Internet has created an environment in which people have begun to confide personal experiences to a multitude of outsiders.
Constitutional Violations: Julian Assange, Privacy And The CIA
While the US Department of Justice battles to sink its fangs into the Australian national for absurd espionage charges, various offshoots of his case have begun to grow.
Day X: Julian Assange’s ‘Final’ Appeal
Keeping Assange in the UK in hideous conditions of confinement without bail serves the goals of Washington, albeit vicariously.
Press-Freedom In The West Is A Lie
The U.S. and its allies have been keeping all of these historic developments secret from their respective publics.
Mission to Free Assange: Australian Parliamentarians in Washington
Australian parliamentarians lobbying members of the US Congress and various relevant officials on one issue: the release of Julian Assange.
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