Stocznia Gdańska







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Gdańsk

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Museum of the Polish Post



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Hartes Vorgehen gegen das Verbreiten von Falschinformationen

Die Zeit:

Bundesinnenministerin Nancy Faeser kündigte ein hartes Vorgehen gegen eine mögliche Verherrlichung von Kriegsverbrechen sowie das Verbreiten von Falschinformationen an. Bei den für Sonntag in mehreren deutschen Städten angekündigten Protestkundgebungen werde „sehr genau nach verbotenen Symbolen“ geschaut werden, sagte Faeser der Welt am Sonntag.

„Das Zeigen des ‚Z‘ verherrlicht Kriegsverbrechen und kann deshalb unserer Ansicht nach strafrechtlich verfolgt werden“, sagte die Bundesinnenministerin. Mit dem „Z“-Symbol sind russische Militärfahrzeuge markiert, die am russischen Angriffskrieg in der Ukraine beteiligt sind. „Hier brauchen wir ein konsequentes Einschreiten der Polizei.“

„Dieser verbrecherische russische Angriffskrieg ist auch ein Informationskrieg“, sagte Faeser weiter. Es gebe von russischer Seite „dreiste Lügen, Propaganda und Desinformation“. Dies werde sie auf Kundgebungen in Deutschland nicht zulassen.

Der innenpolitische Sprecher der SPD-Bundestagsfraktion, Sebastian Hartmann, wies darauf hin, dass die Demonstrations- und Meinungsfreiheit ein hohes grundrechtlich geschütztes Gut sei: Menschen sollten und dürften Protest kundtun. „Was jedoch nicht geht, ist, dass die russische Invasion in die Ukraine, wo solch furchtbare Kriegsverbrechen wie in Butscha geschehen, auf unseren Straßen gefeiert und verherrlicht wird“, sagte Hartmann. „Wenn zu Hass aufgerufen wird und Straftaten begangen werden, muss die Versammlung aufgelöst werden.“

Freedom of opinion is fundamentally protected, as long as it’s the right opinion, naturally. No false opinions! False opinions strafrechtlich verfolgt werden.

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It’s 2017 all over again, only better

Guardian:

Vladimir Putin may use the Biden administration’s support for Ukraine as a pretext to order a new campaign to interfere in American politics, US intelligence officials have assessed.

Intelligence agencies have not found any evidence Putin has authorized measures like the ones Russia is believed to have undertaken in the 2016 and 2020 elections in support of Donald Trump, according to several people familiar with the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity.

After all, when it comes to conjecture on the basis of no evidence about what may happen that is similar to what is believed to have happened, if you can’t trust several anonymous people familiar with the matter, who can you trust?

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Kramatorsk

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Clare Daly 06.04.2022

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Scott Ritter on being banned by Twitter

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The West at War: On the Self-Enclosure of the Liberal Mind

Boris Buden, e-flux:

The system of parliamentary oligarchy that upholds Putin, with its authoritarian and violent character, is not an exclusively Russian invention. It’s the system that best serves the interests of the global ruling class today. This is why there has been so much sympathy for Putin among right-wing circles around the world. If Putin dies, someone else will carry his flag onward, not only in Russia but in many other places around the world, including the West.

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The West still has no vision of democracy beyond the nation-state, which is why an entity like “the West” exists in the first place: as a cultural and normative ersatz for its own lack of utopian imagination and revolutionary courage. This is why, when faced with a crisis, the EU suddenly forgets its noble values and relies on something much more sinister: The president of the European Council, when addressing the question of why the EU treats refugees from Ukraine differently from those of other war-torn countries, declared that Ukrainians and Europeans belong to the same “European family.”8 However sweet and benevolent, this metaphor can only mean that the EU is a community united by blood. Can unity through “soil” be far behind?

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Educational Gag Orders Seek to Enforce Compulsory Patriotism🇺🇸

PEN America:

One theme that runs through virtually every educational gag order is patriotism. On its own, that’s unremarkable. Every state in the country has education-related laws on the books designed to produce patriotic, civic-minded students.

But what legislators are doing now is different. Instead of simply requiring students to learn about, say, the Mayflower Compact or the importance of democracy, lawmakers are attempting to censor what they consider to be “anti-American” ideas, regulate instruction on slavery and racism, and prohibit conversations about contemporary injustice.

In other words, the purpose of these bills is not simply to cultivate patriotism. Rather, it is to make patriotism–or more specifically, a knee jerk and uncritical form of patriotism–compulsory.

There is a long history of such legally mandated patriotism in the United States. The Sedition Act of 1918 was used to imprison antiwar protestors during World War I. Until the 1940s, laws required students and teachers to stand for the Pledge of Allegiance. During the Cold War, teachers were compelled by law to swear loyalty oaths to the country. This all testifies to a strain of American censoriousness centered on patriotic sentiment, one that in recent decades schools had successfully kept at bay.

No longer. The current wave of educational gag orders has renewed this threat to America’s educational institutions.

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Instead of targeting specific historical topics for censorship, they propose simply to ban criticism of the United States.

For example, Kentucky HB 706 would prohibit any “revisionist history of America’s founding.” So does Kentucky HB 487, which also bans use of any material deemed to “disparage the fundamental American value of equality.” Iowa SB 2043 bars K-12 teachers from discussing the Pledge of Allegiance “in any manner” that one might reasonably understand to constitute “unpatriotic commentary on the United States.” And under Oklahoma SB 588, public school teachers would be unable to endorse, favor or promote socialism, communism, Marxism, or any form of “anti-American bias.” What constitutes “anti-American bias”? The bill does not specify, but violations are punishable by the loss of state financial support, state accreditation, or both. Another Oklahoma bill, SB 614, would extend that last set of prohibitions to public universities, too.

Indeed, many of these compulsory patriotism bills apply to higher education, including Kentucky HB 487 and Missouri HB 2129 and SB 645. These last two would require high school and university-level courses on American history to “promote an overall positive…understanding of the United States.”

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The history of compulsory patriotism in the United States is not an attractive one. Most Americans look back on the Sedition Act, the Red Scare, the Smith Act, and McCarthyism as stains on the American character, not as something to emulate today. Unfortunately, in a misguided attempt to regulate what teachers can and cannot say about this country, state legislators now appear intent on repeating their predecessors’ mistakes. In doing so, supporters of these bills are in fact proposing a vision of patriotism that is not only unquestioning, but fragile. Each month, as more educational gag orders become law, we come closer to replicating the anti-democratic mistakes of our past.

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