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                Date: 2001-10-11
                 
                 
                US: Frage-Verbot für Bürger
                
                 
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      In den USA werden nicht nur die Schulkinder zum 
heiligen Eid vergattert. Auch TV-Moderatoren 
sollen sich gefälligst überlegen, was sie sagen. 
Die seltsame Art von Freiheitsauffassung betrifft 
alle Bürger: 
 
"It is therefore urgent," Rumsfeld continued, "that all Americans be 
quiet, stop asking questions, accept the orders of authorities, and let 
us get on with the important work of defending liberty, so that America 
can continue to be a beacon of freedom to all the world." 
 
Wen wundert es da, dass im bedingungslos 
schulter/schließenden Deutschland eine 
TV-Diskussions-Sendung mit Anrufern bereits ohne 
Anrufer auskommen muss? 
 
Hessische Landesanstalt verbietet Call-In-Sendung zu Thema "Große Kriege, 
Kleine Kriege", angeblich um den Moderator zu schützen 
http://www.heise.de/tp/deutsch/inhalt/te/9781/1.html
                   
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Volltext des Onion: 
 
WASHINGTON, DCResponding to the threats facing America's free 
democratic system, White House officials called upon Americans to stop 
exercising their democratic freedoms Monday. 
 
"In this time of national crisis, a time when our most cherished 
freedoms are threatened, all Americansnot just outspoken talk-show 
hosts like Bill Mahermust watch what they say," White House press 
secretary Ari Fleischer told reporters. "Now more than ever, if we want 
to protect democracy for future generations, it is vital that nobody 
speak out about the issues of the day." 
 
"We must all do our patriotic duty to protect our country's great 
ideals," Fleischer continued, "and we have to be careful about what 
opinions we express if we are to defend our Constitution, a sacred 
document behind which all Americans must stand united as one." 
 
Fleischer's sentiments echoed those of many executive-branch officials, 
who, in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks, have called for broad-based 
limitations on civil libertiesand urged all patriotic, freedom-loving 
citizens to support those restrictionsin defense of the American way of 
life. 
 
"We live in a land governed by plurality of opinion in an open 
electorate, but we are now under siege by adherents of a fundamentalist, 
totalitarian belief system that tolerates no dissent," Attorney General 
John Ashcroft said. "Our most basic American values are threatened by 
an enemy opposed to everything for which our flag stands. That is why I 
call upon all Americans to submit to wiretaps, e-mail monitoring, and 
racial profiling. Now is not the time to allow simplistic, romantic 
notions of 'civil liberties' and 'equal protection under the law' to get 
in the way of our battle with the enemies of freedom." 
 
In the past, Ashcroft said, efforts by federal agencies to restrict 
personal freedoms were "severely hampered" by such factors as 
the judicial system, the Bill Of Rights, and "government by the 
people." Since the attacks, however, some such limitations have been 
waived, finally giving the CIA, FBI, Pentagon, and White House the 
greater powers they need to defend freedom. 
 
U.S. Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), who advocated permitting the CIA to engage 
in various illegal activities during a recent Tonight Show With Jay 
Leno appearance, stressed the importance of not merely submitting to 
freedom-curtailment policies, but also blindly agreeing with them. 
 
"Now is not the time for such divisive, destructive things as dialogue 
and debate," McCain said. "Now is not the time for, 'My opinion is just 
as valid as yours,' and 'What are my country's leaders doing and why?' 
and 'I have a question, Mr. President.' Now is the time for one thing 
and one thing only: The defense of the American democratic ideal. Any 
and all who disagree with this directive, or who have different ideas 
about how it should be accomplished, should learn to shut their mouths." 
 
As the U.S. prepares to mobilize forces against Afghanistan, the 
military is seeking strong limitations on the press. According to 
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, such a Constitution-flouting move 
would not be unprecedented, citing the suspension of habeas corpus in 
the Civil War and the order to round up 110,000 Japanese-Americans in 
detention camps after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. 
 
"Remember, under the oppressive Taliban regime, people live in constant 
fear of an oppressive order to which all must submit," Rumsfeld 
said. "Under their system, it is illegal to practice a different 
religion or support a different political system. It is against 
the law for women to work or leave their homes without their faces 
covered. There is no freedom of speech, press, or assembly, as dissent 
of any kind is not tolerated. It is even forbidden to smile or laugh 
in public, and all who fail to unquestioningly obey are punished with 
reprisals of brutal violence. We must not allow such a regime to 
threaten our great democracy. We must stand for something better than 
that." 
 
"It is therefore urgent," Rumsfeld continued, "that all Americans be 
quiet, stop asking questions, accept the orders of authorities, and let 
us get on with the important work of defending liberty, so that America 
can continue to be a beacon of freedom to all the world." 
 
Original: 
http://www.theonion.com/onion3736/freedoms_curtailed.html
                   
 
 
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edited by Harkank 
published on: 2001-10-11 
comments to office@quintessenz.at
                   
                  
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