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Pakistan's Internet censorship

Are you planning to go back to stone age?

Samika you dont understand the senstivity of the matter so i suggest cool down , no one is going back to stone age.

What do you suggest that these people who are flamming and playing with our emotions are not "Stone agers" but they are liberals ?

Do you support them samika ??
I would say lets not Ban these website but lets Fight these hatemongers on the web and show them the real content and get their corrupted minds back to light.

watch this video.

 
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first it was facebook (understandable as there a genuine reason behind it) and now youtube...a while ago I read a post saying some wikipedia info was also blocked..what goin on there ??? :lol:
 
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how come by banning some sites make us go back in stone age, can you please enlighten me with your views ??????????
 
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Why dont they just restrict the page they dont wanna show to people of Pakistan.....

No one was able to see the army beating taliban video on youtube.

I saw it.

I made me proud to hear them cry in pain.
I only wish they burned them alive.

:victory::victory:
 
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Political cartoonists split on usefulness of 'Everybody Draw Muhammad Day'

"Shock for shock's sake." "Choreographed punditry." And "wrong, childish and needlessly provocative."

That's what some critics think of Thursday's Facebook-ignited campaign titled "Everybody Draw Muhammad Day." But those aren't Islamic extremists speaking. Those are the words of pro-free-speech political cartoonists.

Some people might draw Muhammad on Thursday as part of a socially networked protest to caricature the Islamic prophet. Just don't expect most professional political cartoonists to join in.

"I don't think it's kowtowing to be respectful of another's belief system," says San Diego Union-Tribune cartoonist Steve Breen. "I seldom participate in staged editorial events," says Seattle Post-Intelligencer cartoonist David Horsey. And "the 'Draw Muhammad Day' is a demonstration in the worst impulse for some editorial cartoonists," says Chicago Tribune cartoonist Scott Stantis.

Those sentiments reflect the official stance of the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists. The group's president, Sacramento Bee cartoonist Rex Babin, says: "I would be opposed to our organization getting behind such an 'event' because . . . something like that can be too easily co-opted by interest groups [whose agenda can go] beyond a simple defense of free expression." Past AAEC president Ted Rall also says he won't draw Muhammad on Thursday, either.

As a protest, "Everybody Draw Muhammad Day" was planned after the creators of TV's "South Park" complained last month that Comedy Central edited their attempts to render Muhammad. Some Muslims consider any depiction of Muhammad to be blasphemous, though Islamic scholar Babak Rahimi, who teaches at the University of California San Diego, says: "It is a well-known fact that aesthetic depictions of the prophet have been and remain a major cultural feature of Muslim societies around the world."

Breen and Horsey are among 19 Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonists who signed a petition to support "South Park" creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker. But they, as well as such other signees as Clay Bennett, Matt Davies and Mike Peters, say they do not plan to publish a Muhammad cartoon Thursday.

Also not a participant in the protest: Seattle cartoonist Molly Norris, whose illustration last month spawned the campaign. "Fight for the right to draw Muhammad, then decline doing so," she says.

Norris's cartoon inspired Facebook pages, including one that has drawn more than 60,000 supporters. She says she has joined a Facebook page that decries the "Draw Muhammad" campaign -- "AGAINST Everybody Draw Muhammad Day" has attracted more than 70,000 supporters.

But petition signee Mark Fiore, whose clients include SFGate.com, says his political animation Thursday will incorporate Muhammad. And noted Islamic critic Ayaan Hirsi Ali, whose book "Nomad: From Islam to America" was published this week, says the protest "is a positive campaign" that can "promote self-reflection among Muslims."

Still, Toronto-based political cartoonist Nikahang Kowsar, who describes his faith as "Muslim Lite," says: "I believe we have the right to offend, but when offense is seen as 'insult,' it might be a bad time to draw an offensive cartoon."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/05/19/AR2010051905384.html?hpid=sec-religion
 
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This is really amazing that no one is raising his voice for pornographic site!!!!!!!

THEY MUST BE BANNED!!! however, again the point here is blasphemous CONTENT! not pornography! don't divert the topic!!
 
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Pakistan govt is playing very sensitive. Youtube and facebook are the basic needs of Life. I recently shifted to Dell international and one of the questions they asked me was, "Facebook account mandatory". Gmail is blocked in our office but facebook is not.. HAHHAHA!
 
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looks like it.

This is a stupid move by Pak govt. They are isolating their own country from the rest of the world. Are they trying to create another North Korea?

Theres a risk of voilance due to the acts of those AH in the name of freedom of speech, the ban is an attempt to contour that .. dont you ppl have anything +ive to contribute except having a feild day
 
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