Federal judge re-affirms free speech victory, invalidating Connecticut’s unconstitutional donor privacy and fundraising registration laws – Pacific…

This week, Connecticut put the final nail in the coffin of a state law that violated the free speech of charity fundraisers.

The First Amendment covers a lot of ground that may not be immediately obvious. Most probably understand that it protects peoples right to peacefully protest, their right to express their opinion, and even their right to burn an American flag.

What is, perhaps, less obvious, is the protection the First Amendment provides to nonprofit fundraisers and donors.

A good fundraiser knows that garnering donations means speaking from the heart about issues for which they care so passionately. It means building personal relationships with prospective and existing donors.

Fundraising is, in short, a personal experience, and, like most things in life, it doesnt go by a script, but rather by instinct and spontaneous human connection.

But a Connecticut law intervened in this process and prevented fundraisers from doing their job.

The law forced paid solicitors to tell the state not only when they planned to speak to a potential donor, but also to provide the state with a script of exactly what they were going to say.

This didnt sit right with Adam Kissel, a fundraiser for the Jack Miller Center, a nonprofit focused on civic education. Adam believed in the organizations mission to help professors and instructors teach students about Americas founding principles, government, and history.

But his work was stopped in its tracks before he even got started, all thanks to this absurd state law.

Governments cannot poke their nose into private political conversations with potential donors any more than they can force a person to tell government officials what political opinions they hold. It doesnt matter if you are a college student, an activist, or, in this case, a fundraiser. The First Amendment protects all individuals from government intrusion on free speech.

But this law took things even further.

Not only did fundraisers have to provide state officials with a script, but they also demanded that the names of donors be recorded and reported on demand, even if the donor gave only $1. Anyone who went off script was subject to a $5,000 fine. Worse still, they could even face a year in prison.

In addition to the chilling effect the rules had on fundraisers, this is a violation of a donors right to privacy, especially in light of a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision striking down a California regulation requiring charities to disclose the identities of major donors.

After Connecticut refused to follow the lead of other states like West Virginia, Pacific Legal Foundation helped Adam fight back with a federal First Amendment lawsuit.

In July 2021, Adam scored a major victory in his fight to speak freely to potential donors about the causes he supports when the judge granted us a preliminary injunction. It was a great first step, but the decision had not yet been made permanentuntil last week.

The State of Connecticut conceded that the challenged laws would be found unconstitutional. In addition topermanentlystopping enforcement of thechallengedlaws, the State also agreed to post a notice on its website so that fundraisers would know these onerous requirements were no more.

With this victory, everyone inConnecticutis now free to advocate for issues they believe in, without Connecticuts unconstitutional restrictions on fundraisers speech.

All forms of free speech deserve protection. When any facet of free speech is violated, the entire First Amendment stands in jeopardy.

The government cannot demand that you disclose in advance what you are going to say and provide a script before you can speak. Nor can the government rob citizens of their privacy when they donate to a nonprofit.

A few other states, such as Tennessee, still have similarly repressive laws on the books; and politicians in other states continue to push policies which strip away donor privacy. Hopefully, these other states will take note of Connecticuts capitulation and restore the free speech rights of fundraisers and the privacy rights of donors without needing to be sued.

More here:

Federal judge re-affirms free speech victory, invalidating Connecticut's unconstitutional donor privacy and fundraising registration laws - Pacific...

Posted in Uncategorized

Democrats’ Voting Rights Agenda Is a Thinly Veiled Attempt To Nationalize Our Elections – Heritage.org

American voters should be breathing a sigh of relief after the defeat of Democratic New York Sen. Chuck Schumers attempt to gut the legislative filibuster rule and pass a reckless election bill that would have endangered the integrity and security of future elections.

This is the same Chuck Schumer who previouslysaidthat the extended debate that the filibuster rule protects is the hallmark of the Senate and the the guard rail of our democracy.

Schumer was trying to destroy the guard rails of our democracy in more ways than one. The bill that fortunately went down in defeatH.R.5746, the Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis Actwas a combination of two prior bills and probably one of the worst pieces of legislation ever proposed in Congress.

It would have federalized and micromanaged the election process administered by the states, imposing unnecessary, unwise and likely unconstitutional mandates on the states and eliminating basic security protocols like voter ID that protect voters and the honesty of our elections.

>>>Congress Should Ban Foreigners From Interfering in Referenda

The demagogic push to pass this bill was based on a total falsehood: that there has been a wave of voter suppression that is keeping Americans from registering and voting. Liberals have often made this absurd claim in the past year after states like Florida, Georgia and Texas passed beneficial, sensible improvements to their election laws. But its not a new charge. The Left has been saying this for more than a decade, ever since states like Georgia and Indiana first started implementing election reforms like voter ID, which went into effect in both states for the first time in the 2008 presidential election.

Voter suppression? The U.S. Census Bureau report on the 2020 electionshowsthat turnout was 66.8%just short of the record turnout of 67.7% in the 1992 election. The turnout of all races was higher in 2020 than in the 2016 election, including among black Americanswho are, according to people like Chuck Schumer and President Joe Bidenbeing kept from voting by dastardly requirements like having to show an ID to authenticate their identity.

Moreover, the Census Bureau shows that voter registration in 2020 reached 72.7%, a higher registration rate than in the 2016, 2012, 2008, 2004 and 2000 presidential elections. Voters obviously are not having any trouble registering or voting, contrary to the lies we keep hearing that the mainstream press seems to have no interest in questioning or correcting.

Yet anyone who opposed this manipulative federal bill or who supports reforms such as voter ID is,accordingto an inflammatory, disgraceful speech Biden gave recently in Atlanta, a white supremacist in the same camp as segregationist Gov. George Wallace and Confederate President Jefferson Davis. That will come as a big surprise to the overwhelmingmajorityof Americans of all races, including blacks, who support voter ID as a common-sense requirement.

But Biden didnt compare Muriel Bowser, the black mayor of the District of Columbia, to a white segregationist when sheissueda new order requiring anyone going to a restaurant, theater, bar or gym in the city to show not only proof of vaccination, but also a photo ID to prove you are the individual who got vaccinated. Having to show an ID to get into a restaurant allegedly isnt racist, but having to show an ID to vote is.

This bill, which was supposedly about voting rights, would have set up a public funding program for congressional candidates. Jefferson Davis must have had a lot of relatives because many people dont believe that taxpayers should be forced to fund the campaigns of candidates they would never vote for in a million years something that has nothing to do with protecting voting rights.

>>>NYs Schumer Shows Contempt for His Own States Voters

The bill would also have given unelected, unaccountable bureaucrats in the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Justice Department the ability to veto almost any election law changes made by state legislatures or voters through the referendum process that they dont like, a shocking violation of federalism and anti-democratic to the core. (The Civil Right Division, incidentally, is headed by Kristen Clarke, whopublisheda letter in the Harvard Crimson when she was a college student in which she claimed that black Americans have greater mental, physical, and spiritual abilities than other races.)

Democrats in Congress were trying to limit the ability of states to determine the qualifications and eligibility of voters, to ensure the accuracy of voter registration rolls, to secure the fairness, honesty and integrity of elections, and to participate and speak freely in the political process.

Everyone who believes in preserving our democratic republic should be relieved this legislation has ended up on the ash heap of history.

Read the original here:

Democrats' Voting Rights Agenda Is a Thinly Veiled Attempt To Nationalize Our Elections - Heritage.org

Posted in Uncategorized

The state of The Times – The Storm Lake Times

Every year at this time, since the founding of The Storm Lake Times in 1990, we have reported on this newspapers record during the past year and offer a perspective into the coming year. While I gave up my title as Publisher to Brother Art a year ago, I still hang around the office for a few hours each day with no official title. I like to think of myself as Elder Statesman as I mark my 50th anniversary in journalism this year.

We make this annual report because we believe a community newspaper has a special obligation to the people we serve. Journalism is given a special mandate in the Constitution of the United States, outlined in the First Amendment, that provides for freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom to complain about our government and freedom of the press, which enables and enhances the other freedoms.

Our First Amendment has come under attack in recent years by people bent on destroying democracy, and who see that free speech and a free press stand in the way of their lust for domination. We need only look to our neighbor to the south, Mexico, to see the effects. Three brave journalists have been murdered there in the past couple of weeks as that country reels from corruption with an inquisitive press standing in their way.

Freedom of expression is the last refuge against scoundrels. We have people today in city councils, school boards, state legislatures and even our U.S. Congress who want to make it illegal to speak out against their misdeeds. Last week in Des Moines the city council passed rules to restrict a newly-elected member who attempted to voice the concerns of her constituents. State agencies, even our governor, stonewall attempts by citizens who want to view public documents that state law says they have a right to see.

Local newspapers are essential to keeping our communities informed about what our government officials are doing for and to us. But the past couple of years have been tough on local newspapers as we attempt to fulfill this essential public service. Competition from the internet was tough enough, then the pandemic delivered a body blow to all businesses, including newspapers that depended on advertising from those battered businesses.

Hundreds of newspapers across the nation have closed in the last few years, including about a dozen in Iowa. We at The Times certainly faced a challenging year in 2020. But we persevered and entered 2022 in a strong position to face the future and thrive.

The story of this newspaper and the community we serve received international attention during the past year with the release of the award-winning feature documentary movie, Storm Lake, which played to great acclaim in film festivals across the country and was telecast nationally on PBS in November. Now you can watch it on Amazon Prime Video. It is the story of The City Beautiful as seen through the eyes of the people who cover it the staff of The Storm Lake Times.

It showed how our community faced the challenges of immigration and the pandemic to become the best of what America is supposed to be a beacon of hope to people from around the world. Art and other members of the staff crisscrossed the nation promoting the movie, bringing first-hand accounts of the promise of The City Beautiful to cities from New York to Los Angeles.

The movie was not only a boon to Storm Lakes reputation, but to our newspaper as well. Hundreds of people from across the nation subscribed to The Times and sent tax-deductible donations to the Western Iowa Journalism Foundation, an organization we set up with several other area newspapers including the Carroll Times Herald, Jefferson Herald and the Spanish language LaPrensa to sustain independent family-owned newspapers in this region. We hope it will be a model for sustaining community newspapers across the country.

With Arts winning of the Pulitzer Prize in 2017 and his subsequent frequent appearances on national TV, public radio and writings in newspapers like the Washington Post and the Guardian, he has become an important voice of modern agriculture and rural America and an ambassador of goodwill for Storm Lake.

That has had a significant impact on the readership of The Storm Lake Times. Our circulation revenue increased 32% during the past year as more Buena Vista Countians got their news from The Times than from any other source. We have a print circulation now of about 2,300 while our online subscribers have grown to more than 700. We have nearly three times as many readers as our nearest competitor, with more circulation than all other newspapers daily and weekly in Buena Vista County combined.

Five years ago circulation accounted for only about a quarter of most newspapers revenue. Advertising was the mothers milk of journalism. That has changed drastically as Facebook and Google have siphoned off the ad money, while ignoring the council meetings, high school sports, weddings, funerals and countless community events for which citizens depend on their local newspapers.

Thus the business model of newspapers is changing, and that includes The Storm Lake Times. Nevertheless, our advertising increased 13% in 2021.

Smart businesses know that local newspapers are still a great way to reach local customers, but theyre spending more money online. However, if I dont follow your business on Facebook, I will never see your ad. Meanwhile, The Storm Lake Times, through our print edition and website, is reaching nearly 7,000 sets of local eyeballs twice a week. Thats good value.

We like to think our readership is growing because we put out an interesting newspaper, with stories that appeal to every member of the family. Were trying to be a reflection of this community, and that includes reporting the bad as well as the good news. As long as its interesting to our readers.

If local news is the heart of our newspaper, our editorial pages are the soul. Some people think were too liberal, whatever that means. Were fiscally conservative and socially progressive. Our editorial philosophy is based on the Gospels: Dont lie, steal or cheat; take care of the resources our Creator gave us; and be nice to people, especially folks who dont have as much as the rest of us.

If you disagree with us, we welcome your Letters to the Editor. We run several hundred each year, many of them critical of our thinking. We publish the weekly newsletters of our state legislators, regardless of their politics. Thats fine with us. The community newspaper should be the marketplace of ideas, and as long as we can listen to each other and stay civil, well be fine as a nation.

We Cullens are the products of parents who survived the Depression and were devoted to Franklin Roosevelt and his New Deal; and 16 years of Christian education that taught us that Jesus loves everyone and wants us to take care of each other.

We remain committed to those principles, in our office at Times Square, just four blocks from the house on Geneseo Street where we learned those lessons.

Thanks for reading The Times and we hope you all have a healthy and prosperous year. Well talk again next year.

John Cullen is the founder and retired publisher of The Storm Lake Times. He can be reached at [emailprotected].

Read the original:

The state of The Times - The Storm Lake Times

Posted in Uncategorized

Weekly Briefs: SCOTUS will hear tribal, wetlands cases; a victory for University of Florida profs in free speech case – ABA Journal

News Roundup

By Debra Cassens Weiss

January 28, 2022, 2:53 pm CST

Image from Shutterstock.

SCOTUS will consider reach of McGirt

The U.S. Supreme Court will consider the reach of its 2020 decision McGirt v. Oklahoma, which held that a large part of eastern central Oklahoma is an American Indian reservation. The decision meant that tribal members who commit crimes on the Creek Reservation cant be prosecuted by the state of Oklahoma, although they can be prosecuted by the federal government for major crimes. Last Friday, the Supreme Court agreed to decide a different question: whether the state can prosecute non-Indians who commit crimes against Indians on reservations. The Supreme Court declined to consider whether the McGirt decision should be overturned, however. The case is Oklahoma v. Castro-Huerta. (The New York Times, the Washington Post, SCOTUSblog, the cert petition)

Supreme Court will hear wetlands case

The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear the case of Michael and Chantell Sackett, who want to build a home on their property near Priest Lake, Idaho. At issue is whether the land can be regulated as wetlands under the Clean Water Act, which would mean that a federal permit is required. The Sacketts are urging the high court to adopt a test requiring water on property to be connected to a lake or other waterway to be considered waters of the United States that can be regulated. The Biden administration said that test would curtail the federal governments ability to protect wetlands. The case is Sackett v. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. (Reuters, the Washington Post, SCOTUSblog, the cert petition)

Judge rules for University of Florida profs in free speech case

Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Walker of the Northern District of Florida ruled last Friday for professors at the University of Florida who challenged a policy that had barred them from giving testimony in a voting rights case. The Tallahassee, Florida, federal judge rejected claims that the lawsuit was moot because the university revised its policy and allowed the professors to testify. Walker said the revised policy still allowed the university to ban involvement in matters that conflict with state interests. Walker said the professors were likely to succeed on their First Amendment claim and granted an injunction. (The New York Times, the Washington Post, the Tallahassee Democrat, the Jan. 21 opinion)

Judge is back on bench after AR-15 plea deal

Judge Mark Thompson is back on the bench in Breckenridge, Colorado, after pleading guilty to a reduced charge in a case that had accused him of threatening his stepson with an AR-15 style rifle. Thompson pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct earlier this month. He was placed on probation and ordered to undergo anger management treatment. Thompson resigned as chief judge of the states 5th Judicial District in a Jan. 21 letter, but he will serve as a district judge hearing civil cases. (The Summit Daily News)

Spending on state high court races at record levels

Spending on state supreme court races hit record levels in the 2019-2020 election cycle, when adjusted for inflation, according to a report by the Brennan Center for Justice at the New York University School of Law. Thirty-eight states choose justices on their top court by elections. Big donors and interest groups spent nearly $100 million in those races. The report called the spending less an aberration than an escalation. (The Hill via How Appealing, the Brennan Center for Justices report and press release)

Jury awards $110M in earplugs defect trial

Federal jurors in Pensacola, Florida, awarded $110 million Thursday to two men who said they had hearing damage as a result of wearing combat earplugs made by the 3M Co. Its the largest verdict yet in the federal mass tort litigation. 3M said it plans to appeal. (Reuters, Law.com)

Excerpt from:

Weekly Briefs: SCOTUS will hear tribal, wetlands cases; a victory for University of Florida profs in free speech case - ABA Journal

Posted in Uncategorized

Letters to the Editor: Jan. 28, 2022 – TCPalm

Treasure Coast Newspapers

I was reading through some news feeds recently and came across an article with a link to the National Coalition Against Censorship. The title piqued my curiosity, so I clicked on the link and read their statement they posted in December 2021. Among other things, the NCAC claims that "an organized political attack on books in schools threatens the education of Americas children.

So, I asked myself what kind of education are they claiming is being threatened? Based on what Ive physically looked at and read, Im not sure we have the same definition of education. Books that include inappropriate content, pornography, divisive rhetoric, and agenda driven theories doesnt fall under my definition. Also, the books being challenged do contain all of the above and are conditioning our children to become prey to those with evil intent.

I am a firm believer in First Amendment rights and want to protect all our freedoms. However, the majority of these books in question cross the line. Schools have been usurping the authority of parents for decades and are allowing any and all subjects to be accessible to all children regardless of age or grade.

It should be no surprise to anyone when you look at the organizations, publishers and agencies, bookstores, and individuals supporting the position of the NCAC. I am pleased to see our local bookstore isn't on the list.

The irony is the NCAC wants to "censor" the parents while they claim books should not be "censored" from children in our public schools.

Oh what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive.

Karen Hiltz, Sebastian

Thanks to Treasure Coast Newspapers for a lively opinion section on Jan. 23. Its fun to watch Ben Shapiro grow up.

Ben, during the pandemic, businesses didnt use Paycheck Protection Program loans to pay sick leave to keep people at home just to irritate you. They also spent money to improve home offices so people who might pose a risk could work from home until the employee and the work place receive negative COVID-19 test results.

If he agrees that Americans like to work, perhaps Ben should take six months off from full-time writing and help a restaurant owner by doing the dishes at the going rate of pay. Surely he would come out of that sort of Hemingway-in-the-trenches experience with all kinds of new appreciations, especially for those he leaves behind at the dish machine. I for one would look at him in a new light, because, yes, I did do dishes for nine hours, dream at night about them, and then go back the next day to do it again. Ben, when old folks die of COVID-19, some of them leave an estate behind, so heirs retire early, and grand- and great-grand-children go up the ladder.

Another writer has figured out inflation, one contributing item being payments to individuals. So heres a case. I did not get a payment because I did not qualify, but my son did. It was not enough money to quit his job. He kept working. But he did buy more gas for his car, boosting energy prices, took care of some deferred maintenance, boosting those trades, spent money at hurting establishments, and discovered a money-making opportunity. He also boosted the stock market by $500, benefiting profit takers. Cheer up!

Timothy C. Trewyn, Fort Pierce

State Rep. Toby Overdorf is all in on the new anti-abortion law before the Florida House of Representatives. In a race to the bottom, the Florida legislator is considering a law based on the proposed Mississippi law banning abortions after 15 weeks with no exceptions for rape or incest. That Florida lawmakers would consider copying a law from the state of Mississippi which is 50th in the country in infant mortality and proclaim that they want to protect the unborn is ridiculous.

Rep. Overdorfs district aide Joey Planz said, Tobys constituents want to protect the unborn. If Toby really wanted to protect the unborn he would improve health care in the state of Florida. He could make sure Planned Parenthood gets funding so low-income women could get reproductive health care. He could promote Medicaid expansion which would provide healthcare to over 400,000. Floridians including children. But no. He wants to follow Mississippis lead in a race to the bottom.

To the people who voted for Toby Overdorf on the premise that he would protect the unborn, wake up! Protecting the unborn is not banning abortion it is providing quality health care and prescription drug coverage for all Floridians, the poor included.

Rosemary Westling, Jensen Beach

View post:

Letters to the Editor: Jan. 28, 2022 - TCPalm

Posted in Uncategorized

COVID-19 increased censorship circumvention and access to sensitive topics in China – pnas.org

Significance

We study the impact of crisis on information seeking in authoritarian regimes. Using digital trace data from China during the COVID-19 crisis, we show that crisis motivates citizens to seek out crisis-related information, which subsequently exposes them to unrelated and potentially regime-damaging information. This gateway to both current and historically sensitive content is not found for individuals in countries without extensive online censorship. While information seeking increases during crisis under all forms of governance, the added gateway to previously unknown and sensitive content is disproportionate in authoritarian contexts.

Crisis motivates people to track news closely, and this increased engagement can expose individuals to politically sensitive information unrelated to the initial crisis. We use the case of the COVID-19 outbreak in China to examine how crisis affects information seeking in countries that normally exert significant control over access to media. The crisis spurred censorship circumvention and access to international news and political content on websites blocked in China. Once individuals circumvented censorship, they not only received more information about the crisis itself but also accessed unrelated information that the regime has long censored. Using comparisons to democratic and other authoritarian countries also affected by early outbreaks, the findings suggest that people blocked from accessing information most of the time might disproportionately and collectively access that long-hidden information during a crisis. Evaluations resulting from this access, negative or positive for a government, might draw on both current events and censored history.

Scholars have long predicted that during crises or uncertain time periods, people will rely more on mass media for information relevant to their own safety and spend more time seeking out information (1). Increased attention to media during crisis has been shown empirically in democracies, such as during democratization in Eastern Europe (2), during the eruption of Mount St. Helens (3), and immediately after the September 11 terrorist attacks (46). Increased attention to the media presents opportunities for large changes in opinion or political socialization (2, 7), and crisis disruptions can also shift attention toward entertainment due to lack of mobility and boredom (8).

This paper identifies another effect of crisis: abrupt exposure to prior sensitive information blocked by governments. We examine the effect of crisis on information seeking in highly censored environments by studying the impact of the COVID-19 public health crisis on censorship circumvention in China. In January and February of 2020, COVID-19 cases in China were spiking, official news sources were slow to acknowledge the crisis, and many regions of China restricted movement. Using a variety of measures of Twitter and Wikipedia data, both of which are inaccessible within China, we show large and sustained impacts of the crisis on circumvention of censorship in China. For example, the number of daily, geolocating users of Twitter in China increases by up to 40% during the crisis and is 10% higher long term, while politically sensitive accounts gain tens of thousands of excess followers, up to 3.8 times more than under normal circumstances, and these followers persist 1 y after the crisiss end. Moreover, beyond information seeking about the crisis itself, we find that information seeking across the Great Firewall extended to information the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has long censored, including information about sensitive historical political events and leaders.

Although just one of many crises, the global nature of the COVID-19 crisis makes this case a unique and important opportunity to compare information seeking during crisis in China to that in other countries that had similar COVID-19 outbreaks. To draw a comparison, we investigate the same patterns in countries with no censorship or in authoritarian regimes where the platforms we study are not censored that also experienced large outbreaks of COVID-19 cases soon after China. Consistent with other work on information seeking during lockdown in democracies (8), we find higher levels of engagement with online news media generally in comparison countries, but do not observe users seeking information about sensitive political topics unrelated to the crisis.

Together, these findings demonstrate that during crisis access to information fundamentally changes in autocracies in patterns that differ from democracies. Information spillovers originating from crisis could be especially pronounced when a regime has previously censored a large amount of political information and circumvention tools provide access to a wide variety of current and historical censored content. That information seeking during crisis spills over to unrelated and previously censored content in authoritarian contexts is related to previously studied gateway effects where the Chinese governments action to suddenly block a primarily entertainment website facilitated access to censored political information (9). However, our overall results and country comparisons suggest a broader implication: that the abrupt and wide-ranging consumption of hidden information may be a feature of censorship regimes themselves and can occur with or without contemporaneous government action to bring it about. This spillover effect is further robust enough that an ongoing crisis does not appear to distract from long-censored informationattention to information expands to include both the crisis and censored history. These results provide an important contribution to the literature on the impacts of crisis on authoritarian resilience and governance (1012).

While access to information the regime censors dramatically increases during crisis, note that we do not know the overall impact on public opinion. In the case of the COVID-19 crisis in China, access to blocked platforms facilitates access not only to censored information sensitive to China but also to the Western media, which contains a wide range of negative news about the United States and other democracies. It is generally difficult to infer true levels of support for authoritarian regimes (because of preference falsification) (1315), but we draw out the potential political consequences of increased censorship circumvention in this papers Discussion.

In many authoritarian countries, traditional and online media limit access to information (1619). While this control is imperfect, studies have shown that media control in autocracies has large effects on the opinions of the general public and the resilience of authoritarian regimes (2026), even though there are moments when it can backfire (9, 2732). Evidence from China suggests that media control may be effective in part because individuals generally do not expend significant energy to find censored or alternative sources of information.*

While many have studied the impact of information control in normal times in authoritarian regimes, less is known about information seeking during crisis. In democracies, information seeking intensifies during crisis, increasing consumption of mass media. Ball-Rokeach and Defleur (1) describe a model of dependency on the media where audiences are more reliant on mass media during certain time periods, especially when there are high levels of conflict and change in society. These findings are largely consistent with research on emotion in politics, which concludes that political situations that produce anxiety motivate people to seek out information (34). While in normal times information seeking is strongly influenced by preexisting beliefs, several studies have suggested that crisis can cause people to seek out information that might contradict their partisanship or worldview (7, 35), although they may pay disproportionate attention to threatening information (36).

Similar patterns may exist in authoritarian environments. Because the government controls mass media, citizens aware of censorship may not only consume more mass media that is readily available during crises, but also seek to circumvent censorship or seek out alternative sources of information that they may normally not access. For example, during the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) crisis in China in 2003, Tai and Sun (37) find that people in China turned to Short Message Service (SMS) and the Internet to gather and corroborate information they received from mass media. Cao (38) shows an increase in censorship evasion and use of Twitter from China during regime-worsening events, such as worsening of trade relations between the United States and China and the removal of presidential term limits in the constitution in 2018.

Outside of facilitating access to information about the crisis, evasion of censorship during crisis could also provide information that has long been censored. In particular, a crisis could create spillovers of information, where evasion to find one piece of information facilitates access to a broad range of content. This phenomenon is related to the entertainment-driven gateway effect documented in ref. 9, where sudden censorship of an entertainment website (Instagram) motivated censorship evasion and thus facilitated access to unrelated political information. At the same time, crisis is a very different context than is sudden censorship of an entertainment website. Anxiety about the epidemic, perhaps especially when accompanied by boredom during quarantine and lockdown, could lead consumers of information to be more likely to seek out information that has long been censored after they have evaded censorship to better understand the trustworthiness of their government. On the other hand, the crisis itself may be sufficiently distracting to make them less likely to seek out unrelated and long-censored information. Further, crisis-induced spillover effects are more difficult for autocrats to avoid than gateways created through censorship of entertainment websites, which could be reduced by avoiding the initial censorship altogether or implementing less visible censorship. While the overall impact on the autocrat is unknown and could be outweighed by a successful, rapid government response to the crisis, such a gateway would strengthen the ability of consumers to read sources outside of China.

On 31 December 2019, officials in Wuhan, China confirmed that a pneumonia-like illness had infected dozens of people. By 7 January 2020, Chinese health officials had identified the diseasea new type of coronavirus called novel coronavirus, later renamed COVID-19. By 10 January, the first death from COVID-19 was reported in China, and soon the first case of COVID-19 was reported outside of China, in Thailand. As of December 2020, COVID-19 has infected over 91,000 people in China with over 4,500 deaths and at least 73.5 million people worldwide with over 1.6 million deaths.

While initial reports of COVID-19 were delayed by officials in Wuhan (39), Chinese officials took quick steps to contain the virus after it was officially identified and the first deaths were reported. On 23 January 2020, the entire city was placed under quarantinethe government disallowed transportation to and from the city and placed residents of the city on lockdown (40). The next day, similar restrictions were placed on nine other cities in Hubei province (41). While Hubei province and Wuhan were most affected by the outbreak, cities all over China were subject to similar lockdowns. By mid-February, about half of China780 million peoplewere living under some sort of travel restrictions (42). Between 10 January and 29 February 2020, 2,169 people in Wuhan died of the virus (43).

We use digital trace data to understand the effect of the COVID-19 crisis on information seeking. Table1 summarizes the empirical tests conducted in this paper. First, we show that the crisis increased the popularity of virtual private network (VPN) applications, which are necessary to jump the Great Firewall, downloaded on iPhones in China. We also show that the crisis expanded the number of Twitter users in China, which has been blocked by the Great Firewall since 2009. The crisis further increased the number of page views of Chinese language Wikipedia, which has been blocked by the Great Firewall since 2015. We also show that the areas more affected by the crisissuch as Wuhan and Hubei Provincewere more likely to see increases in circumvention.

Next, we show that the increase in circumvention caused by the crisis not only expanded access to information about the crisis, but also expanded access to information that the Chinese government censors. On Twitter, blocked Chinese language news organizations and exiled dissidents disproportionately increased their followings from mainland China users. On Wikipedia, sensitive pages such as those pertaining to Chinese officials, sensitive historical events, and dissidents showed large increases in page views due to the crisis. Finally, Comparison with Other Countries Affected by the Crisis shows that these dynamics do not occur on Italian, German, Persian, or Russian Wikipedialanguages of countries with similar crises but where Wikipedia is uncensored.

We show that censorship circumvention increased in China as a result of the crisis using data from application analytics firm App Annie, which tracks the ranking of iPhone applications in China. While most VPN applications are blocked from the iPhone Apple Store, we identified one still available on it. Around the time of the Hubei lockdown, its rank popularity increased significantly and maintained that ranking (Fig.1, Top).

Download rank of iPhone application in China: Facebook, Twitter, and Wikipedia. Data are from App Annie. Top intentionally omits the name of the VPN app and its precise ranking.

Concurrent with the increase in popularity of the VPN application is a sudden increase in popularity of Facebook, Twitter, and Wikipedia applications, as Fig. 1 shows. These increases indicate that those jumping the Firewall as a result of the crisis were engaging in part with long-blocked websites in ChinaTwitter and Facebook have been blocked since 2009 and Chinese language Wikipedia since 2015.

This finding is consistent with data we collected directly from Twitter and Wikipedia. Fig.2, Top shows the number of geolocating users in China posting to Twitter in Chinese in the time period of interest. Immediately following the lockdown, Chinese language accounts geolocating to China increased 1.4-fold, and postlockdown, 10% more accounts were active from China than before. Fig. 2, Bottom shows that the crisis also coincided with increases of new users, indicating that increases are due to new users and not dormant ones reactivating. We provide a rough, back-of-the-envelope calculation for the absolute size of these effects. If there were 3.2 million Twitter users in China (44) prior to the COVID-19 pandemic and the 10% increase in usage applies generally to Twitter users (i.e., not just those geotagging), then 320,000 new users joined Twitter because of the crisis, including users who do not post or post publicly. We assess this estimate in SI Appendix, section 4 using the estimated fraction of posts in Chinese that are geotagged (1.95%) and the total number of unique Twitter users in our sample (47,389 users posting in Chinese and in China).

(Top) Number of unique geolocating users in China posting in Chinese. (Bottom) The fraction of active unique users who joined Twitter in the last 30 d. The decline in new users after the end of lockdown (Bottom Right) is driven by a decline in new signups after lockdown easing, rather than lockdown users leaving the site (they are no longer considered new after 30 d).

Data from Wikipedia on the number of views of Wikipedia pages by language match the App Annie and Twitter patterns.# We measure the total number of views for Chinese language Wikipedia by day from before the coronavirus crisis to the time of writing. Fig.3 reveals large and sustained increases in views of Chinese language Wikipedia, beginning at the Wuhan lockdown and continuing above pre-COVID levels through May 2020. Views of all Wikipedia pages in Chinese increased by around 10% during lockdown and by around 15% after the first month of lockdown. This increase persisted long after the crisis subsided. In absolute terms, the total number of page views increases from around 12.8 million views per day in December 2019 to 13.9 million during the lockdown period (24 January through 13 March) and up to 14.7 million views per day from mid-February through the end of April.

Views of Wikipedia pages in Chinese. Shown is the ratio of total daily views of Wikipedia pages in Chinese compared to December 2019 views (12.7 million views per day in December 2019). The beginning of the Hubei lockdown and the first relaxation of lockdown in Hubei are indicated in gray.

Whereas the data from App Annie and Wikipedia cannot distinguish between circumvention patterns within China, the geolocation in the Twitter data enables the examination of subnational variation. Circumvention occurred in provinces throughout China as a result of the Wuhan lockdown; Hubei, the most impacted province, experienced the most sustained increase in geolocated users.

Fig.4 measures the initial increase of Twitter volume on 24 January 2020, the day after Wuhans lockdown and the start of lockdown in 12 other cities in Hubei, in comparison to the average from 1 December 2020 to 22 January 2020 in each province in China (the x axis). The y axis measures how sustained the increase wasthe ratio of Twitter volume 30 d after the quarantine to the baseline before the outbreak. Hubei is in the top right corner of the plot: Twitter volume there doubled in comparison to the previous baseline, and the doubling persisted 30 d after the crisis. These estimates are drawn from polynomial models fitted to the daily number of users per provinceSI Appendix, Fig. A1 displays the modeled lines over the raw data for each province.

Increases in geolocated Twitter activity by province (modeled). Shown is the increase in geolocated Twitter users compared to the average number of geolocated Twitter users in a province before the Hubei lockdown. Estimates for 30 d after and day of lockdown are drawn from a five-term polynomial regression on the number of unique geolocated Twitter users per day after the lockdown. These province-by-province polynomials are displayed over the raw data in SI Appendix, Fig. A1.

To further validate that this increase in Twitter usage in China is related to the Wuhan lockdown, we collected real-time human mobility data from Baidu, one of the most popular map service providers in China. The decrease in mobility in 2020 is correlated with the increase in Twitter users across provinces in China, net of a New Years effect (SI Appendix, Fig. A3). However, as the crisis spreads, the demobilization effect disappears, while Twitter usage remains elevated. The overall increase in Twitter users across China 2 wk after the lockdown and beyond cannot be explained by further decreases in mobility or New Year seasonality (SI Appendix, Fig. A4). SI Appendix, section 3 presents more detail.

This subsection examines how the crisis impacted what content Twitter users from mainland China and users of Chinese language Wikipedia were consuming. Both Twitter and Wikipedia facilitate access to a wide range of content, not just information sensitive to the Chinese government. New users of Twitter from China might follow Twitter accounts producing entertainment or even Twitter accounts of Chinese state media and officials, who have become increasingly vocal on the banned platform (45). New users of Wikipedia might seek out only information about the virus and not about politics. If the crisis produced a gateway effect, we should see increases in consumption of sensitive political information unrelated to the crisis.

We use data from Twitter to examine what types of accounts received the largest increases in followers from China due to the crisis. For this purpose, we identify 5,000 accounts that are commonly followed by Twitter users located in China.** Materials and Methods and SI Appendix, section 2 detail how we identified these accounts.

We assigned each of the 5,000 popular accounts into one of six categories: 1) international sources of political information, including international news agencies; 2) Chinese citizen journalists or political commentators, which include nonstate media discussions of politics within China; 3) activists or accounts disseminating information about politics in the United States, Taiwan, or Hong Kong; 4) accounts disseminating pornography; 5) state media and political figures; and 6) entertainment or commercial influencers. Categories 1 to 3 are accounts that might distribute information sensitive to the Chinese government, such as international media blocked by the Great Firewall (e.g., New York Times Chinese and Wall Street Journal Chinese); Chinese citizen journalists and political commentators such as exiled political cartoonist Badiucao and currently detained blogger Yang Hengjun; and political activists such as free speech advocate Wen Yunchao and Wuer Kaixi, former student leader of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests. Accounts in category 4 are pornography, which we consider sensitive because it is generally censored by the Chinese government, but not politically sensitive like categories 1 to 3. Accounts in category 5 include accounts linked to the Chinese government, including the governments news mouthpieces Xinhua and Peoples Daily, as well as the Twitter accounts of Chinese embassies in Pakistan and Japan. Category 6 is also not sensitive, as these accounts mostly do not tweet about politics, but instead are entertainment or commercial accounts or accounts of nonpolitical individuals.

We want to understand how the coronavirus crisis affected trends in follower counts of each of the six categories and, in particular, compare how the crisis affected the followings of categories 1 to 3 to those in categories 5 and 6. We therefore downloaded the profile information of all accounts that began following popular accounts in categories 1 to 3 and 5 and 6 and a random sample of popular accounts from category 4 after 1 November 2019. We then use the location field to identify which of the 38,050,454 followers are from mainland China or Hong Kong (see SI Appendix, section 2 for more details).

Because Twitter returns follower lists in reverse chronological order, we can infer when an account started following another account (46). For the accounts in the six categories, we compare the increase in followers from mainland China to the increase in followers from Hong Kong accounts relative to their December 2019 baselines; we chose Hong Kong because it is part of the Peoples Republic of China but is not affected by the Firewall. The ultimate quantity of interest is the ratio of these two increases. If the ratio is greater than one, then the increase in following relationships is more pronounced among mainland Twitter users compared to those from Hong Kong.

Fig.5 shows this ratio by category day. Relative to Hong Kong, the crisis in mainland China inspired disproportionate increases in the number of followers of international news agencies, Chinese citizen journalists, and activists (some of whom might otherwise, without exposure on Twitter, be obscure within China, especially ones who have been banned from public discourse for a long time)users who are considered sensitive and often have long been censored. In comparison, there is only a small increase in mainland followers of Chinese state media and political figures during the lockdown period and a slight decrease for nonpolitical bloggers and entertainers. Fig.6 reports the regression estimate for the relative ratio of number of new followers (akin to a difference-in-differences design with Hong Kong as control group and December 2019 as pretreatment period). The result is the same.

Increases in Twitter followers from China vs. Hong Kong by category. Shown is the gain in followers from mainland China compared to Hong Kong across six types of popular accounts, relative to December 2019 trends. Ratios here approximate the incidence rate ratios estimated in the models for Fig. 6. Each dot represents that category-days ratio. The blue lines indicate the moving averages, and the red lines represent the average during Wuhan lockdown. A value greater than 1 means more followers than expected from mainland China than from Hong Kong. Accounts creating sensitive, censored information receive more followers than expected once the Wuhan lockdown starts. Accounts that are not sensitive or censored, such as state media or entertainment, do not see greater than expected increases.

Increases in Twitter followers in China vs. Hong Kong by category (regression estimate). Incidence rate ratios shown are from negative binomial regressions of number of new followers on the interaction between indicator variables for in lockdown period and in mainland China, with December 2019 as control period and Hong Kong as control group.

We then demonstrate that the result does not depend on the choice of comparison group, and the relative increase starts no earlier than the Wuhan lockdown. SI Appendix, Fig. A6 conducts a placebo test by running weekly regressions, showing that the relative increase in followers in China starts precisely during the week of lockdown. In SI Appendix, Figs. A7A9 show that the same pattern holds with alternative comparison groups such as overseas Chinese in Taiwan and the United States.

Chinese government information operations on Twitter do not explain the results. Of the 28,991 accounts Twitter identified as belonging to a Chinese government information operation, none author a tweet in the 1,448,850 streamed geolocated corpus. To confirm this paucity, we then analyze the 14,189,518 tweets Twitter provided from the information operation accounts. Only 0.03% of those tweets are geotagged. Twelve of the 1.45 million tweets mention five information operation accounts. We then download tweets from 1,000 users from China and find zero mentions or retweets of the information operation accounts. We also find that none of these information operation accounts follow any of the popular accounts for which we collected followers.

SI Appendix, section 4 provides effect size estimates. There, we roughly estimate that around 320,000 new users came from China. Further, based on December 2019 follower growth rates, 53,860 excess accounts follow citizen journalists and political bloggers, 52,144 for international news agencies. By the end of the lockdown, citizen journalists and political bloggers benefit from 3.63 times the number of followers they otherwise would have had and activists from 2.97 times. Importantly, 8890% of the followers from China follow accounts in these categories 1 y later, and these rates are higher than for accounts which start following in the weeks after the end of the Hubei lockdown. In addition, SI Appendix, Fig. A10 shows that new users from China persist in tweeting at the same rates as those from Hong Kong and Taiwan.

To better understand patterns of political views in the Wikipedia data, we leverage existing lists (see Materials and Methods for additional details) to categorize the Chinese language Wikipedia views into three different categories: 1) Wikipedia pages that were selectively blocked by the Great Firewall prior to Wikipedias move to https (after which all of Chinese language Wikipedia was blocked), 2) pages that describe high-level Chinese officials, and 3) historical leaders of China since Mao Zedong. Whereas we would expect that a crisis in any country should inspire more information seeking about current leaders in category 2, only if crisis created a gateway to historically sensitive information would we expect proportional increases in information seeking about historical leaders in category 3 or information about sensitive events that were selectively blocked by the Great Firewall on Wikipedia prior to 2015 in category 1.

Fig.7 shows the increase in page views for each of these categories on Chinese Wikipedia relative to the rest of Chinese language Wikipedia. We find that the lockdown not only increased views of current leaders (purple), but also increased views of historical leaders (yellow) and views of pages selectively blocked by the Great Firewall (red). In SI Appendix, Tables A2 and A3 show specific pages disproportionately affected by the increase in views of Wikipedia. While pages related to coronavirus experienced a jump in popularity, other unrelated sensitive pages including the June 4 Incident, Ai Weiwei, and New Tang Dynasty Television (a television broadcaster affiliated with Falun Gong) also experienced an increase in page views.

Views of blocked, current leader, and historical leader Wikipedia pages in Chinese, German, and Italian. Vertical lines indicate the starts and ends of lockdown periods. See SI Appendix, Table A4 for specific dates. ZH, Chinese; DE, German; IT, Italian.

For more detail on this analysis as well as the Wikipedia pages that received the largest absolute and relative increases in traffic, see SI Appendix, section 6.

Since information seeking during crisis is common (1), we investigate Wikipedia data in other languages to explore how other countries were affected by the crisis. We show that the gateway effect of crisis on historically sensitive information is unique to the currently censored webpages in China. For comparison, we focus on Iran, another authoritarian country affected by COVID-19 that previously censored Wikipedia (but does not any longer), and Russia, an authoritarian country that does not censor Wikipediafor Iran, like China, we know which Wikipedia pages were previously censored (47). We also show data from democracies without censorship affected early on by the COVID-19 crisis, Italy and Germany.##

To make the comparison, we use lists of current leaders from these countries (based on office lists in the CIA World Factbook) (Materials and Methods) and create lists of historical leaders using de facto country leaders since World War II (see SI Appendix, Table A4 for a list of these titles and offices). All of these countries were affected by the crisis in late February or early March, and Italy imposed relatively stringent lockdowns. Therefore, we expect increases in information seeking for current leaders, as citizens begin to pay more attention to current politics as the crisis hits. However, none of these countries block Wikipedia. Information seeking about the current crisis therefore should not act as a gateway to information about historical events or controversies, as these pages are always available to the public.

Table 2 shows these results. While overall Wikipedia views and page views of current leaders increase in three of four comparison languages, only for Chinese language Wikipedia do historical leaders increase disproportionately and consistently throughout the whole time period. That is, we see an overall effect on information seeking throughout the world, including for historical leaders; for Chinese language Wikipedia, we see larger increases for historical leaders compared to Wikipedia page views in general. The small increases in historical political leader page views in German and Italian did not correspond with the start of the COVID-19 crisis or their respective lockdowns (Fig. 7).

During the lockdown period, Wikipedia views in Chinese increased relative to overall views for politically sensitive Wikipedia pages and political leader pages, as well as for historical political leaders

Further, we do not see increased attention to pages previously blocked in Iran (47) during the crisisWikipedia pages that can now be accessed without restriction in Iran.

In SI Appendix, section 6.2, we replicate these results for much larger sets of 1) historical leaders and 2) politically sensitive pages (pages related to the pre-https blocked pages in Iran and China and political opposition pages in Russia). We expand these sets of pages using Wikipedia2vec (48) and find that very broad information seeking about historical leaders and politically sensitive topics occurred only for Chinese language Wikipedia.

Crisis in highly censored environments creates widespread spillovers in exposures to sensitive, censored information, including information not directly related to the crisis. Like in democracies, consumers of information in autocracies seek out information and depend on the media during crisis. However, in highly censored environments, increased information seeking also incentivizes censorship circumvention. This new ability to evade censorship allows users to discover a wider variety of information than they may have initially sought, and users could also be particularly motivated to seek out accumulated, hidden information during a crisis. Our results suggest that informational spillovers produced by censorship evasion are a result of the structure of censorship and that they occur beyond government-induced backfire from sudden censorship of popular entertainment websites (9).

Public exposure to censored information during crisis is almost certainly not the intention of any regime with widespread censorship. However, the effect of this crisis-induced gateway to censored information on public opinion is unknown. In the case studied in this paper, surveys in China show increased support for the CCP over the course of the pandemic (and over the same time as large declines in favorability toward the United States) (49), even though we show that this increase in support occurs in conjunction with increased access to censored information. These findings could reflect favorable reactions to the governments pandemic policy response that may have overwhelmed negative impacts of access to censored information (50). Or the increase in support at a time of greater evasion of censorship could lend support to previous findings that access to Western news sources can counterintuitively increase support for the regime (51, 52). Studying the impact of evasion during the crisis on public opinion is left to future research. However, we include in SI Appendix, section 7 an exploratory analysis of the content posted by the popular accounts followed by our sample. While we see quite negative coverage of China on these accounts and coverage of sensitive topics such as human rights, the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests, and protests in Hong Kong, we also find that coverage of the United States by international news agencies was much more negative or neutral than positive, and the United States could have served as a favorable comparison for China and the Chinese governments handling of the pandemic.

While evaluations of responses to an ongoing crisis and comparisons to other governments responses to the same crisis may have benefited government officials in China in this particular circumstance (50), beyond these evaluations, increased access to historical and long-censored information, as documented here, has the potential to dampen positive or compound negative changes in trust and may also contribute to easier access to uncensored information about a government in the future. Natural disasters, including epidemics, tend to alter trust in government officials. When a policy response is perceived as efficacious, support for the level of government perceived to have directed the response increases (12, 53). On the other hand, neglectful responses can induce subsequent protest participation (11). In China, the average effect of natural disasters from 2007 to 2011 was to decrease political trust, and internet users have decreased baseline levels of political trust (53, 54). At the same time, political surveys in China suffer from preference falsification (1315), complicating our efforts to understand the political consequences of these events.

While the results here do not link the COVID-19 crisis gateway effect to the political fortunes of the Chinese government, they do suggest that a country with a highly censored environment sees distinctive and wide-ranging increases in information access during crisis. While in normal times censorship can be highly effective and widely tolerated, crisis heightens incentives to circumvent censorship, and regimes cannot rely on the same limits on information access during crisis, even for topics long controlled.

Download rank data for Facebook, Twitter, Wikipedia, and the VPN app come from application analytics firm App Annie (https://www.appannie.com), which tracks the popularity of iPhone application downloads in China. While most VPN applications are blocked from the iPhone Apple Store (and there are other means of obtaining VPNs), we identified one still available on it. VPN download rank shown in the text is for that VPN application. These data contain the ranking of an applicationfor Wikipedia, its rank within the Reference App categoryrather than the number of downloads. To protect the VPN application and its users, we do not disclose its name or the exact ranking.

For the Twitter analyses, we collected 1,448,850 tweets (101,553 accounts) from mainland China from 1 December 2019 until 30 June 2020. These tweets were identified using Twitters POST statuses/filter endpoint. Our analyses are limited to the 367,875 that were posted in Chinese (47,389 accounts that posted in Chinese, 43,114 that had names or descriptions in Chinese).

The Twitter follower analysis examines accounts that Twitter users from China commonly follow. To find those accounts, we randomly sampled 5,000 users geolocated to China. For each of these users, we gathered the entire list of whom they follow, their Twitter friends. From these 1,818,159 friends, we extracted the 5,000 most common accounts. We also selected only accounts that were Chinese language accounts or had Chinese characters in their name or description field to ensure that we were studying relevant accounts: those disseminating information easily accessible to most Chinese users. SI Appendix, section 2 provides more detail.

We downloaded the profile information of all accounts that began following these popular accounts after 1 November 2019. Because Twitter returns follower lists in reverse chronological order, we can infer when an account started following another account (46). We then use the location field to identify which of these 38,050,454 followers are from mainland China or Hong Kong (see SI Appendix, section 2 for more details). We downloaded all new followers of nonpornography accounts and all new followers of a random selection of 200 pornography accounts (the majority of the accounts were pornography). This sampling allows us to estimate the impact of the coronavirus on pornography while decreasing our requests to the Twitter Application Programming Interface.

Human mobility data are publicly available from Baidu Qianxi (https://qianxi.baidu.com/2020/), which tracks real-time movement of mobile devices and is used in studies of human mobility and COVID-19 containment measures (55). Our robustness checks use data across China during the Lunar New Year period in both 2020 and 2019. We extracted the data from the webpage, including the daily within-city movement index (an indexed measure of commuter population relative to the population of the city) as well as daily moving-out index (an indexed measure based on the volume of population moving out of the province relative to the total volume of migrating population on that day across all provinces in China). See SI Appendix, section 3 for more details.

Data on the number of Wikipedia page views are publicly available at https://dumps.wikimedia.org/other/pagecounts-ez/merged/. To better understand patterns of political views in the Wikipedia data, we use existing lists to categorize the Chinese language Wikipedia views into three different categories: 1) Wikipedia pages that were selectively blocked by the Great Firewall (https://www.greatfire.org/ maintains a list of websites censored by the Great Firewall) prior to Wikipedias move to https, after which all of Wikipedia was blocked; 2) pages about high-level Chinese officials (using offices listed in the CIA World Factbook, https://web.archive.org/web/20201016160945/ https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/resources/world-leaders-1/CH.html, excluding Hong Kong and Macau as well as the Ambassador to the United States); and 3) historical paramount leaders of China since Mao Zedong.

In comparing multiple languages and countries, we use the same offices listed in the CIA World Factbook to create lists of current leaders from Iran, Russia, Italy, and Germany (for office holders as of February 2020) and create lists of historical leaders using de facto country leaders since World War II. See SI Appendix, Table A4 for a list of these titles and offices, as well as the lockdown start and end dates used in the Wikipedia page view models displayed in Table 2. The list of Wikipedia pages blocked in Iran was published by Nazeri and Anderson (47).

In SI Appendix, section 6.2, we replicate the Wikipedia page view results for much larger sets of 1) historical leaders and 2) politically sensitive pages (pages related to the pre-https blocked pages in Iran and China and political opposition pages in Russia). We expand these sets of pages using Wikipedia2vec (48).

Incidence rate ratios for the follower analyses and the Wikipedia page view analyses are from negative binomial regressions. In the follower analysis, this models the number of new followers per day, with a separate model for each account category. Independent variables are in lockdown period and in mainland China, and the effect of interest is the interaction between these indicator variables (i.e., a difference in difference), with December 2019 as control period and Hong Kong as control group. The Wikipedia page view analyses use the same specification, reporting the coefficient for in lockdown period and in page set (current leader, historical leader, previously blocked) relative to December 2019 and relative to page views for the rest of Wikipedia. Observations are the total views per category by day. Figures displaying (log-scale) ratios of followers/Wikipedia page views approximate coefficients from these negative binomial regressions. Negative binomial regressions were estimated using the MASS library in R.

Increases in geolocated Twitter activity (unique users) by day and by province were modeled using a five-term polynomial regression (by day) for time trends after the Hubei lockdown and a mean without any time trend prior to lockdown (see SI Appendix, Fig. A1 for a province-by-province visualization of this model). The points in Fig. 2 are predicted values by province for the first day of lockdown and day 30 of lockdown.

We thank Thomas Qitong Cao, Lei Guang, Ruixue Jia, Susan Shirk, and Yiqing Xu in addition to participants at workshops at New York University, the University of Chicago, University of Southern California, and University of California, San Diego for helpful feedback. This work was partially supported by the National Science Foundation Grant 1738411.

Author contributions: K.-C.C., W.R.H., M.E.R., and Z.C.S.-T. designed research, performed research, analyzed data, and wrote the paper.

The authors declare no competing interest.

This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.

This article contains supporting information online at https://www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.2102818119/-/DCSupplemental.

*Stockmann (24) provides evidence that consumers of newspapers in China are unlikely to go out of their way to seek out alternative information sources. Chen and Yang (33) provided censorship circumvention software to college students in China, but found that students chose not to evade the Firewall unless they were incentivized monetarily. Roberts (26) provides survey evidence that very few people choose to circumvent the Great Firewall because they are unaware that the Firewall exists or find evading it difficult and bothersome.

Source: New York Times, 15 December 2020. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/world/coronavirus-maps.html.

To protect the application and its users, we are not disclosing its name or the exact ranking.

Note that increase in popularity is not comparable across applications because popularity is measured in terms of ranks. More highly ranked applications (like Facebook and Twitter) may need many more downloads to achieve a more popular ranking.

SI Appendix, section 2 provides more detail, and SI Appendix, Fig. A1 shows trends per province.

#Wikipedia page view data are publicly available: https://dumps.wikimedia.org/other/pagecounts-ez/merged/. Note that these data do not track where users are from geographically; we use language as an imperfect proxy for geography.

While almost all provinces experience a sustained increase in Twitter volume, Beijing and Shanghai have an overall decrease in Twitter volume after the outbreak. We suspect many Twitter users in Beijing and Shanghai left those cities during the outbreak, which is corroborated by the Baidu mobility data we detail in SI Appendix, section 3.

**We note that follower behavior is a useful window into user behavior and has advantages over other metrics in this context like the content of the new users tweets. First, merely following accounts is likely a less risky behavior than publicly posting content about politics, especially that related to China. That is, we expect users to self-censor their posts but not (to the same extent) whom they only follow. Second, tweet activity is right skewed in our data, which is common in social media data. The median account in the stream tweets twice, and the top 1% of active users author 40.3% of tweets. Analyzing tweets would therefore create a less complete analysis of user behavior than analyzing following relationships.

In June 2020 and September 2019, Twitter released datasets containing 28,991 accounts it identified as being part of pro-China information operation campaigns (https://transparency.twitter.com/en/reports/information-operations.html). Twitter granted us access to the unhashed version of the data they do not publicly release, meaning we had the information operation campaigns accounts actual screen names and user identification numbers.

Using data from https://www.greatfire.org/.

These lists are based on offices in the CIA World Facebook. We use this list for ease of comparisons with other countries and remove the Ambassador to the United States from each list. Chinas list is available here (and there are links to leaders of other countries on the same page): https://web.archive.org/web/20201016160945/ https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/resources/world-leaders-1/CH.html, excluding Hong Kong and Macau.

The June 2020 increase in China is due to the anniversary of Tiananmen Square protests. Our claim is not that only the COVID-19 crisis causes increases in views of sensitive content. That the same behavior is observed around another crisis event supports this papers argument.

##Like China, citizens in each of these countries speak languages relatively specific to their country, and therefore we expect most of the page views of Italian, German, Persian, and Russian Wikipedia to originate in Italy, Germany, Iran, and Russia, respectively.

Read the original here:

COVID-19 increased censorship circumvention and access to sensitive topics in China - pnas.org

Posted in Uncategorized

Why experts say the banning of "Maus" is not like the censorship of "Huckleberry Finn" – Salon

On Wednesday, a Tennessee county school board pulled "Maus" Art Spiegelman's award-winning graphic novel about the Holocaust from its eighth-grade curriculum, sparking outrage amongst liberals who accused the board of engaging in censorship. But on Thursday, commentators online attempted to push back against this narrative by downplaying the board's vote and accusing the left of apparent hypocrisy.

To make their point, many critics pointed tominutestaken by the McMinn County Board of Education during its meeting on earlier this month, arguing that the board was not motivated by antisemitism but concerns over instances of obscenity and nudity. Throughout the transcript, board members made such objections, claiming that the book was inappropriate for the classroom.

As Lee Parkison, Director of School, said during the meeting, "there is some rough, objectionable language in this book," noting that the board could redact key lines.Still, other members, like Tony Allman, clearly took issue with the novel's visual depictions of Nazi atrocities. "It shows people hanging," Allman said. "It shows them killing kids."

RELATED: "Orwellian": Tennessee school board sparks outrage with vote to ban Holocaust graphic novel "Maus"

"Why does the educational system promote this kind of stuff?" he asked. "It is not wise or healthy."

Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.

Jeff Trexler, Interim Director of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, who read the board's minutes, told Salon that the school officials completely misread the novel.

"To say that Maus promotes violent abuse and dehumanizing language is to show that you don't understand it," Trexler said. "Schools are supposed to be in the business of promoting literacy, and this is just one example of how school leaders are using their own illiteracy as justification for keeping children from learning what the adults in charge have not."

Some commentators also took issue with the use of the word "ban" to describe the school board's decision, contending that it is a misnomer given that McMinn County simply nixed the "Maus" from its eighth-grade curriculum.

But Jonathan Friedman, director of free expression and education at PEN America, said that he doesn't think the term "is reductive at all."

Pointing to a piece he wrote last year, Friedman reiterated that "the American Library Association and other advocates for the freedom to read" have "long considered" curricular and library removals as "efforts to ban books from circulation, to effectively disallow and discourage others to read them."

RELATED: Book banning fever heats up in red states

At the same time, many critics viewed liberal outrage over the board's vote through the lens of "leftist hypocrisy," noting that books like Harper Lee's "To Kill a Mockingbird" and Mark Twain's "Huckleberry Finn" have been restricted in the past over accusations of racism.

Earlier this week, Mukilteo School Board in Washington state voted to remove "To Kill a Mockingbird" from its ninth-grade required reading, though the board granted discretion to individual teachers who wanted to use the novel in their curricula.

In the past, Friedman noted, PEN America has pushed back on schools looking to pull "To Kill a Mockingbird" from course curricula, writing in 2020 that the novel "[deals] with difficult subject matter from our country's complicated and painful history, including systemic racism." Still, he noted that most of the book bans we're seeing are being leveled against LGBTQ+ authors, authors of color, and books that deal with race, sex, and gender.

"The challenge right now is to recognize that the weight of the momentum here is so very clearly swinging in one direction," Friedman said.

Thus far, McMinn is the first known county to pull "Maus" from its students' curricula. It remains unclear whether the book will see more restrictions throughout the rest of the country, though it's possible, given that other districts have had the tendency to target the same authors and works.

Andrea Pitzer, who wrote "A Global History of Concentration Camps," said that it's important for kids to be exposed to books like "Maus" when "so much of the language of conspiracy theories swirling around the country today from QAnon to anti-vaxx and anti-democratic movements rises out of antisemitic literature used in the past to devastating ends.

"The county that handed down the decision about MAUS is in Tennessee, which also passed a law not long ago that may allow publicly funded adoption agencies to discriminate on the basis of religion," she added. "Last week, we saw stories about a lawsuit filed by a Jewish couple saying they were refused as clients at one agency in the state because of their religion. When you include the kind of synagogue violence we've seen recently in Texas and Pittsburgh, it makes for a frightening trend. This isn't some isolated, abstract situation it's part of a larger, concrete phenomenon."

More:

Why experts say the banning of "Maus" is not like the censorship of "Huckleberry Finn" - Salon

Posted in Uncategorized

A short history of ‘Sailor Moon’ and censorship in America. – The Michigan Daily

Sailor Moon started as a serialized manga anthology that ran from 1991-1997, written and illustrated by Naoko Takeuchi (TokiMeca!). Due to its immense popularity, it was adapted into an anime series in 1992 that ran until 1997. Sailor Moon did not premiere in North America until 1995 however, the North American licensing and dub came with many unexpected changes.

One of the biggest and most evident changes was the Americanization of names. From the main characters to the villains, all their names were changed: Sailor Moons name changed from Usagi to Serena, Mercurys from Ami to Amy, Marss from Rei to Raye, Jupiters from Makoto to Lita, Venuss from Minako to Mina, Neptunes from Michiru to Michelle, Uranuss from Haruka to Amara and, lastly, Tuxedo Masks from Mamoru Chiba to Darien Shields. Apart from renaming characters, the American broadcasters also attempted to Americanize the show on a larger scale by removing many of the references to Japanese culture, both in the dub and in the animation itself. Kanji writing was edited out of the background of many frames, and shots of roads would even be flipped to match right-hand American traffic. Seemingly, the American version attempted to erase the seriess ties to Japan as a whole.

Other censored material wasexpected, such as nudity and violence. This aspect was very consistent. During the Sailor Scout transformation sequences, you can see silhouettes of their nude bodies. Those scenes would be reanimated to remove the definition on breasts, as well as make them smaller. This would also be done for the many bathtub scenes in the show. The water level would be raised or made more opaque to avoid showing the girls bodies. In terms of censoring violence, blood would oftentimes be edited out by changing the color from red to green. The dub would avoid using the word death, and the scenes portraying direct violence would simply be cut from the episode. These changes were more understandable, especially since Sailor Moon was being advertised as a kids show on channels like Cartoon Network, which at the time were airing shows such as Powerpuff Girls and Dexters Laboratory.

One of the most mentioned features when discussing the Western censorship of Sailor Moon is the erasure of the shows queer characters. This was first done in the very first season with the characters Zoisite and Kunzite, who are a part of a group called Shitennou, or The Four Heavenly Kings, who all serve under Queen Beryl, a would-be conqueror of the Moon Kingdom. The original series heavily implied they had aromantic relationship. In the American version, Zoisite is changed from a male character to a female character most likely in an effort to avoid backlash from parents for showing a gay relationship in a childrens show. This once again happened in season four with a character named Fish Eye. Fish Eye was a part of a group called the Amazon Trio. The three were originally all animals, but they were turned into humans by their leader in exchange for capturing a Pegasus that was hiding in peoples dreams. The original manga and anime features Fish Eye as a male character who dresses in a feminine way and pursues many men during their run in the show (it is unclear whether Fish Eye identifies as a woman). This was censored by giving Fish Eye a female voice actress and removing all references to Fish Eye being male.

Another significant example of censorship was the depiction of the relationship between two Sailor Scouts. In both the anime and manga, it is very clear that Sailor Neptune and Sailor Uranus, Michiru and Haruka, are in a romantic relationship. This relationship was censored in many other countries in different ways in the U.S., their relationship was changed from being girlfriends to cousins. Yes, it is just as uncomfortable as it sounds. Other countries kept their status as a romantic couple but made Sailor Uranus a male character. This was also done with the Sailor Starlights. Many Western fans do not know about them because the season they premiered during was never dubbed. Fans theorize that this happened because the Sailor Starlights, Taiki Kou, Seiya Kou and Yaten Kou, present as male in their civilian form, but in their transformations become female. In reality, though, it was mainly due to licensing issues.

All of these things were changed, but why are they so important? To put it plainly, it is a disservice to both the fans of the series and the original work itself; censoring nudity or blooddoesnt affect much, but removal of entire scenes and drastic changes to character dynamics affect so much more than just the aesthetic: it takes away from the narrative and makes the show confusing at times. By limiting the story, it becomes a disservice to the original animators and Naoko Takeuchi. Its also a disservice to a lot of Western fans of the series who were never able to get the full experience of the story. I personally never even realized the extent of censorship in the show until much later, when meme videos of the old dub started becoming popular on YouTube, showing the absurd lengths the American dub would go to censor violence and relationships. It was almost comical at times.

However, all is not lost: VIZ Media came out with a brand-new dub airing between 2014 and 2016. This new version kept the original Japanese names of the characters. Additionally, this time none of the content previously deemed to be inappropriate was cut. This includes the violence, blood and queer characters. Finally, those who cant read subtitles or simply prefer dubs can watch Sailor Moon withoutfear they are missing out on anything from the series.

Daily Arts Writer K. Rodriguez-Garcia can be reached at karodrig@umich.edu.

More here:

A short history of 'Sailor Moon' and censorship in America. - The Michigan Daily

Posted in Uncategorized

Letter: Follow the difficult path to avoid censorship; Keep organ program; Expand Medicaid – Greenville Daily Reflector

Country

United States of AmericaUS Virgin IslandsUnited States Minor Outlying IslandsCanadaMexico, United Mexican StatesBahamas, Commonwealth of theCuba, Republic ofDominican RepublicHaiti, Republic ofJamaicaAfghanistanAlbania, People's Socialist Republic ofAlgeria, People's Democratic Republic ofAmerican SamoaAndorra, Principality ofAngola, Republic ofAnguillaAntarctica (the territory South of 60 deg S)Antigua and BarbudaArgentina, Argentine RepublicArmeniaArubaAustralia, Commonwealth ofAustria, Republic ofAzerbaijan, Republic ofBahrain, Kingdom ofBangladesh, People's Republic ofBarbadosBelarusBelgium, Kingdom ofBelizeBenin, People's Republic ofBermudaBhutan, Kingdom ofBolivia, Republic ofBosnia and HerzegovinaBotswana, Republic ofBouvet Island (Bouvetoya)Brazil, Federative Republic ofBritish Indian Ocean Territory (Chagos Archipelago)British Virgin IslandsBrunei DarussalamBulgaria, People's Republic ofBurkina FasoBurundi, Republic ofCambodia, Kingdom ofCameroon, United Republic ofCape Verde, Republic ofCayman IslandsCentral African RepublicChad, Republic ofChile, Republic ofChina, People's Republic ofChristmas IslandCocos (Keeling) IslandsColombia, Republic ofComoros, Union of theCongo, Democratic Republic ofCongo, People's Republic ofCook IslandsCosta Rica, Republic ofCote D'Ivoire, Ivory Coast, Republic of theCyprus, Republic ofCzech RepublicDenmark, Kingdom ofDjibouti, Republic ofDominica, Commonwealth ofEcuador, Republic ofEgypt, Arab Republic ofEl Salvador, Republic ofEquatorial Guinea, Republic ofEritreaEstoniaEthiopiaFaeroe IslandsFalkland Islands (Malvinas)Fiji, Republic of the Fiji IslandsFinland, Republic ofFrance, French RepublicFrench GuianaFrench PolynesiaFrench Southern TerritoriesGabon, Gabonese RepublicGambia, Republic of theGeorgiaGermanyGhana, Republic ofGibraltarGreece, Hellenic RepublicGreenlandGrenadaGuadaloupeGuamGuatemala, Republic ofGuinea, RevolutionaryPeople's Rep'c ofGuinea-Bissau, Republic ofGuyana, Republic ofHeard and McDonald IslandsHoly See (Vatican City State)Honduras, Republic ofHong Kong, Special Administrative Region of ChinaHrvatska (Croatia)Hungary, Hungarian People's RepublicIceland, Republic ofIndia, Republic ofIndonesia, Republic ofIran, Islamic Republic ofIraq, Republic ofIrelandIsrael, State ofItaly, Italian RepublicJapanJordan, Hashemite Kingdom ofKazakhstan, Republic ofKenya, Republic ofKiribati, Republic ofKorea, Democratic People's Republic ofKorea, Republic ofKuwait, State ofKyrgyz RepublicLao People's Democratic RepublicLatviaLebanon, Lebanese RepublicLesotho, Kingdom ofLiberia, Republic ofLibyan Arab JamahiriyaLiechtenstein, Principality ofLithuaniaLuxembourg, Grand Duchy ofMacao, Special Administrative Region of ChinaMacedonia, the former Yugoslav Republic ofMadagascar, Republic ofMalawi, Republic ofMalaysiaMaldives, Republic ofMali, Republic ofMalta, Republic ofMarshall IslandsMartiniqueMauritania, Islamic Republic ofMauritiusMayotteMicronesia, Federated States ofMoldova, Republic ofMonaco, Principality ofMongolia, Mongolian People's RepublicMontserratMorocco, Kingdom ofMozambique, People's Republic ofMyanmarNamibiaNauru, Republic ofNepal, Kingdom ofNetherlands AntillesNetherlands, Kingdom of theNew CaledoniaNew ZealandNicaragua, Republic ofNiger, Republic of theNigeria, Federal Republic ofNiue, Republic ofNorfolk IslandNorthern Mariana IslandsNorway, Kingdom ofOman, Sultanate ofPakistan, Islamic Republic ofPalauPalestinian Territory, OccupiedPanama, Republic ofPapua New GuineaParaguay, Republic ofPeru, Republic ofPhilippines, Republic of thePitcairn IslandPoland, Polish People's RepublicPortugal, Portuguese RepublicPuerto RicoQatar, State ofReunionRomania, Socialist Republic ofRussian FederationRwanda, Rwandese RepublicSamoa, Independent State ofSan Marino, Republic ofSao Tome and Principe, Democratic Republic ofSaudi Arabia, Kingdom ofSenegal, Republic ofSerbia and MontenegroSeychelles, Republic ofSierra Leone, Republic ofSingapore, Republic ofSlovakia (Slovak Republic)SloveniaSolomon IslandsSomalia, Somali RepublicSouth Africa, Republic ofSouth Georgia and the South Sandwich IslandsSpain, Spanish StateSri Lanka, Democratic Socialist Republic ofSt. HelenaSt. Kitts and NevisSt. LuciaSt. Pierre and MiquelonSt. Vincent and the GrenadinesSudan, Democratic Republic of theSuriname, Republic ofSvalbard & Jan Mayen IslandsSwaziland, Kingdom ofSweden, Kingdom ofSwitzerland, Swiss ConfederationSyrian Arab RepublicTaiwan, Province of ChinaTajikistanTanzania, United Republic ofThailand, Kingdom ofTimor-Leste, Democratic Republic ofTogo, Togolese RepublicTokelau (Tokelau Islands)Tonga, Kingdom ofTrinidad and Tobago, Republic ofTunisia, Republic ofTurkey, Republic ofTurkmenistanTurks and Caicos IslandsTuvaluUganda, Republic ofUkraineUnited Arab EmiratesUnited Kingdom of Great Britain & N. IrelandUruguay, Eastern Republic ofUzbekistanVanuatuVenezuela, Bolivarian Republic ofViet Nam, Socialist Republic ofWallis and Futuna IslandsWestern SaharaYemenZambia, Republic ofZimbabwe

Here is the original post:

Letter: Follow the difficult path to avoid censorship; Keep organ program; Expand Medicaid - Greenville Daily Reflector

Posted in Uncategorized

Censorship and samizdat on the internet – Catholic Culture

By Phil Lawler (bio - articles - email) | Jan 25, 2022

Massive convoys of trucks are converging on the nations capital. About 50,000 truckers are involved. In one place the convoy stretches more than 40 milesand thats before the separate convoys, coming from different corners of the nation, meet for their final approach. Tens of thousands of people are lining the highways to show their support; women are bringing hot meals out to the truckers when they stop to rest.

Doesnt that sound like a news story to you? Its happening right now in Canada. But you probably havent read it in your local newspaper; you certainly havent seen it covered on the major-network reports.

If the truckers were protesting gender discrimination, or even the rising cost of diesel fuel, this protestwhich produces some very dramatic visual imageswould lead the nightly TV newscasts. But the Freedom Convoy is protesting Covid-lockdown restrictions, and the major media have very obviously resolved to spike stories about any such protests. And so Silence.

Oh, I was able, with a bit of extra digging, to find a reasonably accurate Reuters story about the convoy. And CBC allowed that hundreds of truckers were protesting. But if you want any details at all, you need to look to non-traditional news providers, such as our friends at LifeSite News.

The mainstream media are not providing the news here; quite on the contrary they are deliberately suppressing the spread of public information. This is not a new phenomenon, of course; I have frequently commented on the curious blindness that afflicts reporters in Washington, DC every January, so that they do not notice the March for Life. But that willful blindness is now spreading, so that journalists ignore any developments of which their editors do not approve. Moreover, the self-appointed censors of social-media platforms do their best to shield readers from any facts that leak through the ever-tighter net.

And the major media are not alone in their campaign to restrict the flow of information. The same problem is very much in evidence in the field of educationespecially higher education. (See Jordan Petersons explanation of why he finds it morally untenable to remain on the faculty of a major university.

We can complainwe often have complainedabout liberal bias, in the media and in academe. But those complaints, too, are filtered out of mainstream conversations; they reach only those who are already inclined to agree, those who are open to alternate views. The fundamental problem, as Peterson explains, is that alternate views are actively suppressed, with increasing vigor and without apology.

Critics of the mainstream media outlets sometimes refer to them as the legacy media. The term is apt, I think. Like the fortunate offspring of wealthy families, these outlets have inherited powerful positions, built on the work of prior generations. Those prior generations amassed their influence by providing the public with information. The current leaders of the legacy media have abandoned that effort. Rather than giving people accurate information, and trusting responsible adults to form their own opinions, the mainstream media are now determined to shape opinions directly, telling people what they must think, suppressing contrary evidence and dissenting opinion. Today the most interesting news coverage is provided by upstart services, struggling to find an audience.

Complaints about media bias have very little impact. They, too, are filtered out of mainstream conversations, so that they reach only those people who already agree.

First, refuse to support the institutions that suppress the free flow of information. Insofar as possible, do not give them subscriptions, or tuition, or even attention.

Next, explore the alternatives. Not all of the new online sources of information are reliable; some discernment is necessary. Compare different accounts, and notice which outlets provide coverage that holds up to scrutiny. But do not be frightened away from new outlets simply because they are scorned by the legacy media.

Third and most important, inform your friends. And not only your Facebook friends, who may or may not actually be your real-life acquaintances. Share the news directly. Face-to-face conversations are always best, but email works well, too. Keep in mind that the internet was designed precisely to allow remote communications among people with shared interests. If the social-media giants thwart your efforts to share information, find other routes.

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and his heroic allies showed how underground communicationssamizdatcould build a movement powerful enough to topple a political monolith. As the Soviet empire collapsed, the bid to control the spread of information will collapse, too. Facts, as John Adams said, are stubborn things. The truth will out.

Phil Lawler has been a Catholic journalist for more than 30 years. He has edited several Catholic magazines and written eight books. Founder of Catholic World News, he is the news director and lead analyst at CatholicCulture.org. See full bio.

Sound Off! CatholicCulture.org supporters weigh in.

All comments are moderated. To lighten our editing burden, only current donors are allowed to Sound Off. If you are a current donor, log in to see the comment form; otherwise please support our work, and Sound Off!

Continue reading here:

Censorship and samizdat on the internet - Catholic Culture

Posted in Uncategorized