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February 22, 2003
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Not posting to Friday Five this week. Unlike last week when the questions
were really
interesting
, and several Sloggers
'fessed up
, this week's questions are kind of silly. Besides, I'd never be able to
top Mercurial's brilliant and hilarious
responses
.
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4:54:45 PM
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Atrios has picked up on the
story
, reported only in the
Canadian
media, of a professional woman of Indian descent and Canadian citizenship
and residency, a loan officer at a major Canadian bank, who was harassed and
barred entry to the U.S. during an O'Hare stop-over of her vacation flight
home from India to Canada. She was threatened with jail for having a passport
the INS thought "looked funky", and denied consular assistance. The INS officer
"cut the front page of Cruz's passport and filled each page with 'expedited
removal' stamps, rendering it useless. She was photographed, fingerprinted,
barred from re-entering the U.S. for five years and immediately 'removed'.
Not to Toronto, but to India, where she had just spent several weeks visiting
her parents. It took four days, and help from Canadian officials in Dubai
and a Kuwaiti Airlines pilot, to get her back home."
As a Canadian who spends a fair bit of time in the U.S. on business, I am
distressed at the flagrant and arbitrary violation of this woman's rights,
but I am equally concerned that such stories, which are not uncommon and
which are obviously of concern and interest to Americans (Atrios' post has
attracted dozens of very emotional comments), are ignored by the U.S. media,
usually because, like the
fascinating
investigation into the friendly-fire deaths of Canadians in Afghanistan,
they are not deemed "newsworthy".
There are two important principles here that seem to be violated with regularity
in America these days, and which represent an alarming slippery slope for
a country that prides itself on being 'democractic' (despite the 2000 election):
- Democracies depend on the rule of law prevailing over
the rule of man to prevent tyranny and circumvention of the judicial
system. Allowing INS agents, intelligence agents, the police or anyone else,
to make arbitrary and far-reaching decisions with no clear guidance or restrictions
on their authority, is an abrogation of that principle.
- Democracries require a truly free press, where the media
can report fearlessly on any issue that they believe to be of public interest
or import. As the press' insatiable appetite for far more trivial 'human
interest' stories indicates, stories like this clearly warrant coverage in
the U.S. media, and their absence suggests either a tacit censorship, or,
more alarming yet, a self-censorship, of stories that might be deemed by some to be
unpatriotic.
Other countries that have allowed these principles to be compromised, notably
some fledgling Latin American 'democracies', have quickly found themselves
living in countries that are no longer free. It's a sobering thought that
one day the colour of the U.S. on the
freedom map
might be the same as that of our allies Columbia and Saudi Arabia. I love
the U.S. and Americans, but if it comes to that, I may no longer be allowed
in, or, having been born in the U.K., may have to change to a job that doesn't
require me to meet and work with colleagues on U.S. soil. Somebody please
tell me I'm just being paranoid.
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2:42:13 PM
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© Copyright 2004
Dave Pollard.
Last update:
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