Cory Doctorow forklarer, hvorfor en mildere fortolkning af ophavsretten vil føre til et rigere kulturliv.
Link: Cory Doctorow on copyright and piracy: ‘Every pirate wants to be an admiral’ (via Boing Boing).
Kultur, natur og modstand
Cory Doctorow forklarer, hvorfor en mildere fortolkning af ophavsretten vil føre til et rigere kulturliv.
Link: Cory Doctorow on copyright and piracy: ‘Every pirate wants to be an admiral’ (via Boing Boing).
Den i London bosatte canadiske science fiction-forfatter med russisk-jødisk baggrund Cory Doctorow betegner indvandringsmodstanden som “racismens sidste respektable bastion” og melder i den forbindelse klart ud:
Next time you hear someone whittering on about immigrants, call ’em on it. I’m an immigrant and the son of immigrants and the grandson of immigrants who shredded their papers to get through the Czech border and snuck into Canada without “following the rules.” You got a problem with immigration, you got a problem with me.
Og jeg kan kun give ham ret. Hvis jeg var en iraker fra Bagdad, der havde set familie og venner blive dræbt og alle chancer for en fredelig tilværelse gå op i røg efter syv års meningsløs krig, og jeg var nødt til at fifle med papirerne for at kunne få asyl i et fredeligt land, hvor mine børn kunne få en uddannelse, så gjorde jeg det sgu. Og det gjorde Søren Espersen og Lars Løkke Rasmussen og Birthe Rønn Hornbech og selv Pia Kjærsgaard sgu nok også. Så lad os sænke paraderne, droppe racismen og føre en menneskevenlig udlændingepolitik.
Det er i øvrigt også sket flere gange, at danske arrangører har været pinligt berørt over de utroligt strenge krav og nedladende behandling, deres gæster er blevet udsat for fra de danske myndigheders side. Så det er ikke kun i Storbritannien, de har problemet.
Link: Britain’s loony rules for artist visas embarrass festival organizers
Forfatteren Cory Doctorow skriver på Boing Boing om planlagte og gennemførte ændringer i den britiske udlændingelov, der også påvirker ham selv som britisk gift canadier:
Jacqui Smith, the British Home Secretary, has unilaterally (and on 24 hours’ notice) changed the rules for Highly Skilled Migrants to require a university degree, sending hundreds of long-term, productive residents of the UK away (my immigration lawyers had a client who employed over 100 Britons, had fathered two British children, and was nonetheless forced to leave the country, leaving the 100 jobless). Smith took this decision over howls of protests from the House of Lords and Parliament, who repeatedly sued her to change the rule back, winning victory after victory, but Smith kept on appealing (at tax-payer expense) until the High Court finally ordered her to relent (too late for me, alas).
Now, it seems, I will become one of the first people in Britain to be forced to carry a mandatory biometric RFID card in a pilot programme being deployed first to foreign students and we spousal visa holders (government is looking to curtail spousal visas altogether, capping all visas at 20,000 per year, including spousal visas, denying Britons the right to bring their spouses into the country once the quota has been filled). The card will be eventually linked to all of the national databases — credit, health, driving, spending.
Man forestiller sig beskeden: Beklager, du er nr. 20.001 i år, så du kan ikke leve i Storbritannien med din engelske hustru og børn. Næste!
Skæbnens ironi vil, at Doctorow er efterkommer af russiske jøder, der flygtede fra Sovjet efter krigen og undervejs reddede livet ved at ødelægge de papirer, det kommunistiske diktatur påtvang sine borgere, til friheden i Vesten, hvor fremmede var velkomne, og staten ikke holdt øje med folk.
Sceneskift til England i dag:
Many of my British friends act as if I’m crazy when I say that we must defeat Labour in the next election. We’re all good lefties, and a vote for the LibDems is considered tantamount to handing the country over to the Tories. But what could the Tories do that would trump what Labour has made of the country? The Labour Party has made a police state with a melting economy, a place where rampant xenophobia makes foreigners less and less welcome — where we are made to hand over our biometrics and carry papers as we conduct our lawful business.
To my friends, I say this: your Labour Party has taken my biometrics and will force me to carry the papers my grandparents destroyed when they fled the Soviet Union. In living memory, my family has been chased from its home by governments whose policies and justification the Labour Party has aped. Your Labour Party has made me afraid in Britain, and has made me seriously reconsider my settlement here. I am the father of a British citizen and the husband of a British citizen. I pay my tax. I am a natural-born citizen of the Commonwealth. The Labour Party ought not to treat me — nor any other migrant — in a way that violates our fundamental liberties. The Labour Party is unmaking Britain, turning it into the surveillance society that Britain’s foremost prophet of doom, George Orwell, warned against. Labour admits that we migrants are only the first step, and that every indignity that they visit upon us will be visited upon you, too. If you want to live and thrive in a free country, you must defend us too: we must all hang together, or we will surely hang separately.