#Identity politics are the worse thing to happen to society yes that includes the southern people obsessed with the civil war
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Had a little over a week with my bf and spent the whole time smoking weed but now he's back home (2000 miles away) and it's time to take a break from the smook and focus on my Career Writing
Imma be honest with ya chat I struggle with a staggering insecurity despite the fact that I know I've got talent People enjoy my fanfiction and what original stuff I've published sits at 4.5 stars minimum on the kindle store
Imposter Syndrome is real and I wish I could share my original work more casually but with how cancellation is a thing and people freak out over the least little shit and also because I'm white (nothing worse to openly be in a creative field than white)
I absolutely must separate me the original author from me the fanfic author :( and it means that I suffer alone a lot on that front
#gallows talk#bitch bitch bitch#etc#it's so dumb that no longer do you have to commit a crime to be executed#really feels like we are living in a nightmare in terms of creativity#i've really just checked out of most forms of media at this point and just enjoy what I liked from before the first wave of retardation#drowned us around 2016#i need to finish learning japanese to really indulge or try out any anime or manga because localizers have an agenda#I'm not here to be political or take a stance or tell you who to vote for#I'm here to write and entertain and have fun and give fun to the people who enjoy what I write#Why does everyone have to act like they're running for mothafuckin office#Why does everyone act like they are a crusader of righteousness#I'm generalizing ofc#Guess what I don't care who you vote for because I dont see people who disagree with me as life or death enemies#I feel like I am screaming at a crowd of escaped zoo animals fighting each other to calm down#People got no smarts no nuance no anything it's always “my side is right and the other side is wrong on EVERYTHING”#People are overly politicized these days#Identity politics are the worse thing to happen to society yes that includes the southern people obsessed with the civil war#that includes everyone of all identities I identify as NOTHING which is technically an identity so guess what I'm retarded too
0 notes
Text
Crackdown on Online Criticism Chills Pakistani Social Media
By Mehreen Zahra-Malik, NY Times, July 27, 2017
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan--Dr. Faisal Ranjha was examining a patient in the crowded critical-care unit of his hospital in northeastern Pakistan when a federal officer abruptly walked in, seized his cellphone and told him he was under arrest.
Officers took him home to scoop up his laptop and the tablet computer on which his 8-year-old son was playing games, then drove the doctor more than 150 miles to the Federal Investigation Agency headquarters in Islamabad. Only then was he told why: He stood accused of leading an anti-army information campaign on Twitter.
Dr. Ranjha is one of dozens of people arrested and investigated since January for their social media use, under the sweeping cybercrimes law passed by Parliament last year.
The law, the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act, was widely promoted as a tool to punish internet activity by banned militant groups and curb online sexual harassment. But in recent months it has increasingly been used to crack down on those who have gone online with criticism of the government and, particularly, the military.
Civil rights advocates, as well as people directly targeted by the authorities, have described actions that included harassment, intimidation, and detention without access to lawyers or family members. In a few cases, physical abuse of those in custody was reported.
More subtly, the campaign has also injected a distinct chill into a Pakistani social media scene long known for boldness and rollicking satire.
“Many journalists and activists--especially young people who ask important questions or say critical things on Facebook or Twitter--they are going quiet, thinking they can be arrested, or worse,” said Shahzad Ahmad, a director of Bytes for All Pakistan. The group campaigns for internet freedom and has gone to court several times seeking to lift government restrictions in Pakistan.
The internet crackdown is happening while the country’s military establishment has been exerting its influence more broadly over media outlets, the courts and politics, even as it has enjoyed widespread popularity with the public. Now, the military seems to feel increasingly empowered to root out even small-scale criticism.
Dr. Ranjha insisted that he had never crossed any explicit line with his posts.
“I’ve never been part of any anti-army campaign,” Dr. Ranjha said in a telephone interview from his home in the Gujranwala District of Punjab Province. “But yes, my tweets definitely give the impression that democracy in Pakistan is very weak because it is not being allowed to grow stronger, to flourish.”
He was freed on May 22 after two days of questioning. But his devices have not been returned, and the Federal Investigation Agency took control of his Twitter account to make it inaccessible.
Under the electronic crimes law, investigations are carried out by the Federal Investigation Agency. The agency says it does not monitor, but only follows up on complaints from the Interior Ministry or, more often, from the military and its feared spy agency, Inter-Services Intelligence, or I.S.I.
The I.S.I. has long been accused of using intimidation, torture and extrajudicial killings against suspected militants, dissidents and journalists. Now it is also able to move indirectly, through the new cybercrimes law and the investigation agency, against dissent, according to officials and rights advocates.
In May alone, the F.I.A. began investigating more than 200 social media accounts and summoned at least 21 users for questioning about “anti-military posts.” In June, Zafarullah Achakzai from the southern city of Quetta became one of the first reporters to be charged under the electronic crimes law.
The number of investigations, and sometimes arrests and fines, began increasing soon after the law’s passage in August 2016. But it was a series of disappearances in January outside the normal workings of the law that greatly increased public fears and outrage over what was increasingly perceived as an unjust crackdown on public expression.
That month, at least five activists known for internet posts critical of the military suddenly disappeared. People flocked online to protest and demand the activists’ return. An editorial in the newspaper Dawn called the disappearances “a dark new chapter in the state’s murky, illegal war against civil society.”
Four of the five have since returned home. Three promptly left Pakistan. But Samar Abbas, the president of Civil Progressive Alliance Pakistan, a rights group based in Karachi, is still missing.
No state agency has accepted responsibility for holding the five men. The army’s media office and the Interior Ministry denied involvement in separate news conferences in January.
Three of these activists were administrators of a popular satirical Facebook page called Mochi. The cover photo for the page reads: “We respect Armed Forces of Pakistan as much as they respect the constitution of Pakistan.”
One Mochi administrator, who spoke on condition of anonymity out of fears for his family, said he was subjected to torture during his three weeks in I.S.I. custody. The wife of another activist who disappeared in January said that since his return, he had remained so traumatized that he shied away from even his children, and remained mostly shut in his room. She requested that specifics about his case not be published to protect her family’s identity.
Another activist who disappeared was Salman Haider, a well-known poet now in exile in the United States. Mr. Haider declined to comment for this article, but shared a harrowing poem about his fear of death while in confinement, and such degradations as being made to use the same bottle to urinate in and drink water from.
Rights activists say that the episode gave authorities renewed confidence to go after dissenters ever more openly, culminating in a public announcement in May by the interior minister that criticism of the security forces was forbidden and would be punished.
“Officials now realized what an excellent tool they had in their hands to control political expression,” said Mr. Ahmad of Bytes for All Pakistan.
Mr. Shafique, the head of the Federal Investigation Agency’s cybercrime section, would not comment on specific cases. But he made it clear that posts disrespectful of Pakistan’s armed forces would not be tolerated.
“Freedom of expression within limits is a right, but using abusive language against sacred institutions--that makes a crime,” he said.
The crackdown has definitely raised fears, with many saying they self-censored their posts rather than risk arrest or any threat against their families.
And that, Dr. Ranjha said, was almost surely the point.
“Picking me up was a way to send a message to others to straighten up,” he said. “When you are taken away--and you don’t know why, or when you’ll come back--it changes everything.”
0 notes