M4cr0s
Back In Black
It's been discussed many times over the last few years, the hysteria and paranoia of modern society after the two towers fell. Especially in the UK and US the stories of harassed photogs are many. Despite demonstrations and protests, "they" made laws and regulations limiting the freedom of speech and expression we've got so accustomed to in the west. Misunderstandings and poorly educated police and public have also been a problem.
In one way I am happy that I live in a country that's still fairly modest when it comes to security paranoia, although some tendencies have been seeping in here too. That does not mean I or we do not care about the situation in other countries. We're one world and become more and more interconnected in this age of globalization and rapid flow of information. What goes on in the US or UK concern other nations too, especially when those nations have a tendency of leading the fashion, so to speak.
We do not know where this will end, we can only try to fight for the rights and privileges our ancestors earned by blood and sacrifice. Perhaps the greatest victory of Al Quaeda and the likes was not in fact the thousands that died when the towers fell, or the hundreds of thousands of dead, mostly civilian, in Iraq or Afghanistan, but the fear, the insecurity, the paranoia and hysteria their actions have inflicted on the western world. One might argue that how our nations treat their inhabitants in difficult times such as these, show more than anything how fragile our democracies are, and how short the path to totalitarian 1984-ish societies are.
But, I digress and I wish not to start a political discussion in this thread whose purpose is really another. A while back I designed and ordered my personal version of a t-shirt with the "I'm a photographer, not a terrorist"-slogan and I wanted to show it of. My personal tiny, and highly insignificant protest to the conditions for photographers in our time.
By the way, the writing is not in fact crooked, shirt is simply not hanging straight on me.
Mac
In one way I am happy that I live in a country that's still fairly modest when it comes to security paranoia, although some tendencies have been seeping in here too. That does not mean I or we do not care about the situation in other countries. We're one world and become more and more interconnected in this age of globalization and rapid flow of information. What goes on in the US or UK concern other nations too, especially when those nations have a tendency of leading the fashion, so to speak.
We do not know where this will end, we can only try to fight for the rights and privileges our ancestors earned by blood and sacrifice. Perhaps the greatest victory of Al Quaeda and the likes was not in fact the thousands that died when the towers fell, or the hundreds of thousands of dead, mostly civilian, in Iraq or Afghanistan, but the fear, the insecurity, the paranoia and hysteria their actions have inflicted on the western world. One might argue that how our nations treat their inhabitants in difficult times such as these, show more than anything how fragile our democracies are, and how short the path to totalitarian 1984-ish societies are.
But, I digress and I wish not to start a political discussion in this thread whose purpose is really another. A while back I designed and ordered my personal version of a t-shirt with the "I'm a photographer, not a terrorist"-slogan and I wanted to show it of. My personal tiny, and highly insignificant protest to the conditions for photographers in our time.
By the way, the writing is not in fact crooked, shirt is simply not hanging straight on me.
Mac