- Related Stories
-
Senator to propose surveillance of illegal images
February 7, 2007 -
Senator: Illegal images must be reported
December 8, 2006 -
Technology voter guide 2006 - Grading Congress on high-tech cred
November 2, 2006 -
Senators reassure bloggers
March 9, 2005 -
GOP beats Dems on tech-friendliness
October 28, 2004
The Arizona senator joked about attacking the sovereign nation during a campaign stop in South Carolina this week, singing, to the tune of the Beach Boys song "Barbara Ann": "That old, that old Beach Boys song, Bomb Iran. Bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb, anyway."
According to a video recorded by what appears to be a camera phone held by someone at the back of the room, the audience laughed at McCain's rendition of the classic song (the video was restored in the last several hours and can be seen here).
But the clip was deleted by YouTube, which is owned by Google. A spokesman for YouTube, who asked that his name not appear in this article, said, "We appreciate the prompt feedback from our community regarding the McCain video. It was flagged by our users, we reviewed it and it was mistakenly removed. We have examined the situation and have since reinstated the video."
The spokesman refused to answer any other questions, such as when, exactly, the video was deleted or what procedures are in place to ensure that political candidates don't use YouTube's complaint procedure to squelch critics. The popular video-sharing site permits users to flag videos as "inappropriate."
The New Yorker magazine reported in February that, despite the Bush administration's public claims not to have any plans to bomb Iran, the Pentagon has secret plans to carry out a bombing attack if authorized by President Bush. McCain said bombing Iran, which is accused of aiding the Iraq insurgents, may be necessary to protect Israel.
This is not the first time a controversy has erupted over political videos removed by YouTube. The Electronic Frontier Foundation has documented other videos that it says should not have been deleted.
The EFF has filed suit against Viacom on behalf of MoveOn.org and Brave New Films, saying a satire of the The Colbert Report was removed from YouTube following a "baseless" copyright complaint.
"It is time to draw a line in the sand and make clear that taking down political speech first and asking questions later is absolutely unacceptable behavior," Adam Green, civic communications director at MoveOn.org, said in response to the McCain video deletion.
Recently, another anti-Bush video surfaced on YouTube. This one pokes fun at World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz--who is currently embroiled in a controversy over a hiring that violates the organization's policy--in the style of NBC's popular TV show The Office. Democratic Presidential candidate John Edwards is mocked in a video showing him spending more than two minutes fussing with his hair and camera makeup.
See more CNET content tagged:
Iran, YouTube, MoveOn.org, spokesman, video




Case in point ... this "technology" article.
I didn't know we had the technology to remove a video from
YouTube. That's amazing! ;-)
I thought that Fox ran the world.
Never occurs to you that the equally partisan folks who frequent sites like MoveOn.com would pull the same stunt on material that they wanted squelched.
I daresay the partisan disease has reached the point that the right is blind the the left eye, and the left blind in the right.
sand and make clear that taking down political speech first and
asking questions later is absolutely unacceptable behavior."
YouTube has no obligation, legal or otherwise, to anyone to
keep posted videos online. They can take down whatever they
want for whatever reason they like. Free speech protection
applies to government interaction with the public, in that you
cannot be legally prosecuted for what you say nor prevented
from saying what you like. None of this applies to YouTube!
Same with Howard Stern. Except he was so vulgar, the FCC got involved. Some would call that censorship, others argue that the public airwaves belong to the public at large. In any case, now he's on sat radio, and everyone is happy -- at least until sat radio becomes so widely available that people start worrying about their kids again. But by then we'll have Windows2015 ("the most secure operating system ever") and this will have iron-clad parental controls on all media content (although no parents will use them).
That would mean the people who label critics as traitors are
atcually a bit out of touch, wouldn't it?
52% Dem or leaning Dem
as of about one week ago
http://www.galluppoll.com/content/default.aspx?ci=15370
If you care about where Americans actually stand, the
summaries on the Gallup site are a good place to start:
http://www.galluppoll.com/content/default.aspx?ci=15370
http://www.galluppoll.com/topics/
- Liberal media...
- by Zaphod_Beeblebrox April 28, 2007 6:34 AM PDT
- If you keep moving left you can eventually accuse centrists of being right wing extremists. The press and the Democrats have been doing this for years.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(16 Comments)