Friday, March 9, 2007

France bans citizen journalists from reporting violence

It's all about Immigrants in Europe and HERE in the United States. Above is pictured a non-white immigrant guest in France who is NOT sgowing his appreciation for being allowed to live his third world cesspool and come to France.


WARNING - This is COMING to America Soon. The ONLY reason France passed this law is to prevent citizens from revealing what the establishment media does NOT want people to know. This law is a mockery of justice and the people of France should rise up and overthrow their illigitimate government. This is just TOO MUCH!

Why doesn't the government of France and the French Jews Media want people to know what's happening in France? I'll tell you why - because their illusory Multicultural Paradise is falling apart and that is something that neither the media or French government can afford to allow Frenchmen or anyone else to know.

Although the average American is still to stupid and/or asleep to realize it, this kind of insanity is coming to America soon, as is the suppression of the news associated with it. You'd better wake up and quick.

Viva Le Pen! [Openly anti-immigration candidate]

France bans citizen journalists from reporting violence

The French Constitutional Council has approved a law that criminalizes the filming or broadcasting of acts of violence by people other than professional journalists. The law could lead to the imprisonment of eyewitnesses who film acts of police violence, or operators of Web sites publishing the images, one French civil liberties group warned on Tuesday.

The council chose an unfortunate anniversary to publish its decision approving the law, which came exactly 16 years after Los Angeles police officers beating Rodney King were filmed by amateur videographer George Holliday on the night of March 3, 1991. The officers’ acquittal at the end on April 29, 1992 sparked riots in Los Angeles.

If Holliday were to film a similar scene of violence in France today, he could end up in prison as a result of the new law, said Pascal Cohet, a spokesman for French online civil liberties group Odebi. And anyone publishing such images could face up to five years in prison and a fine of รข‚¬75,000 (US$98,537), potentially a harsher sentence than that for committing the violent act.

Read the rest at Yahoo

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