The 11th Annual Muzzle Awards

Silencing free speech
By DAN KENNEDY  |  July 5, 2008

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[Correction, July 3 2008: Due to a reporting error, in a previous version of this story, Maine attorney general Steven Rowe's role was overstated in a case involving Maine's Freedom of Access Act. Rowe was not a party to a lawsuit aimed at forcing an independent commission Rowe had appointed to release documents it had compiled in the course of reviewing the conviction of Dennis Dechaine in the notorious Sarah Cherry murder trial. However, we continue to believe that Rowe should have ordered that the records be released, as we first argued last fall ("Freedom Watch," Portland Phoenix, October 10, 2007).]

The Muzzle Awards: Collegiate division. By Harvey Silverglate.

Past Muzzle Awards:
1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 
2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007

Freedom of expression may be guaranteed by the Constitution. But it’s an idea we have to fight for every day.

That has never been more true than in the post–9/11 era. Just ask Adam Habib, a South African academic of Muslim heritage and critic of the war in Iraq, who’s been banned from speaking in Boston this summer because of secret — and, he insists, nonexistent — evidence that he has ties to terrorism.

The great civil libertarian Nat Hentoff once said that our sex drive pales in comparison with our urge to censor. It’s an urge that is played out in places high and low, encompassing both the serious and the absurd. Military veterans protesting the war are arrested in Boston and charged with disturbing the peace. An anti-abortion-rights activist in Maine borrows sex-education books from public libraries and refuses to return them. A legislative leader in Rhode Island — the head of John McCain’s presidential campaign in that state — compares anonymous critics to “terrorists,” and helps kill a proposal aimed at guaranteeing their First Amendment rights.

These are just a few of the cases highlighted in our Muzzle Awards, an annual Fourth of July roundup now in its 11th year. Since 1998, the Phoenix has been honoring those who’ve brought dishonor to themselves by trampling on the rights of free speech and personal liberties in New England.

The Muzzle Awards were inspired by noted civil-liberties lawyer and Phoenix contributor Harvey Silverglate, and are named after similar awards given by the Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Freedom of Expression.

This year’s edition was compiled by tracking freedom-of-expression stories in New England since July 4, 2007, and are based on reporting by the Phoenix newspapers in Boston, Providence, and Portland, as well as the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and various news organizations and Web sites — including the Boston Globe, the Boston Herald, the Providence Journal, the Portland Press Herald, the Eagle-Tribune of Lawrence, the Enterprise of Brockton, the Sun Journal of Lewiston, Maine, the Associated Press, and universalhub.com.

And now, the envelopes, please.

COMCAST
The media giant fired veteran cable-TV host Barry Nolan for criticizing Bill O’Reilly
If there’s a symbol of everything that’s wrong with what passes for the news media today, it is surely the Fox News Channel’s Bill O’Reilly.

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