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Access Now 17 December 2020 | 10:00 am
As we mark the 10th anniversary of the Arab Spring,
we, the undersigned activists, journalists, and human rights organizations, have come together to voice our frustration and dismay at how platform policies and content moderation procedures all too often lead to the silencing and erasure of critical voices from marginalized and oppressed communities across the Middle East and North Africa.
The Arab Spring is historic for many reasons, and one of its outstanding legacies is how activists and citizens have used social media to push for political change and social justice, cementing the internet as an essential enabler of human rights in the digital age.
Many in the U.S. have spent 2020 debating the problems of content moderation on social media platforms, misinformation and disinformation, and the perceived censorship of political views. But globally, this issue has been in the spotlight for a decade.
This year is the tenth anniversary of what became known as the Arab Spring , in which activists and citizens across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) used social media to document the conditions in which they lived, to push for political change and social justice, and to draw the world s attention to their movement. For many, it was the first time they had seen how the Internet could have a role to play in pushing for human rights across the world. Emerging social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube all basked in the reflected glory of press coverage that centered their part in the protests: often to the exclusion of those who were actually on the streets. The years after the uprisings failed to live up
Stephen Wise Temple Hosts Drive-Thru âLIT Hanukkahâ Light Show Experience
When writer and producer Michael Lam was a kid, he asked his dad, Stephen Wise Templeâs Cantor Nathan Lam, why they didnât decorate their house with lights for Hanukkah when it was supposed to be the Festival of Lights.
âHanukkah is supposed to be fun, itâs a party,â Lam, now 45 said, remembering the yearly discussion. âI always thought, âwe should be allowed to put lights up.ââ
Decades later, Lam is lighting up the neighborhood and lifting L.A. spirits with âLIT Hanukkah,â a drive-thru light show experience for everyone to enjoy all eight nights of Hanukkah.