skype with if we don t show their faces. i m from the south of england. i grew up in a middle class family. life was easy. but you cannot practice islam back home. we see it all around us, and we can t do anything about it because we are living by the laws. we met him and his friends as so many of the young men do online. they i they post instagram f photoing of guns. they have committed maskers and acts of terror so extreme that even al-qaeda disavowed them. i asked if his family knows what he is doing in syria. they re not happy with me
post-withdraw, what is it like? well, i was there last year i was there. it has gotten very tough. the iraqis have really clamped down. pretty much everything is off limits, even taking pictures in a market, but especially car bombs, things like that, almost impossible to take photos of. you say in your book that censorship became a starting point for this book. how so? well, there are a lot of things we were blocked from photoing by military regulation s or sometimes, either iraqi or u.s. government regulations were limiting us. i started to do the book really focusing on censorship. and from there, i started hearing stories, about the behind the scenes aspects of the war. carolyn, your perspective is unique because you were in iraq before the invasion and post-invasion, you were an imbed. how difficult was it to do your
you were pointing to the officers, military, and police presence, and just about every street here. you see that but you re helping police officers, investigators, and volunteers as well? what i think it s done is police have set up their own online systems where they have been asking for photoing, video, and what not. i think what is different is the speed in which people are connected to help people. the vigil, 1,000 people showed up, most of that was word of mouth. in four hours online, people hearing aid raced $15,000 for a family. yes, for martin richard. yes, i don t know the poor folks, but i know people who do. i think the circles that are
employers will be able to use the database to do background checks without the permission of somebody applying for a job. that s not what we want. what is this going to do to the privacy safeguards that are in place between an individual and a psychotherapist? there s all sorts of stuff that needs to be looked at. we were looking at it last night. we should have an open process where people know what they re photoing on and know what the implications are. it s not going on here. there is going to be an open process now. over the course of the next week. we ll put lots of information out there about what s going on. i think you ll see very different votes as we come forward. you have 31 republicans who are on record opposing this already. 16 from a lot of red states, a lot of voters are getting aware of what s going on, knowing this is going to lead to a federal gun registry, that s going to lead to a lot of votes. this issue, he brings up the mental health, and there s been a lot
voting. and then the secretary of state said he s just not going to comply because it would only serve to confuse voters. then the same judge who reinstated the weekend voting ordered houston to appear in court this thursday. then he backed down, issued a formal apology, but that s not the end of it. now mike says he will repeal the judge s photoing and tried eliminate early voting the weekend ahead of the election. folks, this battle is going to continue. hawaii is doing this differently, what s going on? ohio, just like florida, eliminated the weekend voting which is early voting. we know that in places like in