Saturday, October 5, 2019

Petty tyrants feeling free

It took a moment for Ben Watson to realize the officer was not joking.

Watson had just told the Customs and Border Protection staffer reviewing his passport that he works in journalism. Then the seemingly routine Thursday encounter at the Washington Dulles International Airport got tense.

“So you write propaganda, right?” Watson, the news editor at the national security site Defense One, recalled the CBP officer asking.

“No,” Watson says he replied. He affirmed again that he was a journalist.

[...]

Watson said he got his passport back only after agreeing with the “propaganda” charge.

[...]

After the second alleged query by the CBP officer, Watson explained that he covers national security “with many of the same skills” he used as a public affairs officer in the Army — and added: “Some would argue that’s propaganda.”

[...]

When the officer repeated his question a third time, Watson said, he paused.

His wife had already circled the airport for 20 minutes. He figured he could get stuck for hours if he tried to call in the officer’s supervisor. So he gave in.

“For the purposes of expediting this conversation, yes,” he recalled telling the CBP officer.

The officer made Watson agree one more time before letting him through, Watson said. He says he’s filed a civil rights complaint with DHS.

[...]

The incident comes amid rising hostility faced by journalists as the Trump administration continues to attack the media as “fake news.”

[...]

Watson said [...] he did not realize until sharing his experience at the Dulles Airport on social media just how many people in his field were reporting the same brand of harassment.

[...]

“We are disappointed and concerned that any U.S. official would question a journalist, or any citizen, in this way,” Kevin Baron, Defense One’s executive editor, wrote to The Post.

[...]

Walter Shaub, an attorney who served as director of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics until 2017, tweeted that the incident should go to the DHS inspector general for review.

“A customs agent withholding the passport of a journalist until he agrees to say he writes ‘propaganda’ is actionable misconduct, even in Trump’s America,” he said.

This has happened to me coming back into the country too, last year - a pretty aggressive questioning about who I worked for and “fake news.”

  WaPo
I'm going to guess this happens a lot. I was given a hard time coming back in through Miami after visiting Venezuela way back in 2004, and I'm a white Anglo, non-journalist, who had never been anywhere on a passport before. I don't imagine things have gotten better.
A growing list of journalists say they have been startled by government officials’ harassment in a country that prizes freedom of the press. The encounters are raising fears that hostile rhetoric led by President Trump and his allies are damaging reporters’ ability to do their job unhindered.
Some journalists have been feeling it for a long time. Depending on what your writing about.
This spring, the World Press Freedom Index called journalists’ treatment in the United States “problematic” for the first time in its 17 years of assessments — and singled out “President Trump’s anti-press rhetoric and continuing threats to journalists” as driving the deteriorating conditions. The U.S. ranking on the index has fallen for the past three years.
The Obama administration was really hard on journalists. I guess he can at least say he didn't incite his supporters to violence against them.

US law allows border agents to confiscate and search everything, including journalists' electronic devices, and that law needs to change.
In February, CBP apologized to a BuzzFeed journalist questioned at a New York airport about his news organization’s coverage of Trump and special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation. A few months later, a freelancer said he was detained by CBP officials for hours at an airport in Texas.

Then, in August, British journalist James Dyer described an “unsettling experience” as he flew into California to cover a Disney event. The film and TV writer said a CBP officer at Los Angeles International Airport called him a member of the “fake news media” and asked if he had worked for CNN or MSNBC, two frequent targets of Trump’s criticism.

“He aggressively told me that journalists are liars and are attacking their democracy,” Dyer wrote in a viral tweet thread.

He said he was allowed to move on after explaining that he was just trying to write about Star Wars.

CBP’s response at the time was much like its statement on Thursday’s incident.

“Inappropriate comments or behavior are not tolerated, and do not reflect our values of vigilance, integrity and professionalism,” the agency said.
Yeah, they do, though.

I suggest all journalists cross the border with a story ready about just trying to write about Star Wars, or something similar until such time as this country gets straightened out.  So, maybe forever.

...but hey, do what you want...you will anyway.

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