Tag: Iraq-Middle East Music
On The Media
The Sound of Pain
Friday, September 14, 2007
U.S. detainee accounts of waterboarding, temperature extremes and sleep deprivation have reinvigorated the legal and political debate over what constitutes torture. But writer David Peisner describes another all too common U.S. interrogation tool - popular music. He explains the history and application of sonic suffering.
Supported by
-
Revenge Porn's Latest Frontier
-
Phone Calls in the Age of the Text Message, A New Speech Law in Libya, and More
-
Hitler's Copyright Fight
-
The U.S. 'Secret' War in Cambodia
-
More Misleading Unemployment Numbers Quoted By the Media
-
Reporting on Taboo Topics in Liberia
-
When Freedom of the Press is Not a Priority
-
"Author" of 'Naked Came The Stranger' Dies
-
Obama's Historic Statement, the False Statistic on "Boomerang" Kids, and More
-
The Future of the Phone
-
Phone Calls in the Age of the Text Message, A New Speech Law in Libya, and More
-
Comcast's Big Change
-
When Freedom of the Press is Not a Priority
-
Obama's Historic Statement, the False Statistic on "Boomerang" Kids, and More
-
The Future of the Phone
-
Revenge Porn's Latest Frontier
-
Germany Publishes "Mein Kampf"
-
What's the Harm in Hate Speech?
-
Reporting on Taboo Topics in Liberia
-
Publishing: Adapt or Die
-
What's the Harm in Hate Speech?
-
The U.S. 'Secret' War in Cambodia
-
Why the Myth that Vaccines Cause Autism Survives
-
Comcast's Big Change
-
Germany Publishes "Mein Kampf"
-
I did a FOIA on myself, and all I got were these lousy letters
-
After Graceland
-
Divorcing Google
-
The Future of the Phone
-
When Freedom of the Press is Not a Priority

