On the Issues: Media, Freedom of Information, and the Public’s Right to Know

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On the Issues: Media, Freedom of Information, and the Public’s Right to Know
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After 1971: The Media and Freedom of Information—Join us for a special On the Issues event, held in conjunction with this year’s Milwaukee Film Festival.  The opening night of the festival features the film “1971.”  The documentary recounts the story of a group of citizen activists who, during the height of the Vietnam War, broke into their local FBI office in Media, Pennsylvania, and stole hundreds of pages of confidential documents.  They were never caught, and leaked the documents to the press, exposing the FBI’s extensive surveillance of the antiwar and civil rights movements.  The film raises questions that—in the age of Edward Snowden and Julian Assange—seem more important than ever.  What does the public have a right to know?  And what, if any, limits are there to a free and unfettered press?  Our conversation will feature the attorney for Edward Snowden, the ACLU’s Ben Wizner; Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reporter Dan Bice; and the vice-president of the Wisconsin Freedom of Information Council, attorney Christa Westerberg.    

On the Issues: Media, Freedom of Information, and the Public’s Right to Know
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