Courage Campaign’s Voter Guide Blocked By DoD Computers in Iraq

We recently heard from a Californian deployed to Iraq that the Courage Campaign’s Progressive Voter Guide – and in fact, our entire website – is being blocked by Department of Defense computers in Iraq, whereas right-wing sites remained available. Today a reporter for The Hill confirmed the story:

Courage Campaign, a 700,000-member grassroots organization, has demanded in a letter to Defense Secretary Robert Gates that access to its site be provided before the Nov. 2 Election Day….

In contrast, the group said a number of web sites that espouse conservative views can be accessed on Defense Department computers.

The Hill independently confirmed that the Tea Party Express site can be accessed on Defense Department computers while the Courage Campaign site cannot be accessed. Courage campaign said it has received information that web sites affiliated with the Traditional Values Coalition, California Election Forum and Christian Voter Guide through the Defense Department computers in Iraq.

Courage Campaign acted on a tip from a prospective Californian voter deployed to Iraq.

“It is an enormous problem because the election on California is extremely important,” Rick Jacobs, the founder of Courage Campaign, said in an interview.

Earlier this week Jacobs wrote to Defense Secretary Robert Gates demanding that access to our website be restored. Courage Campaign has not received a response. The letter was cc’d to President Obama, Senators Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer, and key members of the California Congressional delegation. Click here to view the letter.

The Hill posits a possible explanation for the blockage:

However, there could be other possible explanations for the blocked site, such as an automatic filter that sifts through specific words. The Courage Campaign site uses multiple references to “sex” (as in same-sex marriages) and “gay” (as in anti-gay, or gay rights). The site also contains information and action items on the repeal of the military’s ban on openly gay service members.

However, other sites that also use the words “sex” and “gay” – including the right-wing sites listed above – are not blocked. Hell, if you are going to merely block a site because it has multiple references to “gay” and “sex” you’d be blocking the New York Times, CNN, and Wikipedia, to name just a few.

We at Courage Campaign have been given no explanation for what is going on here. Needless to say, it is extremely troubling. Voters have a right to access our guide, and soldiers and other support personnel in Iraq (or anywhere else, for that matter) have a right to access our site and others like it. If this is a matter of political censorship, it has no place in our armed forces.

With Tuesday’s election looming and our troops filling out ballots in Iraq, we are going to stop at nothing to make the site – and our voter guide – accessible to American soldiers who want to vote.

Note: I am the Public Policy Director for the Courage Campaign

7 thoughts on “Courage Campaign’s Voter Guide Blocked By DoD Computers in Iraq”

  1. “The site also contains information and action items on the repeal of the military’s ban on openly gay service members.”

  2. Let me get this right- the D of D, a department of the US Government, is blocking first amendment rights of US citizens, from the very people whose mission is to defend the rights and liberties of US citizens…..

    Anyone else confused here… like the D of D?!?

  3. I get email from the Courage Campaign.  Does the DoD also block Courage Campaign email?  Are there .mil addresses on the Courage Campaign mailing lists?

  4. but i cannot for the like of me understand what possible legitimate reason there would be for filtering incoming domestic political information. as long as soldiers have the franchise, any abrogation of their freedom to get information about elections and american politics is a gross violation of their constitutional rights as citizens.

    my guess is this got caught up in an existing bureaucratic program of censorship, but why that program exists needs to be addressed publicly. our soldiers are citizens, not children.

  5. Since I have my on blog, primarily progressive leaning, where I try to post material that matters but not getting mainstream media attention, and occasionally post or cross-post here at Calitics.

    I find the censorship or denial of access surprising given we have a middle of the road type of Administration running things. Then again, the Military Complex does lean way right and is known to thumb it’s nose at anything left of NIXON.

    This story not only needs an explanation but immediate opening of the necessary channels at DOD, like yesterday. It also needs to be picked up by main stream media, for who knows who else is being blocked for the same reason that Calitics does.

    Bet Senator Boxer would love to know about this (I am serious), as her opponent is certainly benefiting from Right Blog going right through.

    Curtis L Walker

    FreeFlightNewMedia.typepad.com

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