The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, September 27, 2012 - 5A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycomThursday, September 27, 2012 - Election fever missing on many college campuses In this Nov. 22, 2011 photo, Google executive Fabio Jose Silva Coelho poses for a portrait in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Google Inc.'s head of operations in Brazil was detained by the country's federal police on Wednesday after the company failed to heed a judge's order to take down YouTube videos that the court ruled were illegal. Google's Brazil chief detained afr f g aO feSrZ al ormv ies Anti-Islam film on YouTube deemed a violation of Brazilian law RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) - Google Inc.'s head of operations in Brazil was detained by the country's federal police Wednes- day after the company failed to heed a judge's order to take down YouTube videos that the court ruled violate Brazilian electoral law. The detention came as another court ordered YouTube to remove clips of an anti-Islam film that has been blamed for deadly protests by Muslims around the globe, both joining a spate of court- ordered content-removal cases against Google's video-sharing website in Brazil., The arrest of Google execu- tive Fabio Jose Silva Coelho was announced in Sao Paulo. A press release issued by the federal police said he was not expected to remain in jail and should be released later in the day after signing a document promising to appear in court. Brazil's strict electoral laws limit what critics can say on television, radio and the Inter- net about candidates for office. Ahead of municipal elections next month, Google has received repeated requests to remove Web videos that allegedly violate those restrictions. A judge in Mato Grosso do Sul state ordered Coelho's arrest Tuesday because the company had not removed YouTube videos that make incendiary comments about an alleged paternity suit aimed at Alcides Bernal, who is running for mayor of the city of Campo Grande. That ruling also included a statewide, 24-hour suspension of Google and You- Tube. It was not immediately clear if and how that aspect of the ruling mightbe carried out. Google said Tuesday that it was appealing the decision. "Being a platform, Google is not responsible for the content posted on its site," the company said in an emailed statement from Sao Paulo. A judge in the southern state of Parana earlier ordered Google to pay $500,000 for each day that it balked at fulfilling an order to remove other videos criticizing a candidate. In the northeastern state of Paraiba, a judge ordered the imprisonment of another Google executive in Brazil, also for not removing videos from YouTube attacking a mayoral candidate, but that order was overruled by a higher court. Eva Galperin of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which pro- motes digital freedom, said the rash of Brazilian cases was "dis- appointing, but not surprising" ahead of the country's nationwide municipal elections on Oct. 7 and Oct. 28. "The Internet is global, but laws are made nation by nation," she said. "There is a struggle between nation states and their laws and the freedom of expres- sion policies of companies that host content all over the globe." In a separate case pending against Google, Sao Paulo-based judge Gilson Delgado Miranda gave the site 10 days to remove video clips from "Innocence of Muslims," which has angered many Muslims around the world by its depiction of the Prophet Mohammed and his followers as thugs. After the 10-day window, Google will face fines of $5,000 a day for every day the clips remain accessible in Brazil, according to the statement on the court's web- site. The company did not respond to requests Wednesday for com- ment about the case. The "Innocence of Muslims" ruling resulted from a lawsuit by a group representing Brazil's Muslim community, the National Union of Islamic Entities, which claimed the film violates the coun- try's constitutional guarantee of religious freedom for all faiths. In a statement on the group's website, Mohamad al Bukai, the head of religious matters for the Sao Paulo-based organization, hailed the ruling. "Freedom of expression must not be confused with giving dis- proportionate and irresponsible offense, which can provoke seri- ous consequences for society,".al Bukai said. Dozens of people have been killed in violence linked to pro- tests over "Innocence of Mus- lims," which portrays the Prophet Muhammad as a fraud, a woman- izer and a child molester. Attempts by courts and offi- cials in several countries to remove the clips have revived the debate over freedom of expres- sion. The judge in the Brazilian case acknowledged that banning content from sites like YouTube is a thorny issue, according to excerpts of the ruling cited in the National Union of Islamic Enti- ties' statement. "This type of jurisprudence cannot be confused with censor- ship," Miranda is quoted as writ- ing. In the excerpts, the judge defines censorship as "the undue restriction of the civic conscious- ness." YouTube routinely blocks video in specific countries if it violates laws there. It also removesvideo deemed to infringe copyrights, show pornography, contain hate speech or violate other guidelines. However, none of those restrictions had been applied in Brazil to the "Inno- cence of Muslims." Google is now selectively blocking the video clips in coun- tries that include Libya and Egypt. Google has said it made the decision to block the video in such places due to "the sensitive situations" there. Galperin of the Electronic Frontier Foundation questioned whether a ban was really neces- sary in Brazil, which has seen no protests or rioting that have swept the Muslim world in recent weeks. "The notion that there's a need to take it down to prevent vio- lence is ludicrous," she said. Miranda's ruling came on the same day that Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff addressed the United Nations and urged an end to prejudice against Muslims. . Google has said it has been so inundated by requests from gov- ernments worldwide to remove online content that it has begun releasing a summary of the demands, most relating to legiti- mate attempts to enforce laws on issues ranging from personal pri- vacy to hate speech. Four years ago, youth enthusiasm was overwhelming ELMHURST, Ill. (AP) - What a difference four years can make. In 2008, college campuses were filled with campaign posters and political ral- lies - and frenzy. Remember "Obamamania?" This year, it's difficult to find a college stu- dent who's truly excited about the presidential race. "Politics has gone back to that thing you don't want to bring up," says Abraham Mulberry. He's a freshman at Elmhurst College in suburban Chicago who's trying to start a club for young Democrats. Last election, his campus had an active Students for Obama chapter, organized well before the election. But this time, there's nary a campaign placard, for either President Barack Obama or Republican candidate Mitt Romney. "I wouldn't say the election is the No. 1 hot-button issue here," Mulberry says, disap- pointedly. Granted, you don't see many signs of campaign enthusiasm in the neighborhoods that surround his campus, or else- where for that matter. But it's telling that, on many college campuses across the coun- try - where, in 2008, then- candidate Obama's messages of "hope" and "change" easily took hold - the mood is mark- edly more subdued. "Certainly, some (young people) have stopped believ- ing," says Molly Andolina, a political scientist at DePaul University in Chicago who tracks young voters. "Maybe that's inevitable. For structur- al reasons, it's easier to offer hope and change as a candidate, than as a president.". Excitement was so high, it really had nowhere to go but down, she says. This time, there's also no obvious chance to make history, as there was when students helped elect the country's first African-Ameri- can president. "For young voters, it was like going to Woodstock in 1968," says John Della Volpe, the poll- ing director at Harvard Univer- sity's Institute of Politics. Now like a lot of Americans, they're more worried about the economy and finding jobs. Voter ID laws in some states, which ban or restrict the use of student IDs at the polls, also are causing confusion on cam- puses - at a time when stu- dents are already weary and cynical about political bicker- ing in Washington. "Lots of people thought President Obama could go in and break gridlock and that didn't happen," says Ethan Weber, a senior at Miami Uni- versity in Ohio, who'll be grad- uating in December. "That's the scariest thing to a lot of young people - that nothing is going to happen." In 2008, Weber cast a half- hearted vote for Republican John McCain, certain Obama would win. This time, he's vot- ing for Romney and sees the election as a "toss-up." He is still in the minor- ity in the 18- to 29-year-old age group, according to polls. Young people are leaning strongly Democratic, as they traditionally do, and favor Obama by a wide margin - though some pollsters say the youngest new voters are show- ing signs that they may buck that trend. An Associated Press-GfK poll conducted earlier this month found that 61 percent of registered voters in the 18-to-29 bracket support the president, compared with 30 pefcent for Romney. In 2008, young people ended up voting for Obama by a 2-to-1 margin, with just over half of U.S. citizens, ages 18 to 29, casting a ballot in 2008. Though older generations are still more likely to vote - about two-thirds of citizens older than 30 did so in 2008, for instance - youth turnout was larger than it had been in recent years, and was par- ticularly notable because their wide margin of support helped lift Obama into office. It remains to be seen, how- ever, whether they'll show up at the polls this time. A Gallup poll taken Aug. 27-Sept. 16 found that 63 per- cent of registered voters, ages 18 to 29, said they "definitely" plan to vote. That Compares with at least 80 percent of registered voters in older age brackets who said the same. What's missing from pro-gay marriage TV ads? Gay people Saudi Arabian government detains 908 female Nigerian pilgrims en route to Mecca on lajj Rule requiring husband to travel with women causes deportation threats ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) - The detention of hundreds of female Nigerian pilgrims heading to Mecca at Saudi Arabia's busi- est airport over a rule requiring them to travel with a husband or male relative is threatening to bring a diplomatic dispute between the two nations. Saudi authorities are hold- ing 908 Nigerian women in poor conditions "with some needing urgent medical attention" at King Abdulaziz Airport in Jeddah and threatened to deport them, the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria said in a report submitted to Nigerian lawmakers Wednes- day. The report said female pil- grims who had landed in a small- er airport in Medina had been unaffected. However, Fuwaiba Muham- mad, a pilgrim, told an Associ- ated Press reporter at Mallam Aminu Kano International Air- port in the northern Nigerian city of Kano that she had been deported Wednesday from the Saudi Arabian city of Medina, along with dozens of others. Uba Mana, a spokesman for the National Hajj Commission, said no pilgrim had been deport- ed by Saudi authorities yet, but that the commission had asked for female pilgrims who did not meet the Saudi immigration offi- cials' requirements to temporar- ily be brought back to Nigeria to avoid deportations. "Medina is a small airport," Mana said, "and if we allow peo- ple to get deported from there, the pilgrims won't be able to return to Saudi Arabia for anoth- er five years, and by no fault of their own," he said. This is the first time pilgrims have faced the possibility of mass deportation over the male escort issue, the commission has said. Accordingto the report, an agree- ment between Saudi Arabia and Nigeria exempts female pilgrims from requiring a male relative to escort them for the manda- tory Hajj pilgrimage, which costs about $4,000 per person. Until now, state pilgrimage officials had been allowed to stand in the place of a male rela- tive or husband. Muhammad, for instance, said that she had been fraveling with a Hajj official who is not her relative. But Saudi authorities have proven much stricter this year. They even stopped women who did travel with their husbands. "Islam allows wives to bear the names of their parents and not necessarily that of their hus- bands," the report argued. All able-bodied Muslims who can afford it are expected to per- form Hajj at least once in their lives, leading people to go to great lengths to make the trip. Some pilgrims sell their cows and jewelry and others save for months or years to pay their own way to Mecca. Muslim philan- thropists and politicians in Nige- ria will typically sponsor some pilgrims annually. Mana had said Monday that the escort situation had been resolved through diplomatic channels, but the commission's report Wednesday said Saudi authorities have "remained ada- mant." The report said top Nigerian officials had held meetings with Saudi officials in Nigeria and in Saudi Arabia in a bid to come to reach a compromise. Nigeria's Foreign Ministry sent a letter of undertaking guar- anteeing the return of the female pilgrims after Hajj, it added, but Saudi authorities still did not release them. Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan put together a high- profile delegation late Wednes- day to travel to Saudi Arabia "as soon as an appointment is final- ized with the appropriate author- ity," a government statement said. Saudiofficials couldnotimme- diately be reached for comment Wednesday. Nigeria, a nation of more than 160 million people evenly divided between Muslims and Chris- tians, and Saudi Arabia are both members of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, an umbrel- la organization representing 57 Muslim nations. Hopes to break 32-state losing streak in upcoming election MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - In one TV ad, a husband and wife talk fondly of a lesbian couple who moved into their neigh- borhood. In another, a mar- ried couple speaks of wanting fair treatment for their lesbian daughter. A third features a pastor talking supportively about gay unions. Each of these ads ran recent-, ly in states with gay marriage issues on the November ballot. What's missing? Gay people speaking for themselves. Four states are voting on gay marriage this fall, and gay rights groups are pouring tens of millions of dollars into key TV markets in hopes of break- ing a 32-state losing streak on the issue. But even as gay peo- ple and same-sex relationships gain acceptance through pop culture staples such as "Mod- ern Family" and "Glee," the idea is still seen as dicey by media strategists involved in the ballot campaigns, resulting in ads that usually involve only straight people talking about the issue. The decision to keep gays in the background has been wide- ly noticed in the gay communi- ty and debated on gay-oriented blogs, with some activists com- plaining that the move contra- dicts the central message of the gay rights movement for a number of years. "If we don't show ourselves, people aren't going to get com- fortable with who we are," said Wayne Besen, director of Vermont-based gay rights group "Truth Wins Out," one of many that presses gays to live openly with pride in who they are. But others counsel defer- ence for the complexities of public messaging, pointing out that the ads are designed to speak to the fears and val- ues of the heterosexual major- ity, whose vote will decide the issue. "The moderate tough guys we need to flip to win a cou- ple of these races are still the ones who say that gays are gross," said Andy Szekeres, a Denver-based fundraising consultant who has worked on several state campaigns and had access to focus group data. "Pushing people to an uncom- fortable place, it's something you can't do in a TV ad," said Szekeres, who is gay