Pastebin
API
tools
faq
paste
Login
Sign up
Please fix the following errors:
New Paste
Syntax Highlighting
WASHINGTON, D.C. — 16-year-old Andrew Demeter of Cleveland, Ohio does not yet have his driver's license, but he has managed to confront arguably the most influential politician in the nation: Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi. Demeter was in D.C. this past month (April 27-29) for his award-winning entry "We The People, Genetically-Modified?" in C-SPAN's annual and national "StudentCam" documentary competition. Originally scheduled to shake the hands of both Senator Harry Reid and Speaker of the House John Boehner (in lieu of Leader Pelosi), Demeter purchased online a pocket-sized copy of the U.S. Constitution as a gift and token for Reid, as the Democrat had recently and controversially labeled Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy and his supporters (who had protested federal agents reclaiming the alleged government farmland) "domestic terrorists" for, what Demeter says, "was simply an exercise of free speech". Much to his dismay, Demeter and the other top four winners of StudentCam were rescheduled to meet and greet Minority Leader Pelosi in the early afternoon of April 29. "I didn't want this opportunity to go to waste," Demeter remembers, "even if it required stepping outside my comfort zone." "Washington, D.C. is flipped upside-down, inside-out," the teen theorizes, "You have to remove your belt, shoes, and jacket before entering the Capitol because you're supposedly a criminal; guilty until proven innocent. Truth be told, the real criminals conspire against the American public from inside the Capitol itself." An outspoken critic of "unconstitutional" security measures at airport and government properties alike, Demeter highlights, "After emptying my pockets and walking through a metal detector, a security agent questioned me as I looped on my belt with one hand and held what would've been my present for Reid in the other, 'What is that?' she asked. 'The Constitution,' I replied. How ironic." The youth activist then anxiously stood with Leader Pelosi's rushed legislative assistant while the remaining StudentCam contestants were granted security clearance. Demeter visualizes, "The group of a dozen or so of us [parents and C-SPAN employees included] ran down a series of corridors until we arrived at the door of Pelosi's office." Pelosi eventually arrived, welcoming each entrant with a handshake and, in the words of Demeter, a "superficial" smile. "As Donald [De Alwis] was speaking with Pelosi about his film on water pollution," Demeter says, "I slid my phone out of my suit pocket and began recording. Only once I posed my question to Pelosi did I overtly display my phone and capture her reaction of pure confusion." As audible in the clip of Demeter's confrontation, he asks the Democratic Leader, "Why do you support the NSA's [National Security Agency] illegal and ubiquitous data collection?". Pelosi, visibly shocked and stumbling with her words, seemingly evades Demeter's question and proceeds to diffuse responsibility of NSA programs from the democratic Obama Administration to the republican Bush Administration. Demeter believes, "It is, at minimum, hypocritical and, at maximum, disillusionment with the two-party system for Pelosi to support the NSA's bulk data collection and yet still criticize its precursor: the post-9/11 Patriot Act." Despite the attempt of one of Pelosi's legislative aides to cut him off mid-sentence, Demeter continues, "I asked, 'Isn't the NSA a violation of the Fourth Amendment?'. So quickly, almost instinctively, she [Pelosi] said 'No'." Demeter attributes this detachment from the Supreme Law of the Land to Pelosi's "hyper-inflated ego" and explains, "She thinks and talks as though she is above the law, above the Constitution. I understand why, though. When I was eating breakfast one morning during the trip -- at The Liaison Capitol Hill Hotel, coincidentally two blocks from the Capitol -- I went to pour myself a glass of water from a pitcher on the table, but -- before I could -- the waiter ran from across the restaurant to the table, grabbed the pitcher from my hands, and poured the water for me. I was almost offended, actually." Though, Demeter says he learned more after the encounter with Pelosi than he did during. "Immediately after leaving the Capitol, a certain, to-be-unnamed entity from C-SPAN -- who had witnessed firsthand the exchange of dialogue between Pelosi and myself -- remarked, 'I saw you recording with your phone. Were you planning on posting that to YouTube?'. Unknowing at the time that my phone had only recorded the first half of the confrontation -- and then stopped filming due to insufficient storage space -- I tersely responded, 'Why does it matter?'." Demeter was then shocked by the answer he was given. "The individual said something like, 'We wouldn't want to damage C-SPAN's relationship with Leader Pelosi and/or her office.'" Following a lunch at Union Station spent desperately attempting to recover from his phone the full-length clip of his hard-hitting question to Pelosi, Demeter walked a few blocks back to C-SPAN (where he had been interviewed the day before) before flying home to Cleveland. "When the elevator dinged at the third floor -- C-SPAN's floor --," Demeter reminisces with a subtle grin, "the doors opened, my father and I walked out, and we were spontaneously welcomed with the warm smile and firm handshake of Brian Lamb, the founder of C-SPAN." According to Demeter, Lamb had already received news of the journalistic feat from one of his employees, subsequently congratulating and encouraging Demeter; a response much unlike the employee who had earlier questioned Demeter's motives. But, "the plot thickens," Demeter claims. "I returned home very late Tuesday night, but I wouldn't unpack -- or sleep, for that matter -- until I e-mailed C-SPAN. My footage may have been compromised, but C-SPAN's wasn't," Demeter chuckles. "After tactfully writing an e-mail to a C- SPAN employee to respectfully request footage of the Pelosi confrontation, I went to bed. The following afternoon, I received a reply…but not from the C-SPAN employee I had e-mailed and, instead, from the very entity who had virtually intimidated me into not posting online the footage of Pelosi humiliating herself." E-mail traffic between Demeter and the anonymous C-SPAN employee reveals the following: DEMETER: Could you please send me the contact info of the cameraman who filmed the b-roll shots during our trip to the Capitol? C-SPAN: <REDACTED> is the gentleman who recorded the event, and I have copied him on this email. I will relay however that our agreement for the meet and greet with House Dem. Leader Pelosi was for photographs and b-roll only (no audio recording). While <REDACTED> did have a mic attached to his camera, per our agreement, the audio would not be able to be used. It was an omission on my part not to relay that to you... DEMETER: With all due respect, I would view C-SPAN's unwillingness to kindly provide me the aforementioned clip as a conflict of the network's philosophy of neutrality and unbiasedness. StudentCam, after all, emphasized the cruciality of broadcasting both sides of the story and not censoring one side or any other in order to fit a particular agenda. C-SPAN: I’ll be happy to provide you with the video, but -- just to clarify -- my concern did not stem from any bias. "Persistence is sacrosanct," Demeter reinforces. As for the video itself, the politically-active teen concludes, "After viewing the clip for the first time, my mother said, 'I hope you live to be eighteen.'". The aspiring reporter/journalist, still optimistic, advises Americans, "If I -- a shy, socially inept high-school student -- can expose on a global scale the paradox that is politics, by asking nothing more than a question, then so too can you."
Optional Paste Settings
Category:
None
Cryptocurrency
Cybersecurity
Fixit
Food
Gaming
Haiku
Help
History
Housing
Jokes
Legal
Money
Movies
Music
Pets
Photo
Science
Software
Source Code
Spirit
Sports
Travel
TV
Writing
Tags:
Syntax Highlighting:
None
Bash
C
C#
C++
CSS
HTML
JSON
Java
JavaScript
Lua
Markdown (PRO members only)
Objective C
PHP
Perl
Python
Ruby
Swift
4CS
6502 ACME Cross Assembler
6502 Kick Assembler
6502 TASM/64TASS
ABAP
AIMMS
ALGOL 68
APT Sources
ARM
ASM (NASM)
ASP
ActionScript
ActionScript 3
Ada
Apache Log
AppleScript
Arduino
Asymptote
AutoIt
Autohotkey
Avisynth
Awk
BASCOM AVR
BNF
BOO
Bash
Basic4GL
Batch
BibTeX
Blitz Basic
Blitz3D
BlitzMax
BrainFuck
C
C (WinAPI)
C Intermediate Language
C for Macs
C#
C++
C++ (WinAPI)
C++ (with Qt extensions)
C: Loadrunner
CAD DCL
CAD Lisp
CFDG
CMake
COBOL
CSS
Ceylon
ChaiScript
Chapel
Clojure
Clone C
Clone C++
CoffeeScript
ColdFusion
Cuesheet
D
DCL
DCPU-16
DCS
DIV
DOT
Dart
Delphi
Delphi Prism (Oxygene)
Diff
E
ECMAScript
EPC
Easytrieve
Eiffel
Email
Erlang
Euphoria
F#
FO Language
Falcon
Filemaker
Formula One
Fortran
FreeBasic
FreeSWITCH
GAMBAS
GDB
GDScript
Game Maker
Genero
Genie
GetText
Go
Godot GLSL
Groovy
GwBasic
HQ9 Plus
HTML
HTML 5
Haskell
Haxe
HicEst
IDL
INI file
INTERCAL
IO
ISPF Panel Definition
Icon
Inno Script
J
JCL
JSON
Java
Java 5
JavaScript
Julia
KSP (Kontakt Script)
KiXtart
Kotlin
LDIF
LLVM
LOL Code
LScript
Latex
Liberty BASIC
Linden Scripting
Lisp
Loco Basic
Logtalk
Lotus Formulas
Lotus Script
Lua
M68000 Assembler
MIX Assembler
MK-61/52
MPASM
MXML
MagikSF
Make
MapBasic
Markdown (PRO members only)
MatLab
Mercury
MetaPost
Modula 2
Modula 3
Motorola 68000 HiSoft Dev
MySQL
Nagios
NetRexx
Nginx
Nim
NullSoft Installer
OCaml
OCaml Brief
Oberon 2
Objeck Programming Langua
Objective C
Octave
Open Object Rexx
OpenBSD PACKET FILTER
OpenGL Shading
Openoffice BASIC
Oracle 11
Oracle 8
Oz
PARI/GP
PCRE
PHP
PHP Brief
PL/I
PL/SQL
POV-Ray
ParaSail
Pascal
Pawn
Per
Perl
Perl 6
Phix
Pic 16
Pike
Pixel Bender
PostScript
PostgreSQL
PowerBuilder
PowerShell
ProFTPd
Progress
Prolog
Properties
ProvideX
Puppet
PureBasic
PyCon
Python
Python for S60
QBasic
QML
R
RBScript
REBOL
REG
RPM Spec
Racket
Rails
Rexx
Robots
Roff Manpage
Ruby
Ruby Gnuplot
Rust
SAS
SCL
SPARK
SPARQL
SQF
SQL
SSH Config
Scala
Scheme
Scilab
SdlBasic
Smalltalk
Smarty
StandardML
StoneScript
SuperCollider
Swift
SystemVerilog
T-SQL
TCL
TeXgraph
Tera Term
TypeScript
TypoScript
UPC
Unicon
UnrealScript
Urbi
VB.NET
VBScript
VHDL
VIM
Vala
Vedit
VeriLog
Visual Pro Log
VisualBasic
VisualFoxPro
WHOIS
WhiteSpace
Winbatch
XBasic
XML
XPP
Xojo
Xorg Config
YAML
YARA
Z80 Assembler
ZXBasic
autoconf
jQuery
mIRC
newLISP
q/kdb+
thinBasic
Paste Expiration:
Never
Burn after read
10 Minutes
1 Hour
1 Day
1 Week
2 Weeks
1 Month
6 Months
1 Year
Paste Exposure:
Public
Unlisted
Private
Folder:
(members only)
Password
NEW
Enabled
Disabled
Burn after read
NEW
Paste Name / Title:
Create New Paste
Hello
Guest
Sign Up
or
Login
Sign in with Facebook
Sign in with Twitter
Sign in with Google
You are currently not logged in, this means you can not edit or delete anything you paste.
Sign Up
or
Login
Public Pastes
Untitled
9 min ago | 8.21 KB
Untitled
1 hour ago | 8.46 KB
Untitled
2 hours ago | 7.62 KB
Web Maintenance Kickoff [POST REDESIGN]
2 hours ago | 0.98 KB
Untitled
3 hours ago | 7.43 KB
Untitled
4 hours ago | 6.56 KB
Untitled
5 hours ago | 16.10 KB
Untitled
6 hours ago | 5.53 KB
We use cookies for various purposes including analytics. By continuing to use Pastebin, you agree to our use of cookies as described in the
Cookies Policy
.
OK, I Understand
Not a member of Pastebin yet?
Sign Up
, it unlocks many cool features!