Tuesday, 11 May 2010

Execution and Intimidation are condemned: Statement of Tehran Bus Transportation Syndicate in condemning Farzad Kamangar’s execution

فارسی

We are mourning the death of a teacher whose teaching tool was chalk and pen, who taught children that many of them would go to bed with an empty stomach every night. Execution and intimidation is condemned. His crime was defending human rights. Crime that in the past 100 year has taken lives of many and made lots of families to mourn. In the past 4 years many national and international organizations had condemned the imprisonment of Farzad Kamanger and more importantly demanded for an impartial and legal review of his case. International organizations had asked for direct meeting with Farzad several times, which never got approved.

Unfortunately his family did not have the right or opportunity to see their beloved son for the last time. These executions take place in our society while our people have always negated any type of violence. Iranian and international worker movement have lost a teacher who did not stop learning and teaching even in prison. Our condolences goes to Farzad Kamangar family and everyone around the world.

As we have repeatedly announced through out these years, we want an end to death penalty, we reject verdicts of illegal courts and ask for the freedom of all social right prisoners; including Mr. Madadi and Osanloo.

With hope for peace and justice all around the world

Union Workers

Bus Transportation of Tehran and Suburbs

In Memorium

Valley Parade after the fire
The fire at Valley Parade took 56 lives and left more than 200 people injured 
Bradford marks Valley Parade stadium fire 25 years on

Wollt ihr den totalen Krieg?


Forget "Downfall", here's Bayern München 's Dutch coach Louis Van Gaal!

In case you have just tuned in...

Gordon Brown plays last card – proffering his resignation


    Brown's announcement outside No 10 Downing Street 

     

    School ban on gay anthology challenged by US free speech organisations

    Glenn Beck
    Oh look! it's that a**hat again Mommy!
    A campaign by the local chapter of Glenn Beck's 9.12 project led to Rancocas Valley Regional High School's decision to ban Revolutionary Voices. Photograph: Soul Brother/FilmMagic

    American free speech organisations are fighting a decision by a New Jersey school to remove a critically acclaimed anthology of writing about teenage homosexuality from library shelves after parents described it as vulgar and obscene.
    Revolutionary Voices, a collection of stories, poems and artwork by young homosexuals, was banned at Rancocas Valley Regional High School last week following a campaign by the local chapter of Glenn Beck's conservative 9.12 project. Local grandmother and 9.12 member Beverly Marinelli told the Philadelphia Inquirer that the book was "pervasively vulgar, obscene, and inappropriate", while insisting that she is "not a homophobe".
    But a coalition of free speech groups has jumped to the book's defence, saying that residents "have no right to impose their views on others or to demand that the contents of the library reflect their personal, religious, or moral values".
    "There are undoubtedly GLBTQ [gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgendered, and questioning] students at Rancocas Valley High School, regardless of whether they are openly recognised. Removing any of these titles would send a clear message to those students that they are the objects of social disapproval – different, vulnerable, and marginal – whose needs for information of particular relevance to their lives are not respected," wrote the directors of a collection of organisations to the school's board. The letter, the signatories to which include the National Coalition Against Censorship, the National Council of Teachers of English, American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression, the Association of American Publishers and PEN America, added that there was "no question that these books are not obscene".
    "No one has to read something just because it's on the library shelf," the letter continued. "No book is right for everyone, and the role of the library is to allow students to make choices according to their own interests, experiences, and family values ... Even if the books are too mature for some students, they will be meaningful to others."
    Lambda Legal, a US civil rights group representing gays, lesbians, and people with HIV/Aids, has also written to the school board saying that removing the book "undermines the school's obligation and ability to protect students regardless of sex, sexual orientation, or gender identity".
    The book's editor, Amy Sonnie, pointed to a letter from a 15-year-old boy, who said that on reading the volume he was relieved to discover "that there were other people out there who shared elements of my identity".
    "Queer students may not feel safe speaking up when LGBTQ books are challenged," said Sonnie. "But, they certainly deserve a chance to discover the 'diversity of voices' that make balanced library collections so crucial for the health of our communities and democracy."
    The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that the local 9.12 group is now looking to get the same book removed from the Lenape regional high school district, the county's largest school district. But the paper said that students were "shrugging off" the controversy. "Just because these books are in the library isn't going to cause us to be gay," they said. "We have so much access to information, if we want to read something we'll read it."
    Alison Flood @'The Guardian'

    Conservatives can't be funny.

    a)They don't like irreverence 
    because their beliefs are based on sacred things that mustn't be questioned.

    b)They don't like irony  
    because it involves nuance acknowledges that our assumptions about reality don't always match up.

    That basically leaves them with humor based on puns and cruelty.

    e.g.
    The young are permanently in a state resembling intoxication. 
    - Aristotle

    Sex Madness



    Vaughn Bell just reminded me of this film, which I haven't seen since an all nighter at The Scala in London sometime in the early eighties. 
    I also learnt this rather astonishing bit of information from his post over at 'Mind Hacks'
    "...Before then, the most effective treatment was to be infected by malaria which would give you a fever so strong that the syphilis bacteria would die in your body due to the high temperature. The hope was that the malaria could be treated by quinine before you died from that. The discovery won Julius Wagner-Jauregg the Nobel prize in 1927."


    .@DMiliband says Cabinet has agreed no one will put their name forward for leader until talks are over

    RIP Frank Frazetta


    Back at school in Glasgow in the mid 70's the art department was full of boys ripping off Roger Dean.
    Frank Frazetta got ripped off a lot too!

    ‘Never book me in Memphis the day Elvis dies again.’ - Willie Nelson

    JoeBot - "Disaster Tourist" - Photo by Andrew Edman

    Brother Dege (for Stacey!)

    “This is Delta Blues for the 21st Century, raging out of the swamplands of Louisiana. Dripping with atmosphere and backwoods noir. The real deal—death-obsessed, god-fearing, foot stomping acoustic blues steeped in the devilish myths and haunted ambience that permeates every inch of Louisiana. Factor in some Historic longhaired rock & roll influences – from Sabbath to Black Flag – and you’ve got an art project and anthropological study wrapped in one time traveling package.”

    Coalition scenarios