Monday, 5 July 2010

Oily disasters: When will we ever learn?

Photo: Oily disasters: When will we ever learn?
The Deepwater Horizon rig off the coast of Mexico where the current disaster is occuring. (Credit: ChvyGrl via Flickr)
The Gulf of Mexico oil disaster was the worst accidental spill in history. No, not the one getting the headlines today, but the one in 1979 — although the current spill may eventually prove to be larger. Those of us old enough to remember may be experiencing déjà vu.
On June 3, 1979, a blow-out preventer failed on the Ixtoc I drilling platform off the coast of Mexico. The well was owned by Mexico's state oil company, Pemex, but the drilling was being done by Sedco, which later became Transocean, owner of the Deepwater Horizon rig where the current disaster is unfolding.
As with today's crisis, the experts tried to control the 1979 spill with a number of methods, including booms, dispersants, placing a giant metal "top-kill" dome over it, and plugging it with garbage and cement. None of these techniques worked then, and they aren't working now. The Ixtoc spill went on for more than nine months, spewing between 477 million and 795 million litres of oil that washed up on the coasts of Mexico and the U.S. It wiped out fishing along the Mexican coast for years and harmed and killed sea turtles, dolphins, birds, and other animals.
In the end, the Ixtoc spill was stopped when Pemex drilled two relief wells and pumped mud and steel balls into the well. BP is drilling relief wells at the Deepwater Horizon site but expects to take up to three months to complete them.
The main differences between the two spills are that no one died in the Ixtoc disaster, whereas 11 people were killed in the Deepwater Horizon blow-out, and the Ixtoc well was being drilled in 49 metres of water, while the Deepwater Horizon was more than 1,500 metres deep.
It makes you wonder if we'll ever learn. In Canada, oil companies are drilling a well off the coast of Newfoundland that is even deeper than the BP well in the Gulf. Oil companies are also gearing up to drill in Arctic waters, and the B.C. government has been putting pressure on the federal government to lift bans on drilling and oil tanker traffic off the West Coast.
These spills are just a visual reminder of the damage that our fossil-fuel addiction wreaks on the environment every day. After all, if the oil weren't being spilled, it would eventually be burned, spewing carbon emissions into the atmosphere.
Environmental havoc is only one reason to conserve energy and switch to cleaner energy. Security is also a crucial issue when it comes to global oil supplies. From the costly war in Iraq to the instability of some of the main oil-producing countries, we're seeing increasing problems with our reliance on this ever-more-scarce energy resource.
Some people argue that's a reason to increase supplies from domestic sources by expanding production in the tar sands, extracting oil from shale, and drilling more off our own coasts — but that's an absurd argument. Any one of these leaves us open to more environmental damage from spills and pollution during drilling, extracting, and transporting. In fact, a study led by the University of Alberta's David Schindler and published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science found that pollution from the Alberta tar sands into the Athabasca River and its tributaries is equivalent to a major oil spill every year.(my emphasis-beeden)
We don't seem to be good at learning from the past. No matter what the technology or energy source, whether it's fossil fuels or nuclear, we must be prepared for the worst-case scenario before we proceed. That's because, no matter how minimal the risk, the consequences of an accident, as we've seen from the Gulf of Mexico to Chernobyl, can be calamitous.
One thing we know for certain is that relying on diminishing supplies of fossil fuels for our energy needs has serious consequences for the environment, human health, the economy, and our security. And yet governments still continue to subsidize what U.S. TV host Rachel Maddow correctly referred to in a show comparing the two spills as "the most profitable industry the universe has ever seen."
Let's prove that we can learn. We need to conserve energy and we need to tell our governments that it's time to start the shift to a clean-energy economy and to keep the oil wells and tankers away from our waters.
 David Suzuki with Faisal Moola @'David Suzuki.org'

No fracking way New Brunswickers should ban the hazardous process of hydraulic fracturing.

In less than 60 days, using a process known as hydraulic fracturing or fracking, an oil and gas company will inject hundreds of tanker truckloads of freshwater laced with thousands of kilograms of toxic chemicals and sand beneath the ground. Their goal is to extract natural gas embedded in a shale rock formation near Elgin in southern New Brunswick.
At risk are the groundwater, surface water, human and non-human health.
A typical frack job requires between 11,400,000 to 15,200,000 litres of water, which returns to the surface highly toxic
Squeezing gas from a rock below ground involves unconventional drilling practices. A vertical well is dug vertically into the ground and then vertically across the shale formation (see attached figure). The fracking fluid is then injected into the well bore — under enough pressure to peel paint from a car — so that it causes the shale to fracture and release the gas from the billions of pockets found throughout this rock. The gas comes up the well, along with most of the fracking fluids.



Fracking is a relatively new technology that involves boring a  vertical well deep into the ground and then drilling a horizontal  pathway

Ultimately, the company sells the gas for a profit, and the province collects royalty payments. Private landowners may also lease their land to the gas company to supplement their income.
Controversy is growing, in Canada and the US, over the nature of the chemicals used in the fracking process, the sheer volume of water needed for the process, as well as the wastewater produced after the fracking fluid spews out of the well.
Scientists in the US report that 65 of the 300-odd compounds used in fracking are hazardous to both humans and non-humans. Some cause cancer. These chemicals are mixed with the water which comes from different sources: municipal water systems, rivers, ponds, and lakes.
A typical frack job requires between 11,400,000 to 15,200,000 litres of water — or enough water to fill an Olympic-sized swimming pool five to seven times over. Most of the water that is pressurized into the well, spews out once the pressure is released. Each well can be fracked multiple times. Safe disposal is an issue, because the water returns laced with toxic chemicals.
In just one year, 2000, the world's oil and gas exploration industry produced 77 billion barrels of wastewater, according to an article by Z Khatib and P Verbeek, published in the Journal of Petroleum Technology. Based on current rates of water consumption, that amount is equivalent to the volume of water needed by the City of Fredericton for the next 20 years.(my emphasis)

According to the United Nations, the world, including Canada, is heading towards a major water shortage crisis — due, in part, to water being used for industrial purposes like fracking.
Laying aside for a moment the moral and ethical questions concerning the industrial use of water in a world facing diminishing sources of good clean drinking water, the question remains as to what to do with the sheer magnitude of the wastewater produced in the fracking process. According to ProPublica, an independent newsroom that does investigative journalism for the public's benefit, it is still unclear as to whether or not we have the technology at our disposal to handle such vast quantities of wastewater.
In some jurisdictions, the wastewater is left in open pits. In other areas, it is emptied into sewage treatment plants, many of which are ill-equipped to handle this type of industrial waste. There are conflicting reports on how and where the fracking fluids are being disposed of here in New Brunswick.
There is no question these fracking fluids are highly toxic. ProPublica reported in 2008 that after treating a worker who got splashed with fracking fluid, an emergency nurse in Colorado ended up with multiple organ failure and nearly died.
Dr Theo Colborn, an independent scientist in Colorado who specializes in low-dosage effects of chemicals on human health, argues that even in very low doses, these chemicals can damage kidneys and immune systems and negatively impact reproduction. Among farm animals raised in close proximity to where the fracking wastewater was being misted in the air for evaporation in Garfield County, CO, a bull went sterile; sheep bred on an organic farm experienced a slew of inexplicable still births; and pigs as well as a herd of beef cows stopped going into heat.
The oil and gas industry, however, appears unmoved and undeterred by these concerns. In fact, a local newspaper published a story June 10th, 2010 in which a representative of the oil and gas industry was quoted in saying that fracking in New Brunswick "won't harm well water".
The fact is that nobody has done any research to see how the process actually works underground. No one knows for sure to what extent the fissures reach underground or whether cracks made in the rock create a passageway for these dangerous chemicals to contaminate the groundwater.
"What is needed now most," wrote ProPublica reporter Abraham Lustgarten in 2009, "according to scientists at the Environmental Protection Agency and elsewhere, is a rigorous scientific study that tracks the fracturing process and attempts to measure its reach into underground water supplies." The price tag for such a study would be around USD10 million.
In 2008, ProPublica reported that there were over 1000 cases documented by courts and local governments in Colorado, New Mexico, Alabama, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, where fracking is a suspected cause of drinking water contamination.
Filmmaker Josh Fox visited regular Americans across 24 US states to produce a documentary challenging and disproving the industry's contention that fracking is harmless. He found and filmed a shocking trail of people and their animals in rural communities getting sick. In one scene in his documentary film, Gasland, (which will air on HBO Canada August 1st, 2010), a local resident uses a cigaret lighter to light the gas that escapes when he tries to draw water from the kitchen sink tap.
Because of the controversies surrounding this process, fracking has been banned in New York State until proven safe. It is disappointing that New Brunswick has not introduced its own ban on this process in order to protect its citizens and our environment from such unnecessary risks.
For its part, in June 2010, the Conservation Council of New Brunswick hosted two public sessions to raise awareness on this issue. The first one happened on June 17th in Penobsquis, the second in Elgin on June 18th.
In Penobsquis, sauna-like temperatures in the meeting room did little to dampen the spirits of concerned citizens, packed like sardines, who came to hear Natural Resources Defence Council Attorney Kate Sinding and Catskills Mountainkeeper Program Director Wes Gillingham speak about their experiences and knowledge of this issue. The underlying message from this presentation was that the potential for contamination of surface and groundwater in New Brunswick is real. Yet despite these concerns, the process continues to occur unabated in New Brunswick.
Of the three companies currently exploring for shale gas in New Brunswick, one company has obtained the lease to conduct tests and see how much of the gas can be recovered from a million-hectare swath of land spreading from the Atlantic coast to the Maine border. It is difficult to predict how many shale gas wells might be constructed if this explorative venture proves to be commercially viable. Estimates range from 480 to 5000 wells.
Given that 29 wells have already disrupted the small community of Penobsquis, a minimum of 480 wells will have a significant impact on the landscape, freshwater supplies, air quality, and lifestyle of many more New Brunswickers. At the moment, New Brunswickers are facing the same situation faced by Pennsylvanians a few years back.
Like New Brunswick, Pennsylvania had no regulations in place to allow for a gradual and community based development of its shale gas industry. And like New Brunswick, it lacked regulations on fracking. Consequently, gas pads started appearing next to homes, hospitals, schools, and summer camps, transforming the countryside into an industrialized zone, with tractor trucks operating 24/7, gas burning flares affecting air quality, and citizens experiencing significant drops in their property values.
"As devastating as the experience is for those who have lost their fundamental right to have clean, safe, potable drinking water come out of their taps," wrote Kate Sanding on her blog April 15, 2010 after visiting Dimock, Pennsylvania, "what was perhaps most eye-opening was the utter transformation of the community." In other words, some of the prettiest and peaceful countryside became transformed into an industrialized zone.
Unless there are provisions in place, and soon, which would allow ordinary New Brunswickers to play an active and determinant role in how the gas industry may evolve in this province, there is no doubt in my mind that we will suffer the same consequences here in New Brunswick. It's too late for Pennsylvanians, but it's still not too late for us New Brunswickers. So, let's get involved.
Jean Louis Deveau has post-graduate degrees in both the natural and social sciences. He is the co-founder of the Friends of the Mount Carleton Provincial Park and an avid canoeist. Apart from proximity to family and friends, he and his wife chose to live and raise their two sons in New Brunswick because of its picturesque countryside, relatively clean air and water, and lack of heavy industrialization.
Jean Louis Deveau @'StraightGoods'

Sunday, 4 July 2010

Quaint Towns, Deadly Poisons Welcome to Toxic Valley

Crossing the Ohio River into Indiana from Owensboro, Ky., travelers are greeted with an image far more symbolic of Hoosier life than an "Indiana Welcomes You" billboard or a drawing of Abraham Lincoln, who spent part of his childhood just a few miles to the west of the William H. Natcher Bridge.
Indeed, the Hoosier state's howdy dominates the horizon a couple hazy miles before the bridge, when fat plumes of opaque-white air pollution from the Rockport Power Plant first appear. The coal-fired plant's twin cooling towers greet passing motorists with a hearty, "Welcome to Indiana, Land of Pollution." Minutes up U.S. 231, the box-like AK Steel plant rises just off the roadway to the east, adding an exclamation point.
Between them, these two industrial facilities told the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that they released nearly 26 million pounds of toxic chemicals into the air, water and land in 2008. In their Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) reports to EPA, AK Steel reported 19.1 million pounds, American Electric Power's Rockport plant 6.7 million.
As John Blair, president of the Evansville-based environmental group Valley Watch has calculated, that's more toxic releases from two Indiana industrial facilities than New York City, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Chicago, Indianapolis, Seattle, Los Angeles and San Diego, combined.
Continue reading
Steven Higgs @'Counterpunch'

The list of "enterprises" daily destroying the planet continues, more horrific stories from Indiana, its time for the EPA to do its job, and its time for the shareholders and management to be held accountable. A thousand apologies to readers at Moana for going on about this, but the tide is becoming a Tidal Wave of Tsunami proportions, as business after business declines to meet its environmental responsibilities, as long after the deluge has broken only the ruined will remain, the quick-fix money addicts will have left the building with all its polluted walls and toxic cesspools, for others to clean-up. Contact your local government and ask them about any industries you have concerns about, these abuses will not stop unless our governments are aware of our concern and business is made accountable for its deliquency.........beeden

Happy 4th...

Iran's Guantánamo Bay: the cover-up won't work

Faced with undeniable evidence of a scandal, one solution is to blame others. But picking out a few expendable scapegoats from your own side – and punishing them – often works better. That is the tactic adopted by the Iranian regime in trying to shrug off revelations of atrocities in the Kahrizak detention centre.
This week an Iranian military court convicted and sentenced to death two officials who had been accused of torturing and killing three protesters in the centre during the aftermath of last year's disputed presidential election.
The reports added that nine other suspects in the case were also sentenced to flogging or prison terms and one person was acquitted. The verdict is said to be not final and can be appealed. No names have been disclosed and the court sat behind closed doors, so it is impossible to verify anything about the case independently of the official statement about the case.
Kahrizak, known as Iran's Guantánamo Bay among protesters, became a significant embarrassment for the Islamic Republic when a group of released prisoners gave testimonies to international media about the misfortunes they suffered in custody. It was built underground without proper ventilation and toilet facilities. Although it is supposed to have a maximum capacity of 50 prisoners, in the turmoil after Iran's presidential election it was filled with hundreds. At least five have died under torture there and some were raped.
In July last year, Iran's supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, ordered the closure of Kahrizak when Saeed Sadaghi, a pro-regime photographer, reportedly told him that he had been raped in the detention centre. However Khamenei didn't mention the rape until Mehdi Karoubi, an Iranian opposition leader, wrote a widely publicised letter to the head of Iran's Council of Experts revealing that he had met with a few of those who have been raped inside Kahrizak centre. The rape disclosure became a scandal for a regime that preaches moral values and boasts that it is an Islamic Republic. It sparked an outcry even within the supporters of the regime.
But it was only when 24-year-old Mohsen Rouhalamini, the son of a distinguished conservative figure, was named among those killed that the Iranian authorities were forced to respond. Subsequently, two other victims were identified, Amir Javadifar and Mohammad Kamrani. The two officials reportedly sentenced this week were charged with the death of these three protesters. (Opposition sources maintain that at least five protesters died in the centre, rather than three.)
As with other post-election scandals in Iran, the authorities first dismissed it as opposition propaganda, but later Iranian MPs assigned a committee to investigate the issue. In January 2010, the report of the investigation suggested that Saeed Mortazavi, Tehran's former chief prosecutor, was behind the affair. However the claim of rape was dismissed in the report. Mortazavi was then rewarded by President Ahmadinejad with his appointment as head of Iran's counter-smuggling department.
But since last summer, the more the government has tried to put an end to the scandal, the more the details have emerged about what really had happened. Last month, Roozonline, a US-based Iranian website, revealed that Ramin Pourandarjani, the examining doctor who had disclosed details of the deaths of some protesters, including Rouhalamini, was allegedly suffocated, although the government maintains that his death was due to natural causes.
The Human Rights Activists News Agency had interviewed a prisoner of Kahrizak whose name and gender were not disclosed for security reasons. The prisoner had said: "After 43 days, they let me to call my family for the first time and let them know of my whereabouts. They showed me a video clip of my son and told me that he's in custody and he'll be raped if I don't confess to what they ask me to do."
The agency documented the scandal by piecing together the personal accounts of those who experienced the jail in Kahrizak. "Flogging, beating with batons and metal bars and electric shocks were common. Some were forced to pose their sexual organ in humiliation and some were sexually abused by bottles and batons. Some were bound and others had to pee on them," the report says.
It is not the first time Iran has used the old trick of covering up a scandal by such trials. After a brutal attack on Tehran University campus 11 years ago, which left at least two dead and hundreds injured, the government employed the same method and put its police commanders and officers on trial. However in the appeals court almost all were acquitted, except one who was charged with stealing a student's electric razor.
The trials over the campus scandal were not an end to the story; every year since then students have protested on the anniversary. Iran is now using the same tactic, but it won't work – just as it didn't work for the university campus. A month ago, there was speculation from an opposition website that Iran has reopened Kahrizak by changing its name to "Soroush 111". The Kahrizak story is far from over.
Saeed Kamali Dehghan @'The Guardian'

Infringement is not stealing

Brilliant!

(Click to enlarge)

Joy Orbison - Brklyn Clln (Michna's Brooklyn Bridge Remix)

 

Joe Nice - Mala Tribute 06/10/09



I just got the link for Joe Nice's Gourmet beats radio show from last night, and it contained a very special treat - 16 foundation dubplates from the man like Mala. Many thanks to Section 5 on the heads up.


Download the whole show

Tracklist
01 Adultz Only
02 Mountain Dread March
03 Cowboy Dub
04 Creepah
05 Jah Power Dub
06 Pop Pop Epic
07 Intergalactic Dub
08 Living Different
09 Explorer
10 Unexpected
11 Maintain Thru Madness
12 Big Leg Movement
13 Friday B4
14 Conference Part II
15 Sundayz
16 Bring Sut Unt

A London Dub – a best of Digital Mystikz & Loefah

I’d been looking for an excuse to do a DMZ only mix for a while now. And then my good friend Javier from Serie B mentioned that he’d never heard any of the early and classic DMZ releases until I linked him to the audio from the recent Red Bull Soundclash. I’d found the excuse I needed to do the mix. The idea was simple: do it like we used to back in the days when you’d put all your best songs on a tape for a friend to turn them onto something. Only this time the tape would be digital.
I spent most of the Easter weekend putting this mix together – it went from an all-out, in depth retrospective to a more measured attempt at a ‘best of’, or at least my ‘best of’. I’d originally got it just under 90 minutes to keep with the mixtape vibe but then realised I’d forgot a couple of tracks I absolutely wanted on there so instead of binning it and starting again I just added them and the result is 46 productions in 100 minutes – all tracks by Mala, Coki and Loefah including at least one track from each of the DMZ label releases plus key releases and remixes on various other labels including Tempa, Deep Media, Hotflush and Tectonic among others.
The following blurb about the mix is rather long so if you just want the music skip to the bottom of the post for link, tracklist and stream option.
Putting the mix together and listening back to it got me reminiscing about my own DMZ history and love story with the label, the artists and their music. It all started in 2005 on a rainy evening in London sometime after the summer. I randomly bumped into Steve Kode 9 – who at that point I hadn’t seen in ages – somewhere in Shoreditch who told me to come through to the Old Blue Last pub where he was spinning with some friends that night. I changed my plans and headed to the pub to find him alongside Mala from Digital Mystikz spinning upstairs to a small crowd (I think this night was part of the pub sessions which took place in 04/05 around London if memory serves me right…). And that’s when I discovered DMZ as a label and a sound for the first time.
I’ll never forget that night – every track Mala dropped had me rushing to the decks asking ‘what the hell is this?!’ before jumping around like a lunatic. I must have made a right tit of myself but I walked away that night with a grin on my face like never before and a phone full of release names and one label in particular, DMZ. In many ways this is also the night I ‘discovered’ dubstep again if you will, a few years after being first introduced by Kode to the dark garage mutations taking place in south London after he took me to some early FWD>> sessions at Plastic People and played me his early stuff.
The next thing I know I was in Blackmarket looking for DMZ releases and I went to my first DMZ dance in Brixton, the last one held at Third Base. The second one I went to was the now infamous night where they had to stop the party halfway through the night and move everyone from Third Base to the club upstairs, Mass, where they have been since because the crowd outside was stretching around the corner and there was no way Third Base would hold that many people.
It’s been nearly five years and in that time my love and respect for DMZ has only grown stronger. As a label they are for me one of the most consistent in the quality of their output, making them as fundamental to the sound and history of the music as Hyperdub, Tempa or Hotflush. As Mala and Loefah have both said in interviews, DMZ is a sound. It’s not dubstep, it’s the DMZ sound. It may be a part of dubsptep, but only as much as Hyperdub is or Tempa or Hotflush, to keep the comparisons with what I see as the other 3 key labels in the history and evolution of the music.
As a sound I never stop marveling at just how powerful the productions of these three individuals have been and continue to be. From Mala’s incredibly addictive percussive experiments to Loefah’s minimal sub assaults and Coki’s wobble experiments. These guys are responsible for creating, willingly or not, templates for the sound which have become standards. What’s more remarkable though is how they’ve steered clear of the pitfalls others so willingly fell into. They have always stayed true to their craft and their love of the music, and that’s not only visible in the productions, and their longevity (some of the tracks in this mix are 6 or more years old now), but also in their bi-monthly dances.
Going to a DMZ dance is something anyone who has ever felt something for their music should experience at least once if they can. I remember shortly after, and before, the dances became popular following the Mary Ann Hobbs special on BBC Radio 1 people would come to London from all over the world, literally, to witness the DMZ experience. The atmosphere, the people, the music all combined for some of the most intense and memorable live experiences I’ve ever had. When I left London for two years to go to Japan the one thing I always wanted to return for and missed the most were the DMZ dances.
All of which is a long winded way to explain that this mix is not only a present to a good friend of mine but also a way for me to say thank you to Mala, Loefah and Coki for their gift of music and the inspiration they have provided me in the last five years. Even if the label and dances were to stop tomorrow they would never be forgotten and will always live in my heart as some of the most important moments in my musical life. I spoke about this in more detail in my Red Bull Soundclash review, but one thing I realised after the clash is that to me DMZ, and their sound, are the musical epiphany equivalent to the jungle, hardcore and the early rave days of many of my British friends. I never grew up with rave and its offshoots, living in the south of France I was never exposed to that until I was 16/17 and moved to the UK. And while jungle and the post-rave mutations have been an important part of my musical make up, they haven’t had the same impact that DMZ, Hyperdub and others have had on me as a young man living in London who saw and witnessed the sound evolve, grow and become worldwide. I have a connection with this sound that is spiritual and goes incredibly deep. Like with rave music, I never knew about sound system culture until I was older and DMZ were key in helping me rediscover that culture and fall in love with it all over again.
Back to the point. You can download the mix below, or stream it, as well as find a complete tracklist. As I said before this is a best of Digital Mystikz (aka Mala and Coki) and Loefah productions – all of which are out, though most of the earlier ones are out of print and not all available digitally. All tracks mixed, mashed and dubbed in Ableton.
There are so many unreleased and lost dubs from these guys as well, many of which are for me incredible tunes (Mala’s Mountain Of Dread March, Eyez, Pop Pop Epic, Unexpected, Coki’s Lucifer, Loefah’s Boiler Suit and so many more) that I hope they one day see a release. In the meantime you should check out this amazing Joe Nice mix from the summer of 09 which includes a Mala only selection of all unreleased dubs. There are a few other mixes floating around with many of these lost dubs on there, so if you want more get hunting.
That’s it, all that’s left for me to say is enjoy and I hope you find as much inspiration in the music as I have over the last five years. And if you’re in London or Leeds when DMZ is in town be sure to come and meditate on bass weight – it’ll change your life.
 
Tracklist:
Mala – Changes (Deep Medi 004)
Digital Mystikz – Mawo Dub (BAM 004)
Digital Mystikz – Lost City (DMZ 002)
Coki – The Sign (BAM 009)
Loefah – Horror Show (DMZ 002)
Coki – Officer (DMZ 004)
Mala – Learn (DMZ 012)
Digital Mystikz – Ancient Memories (DMZ 008)
Digital Mystikz – Chainba (DMZ 001)
Loefah – Root (DMZ 005)
Search & Destroy – Candyfloss (Loefah remix) (Hotflush)
Digital Mystikz – Haunted (DMZ 008)
Digital Mystikz – Thief in Da Night (Soul Jazz)
Mala – Alicia (White Label)
Digital Mystikz – Earth a Run Red (Soul Jazz)
Loefah – Disko Rekah (Deep Medi 003)
Digital Mystikz – Molten (Tectonic)
Mala – Shake Up Your Demons (Disfigured Dubs)
Mala – Level Nine (Hyperdub)
Digital Mystikz – Anti War Dub (DMZ 008)
Coki – Bloodthirst (FREQ 001)
Loefah – Rufage (DMZ 009)
Coki – All Of A Sudden (Deep Medi 003)
Mala – Miracles (Deep Medi 012)
Digital Mystikz – Neverland (DMZ 005)
Mala – Blue Notez (DMZ 010)
Coki – Spongebob (DMZ 013)
Coki – Walkin With Jah (Soul Jazz)
Digital Mystikz – Twisup (DMZ 001)
Coki – Triple Six (DMZ 014)
Digital Mystikz – Ugly (BAM 004)
Mala – New Life Baby Paris (Deep Medi 012)
Mala – Lean Forward (DMZ 012)
Coki – Goblin (Disfigured Dubz)
Mala – In Luv (White Label)
Mala – Forgive (Deep Medi 004)
Johnny Clark vs Mala – Sinners (Disfigured Dubz)
Mala – Bury Da Bwoy (DMZ 011)
Loefah – Mud (DMZ 009)
Coki ft. Mavado – Gangsta for life (White Label)
Loefah – Jungle Infiltrator (BAM 006)
Digital Mystikz – Conference (Soul Jazz)
Loefah – System (Tectonic)
Digital Mystikz – Misty Winter (Soul Jazz)
Coki – Shattered (Tempa)
Loefah – It’s Yours (Ringo)
Coki – Burning (White Label)

Stephen Fry on Social Media



Not the biggest fan of Mr. Fry - but he sure talks a LOT of sense here...

HA!

World Cup replica made of cocaine found in Colombia

Smoking # 73

Image and video hosting by TinyPic