Wednesday, 1 September 2010

Double HA!

 Ironic as this was tweeted by M.I.A. whose self owned record company was particularly heavy handed with its DMCA notices when her new album leaked recently!

HA!

(Thanx Stan!)

♪♫ The Duke & The King - Shaky

Frightening!

Sarah Palin the Sound and the Fury

How to grow a Rainbow Rose

Yoko Ono teams up with Gaga, Iggy Pop, RZA for LA dates

Under the banner “We Are The Plastic Ono Band”, Yoko Ono joined forces with the likes of Eric Clapton, Paul Simon, and members of Sonic Youth for a special one-off performance in Brooklyn last February. This coming October, Ono will reprise her massive concert for two dates in Los Angeles, and the guest talent will be equally brilliant.
Set to perform at the Oprheum in Los Angeles on October 1st and 2nd, Ono will backed by Yuka Honda and Cornelius (Keigo Oyamada, Shimmy Hirotaka Shimizu and Yuko Araki), with son Sean Lennon handling musical direction. She’ll also welcome a number of special guests: Iggy Pop, Lady Gaga, Mike Watt, Wilco’s Nels Cline, and Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore and Kim Gordon are each confirmed for one date, while Wu-Tang Clan’s RZA, Perry Farrell, Carrie Fisher, Vincent Gallo, Haruomi Hosono, tUnE-yArDs, and Harper Simon will appear at both performances. You can find a full list of who plays when below.
Tickets for both dates are currently on sale and prizes range from $60.00 – $150.00. Click here for more info.
10/01:
Iggy Pop
RZA
Perry Farrell
Nels Cline
Carrie Fisher
Vincent Gallo
Haruomi Hosono
Harper Simon
Tune-Yards
10/02:
Lady Gaga
Mike Watt
Kim Gordon
Thurston Moore
The RZA
Perry Farrell
Carrie Fisher
Vincent Gallo
Haruomi Hosono
Harper Simon
Tune-Yards

SBTRKT - WaiTiNG GaME

   

Square Grouper (Trailer)

Glenn Beck has apparently booked the largest venue in Anchorage on Sept 11 (why is that date familiar? Must be divine providence at work again...) 
Kick off of Beck-Palin campaign?

Petah Tikvah city hall won't let Ethiopian kids transfer out of elementary school


Dozens of parents of Ethiopian origin have been blocked by the Petah Tikva municipality from moving their children from the majority-Ethiopian religious Ner Etzion elementary school to other schools in the city.
Most of the requests were based on the parents' desire not to have their children studying in a school whose student population was nearly exclusively Ethiopian. The municipality, backed by the Education Ministry, rejected most of the requests, saying that it could not force the other religious schools, private and public, to accept a large group of Ethiopian students.
"The arrangement with the schools is based on the assumption that each religious school takes only a small group of Ethiopian students. Taking several dozen such children is out of the question," a source with close knowledge of the Petah Tikva education system told Haaretz.
Of the 290 students expected to attend Ner Etzion this year, only one, first-grader Ran Keinan, is not of Ethiopian origin. The process by which the Ethiopian students became the school's majority took place over a period of years, and is due to the large number of Ethiopian families in the underprivileged neighborhoods for whom this is their default school, and partly because the parents not of Ethiopian background removed their children from the school.
While some moved their children to independent Orthodox schools (most of them associated with Shas), while others moved their children to other state-religious schools, with the approval of the municipality.
Another source said that Ner Etzion provided a convenient solution for everyone involved - everyone, that is, except the parents who wanted to move their children to a different school. "The existence of a school that contains nearly 300 children of Ethiopian background means other schools don't need to take them," the source said.
Young Ran Keinan comes to the school from a "Shuvu" network kindergarden, where most children are from families with their origins in the former Soviet Union. "Ran had a great time in the kindergarten, and there's no reason why he shouldn't get along fine in Ner Etzion, even if he is the only 'white' kid in the school," said Ran's father, Rabbi Amiel Keinan. He said that the mass exodus of veteran Israelis from the increasingly Ethiopian-majority school was "utterly shameful. It's a phenomenon that disgusts me."
Rabbi Keinan teaches in a yeshiva in Petah Tikva, which includes students with special needs. "It's all about values," he says. "Integration and equality are very important in our yeshiva, so I thought, why not do the same at home. In the class I teach in the yeshiva there are recent immigrants from Ethiopia, France and the United States, as well as native Israelis. And it's fine. Why can't the same be happening in first grade? This was the background for my decision to register Ran at Ner Etzion."
Sources in the municipality stressed to Haaretz that the students at Nir Etzion "get special assistance not enjoyed by any other schools. They get longer schooldays, up to 4 P.M., a hot meal and hundreds of hours of extra classes [schoolwide] each week. Students who didn't read Hebrew a year ago have acquired the language, test results are excellent, and graduates are accepted into the best yeshivas."
One municipality source said: "With all due respect to the parents, in other schools these kids wouldn't get the same attention." The sources also stressed that all transfer requests to secular schools were confirmed.
The Education Ministry said in a statement that student registration falls under the responsibility of the local authority, but decisions made at the local authority level can be appealed to the district director at the ministry. "No appeals hav been received so far," the ministry said, noting it ran support programs in schools with high percentages of recent immigrants.
Children in the largely Ethiopian neighborhood were divided on the issue, with some saying they'd like to have some "white" friends and other saying caucasian Israelis shunned them at school and called them "Negroes."
Or Kashti @'Haaretz'

Podcast: Jay Rosen on what WikiLeals means for the media

Artists Make DIY Bike Lane Along Helsinki Thoroughfare

Hämeentie is the longest street in Helsinki, Finland, and one of the city's main thoroughfares. It has four lanes of traffic, but no space whatsoever for cyclists. There's no bike lane between the buses and the sidewalk.
To create their own, the Finnish collective Länsiväylä poured paint along one section of the street and then invited a group of cyclists to ride through it at midnight, leaving a visible trace of where bikes would ride if there were space, and creating a colorful new boundary.
Law-and-order types, worry not: The paint they used washes away with water. Unfortunately, that means that Hämeentie won't really have a permanent new bike lane. At least not yet: The huge turnout might make city planners take notice.
Andrew Price @'GOOD'

Shameful News Industry Willing To Sacrifice Wikileaks To Get Shield Law