Sunday, 13 February 2011

Good morning revolution: A to do list

Activists Push for Heroin Help in UN Russia Visit

The London-based International Harm Reduction Association (IHRA) and 16 HIV rights groups are urging the UN's rights mission to lobby Russia to legalize methadone in order to fight HIV/AIDS and heroin addiction. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay is scheduled next week to meet Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, government officials and 60 rights campaigners during a five-day visit to Moscow.
Russia, home to 1 million HIV-positive people, has one of the fastest growing HIV/AIDS epidemics in the world, according to the World Health Organization. The epidemic is being fueled by as many as 3 million heroin addicts, many of whom use dirty needles, local health groups say. However, Russia refuses to support harm reduction programs such as needle exchanges, or to legalize methadone to treat heroin addicts, which WHO deems essential in fighting the epidemic.
According to Russia's Health Ministry, methadone's effectiveness is unproven. Russia's chief medical official, Gennady Onishchenko, has referred to it as "just another narcotic."
"This is a national health crisis and a human rights priority in Russia that must be raised at the highest levels," said Damon Barrett, an IHRA senior analyst. "The fact that the government's policy is so incomprehensible is what makes it so frustrating."
HIV-positive Russian activist Irina Teplinskaya will meet with Pillay during her visit, according to the Andrey Rylkov Foundation for which Teplinskaya volunteers. Injection drug users with HIV are less likely to receive antiretroviral therapy, she said. "Because there is no opioid substitution therapy in Russia, drug-dependent people are not able to receive treatment for HIV," said Teplinskaya, who is also a heroin user.
@'The Body'

Impulsive Cross-Dressing in Parkinson's Disease Treated With Ropinerole

Happy Birthday Henry!

Poster by Glen E. Friedman & Shepard Fairey
HERE

Mysterious Voynich manuscript dates back to the 15th century

African Head Charge - Voodoo of the Godsent (3 track preview)

   

The Roots – Jam (ft. Marcus Miller, Christian Scott & more) @ Highline Ballroom, NYC 6-21-10


The Roots jumped into an amazing 20 minute improvised jam with jazz icons Marcus Miller on bass and Christian Scott on trumpet. Joining them were other talented musicians including Teodross Avery, Jason Moran, Maurice Brown, and of course, the Roots Crew

DOWNLOAD
(left click to play, right click to download)

via All The Way Live

Worship (for Son#2!)

Saturday, 12 February 2011

Neil Gaiman on Piracy

Via

♪♫ PJ Harvey - Big Exit (Live Jools Holland 2001)

The tyrant has gone. Now the real struggle begins for Egypt

I'm bored w/ revolution...

Organized Crime: The World's Largest Social Network

Anatomy of a Dictatorship: Hosni Mubarak

History's first verdict on Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was rendered late Tuesday night, Feb. 1, when thousands of protesters forced the autocrat to vow not to run for office again. The president, they chanted, had to go. On Friday, Feb. 11, after some prevarication, Mubarak appeared to have finally taken the point.
From police brutality to persecution of minorities, from the arrests of journalists to the suppression of political dissent, Mubarak's Egypt has been a textbook police state. For 30 years, anger and frustration brewed among his subjects, bottled up and sealed with fear.
Over the past three decades, Mubarak did not personally torture alleged criminals or beat protesters in the street. But as Joe Stork, deputy director of Human Rights Watch's Middle East and North Africa division, told me from Cairo, Mubarak's repression was simply "delegated to the Ministry of Interior and various security services. At the end of the day, he's the final address for all this." As we bid farewell to a dictator, here's a look back at his ugly history of repression and cruelty...
@'FP'

Chomp FM

Anonymous Owns HBGary - Andrew Gavin's Data Mining Network - Cyberspace Post-Anonymous

HERE