Tuesday, 15 March 2011

Here's the Truth, where's the Justice


Here's the truth, where's the Justice, is a short film about how the Hillsborough football disaster on April 15th 1989 links two people together. Anne Williams and John Herbert.
Made by M3D 3rd year Media group:
Terry Rytz
Jennifer Robinson
Annemarie Mcalister
Declan Mcgettigan

Secret Fears of the Super-Rich

Australian PM Julia Gillard on Q&A answering Julian Assange last night


ABC lined up Assange for Gillard — but denies ambush

David House on Bradley Manning

'I Have Watched My Friend Degrade over Time'

A boy walks through the rubble of Rikuzentakata in northern Japan (Picture: Reuters)
kode nine
Don;t get it twisted. I don't hate genres. My genre is called bubble'n'squeak, and your genre is shit.
The front page of the People’s Daily newspaper, March 14, 2011
The front page of the People’s Daily newspaper, March 14, 2010

People’s Daily: Two Years, Two Editions, One Front Page?

Jamie Woon - Lady Luck (Hudson Mohawke's Schmink Wolf Re-fix)

Via

How much of Japan's suffering can people comprehend?

The American author Annie Dillard summed up well the difficulty of empathising with hordes of other people. "There are 1,198,500,000 people alive now in China," she wrote. "To get a feel for what this means, simply take yourself – in all your singularity, importance, complexity, and love – and multiply by 1,198,500,000. See? Nothing to it."
I came across that honest, wise remark this weekend, while watching the footage from Japan. The two did not sit well with each other. When a big disaster strikes, either here or abroad, politicians and journalists alike work on the basis that the greater the misery, the more they, and we, should care. David Cameron was working to that logic when he said yesterday that "our thoughts are with the Japanese people". And after reading the reports of 10,000-plus deaths and nuclear warnings, or seeing the photos of submerged towns and stranded survivors, who could disagree?
Yet the uncomfortable truth is that the academic research suggests Dillard is right. However horrifying the pictures, however moving the reports, there's a limit to how much suffering people can take on board – and it's extremely low.
The bigger the numbers of fatalities and injuries, the harder it is for audiences to comprehend them. This law of diminishing returns doesn't just apply to natural disasters, but to other varieties of misery – from oil spills to famines and genocides.
"Psychic numbing" is how the University of Oregon psychologist Paul Slovic refers to this. To illustrate what he means, he sometimes sketches two graphs. The first shows how we might believe we value human lives, with the line going straight up along a diagonal: the more lives at stake, the more attention we pay. The second shows the reality, as Slovic sees it. Here the line starts off very high, but then drops all the way down: we get very worked up when one or two lives are at stake, but then the numbers begin to blur and we tune out.
The result is that humans will often throw money at one sad story – even when it doesn't involve a human. Researchers sometimes quote the story of how more than $48,000 was raised in 2002 to save a dog stranded on a ship adrift near Hawaii. Charities know this impulse too, which is why they often put a single child on their envelopes and posters...
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Aditya Chakrabortty @'The Guardian'

Will Congress Push Google To Tweak Its Algorithm To Punish Pirate Sites?

Judging by today’s hearings, some members of Congress are willing to consider radical measures to rid the internet of “rogue” websites accused of piracy. Among them: getting search engines like Google (NSDQ: GOOG) to tweak their search results, and ordering ISPs to block certain websites from U.S. viewers altogether. Until several months ago, Congress had never even discussed taking steps like these. The fact that they are now on the table is probably a function of several factors, including aggressive lobbying by the entertainment industry and a proliferation of illegal content online.
Congress first started considering the idea of allowing federal law enforcement to block websites in September, when Sen. Patrick Leahy introduced the controversial COICA bill in the last Congress. Now the House of Representatives is considering a similar proposal, although no bill has yet been introduced...
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Joe Mullin @'paidContent'
Agency says stored nuclear fuel burned in Japan
Guardian World
cable: Japan govt "obscuring costs and problems" in nuclear industry

Japanese Stocks Plunge More Than 13% on Worries Over Radiation

Why is there no looting in Japan?

Japan Faces Prospect of Nuclear Catastrophe as Employees Leave Plant