Sunday, 20 March 2011

Erosie VS Graphic Surgery

Radiation dose chart

(Click to enlarge)

Damon Albarn Prepares New Elizabethan Opera

Anyone who still thought that former Blur frontman Damon Albarn was just a showboating mockney popinjay - and bumptious to boot - is probably going to have to give in to the overwhelming body of evidence to the contrary, if not now, then soon.
Just look at his workload in the past 10 years: the final Blur album, three Gorillaz albums, a solo album of home demos, countless excursions across Africa, bringing the best talent back to perform with UK musicians in his Africa Express concerts, an opera based on the Chinese legends of a monkey god, a triumphant Blur reunion tour and Glastonbury headline slot, a Blur 7" single, a Gorillaz tour and Glastonbury headline slot, a fourth Gorillaz album (coming next month) and now another entire opera.
In the same space of time, Oasis have effectively made and toured four albums, and then split up, and then reformed without Noel. On, and Liam went to see the Spongebob Squarepants movie.
Damon's new opera, Doctor Dee, is set to premiere in June, at Manchester's International Festival, before moving down to London's Coliseum next year, as part of the city's Cultural Olympiad.
The production is based on the life of John Dee, who was Queen Elizabeth I's scientific advisor, specializing in medicine, and his reputation as an alchemist, astrologer, and spy. Which makes it a kind of cross between Harry Potter and James Bond, in ruffs, and set to music. Amazing.
Having originally started the project with comic book sage Alan Moore (he wrote, among other things, Watchmen, From Hell and V for Vendetta), Damon went on to finish it alone, and plans to take a major role in the production too. It will be directed by Rufus Norris, the Tony-nominated director who revived Don Giovanni for the English National Opera last year, and brought Les Liaisons Dangereuses to Broadway in 2008.
Manchester International Festival director Alex Poots told BBC News: "It will be a big, spectacular show. I know that Damon's passionate about it and he's already written some incredibly beautiful songs, some anthemic songs."
And that's on top of the beautiful and anthemic songs he wrote when he was 'just' a pop star.
@'BBC America'

Banned plants

What's growing in your garden? The (Australian) Federal Government wants to expand the list of prohibited plants listed in the Drug Act to include among others all Angel's Trumpets, many common cacti and many native and exotic wattles. Is this necessary to fight drug trafficking and manufacture? Or will these laws make criminals out of nurseries, gardeners and botanic collectors?
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DISCUSSION PAPER (Implementation of model schedules for Commonwealth serious drug offences)

Police support for protesters is growing as government cuts start to bite

A deepening antipathy for the government's public spending cuts has been revealed as the head of the police union said officers patrolling next weekend's demonstrations against austerity measures would have "a lot of sympathy" with the protesters.
Emphasising the growing opposition to the speed and breadth of the cuts programme, the chairman of the Police Federation, Paul McKeever, said that officers on duty at Saturday's March for an Alternative in central London would be feeling a sense of solidarity as they policed the event, which is being organised by the Trades Union Congress (TUC).
"The great irony is that officers policing marches like the TUC are actually facing greater detriment than many of those protesting against the cuts," said McKeever, whose union represents 140,000 rank-and-file police officers.
"We're not members of the TUC and have to be careful about having too close an association, though there will be a lot of sympathy towards those marching."
The march, due to be held in London's Hyde Park, looks set to be the largest rally to date against the coalition government's policies, with organisers hoping for more than 100,000 people to attend.
Along with the unions and other campaigning bodies, a plethora of other protest groups has sprung up as the strength of feeling grows against a package of issues as diverse as tuition fee rises, the scrapping of the education maintenance allowance, bankers' bonuses, tax evasion by big business, library closures and arts and public spending cuts.
One peace activist, and veteran of the anti-war marches in 2003, told the Observer: "We will get a lot of first-time protesters on Saturday because people are getting more confident that protest is for them. It's not for a bunch of anarchists, it's families, students, old people, maybe now even the odd police officer, who don't want to put up with cuts and unfairness in Britain any more."
Groups are using technology and social media to share expertise and information as well as co-ordinate and manage direct action more efficiently. The day is expected to see traditional protests take place at the same time, with sit-ins at high street shops and banks and occupations of public buildings and universities.
In the past five months, the protest group UK Uncut has staged a steady campaign of sit-ins against tax dodging that have forced the temporary closure of branches of Barclays, Vodaphone, Boots, British Home Stores and Topshop up and down the country.
"26 March is going to be a really important day," said Anna Walker of UK Uncut. "We had the student protests and we have seen the growth of UK Uncut, but this is the first time we are going to have people from all over the UK together whose lives are being turned upside down by these cuts. It is going to be the start of something powerful."
Scotland Yard has already suggested that "troublemakers" could attempt to hijack the protest. The Met was criticised for its tactics at student tuition fee protests last year, when dozens of people were arrested during violent outbreaks. This time, members the of human rights organisation Liberty will act as independent observers.
McKeever suggested that, far from being hostile to the protesters, many police officers would share the frustrations of the day. He said that a massive march of police officers themselves could not be ruled out if the home secretary, Theresa May, pushes forward with government plans to cut back on police pay and perks.
More than 20,000 police officers marched through London in 2008 in protest about their pay, the biggest demonstration in police history.
"We had 23,000 officers on the streets on a point of principle. Imagine how many might be involved with the level of feeling at the moment. Nothing is ruled out," said McKeever.
He also warned that attempts by the government to force through changes in pay and conditions might lead to legal action. "We are exploring every avenue to make sure officers are treated fairly.
"The first duty of any government is the protection of its citizens. Yet it is being vindictive against a police service it seems to hold in very low regard.
"Mervyn King has said that it's not those in the public sector who are to blame for the crisis, but it doesn't feel like that in the police service."
He added: "They don't seem to be so accusatory towards those where the blame actually lies. There seems to be a dislike of policing with this present government – the so-called party of law and order is dead, it's buried, it's gone."
Mark Townsend and Tracy McVeigh @'The Guardian'
(GB2011)

U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Resigns Following WikiLeak Flap

Blame the Defense Department for WikiLeaks

Japan’s Nuclear Disaster Caps Decades of Faked Safety Reports, Accidents

The unfolding disaster at the Fukushima nuclear plant follows decades of falsified safety reports, fatal accidents and underestimated earthquake risk in Japan’s atomic power industry.
The destruction caused by last week’s 9.0 earthquake and tsunami comes less than four years after a 6.8 quake shut the world’s biggest atomic plant, also run by Tokyo Electric Power Co. In 2002 and 2007, revelations the utility had faked repair records forced the resignation of the company’s chairman and president, and a three-week shutdown of all 17 of its reactors.
With almost no oil or gas reserves of its own, nuclear power has been a national priority for Japan since the end of World War II, a conflict the country fought partly to secure oil supplies. Japan has 54 operating nuclear reactors -- more than any other country except the U.S. and France -- to power its industries, pitting economic demands against safety concerns in the world’s most earthquake-prone country.
Nuclear engineers and academics who have worked in Japan’s atomic power industry spoke in interviews of a history of accidents, faked reports and inaction by a succession of Liberal Democratic Party governments that ran Japan for nearly all of the postwar period.
Katsuhiko Ishibashi, a seismology professor at Kobe University, has said Japan’s history of nuclear accidents stems from an overconfidence in plant engineering. In 2006, he resigned from a government panel on reactor safety, saying the review process was rigged and “unscientific.”
Nuclear Earthquake
In an interview in 2007 after Tokyo Electric’s Kashiwazaki nuclear plant was struck by an earthquake, Ishibashi said fundamental improvements were needed in engineering standards for atomic power stations, without which Japan could suffer a catastrophic disaster.
“We didn’t learn anything,” Ishibashi said in a phone interview this week. “Nuclear power is national policy and there’s a real reluctance to scrutinize it.”
To be sure, Japan’s record isn’t the worst. The International Atomic Energy Agency rates nuclear accidents on a scale of zero to seven, with Chernobyl in the former Soviet Union rated seven, the most dangerous. Fukushima, where the steel vessels at the heart of the reactors have so far not ruptured, is currently a class five, the same category as the 1979 partial reactor meltdown at Three Mile Island in the U.S...
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Jason Clenfield @'Bloomberg'

Julian Assange's Lawyer - Rob Stary slams the Australian Government

Signalling dissent

With a tin can, some copper wire and a few dollars’ worth of nuts, bolts and other hardware, a do-it-yourselfer can build a makeshift directional antenna. A mobile phone, souped-up with such an antenna, can talk to a network tower that is dozens of kilometres beyond its normal range (about 5km, or 3 miles). As Gregory Rehm, the author of an online assembly guide for such things, puts it, homemade antennae are “as cool as the other side of the pillow on a hot night”. Of late, however, such antennae have proved much more than simply cool.
According to Jeff Moss, a communications adviser to America’s Department of Homeland Security, their existence has recently been valuable to the operation of several groups of revolutionaries in Egypt, Libya and elsewhere. To get round government shutdowns of internet and mobile-phone networks, resourceful dissidents have used such makeshift antennae to link their computers and handsets to more orthodox transmission equipment in neighbouring countries.
Technologies that transmit data under the noses of repressive authorities in this way are spreading like wildfire among pro-democracy groups, says Mr Moss. For example, after Egypt switched off its internet in January some activists brought laptops to places like Tahrir Square in Cairo to collect, via short-range wireless links, demonstrators’ video recordings and other electronic messages. These activists then broadcast the material to the outside world using range-extending antennae...
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Greg Mitchell
Bombing Libya on 8th anniversary of Iraq war: From Shock and Awe to Shock and Aw, Shit.

Europe Pressure, Arab Support Helped Turn U.S.

Glance of assets massing for Libya military action

Expert: Safe injection site improves 'public order' (Video)

Japan Is In Our Hearts

Via
(Thanx Audiozobe!)