Sunday, 9 October 2011

Camila Vallejo – Latin America's 23-year-old new revolutionary folk hero

Netherlands to classify high-potency cannabis as hard drug

Pre-rolled joints at a coffee shop in Amsterdam. The Dutch government plans to classify high-potency cannabis alongside hard drugs. Photograph: Peter Dejong/AP
The Dutch government has said it will move to classify high-potency cannabis alongside hard drugs such as cocaine and ecstasy, the latest step in the country's ongoing reversal of its liberal policies.
The decision means most of the cannabis now sold in Dutch coffee shops would have to be replaced by milder variants. But sceptics said the move would be difficult to enforce, and that it could simply lead many users to smoke more of the less potent weed.
Possession of cannabis is technically illegal in the Netherlands, but police do not prosecute people for possession of small amounts, and it is sold openly in designated cafes. Growers are routinely prosecuted if caught.
Maxime Verhagen, the economic affairs minister, said cannabis containing more than 15% of its main active chemical, THC, is so much stronger than what was common a generation ago that it should be considered a different drug entirely.
The high potency cannabis has "played a role in increasing public health damage", he said at a press conference in The Hague.
The cabinet has not said when it will begin enforcing the rule.
Jeffrey Parsons, a psychologist at Hunter College in New York, who studies addiction, said the policy may not have the benefits the government is hoping for.
"If it encourages smoking an increased amount of low-concentration THC weed, it is likely to actually cause more harm than good," he said, citing the potential lung damage and cancer-causing effects of extra inhalation.
The Dutch justice ministry said it was up to cafes to regulate their own products and police will seize random samples for testing.
But Gerrit-Jan ten Bloomendal, spokesman for the Platform of Cannabis Businesses in the Netherlands, said implementing the plan would be difficult "if not impossible".
"How are we going to know whether a given batch exceeds 15% THC? For that matter, how would health inspectors know?" he said. He predicted a black market will develop for highly potent cannabis.
The ongoing Dutch crackdown on cannabis is part of a decade-long rethink of liberalism in general that has seen a third of the windows in Amsterdam's red light district closed and led the Netherlands to adopt some of the toughest immigration rules in Europe.
The number of licensed coffee houses has been reduced, and earlier this year the government announced plans to ban tourists from buying cannabis. That has been resisted by the city of Amsterdam, where the cafes selling cannabis are a major tourist draw.
@'The Guardian'

Julian Assange at Stop The War Rally London 8/10/11


Stop the War Coalition demo in London marks 10th anniversary of Afghan war


Bill Maher 
Is there anything stupider in the whole world than newspaper cartoons of recently dead famous people meeting god in heaven?

Epilepsy as a door between worlds

Polly Borland’s Indescribably Creepy 'Smudge' Photographs




Who’d have thought that a stocking could make a photo look so singularly creepy? London-based photographer Polly Borland’s ongoing series Smudge employs a series of strange costumes and incongruous props to distort the bodies of its subjects, creating images that are both evocative and disconcerting. They’re all the more disturbing as you never see the faces of the people you’re looking at — they’re hidden behind wigs or make-up smeared stockings or Clockwork Orange-style masks. There’s definitely something sexual about the images, but crucially, they’re never explicit — you get the sense that some strange fetish is being implied or evoked, but you’re never quite sure what it is, and maybe that’s for the best. Borland’s work is well known in her native Australia and her adopted home of London, and the first US showing of the photos from Smudge is happening now at Paul Kasmin gallery in NYC. Click through to see some of the images on show.

♪♫ Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds - AKA...What A Life

♪♫ The Flaming Lips - The Spark That Bled (Hollywood Forever Cemetary 6-14-11)

Download 'The Soft Bulletin' Live 5/19/11 in Atlanta (Videos) HERE.
Via

German General Says NATO Mission Has 'Failed'

Wall Street protesters have little faith in US democracy

Discontent with the state of the US economy has drawn many protesters out to demonstrations in major cities in the United States.
The "Occupy Wall Street" movement that started in New York on September 17 has spread to over 90 other US cities.
As the 24-hour encampment continued in New York City on Friday, there were demonstrations around the country, including in Minneapolis, Minnesota; Chicago, Illinois; Austin and Houston, Texas; Atlanta, Georgia; and Washington DC.
Some Republican politicians are criticising the movement.
Republican House Majority leader Eric Cantor called the protesters "growing mobs".
But the protesters are not focused on the US' traditional political system.
"We need to dictate the policy up, not policy being dictated down," Jesse LaGreca, a protester on Wall Street, told Al Jazeera.
"We will be the leaders, and if there's any politicianss who wanna support us in passing policies that we support, then that's the best we to about gaining our support."
Katie Davison, another Wall Street protester, agreed.
"A candidate is sort of the old way of doing things," she told Al Jazeera. "We're looking for a new way of doing things that is more participatory and more meaningful. What that looks like we're still figuring out."
Anthropoligist, writer and protest organiser David Graeber, told Al Jazeera why he thinks young people in the US have reached an especially frustrating point.
In making a demand, you're essentially recognising the authority of the people who are going to carry it out," he said.
"Our message is that the system that we have is broken. It doesn't work. People aren't even discussing the real problems Americans face."

De La Soul Is Dead: Original Samples

De La Soul Is Dead was De La’s second album, released in 1991.  Production, just as their first LP, is credited to Prince Paul.  We got most of the samples in this set… only missing a few, indicated below. We’ve also included some bonus samples to a couple of ”A Roller Skating Jam Named Saturdays” remixes.
Download
Xeni Jardin
Shorter CNN just now: is bad cause they're taking up space used by jugglers, street performers, ergo OWS takes away jobs.

Matt Taibbi on SEC covering up Wall Street crimes (Countdown with Keith Olbermann)

The Sharpest Beach Bums You’ll Ever Meet

This IS Class War

M.ElGohary