Wednesday, 12 October 2011

Australia parliament passes divisive carbon tax

Australia's lower house of parliament has narrowly passed a bill for a controversial carbon tax.
The legislation would force about 500 of the biggest polluters to pay for each tonne of carbon dioxide they emit.
The tax is central to the government's strategy to combat climate change, but the opposition says it will cause job losses and raise the cost of living.
Australia is the world's largest coal exporter and is one of the biggest per capita greenhouse gas emitters.
"Today is a significant day for Australians and the Australians of the future who want to see a better environment," Prime Minister Julia Gillard said before the vote.
After her Clean Energy Bill 2011 was passed with 74 votes for and 72 against, she hugged colleagues and waved to supporters in the public galleries.
Protests
The victory is an important one for the prime minister, whose popularity with voters in opinion polls has been declining against the opposition.
The bill is unpopular with many Australians. Thousands of people have protested against it, accusing Ms Gillard of lying before last year's election.
Ms Gillard made a pledge during last year's federal election not to introduce a carbon tax.
The proposed tax was drawn up after Ms Gillard failed to win an overall majority in parliament at the polls and had to rely on the support of the Australian Greens.
The carbon tax and a companion bill for A$300m ($298m; £191m) in assistance for the Australian steel industry are expected to pass in the senate with the assistance of the Greens next month.
Australia's 500 heaviest polluters will pay A$23 for each tonne of carbon emissions, and households will be compensated through tax cuts or welfare increases for any increased costs.
It will be introduced on 1 July next year, and will then evolve into an emissions trading scheme three years later.
The conservative opposition leader, Tony Abbott, has promised to ditch the tax if he wins office.
@'BBC' 

Carbon protesters interrupt Question Time


FACT mix 290: Appleblim

Tracklist:
Gas – Zauberberg track 1 (Mille Plateaux)
David Sylvian – The Boy with the Gun (Virgin)
Tangerine Dream – White Eagle (Virgin)
Echo & The Bunnymen – Over the Wall (Peel Sessions)
Human League – The Black Hit of Space (Virgin)
Cocteau Twins – Blue Bell Knoll (4AD)
Model 500 – Pick up the Flow (Metroplex)
Loose Ends – Gonna Make You Mine (Ten Records)
Touch – Without You (bassapella) (Garage Trax)
Hanson & Davis – Tonight (Fresh Records)
52nd Street – Cool as Ice (Factory)
Aphex Twin – a weird looking trivial pursuit style wedge thing (Selected Ambient Works 2, Warp)
Black Light Smoke – Decisions feat. Suavecito – Scissor & Thread
Behling & Simpson – Where the Oh’s (Applepips)
Wedge & Behling – Stairwell (unreleased)
October & Borai – Sticky Fingers (BRSTL 001)
Behling & Simpson – Tape Hiss – (unreleased)
Phat Chex – Git da Funk (unreleased)
Crazy P – Changes (20:20 Vision)
Paul Woolford – Pursuit (Halo Cyan)
Axel Boman – Esteban Peligro (Al Tourettes & Appleblim mix) (Glass Table)

Herman Cain's 9/9/9 Plan Raises Taxes on the Poor

Who is Herman Cain's Brain?

The Fight for 'Real Democracy' at the Heart of Occupy Wall Street

Demonstrations under the banner of Occupy Wall Street resonate with so many people not only because they give voice to a widespread sense of economic injustice but also, and perhaps more important, because they express political grievances and aspirations. As protests have spread from Lower Manhattan to cities and towns across the country, they have made clear that indignation against corporate greed and economic inequality is real and deep. But at least equally important is the protest against the lack -- or failure -- of political representation. It is not so much a question of whether this or that politician, or this or that party, is ineffective or corrupt (although that, too, is true) but whether the representational political system more generally is inadequate. This protest movement could, and perhaps must, transform into a genuine, democratic constituent process.
The political face of the Occupy Wall Street protests comes into view when we situate it alongside the other "encampments" of the past year. Together, they form an emerging cycle of struggles. In many cases, the lines of influence are explicit. Occupy Wall Street takes inspiration from the encampments of central squares in Spain, which began on May 15 and followed the occupation of Cairo's Tahrir Square earlier last spring. To this succession of demonstrations, one should add a series of parallel events, such as the extended protests at the Wisconsin statehouse, the occupation of Syntagma Square in Athens, and the Israeli tent encampments for economic justice. The context of these various protests are very different, of course, and they are not simply iterations of what happened elsewhere. Rather each of these movements has managed to translate a few common elements into their own situation.
In Tahrir Square, the political nature of the encampment and the fact that the protesters could not be represented in any sense by the current regime was obvious. The demand that "Mubarak must go" proved powerful enough to encompass all other issues. In the subsequent encampments of Madrid's Puerta del Sol and Barcelona's Plaça Catalunya, the critique of political representation was more complex. The Spanish protests brought together a wide array of social and economic complaints -- regarding debt, housing, and education, among others -- but their "indignation," which the Spanish press early on identified as their defining affect, was clearly directed at a political system incapable of addressing these issues. Against the pretense of democracy offered by the current representational system, the protesters posed as one of their central slogans, "Democracia real ya," or "Real democracy now."
Occupy Wall Street should be understood, then, as a further development or permutation of these political demands. One obvious and clear message of the protests, of course, is that the bankers and finance industries in no way represent us: What is good for Wall Street is certainly not good for the country (or the world). A more significant failure of representation, though, must be attributed to the politicians and political parties charged with representing the people's interests but in fact more clearly represent the banks and the creditors. Such a recognition leads to a seemingly naive, basic question: Is democracy not supposed to be the rule of the people over the polis -- that is, the entirety of social and economic life? Instead, it seems that politics has become subservient to economic and financial interests.
By insisting on the political nature of the Occupy Wall Street protests we do not mean to cast them merely in terms of the quarrels between Republicans and Democrats, or the fortunes of the Obama administration. If the movement does continue and grow, of course, it may force the White House or Congress to take new action, and it may even become a significant point of contention during the next presidential election cycle. But the Obama and the George W. Bush administrations are both authors of the bank bailouts; the lack of representation highlighted by the protests applies to both parties. In this context, the Spanish call for "real democracy now" sounds both urgent and challenging...
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Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri @'Foreign Affairs'

Time to Base Addictions Strategies on Evidence Not Dogma

When robots die: The existential challenges of human-robot interaction

Adriana Tapus has studied human-robot interaction (HRI) long enough to expect the unexpected.
"When you work with people, you have many, many surprises. You cannot know exactly what the human will do next and many things come up that you didn't expect," says Tapus, associate professor ENSTA-ParisTech, who builds assistive robotics architectures and investigates HRI in therapeutic environments.
Tapus tells of a patient recovering from a stroke who tried to cheat a therapeutic bot during a musical game designed to improve the rehabilitation process. There was no personal gain involved, says Tapus: beyond the satisfaction of outwitting the bot, that is.
"These are things that we couldn't imagine when we designed the system [...] Humans are unpredictable," says Tapus.
For example, young children interacting with the humanoid NAO bot -- a central figure in Tapus' current research -- often instinctively kiss the bot's head, says Tapus. And, if NAO's eyes turn red, the children ask researchers why the bot is upset.
But one elderly woman's relationship with Bandit (a humanoid bot developed by the University of South California's Interaction Lab) provides the most tantalising glimpse into the kind of small, human drama that could be played out hundreds of thousands of times in the future, if robots become more commonplace in our daily lives.
As part of a long-term study of the ways people and bots interact in therapeutic settings, Tapus had Bandit play a musical game with people suffering from dementia. The "Song Discovery" game (loosely based on the television game show "Name That Tune") was specially designed to help dementia patients maintain their attention levels...
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Emmet Cole @'Wired'

The 1% Needs to Keep Americans Demoralized

They Are the 1% - A Really Scary Follow Up

How the top 1 percent made its money in two charts

Why Corporate Elites Should Be Petrified of Occupy Wall Street

Occupy Wall Street Protest 1% New Yorkers Who Hoard Wealth

The Right’s ‘53 Percent’ Solution to Occupy Wall Street

In the last few days, the conservative movement has formed its response to Occupy Wall Street. The mere fact of conservative opposition isn’t very surprising — obviously, conservatives aren’t going to love a left-wing movement filled with counterculture types assailing the rich and big business. What’s more interesting is the nature of the conservative response. There is hardly any direct intellectual engagement or forceful restatement of pro-market principles. Instead what we see is a series of evasions.
For instance, David Brooks, in his column today, insists that the whole notion of contrasting the interests of the richest 1 percent against everybody else is simply irrelevant:
If there is a core theme to the Occupy Wall Street movement, it is that the virtuous 99 percent of society is being cheated by the richest and greediest 1 percent. This is a theme that allows the people in the 99 percent to think very highly of themselves. All their problems are caused by the nefarious elite.
Unfortunately, almost no problem can be productively conceived in this way.
Really? Let’s take a look at the income gains of the richest 1 percent over the last three decades, compared to everybody else:

This is an economy that’s incredibly great for the very rich and pretty lousy for everybody else. If you consider this even mildly problematic, you have several responses. You can try to help workers unionize, or restructure the financial industry, or challenge the loopy way we pay CEOs more and more regardless of performance. You can look for even more radical solutions, which some of the protestors favor, though I would not...
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Jonathan Chait @'NY Mag'

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Illustrations: Molly Crabapple
WFMU
What. A. Joke. Slate Deems The Stroke's "Is This It" The Best Album of The Last Decade:

Doug Aitken's Black Mirror, starring Chloë Sevigny

                         Doug Aitken's video installation Black Mirror, which explores modern life accelerated, and will be showing as part of an exhibition of his work at Victoria Miro gallery in London from 12 October to 12 November 2011
Via

Tarkovskian Dream

(Thanx GKB!)
Andrew Exum
Ladies and gentlemen, I've just been handed an urgent and horrifying news story ... Cannonball!