Saturday, 19 November 2011

The plot to get Gough

Media baron Rupert Murdoch and former prime minister Malcolm Fraser exchanged secrets, including intelligence information, in efforts to politically destroy Labor leader Gough Whitlam.
Documents released by the National Archives, including a personal file compiled by Murdoch and notes of Fraser's attorney-general, Bob Ellicott, show that the media magnate and prime minister worked together on Murdoch's biggest personal scoop - a front page revelation in The Australian of February 25, 1976, that Whitlam had secretly sought a massive election campaign donation from Saddam Hussein's Iraqi Baath Party.
What was called the Iraqi Money Affair was a political sensation that nearly cost Whitlam the Labor leadership in humiliating circumstances.
Murdoch's personal file and Ellicott's notes have revealed intimate collaboration as the publisher sought to confirm claims by French-Australian businessman Henri Fischer that he had been enlisted by left-wing Labor figure Bill Hartley, ALP national secretary David Combe and Whitlam to raise Iraqi funds for Labor's 1975 election campaign...
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Philip Dorling @'The Age'

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Forbidden song for Arya Aramnejad

آواز ممنوع
کاری از مانا نیستانی برای آریا آرام نژاد . . .

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Welcome to the Bank of Ideas!

PSA (without guitars) featuring Billy Bragg

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Richard Thompson’s adjectives

The fire next time

Wayne Kramer Guitar Gods Figure

The next figure in the Guitar Gods series is Brother Wayne Kramer, founder of Detroit's radical rock group MC5. The figure is limited to 750 numbered units, stands at 7 inches tall, and is made of a lightweight poly resin. Displayed in a multi-panel box, here Wayne is not only accurately sculpted right down to his signature White Panther Party threads, curly hair, and American flag guitar, but he also delivers a signature riff at the push of a button! One of Rolling Stone Magazine's "100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time", Brother Wayne's inimitable style was the first to combine rock with free jazz to create the genre's most unique result -- high-energy sci-fi hard rock and roll. Kick out the jams or get off the stage!
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If...

This Occupy Wall Street poster by longtime Radiohead artist Stanley Donwood says it all. Thought You Should See This has more. Plus, more on art and protest.
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The Terror of Consumption

Lulu Simone
                   

99% v 1%: the data behind the Occupy movement

Occupy Oakland: footage shows police beating 'peaceful' Iraq war veteran

                   
Video footage has emerged of a police officer beating an Iraq war veteran so hard that he suffered a ruptured spleen in an apparently unprovoked incident at a recent Occupy protest in California.
The footage, which has been shared with the Guardian, shows Kayvan Sabehgi standing in front of a police line on the night of Occupy Oakland's general strike on 2 November, when he is set upon by an officer.
He does not appear to be posing any threat, nor does he attempt to resist, yet he is hit numerous times by an officer clad in riot gear who appears determined to beat him to the ground.
Sabehgi, 32, an Oakland resident and former marine who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, has since undergone surgery on his spleen. He says it took hours for him to be taken to hospital, despite complaining of severe pain. Police have told the Guardian they are investigating the incident.
The footage was recorded by artist and photographer Neil Rivas, who said Sabehgi was "completely peaceful" before he was beaten. "It was uncalled for," said Rivas. "There were no curse words. He was telling them he was a war vet, a resident of Oakland, a business owner."
Sabehgi has previously said he was talking to officers in a non-violent manner prior to his arrest, which the footage appears to confirm.
The 32-year-old can be seen standing in front of a line of police officers, all of whom are in riot gear. The officers walk forward, chanting and thrusting their batons, and Sabehgi starts to walk backwards.
Although the video is dark, an officer can clearly be seen beginning to hit Sabehgi around the legs with a baton, then starting to strike him higher up.
Sabehgi then appears to be bundled to the ground. He was later arrested.
Rivas said the footage was shot around midnight on 3 November, as police approached Occupy Oakland following the 2 November general strike.
Police deployed teargas and non-lethal projectiles that night, after some protesters entered a disused building north of Frank H Ogawa Plaza, but Rivas said there did not appear to be an immediate threat to police at the time of the video.
"It was pretty much just Kayvan and myself right there at that moment when he got beat," Rivas said.
"I couldn't help but start yelling out for them to stop. He was not fighting back; he was moving away from the officer. It did not feel good.
"I saw him being taken down to the ground and I tried to keep my camera focused on that as well, but they were pretty quick at setting up a barricade between myself and Kayvan at that point. I was shoved out of the way, and I had several guns pointed my way.
"I remember specifically one officer right in front of me having his gun pointed point blank at me."
Rivas said he realised the man in his video was Sabehgi after reading that a second Iraq war veteran had been injured, and seeing television footage.
Oakland television station KTVU TV-2 has previously shown footage of Sabehgi in handcuffs just after he was arrested, but Rivas believes this is the only video of him being beaten.
Sabehgi has previously told the Guardian he was walking away from the main area of police clashes – at 16th Street and Telegraph, just north of the Occupy base at Frank H Ogawa Plaza – when he was beaten and arrested.
Several police agencies were involved in the operation on 2 and 3 November, but Rivas said the officers who appear in front of Sabehgi at the beginning of the video were from Oakland police department.
A spokeswoman for Oakland police said: "The Oakland Police Department is currently investigating the incident."
Adam Gabbatt @'The Guardian'