Friday, 11 May 2012

Algren's Last Night

Based on a script written and narrated by Algren friend Warren Leming, "Algren's Last Night" is the bittersweet tale of a Chicago writer bidding farewell to the city he had 'made his trade.'
Unique and evocative cityscapes reveal a dark, haunted Chicago rarely traveled or seen.
Director/Producer/Editor/Camera: Carmine Cervi
Actor/Writer/Producer: Warren Leming

Euler diagram used to represent the propinquity effect just so there are no 'semantic misunderstandings' at the Leveson Inquiry

'...and cor-relatively that government or individuals within it have permitted themselves to acquire an excessive degree of propinquity to News International. I am putting this in a deliberately roundabout way; I could I suppose be much blunter.' - That you could Mr. Jay!!!

Well do you?

Via
(Thanx Walter!)

If children’s drawings were made into toys…

MORE

Thursday, 10 May 2012

Before & After (Fox News)

Meanwhile...

Makoto Morimura literally finds hope in the news


55 Killed and 372 Injured in Damascus Bomb Attack

US 'already committed to helping Assad fall'


'Not Doing Things Is Soul Destroying' - Kevin Shields Of MBV Interviewed

Argentina's Senate passes gender identity law

Via Mauro Cabral, Co-Director of the Argentinian branch of GATE (Global Action for Trans* Equality) I learn that the country's Senate yesterday (9 May 2012) unanimously approved a gender identity law that doesn't require a medical diagnosis in order to gain legal recognition, hormonal treatment and/or surgical procedures (including hormones and surgeries carried out in the public health system) and that doesn't require medical intervention as a condition of legal recognition.

As Mauro says:
It's a law grounded in the right to identity, establishing informed consent as the best practice for trans* access to health.

It seems likely there will be a short delay for the legislation to be formally enacted by Presidente Cristina Fernández before it actually becomes law, but it's hoped that it will be practically implemented soon after that.

The significance of this change cannot be understated - the linking of trans* people's medical and legal statuses is an area of trans* rights which has long been believed to cause more problems for many trans* people than it solves, both in accessing healthcare and obtaining legal recognition, and it is to be hoped that other countries will follow Argentina's example in supporting trans* people's rights.

More at the Spanish language website Minutouno

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Image compiled from public domain images in Wikimedia Commons (here and here) by Helen

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Cross-posted from Bird of Paradox

Report on The Beat Generation (Radio Canada 1964)

Via

UK plans for secret courts 'dangerous'

UK government plans to end centuries of open justice by allowing some court evidence to be heard behind closed doors are "dangerous", Amnesty International said.
The proposed legal changes, part of the Justice and Security Bill, could result in information and evidence of human rights violations by UK state representatives, being kept secret.
Plans by the government to introduce new legislation were confirmed in the Queen’s speech during Wednesday’s state opening of the UK Parliament.
“These proposals are dangerous and should be dropped," said Tara Lyle, Policy Adviser at Amnesty International UK.
“They will allow the government to throw a cloak of secrecy over wrongdoing, including matters as serious as the alleged involvement by UK officials in rendition, secret detention, enforced disappearances and torture."
The Bill would allow for the use of “closed material procedures” in future civil claims cases. This would allow the courts to consider secret material presented by UK authorities in closed sessions.
Claimants and their lawyers of choice would not have access to the material or the closed sessions and would, instead, have a court appointed Special Advocate to represent their interests.
The Special Advocate would be prohibited from discussing any part of the secret material with the claimant or taking instructions from them after seeing the material, seriously impeding their ability to serve the interests of the claimant.
Amnesty International considers that the use of Special Advocates fails to sufficiently mitigate the unfairness of “closed material procedures”. 
Amnesty International believes the right to redress and a fair trial for victims of alleged human rights violations could be critically undermined by the proposals.
The proposals for the Bill come amid allegations that the UK has been involved in rendition, unlawful detention and mistreatment.
“After David Cameron promised to get to the bottom of allegations of complicity in human rights violations by UK officials, this Bill is a sell-out to the security services," said Tara Lyle.
“The victims of human rights violations as well as the general public have a right to learn the truth about whether and how government officials have been involved in rendition, secret detention, enforced disappearances and torture.”
“If members of the intelligence and security services are suspected of involvement in human right violations, the government should not be able to invoke ‘national security’ to avoid real accountability.”
@'Amnesty International'
Hmmm...

Tunnel of Love

A young couple walk through the 'tunnel of love' near the town of Klevan in Ukraine. The tunnel is a two-mile section of private railway that serves a local factory. A train runs through it three times a day
Photographer: Amos Chapple