Saturday, 8 January 2011

Germans back in for Babel

Skysports.com understands Hoffenheim are trying to lure Ryan Babel away from Liverpool.
The Bundesliga side have held a long-term interest in Babel and have made moves to sign the Dutchman in the last two transfer windows.
Babel's future at Liverpool has again been the subject of conjecture with the 24-year-old failing to establish himself in Roy Hodgson's plans.
The former Ajax man has made just one Premier League start this season and Liverpool are thought to be open to offers for Babel.
Birmingham are also keen on Babel and are believed to have had a loan bid rejected for the forward.
Hoffenheim are thought to be ready to make a bid to sign Babel on a permanent basis as doubts surround the future of Demba Ba.
Any move for Babel depends on Liverpool being able to bring in a replacement as Hodgson does not want to leave himself short of options with the under-fire Reds boss already lacking strength in-depth in attack.
@'Sky'

Cloud Flipper

Cloud Flipper is a free service which which converts a SoundCloud group or profile page into an RSS XML feed. The resulting URL (the Cloud Flipper URL + your SoundCloud URL) is then available to be subscribed to directly into your RSS feed reader of choice for podcast delivery.

Cloud Flipper

Antidepressants Still Don't Work In Mild Depression

Friday, 7 January 2011

The Rise and Fall of The Smiths (BBC Video Documentary)

Heroes

I can remember
Standing
By the wall
And the guns
Shot above our heads
And we kissed
As though nothing could fall
And the shame
Was on the other side
Oh we can beat them
For ever and ever
Then we can be Heroes
Just for one day
Illustration: (the ever wonderful) 'exiledsurfer'

لحرية للمدون التونسي سليم عمامو Free Slim Amamou

Algeria youths riot for second night

Algerian youths have rioted for a second night across the capital, Algiers, and in several other cities.
The riots have been linked to rising food prices, housing shortages, and wider social and political grievances.
A BBC correspondent says Algiers has emptied out in the late afternoon over the last two days, before rioters take to the streets, clashing with police.
The riots follow a period of rare unrest in neighbouring Tunisia, which has led to at least three deaths.
The BBC's Mohamed Arezki Himeur reports from Algiers that there has been sporadic rioting in Algeria since the new year, when the price of many food products increased sharply.
But the protests have intensified since Wednesday, our correspondent says.
Political frustration They also spread to Bab el-Oued, a working class neighbourhood of symbolic importance. It was at the centre of the protest movement in 1988, at the beginning of a period of unrest that led to an Islamist insurgency in the 1990s.
The riots are widely seen as drawing on deep frustrations with the ruling elite and a lack of political freedom, as well as more immediate concerns about the cost of living, housing, and jobs.
During the riots this week, youths have ransacked shops, lit tyres in the street, and hurled stones at police.
Security forces responded with tear gas and high-pressure hoses.
Rioting has also been reported in cities including Constantine, Oran, and Bejaia.
The demonstrations in Tunisia began after a man set fire to himself on 17 December in the Sidi Bouzid region to protest against the police confiscating fruit and vegetables that he was selling without a permit.
Protests are rare in Tunisia, where there are tight controls aimed at preventing dissent.
As in Algeria, the unrest has been linked to frustrations with the president and the ruling elite, as well as to concerns over jobs and living costs.
@'BBC'

Wiki Rehab 

Republicans set sights on WikiLeaks and Assange

Orwellian Doublethink Part 2-Our Bloodthirsty Leadership’s Response to Wikileaks

Assange claim Aftenposten is a partner denied by editor

Julian Assange and the journalists

WikiLeaks and Democracy

An extreme test case

(GB2011)

Madonna



SEX

Sex Pistols: Sir Philip Green’s “Cash From Chaos”

Room With A View

@'Poemas del río Wang'

إطلاق الرصاص على العزل في تونسTunisia Sidi Bouzid


إطلاق الرصاص الحي على المتظاهرين العزل من قبل زبانية نظام عميل إسرائيل المدعو زين العابدين بن علي زوج مصففة الشعر ليلى الطرابلسي

 Illustration:'exiledsurfer'

How much will a Paul Haggis book hurt Scientology’s image?

Jamie xx in the mix for Benjii B

Production it-boy of the moment, Jamie XX, did this mix for Benji B’s BBC Radio 1 show last night (5/1) and it’s full on vibes on this one. Can’t wait to see what he has in store for the rest of 2011. (Via Pinglewood)
Jamie XX – In The Mix for Benji B, January 5 2011 (ge.tt)
Tracklist after the jump.

Timmy Thomas — Why Can’t We Live Together
Zomby — Tarantula
Jamie Woon — Night Air – Becoming Real Remix
Koreless — M.T.I.
James Blake — I Mind
Cassie — Must Be Love – Jacques Greene’s Marriage Proposal Mix
Mount Kimbie — Before I Move Off
Rui Da Silva — Touch Me – Chopped and Screwed
DJ Choko — Stealth Drums
Jamie xx — Far Nearer – The Knife Bootleg
Beach House — 10 Mile Stereo
Crazy Cousinz — Inflation – Chopped and Screwed
Tanya Stephens — Can’t Touch Me No More
Dj A B — Darbuka
Harmonic 313 — Problem 7
Lumidee — Never Leave You
Adele — Rolling In The Deep – Jamie XX Shuffle
Gil Scott Heron and Jamie XX — One Take
@'Disco Belle'

Jacques Derrida Interviews Ornette Coleman (1997)

G.OD - Left For Dead


(Thanx Audiozobe!)

Grooming and our ignoble tradition of racialising crime

HA!

(Thanx Michael!)

Bradley Manning: The Forgotten Man

listen now | download audio
A lot of attention has been given to Julian Assange of late, but another significant figure in the Wikileaks story is Bradley Manning -- the young American army officer who's alleged to have leaked the sensitive information to Wikileaks. Manning was arrested in May 2010 and is being held in maximum security isolation. If found guilty Manning could spend more than 50 years in jail.
@'ABC'

PSA

U.S. teenager tortured in Kuwait and barred re-entry into the U.S.

Conscious - Dougie

'Elaborate fraud'




Study linking vaccine to autism was fraud

'Piltdown' medicine: Andrew Wakefield's scientific fraud was worse than previously thought

fuck...

Image and video hosting by TinyPic
(Thanx Stan!)

Iron And Wine (Live @npr's First Listen)


Back in 2002, Iron and Wine was a "band" in name only — a vehicle for the whispered acoustic bedroom recordings of a college film professor named Sam Beam. Beam's rustic musings sang of death and damnation, love and redemption, while packing a surprising degree of momentum and narrative thrust into what only sounded like gentle folk songs.
If it weren't for Beam's softly engaging croon, the Iron and Wine of the forthcoming Kiss Each Other Clean wouldn't always be recognizable to Beam fans from eight or nine years ago. For one thing, he's evolved into a full-fledged bandleader, following 2007's engagingly springy The Shepherd's Dog with a sound that feels fuzzier, even dirtier. The opening seconds of Kiss Each Other Clean sound like no preceding Iron & Wine record — "Walking Far From Home" swaps out the clean acoustic guitars for layers of fuzz and subtly processed vocals — though the album feels like a natural extension of its marvelous predecessor, and even lets rays of sunlight peek in during songs like "Tree by the River."
Like The Shepherd's Dog, Kiss Each Other Clean showcases Iron and Wine's subtly exploratory, even meandering side. But fans of the group needn't wait until the album's Jan. 25 release date to hear the new innovations for themselves: Wednesday afternoon, Beam and his bandmates appeared on WNYC's Soundcheck to announce a surprise live performance of the new album at The Greene Space in New York City that night — a concert you can now watch in its entirety or download as an mp3.
 Download
@'npr'
Sado-Justice in America: The Treatment of High Security Prisoners and the Bill of Rights

Tears as chemical signals – smell of female tears affects sexual behaviour of men

(GB2011)

The protest movement needs to expand now from the people who dodged our taxes to the people who stole our taxes: the banks & their bonuses

♪♫ Shelby Lynne - Your Lies

Station Street, Fairfield

Photo:TimN

The Village Where the Neo-Nazis Rule

Neo-Nazis have placed signs at the entrance to the village of Jamel in eastern Germany pointing the way to it point the way to Hitler's birthplace (Braunau am Inn 855 km) and to the formerly German cities of Breslau (now Wroclaw in Poland) and Königsberg (now Kaliningrad, Russia)
Hitler salutes in the street and firing practice in the forest: Neo-Nazis have taken over an entire village in Germany, and authorities appear to have given up efforts to combat the problem. The place has come to symbolize the far right's growing influence in parts of the former communist east.
Horst and Birgit Lohmeyer have been working on their life's dream for six years, renovating a house in the woods near Jamel, a tiny village near Wismar in the far northeastern German state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. Birgit Lohmeyer writes crime novels, her husband is a musician, and both try to pretend everything is normal here in Jamel.

It wasn't easy to find their new home. The Lohmeyers spent months driving out to the countryside every weekend, heading east from where they lived in Hamburg, but most of the houses they saw were too expensive. Then they came across the inexpensive red brick farmhouse in Jamel. Slightly run-down, but not far from the Baltic Sea, the house sits surrounded by lime and maple trees, near a lake. The Lohmeyers knew that a notorious neo-Nazi lived nearby -- Sven Krüger, a demolition contractor and high-level member of the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD). What the Lohmeyers didn't know was that other neighbors felt terrorized by Krüger. He and his associates were in the process of buying up the entire village...
 Continue reading
Maximilian Popp @'Der Spiegel'

Gorillaz – Plastic Beach Live (unofficial)


'Plastic Beach Live' is a 2 disc compilation paying tribute to Gorillaz live in 2010. Disc 1 features the whole of Plastic Beach live including ALL the collaborators recording live (apart from Snoop who never performed WTTWOTPB live, but additionally including the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble on Broken and Plastic Beach) compiled from various gigs from the best possible sources. Disc 2 is the best recordings of the other 17 tracks performed around the world, featuring collaborators where possible. All tracks have been normalised for volume and are taken from the best sources available. Disc 1 is all from tv or radio - Disc 2 is more mixed, a couple of the tracks were taken from Youtube recordings and a bootleg. Thanks to Rust for the cover - other alternate covers are also available in the zip. Re-encoded only once more from sources, at 320kbps mp3. For all source info see the include release notes or click 'Read More' beloe.

Download (click to be taken to a selection of sources):-
Both Discs as one Zip | Disc 1 | Disc 2

Disc 1
1. Orchestral Intro 2. Welcome to the World of the Plastic Beach (featuring the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble) 3. White Flag (featuring Kano, Bashy and the Syrian National Orchestra For Arabic Music) 4. Rhinestone Eyes 5. Stylo (featuring Mos Def and Bobby Womack) 6. Superfast Jellyfish (featuring De La Soul and Gruff Rhys) 7. Empire Ants (featuring Little Dragon) 8. Glitter Freeze (featuring Mark E. Smith) 9. Some Kind of Nature (Featuring Lou Reed) 10. On Melancholy Hill 11. Broken (featuring the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble) 12. Sweepstakes (featuring Mos Def and the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble) 13. Plastic Beach (featuring the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble) 14. To Binge (featuring Little Dragon) 15. Cloud of Unknowing (featuring Bobby Womack) 16. Pirate Jet

Disc 2
1. Last Living Souls 2. Kids With Guns (featuring Neneh Cherry) 3. O Green World 4. 19/2000 (featuring Miho Hatori) 5. Tomorrow Comes Today 6. DARE (featuring Roses Gabor and Shaun Ryder) 7. Dirty Harry (featuring Bootie Brown) 8. El Manana 9. November Has Come (featuring MF Doom) 10. Doncamatic (featuring Daley) 11. Punk 12. Fire Coming Out Of The Monkey's Head 13. Don't Get Lost In Heaven 14. Demon Days (featuring Bobby Womack) 15. Hong Kong (featuring Zeng Zhen) 16. Feel Good Inc (featuring De La Soul) 17. Clint Eastwood (featuring Kano and Bashy) Bonus tracks: 18. Clint Eastwood (featuring Snoop Dogg) 19. Clint Eastwood (featuring Eslam Jawaad) 20. Clint Eastwood (featuring Tinie Tempah)

more information

Gorillaz-Unofficial.com has now been constantly updated since its launch in 2004 We have over tens of thousands of unique readers visiting the site each month now, and have received millions of visits since launch. We’re lucky enough to count members of Zombie Flesh Eaters, Gorillaz’ management, EMI, Passion Pictures and Gorillaz artistic teams amongst our regular visitors. Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett have both kindly granted interviews to the site in the past and have been very supportive.

Bratara Buzea whilst spelling the Romanian government


An Exile exclusive pic
I'm outta here, Romanian Witches? 
Anti - government spells?
Seriously...
Too much for me/

Romanian witches to cast anti government spell


Double double toil and trouble: witches in Romania are planning to cast a spell on the country's rulers today over new rules forcing them to pay tax for the first time.
Into their cauldron will go cat excrement and dead dogs rather than eye of newt and toe of frog. But they are hoping to put a Macbeth-style hex on president Traian Basescu and his government after the imposition of a new tax regime aimed at tackling Romania's recession.
Witches from the east and west of the country will gather on Romania's southern plains and the banks of the Danube to protest against new laws and cast spells against the politicians who implemented them.
A dozen witches will hurl the poisonous mandrake plant into the Danube "so evil will befall them", a witch named Alisia said.
The threatened curse is not being taken lightly in a country with a long tradition of superstition. Basescu and his aides have been known to wear purple on certain days in an attempt to ward of evil.
"This law is foolish. What is there to tax, when we hardly earn anything?" Alisia said.
The new law is part of the government's drive to collect more revenue and crack down on tax evasion. It will force the likes of witches, astrologers and fortune tellers, among others, to register their professions making them liable for 16% tax in line with other self-employed Romanians.
Queen witch Bratara Buzea said she will lead a chorus of witches in casting a spell using a concoction of cat excrement and a dead dog.
"They want to take the country out of this crisis using us? They should get us out of the crisis because they brought us into it," she said.
"My curses always work!" she cackled, according to AP.
Some argue the tax law will be hard to enforce, as the payments to witches and astrologers usually are made in cash and are relatively small at 20 to 30 lei (around £5) per consultation.
Such spiritualism has long been tolerated by the Orthodox Church in Romania. The late Communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu and his wife, Elena, had their own personal witch.
Mircea Geoana, who lost the presidential race to Basescu in 2009, performed poorly during a crucial debate, and his camp blamed attacks of "negative energy" by their opponent's aides.
Geoana aide Viorel Hrebenciuc alleged there was a "violet flame" conspiracy during the campaign, saying Basescu and other aides dressed in purple on Thursdays to increase his chance of victory.
They continue to be seen wearing purple clothing on important days, because the colour supposedly makes the wearer superior and wards off evil.
Martin Weaver @'The Guardian'

Thursday, 6 January 2011

René Guénon - Tradition, Civilization and the Modern World


ГВОЗДЕНО ДОБА

The Man Who Spilled the Secrets

 

Mainstream Pakistan religious organisations applaud killing of Salman Taseer

The assassination of the Punjab governor, Salman Taseer, was praised by mainstream religious organisations in the country. Photograph: Governor House/EPAThe increasing radicalisation of Pakistani society was today laid bare when mainstream religious organisations applauded the murder of Salman Taseer, the governor of Punjab, earlier this week and his killer was showered with rose petals as he appeared in court.
Taseer was buried in his home town of Lahore. The 66-year-old was assassinated yesterday by Mumtaz Qadri, one of his police bodyguards, after he had campaigned for reform of the law on blasphemy.
Qadri appeared in court, unrepentant, where waiting lawyers threw handfuls of rose petals over him and others in the crowd slapped his back and kissed his cheek as he was led in and out amid heavy security.
The internet had already been hosting fan pages for Qadri, with one Facebook page attracting over 2,000 followers before being taken down, while there were small demonstrations in favour of the killer in north-west Pakistan.
While terrorist acts are generally associated with an extremist fringe, the gunning down of Taseer appeared to have significant support that reached into the heart of society.
All the big mainstream political parties strongly condemned the murder, and thousands attended funeral prayers for Taseer. However, both the large religious political parties declared that he had deserved to be killed for his views.
Reports suggested that Qadri, 26, was a known radical in the police service who had previously been declared by his superiors to be unfit for guarding VIPs. He told interrogators he was proud to have killed a blasphemer.
Reports also said Qadri, part of Taseer's security force, had tipped off other guards about his plan to kill the Punjab governor. The other bodyguards did not seem to react as Qadri fired a whole clip of bullets into Taseer in a market in central Islamabad and then laid down his weapon.
It is thought that over a dozen police officers were taken into custody following the murder. Taseer's ruling Pakistan People's party suggested that a "wider conspiracy" was behind the killing, while the issue also became an ugly party political spat.
Taseer's job was a ceremonial position representing the president, the head of the PPP, Asif Zardari, but the provincial government is run by the administration of opposition leader Nawaz Sharif, which was blamed for providing the governor with poor security.
Taseer had used his position to warn about the "Talibanisation" of Punjab province, telling the Guardian last year: "The Sharifs are creating a potential bomb here in Punjab."
"This is a political murder," a senior member of the PPP, Fauzia Wahab, said. "There will be an investigation. It is a conspiracy."
Taseer's call for the widely-abused blasphemy law to be reformed or abolished was so incendiary that it united rival Islamic schools of thought against any change, the moderate Barelvi sect with the pro-Taliban Deobandis.
The statute, meant to protect Islam and the prophet Muhammad from "insult", is used to convict dozens of people on flimsy evidence each year.
"Salman Taseer was himself responsible for his killing," Munawar Hasan, the head of Jamaat-e-Islami, one of the two big religious political parties, said. "Any Muslim worth the name could not tolerate blasphemy of the Prophet, as had been proved by this incident."
Qadri was in the Barelvi sect, which is followed by most Muslims in Pakistan. However, on the issue of the blasphemy law, the Barelvi clerics had joined hands with the pro-Taliban Deobandi. The issue was sparked by Taseer's championing of a Christian woman, Asia Bibi, who was sentenced to death for blasphemy late last year.
"No Muslim should attend the funeral or even try to pray for Salmaan Taseer," a statement from Jamaate Ahle Sunnat Pakistan, one of the biggest organisations of the Barelvi, representing 500 religious scholars, said. "We pay rich tributes and salute the bravery, valour and faith of Mumtaz Qadri."
Taseer's assassination showed how free speech has been curtailed in Pakistan. The religious scholars warned that others could meet the same fate.
"The supporter is as equally guilty as one who committed blasphemy," the Jamaate Ahle Sunnat Pakistan statement said. It added that adding politicians, the media and others should learn "a lesson from the exemplary death".
Saeed Shah @'The Guardian'