Wednesday, 23 February 2011

I ♥ books!


Black ops: how HBGary wrote backdoors for the government

*delusional*


Gaddafi through the years

You are what you...

Via This Isn't Happiness

!!!

BBC Global News
Reports: Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has spoken by telephone with Libyan leader. says "everything is fine in ."

ردود أفعال من مدينة بنغازي على خطاب العقيد

Defiant Gaddafi refuses to quit amid Libya protests

The Beatles play Prodigy's Smack My Bitch Up



via

Confessions of a Raving, Unconfined Nut: Paul Krassner's 50 Years of Misadventures in Satire and Counterculture

Last month, Paul Krassner released a new and expanded edition of his acclaimed memoir, Confessions of a Raving, Unconfined Nut: Misadventures in the Counterculture. Given the author's iconic status in the annals of self-publishing, it is only appropriate that the paperback is available solely at Paul Krassner's personal site. (But Krassner is no Luddite; the Kindle version is available via Amazon.)
Now 78, Krassner is decades from his busiest days as the Zelig of the American counterculture. But unlike many of his former comrades in America's postwar cultural revolution, Krassner is both alive and kicking. He never gave up his passions or jumped the political fence. An original collaborator of Lenny Bruce, he still performs stand-up, heavy on social satire; a co-founder of the Yippies, he still attends noisy protests; a participant-historian of the last half-century of American publishing, journalism and activism, he still lectures and writes.
Along with the new edition of Unconfined Nut, Krassner has just finished editing a 500-page collection, The Best of Paul Krassner: 50 Years of Investigative Satire, and is waist-deep in the process of writing his first novel -- working title, Court Jester -- about a modern-day Lenny Bruce-type character. (All of which suggests that the Oakland branch of the writers' organization PEN might have jumped the gun in December when it presented Krassner with its Lifetime Achievement Award. Not that the recipient is complaining. "I was happy to receive it, but even happier that it wasn't a posthumous honor," says Krassner.).
When it appeared in the early '90s, the first edition of Raving, Unconfined Nut was arguably the most raucous insider's account yet of the 1960s. The new edition only adds ballast to the argument. The memoir takes its name from an angry letter the FBI sent to the editor of Time after the magazine ran a friendly profile of Krassner. "To classify Krassner as a social rebel is far too cute," wrote the agency. "He's a nut, a raving, unconfined nut."
Krassner began his career as an unconfined nut at the age of six, just as he became the youngest concert artist ever to perform on Carnegie Hall. He was playing Vivaldi's Violin Concerto in A Minor while wearing a Little Lord Fauntleroy suit when he felt an itch. The young Krassner titled on one leg to scratch the itch with his other leg without missing a beat. The hall erupted in delighted laughter. This was the moment, Krassner writes, when he was first "zapped by the god of Absurdity."
What followed was a career as "investigative satirist" that would place him at the center of every major event and current in the postwar history of the alternative press and the counterculture. Krassner made his name as the publisher of the Realist, which appeared intermittently between 1958 and 2001 and peaked with 100,000 subscribers. But the influence of the Realist was always greater than its circulation, and it ranks in importance alongside other storied self-published journals of the last century such as I.F. Stone's Weekly...
Continue reading
 Alexander Zaitchik @'AlterNet'

Greymatter - Live @ Sonique, Sao Paulo 19th Feb 2011

   Download

(GB2011) NHS turmoil is just the start of Tory ideology run wild

David Cameron big society
David Cameron delivers a speech on the 'big society' to social entrepreneurs at Somerset House in London. Photograph: Wpa Pool/Getty Images
This is it, the last veil ripped away. In the Daily Telegraph today, David Cameron penned his preview of the long-delayed white paper on public services. The paper's editorial saw the light: "For the first time he explains the full scope of his ambition to roll back the boundaries of an overweening state." This is indeed the eureka moment for the country. Nothing like this was ever breathed before the election.
Every single public service will be put out to tender. Everything. Well, not MI5 or the judiciary – but everything else, including schools and the NHS. Forget the camouflage of localism and choice: however much local people like local services that work well, they will have no choice in the matter. A private company – or in theory a very large charity – can challenge any service they would like to run and bid to take it over. If Serco or Capita think they can turn a reasonable profit from cherry-picking anything the council or the government runs, they will have the right to demand it is put out to tender. If they bid below the current cost and claim that quality will not fall, it's theirs for the asking. Not the people, not their elected representatives, nor the users of those services will be able to refuse. It will be taken out of their hands because competition law will decide. If local people want their council to hold on to a much-loved service, a company can take the council to court – at huge and wasteful expense – and almost certainly win the right to tender and win the contract.
The NHS bill now marching through parliament is the model. Behind the eyecatching GP commissioning, the real radicalism is in making any part of the NHS open to contract by "any willing provider". Any company can claim the right to provide any part of the NHS – even if the local GP consortium is very happy with the NHS surgeons providing operations. Neither patients nor GPs will choose once competition law enforces tendering out. Cameron reveals his white paper on public services will lever open everything in the same way. EU competition law doesn't currently apply to public services or the NHS, unless commissioners choose to put a service out to contract, in which case it must be opened up fairly across the EU. Now everything is open for business.
Democracy will scarcely get a look in. People can't choose if services are contracted out. Once contracts are signed, nothing can change. You can throw out rascally councillors or governments, but the contracts will go on regardless. Like PFIs, they will be traded as financial instruments, sliced and diced according to risk and sold on. This sets a nuclear bomb under all public services, because there can never be any going back. If you don't like the sound of this, Cameron's government can be voted out but it will be virtually impossible to return services to a public realm that no longer exists. Ownership of the contracts and companies moves on, and the public sector loses any capacity to take them back.
Is contracting out necessarily value for money? An extensive trawl of the literature was done for John Hutton at the DTI by the pro-market economist DeAnne Julius only three years ago, but even she failed to find any decent evidence that contracting out works as a general proposition.
It's not a perfect match, but thehistory of the PFI calamity is well-documented, on the left by Allyson Pollock and on the right in the Telegraph by Andrew Gilligan, and in Tory MP Jesse Norman's campaign to reclaim some of the billions skimmed off these lucrative contracts. At the campaign site you can find plentiful cases of a PFI school charged £302 to fix one electric socket or how the M25 PFI cost an extra £1bn. Public servants negotiating big, inflexible and unchangeable contracts up against companies employing the sharpest lawyers and accountants will always be at a disadvantage. Gordon Brown and Baroness Shriti Vadera's pig-headed determination, against expert advice, to put the London tube into a web of PPP contracts stands as the worst exemplar: it fell over and cost a fortune.
When I spoke to Norman, he said he'd warned his leader that "many PFI contracts provide an object lesson". He says the danger is that contracts can be "very expensive, very inflexible and opaque". The solemnly staid Chartered Institute for Public Finance and Accountancy expresses its concern: "Where is political accountability when the contracts are not aligned with the political cycle?" And, they wonder, if everything is broken up into small outsourced pieces, "how are authorities to pursue the shared services and efficiencies of scale urged on them?"
Cameron says his reforms will bring "openness, creativity and innovation", but in fact these contracts are the closest you can get to a Stalinist five-year plan – opaque, undemocratic and unresponsive to change. Democratic politicians adapt public service priorities all the time – not always for the best, but fettered only by responsiveness to voters, not to badly drawn fixed contracts.
Cameron is taking an ideological blowtorch to anything branded "public". He says this is the "decisive end of the old-fashioned, top-down, take-what-you're given model of public services". His mission is to "dismantle big government and build the 'big society' in its place". But it may look more like big Serco than big society.
Labour is in a quandary, afraid Cameron is laying a trap. Opposing the plan risks wearing the cap of "old-fashioned, top-down" anti-reformers defending the unions' self-interest. Besides, Tony Blair began all this – and public services will always need eternal effort to invigorate and renew. But these are changed times, and it's not Labour who need to be afraid. All around people are starting to see the destruction of public services they had forgotten to appreciate. Libraries, Sure Starts, charities, after-school clubs, youth clubs, parks and gardens, old people's care, hospitals, clinics, midwife visits, meals on wheels and a thousand other things once taken for granted are shrinking before their eyes. If ever there was a bad political time to privatise the lot, this must be it.
Cameron is setting his runaway ideology, speeding down the tracks on collision course with public sentiment. This only confirms that tell-tale moment of glee when the Tory benches shouted "More! More!" as Osborne ended his budget listing the deepest public cuts since the war. Political wisdom would advise them to engage in a little more hand-wringing anguish, but they just can't resist following their animal instincts. Labour has nothing to fear in standing up for the public good.
Polly Toynbee @'The Guardian' 

!!!
Do NOT get me started on privatisation...

Journalist Returning to US Has Notes, Computer and Cameras Searched and Copied by Authorities at Airport

An end to this soft bigotry against the Arab world

Letter from Tripoli: An eyewitness account

My kingdom for a facelift

Cruel. Vainglorious. Steeped in blood. And now, surely, after more than four decades of terror and oppression, on his way out?

Tuesday, 22 February 2011

Libya unrest Benghazi Doctor says "it's a massacre"

#EQNZ: The Web Mobilizes for New Zealand Earthquake

Free dial-up ISP for Libyans

XS4ALL, a fantastic, hacker-friendly ISP in the Netherlands, has thrown open all its modem lines for free use by people in Libya when and if their network access gets blocked by the government. DPCosta sez, "It's expensive (international call), but can be very handy in an emergency. The number is +31205350535 and the username/password are xs4all."
Cory Doctorow @'boing boing'

Swedish Court Fines File Sharer About $300 For Sharing 44 Songs

While US courts have been awarding tens of thousands of dollars per song for the few people found guilty of unauthorized file sharing, many people have noted how utterly ridiculous those awards are, in comparison to any actual harm. It appears that a court over in Sweden appears to agree. A man who was charged with sharing 44 songs has been fined a much smaller amount, specifically, 2,000 kronor, or about $300. It actually comes out to just about $7 per song.
It will be interesting to see how the industry reacts to this one. After all, they've been going around praising the IPRED anti-piracy law in Sweden for the last two years now. Will we suddenly start hearing about how Sweden "doesn't take piracy seriously" and then there will be a new push for even stricter laws?
@'techdirt'

Libya

Why Libya can't shut down bit.ly

The Future of Art

Random Shootout Towards Ambulances and Protesters

Eastern Libya appears to be under opposition control

WTF???

ian katz
RT @: 150 bodies of army officers who disobeyed regime found inside Benghazi garrison according to local I spoke to

D'oh!

AJELive
Libya attacks may be "crimes against humanity", says UN high commissioner for human rights.

Gaddafi’s Grip Falters as His Forces Take On Protesters

Never Forget!

"It is disheartening what human beings can be capable of..."
Dr. Wouter Basson
Truthout
Amazing! US Uncut FB page doubles from 2,000 to 4,000 in two hours!

Banksy in LA


Banksy refused Oscars disguise request

The Beat Goes On

 Jack Kerouac photographed by Allen Ginsberg in New York in September 1955. All images: © Allen Ginsberg/Corbis
Neal Cassady and Natalie Jackson on Market Street in San Francisco, c. 1955, text by Allen Ginsberg
Timothy Leary and Neal Cassady aboard Ken Kesey's Merry Pranksters bus, 1964, photograph by Allen Ginsberg
The romantic allure of the Beat Generation of writers and poets continues to hold sway over contemporary audiences, as proven by the release of two new movies based on key texts from the era, Howl and On The Road, and an exhibition of photos currently on show at the National Theatre in London...
MORE
@'Creative Review'

In defence of squatting

'Deaths' after quake hits Christchurch in New Zealand

Gaddafi's Mercenaries Stationed in Tripoli Libya

Muammar Gaddafi as 'Psychopathic Snoopy'


Mona Eltahawy
Revolutionary Arabic for Beginners via @ Eshaab youreed shamsiyyet el aqeed: The people want the Colonel's umbrella

Too Much Blood !!


A little interlude from the entertainment section here @ Exile...

Addicted to Hate

The Full Story of the False Prophet Fred Phelps

Free Julian Assange!


Via