Sunday, 13 March 2011


Liverpool give Kenny Dalglish a two year deal

Page van der Linden
Everything you ever wanted to know about boiling water reactors. pp. 3-16 for what Fukushima reactors are like. PDF

The mourning of Ali Hassan Al Jaber


Al-Jazeera cameraman Ali Hassan al Jaber killed in Libya

Wayne Coyne and his nephew Dennis discuss drugs (and Metallica)

Joi Ito
70% possibility of M7+ earthquake in the next 3 days - NHK

Ground video of massive tsunami in Japan

Nuclear Experts Explain Worst-Case Scenario at Fukushima Power Plant 

Via

Japan Earthquake: before and after

Japan's massive earthquake has little effect on culture's impeccable manners

Australian deaths in custody and the call for a Senate inquiry – joint committee

Australian deaths in custody - one of the world's worst records - has become an obsession with me as I quickly compile a University Press book for community and research my PhD (Law) from a criminological aspect into the extensiveness of Australian deaths in custody. The Human Rights Alliance is working to disseminate the facts, and is beginning regional Deaths in Custody Advocacy Units to help affected families especially with their rights, and we continue the campaign calling upon the Australian Senate for an urgent Joint Committee Inquiry. There are a number of concerned human rights groups and some agencies such as the Aboriginal Legal Services and the Australian Human Rights Commission complementing each other in shining the light. We all need to spread the word.
Australia has one of the world’s worst deaths in custody records. Deaths in custody includes prison and police custody. We, of The Human Rights Alliance, have called upon our 76 Australian Senators to initiate an Australian Senate Inquiry into Australian Deaths in Custody. We ask that any Inquiry ensure a Joint Committee of Senators and experts, and not only researchers from the Australian Institute of Criminology however expert researchers from the Australian Human Rights Commission, and academics who have researched the criminal justice system and include our most respected and qualified Aboriginal Elders. It is negligence and constitutional impropriety for the Commonwealth to delay an Inquiry into Deaths in Custody. I myself have commenced a PhD (Law), through James Cook University, from a criminological aspect of the extensiveness of Deaths in Custody in our Australia. I am quickly writing a book for community, through a University Press, so as to en masse raise community awareness about the extensiveness of Australian Deaths in Custody.
There are more non-Aboriginal deaths in custody than Aboriginal deaths. The rate of Aboriginal deaths in custody is higher than in South Africa during the peak of apartheid (excluding Apartheid South Africa’s ex-judicial killings). Most Australians have not realised the extent of deaths in custody, and we must ensure they do so we can move to the next step of procuring genuine remedies and save lives...
Continue reading
 Gerry Georgatos @'Indymedia'
I'm playing catch-up on this issue(almost a year late), misguidedly thought that this problem had been long resolved, unfortunately its persistence within Australian society condemns/damns us all for its continuing iniquity. With a public apology, to the Indigenous People of Australia for past"treatment" since colonization, by the Rudd government some few years past, such alarming statistics/deaths tragically tell the reality of Australia's current indigenous relations.
beeden

Chernobyl


♪♫ Kraftwerk - Radioactivity

Colombia Slips Into the Abyss

While little attention has been paid by the press, Colombia just reached an ignominious benchmark – it is now the country with the largest population of internally displaced persons in the world, surpassing The Sudan which had held this position for the past several years. Colombia, with a population of around 44 million, now has 5.2 million internally displaced persons, meaning that almost 12% of its population is displaced – most of them by violence, and a disproportionate number Afro-Colombians and indigenous.As a report by the Colombian human rights group CODHES notes, half of the 5.2 internally displaced were displaced during the presidential term of Alvaro Uribe, and as a direct consequence of his "counterinsurgency program" – a program funded in large measure by the U.S. As CODHES noted, in a significant proportion of the municipalities impacted by this program, there has been large-scale mining and cultivation of oil palm and biofuel. CODHES is clear that this production is directly responsible for the violent displacement of persons from their land Indeed, it appears that the "counterinsurgency program," as many of us has said for years, was in fact largely intended to make Colombia safe for multi-national exploitation of the land at the very expense of the people the program was claimed to be helping.
The proposed Colombia Free Trade Agreement (FTA) is also intended to do the very same – to protect the rights of multi-national corporations over the basic human rights of the Colombian people. For example, the Colombia FTA would privilege the very palm oil production which is leading to the mass displacement of people. Even more frightening, as The Nation Magazine explained in a detailed article, entitled, "The Dark Side of Plan Colombia," around half of the palm oil companies are actually owned and controlled by paramilitary groups, meaning that the FTA will directly aid these groups by incentivizing their crops...
Continue reading
Dan Kovalick @'Counterpunch'

Michigan Governor Plays Fast and Loose with Democracy, Invokes Radical New Powers

The Great Wave Off Kanagawa


HERE
John Perry Barlow
What spreads faster than radiation? Irrational fears about radiation.

Exodus from Japan nuclear plant

An estimated 170,000 people have been evacuated from the area around a quake-damaged nuclear power station in north-east Japan that was hit by an explosion, the UN atomic watchdog says.
A building housing a reactor was destroyed in Saturday's blast at the Fukushima No.1 plant.
The authorities said the reactor itself was intact inside its steel container.
Friday's devastating earthquake and tsunami is believed to have left more than 1,000 people dead.
The Japanese government has sought to play down fears of a meltdown at Fukushima No.1, saying that radiation levels around the stricken plant have now fallen.
But on Sunday morning, concerns were raised about the safety of a second reactor at the plant after operator Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco) said the cooling system of another reactor had failed.
Since Friday's earthquake, radioactive air and steam has been released from several reactors at both Fukushima No.1 and No.2 plants in an effort to relieve the huge amount of pressure building up inside. Sea water and boron is being pumped into the site to lower temperatures.
Tepco said four of its workers were injured in Saturday's explosion, but that their injuries were not life-threatening. The Japanese government doubled the size of the evacuation zone around No.1 plant to 20km (12.4 miles) after the blast.
Reuters news agency quotes a Japanese nuclear safety agency official as saying that tests indicate that at least nine people have been exposed to radiation from the plant, and local authority estimates suggest this figure could rise as high as 160.
The government has urged local people to remain calm and is preparing to distribute iodine to anyone affected.
The UN's nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said in a statement: "In the 20-kilometre radius around Fukushima Daiichi (No.1), an estimated 170,000 people have been evacuated.
"In the 10-kilometre radius around Fukushima Daini (No.2) an estimated 30,000 people have been evacuated. Full evacuation measures have not been completed."
Scenes of devastation
The tsunami that followed the 8.9-magnitude earthquake wreaked havoc along a huge stretch of on Japan's north-east coast, sweeping far inland and devastating a number of towns and villages. Powerful aftershocks are continuing to hit the region.
The BBC's Damian Grammaticas in the coastal city of Sendai, in Miyagi prefecture, says the scenes of devastation there are astonishing - giant shipping containers have been swept inland and smashed against buildings, and fires are still burning close to the harbour.
Police said between 200 and 300 bodies were found in just one ward of the city.
The town of Rikuzentakada, Iwate prefecture, was reported as largely destroyed and almost completely submerged. NHK reported that soldiers had found up to 400 bodies there.
NHK reports that in the port of Minamisanriku, Miyagi, the authorities say that about 7,500 people were evacuated to 25 shelters after Friday's quake but they have been unable to contact the town's other 10,000 inhabitants.
A local official in the town of Futaba, Fukushima, said more than 90% of the houses in three coastal communities had been washed away by the tsunami.
Couple walk past overturned vehicles in Miyako (12 March) 
"The tsunami was unbelievably fast," said Koichi Takairin, a 34-year-old truck driver who was inside his four-ton rig when the wave hit Sendai. "Smaller cars were being swept around me. All I could do was sit in my truck."
Tens of thousands of troops backed by ships and helicopters have been deployed on rescue and relief missions. More than 215,000 people are said to be living in 1,350 temporary shelters in five prefectures.
International disaster relief teams are being sent to Japan, with the UN helping to co-ordinate the operation.
President Barack Obama has pledged US assistance. One US aircraft carrier that was already in Japan will help with rescue and relief efforts, and a second is on its way.
Japan's worst previous earthquake was of 8.3 magnitude and killed 143,000 people in Kanto in 1923. A magnitude 7.2 quake in Kobe killed 6,400 people in 1995.
@'BBC'
Hidden Benefits of Being Messy

How the Internet Tried to Kill Me

♪♫ Jon Langford - Plenty Tough Union Made (We Are Wisconsin rally)

Nuclear energy: Inside the black box

Madison WI Live



Via

The Canberra investigations of Julian Assange: Consequent inquisitions upon Julia Gillard

People near the Fukushima nuclear reactors are checked for exposure to radiation


Meltdown Caused Nuke Plant Explosion: Safety Body

Quake moved Japan coast 8 feet; shifted Earth's axis

Nadia Plesner: 'It's time for an intervention and you are all invited'

My latest work, Darfurnica, is a modern version of Picasso’s Guernica. In our time, the boundaries between the editorial and advertising departments in the media are disappearing and entertainment stories about the lives of Hollywood celebrities have become breaking news. Apparantly a genocide in Darfur can be happening RIGHT NOW without being important enough to make headlines. This is unacceptable and I refuse to turn the blind eye to what is happening.
In Darfurnica I have mixed some of the horrible stories I have learned about Darfur over the past years with some of the Hollywood gossip stories which made headlines during the same time period.
In collaboration with ARTMANIPULATOR, my first solo exhibition, INTERVENTION, took place in the Odd fellow Palace in Copenhagen from January 7th until February 4th, 2011. It consisted of Darfurnica and FORBES/DARFUR, a series of drawn portraits of the most and least influential people in 2009. The most influential are based on the list “Forbes 100″ and the least influential are portraits of children in Darfur. The show was opened by the Danish Culture Minister, Per Stig Møller, and was greatly visited, both at the opening day and throughout the month.
AND NOW LOUIS VUITTON HAS SUED ME AGAIN
As I returned to Holland in the beginning of February, I had received a verdict in a new court case started by Louis Vuitton. They are very angry about the bag that the boy in the middle is carrying. They claim again that I infringe their design rights on the pattern used in their “audra” bag and they had the court in Hague put 5000 euro penalties for each day I continue to show this painting on my website or in galleries or anywhere else. They have been counting since January 28, so at the moment the amount is higher than 220.000 euros (!)
Here you can read an English translation of the Court Order
I only heard about this lawsuit when I received the verdict; I have therefore not been able to defend myself. This seems a clear violation of my freedom of speech and artistic freedom.
I have spent the past month searching for an attorney and I am now blessed to have the help from Jens van den Brink and Christien Wildeman from the lawfirm Kennedy Van der Laan.
They have kindly agreed to start helping me but I need to find funds to defend myself and enable me to fend off fines Louis Vuitton may claim.
PLEASE HELP ME RAISE FUNDS TO DEFEND MYSELF
Any donations can be transferred to this Dutch account:
R.M. Keesom
Account nr: 1057.26.818
BIC/SWIFT code: RABONL2U
Iban nr: NL02RABO0105726818
OR
to this Danish account:
M. Engelbrecht
Reg. nr: 3306
Account nr: 4083473037
BIC/SWIFT code: DABADKKK
Iban nr: DK9030004083473037
Please note, the accounts are not in my own name as I can risk to have my accounts seized by Louis Vuitton.
THANK YOU!
In a few weeks we plan to start summary proceedings against LV to try to have the order lifted.
I can’t believe that our world has come to a place where protection of design and copyrights apparently is more important than protection of human rights.
According to The Save Darfur Coalition, the last bombings of villages in Darfur took place no less than a few weeks ago, and 45.000 new refugees arrived in the Zamzam IDP Camp.
However – this is not something you hear in the media at all.
The story about Darfur must be told, and I believe I should have my artistic freedom of speech to do so.

Egoism, Bassler Disconnect - Brain Reboot (Egoism Remix)

Gen. Wesley Clark says Libya doesn't meet the test for U.S. military action

Scion Radio A/V Presents: Rob Hood Interview

Kode9 - Time Patrol Dub


The anticipation is steadily increasing as we draw closer to the release date for the forthcoming Kode9 and The Spaceape LP, Black Sun, but to help hold us futuristic beat junkies over in the meantime, Kode9 has sent along this dub version of "Time Patrol" (which originally appeared on the 5 Years of Hyperdub comp back in 2009). As to be expected from a dub, The Spaceape's vocals are completely stripped away, allowing the focus to be on Kode9's lush, booming production. The only trace of vocals left amongst the menacing synth lines and dark horn stabs is the echoing, emotive phrasing of Chinese vocalist Cha Cha, whose contribution to the track marked her first collaboration with the London producer but has since led to her appearing on four tracks for the upcoming LP. In the time before Black Sun drops on April 18, we're thankful that Kode9 has allowed us to take a little trip into his reimagined past in hopes that it'll better prepare us for the mind-warping future he is about to deliver.
Essential Mix 12/03/11

Caribou - Tour CD 2010 DJ Mix


1. Anton Bruhin. Schtandli. Boing.
2. Brave New World. Halpas Corn Dance. Vertigo.
3. Group Inerane. Telilite. Sublime Frequencies.
4. Alog. Every Word Was Once an Animal (Daphni Mix). Unreleased.
5. Crash Course In Science. Flying Turns. Stones Throw.
6. Igor Wakhevitch. Rituel De Guerre Des Esprits De La Terre. Atlantic
7. Unknown. Egyptian Wedding (Luxor). Philips.
8. Nightlife Unlimited. Peaches & Prunes (Ron Hardy Edit). Partehardy.
9. Bernard Bonnier. Vero-La-Toto. Amaryllis.
10. Martin Hall. Fishes. Piermario Ciani.
11. The Doves. I Shall Be Free.
12. Daphni. So Tired Of Crying. Unreleased.
13. Thomas Mapfumo. Shumba (Daphni Edit). Resista.
14. Daphni. For Arnold. Unreleased.
15. Aphrodite's Child. Break. Vertigo.

Game Changing Study Puts Piracy in Perspective

The Saxophone Saint: The Church of John Coltrane

Huge blast at Japan nuclear power plant

Can: the ultimate film soundtrack band?

He hardly needs to give up his day job, but Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood seems to have a pretty good alternative career lined up as a film composer. After his dissonant, overpowering strings on There Will Be Blood, he does sterling work on this week's excellent Norwegian Wood, adding to the Japanese teen gloom with sheets of orchestral noise and tender acoustic guitar melodies. But what caught my attention on the soundtrack was the welcome reappearance of Can, whose music not only fits the late-60s setting, but also reminds us how much Radiohead are indebted to the trailblazing krautrockers. They've made no secret of it, even covering Can's The Thief, but listening to The King of Limbs' precision clattering, jazzy guitars, slightly slurred vocals and unorthodox song structures, the spirit of Can still courses through them.
Another reason Can complement Norwegian Wood is the band's Japanese frontman, Damo Suzuki, who sounds like he is singing in his native tongue even when performing in English. The band famously recruited Suzuki off a Munich street in 1970 to play a gig that same night – where his incendiary improvised performance turned away all but the most hardcore, including, bizarrely, actor David Niven, who stayed till the end.
Two of the Can songs in Norwegian Wood are already from existing soundtracks, hence their inclusion on the 1970 album, er, Can Soundtracks: Don't Turn the Light On, Leave Me Alone (bet Radiohead wish they'd thought of that title), Suzuki's first recording with the band, which sounds like a stoned art-students' jam (someone's done a homemade video here); and She Brings the Rain, a mellow, bassy, jazzy melody that doesn't really sound like Can at all (it was performed by their original singer, Malcolm Mooney, shortly before he had a breakdown and left the band). The version in Norwegian Wood, however, sounds like a cover.
Back in my student days – when I should have been listening to Radiohead or studying – Can Soundtracks was a favourite on the electric gramophone. But before imdb, Amazon, iTunes or, in fact, the internet, it was difficult tracking down the films the songs were originally made for. And it still is. They all seem to be obscure German B-movies from the late 60s. Don't Turn the Light On…, for example, is from a film called Cream – Schwabing-Report, on which the only light imdb can shed is the salacious tagline: "What a bored child bride did until she got caught!" That's probably enough information. She Brings the Rain, meanwhile, was from a film called Ein Großer Graublauer Vogel (A Big Grey-Blue Bird). Apparently it's about scientists who invent a computer that solves the mysteries of the universe, but then forget they've done so. Has anyone ever seen this film? Does it really exist?
Fortunately Can's music has been used in edgier but more accessible movies ever since. Keyboardist Irmin Schmidt went on to produce scores of scores, including Wim Wenders's Alice in the Cities. Wenders used She Brings the Rain in Lisbon Story, as did Oskar Roehler in his 2000 film No Place to Go. And the band reunited to do a track for Wenders's Until the End of the World. There's also a lot of Can in Lynne Ramsay's Morvern Callar (the book was dedicated to bassist Holger Czukay), and their funky Vitamin C cropped up in Pedro Almodovar's Broken Embraces. Apparently Can's biggest earner, though, was the track Spoon, which was adopted by hit German TV cop show Das Messer. I thought I heard them recently in another fine and gloomy Japanese youth movie, Confessions, but it turned out to be Boris. Coincidentally, Confessions' soundtrack also features Radiohead.
The good news is that the best of those "lost" movies featuring music from Can Soundtracks is to become available for the first time. This is Jerzy Skolimowski's Deep End, which the BFI is re-releasing in May. A teen drama set in a swimming baths at the end of Swinging London, it features the most legendary song on Can Soundtracks: Mother Sky, which plays as the hero trawls through sleazy Soho, steals a cardboard cut-out, makes the acquaintance of a prostitute with a broken leg and buys a hotdog from Burt Kwouk. Mother Sky is quintessential Can: a mighty 15-minute psychedelic wig-out with crazy screeching guitar, minimalist bassline, clockwork drumming and indecipherable Damo Suzuki chanting. It's garage punk with a longer attention span, math rock with a human soul, and prog without the self-indulgence. Nobody could get away with that now, not even Radiohead.
Steve Rose @'The Guardian'

Saturday, 12 March 2011

Happy Birthday Jack!

Radiation leak confirmed at quake-hit Fukushima plant

東北・関東大地震。揺れる新宿の高層ビル 2011年3月11日

Wisconsin Firefighters Shut Down Bank That Funded Walker

Everybody knows the GOP's biggest weakness is money, so why not hit 'em in the sweet spot? That's what many amazing Wisconsin firefighters did yesterday when they collectively began withdrawing their funds from Madison's M&I Bank -- whose executives and board members were among the highest donors to Governor Scott Walker's campaign.
Heeding a call by Firefighters Local 311 President Joe Conway to 'Move your money,' union members withdrew over $100,000 from the bank, with some reports stating that number is as high as $192,000. Either way, it was a hefty enough chunk of change that M&I shut its doors and closed for the day at 3PM.
This is a very simple, very peaceful way to inflict some serious damage on the money-grubbers; super kudos to the Firefighters Union.
Anecdoctally -- 'M&I Bank received $1.7 billion in bailout money via President George W. Bush's Troubled Assets Relief Program. The bank was acquired by the Bank of Montreal in December of 2010 for $4.1 billion in stock,' reports Dane101.
UPDATE: Stranded Wind over at DailyKos has photos of the protest outside M&I, and says the ante has been upped to $600,000! 'What these pictures show are six hundred ordinary citizens descending on the M&I branch near the Wisconsin Capitol after learning of their purchase of the gubernatorial election last November. Two firefighters with old school ideas about saving had over $600,000 between the two of them and they demanded cashier's checks on the spot.'
Julianne Escobedo Shepherd @'AlterNet'

How To Donate Money By Cellphone To Japan Quake Victims