Sunday 24 April 2011

Futura(ma) 1964-65

Via
Finally saw a copy of Futura's book at Melbourne' s State Library.
If anyone sees a cheapish copy for sale please let me know...

Shielding the Privacies of Life

Perspective: Why Comparing Painkiller Addiction to Crack Worsens the Problem

Norio Ohga, former Sony president, dies

The former president and chairman of Sony, Norio Ohga, who was credited with developing the compact disc, has died aged 81, the company has said.
Ohga, who led the company from 1982 to 1995, died of multiple organ failure in the Japanese capital, Tokyo.
Sony's chairman, Sir Howard Stringer, said his predecessor's foresight and vision had transformed the company into a global entertainment leader.
Ohga was still a senior adviser to the company at the time of his death.
In 1953, Sony's co-founders recruited Ohga while he was still studying at the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music and hoping to pursue a career as an opera singer. They sensed his knowledge of sound and electrical engineering would benefit the firm.
He was an executive by his 30s - a rarity in a Japanese company - becoming the president of CBS Sony Records (now Sony Music Entertainment) in 1970s.
From the start, he recognised the potential of the compact disc, and personally drove Sony's initiatives to introduce the format.
During the development of the CD, it was Ohga who pushed for a disc that was 12cm (4.8in) in diameter, because it provided sufficient capacity at 75 minutes to store all of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony.
Sony sold the world's first CD in 1982 and CDs overtook LP record sales in Japan five years later. Ohga's specifications are still used today, and have shaped formats developed since, including MiniDisc and DVD.
In 1989, he oversaw the $3.4bn purchase of Hollywood studios Columbia Pictures, which was criticised as unwise and costly at the time.
Ohga also presided over the launch of Sony's game business, which went on to develop the successful "PlayStation" console.
"By redefining Sony as a company encompassing both hardware and software, Ohga-san succeeded where other Japanese companies failed," said Sony Chairman Howard Stringer, using the Japanese honorific.
"It is no exaggeration to attribute Sony's evolution beyond audio and video products into music, movies and game, and subsequent transformation into a global entertainment leader to Ohga-san's foresight and vision," he added.
Ohga stepped down as Sony's president in 1995 and continued to serve as chairman and representative director until 2000.
He was also the chairman of the Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra.
@'BBC'

Not Even The Threat Of Prison Deters Information Sharing

Obama on Manning

Unlawful Command Influence

Iain Sinclair: The Festival of Britain, 60 years on

The Festival of Britain is remembered as an uplifting moment for a nation recovering from war. Iain Sinclair, who visited it aged eight, reflects on the celebrations to mark its 60th anniversary, in our age of corporate sponsorship and Olympics mania.
@'The Guardian'

'US cannot change ME uprisings course'

Iranian Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani says the United States cannot change the course of the popular uprisings in the Middle East and North Africa.
Larijani said on Saturday that the popular uprisings have “turned a new page” and “will change the situation in the region,” IRNA reported.
He stressed that the US and Israel's efforts to change the course of the uprisings would be ineffective.
“The recent events in the region are so deep that the Americans cannot change the situation. They should accept that the regional nations want democracy,” Larijani said.
The Iranian Parliament speaker stressed that Iran should continue its “duty” to defend the nations against what he called “a modern dictatorship.”
Larijani further called on international bodies to “remove their earplugs and hear the voice of the people.”
Many countries in the Middle East and North Africa, including Bahrain, Yemen and Libya, have recently witnessed massive protests against their autocratic regimes.
The protests have been inspired by revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt earlier this year which ended the long rule of Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and Hosni Mubarak respectively. 

@'PressTV'

ZXZ - intothegroove


Get the ZXZ album 'Abraxas' as a free download
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Yemen leader Saleh agrees to step down under Gulf plan

Clay Shirky
@ Obama "resorts to brazen hypocrisy & factually confused claims to defend Manning's treatment"

Israel in a quandary over turmoil in Syria

Ad break #17

(Click to enlarge)
(Thanx Linda!)

War? What is it good for?

Absolutely nothing!

Hmmm!

Woman brutally beaten for using women’s toilet in fast-food restaurant

Trigger warning: violence against trans women
Restroom panic, sometimes also known as bathroom panic; the terms mean the same. They refer to the sense of moral outrage and indignation experienced by some cis people on realising that trans people (generally trans women) use the same public toilets as they do. It’s an irrational fear grounded in the transphobic notion that trans women, regardless of our legal, medical or surgical status should be denied access to restrooms consistent with our gender presentation.
Too often the reasoning behind this idea seems to be that we will assault cis women if we’re not kept out of public toilets. Yet no proponent of this cissexist justification has ever come up with irrefutable proof – court case reports, police records, press reports, just one thing – to show that even one trans woman has ever attacked or otherwise assaulted a cis woman in one of “their” restrooms. Quite the reverse, in fact: there have been numerous instances of trans women being harassed and assaulted by cis people in public conveniences without fear of reprisal.
The latest manifestation of this ciscentric hysteria reached new depths last Monday, 18 April, in a McDonald’s restaurant in Baltimore with a vicious assault being captured on cellphone video:
The video shows two women — one of them a 14-year-old girl — repeatedly kicking and punching the 22-year-old victim in the head, as an employee of the Rosedale restaurant and a patron try to intervene. Others can be heard laughing, and men are seen standing idly by.
Toward the end of the video, one of the suspects lands a punishing blow to the victim’s head, and she appears to have a seizure. A man’s voice tells the women to run because police are coming.[Baltimore Sun]
Trigger warning: Here is a link to the video of the attack [YouTube]
As far as I know, the victim is still in hospital, where she was taken after the attack, and no update has yet been issued regarding her condition.
I have seen numerous commentaries online (Google News) and two themes are emerging. First, that the attack was motivated by race (the victim is white, her attackers are black). In my opinion, this is reverse racism and has no place in any discussion of this attack. In addition, it overlooks the fact that one of the attackers is herself quoted as saying that the fight was “over using a bathroom.” (Baltimore Sun). Finally, it ignores the published statistics showing that over 70% of transphobic violence is against women of colour (WoC). (Trans Murder Monitoring project) In that context, this attack is an exception to the norm – not that that makes it any better.
The second emerging commentary seems to be a call for the dismissal of the restaurant staff for failing to step in and stop the attack. In my view, this is a kneejerk reaction and I wonder what practical benefit it would have. Disciplinary action should certainly be taken by McDonalds but let’s not forget that any of the other customers could have intervened. One did, eventually – and another recorded the now viral cellphone video. So what action should be taken against those customers? It seems to me that education on trans issues should be a priority here, in the hope that the seeds of attitudinal change can be planted.
I believe it’s time to stop centring cis women’s unfounded concerns above the safety of trans women. Like it or not, trans women are women and, as such, we have as much right as any other woman not to be brutally assaulted when using public toilets.

(Cross-posted from Bird of Paradox)

Preacher of Syria's Deraa province quits over killings

Commentator - "And now Liverpool can relax". Yep, we were all worried at 4-0 with 5 minutes to go.
Hazel Dickens RIP
Illustration

Is political partisanship in your genes?

Blake Hounshell
Perspective: The Boston Massacre that kicked off the American revolution? Five dead.

Syrian troops open fire on mourners at funerals for pro-democracy protesters

Syrian security forces have opened fire on mourners at mass funerals for pro-democracy protesters killed in the bloodiest day of uprising against President Bashar al-Assad's regime.
Troops injured at least three people when they fired live rounds at a funeral in the Damascus suburb of Douma, while mourners approaching the southern town of Izra'a were shot at to prevent them from attending another mass funeral, witnesses told Reuters.
One of the witnesses at the Douma funerals told the news agency: "I saw three people falling on the ground, one of them had blood gushing from his mouth. I could not tell whether he was hit in the stomach or the chest."
A second witness said pallbearers abandoned coffins they were carrying and ran for cover when the funeral came under fire.
One witness who had come to Izra'a to attend the burials of at least 12 people shot by security forces on Friday told Reuters: "There was a heavy volley of gunfire in our direction as we approached Izra'a to join the funerals of martyrs."
Across Syria on Saturday, tens of thousands of mourners demanded the "overthrow of the regime" at funerals for about 100 protesters killed by the security forces on Friday.
Mourners at the funeral in Izra'a chanted: "Bashar al-Assad, you traitor. Long live Syria, down with Bashar."
Activists said at least 100 people were killed during Friday's protests – raising the death toll from initial estimates of at least 88 civilian casualties.
Demonstrators were killed across the country, from the port city of Latakia to Homs, Hama, Damascus and the southern village of Izra'a, activists said. Security forces around Damascus and other key cities ignored appeals to eschew violence, opening fire with live rounds and using teargas against several pro-democracy protests, activists and witnesses reported.
Protests have continued despite a string of government concessions earlier in the week, including the lifting of the hated 48-year-old emergency law.
The White House urged Damascus to follow through on promised reforms. US President Barack Obama called on the Syrian government to stop using violence against demonstrators and accused Assad of seeking help from Iran.
"This outrageous use of violence to quell protests must come to an end now," Obama said. "Instead of listening to their own people, President Assad is blaming outsiders while seeking Iranian assistance in repressing Syria's citizens through the same brutal tactics that have been used by his Iranian allies."
British foreign secretary William Hague condemned the "unacceptable killing of demonstrators" and called on Syrian security forces "to exercise restraint instead of repression". He said the authorities should respect the "people's right to peaceful protest".
David Batty @'The Guardian'

Beastie Boys - Make Some Noise MSG ALBUMSTREAM

Watch live streaming video from beastieboys at livestream.com

Kate Bush hints at live return

Saturday 23 April 2011

♪♫ Gutter Twins - The Stations @ Salumeria della Musica (Milan, Italy)

Andrew Exum
You are NOT GOING TO BELIEVE THIS, but the WaPo editorial page is talking smack on Syria again without providing a policy alternative.

♪♫ Frankie Goes To Hollywood - Relax (Banned Version)


The first official video for "Relax", directed by Bernard Rose and set in a S&M themed gay nightclub, was allegedly banned by MTV and the BBC, prompting the recording of a second video, directed by Godley and Creme in early 1984, featuring the group performing with the help of "laser beams". However, after the second video was made the song was banned completely by the BBC, meaning that neither video was ever broadcast on any BBC music programmes.

Grafilm


Via

In Conversation: PJ Harvey


wnyc.org: "Since recording her debut in 1992 as PJ Harvey, the English singer-songwriter and guitarist Polly Jean Harvey has recorded an eclectic string of albums, no two of which sound the same. Her latest is called “Let England Shake.” It’s an epic, if unsettling affair about the wars fought by her native country – and their casualties. Harvey joins us to talk about the album."



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our daily Polly Harvey post...

♪♫ Twilight Singers - When Doves Cry

HA?

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Robert Fisk: But what if the spirit of rebellion spread to Iran?

Beastie Boys - Make Some Noise/Fight For Your Right (Revisited)


The Beastie Boys get loud and proud in the video for “Make Some Noise” aka “Fight for Your Right Revisited,” the lead single off their album Hot Sauce Committee Part Two, dropping May 3. Touting cameos from Hollywood A-listers Seth Rogen, Jack Black, Elijah Wood, Steve Buscemi, Will Ferrell, and more, the raucous clip serves as a continuation of the trio’s 1986 classic visuals for “Fight For Your Right,” with three impersonators of Mike D, MCA, and Ad-Rock causing a scene on the streets. Stir up some trouble with the star-studded cast.
(Thanx DJPigg!)

Judge cancels hearing on Twitter users’ challenge to feds’ WikiLeaks investigation in Va.

Monalisa
Nothing, and I do mean nothing, says 'humanitarian mission' like ordering Predator drone strikes.

Origin of Song: Rockin’ With Jesus

Beastie Boys - Say It

♪♫ Johnny Cash & The Carter Family - Were You There When They Crucified My Lord?

Obama on Manning: “He Broke the Law.” So Much for that Trial?

♪♫ Ryan Adams w/ Emmylou Harris - Oh My Sweet Carolina (Live El Rey, April 21, 2011)