Saturday 11 June 2011

Ras Amerlock - Farther East (JTR EP04)


For over twenty years, Michael McCutcheon a.ka. Ras Amerlock has been refining his chosen profession of music. Whether performing with The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra as a classical solo violinist, or as a roots reggae dub entertainer, opening for acts such as Burning Spear; Ras lives to perform and give Jah the glory for all that is, in this life. Ras Amerlock's music is a reflection in sound of the Rastafarian way of life he as a Rasta in America embraces. His current releases are heavy "old school" style dubs aiming to reflect a variety of techniques within the realm of the dubstyle sound. Ras has performed throughout North America, Russia and Europe by the grace of Jah.
Prepare for a flashing hitchhiking trip through the sonar landscapes of dubby history with our NET-EP 04, where Ras Amerlock is about to give you an exclusive lift aboard his hidden space ship laboratory!
Feeling the ever-present aftermaths of such dub fundamentalists as Scientist, King Tubby or Lee Perry all the way through your journey you will wonder if the legendary Black Ark studio really dissolved into its own mythical ashes - or if it hasn't reintegrated back into a new orbit just now.
Ras Amerlock's crazy 3D-dubness experiments will take you far beyond the black hole of historical emulation. "Farther East" is rather an echo-driven time machine, jumping from a glorious past straight to an unknown future, conveying deep studies into bassline gravity, Zero-G-offbeat science and deadly snare-blasters underway. Leaving a long trail of green haze in its wake. Fasten your seatbelts and switch on your Sens-I-Mania life support systems!
(JAHTARI)

Farther East
Prayer 4 Dreadlion
Panic
Space Buccaneer Vs. The Slaughters
Dub Wise
End Game Dub
One From Tesla's Lab
Farther East (version)


DOWNLOAD WHOLE EP
GET SINGLE TRACKS
(41.3 MB) 33:22 min
http://www.myspace.com/rasamerlockstatemonrasta

♪♫ Faust - Krautrock

Quite enjoyed Faust last night...at least it was LOUD!
Bonus: Interview after jump

Bloody Wednesday | الأربعاء الدامي | The Battle of Tahrir Square

Wednesday 2nd February was a pivotal day of the Egyptian Revolution. Peaceful protesters were attacked by men on horses and camels in Tahrir Square. A battle raged for over 24 hours as the men and women of the Revolution defended themselves and the square that embodied Egypt's struggle.
Filmed & edited by Omar Robert Hamilton
www.orhamilton.com

HA!

Panetta Confronts Pakistan Over Collusion With Militants

NATO’s Newest Bombing Tool: Twitter

Johann Hari: Spare us the fawning over Prince Philip

Pretending WikiLeaks Doesn’t Exist: Government Secrecy Reaches Absurdity

Yesterday, the ACLU filed a lawsuit after the State Department failed to respond to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request seeking the declassification of 23 State Department cables disclosed by WikiLeaks and widely disseminated online and in the press. The cables we seek reveal the diplomatic cost of policies that the Bush and Obama administrations have tried to keep secret from the American public.
Several of the cables describe high-level efforts by the government to pressure Spain and Germany into dropping investigations of the CIA's torture of detainees. The cables show that the U.S. expended significant diplomatic resources in order to try and guarantee impunity for officials responsible for the abduction and torture of victims including Khaled El-Masri, an entirely innocent German citizen. At home, the Bush and Obama administrations have invoked legal fictions such as the "state secrets" privilege to prevent U.S. courts from addressing cases of innocent people tortured and rendered by the CIA; these cables reveal the secret ways in which the government worked to defeat accountability abroad. We believe the American people have a right to know about the government's efforts to shield from liability those officials who violated domestic and international law by engaging in abduction, rendition, and torture.
Other cables requested by the ACLU reveal the government's paradoxical efforts to coordinate the resettlement or prosecution of Guantánamo detainees in foreign countries, even as the United States refused to resettle or prosecute those same detainees in the U.S. Still other cables describe the strains on our relationships with other countries caused by U.S. rendition flights and drone strikes. This information should never have been secret in the first place. Its continued classification illustrates how the government all too often uses secrecy not to enhance national security, but to hide embarrassing and difficult facts from the public.
In spite of the cables' widespread availability, the government has continued to maintain that documents released by WikiLeaks and published by national and international newspapers are classified. The government's decision to cling to a legal fiction rather than conform its secrecy regime to reality has led to absurd consequences. Congressional Research Service (CRS) analysts are blocked by the Library of Congress from using these widely available documents, even as Congress relies on CRS reports to inform new legislation. The Air Force blocked the entire websites of the New York Times and other major media outlets that posted the leaked cables. Perhaps the most troubling consequence of the government's adamant refusal to incorporate common sense into its secrecy regime is that lawyers for Guantánamo detainees have been barred from reading or discussing leaked documents concerning their clients, even though these documents are posted on the websites of major national and international newspapers and available to anyone in the world. The government has gone so far as to claim it is unable to comply with a court order that it provide guidance to lawyers representing Guantánamo detainees regarding how the lawyers may use those documents that are already publicly available.
The ACLU's lawsuit comes on the anniversary of another famous leak. On Monday, June 13, 2011, the United States will release the declassified Pentagon Papers — 40 years after they were first leaked. The fact that for 40 years after their original release the government maintained the pretense that release of the Pentagon Papers would cause damage to U.S. national security shows just how divorced from reality the U.S. approach to secrecy has become. Americans should not have to wait 40 more years for the government to declassify vital information that the whole world is already discussing.
@'ACLU'

Life

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All Aboard the Latin American Drug War Gravy Train

What could they do to me?

“What could they do to me? Nothing more than banish, kidnap, or imprison me – perhaps they could fabricate my disappearance into thin air – but they don't have any creativity or imagination, and they lack both joy and the ability to fly.”
– Blog posting by Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, before being seized and incarcerated by Chinese police on April 3.
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Four Tet Live from Mister Sunday


"Reggae, jazz, hip-hop, classic house and all variances of other stuff were on the platters laid down by Mister Kieran Hebden for our inaugural jam this past Sunday. Luckily we caught it all on tape, and it’s ready to serve up once again for your listening pleasure:
Four Tet Live From Mister Sunday, May 29, 2011
Enjoy!"
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Sarah Palin Uses Email Dump To Release Critics Personal Information

A Marxist Theory of the Web


MORE

Syrian army helicopters open fire on protesters

Khoda


What if you watch a film and whenever you pause it, you face a painting? This idea inspired Reza Dolatabadi to make Khoda. Over 6000 paintings were painstakingly produced during two years to create a five minutes film that would meet high personal standards. Khoda is a psychological thriller; a student project which was seen as a ‘mission impossible’ by many people but eventually proved possible!

How an Afghan Methadone Clinic is Fighting to Counter HIV

Journalistic Verification, Amina Arraf, and Haystack

How did a Syrian blogger, who told beautiful and heartwrenching stories of life as a lesbian in Damascus, manage to trick so many people? How did an American software engineer, whose passion for the Iranian cause led him to build what he dubbed the safest of circumvention tools, do the same? The stories of Amina Arraf and Haystack contain odd parallels: Both took advantage of fervor around Middle Eastern uprisings, both had a grassroots formation of followers…and both thrived on the promotion of professional journalists, whose praise helped garner them support. Both were also absolutely sensational stories that may have caused journalists, otherwise scrutinizing, to discard their usual standards.
I’ve written extensively on the Haystack story, but to quickly re-cap: Circumvention tool comes out of nowhere, built by young, outspoken engineer. Wild claims about efficacy. Media picks up on the hype, young engineer wins awards, media builds the hype even further. Circumvention and censorship experts begin to raise doubts about the tool itself, eventually get ahold of it, tear it apart. Turns out it’s not as secure as the engineer–and by extension, the media–had hyped it to be.
In the case of Amina Arraf, her blog–Gay Girl in Damascus–gained a following amongst bloggers and Middle East enthusiasts, then was quickly catapulted into relative blogger stardom after a series of articles in prominent publications profiled her. Therefore, when on June 6, her “cousin Rania” posted to her blog that she had been kidnapped, the public was quick to believe it. It wasn’t until the next day, when Andy Carvin and others began to question the story, that the details started unraveling as the public quickly jumped in to sleuth the story.
So what made journalists cast aside their usual levels of scrutiny? Or, is it perhaps that journalists are not as careful as we trust them to be?
I would argue that the journalistic treatment of the Haystack story was far more problematic, not least because it was easier to verify: After all, the product’s engineer was based in the US. He was reachable by phone and traveled for several interviews and awards. Numerous journalists met him, and yet not one after questioned the security of the tool. In the case of Amina, the journalists (the pseudonymous “Kathryn Marsh” and Shira Lazar) who first profiled her should have seen red flags when they couldn’t get her on the phone, but they were also dealing with a situation in which digging too much could’ve put an already endangered woman in far more danger...

NPR’s Andy Carvin, reporter or participant in Libya’s war?

The GOP's CIA Playbook: Destabilize Country to Sweep Back Into Power

♪♫ Mark Ernestus vs. Konono N° 1 - Masikulu Dub

Mexican Cops: These Are Their Stories

♪♫ Defunkt - In The Good Times

The Same Financial Firms Responsible For Our Economic Crisis Are Driving Us Toward a Global Food Disaster


US and EU investors -- including US universities, pension funds and investment firms -- are involved in unprecedented land grabs currently taking place in Africa, according to a series of investigative reports released on Wednesday by the Oakland Institute.
The Oakland Institute spent over a year working undercover to gather information on land deals in Ethiopia, Mali, Sierra Leone, Mozambique, Tanzania and South Sudan.
The reports show how land deals have a number of effects, including the destabilization of food prices, mass displacement and environmental damage.
"The same financial firms that drove us into a global recession by inflating the real estate bubble through risky financial maneuvers are now doing the same with the world's food supply," said Anuradha Mittal, executive director of the Oakland Institute.
"In Africa," she added, "this is resulting in the displacement of small farmers, environmental devastation, water loss and further political instability."
These deals are often presented as agricultural investment, providing much-needed economic funds, creating jobs and infrastructure in developing countries.
Yet, the report argues, many of the deals have negative impacts. These include inadequate participation of local populations, misinformation, lack of adequate compensation, especially for women or indigenous populations.
The intention of releasing the reports is not to curb agricultural investment but rather to ensure that the funding does what it promises to do and minimizes the deleterious effects.
The "Understanding Land Investment Deals in Africa" reports reveal that these largely unregulated land purchases are resulting in virtually none of the promised benefits for native populations, but instead are forcing millions of small farmers off ancestral lands and small, local food farms in order to make room for export commodities, including biofuels and cut flowers.
So there is an inversion of small, local farming to industrialized agriculture...e="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Tina Gerhardt @'Alternet'
Oh look...

Friday 10 June 2011

♪♫ My Computer - For Somebody Else

One of my all time favourite songs...

The man who screwed an entire country

Silvio Berlusconi has a lot to smile about. In his 74 years, he has created a media empire that made him Italy’s richest man. He has dominated politics since 1994 and is now Italy’s longest-serving prime minister since Mussolini. He has survived countless forecasts of his imminent departure. Yet despite his personal successes, he has been a disaster as a national leader—in three ways.
Two of them are well known. The first is the lurid saga of his “Bunga Bunga” sex parties, one of which has led to the unedifying spectacle of a prime minister being put on trial in Milan on charges of paying for sex with a minor. The Rubygate trial has besmirched not just Mr Berlusconi, but also his country.
However shameful the sexual scandal has been, its impact on Mr Berlusconi’s performance as a politician has been limited, so this newspaper has largely ignored it. We have, however, long protested about his second failing: his financial shenanigans. Over the years, he has been tried more than a dozen times for fraud, false accounting or bribery. His defenders claim that he has never been convicted, but this is untrue. Several cases have seen convictions, only for them to be set aside because the convoluted proceedings led to trials being timed out by a statute of limitations—at least twice because Mr Berlusconi himself changed the law. That was why this newspaper argued in April 2001 that he was unfit to lead Italy.
We have seen no reason to change that verdict. But it is now clear that neither the dodgy sex nor the dubious business history should be the main reason for Italians looking back on Mr Berlusconi as a disastrous, even malign, failure. Worst by far has been a third defect: his total disregard for the economic condition of his country. Perhaps because of the distraction of his legal tangles, he has failed in almost nine years as prime minister to remedy or even really to acknowledge Italy’s grave economic weaknesses. As a result, he will leave behind him a country in dire straits.
A chronic disease, not an acute one
That grim conclusion might surprise students of the euro crisis. Thanks to the tight fiscal policy of Mr Berlusconi’s finance minister, Giulio Tremonti, Italy has so far escaped the markets’ wrath. Ireland, not Italy, is the I in the PIGS (with Portugal, Greece and Spain). Italy avoided a housing bubble; its banks did not go bust. Employment held up: the unemployment rate is 8%, compared with over 20% in Spain. The budget deficit in 2011 will be 4% of GDP, against 6% in France.
Yet these reassuring numbers are deceptive. Italy’s economic illness is not the acute sort, but a chronic disease that slowly gnaws away at vitality. When Europe’s economies shrink, Italy’s shrinks more; when they grow, it grows less. As our special report in this week’s issue points out, only Zimbabwe and Haiti had lower GDP growth than Italy in the decade to 2010. In fact GDP per head in Italy actually fell. Lack of growth means that, despite Mr Tremonti, the public debt is still 120% of GDP, the rich world’s third-biggest. This is all the more worrying given the rapid ageing of Italy’s population.
Low average unemployment disguises some sharp variations. A quarter of young people—far more in parts of the depressed south—are jobless. The female-participation rate in the workforce is 46%, the lowest in western Europe. A mix of low productivity and high wages is eroding competitiveness: whereas productivity rose by a fifth in America and a tenth in Britain in the decade to 2010, in Italy it fell by 5%. Italy comes 80th in the World Bank’s “Doing Business” index, below Belarus and Mongolia, and 48th in the World Economic Forum’s competitiveness rankings, behind Indonesia and Barbados.
The Bank of Italy’s outgoing governor, Mario Draghi, spelt things out recently in a hard-hitting farewell speech (before taking the reins at the European Central Bank). He insisted that the economy desperately needs big structural reforms. He pinpointed stagnant productivity and attacked government policies that “fail to encourage, and often hamper, [Italy’s] development”, such as delays in the civil-justice system, poor universities, a lack of competition in public and private services, a two-tier labour market with protected insiders and exposed outsiders, and too few big firms.
All these things are beginning to affect Italy’s justly acclaimed quality of life. Infrastructure is getting shabbier. Public services are stretched. The environment is suffering. Real incomes are at best stagnant. Ambitious young Italians are quitting their country in droves, leaving power in the hands of an elderly and out-of-touch elite. Few Europeans despise their pampered politicians as much as Italians do...
Continue reading

Panetta: Escalate Shadow Wars, Expand Black Ops

♪♫ William S. Burroughs And PJ Harvey - The Secret Name


Anyone have any idea where this is from?

Is the N.S.A. Whistleblower Case Falling Apart?

BREAKING:

Ex-NSA official Thomas Drake to plead guilty to misdemeanor

Wikileaks - Behind The News (Sheffield Docfest 9/6/11)



Moderator: Nick Fraser
Participants: Judith I Ehrlich, Vaughan Smith, Michael Parenti, James Ball
Welcome to the age of Wikileaks – never out of the news as subject matter or source. But what is the organisation’s real impact? Has it altered international relations and brought down governments? Has it change the way news is gathered and released forever - or merely made diplomats more discreet with their email exchanges? In search of the story behind the story, we’ve invited a panel of people closely connected to Wikileaks and Julian Assange. Journalist and BBC commissioning editor Nick Fraser, is keen to ask them some questions...
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In Conversation with Julian Assange

How many have died in Mexico's drug war?

NOTW

Morocco opens inquiry into claims French politician had underage orgy in Marrakech

Tom Waits teaser

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Nkulee Dube - Africa Festival Würzburg 06/05/2011


No female artist has managed to fuse ethno-soul, jazz with ethno-ragga in one song as this 24-year old singer, songwriter, Nkulee Dube has done in such a short space of time since entering this challenging and yet exciting industry.
Born to the family of a music legend, Nkulee Dube has big shoes to fill to preserve and sustain the name of her late father, Lucky Dube. She glides and slides with ease in between her songs as she traverses between ragga and ethno-soul as if she was born on stage. As a guest artist and backing vocalist Nkulee has been part of her late father’s band ‘One People’, and has performed at major festivals in Australia, Holland, Papa New Genea, French Gayana, etc.
(nativerhythms)

Thursday 9 June 2011

Windsor woman warns over Facebook amputee fetishists

Glenn Greenwald: WikiLeaks Grand Jury investigation widens

Scott Walker Scores Duet For One At Royal Opera House

New material from Scott Walker arrives in the form of a score to a dance piece at at the Royal Opera House this month. Walker’s piece soundtracks a re-imagining of Jean Cocteau’s monologue Duet For One, choreographed by Royal Opera House associate artist Aletta Collins.
Walker says: “I must admit to not really being an admirer of Cocteau. I am, however, an admirer of Aletta Collins and her work. So when Aletta asked me to collaborate with the intention of deconstructing the original script for dance, I was grateful for the challenge to help take what is essentially, in my humble opinion, an antiquated piece of misogyny (in this case, woman as willing victim) and try to turn it on its head and use its traces to create something new."
Duet For One is performed alongside La Voix Humane, Poulenc’s opera based on Cocteau’s play from 1932, staged by Tom Cairns. London Royal Opera House, 17–25 June, 7:45pm, £10.20–£24.50.
@'The Wire'

Dream World


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Fighting AIDS in Tanzania