(Photos: TimN - Fairfield 19/03/12)
Monday, 19 March 2012
'Taking Tiger Mountain'
TAKING TIGER MOUNTAIN
Dir. by Tom Huckabee & Kent Smith
USA/UK. 1983. 83 min. Video transfer.
Written by Paul Cullum, Kent Smith, Tom Huckabee & William S. Burroughs
Based on 'Blade Runner: A Movie' by William S. Burroughs
MORE
How Scientology Shaped the Writing of William S. Burroughs
Ali's Smile/Naked ScientologyImage: Charles Gatewood
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(Thanx Katie!)
Dozens held at Moscow protest over 'pro-Putin' TV film
Russian police have arrested dozens of people picketing Moscow's TV tower over footage that accused the opposition of paying anti-government protesters.
The film, The Anatomy of Protest, was aired this week on NTV - a channel owned by state-run firm Gazprom.It said protesters against Vladimir Putin's election as president in March had received "money and cookies".
The documentary has caused a backlash on social media and angered some journalists, who accused NTV of lying.
Despite mass protests against what the opposition says were fraudulent presidential elections on 4 March, Mr Putin says he won fairly.
'Popular demand' Nearly 100 people were arrested outside the iconic Ostankino tower on Sunday, reports in Russia's media say.
Opposition leaders Boris Nemtsov and Sergei Udaltsov were among those held during the unsanctioned rally.
The demonstrators wore white ribbons (the symbol of the protest movement) and chanted "Shame to NTV!" and "Russia without Putin!"
The documentary has caused dismay among supporters of the opposition and journalists alike, and led to a social media uproar, with the hashtag "NTVlzhet" ("NTV tells lies") becoming the leading trend on Russian-language Twitter.
Alexei Navalny, a key opposition figure and one of Russia's most influential bloggers, was accused of spreading misinformation and having "too many bodyguards" who were "beating up journalists".
The film has also prompted talk of an NTV boycott and was even criticised by some of the channel's own journalists.
Despite this, NTV plans to broadcast the documentary again later on Sunday "due to popular demand".
@'BBC'
Power-seeking politicians walking the low road on fear
For centuries, power-seeking politicians have recognised that scaring the public is an effective tactic to win support.
Today, with ready access to a media that's hungry for shocking stories, any parliamentarian who wants to whip up fear will usually find a ready audience.
Nowhere is this truer than in the case of fear of crime. Most Australians – particularly those whose major source of information is talkback radio – believe that crime is high and rising. And yet as a report earlier this month from the Australian Institute of Criminology showed, most categories of crime in Australia have been falling over time.
Alas, some members of the Federal Opposition this week decided that they would take the low road, and exploit community fear of crime for partisan ends.
Opposition Leader Tony Abbott spoke of a 'reign of terror on the streets of Sydney'. For anyone who missed the first dog-whistle, Scott Morrison added, 'If you can't stop the boats, you can't stop the guns'. Neither admitted that officers from customs and police – working with their European counterparts – had successfully shut down an attempt to smuggle guns into the country. Spreading misinformation on any issue is damaging, but it's particularly harmful in the case of crime.
Indeed, it was the great legal scholar Jeremy Bentham who first suggested that crime might have an impact on non-victims. A violent crime, Bentham suggested, did a 'primary mischief' to its victim. But it also caused a 'secondary mischief'. As reports circulated, people would go out of their way to avoid the spot where it happened. Some might spend money to protect themselves. Others could be too scared to leave their homes at all. Bentham's work showed that the ripples of crime spread out well beyond the event itself.
A few years ago, as an economics professor at the Australian National University, I carried out a study with UK economist Francesca Cornaglia in which we aimed to test Bentham's theory in Australia. Matching up surveys of mental wellbeing with data on police crime reports, we found that an increase in crime was associated with lower levels of mental wellbeing for people who were not a victim of any crime. When crime surged, people in the neighbourhood who hadn't been victims tended to experience more emotional problems, nervousness and depression.
Moreover, we found that media reports of crime act as a 'multiplier' – causing crime to have an even larger negative impact on mental wellbeing. This suggests that misleading media reports – including those fuelled by self-serving politicians – could lower people's mental wellbeing.
On crime, perhaps more than any other issue, there is a tendency for increases to be reported more than decreases. Good education results make a perfectly decent newspaper story, but no TV news reporter ever started off the evening bulletin with saying 'There weren't any murders today'. Yet because of the impact that crime reports have on mental wellbeing, accurate crime reporting matters.
That puts the onus on to politicians to act in the national interest, and speak responsibly about crime rates. Every time a politician gets a sound-grab on the evening news that misleads people into thinking that crime is rampant, thousands of Australians reassess their evening plans.
As we know, political fear campaigns run by people like Pauline Hanson and Jean-Marie Le Pen weren't brilliant tactical manoeuvres – they just reflected a willingness to walk the low road. Frightening the public isn't difficult – it's just an approach that most politicians choose not to adopt.
Andrew Leigh @'ABC'
Today, with ready access to a media that's hungry for shocking stories, any parliamentarian who wants to whip up fear will usually find a ready audience.
Nowhere is this truer than in the case of fear of crime. Most Australians – particularly those whose major source of information is talkback radio – believe that crime is high and rising. And yet as a report earlier this month from the Australian Institute of Criminology showed, most categories of crime in Australia have been falling over time.
Alas, some members of the Federal Opposition this week decided that they would take the low road, and exploit community fear of crime for partisan ends.
Opposition Leader Tony Abbott spoke of a 'reign of terror on the streets of Sydney'. For anyone who missed the first dog-whistle, Scott Morrison added, 'If you can't stop the boats, you can't stop the guns'. Neither admitted that officers from customs and police – working with their European counterparts – had successfully shut down an attempt to smuggle guns into the country. Spreading misinformation on any issue is damaging, but it's particularly harmful in the case of crime.
Indeed, it was the great legal scholar Jeremy Bentham who first suggested that crime might have an impact on non-victims. A violent crime, Bentham suggested, did a 'primary mischief' to its victim. But it also caused a 'secondary mischief'. As reports circulated, people would go out of their way to avoid the spot where it happened. Some might spend money to protect themselves. Others could be too scared to leave their homes at all. Bentham's work showed that the ripples of crime spread out well beyond the event itself.
A few years ago, as an economics professor at the Australian National University, I carried out a study with UK economist Francesca Cornaglia in which we aimed to test Bentham's theory in Australia. Matching up surveys of mental wellbeing with data on police crime reports, we found that an increase in crime was associated with lower levels of mental wellbeing for people who were not a victim of any crime. When crime surged, people in the neighbourhood who hadn't been victims tended to experience more emotional problems, nervousness and depression.
Moreover, we found that media reports of crime act as a 'multiplier' – causing crime to have an even larger negative impact on mental wellbeing. This suggests that misleading media reports – including those fuelled by self-serving politicians – could lower people's mental wellbeing.
On crime, perhaps more than any other issue, there is a tendency for increases to be reported more than decreases. Good education results make a perfectly decent newspaper story, but no TV news reporter ever started off the evening bulletin with saying 'There weren't any murders today'. Yet because of the impact that crime reports have on mental wellbeing, accurate crime reporting matters.
That puts the onus on to politicians to act in the national interest, and speak responsibly about crime rates. Every time a politician gets a sound-grab on the evening news that misleads people into thinking that crime is rampant, thousands of Australians reassess their evening plans.
As we know, political fear campaigns run by people like Pauline Hanson and Jean-Marie Le Pen weren't brilliant tactical manoeuvres – they just reflected a willingness to walk the low road. Frightening the public isn't difficult – it's just an approach that most politicians choose not to adopt.
Andrew Leigh @'ABC'
Paperwork error in Dotcom arrest
Police arrested Dotcom at the mansion he lived in outside Auckland on 19 January at the request of the United States Government. The US Department of Justice alleges that Dotcom is the mastermind of a criminal enterprise designed to help the masses pirate music and movies. US officials say he made millions from piracy and seek to extradite Dotcom to the US to stand trial.
Following the raid on Dotcom's home, police were photographed removing cash, Cadillacs, jet skis, artwork and scores of other valuables from his home. In addition, they shut down the Megaupload site and threw Dotcom into jail, where he stayed until being released on bail a month later.
New Zealand police filed for the wrong kind of restraining order — the kind that didn't allow for Dotcom to have a court hearing prior to the seizure — and that was a mistake, according to a report in the New Zealand Herald.
A court has now ruled that the restraining order that enabled police to seize his assets is "null and void", and a review of the mistakes made will soon be conducted by New Zealand's attorney general, according to the Herald.
The paper noted that there's no guarantee that Dotcom will prevail. His lawyers must prove the absence of good faith when the procedural error was made.
There was no word on when a decision on this may come down.
Via
Following the raid on Dotcom's home, police were photographed removing cash, Cadillacs, jet skis, artwork and scores of other valuables from his home. In addition, they shut down the Megaupload site and threw Dotcom into jail, where he stayed until being released on bail a month later.
New Zealand police filed for the wrong kind of restraining order — the kind that didn't allow for Dotcom to have a court hearing prior to the seizure — and that was a mistake, according to a report in the New Zealand Herald.
A court has now ruled that the restraining order that enabled police to seize his assets is "null and void", and a review of the mistakes made will soon be conducted by New Zealand's attorney general, according to the Herald.
The paper noted that there's no guarantee that Dotcom will prevail. His lawyers must prove the absence of good faith when the procedural error was made.
There was no word on when a decision on this may come down.
Via
:)
Sean Bradbury @seanbrad2
Stoke fans singing about Suarez: "He cheats, he dives, he hates the Jackson 5"
Fantasy Gothball Team
Via Things We Never Did
The Immaculate Consumptives
The Immaculate Consumptives
Bonus:
Young Guns Go For It - The Story of Soft Cell Sunday, 18 March 2012
Autechre Mixed
Download
Decks with timecodes.
Caliper Remote - LP5
Caliper Remote - Lp5
Chenc9 - Quaristice
Pro Radii - Untilted
Djarum - Anti EP
90101-51-1 - Quaristice
Flutter - Anti EP
Second Scout - Anvil Vapre
Laughing Quarter - Envane
Maetl - Incunabula
Parhelic - Confield
Pce Freeze - Move of Ten
R ess - Oversteps
Rale - Quaristice
Paralel Suns - Quaristice
Arch Carrier - Lp5
Dael - Tri Repetae
Treale - Oversteps
Known(1) - Oversteps
Decks with timecodes.
Caliper Remote - LP5
Caliper Remote - Lp5
Chenc9 - Quaristice
Pro Radii - Untilted
Djarum - Anti EP
90101-51-1 - Quaristice
Flutter - Anti EP
Second Scout - Anvil Vapre
Laughing Quarter - Envane
Maetl - Incunabula
Parhelic - Confield
Pce Freeze - Move of Ten
R ess - Oversteps
Rale - Quaristice
Paralel Suns - Quaristice
Arch Carrier - Lp5
Dael - Tri Repetae
Treale - Oversteps
Known(1) - Oversteps
Saturday, 17 March 2012
Kony: The Musical (Invisible Children 2006)
The comments are priceless...
This is awesome. I love Joe Kony!!! you guys make him seem so fun and wacky. I hope I can make an exploitative documentary to help kickstart my MTV video directing career, just like these guys.
Well I'm sure that if the LRA were to see their sick dance moves they would go "Hey, maybe we aren't actually doing god's work....did you see that semi-ironic dance he did? Also that white guy said 'end the war' and you know we can't just ignore that"
In fact I'm sure that is the entire reason they buggered off to the Congo in the first place.
I wonder if he busted those moves when he was masturbating on the streets and getting arrested.Etc, etc...:)
Everybody's a target; everybody with communication is a target
The NSA Is Building the Country's Biggest Spy Center (Watch What You Say)
Just off Beef Hollow Road, less than a mile from brethren headquarters, thousands of hard-hatted construction workers in sweat-soaked T-shirts are laying the groundwork for the newcomers' own temple and archive, a massive complex so large that it necessitated expanding the town's boundaries. Once built, it will be more than five times the size of the US Capitol.
Rather than Bibles, prophets, and worshippers, this temple will be filled with servers, computer intelligence experts, and armed guards. And instead of listening for words flowing down from heaven, these newcomers will be secretly capturing, storing, and analyzing vast quantities of words and images hurtling through the world's telecommunications networks. In the little town of Bluffdale, Big Love and Big Brother have become uneasy neighbors.
[...]
But "this is more than just a data center," says one senior intelligence official who until recently was involved with the program. The mammoth Bluffdale center will have another important and far more secret role that until now has gone unrevealed. It is also critical, he says, for breaking codes. And code-breaking is crucial, because much of the data that the center will handle—financial information, stock transactions, business deals, foreign military and diplomatic secrets, legal documents, confidential personal communications—will be heavily encrypted. According to another top official also involved with the program, the NSA made an enormous breakthrough several years ago in its ability to cryptanalyze, or break, unfathomably complex encryption systems employed by not only governments around the world but also many average computer users in the US. The upshot, according to this official: "Everybody's a target; everybody with communication is a target."
------------
Read the full article over at Wired
[Curtsey to @exiledsurfer for the heads-up]
Just off Beef Hollow Road, less than a mile from brethren headquarters, thousands of hard-hatted construction workers in sweat-soaked T-shirts are laying the groundwork for the newcomers' own temple and archive, a massive complex so large that it necessitated expanding the town's boundaries. Once built, it will be more than five times the size of the US Capitol.
Rather than Bibles, prophets, and worshippers, this temple will be filled with servers, computer intelligence experts, and armed guards. And instead of listening for words flowing down from heaven, these newcomers will be secretly capturing, storing, and analyzing vast quantities of words and images hurtling through the world's telecommunications networks. In the little town of Bluffdale, Big Love and Big Brother have become uneasy neighbors.
[...]
But "this is more than just a data center," says one senior intelligence official who until recently was involved with the program. The mammoth Bluffdale center will have another important and far more secret role that until now has gone unrevealed. It is also critical, he says, for breaking codes. And code-breaking is crucial, because much of the data that the center will handle—financial information, stock transactions, business deals, foreign military and diplomatic secrets, legal documents, confidential personal communications—will be heavily encrypted. According to another top official also involved with the program, the NSA made an enormous breakthrough several years ago in its ability to cryptanalyze, or break, unfathomably complex encryption systems employed by not only governments around the world but also many average computer users in the US. The upshot, according to this official: "Everybody's a target; everybody with communication is a target."
------------
Read the full article over at Wired
[Curtsey to @exiledsurfer for the heads-up]
Friday, 16 March 2012
Interview w/ Adrian Sherwood that covers a lot of ground...
Pelirocco Platters is broadcast twice a week on Brightons community Radioreverb presented by Mick Habeshaw Robinson. The show reflects his love and involvement in punk, acid house, soul and other musical movements. This episode features an interview with UK dub legend Adrian Sherwood who talks about his career and music productions since the early 80s.
...includes snippets from his new solo album and when he mentions Prince Far I down at Dingwalls, well I used to take every night off working there and come as a punter when Adrian was doing the mixing!
Bonus:
Eric's flyer from 1979 that down from the second bottom advertises the tour that Adrian mentions with Prince Far I, Bim Sherman and Prince Hammer. (Thanx David!)
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