Monday, 19 July 2010

Break Down Colors with 'Pictaculous'

Like the colors in an image you just saw but have no idea what they are? Here's an app that can you give the answers.



A web app by the people behind MailChimp, 'Pictaculous' helps you identify the colors used in an image that you've uploaded.
Simply upload an image on the site and 'Pictaculous' will break down your image into a primary color palette, in addition to a selection of up to 10 different palettes suggested by Kuler and COLORlovers.
Apparently, the web app also works on mobile phones. All you have to do is email your image to 'Pictaculous' and the results will be sent to you within minutes.

Moonshine 'tempts new generation'

Moonshine barrels line a road in 1925  
Prohibition prompted a surge in illegal moonshine production across the US in the 1920s and early 1930s
A growing number of Americans are thought to be getting involved in moonshining - distilling illegal liquor. Traditionally hidden in the backwoods, stills are now going into production in cities across the nation, as Claire Prentice reports from New York.
Against the backdrop of the recession and the current craze for artisan produce, illegal distilling clubs and "kitchen-sink" operations are popping up all over the US, from California to New York and Pennsylvania.
Making and selling moonshine is outlawed in every US state and the police treat distilling liquor without a license as a serious crime.
But while official figures are hard to come by, experts believe as many as a million Americans could be breaking the law by making moonshine - also known as white lightning and white dog.
"There's been a huge increase in the number of people making moonshine," says Max Watman, whose book, Chasing the White Dog, chronicles moonshine's colourful history.
He says that in recent years, the image of moonshine "has changed dramatically".
"The stigma has gone. It's become cool."
Moonshine has occupied a place in America's folk memory since Prohibition - the period between 1920 and 1933 when the production, sale and transporting of alcohol for consumption were banned across the US.
The term moonshine usually refers to whisky but it's a catch-all term for any spirit that is untaxed and illegally distilled.
'High-end mixologists'
Getting a distilling license can run into the tens of thousands of dollars.
But anyone found guilty of making spirits without a license faces a fine of up to $15,000 (£9,750) and up to five years' imprisonment.
Today's moonshiners are a diverse bunch. They include home distillers, high-end "mixologists", small businesses making cheap liquor to sell locally and bigger operations which sell across state lines.
Though most prosecutions continue to be in the south, many of today's new moonshiners are hipster kids, foodie enthusiasts and hobbyists on America's coasts, making booze in their kitchens and bathrooms.
One Brooklyn resident, who spoke on condition of anonymity, makes moonshine to her father's recipe.
She says: "Growing up, me and my brothers watched our dad make moonshine in the bathtub. Now we do it."
In her 20s and an aspiring musician, she is typical of the new breed of moonshiners. Rigged up in her kitchen is a gleaming copper still which she bought over the internet for several hundred dollars.
By day she works in a museum where many of her colleagues know about her illicit hobby.
"You've got to be careful about who you tell. I wouldn't go blabbing about it to someone I'd just met," she says.
'Relentless pursuit'
Private individuals distilling small amounts at home for their own consumption are unlikely to get caught, although police say they take all tip-offs seriously.
"If someone is producing illegally distilled spirits and not paying tax then we'll go after them," says Arthur Resnick, spokesman for the Federal Government's Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau.
A number of distillers have set up websites and blogs where they anonymously answer questions and give advice to first-timers or anyone having problems.
Colonel Vaughn Wilson is one of America's best known builders of copper stills. He has seen demand double for his stills in recent years.
"I can't keep up with my orders," say Col Wilson, who lives in Arkansas and whose stills range from $300 to $11,000 in price. "I've shipped stills to every state in the US."
Because prosecutions tend to be made on a state rather than federal basis, there is no record of the number of moonshine convictions made in America annually. But arrests have been made in Kentucky, Georgia and Arkansas in the past month.
A man in Bell County, Kentucky, was arrested in June after police discovered 100 gallons of moonshine (378 litres) and 500 gallons of mash on his property.
Police said it was part of an ongoing investigation and added that they hoped to make more arrests.
"It will be a relentless pursuit until the end," said Doug Jordan, of the Bell County Sheriff's Department.
A number of states have set up special moonshine task forces to combat the problem.
Arrests are usually made following tip-offs from neighbours or from local stores who report sales of unusually large quantities of sugar, a key ingredient, to the police.
Nathan Jones, of the Kentucky Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, says: "We get cases every month or so. The ones that come to our attention are the big ones."
Lure of illegality
Though cases of moonshine causing blindness are mostly a thing of the past, health officials warn of the dangers of drinking contaminated spirits.
"You do hear stories of people blowing themselves up but if you've read the basics and are using good quality products then it's hard to poison yourself," says Mr Watman.
The biggest moonshine bust in the United States occurred not during Prohibition but in 2001.
Dubbed "Operation Lightning Strike", it resulted in the arrest of 26 people in an operation that stretched from North Carolina to Philadelphia.
The group had dodged $20m in taxes on 1.5 million gallons of alcohol.
For many of today's moonshiners, the appeal lies in the pastime's illegality.
Col Wilson's website includes a section entitled "Beat the law".
He says: "The authorities will never stop moonshine. They are wasting their time trying."  

Sea Level Rise Swamps Islands 

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The Disappearing Intellectual in the Age of Economic Darwinism

We live at a time that might be appropriately called the age of the disappearing intellectual, a disappearance that marks with disgrace a particularly dangerous period in American history. While there are plenty of talking heads spewing lies, insults and nonsense in the various media, it would be wrong to suggest that these right-wing populist are intellectuals. They are neither knowledgeable nor self-reflective, but largely ideological hacks catering to the worst impulses in American society. Some obvious examples would include John Stossel calling for the repeal of that "section of the 1964 Civil Rights Act that bans discrimination in public places."[1] And, of course, there are the more famous corporate-owned talking heads such as Glenn Beck, Charles Krauthammer, Bill O'Reilly and Rush Limbaugh, all of whom trade in reactionary world views, ignorance, ideological travesties and outlandish misrepresentations - all the while wrapping themselves in the populist creed of speaking for everyday Americans.
In a media scape and public sphere that view criticism, dialog and thoughtfulness as a liability, such anti-intellectuals abound, providing commentaries that are nativist, racist, reactionary and morally repugnant. But the premium put on ignorance and the disdain for critical intellectuals is not monopolized by the dominant media, it appears to have become one of the few criteria left for largely wealthy individuals to qualify for public office. One typical example is Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann, who throws out inanities such as labeling the Obama administration a "gangster government."[2] Bachmann refuses to take critical questions from the press because she claims that they unfairly focus on her language. She has a point. After all, it might be difficult to support statements such as the claim that "the US government used the census information to round up the Japanese [Americans] and put them in concentration camps."[3] Another typical example can be found in Congressman Joe Barton's apology to BP for having to pay for damages to the government stemming from its disastrous oil spill.
This "upscaling of ignorance"[4] gets worse. Richard Cohen, writing in The Washington Post about Sen. Michael Bennett, was shocked to discover that he was actually well-educated and smart but had to hide his qualifications in his primary campaign so as to not undermine his chance of being re-elected. Cohen concludes that in politics, "We have come to value ignorance."[5] He further argues that the notion that a politician should actually know something about domestic and foreign affairs is now considered a liability. He writes:
[W]e now have politicians who lack a child's knowledge of government. In Nevada, Sharron Angle has won the GOP Senate nomination espousing phasing out Social Security and repealing the income tax as well as abolishing that durable conservative target, the Education Department. Similarly, in Connecticut, Linda McMahon, a former pro wrestling tycoon, is running commercials so adamantly anti-Washington you would think she's an anarchist. In Arizona Andy Goss, a Republican congressional candidate, suggests requiring all members of Congress to live in a barracks. This might be tough on wives, children and the odd cocker spaniel, but what the hell. Nowadays, all ideas are equal.[6]
Continue reading 
Henry A Giroux @'Truth-out'

Sorry to upload 2 posts from Truth-out.org , but find this post absolutely addresses the "Cult of Ignorance" that is daily, unremittingly propagated by the mass media (as controlled by the mega rich) to the general public at large, allowing the again daily devastation, exploitation and inhumanity that passes for modern society, to go unnoticed. The manipulation of the education system to deny democratic principles in the name of Big Business...Please read...

New Documents, Employees Reveal BP's Alaska Oilfield Plagued by Major Safety Issues

Nearly 5,000 miles from the oil-spill catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico, BP and its culture of cost-cutting are contributing to another environmental mess in the Prudhoe Bay oil field on Alaska’s north shore, according to internal BP documents and more than a dozen employees interviewed over the past month.
After a serious oil spill last November and other mishaps, the BP employees fingered a long list of safety issues that have not been adequately addressed, making the Prudhoe Bay oilfield vulnerable to a devastating accident that potentially could rival the havoc in the Gulf.
"The condition of the [Prudhoe Bay] field is a lot worse and in my opinion a lot more dangerous," said Marc Kovac, who has worked for BP on Alaska's North Slope for more than three decades. "We still have hundreds of miles of rotting pipe ready to break that needs to be replaced. We are totally unprepared for a large spill."
Kovac, a mechanic and welder who is the steward of the United Steelworkers union local 4959, said a lot of employees share his feelings, but "don't want to risk their jobs for speaking out." Kovac said he was willing to take the risk because BP has been slow to deal with the Prudhoe Bay problems and that "many lives are at stake."
Some of the employees, speaking anonymously, said BP follows an "operate to failure" attitude.
Kovac said that means BP Alaska avoids spending money on "upkeep" and instead runs the equipment until it breaks down...
Continue reading
Jason Leopold @'Truth-out'

Sunday, 18 July 2010

Child prison secret restraint tactics 'revealed'

Bioluminescence in the Gippsland Lakes

Parkour from 1930

Israel Stops Listening to Its Judges

The Israeli government is facing legal action for contempt over its refusal to implement a Supreme Court ruling that it end a policy of awarding preferential budgets to Jewish communities, including settlements, rather than much poorer Palestinian Arab towns and villages inside Israel.
The contempt case on behalf of Israel’s Palestinian minority comes in the wake of growing criticism of the government for ignoring court decisions it does not like -- a trend that has been noted by the Supreme Court justices themselves.
Yehudit Karp, a former deputy attorney general, compiled a list of 12 recent court rulings the government has refused to implement, but legal groups believe there are more examples. Many of the disregarded judgements confer benefits on Palestinians, either in the occupied territories or inside Israel, or penalise the settlers.
Critics have accused the government of violating the rule of law and warned that the defiance has been possible chiefly because right-wing politicians and religious groups have severely eroded the Supreme Court’s authority over the past few years.
Senior members of the current right-wing government of prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, including the justice minister, Yaakov Neeman, have repeatedly criticized the court for what they call its “judicial activism”, or interference in matters they believe should be decided by the parliament alone.
Legal experts, however, warn that, because Israel lacks a constitution, the court is the only bulwark against a tyrannical Jewish majority abusing the rights of the country’s 1.3 million Palestinian citizens, as well as 4 million Palestinians living under occupation in the West Bank and Gaza.
Ilan Saban, a law professor at Haifa University, said: “Unlike most -- if not all -- other democracies, Israel lacks a political culture that respects limits on the power of the majority.”
Even the protections offered by Israel’s basic laws, he said, were not deeply entrenched and could easily be re-legislated. The lack of both a formal constitution and a tradition of political tolerance, he added, was “a dangerous cocktail”.
Israel’s liberal Haaretz newspaper went further, warning recently that, in “slandering the judiciary”, government officials had provoked a crisis that could “lead to the destruction of Israeli democracy”.
The country’s highest court is due to rule in the coming weeks on whether the government is in contempt of a ruling the court made four years ago to end a discriminatory scheme, known as National Priority Areas (NPA), that provides extra education funding to eligible communities.
The High Follow-Up Committee, an umbrella political body representing Israel’s large Palestinian minority, launched the case because only four small Palestinian villages were classified in NPAs, against some 550 Jewish communities. The scheme, introduced in 1998, is believed to have deprived Palestinian citizens, a fifth of Israel’s population, of millions of dollars.
Although the court ruled in February 2006 that the scheme must be scrapped, the government has issued a series of extensions until at least 2012.
Sawsan Zaher, a lawyer with Adalah, a legal centre that launched the contempt petition, said: “This case has become a symbol of how the government refuses to implement decisions it does not like, especially ones relating to constitutional protection and minority rights.”
However, she said that punishing the state for its actions would not be easy. “After all, the court is not going to jail the government. The best we can hope for is a fine.”
The NPA case is only one of several that have highlighted a growing trend of law-breaking by the government...
Continue reading
Jonathan Cook @'Counterpunch'

Saturday, 17 July 2010

Germany rejects 'transfer bid' for octopus oracle Paul

Bendle - Folding In

<a href="http://bendle.bandcamp.com/track/folding-in">folding in by bendle</a>

Giving up my iPod for a Walkman

Japanese Binocular Soccer

Took the words right out of my mouth...

Little Axe: from blues to hip-hop and back

Little Axe
 
New blues ... Little Axe. Photograph: York Tillyer
Skip McDonald was playing a gig in Portugal, billed as just him and guitar. A fair portion of the audience had seen the billing and decided an evening of traditional blues was just what they wanted. They might have wanted traditional blues, but they didn't get it. On entering the venue, they came across a stage upon which stood not a stool, a microphone and a guitar, but a selection of samplers and computers, as well as the setup for a full rock band."The purists were outraged," says McDonald. "About 20 of them started walking out. The rest of them stayed and we got on fine. It was a particularly good gig."
He can laugh about it now, because 17 years after starting his Little Axe project, in which the old Delta blues is reinterpreted with the aid of technology, what was a revolutionary approach to an old music has become the norm. Beck and Moby took McDonald's ideas and placed them in the mainstream. McDonald, who's flattered by his imitators, would be happy with their kind of sales, but more important to him is his mission to redefine what constitutes the blues.
"I don't like the way music is put in little boxes with a label on it," McDonald says. "I hear the blues in a lot of different types of music that no one would ever call the blues. And I don't think the blues has to be about pain. You might have a lyric about going across town where there's a woman who's nice to you. The blues can be joyous. There are two types of music: deep and shallow. For me, the blues is anything that starts with an emotion."
McDonald was born Bernard Alexander in Dayton, Ohio in September 1949. He was taught to play blues guitar when he was eight by his father, a steel worker who played at weekends. McDonald's father drilled home the importance of having a steady job, but the son wanted to chance his arm making it in music. He left home at 17, playing jazz, funk and disco up and down the east coast before he met bassist Doug Wimbish and then, in 1979, drummer Keith LeBlanc. As the house band of Sugarhill records, the trio played on some of the early hits of hip-hop – The Message, by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five; White Lines by Grandmaster Melle Mel. Rap's modern take on the blues hit him "like a left hook from nowhere. Those early gigs in Harlem were just completely crazy."
McDonald went from Sugarhill to recording with Afrikaa Bambaataa and James Brown ("a serious man. I learned to call him Mr Brown"), with Sinéad O'Connor and – in another association with a label – the On-U Sound imprint of the English producer Adrian Sherwood, where the McDonald-Wimbish-LeBlanc trio formed the core of Tackhead, the avant-garde funk band that often served as On-U Sound's house band in the 80s.
McDonald first recorded as Little Axe in 1994, and his latest album, Bought for a Dollar, Sold For a Dime, takes McDonald full circle by reuniting the Sugarhill trio for the first time in 17 years. "To be true to yourself sometimes you have to go back to the beginning," he says, echoing the album's lyric about how a man must return to the crossroads to find himself. "I have a chemistry – a telepathy – with those people." But Little Axe remain a broader church. At one gig, the band were joined on stage by superfan Robert Plant.
"He's known for heavy metal, but I hear a blues singer," McDonald says. "I get into trouble for saying this but when I hear Led Zeppelin or the Rolling Stones they're immersed in blues. It's an endless journey for us all. I feel like I'm just getting started."
Dave Simpson @'The Guardian'
(Thanx Owen!)

Fin (Thanx Fifi! Again)

Borneo Coal Plant Poses Triple Threat

It's hard to think of a worse place to build a coal-fired power plant than a strip of pristine beach nestled between Borneo's rich rainforests and its Coral Triangle, one of the most biodiverse marine ecosystems in the world. Unfortunately, that's exactly where the Malaysian government is now fast-tracking the construction of a new 300 megawatt facility.
Local villagers, who may be displaced, are unsurprisingly against the project, and a growing number of international organizations are now jumping into the fray. Together, they have formed a collective known as SOS Borneo to call attention to the potentially catastrophic consequences of the planned plant.
It's not only the global warming emissions these groups are concerned about. If the plant is built, transmission lines may cut through the rainforest. Jamie Henn, with 350.org, writes that residents of the rainforest include endangered species such as orangutans, Borneo pygmy elephants, and the last 40 Bornean rhinos in the world. In addition, sulfur dioxide pollution and acid rain also pose threats to the forest, to local fisheries and to the Coral Triangle area, which is home to three-quarters of the world's coral species.
The good news is that Borneo has energy options other than dirty coal. A University of California Berkeley audit found that a combination of energy efficiency improvements, biofuels (from palm plantation waste), hydropower, and geothermal would be better than a fossil-fueled plant. In the long-term, solar and ocean energy could provide enough power for the island and bring needed green jobs to boot.
Interestingly, Jeremy Hance reported for Mongabay that locals in the area are afraid their landscape will end up mimicking the degradation in American coal states, where air and water pollution, deforestation, mining have devastated the ecosystem. It's too bad America has to be the model for how not to generate energy. Let's hope Borneo can be an example of how to do things the right way.
As Henn sums up, "Stopping this coal plant is about more than protecting one strip of beach, it's a symbol of a global fight to protect our increasingly fragile planet against the onslaught of dirty energy -- from the island of Borneo to the Gulf of Mexico."

Sign this petition to issue your SOS, and tell Malaysian officials to stop this destructive coal plant.

Tara Lohan @'Change'

Friday, 16 July 2010

OOOPS!!!


(Thanx Fifi!)

UNKLE - Saviours & Angels

♪♫ Serge Gainsbourg - Aux Armes Et Caetera

Capturing the Plastic Vortex

Project Kaisei is a non-profit organization based in San Francisco and Hong Kong, established to increase the understanding and the scale of marine debris, its impact on our ocean environment, and how we can introduce solutions for both prevention and clean-up.
Our main focus is on the North Pacific Gyre, which constitutes a large accumulation of debris in one of the largest and most remote ecosystems on the planet. To accomplish these objectives, Project Kaisei is serving as a catalyst to bring together public and private collaborators to design, test and implement break-throughs in science, prevention and remediation.
Kaisei means “Ocean Planet” in Japanese, and is the name of the iconic tall ship that was one of the two research vessels in the August expedition. The other was the New Horizon, a Scripps Oceanography vessel that was arranged via a new collaboration between Project Kaisei and Scripps to provide additional research on the impacts of debris in the gyre. Each vessel obtained a wide variety of samples from this part of the ocean which are now being analyzed. What was evident was the pervasiveness of small plastic debris that was found in every surface sample net that was used for regular sampling over 3,500 miles between the two vessels.
In the summer of 2010, Project Kaisei will launch its second Expedition to the North Pacific Gyre, where it will send multiple vessels to continue marine debris research, and in particular, to test an array of marine debris collection systems. Debris collected will be used to further study the feasibility of converting this to fuel or other useable material. As a collaborative action program, Project Kaisei is seeking sponsors, participants and leaders in their respective industries who can help to make a difference, on land, or at sea, in reducing marine debris.
@'Kaisei'

Thursday, 15 July 2010

For Gas-Drilling Data, There’s a New Place to Dig

Starving for data about natural gas drilling in the Marcellus Shale? A new website hopes to feed your need. A couple of environmental and public health groups have teamed up to create FracTracker [1], a web tool that brings together different data sets and presents the information on a map.
Launched in late June, FracTracker allows users to upload their own data on all-things-gas-drilling, from lists of drilling permits or incident records to maps of air monitoring stations. Others can then go to the site and either look at the data in map form or download it raw.
The site is run by the University of Pittsburgh’s Center for Healthy Environments and Communities [2] (CHEC), which is funded by the Heinz Endowments [3]. It is hosted by the Foundation for Pennsylvania Watersheds [4], an environmental group that funds local projects aimed at protecting the state’s waterways.
The center’s director of operations, Charles Christen, said CHEC came up with the idea while working with communities in western Pennsylvania, which along with much of West Virginia, New York and Ohio sit atop the Marcellus Shale, an extensive rock formation that holds vast quantities of natural gas.
As we’ve been reporting [5] for two years, people in those communities have become increasingly concerned about the environmental impacts of gas drilling. But they’ve often found it difficult to come up with the hard data they need to make informed decisions – or even to know what’s happening on a neighbor’s property. The site is designed to fill that gap, Christen said.
FracTracker allows people to search by topic [6] or select a specific area on a map. It also shows who uploaded the specific data set and whether other people have downloaded it or found it helpful. Since anyone can upload a data set, this transparency is critical to determining whether the information is reliable. CHEC will remove irrelevant data, but it doesn’t vet everything for accuracy. CHEC is counting on users to police the data themselves and to distinguish the good from the bad.
Christen said the site may be difficult for the average person to use, so the center has set up a blog [1] to serve as a forum for learning more about the tool. Over the next couple of months, it plans to reach out to various groups that not only may benefit from the site but also may be able to provide the data that FracTracker relies on.
“The success of this network, this information-sharing tool, really depends on the quality of the data we get,” Christen said. “I think we’re going to see really quality data up on this site and a lot of snapshots being used in a lot of different ways.”
Nicholas Kusnetz @'ProPublica'

Five Dials (Festival issue)

Five Dials is a free monthly online literary magazine courtesy of London publisher Hamish Hamilton. The upcoming Festival issue of the PDF mag features a host of music luminaries doing their best with just words. In it, LCD Soundsystem's James Murphy writes a piece about his song "Losing My Edge", Ryan Adams writes a poem, Bloc Party's Kele Okereke writes a short story, and Mike Watt tells the story behind his contribution to Sonic Youth's song "Providence".
Other contributors include Dean Wareham (Galaxie 500/Luna), onetime Guided by Voices member James Greer, Iggy Pop, and artist Raymond Pettibon (artist for Black Flag, Sonic Youth's Goo), as well as pieces on seminal festivals including Woodstock and Burning Man.
 Sign up

HA!

(Click to enlarge)

Oh yeah!

So the kid didn't speak to her mom about sex education and doesn't tell her she's getting married! Hmmmm!!!

Record Labels Sue Over Use of Music on Adult Sites

♪♫ Hey Champ - Cold Dust Girl

Shocklee Shocklee Old Music industry take notice---> Nintendo Doesn't Want To Criminalize Obsessed Fans http://ow.ly/2b6x8 #music #IP

Regaining Sexual Enjoyment After Sexual Trauma

Continue reading
Joy Davidson @'Love & Health'

It's been fun following this...

Julian Assange: the whistleblower

Photograph: Graeme Robertson for The Guardian
HERE
(LOL! A subbie w/ a sense of humour captioned the file name of that photo!)

Reds!!!

Boris Johnson and the Veronica Wadley affair: an open letter to David Cameron and Nick Clegg

Wednesday, 14 July 2010

Spiritualized's Jason Pierce Talks Ladies and Gentlemen Shows

Spiritualized's Jason Pierce Talks <i>Ladies and 
Gentlemen</i> ShowsAfter reissuing Spiritualized's 10.0 masterpiece Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating in Space and playing the album in full on European stages last year, Jason Pierce (aka J. Spaceman) will bring a choir, strings, and horns to New York City's Radio City Music Hall for one more Ladies and Gentlemen show July 30. It's being touted as the last gig of its kind-- which makes sense since Pierce is well on his way toward a new album, as he told us in a recent interview. He said we could expect a new Spiritualized LP "early next year, if I'm lucky."

Pitchfork: How did these Ladies and Gentlemen shows originally come about?
Jason Pierce: We did an All Tomorrow's Parties show in Australia with Nick Cave. We did one show on top of Mount Buller and played down the mountain-- the crowd sort of comes down the slope with you. We stayed up all night and the guys from ATP asked if we'd ever play Ladies and Gentlemen live, and I said, "Yeah." It was a decision made at altitude-- they got me at the right time. It could've been any album. If they'd asked for Pure Phase or Let It Come Down, we would've wound up doing that.
As much as an audience wants to hear new stuff, they're rarely receptive to hearing a whole new record as a live show. But with Ladies and Gentlemen, they've had 13 years to sit with it and they've got these ideas about where the songs take them. We did the shows in England, and I wasn't going to do this for the rest of my life, so we wound it down. And then we got talking, like, "If we don't take it to America now, we ain't never gonna take it." New York is as far as we could go, unfortunately.
Pitchfork: It doesn't seem like you're somebody who looks back a lot. Has it been hard for you to dedicate your time to this 13-year-old album?
JP: Well, I'm making a new record right now. But, for a lot of bands, it seems like these kinds of shows with all old songs are the best thing they can do. I'm not saying that with any disrespect, but I don't think that's the case with what we're doing. I don't even want to chance it.
And, with Ladies and Gentlemen, I don't think that the band that made that record could've played it when it came out. It's like it's taken this amount of time to do it real justice live. Now we can play it from beginning to end and it's going to make real fucking sense. I think the album I'm working on now is already more important.
Pitchfork: How far along are you with the new album?
JP: Quite a ways. I'm all over the place when I make a record; I don't even know what I'm doin'. As soon as things start to work, that's when a lot of problems start because you have to start raising everything to that level.
Pitchfork: Has revisiting Ladies and Gentlemen inspired you to do more of those types of big arrangements on the new material?
JP: Yeah, I'd be lying if I said it wasn't influencing the music I make now.
Ryan Dombal @'Pitchfork' 

Was lucky enough to be at that ATP Mt Buller gig, I do hope that ATP returns to Australia in the not too distant future (with The Pop Group in tow???)

Not so Red!

♪♫ M.I.A. w/ Martin Rev - Born Free (Letterman Show 13/7)


Fugn hell!!!
Sheer brilliance!!!

Lee Perry 4 President Mix


"a 2 hour Lee Perry extravaganza i recorded for the BluntBeats crew a lil while ago"
(herb)

Lee Perry – I Am The Upsetter [Amalgamated AMG808]
Lee Perry – People Funny Boy [Doctor Bird DB 1146]
Lee Perry – You Crummy [Trojan TR629]
Mellotones – Nonesuch Busted Me Bet [Upset WIRL LP3952]
Upsetter All Stars – Handy Cap [Trojan TR616]
Judge Winchester – Public Jestering [Black Art TSLWB1415]
Lee Perry & The Upsetters – Rude Walking [Blank 10" Dubplate]
Lee Perry & The Upsetters – Run For Cover [Wirl WIRL 1972]
Ansell Collins & Upsetters – Night Doctor [Upsetter FLP 7778]
Lee Perry – Sipreano [Upsetter DYNA LP1545]
Lee Perry & The Soulettes – Doctor Dick [Island WI292]
Charlie Ace & Lee Perry – Cow Thief Skank [Upsetter US398A]
The Upsetters – Black Panta [Upsetter 10"]
Upsetters – Bucky Skank [Downtown DT513]
Upsetters – Bathroom Skank [Justice League DTLP101]
Leo Graham – Doctor Demand[Upsetter FLP 118]
Upsetters – Black Bat [Upsetter FLP 119]
Leo Graham – Black Candle [Upsetter FN7969]
Leo Graham – Big Tongue Buster (Not Leo Graham, is Prince Jazzbo)[Upsetter RRSLP2492]
Burt Walters – Honey Love [Trojan TR636A]
Burt Walters – Evol Yenoh [Blank WIRLLP3959]
Junior Byles – Mumbling & Grumbling [Black Art TSLWB1408]
Inspirations – Tighten Up [Trojan TR613A]
Sir Lord Comic – Django Shoots First [Upsetter FLP7436]
U Roy – Stick Together [Blank]
Jimmy & Glen – Hypocrites [Upsetter RRSLP5086]
Jimmy & Glen – Nine Finger Jerry Lewis [Upsetter RRSLP5087]
Prince Django – Hot Tip [Upsetter SCR27]
Anthony ‘Sangie’ Davis & Lee Perry – Words [Black Art 12"LEE PERRY 2051]
Junior Byles – Beat Down Babylon [Upsetter DSRLP4750]
Maxie, Niney & Scratch – Babylon Burning [Upsetter US386]
U-Roy & The Children – Yama Khy [Perries RRSVP4338]
Bob Marley & The Wailers – Small Axe [Upsetter DYNALP3921]
Bob Marley & The Wailers – Duppy Conqueror [Upsetter DYNAUPSETTER 2110]
Upsetters – Freak Out Skank [Upsetter FLP 7572B]
Upsetters – Jungle Lion [Upsetter FLP7572A]
Devon Irons & Dr. Alimentado – Vampire [Black Art LEEPERRY 2052]
Devon Irons – Vampire [Orchid ORC709A]

158 MB; 2 hours

HERE

US government lifts lid on alleged leak to WikiLeaks

Private Bradley Manning  
The US state department has told the BBC it believes an alleged whistle-blower obtained secret diplomatic data despite being at a field base in Iraq.
Serviceman Bradley Manning, 22, faces two charges related to the illegal transfer and transmission of classified information from a US military network.
The US said he was suspected of downloading from SIPR Net.
He reportedly then passed on the data, including army videos and diplomatic messages, to the WikiLeaks website.
WikiLeaks has repeatedly said it does not have the confidential messages and the site itself is not mentioned in the charges against Private First Class (Pfc) Manning.
A former hacker, Adrian Lamo, reported Pfc Manning to the US authorities. He said the intelligence analyst admitted, in a series of online chats, to sending data to the whistle-blowing website.
In the redacted charge sheet detailing the accusations against Pfc Manning, the Army alleges that he transmitted, "to a person not authorised to receive it", a classified US Department of State cable described as "Reykjavik 13".
The US also alleges Pfc Manning obtained 150,000 US diplomatic cables without proper authorisation.
Previous incidents
In February this year, WikiLeaks released a diplomatic cable from 13 January 2010 recording details of a meeting in Iceland between US diplomat Sam Watson, British ambassador Ian Whitting, and members of the Icelandic government.
Now the state department has told BBC News how Bradley Manning, based at the Hammer military field base in Iraq, could have accessed information unrelated to the US mission in that country.
In an e-mail, US state department spokesperson Megan Mattson said: "After the events of 11 September 2001, agencies across the federal government understood that greater information sharing was vital to protecting our national security interests.
"As part of our efforts to make Department of State information available to those who have a legitimate need to know, we established the Net Centric Diplomacy initiative, which allows Department of State information to be shared on the Department of Defence's SIPR (Secret Internet Protocol System) Net system."
Ms Mattson said that access to the system was only permitted to those "civilian and military users with appropriate security clearances".
She said that Bradley Manning was "suspected of violating the trust and confidence given to him".
Pooled resources
Catherine Lotrionte, associate director of the Institute for Law, Science and Global Security, has a background in US intelligence work
She told BBC News that there was "a push after 9/11 that information was going to be shared - and databases connected."
In her view, data-sharing is necessary for effective intelligence work, and the risk that it may make large data breaches easier is simply "the cost of doing business - the downside is that someone may break the rules".
Speaking on condition of anonymity, a retired US General, with extensive military intelligence experience, told BBC News that there were, "layers of clearances designed to protect and restrict access to data."
He said that sharing information was the right thing to do and the military benefits far outweighed the risks.
But Crispin Black, a former intelligence analyst for the UK government, says the content of cables can be very sensitive.
"Diplomatic cables don't usually contain huge secrets but they do contain the unvarnished truth so in a sense they can be even more embarrassing than secrets."
He told the BBC that the possibility that someone in a base in Iraq could potentially access cables about Iceland violated, the principle of "need to know" in intelligence.
According to claims by Adrian Lamo, Pfc Manning told him in online chats that he removed information by burning it onto a CD.
Mr Lamo claims that Pfc Manning told him that he disguised his activities by pretending he was listening to music by Lady Gaga.
According to Lamo, Pfc Manning is alleged to have said in one online-chat that "Hilary Clinton, and several thousand diplomats around the world are going to have a heart attack…"
Top secret
WikiLeaks has consistently denied possessing the thousands of diplomatic cables Mr Lamo alleges were passed to them.
WikiLeaks editor Julian Assange told BBC News on Thursday that he was "disturbed" by the charges against Bradley Manning.
Mr Assange said that it was "clear that some of those charges relate to information that should not have been classified".
While WikiLeaks says that it is technically impossible for it to know if Pfc Manning is indeed its source, it is trying to assist in his defence.
Mr Assange said that contact had not been established with Pfc Manning personally but that he expected that would change shortly.
He said that whoever had leaked the information was a "hero" for exposing wrong-doing by the US military and accused the army of a "double standard" in prosecuting Pfc Manning.
Chris Vallance @'BBC'

Wikileaks Cash Flows In, Drips Out

Tomorrow is the day!

J Spacebubs boy 3

Modded Gristleisms for TG

Gristleisms with LFO pitch modulation and loop auto trigger for Throbbing Gristle.
by A.S.M.O.

(Thanx to Chris Carter!)

The Vienna Declaration

The Vienna Declaration is a statement seeking to improve community health and safety by calling for the incorporation of scientific evidence into illicit drug policies. We are inviting scientists, health practitioners and the public to endorse this document in order to bring these issues to the attention of governments and international agencies, and to illustrate that drug policy reform is a matter of urgent international significance. We also welcome organizational endorsements.
Picture
This is the official declaration of the XVIII International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2010) to be held in Vienna, Austria from July 18th to 23rd. The declaration was drafted by a team of international experts and initiated by several of the world’s leading HIV and drug policy scientific bodies: the International AIDS Society, the International Centre for Science in Drug Policy (ICSDP), and the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS.  

Create Art While You Work


There are many ways to measure the productivity of a day's work, but a Moscow-based designer has an artistic approach that produces an infograph out of the work you've done on the computer.
Created by designer Anatoly Zenkov, 'IOGraph'is an app that tracks your computer's mouse movement while you work.
All that needs to be done is to run the app and do your usual stuff on the computer, and while you're at it, the app actually captures the movements of your mouse by drawing them on a blank canvas.
The thin lines represent your mouse movements, the small circles represent the clicks, and the big circles represent a break -- the bigger the circle, the longer the break.
Zenkov initially created the app to brighten up the mundane routine of work. However, an image of the results were uploaded online which gained much interest, coincidentally turning the productivity app into an art-producing one. 
John Perry Barlow JPBarlow In 1994, the Chinese asked for my help to connect to the Internet. DOE didn't want to 'em on. 'Fraid they'd spy with it.  There are 384 million Chinese online, 346 million have broadband. http://bit.ly/ChiNet

Old Spice: Best use of social media yet?

Smoking # 77 (Smoking Mind Over Smoking Matter)

Nicotine patches and gum are common -- and often ineffective -- ways of fighting cigarette cravings, as most smokers have discovered. Now a new study from Tel Aviv University shows why they're ineffective, and may provide the basis for more successful psychologically-based smoking cessation programs.
In the new study published in the Journal of Abnormal Psychology, Dr. Reuven Dar of Tel Aviv University's Department of Psychology found that the intensity of cravings for cigarettes had more to do with the psychosocial element of smoking than with the physiological effects of nicotine as an addictive chemical.
"These findings might not be popular with advocates of the nicotine addiction theory, because they undermine the physiological role of nicotine and emphasize mind over matter when it comes to smoking," Dr. Dar says. He hopes this research will help clinicians and health authorities develop more successful smoking cessation programs than those utilizing expensive nicotine patches or gum.
Up in the air
Dr. Dar and his colleagues' conclusions are based on two landmark studies. In the most recent study, he and his colleagues monitored the smoking behavior and craving levels of in-flight attendants, both women and men, who worked at the Israeli airline El Al. Each participant was monitored during two flights -- a long flight of 10 to 13 hours in duration, from Tel Aviv to New York, for example; and a two-hop shorter trip from Israel to Europe and back, each leg lasting three to five hours. Using a questionnaire, he sampled craving levels of the attendants throughout the duration of their flights.
Dr. Dar and his colleagues found that the duration of the flight had no significant impact on craving levels, which were similar for short and long flights. Moreover, craving levels at the end of each short flight were much higher those at the end of the long flight, demonstrating that cravings increased in anticipation of the flight landing, whatever the flight's total duration. He concluded that the craving effect is produced by psychological cues rather than by the physiological effects of nicotine deprivation.
No smoking on the Sabbath
In an earlier 2005 study, Dr. Dar examined smokers who were religious Jews, forbidden by their religion to smoke on the Sabbath. He asked them about their smoking cravings on three separate days: the Sabbath, a regular weekday, and a weekday on which they'd been asked to abstain. Participants were interviewed at the end of each day about their craving levels during that day.
What Dr. Dar found is that cravings were very low on the morning of the Sabbath, when the smoker knew he would not be able to smoke for at least 10 hours. Craving levels gradually increased at the end of the Sabbath, when participants anticipated the first post-Sabbath cigarette. Craving levels on the weekday on which these people smoked as much as they wanted were just as high as on the day they abstained, showing that craving has little to do with nicotine deprivation.
Dr. Dar's studies conclude that nicotine is not addictive as physiological addictions are usually defined. While nicotine does have a physiological role in increasing cognitive abilities such as attention and memory, it's not an addictive substance like heroin, which creates true systemic and biologically-based withdrawal symptoms in the body of the user, he says.
Dr. Dar believes that people who smoke do so for short-term benefits like oral gratification, sensory pleasure and social camaraderie. Once the habit is established, people continue to smoke in response to cues and in situations that become associated with smoking. Dr. Dar believes that understanding smoking as a habit, not an addiction, will facilitate treatment. Smoking cessation techniques should emphasize the psychological and behavioral aspects of the habit and not the biological aspects, he suggests.

Low, Sage Francis, Mariachi El Bronx and more to play Melbourne Festival

The Melbourne Festival has unveiled its Beck's Festival Bar lineup for 2010 and it's a cracker.
Here's the deal in a nutshell: the Melbourne Festival cajoles world class acts into playing at the best venue in the country, ropes in some of the more interesting locals to tag along and then asks just $20 on the door. If you've any sense about you, by now you will have glanced vaguely at the lineup whizzing down the page on your way to secure tickets. If you don't, read on.
The Melbourne International Arts Festival pulls together some of the globe's most diverse and outstanding talent from the worlds of theatre, dance, visual arts and music. It takes place this year between 8 - 23 October in and around Melbourne, the hub of which is always the Beck's Festival Bar within the Forum Theatre. This is not just due to its tradition of being an excellent late night hang out post citywide events, but because of its own dashing musical program.
Or, here's what they say:
Beck’s Festival Bar transforms Melbourne’s iconic Forum Theatre into a house of worship for a series of performances designed to respond to themes of Shamanism, cult bands and music as religious experience.
Presented over seven nights throughout the Festival, the program reveals an underlying rhythm divine, which links contemporary, alternative music making from around the world. From the omnivorous, free-ranging aural play of Japan’s Boredoms, to the extreme power of Sri Lanka’s preeminent metal band Stigmata and the psychedelic surf rock of Dengue Fever, this series draws out the cathartic experience music provides for makers and lovers alike.
The are of course other musical events amongst the festival's schedule, the least of which being The Knife's collaboration with theatre company Hotel Pro Forma on the "electro-dance opera" Tomorrow In A Year. (Read our lengthy interview about this collaboration with The Knife on TheVine).
Here's your itinerary:
Sat 9 Oct -  Boredoms (Japan), Kes Band (Australia), Bum Creek (Australia)
Thu 14 Oct -  Dead Meadow (USA), Stigmata (Sri Lanka), Blarke Bayer / Black Widow (Australia)
Fri 15 Oct -  Sage Francis with special guest B. Dolan (USA), Dexter (Australia), Horrorshow (Australia)
Sat 16 Oct -  Dengue Fever (Cambodia / USA), The Break (Australia), Johnnie and The Johnnie Johnnies (Australia)
Thu 21Oct -  Low (USA), Pikelet (Australia), Ponzu Island (Australia)
Fri 22 Oct - The Drones (Australia), P.K.14 (China), The Twerps (Australia)
Sat 23 Oct -  Mariachi El Bronx (USA), Eagle & The Worm (Australia), The Ukeladies (Australia)
Venue -  the Forum Theatre, doors 9pm each night
Tickets - All nights $20
Bookings -  1300 723 038 / www.ticketmaster.com.au
Please Note: Entry to the venue is restricted to persons over the age of 18 or persons under the age of 18 who are accompanied by their parent or legal guardian (one guardian per person required).
Marcus @'The Vine'

Girlz With Gunz # 119 (including Fox News headline of the day!)