Sunday 4 April 2010

People like who?


Furious BNP chiefs have drafted in security guards - to protect a POSTER. The far-right party splashed out £2,000 on its first billboard campaign in Scotland. But just hours after the massive sign was unveiled, it was targeted by outraged protesters and torn down. And since being replaced, the poster has been pelted with paint, covered in graffiti branding the BNP "nazi scum" and even set on fire. The party has now hired two security guards to keep an eye on the Aberdeen billboard round the clock.Barry Scott, the BNP's north east organiser, said: "We thought we might get a problem with graffiti but we never expected the poster would be destroyed."If people have a problem with the BNP we would rather they emailed us."On their website, the BNP boasts that the poster on Aberdeen's Great Northern Road is "yet another breakthrough" for the party.But local Labour councillor George Adam said: "There are certainly people who are extremely concerned about this, who think the poster is offensive."And Ken Ferguson, of the Scottish Socialist Party, added: "It's not surprising that a poster for the BNP has attracted hostility. Their racist views are repugnant to the vast majority of people in Scotland."Grampian Police said four men aged between 20 and 25 have been charged in connection with three incidents involving the billboard.

The best April Fool this year

Preschoolers know all about brands...and that's a sign of intelligence

A new study released this month examined how well a group of 3- to 5-year-olds were able to recognize "child-oriented" brands. The answer—very able, thank you—is a parent's worst nightmare: Disney has almost certainly already colonized your 3-year-old's brain. McDonald's has planted a flag in there, too, along with My Little Pony and Pepsi and even Toyota. Preschoolers recognize brand names and symbols, and they are increasingly willing and able to make judgments about products and people based on associations with those brands, found the researchers at the University of Madison-Wisconsin and the University of Michigan.
That's the usual set-up for yet another article ringing the death knell for childhood innocence. And this is the part where you rush out and yank your kids away from the pernicious influence of the big, bad marketing machine. Everyone knows that advertising is bad for kids, right? It makes them putty in the hands of the purveyors of corn syrup and artificial coloring, and inspires them to want things that will only make them more stupid. We don't want kids to learn to recognize the golden arches. We want them to learn things that are useful and that help them function in our culture. We want kids learning things that support their ability to learn even more.  Which, it turns out, is exactly what identifying brands helps them do. Adults use branding as a shorthand to narrow choices and locate particular items or qualities they're seeking. In order to keep from being overwhelmed by choice and information on a daily basis, kids need to learn to do the same. Far from a lazy acceptance of spoon-fed culture, early recognition of the Hamburglar is proof of small, keen intellects hard at work decoding their environment
(Thanx Bill!)

What living in a free society entails...

Saturday 3 April 2010

REpost: Erykah Badu - Window Seat


What a brilliant video!
#windowseat was shot guerilla style, no crew , 1 take , no closed set , no warning , 2 min . , don town dallas , then ran like hell... 

Girlz With Gunz # 95


rosemaryCNN
Reports from Russia: 1 of the female metro bombers was 17yo widow of Islamist rebel from north Caucasus.

Smoking # 55

Friday 2 April 2010

World Autism Awareness Day

*Upgrade @320*


The track was originally written and recorded by Jon Anderson & Vangelis on their 1981 album 'The friends of Mr. Cairo'. Donna Summer recorded her version a year later on her 1982 self-titled album, with Quincy Jones producing. Her version of the song features an all-star choir including among others Michael Jackson, Brenda Russell, James Ingram, Dionne Warwick, Kenny Loggins, Lionel Richie and Stevie Wonder.

Dark Side of the 8-bit Moon



 

 

Afghan President Rebukes West and U.N.


Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president, delivered extraordinarily harsh criticism on Thursday of the Western governments fighting in his country, the United Nations, and the British and American news media, accusing them of perpetrating the fraud that denied him an outright victory in last summer’s presidential elections...
 
Karzai's April Fool's Day joke surely... 

Dan Bull - Home Taping Is Killing Music (The Remix)


Love the 'Choose File' pisstake of Katherine Hamnett's 'Choose Life' slogan T shirt!

Who owns ideas?

In the era of the Internet we're facing a crisis around the new reality of intellectual property and copyright. These legal rights were established over hundreds of years to reward creators of ideas, but at the same time preserve and protect the public's right to access and make use of the expression of ideas.

But slow expansion of the laws of intellectual property through the 20th century, and more recently the emergence of new digital technologies, the Internet in particular, have upset the delicate balance between the rights of creators and the rights of the public. Copyright law has been changed, again and again, in what many perceive as an expansion of the rights and control of the emerging "content industries." Copyright law today covers more kinds of expression, lasts considerably longer, and comes with considerably more stringent enforcement than it has in the past.

When you download music or text from the web, you may be innocently breaking the law. Jim Lebans, a producer with CBC Radio’s Quirks and Quarks, looks at the tangled world of intellectual property and how the digital age is challenging ideas about who owns our culture.
Listen to the Who Owns Ideas?
( mp3 file runs: 54:00)
The challenges to Intellectual property rights have expanded as well. While in the past the tools of copyright infringement were industrial - printing presses or record-pressing facilities, today they're available on every desktop. Writing, music, movies, television, indeed every form of communication and expression can be digitized, and perfect copies distributed without limit. As a result the digital revolution has been perceived as a nightmare to the owners of creative property.
This might seem to clearly justify an expansion of IP law and its enforcement, but many critics of the direction IP law has taken disagree. They suggest that the opportunities that digital technologies present, and the abilities they give to ordinary people to make use of cultural material creatively is too valuable to be sacrificed.
This tension has become known as the copyfight, and it's ultimately a dispute about who owns ideas.

Featured in this program are:
Graham Henderson, president of The Canadian Recording Industry Association.
Eric Flint, writer and editor. Mr. Flint has a long association with science fiction publisher Baen Books, and with Jim Baen founded the Baen Free Library,
which distributes free digital books in open formats as a promotional vehicle for the company. Mr Flint has written extensively on IP issues as editor of the web magazine Jim Baen's Universe.
James Boyle , William Neal Reynolds Professor of Law and co-founder of the Center for the Study of the Public Domain at Duke Law School and chairman of the board of Creative Commons. His new book, The Public Domain: Enclosing the Commons of the Mind, will be published shortly by the Yale University Press.
Siva Vaidhyanathan, professor of media studies in the University of Virginia School of Law. He's also the author of Copyrights and Copywrongs: The Rise of Intellectual Property and How it Threatens Creativity.
Cory Doctorow, writer, journalist and Internet pundit. He's also the founder of popular blog Boing Boing.
Jane Ginsburg, Morton L Janklow Professor of Literary and Artistic Property Law.
She has many papers on Intellectual Property law, including How Copyright Got a Bad Name For Itself.
Dr. Michael Geist, law professor at the University of Ottawa where he holds the Canada Research Chair of Internet and E-commerce Law. He's also a columnist on digital issues for The Toronto Star.
Steven Page, singer, songwriter and member of the Barenaked Ladies.
He's also one of the founding members of the Canadian Music Creators Coalition.

Music used in this program from free sources:
Bach - Fantasia in B Minor
Yankee Doodle Variations
Open Season on Bach



Lifie

SageFrancisSFR 500 years ago jebus hatched from an egg that was laid by a man in a bunny suit. It was a chocolate egg. I will eat one in celebration.

Sleeping insects covered in dew by Miroslaw Swietek

These remarkable photographs were taken by physiotherapist Miroslaw Swietek at around 3am in the forest next to his home in Jaroszow, a village in Poland around 30 miles from the city of Wroclaw.
Using a torch, the 37-year-old amateur photographer hunts out the motionless bugs in the darkness before setting up his camera and flash just millimetres from them.

George Carlin - Religion is Bullshit! (Thanx Stan!)

Exciting new way of cooking Bacon (with pictures)

I've discovered a new way of cooking bacon. All you need is: bacon, tin foil, some string, and.. oh whats it called?... oh yeah, an old worn out 7.62mm machinegun that is about to be discarded, and about 200 rounds of ammunition.
You start by wrapping the barrel in tin foil. Then you wrap bacon around it, and tie it down with some string.
http://imgur.com/Qzt4t.jpg
you then wrap some more tin foil around it, and once again tie it down with string.
http://imgur.com/fuY3J.jpg
It is now ready to be inserted into the cooking device. I ripped the tin foil a little bit getting the barrel inserted. that part of the bacon got severely burned by hot gasses.
http://imgur.com/q75AR.jpg
After just a few short bursts you should be able to smell the wonderful aroma of bacon.
http://imgur.com/H8fmZ.jpg
I gave this about 250 rounds. but I think around 150 might actually be enough. But then again I don't mind when bacon is crispy. Ahh the smell of sizzling bacon mixed with the smell of gunpowder and weapon oil.
http://imgur.com/FEeq3.jpg
And the end result: Crispy delicious well done bacon.
http://imgur.com/AOjRS.jpg
Oelund @'Reddit'
(Tip o' the hat to JoshS!)

The Pain Relief Scandal

“Opium has been recently made from white poppies, cultivated for the purpose, in Vermont, New Hampshire, and Connecticut.... comparatively large quantities are regularly sent East from California and Arizona, where its cultivation is becoming an important branch of industry, ten acres of poppies being said to yield, in Arizona, twelve hundred pounds of opium.”
--Massachusetts Government Health Report, 1871
By the mid-1800s, as many people know, opium could be legally purchased in the United States as laudanum, patent medicines, and various elixirs. Less well known is the fact that opium was a godsend during the bloody years of the Civil War. Maimed and disabled soldiers found relief in morphine, the potent alkaloid of opium named after Morpheus, the Greek god of dreams. Used against constant, intractable pain, opium and its derivatives were among the most humane medical drugs ever discovered. How could a physician withhold them?
Today, after countless drug wars have merged into a single, inflexible federal stance on “drugs,” morphine and its derivatives remain so stigmatized, so entangled in drug wars and global narco-politics, that the danger of losing sight of their humanitarian applications looms larger than ever.
At least half of all cancer patients seen in routine practice report inadequate pain relief, according to the American College of Physicians. For cancer patients in pain, adequate relief is quite literally a flip of the coin...

Tell Me Easter's On Friday

(Thanx to My Friend Stan!)

Johann Hari on drugs, royals and the lousy laws being rushed through before the election

"...Yet you have been told that this drug is a new and unique menace. It has killed 27 people in Britain, makes teenagers try to "rip off their scrotum", and a ban will stop the harm it causes. Each of these claims is false.
The first mephedrone death was reported last November, when a 14-year-old girl called Gabrielle Price died in Brighton after apparently taking the drug. Immediately, there were calls for a ban. Three weeks later, the autopsy found the drug had nothing to do with her death: she was killed by "broncho-pneumonia which resulted from a streptococcal A infection". But the campaign didn't pause. They were now identifying deaths from mephedrone everywhere – mainly among clubbers who had taken a huge cocktail of different drugs washed down with alcohol. In truth, one death has been found to be caused by the drug. That's one. This makes jmephedrone somewhat less dangerous than peanuts, which kill 10 people a year by causing an allergic reaction.
What about the drug's other effects? The excellent New Scientist magazine tracked down the origins of The Sun's claim that it made a teenager "try to rip off his testicles", which rapidly became an established fact in news reports. They discovered it was based on a claim that circulated on internet chatrooms, and had been written as a joke. The drug isn't even called "Meow-Meow" by anyone: that term was randomly inserted into Wikipedia just before the hysteria broke, and picked up by journalists..."

Just remember...

'Socilism' 
*snigger*

The RNC fugs up again...

The Republican National Committee sent a fundraising mail piece earlier this month with a return number that leads to a phone-sex line offering "live, one-on-one talk with a nasty girl who will do anything you want for just  $2.99 per minute."
At the bottom of a piece designed to resemble a census form, a toll-free number is listed next to the national party's address.
A voter in Minnesota received the mailer and called the number intending to complain about the attempt to raise money with a form that looks like a government document.
But the Minnesotan was instead directed to a second toll-free number that greets callers as "sexy guy" before offering them the chance to talk with "real local students, housewives and working girls from all over the country."
The individual then forwarded the mail piece to the voter's congressman, a Democrat, who shared it with the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.
A spokesman for the RNC declined to say how many copies of the census-style mailer were sent out.
"The number in question was a typographical error by a vendor used on this particular mailer — using 1-800 instead of 202," said RNC Communications Director Doug Heye.
Heye e-mailed different direct-mail pieces that included the correct RNC phone number, writing: "This is an isolated incident and will not be repeated in the future."
He said the vendor responsible for the mistake "will not be used for the foreseeable future."
AUDIO: HERE
Ben Smith @'Politico' 

Information is beautiful: war games

Who really spends the most on their armed forces?
Info is beautiful: defence budgets
Info is beautiful: defence budgets Photograph: David McCandless
Amid confusion over the rise in defence cuts, I was surprised to learn that the UK has one of the biggest military budgets in the world - nearly £40bn ($60 bn) in 2008.
But I was less surprised to see who had the biggest.
Info is beautiful: defence budgets  
Info is beautiful: war chests. Graphic: David McCandless
Yep, the United States spent a staggering $607bn (£402 bn) on defence in 2008. Currently engaged in what will likely be the longest ground war in US history in Afghanistan. Harbourer of thousands of nuclear weapons. 1.5m soldiers. Fleets of aircrafts, bombs and seemingly endless amounts of military technology.
Here's that bloated military budget in context.
Info is beautiful: defence budgets  
Info is beautiful: the US military budget. Graphic: David McCandless
The defence budgets of the other top nine countries can be neatly accommodated inside the US budget.
So the US is an aggressive, war-mongeringing military machine, right? And the numbers prove it.
But is that true? Is that the whole picture?

Military units

First of all, the enormity of the US military budget is not just down to a powerful military-industrial complex. America is a rich country.
In fact, it's vastly rich. So its budget is bound to dwarf the others.
Info is beautiful: defence budgets 
Info is beautiful: defence budgets compared. Graphic: David McCandless
(This is a reworking of an image from the blog ASecondHandConjecture.com)
It doesn't seem fair to not factor in the wealth of a country when assessing its military budget.
So, if you take military budgets as a proportion of each country's GDP, a very different picture emerges.
Info is beautiful: defence budgets  
Info is beautiful: the biggest spenders. Graphic: David McCandless
The US is knocked down into 8th place by such nations as Jordan, Burundi and Georgia. The UK plunges to 29th.
Why are these other nations spending so much on their military?

• Myanmar (Burma) is a military dictatorship, so that must bias their budgets a little.
• Jordan occupies a critical geographic position in the Middle East and has major investment in its military from the US, UK and France. In return, it deploys large peace-keeping forces across the world.
• The former soviet republic of Georgia was invaded by Russia in 2008. Relations remain extremely tense.
• Saudi Arabia spends heavily on its air force and military capabilities. Why is not clear.
The stories behind Kyrgyzstan, Burundi and Oman's spending are also not clear. (If you have any ideas, please let us know).

Soldiers

A country's military investment is not just dollars and cents. It's also about soldiers and infantry.
When it comes to sheer number of soldiers, you can guess the result.
Info is beautiful: defence budgets  
Info is beautiful: active forces. Graphic: David McCandless
But, as ever, using whole numbers creates a skewed picture. China obviously has a huge population. Their army is bound to be huge.
If you adjust the parameters to a proportional view, the image shifts dramatically.
Info is beautiful: defence budgets  
Info is beautiful: proportional forces. Graphic: David McCandless
North Korea tops the league with the most militarised population, while China plummets to a staggering 164th in the world league table.
The US barely scrapes the top 50. The UK's armed forces look tiny.
This re-ordering creates some surprises too. Israel and Iraq you could perhaps predict. But Eritrea and Djibouti?

All soldiers

To give the fullest picture of armed forces, reservists, civilian and paramilitary should also be included.
This again gives a different picture and perhaps a more revealing one. One that suggests combat readiness, primed forces and perhaps paranoia too? Who's expecting to be invaded?
Info is beautiful: defence budgets  
Info is beautiful: total armed forces. Graphic: David McCandless
Here again, when all the numbers are added up, the US infantry is ranked a lowly 61st for size in the world.
So is the US an "aggressive, war-mongering military machine" obsessed with spending on defence and plumping up its armed forces? Perhaps, the numbers say, not. 
David McCandless @'The Guardian'

Our only 'lanaguage' is English LOL!

REpost - As some people can't be bothered shaving again...

International Workers of the World


The eight hour working day is the fault of these grizzled veterans of union organizing. The Haymarket bombing of May 4th, 1886, was the first inauguration by fire for many into the ideas which coalesced into the charter for the International Workers of the World, bringing union solidarity and the fight for the worker to Chicago. A bomb was thrown at police breaking up the convention and no clear fugitive has materialized for the incident; still 7 men hung from the gallows for the crime of fighting for the working class. Their names were Albert Parsons, August Spies, Samuel Fielden, Michael Schwab, George Engel, Adolph Fischer and Louis Lingg. The belief in solidarity and anarchism alone was enough to convict and execute these men.
There is a rich and storied history to the IWW, and though it is a shadow of the organization it once was. Red-card carrying Wobblies like myself still walk our concrete jungle, fighting toward a general strike to place the means of production in the hands of the worker.
I'd like to draw your attention to a folk singer and nearly life long wobblie, Utah Phillips. Only two shows may be found up at sugarmegs for the fellow, but Mystic Theater is worth a listen. Comedy and folk songs mixed in with the poetry of resistance.
Now, more than ever, is the time to rise up in solidarity with your fellow workers across the globe. Newer mechanisms for control are developed everyday, with the battle of "net neutrality" heating up, the government making attempts at shutting down Wiki-Leaks, and media outlets consolidated into independent or multinational corporate blocs.
Don't forget to celebrate the sacrifices made by our fellow workers this coming May Day, May 1st. Have an on the job slow down if you can't get the day off. Talk to your fellow workers about what you can do to improve conditions in your place of employment. Educate yourself about the varied struggles of the working class world wide. Remember your history; don't forget there's always another day, and another fight.
I'll leave you with the words of Lucy Parsons, an early member of the IWW and the wife of one of the Haymarket martyrs, "Never be deceived that the rich will permit you to vote away their wealth."

Moscow blames US for 'heroin tsunami' sweeping Russia

Production in Afghanistan has risen nearly 50 fold and in Russia the result is an epidemic of heroin abuse.
Russia now has around 2.5m heroin addicts and at least 30,000 of them will die this year.
The Russian authorities accuse the United States of helping the drug suppliers by refusing to destroy opium crops in Afghanistan.
Rupert Wingfield-Hayes reports from the Siberian city of Novo-kusnetsk.
@'BBC'

Forget Taxing Marijuana; The Real Money's In Cocaine

A Harvard economist has estimated how much money states would raise by legalizing and taxing marijuana and cocaine.
In a podcast a while back, Harvard's Jeffrey Miron told us that his estimates for what California would bring in from taxing marijuana are much smaller than some of the numbers that are floating around out there (including a $1.4 billion estimate from state officials).
Since that interview, Miron has come out with a paper estimating, among other things, potential tax revenues from cocaine and marijuana.
It turns out the big tax money is in cocaine.
Sure, legalizing marijuana is highly unlikely and legalizing cocaine isn't even on the table in mainstream politics. Still, it's interesting to know what the numbers would be -- particularly when they're coming from a Harvard economist.
Here's a table that shows Miron's estimates for the annual tax revenues each state would get from marijuana and cocaine. (The figures are in millions; for more details, see the explanation and links after the table.)
State Marijuana Cocaine
Alabama 25.59 80.54
Alaska 6.53 16.28
Arizona 41.91 177.67
Arkansas 19.87 54.49
California 201.74 767.73
Colorado 46.97 133.74
Connecticut 22.57 72.53
Delaware 6.07 18.76
Florida 142.05 362.34
Georgia 86.75 213.96
Hawaii 10.09 21.59
Idaho 11.73 22.66
Illinois 83.98 263.93
Indiana 43.44 120.04
Iowa 18.72 45.94
Kansas 16.69 53.95
Kentucky 28.05 77.79
Louisiana 30.02 97.43
Maine 6.64 25.46
Maryland 37.68 113.79
Massachusetts 44.94 167
Michigan 69.04 174.55
Minnesota 45.43 102.31
Mississippi 19.67 41.17
Missouri 54.99 111.28
Montana 7.94 19.29
Nebraska 13.87 29.13
Nevada 13.97 53.19
New Hampshire 9.03 29.18
New Jersey 74.6 140.31
New Mexico 11.92 47.42
New York 136.81 464.05
North Carolina 87.88 191.04
North Dakota 4.02 9.54
Ohio 88.7 248.79
Oklahoma 29.23 58.23
Oregon 24.09 76.88
Pennsylvania 73.73 211.85
Rhode Island 7.75 37.12
South Carolina 26.29 79.71
South Dakota 7.28 11.96
Tennessee 39.94 146.9
Texas 270.39 483.02
Utah 16.34 53.16
Vermont 3.67 15.86
Virginia 53.35 175.63
Washington 35.76 143.55
West Virginia 8.97 36.65
Wisconsin 61.12 114.16
Wyoming 3.72 11.26
DC 4.82 25.94
Total 2,138.47 6,234.11
On top of state revenues, Miron estimates that a federal taxes would amount to $4.28 billion for marijuana and $12.47 billion for cocaine.
Miron figures taxes on the drugs would be comparable to taxes on alcohol and tobacco. His estimates for how many people in each state use marijuana and cocaine are based on a government survey. (He notes that the number of users would likely rise if the drugs were legalized, but his estimates don't account for this.) He estimates that if marijuana and cocaine were legalized, their prices would fall by 50% and 80%, respectively. The research was funded by the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation; here's the foundation's take on drug policy.

As my Spanish friend Ana says:

"Why is the internet special?,” he asked, saying the net was “just a communication and distribution platform”...but it is not HIS (or another politicians) communication and distribution platform. This is the key, not ethical issues.

Thursday 1 April 2010

My childhood...


 

Because...

Public Enemy
The Enemy Assault Vehicle Mixx
I first heard this on The Ghost's show on 3RRR here in Melbourne way back and Stephen very kindly put it on a tape for me back then...was probably my most played track on my Walkman over the years!
Get it

OOPS - I did it again!

As far as "national security threats" go, real or imagined, it's likely that few Americans lose much sleep over Wilkileaks, the website that publishes anonymously sourced documents which governments, corporations, and other private or powerful organisations would rather you not see. It would appear the US security apparatus does not feel the same way.
On Friday of last week, editor and co-founder Julian Assange posted a letter to the site detailing a laundry list of rather Keystone Kop-like instances of surveillance of himself and other members of the Wikileaks team, likely carried out at least in part by members of the US intelligence or law enforcement community:
"We have discovered half a dozen attempts at covert surveillance in Reykjavik both by native English speakers and Icelanders. On the occasions where these individuals were approached, they ran away."
Ironic if it were not so creepy, much of the observable surveillance took place while Assange and others were in Iceland advising the parliament on a groundbreaking set of laws … designed to protect investigative journalists and web service providers from spying and censorship. Assange also described being tailed on a flight en route to an investigative journalism conference in Norway, by "two individuals, recorded as brandishing diplomatic credentials ... under the name of US State Department".
So why are US tax dollars being spent spying on a bunch of volunteer journalists, human rights activists and web geeks, as appears to be the case? There are a few obvious motives, but the smoking gun might be a classified film Wikileaks claims to have in its possession that shows evidence of a US massacre of civilians. Images have power – think Abu Ghraib, think Mi Lai – and efforts at "perception management" by the department of defence will be much complicated by documentary evidence that leaves little to interpretation or "perception" of a human rights crime committed by US forces. Wikileaks plans to show the video at the National Press Club in Washington, DC on 5 April.
"In my opinion, the operation points not to the CIA, but to the US Diplomatic Security Service (DSS), which (among other things) is tasked with tracing information leaks believed to be originating from US diplomatic staff," Dr Joseph Fitsanakis tells me, founder of Intelnews.org and an expert in the politics and history of intelligence and espionage. "If the US suspected that Wikileaks acquired restricted or classified documents through a US embassy official or staff member (which Julian alludes to in his editorial), then the DSS would get involved."
As a target for surveillance Wikileaks is hardly the Kremlin – the mostly volunteer run site was temporarily shut down a few months ago due to lack of funds. Yet it has provided all manner of scoops in its short life – documented corruption in Kenya, evidence of potentially criminal bank fraud in Iceland, and classified US army documents about the treatment of Guantánamo detainees. And while its list of critics is long, openness and transparency are not chief characteristics regularly attributed to them. North Korea, China, Russia, and Zimbabwe have all blocked access to the site at one time or another in response to controversial leaks.
It's not a very heartening sign that the US government has joined such an illustrious roster. Yet in an ironic twist one of the conclusions of a report prepared by the department of defence intelligence analysis programme (DIAP), and published by Wikileaks earlier this month contains a surprising defence of the workings of a functioning, responsive democracy:
"It must be presumed that Wikileaks.org has or will receive sensitive or classified DoD documents in the future. This information will be published and analysed over time by a variety of personnel and organisations with the goal of influencing US policy."
If the video Wikileaks plans to screen at the National Press Club on April 5 does indeed include scenes of a US massacre of civilians in Iraq or Afghanistan, as is purported, perhaps the "goal of influencing US policy" becomes a little easier to identify. National security is better served by promoting a just and accountable foreign policy. For starters, stop massacring civilians in the never-ending wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and investigate and prosecute those responsible for past massacres and cover-ups when and where the burden of proof calls for it.
If the US army and the defence apparatus still need help from the muckrakers at Wikileaks to remind them of this fact, then let the leaks continue. And if you think the work that Wikileaks is doing is important, then consider leaking them some money.
Joseph Huff-Hannon @'The Guardian'

And of course you can add Australia to that illustrious list of countries...
More here.

I think...

...that there is a stoner working as a sub-editor at The Economist LOL!

John Cusack takes us down the rabbit hole (80s style)



"As you can see in this video now, watching the performance was like diving into an ocean of bad fashion and forced smiles. Dr. Pepper dancing and Mom Jeans from shore to shore... pre-Prozac in motion.... military ballet... Mandatory cheers and quasi-religious cult patriotics... the glory of the empire. A choreographed tribute to the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King. A celebration of diversity, unity, and fluorescent leggings.


Meanwhile, Reagan was dumping all the mentally ill and vets out on the streets to die, as a direct result of his policies."
@'BoingBoing'

Feeling like a little kraut-blip today...