Friday 2 December 2011

Who They are and what They do: what the current whereabouts of Julian Assange can tell us about how power works in 2011

On the limits of sexual ethics: The phenomenology of autassassinophilia

Contemporary liberal discourse advocates tolerance of a diversity of sexual orientations and behaviors, provided that the principle of informed consent can be shown to have been respected. Borrowing an extreme test case used by the sexologist John Money—the reciprocally chosen lust murder pact—this theoretical article examines the limits of liberal ideology for sexual ethics. Using as its illustrative material the case of Sharon Lopatka, a Maryland woman who instigated her own sexual murder in 1996, it demonstrates that the phenomenon of being murdered for pleasure problematizes commonplace assumptions about the legitimacy to consent. The discussion recalls and refreshes existing debates in feminism and the politics of sadomasochism and reads them alongside the rhetoric surrounding the ethics of medically assisted suicide. Consenting to murder for pleasure is revealed as a formulation that exceeds the terms of informed consent as it is currently understood and thereby constitutes an ethical and logical aporia. In a final section, the phenomenology of consensual murder is explored via a reading of the dynamics of sexual activity and passivity in philosophical accounts by Jean-Paul Sartre and Martha Nussbaum, and a fictional text by Muriel Spark.
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Good Enough To Eat

CAN

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♪♫ Little Feat - Dixie Chicken (with Emmylou Harris & Bonnie Raitt)

The Spyfiles

The McFuture™

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McDonald's Scores Magnificent Win in Happy Meal Debacle

Copyright Corruption Scandal Surrounds Anti-Piracy Campaign

Obama lawyers: Citizens targeted if at war with US

Mark Stewart - Pattern Compulsions #7

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The seventh show in the Cyrk series ‘Pattern Compulsions’ curated for Resonance 104.4FM, is an exclusive mix by a pioneer of mutant music, Mark Stewart (Maffia, Pop Group)….
Mark Stewart and his first band The Pop Group blasted out of Bristol in 1979 with the wired, avant future-funk manifesto of their ’We Are All Prostitutes’ single and Y debut album, redirecting their punk energy into the political arena, supporting campaigns such as Stop SUS. Stewart’s blood-letting vocal torrents rode disembodied funk grooves and fearsome free jazz skronking, continuing into 1980’s For How Much Longer Do We Tolerate Mass Murder? album. As punk and its post-punk derivative got more formularised, the Pop Group struck further out, before imploding, leaving Stewart to hitch up with Adrian Sherwood’s On-U Sound, probably the most cutting edge operation of that period, Stewart immersed himself in the sonic possibilities of dub reggae and mixing desk mayhem on 1982’s Jerusalem EP [which included the unsettling but still uncannily prescient future-funk of ‘Welcome To Liberty City’] and his first solo album, the following year’s Learning To Cope With Cowardice.
Stewart was also fixated with the early hiphop he heard in the States, bringing back goldust-like tapes of New York’s groundbreaking hip radio stations, typically going to the source and procuring the Sugarhill/Tommy Boy rhythm section to join his Maffia [and also become Tackhead]. His next three albums – 1985’s As The Veneer Of Democracy Starts To Fade, 1987’s Mark Stewart album and 1990’s Metatron – are regarded as epochal future-shocks, blueprinting industrial [Ministry kingpin Al Jorgensen and NIN’s Trent Reznor citing him as a major influence] and trip-hop [’Mark Stewart, he‘s my chaos‘, says Tricky]. The latter album saw him hijacking techno for another uniquely-personal flight which, by Stewart‘s idiosyncratic in-breeding process, manifested later that decade in cyber-punk and the work of former flat-mate Tricky, proto-dubstep another creation. [“Most dubstep kids, Burial and that, they love all that stuff me and Adrian were doing”].
After 1996’s Control Data, Stewart glanced back at his past achievements with 1998’s We Are All Prostitutes Pop Group compilation and soon after his 2008’s Edit album he was the subject of Toni Schiffer’s documentary, On/Off – Mark Stewart: From the Pop Group To The Maffia.
Reflecting now on an unmatchable track record of anarchic pioneering and seismic influence which prodded Nick Cave to declare, ‘Mark Stewart changed everything‘, he says, “I thought I was making funk music, but a track on Veneer Of Democracy supposedly inspired all the American industrialists, like Front line Assembly and Skinny Puppy, while another track supposedly inspired the Bristol kids. It happens all the time. I’ve got this nonchalance that nothing is sacred so I’ll crash a Slayer guitar line with Rotterdam gabba beats. For me, it’s like colours. I grew up doing montages; like I did this collage of Ronald Reagan’s head on this gay porno cowboy. In fact, I’ve never really grown up at all. I’m still trying to put round things into square holes.”
On the 25th November Mark releases a double A side 7″ – ‘Children Of The Revolution’ / ‘Nothing Is Sacred’ – Ultra-violently noisy and perfectly capturing the restless mood on today’s global streets from London to Libya, Children of the Revolution can be heard on Mark’s mix here for the first time. The album will be out early in 2012 and features a stellar cast including cult film-maker Kenneth Anger, original Clash/PiL guitarist Keith Levene, Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, Richard Hell, Gina Birch from the Raincoats, Tessa Pollitt from the Slits, all of Primal Scream amongst many others…
Tracklist-
1.) Mono log
2.) Starform
3.) Activist – DJ Bone
4.) Nothing is Sacred – Mark Stewart
5.) The Ventures
6.) Sufferer Skank – Ranking Joe
7.) Back Off – Jonny Osbourne
8.) Rude Boy – Rihanna (Crispy Remix)
9.) Children of the Revolution – Mark (Bolan) Stewart
10.) Mars – Helen Forsdale
11.) Daddy Love – Trash Women
12.) Robing and the Hoods
13.) Henry Thome
14.) Benny Joy
15.) Wondrous Place – Billy Fury
16.) It’s Gonna be Me – Davis Bowie
17.) The Day the World Turned Blue – Gene Vincent
18.) Die Herren Der Welt – Hildegaaard de Kneif
19.) Funk Knows
20.) Is this the Future? – Fatback Band
21.) Quardrent Six
22.) Vox Dei
23.) Mono Logue
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Netanyahu Government Suggests Israelis Avoid Marrying American Jews

The 2011 Public Opinion Poll of Jewish and Arab Citizens of Israel

Media Choreography and the Occupy LA Raid

During the Los Angeles Police Department's forcible removal of the Occupy LA protest last night, they chose 12 reporters and photographers to represent the media as a whole.* This is called a "media pool" -- and it used to be a fairly time-honored, if oft-derided, way of dealing with very specific types of situations. The original idea was that a select group of mainstream media journalists go into a military engagement, report their observations to a larger group, and then everyone could write from the same observed facts. Growing beyond its military borders, the media pool concept has been deployed during political conventions, high-profile trials, and in a few other cases. In all cases, though, as summarized in the Encyclopedia of Television, the pool "offers those who employ it a way to manage media coverage."
It strikes me as significant that the compromise developed in the 1980s after the media was barred from covering the invasion of Grenada. It also strikes me as significant that we use the term "compromise" to describe it. The first and second meanings of compromised come into play: "to settle a dispute by mutual concession" and "to weaken (a reputation or principle) by accepting standards that are lower than is desirable."
All of that brings us to last night's media pool. The LAPD deployed this old-school method in a decidedly 20th-century way. First, they didn't select a single web-based publication or alternative news outlet. Instead they allowed the Los Angeles Daily News, Los Angeles Times, Reuters, AP, the big four television outlets, and a two radio reporters. Anybody not in that group -- which would include reporters for every website not affiliated with a newspaper in Los Angeles, not to mention all citizens performing acts of journalism -- were told that they would be arrested if they came too close to the eviction area.
The LAPD forbade their pool reporters from reporting the events live. (Update: See bottom of the post for details. The restriction was more akin to a kind of tape-delay than an embargo.) This helped to neutralize a key informational advantage that Occupy protesters have exploited. As confrontations with police begin, they are able to use the emotional imagery from those events to draw more support in real-time. Of course, in this case, there were some people writing about the events in real-time and others livestreamed, but only if they were willing to risk arrest...
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Bleeding Britain

Thursday 1 December 2011

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Watched this live from LA last night...

Premier Anna Bligh 
Same Sex Civil Union Bill passes Qld Parliament YES-47 NO-40 - here's to LOVE, most powerful force in universe!

Dennis Hopper (Apocalypse Now Action Man)

(Thanx Mark!)

Fuck You!!!
Matt Bors 
is hosting a Third Eye Blind video shoot at Zuccotti Park. Are they trying to drive everyone out?!

♪♫ Die Toten Hosen - You'll Never Walk Alone

A Look at Neo-Nazi Germany from the Inside

Manuel Bauer was once a neo-Nazi thug, heavily involved in far-right paramilitary organizations and guilty of numerous assaults against foreigners and immigrants in Germany. He has since turned his back on the scene -- but he can still provide a unique inside look. Authorities, he says, have long underestimated its danger...

'I Was an Asshole'

The Apologies of Zuckerberg: A Retrospective

The Opiates - Reality TV (Drop Out Orchestra Dub)

ISP code a US-style privacy sell-out

We can’t go on like this. I’m cutting the NHS, not the deficit

Oliver Tank - Dreams (Free Download)

Surge Overkill

Los Angeles
1400 police for 200 arrests!!!

Wednesday 30 November 2011

Beck & Charlotte Gainsbourg - Paradisco

All Power To The 99%

#occupylsx #n30 #n30strike

Lee Ranaldo on the Future of Sonic Youth

George Osborne's every blow falls on those with less not more

Illustration by Belle Mellor
Class war, generation war, war against women, war between the regions: George Osborne's autumn statement blatantly declares itself for the few against the many. Gloves are off and gauntlets down, and the nasty party bares its teeth. Here is the re-toxified Tory party, the final curtain on David Cameron's electoral charade. No more crocodile tears for the poor, no more cant about social mobility or "the most family-friendly government" or "we're all in this together". Forget "vote blue go green", with this mockery of husky-hugging. Let the planet fry.
Exposed was the extent of pain for no gain, exactly as Keynesian economists predicted, a textbook case. Things are "proving harder than anyone envisaged", says Cameron. But precisely this was envisaged by Nobel-winning economists. Extreme austerity is causing £100bn extra borrowing, not less, while everything else shrinks – most incomes (the poorest most of all), employment, order books and exports. Pre-Christmas shopping – already discounted – heralds more imminent company collapses, and the only high street growth is in pawnbrokers, charity shops and Poundlands filling up the black gaps. For all the flurry of small announcements to kickstart business, infrastructure doesn't create jobs fast enough to replace the 710,000 more public jobs to go. The iron envelope of public spending is unchanged. Osborne learns nothing from experience.
What was missing from his list? Not one penny more was taken from the top 10% of earners. Every hit fell upon those with less not more. Fat plums ripe for the plucking stayed on the tree as the poorest bore 16% of the brunt of new cuts and the richest only 3%, according to the Resolution Foundation. Over £7bn could be harvested with 40% tax relief on higher pensions, while most earners only get 20% tax relief; £2bn should be nipped from taxing bankers' bonuses, but the bank levy announced was nothing extra. There was no mansion tax on high-value properties, though owners don't even pay their fair share of council tax, and property is greatly undertaxed compared with other countries...
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Polly Toynbee @'The Guardian'

#OccupyLA (Livestream)


LAPD SCANNER

Ironic eh?

Bethany Usher who now lectures in journalism at Tees side University and who worked at the News of the World in 2006 and 2007 in Manchester is the latest hacking arrest...

John Giorno: The Death of William Burroughs

Directed by Antonello Faretta
Give a man a gun and he can rob a bank, give a man a bank and he can rob the world.
Naomi Klein 
Just doing my morning "I'm not Naomi f-ing Wolf" corrections. Love that half the people I have to correct r journos.

Dayone - Multiply

Girlz with Gunz #163

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#nov30 WHY I AM STRIKING

Ross X 
Recall LAPD's motto: "To Protect and Serve." Bus boarding LAPD at Dodger Stadium to evict reads: "Not in Service."

Occupy L.A. Eviction: Is LAPD Restricting Coverage With Last-Minute 'Pool Media'?