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18 Nov - The Netroots Speak

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Just in case some body is still paying attention to this blog while I play at Blogger and Open Salon

Dropping Al-Alam meant to 'silence resistance'
Wed, 18 Nov 2009 12:52:04 GMT
After two Arab satellite operators took Al-Alam off air, growing number of intellectuals and politicians are lending their voice to the chorus of criticism against the move.

Egyptian parliamentarian Mustapha al-Bakri said the decision to drop Al-Alam was an effort to choke the voice of resistance in the Arab world.

Saudi-based Arabsat and Cairo-based Nilesat stopped Iran's Arabic-language Al-Alam in a move widely seen as its stance on regional issues, especially when it comes to the Saudi-backing of the Yemeni forces in a crackdown on Shiite Houthi fighters in north of the country.

Meanwhile, Egyptian scholar Rafiq al-Habib also told of the heavy toll of the regional disputes on the news network.

Hafiz Abu Saeeda, head of the Egyptian Human Rights Organization, described the Arab companies move as "unjustifiable".

Citing Egyptian and Arab Legal System, he said the operators were not entitled to move without providing convincing reasons.

Al-Alam officials say the decision to take the network off air breached the contract with the Arab satellite providers which stipulated that any disputes should be settled at a competent court of law.

Political motive behind Al-Alam ban
Some regional and international media and political foundations condemned the Saudi-based Arabsat as well as Cairo-based Nilesat's moves to ban Iran's al-Alam from broadcasting on the air, saying that this initiative will serve Zionist regime.

The Arab media described Al Alalm as one of most outstanding network in exposing the crimes committed by Zionist against Palestinians particularly in recent Gaza war, stressing that some political motives are behind this initiative supported by some Arab leaders.

After a few days of silence, Arabsat and Nilesat authorities claimed that the main reason behind dropping Al-Alam, was the network's continuous criticizing of some figures in the Arab world.

They also claimed that Iran's Arabic-language news channel abused rules of broadcasting by violating some religious and political issues.

However Al-Alam has called on the operators to mention the exact time and date of the programs which they have found offensive.

According to al-Alam authorities, the Iran-based television network was taken off the air by both Arabsat and Nilesat on Tuesday without prior notice.

The channel authorities say the move is in violation of initial rights of media freedom as well as previous contracts with the two satellite companies.

They also noted that lack of explanations in official remarks of theses two Arab satellites reaffirms a political motive behind the case.

Reactions against this act are still coming in by human rights organizations as well as Arab and international media in several countries including Lebanon, Britain, Turkey and Sudan.

Home Page/Latest News

* Iraqi vice president vetoes election law
18/11/2009 - 02:39 GMT
* Dropping Al-Alam meant to 'silence resistance'
18/11/2009 - 12:51 GMT
* Thousands protest Peres' visit to Argentina
18/11/2009 - 11:58 GMT
* US urges Iran to respond to nuclear proposal
18/11/2009 - 11:22 GMT
* New settlements draw US, European ire
18/11/2009 - 10:27 GMT
* US national debt passes $12 trillion mark
18/11/2009 - 09:35 GMT
* 'Too early to conclude about Iran nuclear program'
18/11/2009 - 09:12 GMT
* Record number in US against Afghan war
18/11/2009 - 08:53 GMT
* US Army beleaguered with suicide
17/11/2009 - 10:08 GMT
* UN calls on Israel to end Gaza siege
17/11/2009 - 06:06 GMT
* Afghanistan, Iraq on top of world corrupt countries
17/11/2009 - 05:29 GMT
* Violence across Iraq claims 15 lives
16/11/2009 - 08:05 GMT
* Bushehr reactor delayed on technical grounds
16/11/2009 - 06:58 GMT
* Pakistan car bomb blast kills 4 people
16/11/2009 - 06:25 GMT
* Clinton urges Afghan Karzai to 'do better'
16/11/2009 - 05:24 GMT
* Hunger summit urges hunger eradication
16/11/2009 - 04:37 GMT
* Authority reiterates right to declare state
16/11/2009 - 04:17 GMT
* Saudi, Yemeni forces continue shelling Houthis
16/11/2009 - 03:30 GMT
* Iraqi MP accuses PG states of funding Baathists
16/11/2009 - 02:49 GMT
* Authority to seek UN endorsement of statehood
15/11/2009 - 04:20 GMT
* Obama: time is running out on Iran talks
15/11/2009 - 04:06 GMT
* German defense minister under fire in Afghanistan
15/11/2009 - 03:51 GMT
* 'US camp in Iraq a breeding school for Qaeda'
15/11/2009 - 03:30 GMT
* Kosovo holds local polls amid Serbs boycott
15/11/2009 - 11:14 GMT
* British support grows for Afghan withdrawal
15/11/2009 - 10:08 GMT

Photo albums

Phys Ed: Why Exercise Makes You Less Anxious
In the experiment, preliminary results of which were presented last month at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience in Chicago, scientists allowed one group of rats to run. Another set of rodents was not allowed to exercise. Then all of the rats swam in cold water, which they don’t like to do. Afterward, the scientists examined the animals’ brains. They found that the stress of the swimming activated neurons in all of the ’ brains. (The researchers could tell which neurons were activated because the cells expressed specific genes in response to the stress.) But the youngest brain cells in the running rats, the cells that the scientists assumed were created by running, were less likely to express the genes. They generally remained quiet. The “cells born from running,” the researchers concluded, appeared to have been “specifically buffered from exposure to a stressful experience.” The rats had created, through running, a brain that seemed biochemically, molecularly, calm.
A Dental Shift: Implants Instead of Bridges

COLLISION IN CHINA | CHINA FAULTS U.S. IN INCIDENT
The Chinese government blamed the United States today for Sunday's midair collision of a spy plane and a trailing Chinese fighter jet and suggested that the release of the 24 American crew members hinged on Washington's willingness to apologize.

The slow-moving American plane, filled with secret eavesdropping equipment, collided on Sunday with one of two Chinese fighters that shadowed it 65 miles off Chinese territorial waters. With a wing and an engine damaged, the plane made an emergency landing at a military base on the southern Chinese island of Hainan, where the crew was taken into custody.

The pilot of the Chinese jet, identified today as Wang Wei, reportedly parachuted out before his jet crashed, but Chinese rescuers have been unable to find him and he is presumed dead.
AU Senator Calls Scientology a "Criminal Organization"
An anonymous reader passes along news that an Australian senator, Nick Xenophon, has denounced the Church of Scientology as "a criminal organization" from the floor of Parliament. "Senator Xenophon used a speech in Parliament last night to raise allegations of widespread criminal conduct within the church, saying he had received letters from former followers detailing claims of abuse, false imprisonment, and forced abortion. He says he has passed on the letters to the police and is calling for a Senate inquiry into the religion and its tax-exempt status." It wasn't that long ago that the CoS was calling for Net censorship in Australia; a month later the organization was convicted of fraud in France.
SLASHDOT : YOUR RIGHTS ONLINE : CENSORSHIP
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Comments: 441 +- Your Rights Online: AU Senator Calls Scientology a "Criminal Organization" on Tuesday November 17, @11:56PM
Posted by kdawson on Tuesday November 17, @11:56PM
from the can't-do-that-here-either dept.
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An anonymous reader passes along news that an Australian senator, Nick Xenophon, has denounced the Church of Scientology as "a criminal organization" from the floor of Parliament. "Senator Xenophon used a speech in Parliament last night to raise allegations of widespread criminal conduct within the church, saying he had received letters from former followers detailing claims of abuse, false imprisonment, and forced abortion. He says he has passed on the letters to the police and is calling for a Senate inquiry into the religion and its tax-exempt status." It wasn't that long ago that the CoS was calling for Net censorship in Australia; a month later the organization was convicted of fraud in France.
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Comments: 3 +- Your Rights Online: Founder of Tibet's "Butter-Lamp" Site Sentenced To 15 Years In Prison on Tuesday November 17, @10:43AM
Posted by timothy on Tuesday November 17, @10:43AM
from the there-is-no-firewall dept.
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The Installer writes with this snippet from the AP, as carried by Seattle's KOMO News: "The founder of a Tibetan literary Web site was sentenced to 15 years in prison on charges of disclosing state secrets, an overseas monitoring group said Tuesday. Kunchok Tsephel, 39, was convicted and sentenced Nov. 12 after a closed-door trial at the Intermediate People's Court of Gannan prefecture in southwestern Gansu province, according to reports from Tibet received by Tibetan exiles, said the International Campaign for Tibet, a Washington D.C.-based advocacy group. Some of the charges are believed to be related to content posted on his influential Web site, Chodme, or Butter-Lamp, which promotes Tibetan culture, and also for passing on information about last year's anti-government protests."
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Comments: 308 +- Politics: Obama Talks Internet Freedom, China Censors on Monday November 16, @11:04PM
Posted by kdawson on Monday November 16, @11:04PM
from the can't-hear-you dept.
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eldavojohn writes "In a town-hall-style Q&A with (hand-picked) Chinese students in Shanghai, President Obama made several statements knocking China's firewall and censorship. Quoting: 'I am a big believer in technology and I'm a big believer in openness when it comes to the flow of information. I think that the more freely information flows, the stronger the society becomes, because then citizens of countries around the world can hold their own governments accountable. They can begin to think for themselves. That generates new ideas. It encourages creativity. And so I've always been a strong supporter of open Internet use. I'm a big supporter of non-censorship. This is part of the tradition of the United States that I discussed before, and I recognize that different countries have different traditions. I can tell you that in the United States, the fact that we have free Internet — or unrestricted Internet access — is a source of strength, and I think should be encouraged.' The Washington Post notes that the event was broadcast only on the local level, and in fact Chinese authorities removed from view what little coverage it had gotten, after about an hour. But at least American news media are gobbling it up."
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Comments: 544 +- Your Rights Online: Russia Recalls Modern Warfare 2 on Monday November 16, @01:12PM
Posted by timothy on Monday November 16, @01:12PM
from the no-you-take-that-back dept.
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eldavojohn writes "You may recall much ado over some questionable footage in the latest Call of Duty game. Well, that footage has led to a recall of Modern Warfare 2 in Russia. Seems the Russian government was none too happy about the portrayal of Russia in the game and decided to yank it from stores. Infinity Ward has responded with a patch that removes the 'No Russian' mission (the content in question) from the storyline. Before you overly criticize the Russian government, there may be some truth to the claim that the game's story line overly demonizes Russians as just terrorists as the Russian site GotPS3.ru alleges. Is cultural sensitivity becoming an overly played card in the gaming world? Not too long ago, Wolfenstein was recalled in Germany for containing Nazi symbols."
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Comments: 407 +- Your Rights Online: UN Officials Remove Poster Mentioning Chinese Firewall on Sunday November 15, @06:04PM
Posted by kdawson on Sunday November 15, @06:04PM
from the can-you-spell-hypocricy dept.
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At a UN-sponsored Internet Governance Forum in Egypt, anti-censorship group Open Net Initiative was startled by a demand from UN officials to remove a poster mentioning Chinese Net censorship. When ONI refused the request, security personnel arrived and took away the poster. The group was promoting a new book, Access Controlled, a survey of Internet censorship, filtering, and online surveillance. A witness said, "The poster was thrown on the floor and we were told to remove it because of the reference to China and Tibet. We refused, and security guards came and removed it. The incident was witnessed by many." Here is a video of the removal.
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Comments: 275 +- Your Rights Online: Microsoft Tries To Censor Bing Vulnerability on Tuesday November 10, @02:30AM
Posted by kdawson on Tuesday November 10, @02:30AM
from the don't-shout-and-wave-it-about dept.
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An anonymous reader writes "Microsoft's Bing search engine has a vulnerability with its cash-back promotion, which impacts both merchants and customers. In traditional Microsoft fashion, the company has responded to the author of the breaking Bing cash-back exploit with a cease & desist letter, rather than by fixing the underlying security problem. It is possible for a malicious user to create fake Bing cash-back requests, resulting in not only fake cash-back costs for the merchant, but also blocking legitimate customers from receiving their cash-back from Bing. The original post is currently available in Bing's cache, although perhaps not for long. But no worries, the author makes it clear that the exploit should be painfully obvious to anyone who reads the Bing cash-back SDK."
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Comments: 180 +- News: Congress May Require ISPs To Block Certain Fraud Sites on Thursday November 05, @08:39AM
Posted by Soulskill on Thursday November 05, @08:39AM
from the just-getting-warmed-up dept.
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FutureDomain writes "A bill which just passed the House Financial Services Committee would require Internet Service Providers to block access to sites hosting financial scams that pose as members of the government-backed Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC). The bill, called the Investor Protection Act and sponsored by Paul Kanjorski (D-PA), is broad enough to block not only websites, but email and any other 'electronic material.' 'Internet providers are also worried that Kanjorski's requirement — and the accompanying civil penalties and injunctions — would apply even if the blocking is not technically feasible.'"
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Comments: 775 +- Your Rights Online: Secret Copyright Treaty Leaks. It's Bad. Very Bad. on Wednesday November 04, @09:31AM
Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday November 04, @09:31AM
from the you-gotta-be-kidding-me dept.
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Jamie found a Boing Boing story that will probably get your blood to at least a simmer. It says "The internet chapter of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, a secret copyright treaty whose text Obama's administration refused to disclose due to 'national security' concerns, has leaked. It's bad." You can read the original leaked document or the summary. If passed, the internet will never be the same. Thank goodness it's hidden from public scrutiny for National Security.
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Comments: 163 +- Your Rights Online: EFF Launches "Takedown Hall of Shame" on Tuesday October 27, @05:03PM
Posted by kdawson on Tuesday October 27, @05:03PM
from the more-chilling dept.
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netbuzz writes "Recognizing that public shame is a potent weapon, the Electronic Frontier Foundation today launched a new Web site — its Takedown Hall of Shame — that will shine an unflattering spotlight on those corporations and individuals who abuse copyright claims to stifle free speech. Among the early inductees are NPR, NBC, CBS, and Diebold."
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Comments: 622 +- Your Rights Online: French Branch of Scientology Is Convicted of Fraud on Tuesday October 27, @01:44PM
Posted by kdawson on Tuesday October 27, @01:44PM
from the still-getting-away-with-it dept.
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The trial we discussed this spring has come to a verdict, and reader lugannerd was one of several to note a milestone in the fight against the Church of Scientology. "The French branch of the Church of Scientology was convicted of fraud and fined nearly $900,000 on Tuesday by a Paris court. But the judges did not ban the church entirely, as the prosecution had demanded, saying that a change in the law prevented such an action for fraud. The church said it would appeal. The verdict was among the most important in several years to involve the controversial group, which is registered as a religion in the United States but has no similar legal protection in France. It is considered a sect here, and says it has some 45,000 adherents, out of some 12 million worldwide. It was the first time here that the church itself had been tried and convicted, as opposed to individual members."
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Comments: 74 +- Your Rights Online: Ultrasurf Easily Blocked, But So What? on Monday October 26, @11:01AM
Posted by kdawson on Monday October 26, @11:01AM
from the counter-counter-workarounds dept.
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Frequent Slashdot contributor Bennett Haselton writes "A simple experiment shows that it's easy to find the IP addresses used by the UltraSurf anti-censorship program, and block traffic to all of those IP addresses, effectively stopping UltraSurf from working. But this is not a fault of UltraSurf; rather, it demonstrates that an anti-censorship software program can be successful even if it's relatively trivial to block it." Read on for Bennett's analysis.
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Comments: 129 +- Your Rights Online: AU Classification Board To Censor Mobile Apps on Thursday October 22, @04:13AM
Posted by samzenpus on Thursday October 22, @04:13AM
from the we-got-a-ban-for-that dept.
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bennyboy64 writes "The Australian Classification Board is seeking to censor mobile phone applications under its National Classification Scheme. 'I recently wrote to the minister [Minister McDonald] regarding my concern that some so-called mobile phone applications, which can be purchased online or either downloaded to mobile phones or played online via mobile phone access, are not being submitted to the board for classification,' Australia's Classification Board director Donald McDonald told a Senate Estimates committee. I wonder if they know that there are over 80,000 applications on the iPhone platform alone?"
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Comments: 297 +- Your Rights Online: China Strangles Tor Ahead of National Day on Thursday October 15, @02:41PM
Posted by timothy on Thursday October 15, @02:41PM
from the not-so-much-into-liberty-y'see dept.
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TechReviewAl writes "Technology Review reports that the Chinese government has for the first time targeted the Tor anonymity network. In the run-up to China's National Day celebrations, the government started targeting the sites used to distribute Tor addresses and the number of users inside China dropped from tens of thousands to near zero. The move is part of a broader trend that involves governments launching censorship crackdowns around key dates. The good news is that many Tor users quickly found a way around the attack, distributing 'bridge' addresses via IM and Twitter."
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Comments: 216 +- Your Rights Online: In the UK, a Few Tweets Restore Freedom of Speech on Wednesday October 14, @04:28AM
Posted by kdawson on Wednesday October 14, @04:28AM
from the inconvenient-truths dept.
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Several readers wrote to us about the situation in the UK that saw the Guardian newspaper forbidden by a judge from reporting a question in UK parliament. The press's freedom to do so has been fought for since at least 1688 and fully acknowledged since the 19th century. At issue was a matter of public record — but the country's libel laws meant that the newspaper could not inform the public of what parliament was up to. The question concerned the oil trading company Trafigura, the toxic waste scandal they are involved in, and their generous use of libel lawyers to silence those who would report on the whole thing. After tweeters and bloggers shouted about Trafigura all over the Internet, the company's lawyers agreed to drop the gag request.
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Comments: 136 +- Games: Modern Games and Technology Challenging ESRB's Effectiveness on Wednesday October 14, @03:02AM
Posted by Soulskill on Wednesday October 14, @03:02AM
from the rated-t-for-terrible dept.
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The Entertainment Software Rating Board has been around for 15 years now, overcoming an ineffective start and a host of controversial events to become a fairly well-respected ratings agency. However, as this article at The Escapist points out, the world of video games is changing, and the ESRB does not seem to be adapting along with it. "The most pressing problem is the ESRB's reluctance to address online interactions. Seeing as we're moving more and more toward online and internet-enabled games, this inevitably limits the ESRB's authority as a ratings board. Although the ESRB rates the submitted developer content within online games, these ratings are always qualified by an important disclaimer: 'Online Interactions Not Rated by the ESRB.' To date, this has meant that the rating given to the designed game content doesn't cover chat and other forms of player-to-player communication. That's unfortunate, because the ESRB's intimate relationship with the game industry could provide it with a unique vantage point from which to evaluate aspects of online games that are beyond the purview of other would-be raters, including the quality of the game's moderation system, programmed restrictions on chat and known player demographics."
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Comments: 94 +- Your Rights Online: Wikileaks Plans To Make the Web Leakier on Friday October 09, @10:39AM
Posted by kdawson on Friday October 09, @10:39AM
from the assuming-the-risk dept.
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itwbennett writes "At the Hack In The Box conference in Kuala Lumpur, Wikileaks.org announced a plan to enable newspapers, human rights organizations, criminal investigators, and others to embed an 'upload a disclosure to me via Wikileaks' form onto their Web sites that would give potential whistleblowers the ability to leak sensitive documents to an organization or journalist they trust over a secure connection. The news or NGO site would then get an embargo period in which to analyze the material and write the story, after which Wikileaks would make the leaked material public. At the same time, the receiver would have greater legal protection, says Julien Assange, an advisory board member at Wikileaks 'We will take the burden of protecting the source and the legal risks associated with publishing the document,' said Assange. 'We want to get as much substantive information as possible into the historical record, keep it accessible, and provide incentives for people to turn it into something that will achieve political reform.'"
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Comments: 134 +- Games: Left 4 Dead 2 Approved In Australia After Edits on Friday October 09, @02:24AM
Posted by Soulskill on Friday October 09, @02:24AM
from the going-out-on-a-limb dept.
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Last month we discussed news that Valve's upcoming shooter Left 4 Dead 2 had been denied classification in Australia, which meant the game could not be legally sold there. Now, after a series of edits which removed "considerable amounts of gore from gameplay," Australia's classification board has given the game an MA15+ rating. Their new report (PDF) says, "No wound detail is shown and the implicitly dead bodies and blood splatter disappear as they touch the ground. ... The board notes that the game no longer contains depictions of decapitation, dismemberment, wound detail or piles of dead bodies lying about the environment." The unmodified version of the game may still be approved, pending a review that concludes on October 22nd.
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Comments: 125 +- Your Rights Online: Details On Worldwide Surveillance and Filtering on Wednesday October 07, @06:57PM
Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday October 07, @06:57PM
from the eyes-eyes-eveywhere dept.
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An anonymous reader writes "Help Net Security is running an interview with Rafal Rohozinski, a founder and principal investigator of the OpenNet Initiative, which investigates, exposes and analyzes Internet filtering and surveillance practices all over the world. Rafal provides insight on the process of assessing the state of surveillance and filtering in a particular country and discusses differences related to these issues in several regions, touching especially the United States and Europe. In the US, censorship is more difficult to implement if for no other reason than the court systems offer greater protections for freedom of speech. However, in both places surveillance is on the rise particularly as law-enforcement agencies become more adept at working in the cyber domain."
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Comments: 40 +- Your Rights Online: Dam Burst Tool Disables China's Green Dam Censorware on Wednesday September 30, @12:48PM
Posted by timothy on Wednesday September 30, @12:48PM
from the dam-you-anti-social-coders dept.
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An anonymous reader writes "The infamous Green Dam censorship software has suffered yet another blow. As ZDNet explains, Dam Burst, a tool released by security researcher Jon Oberheide, allows unprivileged users to disable the censorware by removing the hooks that enable it to monitor and block user activity, effectively restoring running applications to their original uncensored state. While the Dam Burst software is currently available at Oberheide's website, community mirrors will undoubtedly be necessary to avoid blocking by the Great Firewall."
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Comments: 625 +- Games: Wolfenstein Being Recalled In Germany

Scientology a 'criminal organisation'
Senator Xenophon used a speech in Parliament last night to raise allegations of widespread criminal conduct within the church, saying he had received letters from former followers detailing claims of abuse, false imprisonment and forced abortion.

He says he has passed on the letters to the police and is calling for a Senate inquiry into the religion and its tax-exempt status.

"I am deeply concerned about this organisation and the devastating impact it can have on its followers," he told the Senate.

A spokeswoman for the church, Virginia Stewart, says she is shocked to hear Senator Xenophon's claims, as no-one within the church seems disgruntled.

"If these people had key issues, then how come they haven't contacted the church officially?" she said.

"We actually have an entire section that responds to people. So if someone has a complaint about the church, we really are so happy to meet with them."

Ms Stewart says the church tried to contact Senator Xenophon earlier this year after he spoke about Scientology on television.

"We offered to meet with him, to be completely open, answer any of his questions," she said.

"He didn't even bother to reply so I think it's a bit disingenuous that someone stands up in Parliament, where they can say whatever they want.

"He hasn't even spoken with us before, and we have attempted to speak with him."

Parliamentary speech

Senator Xenophon told Parliament the Church of Scientology was a criminal organisation that hides behind its "so-called religious beliefs".

"Do you want Australian tax exemptions to be supporting an organisation that coerces its followers into having abortions? Do you want to be supporting an organisation that defrauds, that blackmails, that falsely imprisons?" he asked.

"Because on the balance of evidence provided by victims of Scientology you probably are.

"The letters received by me which were written by former followers in Australia contain extensive allegations of crimes and abuses that are truly shocking.

"These victims of Scientology claim it is an abusive, manipulative and violent organisation."

AC NEWS
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http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/11/18/2745765.htm

Money and MisDirection

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Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) Accused of Promoting Israeli Propaganda

Nomi Morris I GlobalPost

TORONTO, Canada - A protest over a Toronto International Film Festival spotlight on Tel Aviv cinema has galvanized the globe's creative community.

From Cairo to Calgary, artists can often be divided on their Middle East views but most agree on the need to draw the line between cultural expression and political advocacy.

As a glamorous parade of celebrities walk the red carpet here, increasing numbers of Hollywood stars are speaking out for or against the festival's critics, who say the Tel Aviv program boosts Israel's tarnished image eight months after its devastating bombing raids in the Gaza Strip.

"We protest that TIFF, whether intentionally or not, has become complicit in the Israeli propaganda machine," said the Toronto Declaration, signed earlier this month by 65 artists, including actresses Jane Fonda and Julie Christie, musicians David Byrne and Harry Belafonte and writers such as Alice Walker and Wallace Shawn.

Since then, 1,500 have added their names to the document, including 60 Israelis. The letter denounces the TIFF focus on Tel Aviv as being subverted by "the Israeli propaganda machine."

The letter itself does not however call for a boycott of the festival, which is on through Sept. 19, nor of the 10 films featured in the program. But Palestinians have demonstrated at the Canadian consular office in Ramallah, and Egyptian filmmakers have pulled their three films from what is arguably the most important international film forum after Cannes.
The controversy has generated a great deal of heated debate. Jane Fonda modified her position after signing the letter saying she had not considered how some "unnecessarily inflammatory" wording in the declaration could "exacerbate the situation." Dozens of American and Canadian actors, directors and producers signed a full page ad in a Toronto newspaper to "applaud" the festival and its 10-film Tel Aviv program.

"Anyone who has actually seen recent Israeli cinema, movies that are political and personal, comic and tragic, often critical, knows they are in no way a propaganda arm for any government policy," said the ad co-sponsored by the Toronto and Los Angeles Jewish communities.

That statement is signed by actors Natalie Portman, Sacha Baron Cohen, Jerry Seinfeld, Lisa Kudrow, Lenny Kravitz and dozens of entertainment industry executives.

For many who are angry about the protest, it is less about the Middle East than about the politicization of an event that has in recent decades put Toronto on the world's cultural map.
"A film festival should be like the Olympics. You should put politics aside for the sake of the films," said American director Jason Reitman.

Visiting celebrities and local filmgoers appeared to do just that, as the festival carried on with as much excitement and glitz as ever, despite the ongoing scandal.

Among dozens of A-list stars in Canada this week are George Clooney, Penelope Cruz, Matt Damon, Jennifer Connelly, Drew Barrymore, Robert Duvall, Megan Fox, Julianne Moore and Michael Douglas. More than 3,100 film industry representatives are here. And tens of thousands of film lovers are lining up across the city to view even the most obscure of the 336 films featured in the festival. Directors from Spain's Pedro Almodovar to Germany's Werner Herzog, to America's Coen Brothers and Ireland's Neil Jordan are screening their newest films.

The opening film Creation, a well-received close-up of Charles Darwin's private life, is a prime example of how increasing numbers of filmmakers are choosing to debut their films in Toronto rather than Venice or Berlin.

"Toronto is the bridge between Europe and North America," said Anke Sterneborg, a critic for the Munich-based Suddeutsche Zeitung who has been attending the festival for the past 12 years. "You get the European art house films, and the Asians. And it's close enough to Hollywood for celebrities to come and give it the shine."

This year, the film that has generated the greatest buzz is "Up in the Air," the latest by Reitman, director of the hits "Juno" and "Thank You for Smoking," and son of Hollywood director Ivan Reitman ("Ghost Busters"). "Up in the Air" stars Clooney as a "termination engineer," who has no home life outside of his job, jetting around the country helping American companies fire people. Both funny and sad, the film examines a society where frequent flier points become a substitute for family attachments. Reitman used documentary footage of 25 real people who had lost their jobs in Detroit and St. Louis, which lends the film a timely edge.

At the same time, critics have singled out many smaller films from smaller countries such as Denmark's "An Education," and "Women Without Men," a German-French-Austrian co-production set in 1950's Iran. Canadian films are attracting higher profile American investment and star power, such as Atom Egoyan's "Chloe," featuring Julianne Moore and Liam Neeson. Canada is still strong in its usual categories of shorts and documentaries, with this year's main documentary entry a gem called "Genius Within: The Inner Life of Glenn Gould."

Among the many Israeli films present at this festival -- some in the special program and some not -- are "Google Baby," a documentary about artificial insemination going global and "Phobidilia," in which a man never leaves his apartment, doing everything by telephone and internet. Particularly well received were "The Time That Remains," by Palestinian-Israeli filmmaker Elia Suleiman and "Lebanon," a soul-searching drama set inside an Israeli tank during the 1982 war, which took top honors at the recent Venice Film Festival.

The TIFF 'tiff' over Tel Aviv, started on Aug. 27 when Canadian director and activist John Greyson pulled his short "Covered," from the festival program arguing that the inaugural City-to-City spotlight on Tel Aviv was inappropriate. Greyson said the Toronto festival had let itself become a tool of the 'Brand Israel' arts and culture campaign that Israel's foreign ministry devised to broaden the country's image beyond its conflict with the Palestinians. He also pointed a finger at two Canadian media companies involved with 'Brand Israel' whose owners are also contributors to the Toronto film festival.

Cameron Bailey, co-director of TIFF, countered that the decision was an independent artistic choice and was in no way influenced by the Israeli government. Festival organizers could be forgiven for believing the spotlight on Tel Aviv would not provoke controversy since Tel Aviv is inside Israel's internationally recognized boundaries, unlike contested Jerusalem and the West Bank. And yet Cameron added fuel to the flame by acknowledging that Tel Aviv is "contested ground" in his released response to the protest.

The issue picked up steam a week before the festival opened, when Canadian writer Naomi Klein ("The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism"), publicized the Toronto Declaration which criticized the Tel Aviv spotlight while stopping short of urging a boycott of the films. Writer and academic Noam Chomsky, actor Danny Glover and many Canadian and Israeli artists and filmmakers were among the 65 who signed. Actors Julie Christie and Viggo Mortensen fell into a category of those who signed the petition and still attended the festival.

The declaration spearheaded by Klein said that celebrating Tel Aviv was like celebrating Johannesburg during the height of apartheid and that Tel Aviv was "built on destroyed Arab villages." Dueling opinion pieces continued for days in local newspapers and Facebook discussions went practically viral.

Canadian producer Robert Lantos called Greyson "hypocritical" since his short film deals with the cancellation of a gay pride event in Sarajevo, whereas Tel Aviv boasts one of the most vibrant gay communities in the world. Actor Jon Voight, who starred with Fonda years ago in "Coming Home," and has ties to the Orthodox Jewish Chabad network, issued a statement condemning Fonda.

Prominent American Rabbi Marvin Hier, who founded the Los Angeles Simon Wiesenthal Center, compared the protesters to Iran's president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and those who seek to destroy Israel, since claiming that Tel Aviv is on Palestinian land implies a non-recognition of Israel.

Such criticism stung many creative artists -- among them many Jews -- who believe activism and an economic boycott is the way to influence Israeli policies, as was done against South Africa during apartheid.

Toronto's mainstream Jewish community, meanwhile, rallied for Israel, buying up tickets to the Israeli films and demonstrating on streets in front of theaters.

"Based on various misdeeds of past and present, shouldn't TIFF stop screening movies from China, Germany, Italy, Spain, Russia and the United Kingdom?" wrote Toronto Star columnist Martin Knelman, satirically. "The greatest outrage of all is that during the six years since George W. Bush sent troops to Iraq, TIFF has meekly continued to promote movies from Hollywood, which we all know is a pathetic pawn of Washington's propaganda machine."

Ironically, many of the festival films set in Tel Aviv are highly critical and could hardly be accused of putting a positive gloss on the city. The demographically complex Jaffa area is examined in three films and the underbelly of Israeli society is laid bare in several which probe racism against Arabs, spousal abuse, trafficking in women for sex. "Lebanon" exposes wartime excesses against civilians.

In Toronto theater line-ups, some ticket-holders hadn't even heard about the controversy. "No. I know nothing about it at all," said Hilary Neal, 23, excited about seeing "She, A Chinese."
Others had heard about the Tel Aviv issue on the news but it failed to dim their enthusiasm for the festival.

"To me it's a side issue," said Milena Nikolic, who came in from her hometown an hour outside Toronto to see three films. "Movies do provide a lot of political debate. TIFF shouldn't be used for it. It's just too bad, what's going on."

Around the city's downtown a festive atmosphere prevailed with free daily outdoor concerts and films, and a complementary event called TUFF, the Toronto Urban Film Festival, which screened one-minute silent films on subway platforms across the city. The folk icon Joan Baez was scheduled to perform. And people were on the streets around the clock with Midnight Madness screenings and dozens of late night parties.

Nomi Morris is a journalist based in California, former Middle East correspondent for Knight Ridder newspapers and a former Berlin correspondent for Time magazine.

AMERICAN LEFTIST
Thursday, September 17, 2009

Random Observations on Health Care Reform and the Dysfunctionality of Government
On Tuesday, Montana Senator Max Baucus released his proposed Senate Finance Committee health care reform bill. Of course, it's an atrocity, a bill that exploits the health care crisis as yet another opportunity to transfer wealth from workers to finance capitalists. People will be forced to purchase policies that are useless in the event of a serious health problem, despite inadequate subsidies and non-existent cost containment. Furthermore, there is the additional prospect that individuals fortunate enough to have good policies through, say, collective bargaining agreements, will find themselves forced to pay a 35% surcharge in 2013 to help fund the program.

In other words, we face a looming social and political catastrophe, one in which the middle and lower classes are even more impoverished as a result of conscious government policy than they are today. Progressives are also prognosticating a wipe out for the Democrats in the mid-term elections of 2010, and, possibly, a defeat for President Obama in 2012. But this underestimates the peril. It goes beyond political partisanship and economic hardship to the legitimacy of the political system itself.

California is a bellwether for what is likely to come. As a consequence of a distressed economy, a legislature riven by partisan conflict, an unwillingness by legislators to make any decisions that would place their salaries, per diem and car allowances at risk and a governor who substitutes vapid public relations gestures for policy, the public holds the political system in complete contempt. Both the governor and the legislature are extremely unpopular. It is impossible to generate public support for any measures that would resolve the fiscal crisis and preserve essential public sector programs.

Everyone, and every public institution, is quite literally, on their own. If the Congress puts through health care reform on terms dictated by health insurance companies, pharmaceutical companies and health care providers, and Obama signs it, this is what we can expect nationally. A collapse in progressive support for the political process, resulting in, at best, gridlock, and, at worst, the passage and implementation of more and more regressive social measures. Combine the passage of such a miserable health care reform bill with possibly as many as 40,000 additional troops for Afghanistan, and we will see the ascendency of an irrational, emotionally driven right wing populism that will escape the boundaries set by Rahm Emanuel and other conservative Democrats, and go beyond preventing the passage of any progressive measures during an Obama administration, to destroying his presidency, and perhaps, the existing social fabric of the country.

Monday, September 14, 2009

The Honduran Coup Never Happened (Part 4)
Forgotten all about this, haven't you? The Obama administration, unwilling to challenge an oligarchy that has been closely connected to the US for decades, has taken the silent approach, and just let the Honduran coup fade from public view. Over two and a half months of the last six months of Zelaya's term have already passed. Maybe, by early December, the coup government will let him reenter the presidential palace just long enough to gather up whatever clothes and credit cards he left behind when he was forcibly removed by the military.

One need only look to the International Monetary Fund to recognize the true contours of US policy, as recently reported by Mark Weisbrot:

No country in the world recognizes the coup government of Honduras. From the Western Hemisphere and the European Union, only the United States retains an ambassador there. The World Bank paused lending to Honduras two days after the coup, and the Inter-American Development Bank did the same the next day. More recently the Central American Bank of Economic Integration suspended credit to Honduras. The European Union has suspended over $90 million in aid as well, and is considering further sanctions.

But the IMF has gone ahead and dumped a large amount of money on Honduras – the equivalent would be more than $160 billion in the United States – as though everything is ok there.

This is in keeping with U.S. policy, which is not surprising since the United States has been – since the IMF’s creation in 1944 – the Fund’s principal overseer. Washington has so far made only a symbolic gesture in cutting off about $18.5 million to Honduras, while continuing to pour in tens of millions more.

In fact, more than two months after the Honduran military overthrew the elected president of Honduras, the United States government has yet to determine that a military coup has actually occurred. This is because such a determination would require, under the U.S. Foreign Appropriations Act, a cut off of aid.

One of the largest sources of U.S. aid is the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), a government entity whose board is chaired by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Interestingly, there were two military coups in the last year in countries that were receiving MCC money: Madagascar and Mauritania. In both of those cases, MCC aid was suspended within three days of the coup.

The IMF’s decision to give money to the Honduran government is reminiscent of its reaction to the 2002 coup that temporarily overthrew President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela. Just a few hours after that coup, the IMF’s spokesperson announced that “we stand ready to assist the new administration in whatever manner they find suitable.” This immediate pledge of support by the IMF to a military-installed government was at the time unprecedented. Given the resources and power of the IMF, it was an important source of international legitimacy for the coup government. Members of the U.S. Congress later wrote to the IMF to inquire how this happened. How did the IMF decide so quickly to support this illegitimate government? The Fund responded that no decision was made, that this was just an off-the-cuff remark by its spokesperson. But this seems very unlikely, and in the video on the IMF’s web site, the spokesperson appears to be reading from a prepared statement when talking about money for the coup government.

In the Honduran case, the IMF would likely say that the current funds are part of a $250 billion package in which all member countries are receiving a share proportional to their IMF quota, regardless of governance. This is true, but it doesn’t resolve the question as to whom the funds should be disbursed to, in the case of a non-recognized, illegitimate government that has seized power by force. The Fund could very easily postpone disbursing this money until some kind of determination could be made, rather than simply acting as though there were no question about the legitimacy of the coup government.

Interestingly, the IMF had no problem cutting off funds under its standby arrangement with the democratically-elected government of President Zelaya in November of last year, when the Fund did not agree with his economic policies.

30 March - More BlogRoaming

Why We Like the British
Media Matters
Morning Joe allowed MCain adviser to falsely assert Clinton and Obama are talking about raising taxes across the board
Casting McCain as opponent of Fed intervention in mortgage crisis, Blitzer ignored his approval of Bear Stearns aid
Brooks, Broder praised McCain's rebuke of Bush-style unilateralism, but didn't mention McCain's past comments attacking allies who opposed Iraq war
Just weeks after criticizing McCain for exploiting campaign finance laws, Wash. post dubbed him a "champion" of campaign finance reform
Intelligence Daily
Global food prices rise and famine increases
Classified memo reveals Iraqi prisoners as 'starving'
Is an international financial conspiracy driving world events ?
Russia launches German spy satellite
Russia and Japan form nuclear alliance
Exercise tests communications in case of domestic crisis
Human rights and media manipulation
Is America terrorizing Somalia ?
Gold bullion is safer than gold stocks
Why the Euro is garbage and only gold is absolute
Pakistan secret agents shot dead
Killer wheat fungus a global threat
The Police State Road Map
The Public Intellectual
Is the Surge really working ?
Everything ( I don't ) do, I ( won't ) do it for you
To Ireland on St. Patrick's Day
Winter Soldier, troops describe Iraq war
The U.S. Military Index (FP)
"Moral indignation is jealousy with a halo"
Dispursements dispersed
The will of the ("Super") people *
Vilhelm Konnander's Weblog
Politics & Security in Russia
Putin world's richest man
A slave to power ? ( Putin )
Nashi is not ours anymore
"fight against time to diversify economy and turn it away from energy exports"
Zyuganov steps up to step down ? ( Candidate for president )
Police crackdown on Nashi demonstration
Union with Belarus ?
Georgia shoots down Russian plane ?
Russia : Going off the air or out of air ? Bloshoe Radio ( BBC )
Independent Report
My letter to Democratic Party leaders ( Clinton )
Tennessee governor making real sense
The coming dollar collapse, recession : videos
Ferraro steps down
McCain painted as Bush Jr.
The Oil Drum
Cogeneration at home : Ceramic fuel cells and bloom energy
Drum Beat
Obama's "Big Oil" ad ; does he have it right or wrong ?
Rachel Quinlan - Peak oil speech in Old Parliament Oz
Andris Piebalgs : getting a sense of proportion
Peak Oil and energy growth : where do we go from here ?
Jamais Cascio : Peak Oil vs. Global Warming
The rising fortunes of coal - perhaps
If Then Knots --------->
Strawman : Venusian runaway warming
Modeling Epistemic Agents
An argument for the irrelevance of Egoism
Writing Process
Varieties of Bunk
Innumeracy Watch
Libertarians love Rawls
Knowledge by Inference from False Testimony
Philosophy isn't easy
Breyer and Scalia Discussion : Video
SciFri on greenhouse gas ( Flashplayer )
This American Life on Iraq mortality Link
"Exactly as Predicted" Global Warming
Dying to Preserve the Lies
Hillary Clinton owns Iraq War ; Video Mar 6, 2003 In her own words
Iraqi War vet bobby Wise speaks on why he supports Obama
Defacing the Marine's grave, pummeling the father, military families of all stripes deserve more respect
Two little ones with their deployment bears
Iraq War has me down : in another venue doing something positive to counter the malaise
No end in sight
"So many outrages, so much disassembling of our Constitution, so many bait-and-switch crisis issues, and so much effort at 'normalizing' the concept of the United States at war in Iraq as a block of many blocks in the supposed 'War on Terror' in the Middle East over the next decade over the next 50 years. Doesn't hurt to remind ourselves from time to time of the original invasion into Iraq and the amazing incongruities that took place and continue to be in place..."
A.F. General Michael Hayden, CIA Director, banned Waterboarding as torture
Army Chief of Staff, General Shalikashvili says Waterboarding against Geneva Conventions
Waterboarding - it's Torture - Consultant Homeland Security, Malcolm Nance
Waterboarding IS Torture - Daniel Levin - former Asst Attorney General - submitted to being waterboarded and pronounced it Torture
"The Presidency is now a criminal conspiracy." MSNBC
( The torture 'discussion' came up again at Washington Monthly the other day : it's gone on for years. I know at least one of the participants reads here. )
Walking the Road That Buckley Built
Piece of Mind
Religious Pornography
Do corporations pay tax?
The art of framing ( Plain talk about Iraq : and 'acceptable' positions )
Interview with a Canadian ( Health care )
"every study that's been done has shown that if you give people the time when they need it,they actually consume less resources over a year."
Hilary plays the race card
"advertising people are in the business of changing our behavior."
Passing the fifth
"Foreign policy is mostly a staid affair attended to by the graduates of our elite schools......We're totally tooled up by the media and driven by the corporate agenda. The trick is to make an elite undertaking seem like a popular movement."
"17 years after the 1991 attack we still have not fixed those sewers and electrical grids. It's no accident. We mean to rain hell on them, we mean to impoversh them, we mean to make them suffer, scatter their factions, install our superbases that will permanently house 100,000 troops, control their government and watch and terrorize their internal factions as closely as Castro ever did his enemies. We mean to be in power there."
( Whew. A realist ! )

30 March BlogRoaming

All Things Pakistan
Forman Christian College's political clout
The caps of Pakistan
Defending dictatorship : another view on Pakistan
Pakistan Election 2008 : Poetic politics Anwar Masood audioclip
ATP Maishaira : Anwar Masood ( recitation of poetry by the poet )
A trip to Saidpur : Khawaja in Islamabad
Profile : Meet Syed Yousef Raza Gillani ( Likeley soon to be Prime Minister )
Mar 23, 2008 : Let Democracy Reign
Foreign Policy Watch
It's the Occupation, Stupid
Fantasy Sports : Or, some reasons why boycotting the Beijing Olympics is really a bad idea
From Lankov, more on Pyongyang
News from the Front, March 25
(The first piece reminds me of FBI commentary about military activity lousing up interrogations at Gitmo. Stirring up resentment is definitely the long way around to securing co-operation.
I accidentally did a funny. See comments - then go to the link. Status of the Chinese People Canada should consider an outright boycott of the China Beijing Olympic Games : Editorial from National Post, Polish PM says No to China Beijing Olympic Opening.
Unrelated : China regime implicated in staging violence in Tibet Protest. My sidebar to that is violence is contrary to what I have seen reported of Buddhist tactics and philosophy in the past. Emulate Ghandi would be about right. )
The Impolitic
Lights Out "Earth Hour"
God Damn America HuHu over something never said
How to end the occupation of Iraq Dem hopefuls call for complete withdrawal from Iraq
Dirty effin hippies convene ( satire, already )
Cognitive dreaming not so much
Agonist
Dalai Lama - an appeal to the Chinese people
Secure Identification ( Governor Brian Schweitzer on Real ID and Security Theatre
"The Real ID is a particularly ridiculous piece of security theatre that will nonetheless be part of a growing state security apparatus directed at American citizens." )
Thematic elements in the fiction of Alastair Reynolds
Mercury Rising ??
Donna Brazile reminds Hillary of something
And another two bite the dust Busheviks
The state of the airborne laser
Foreign Policy Association - Central Asia
AIDS and gas
Russia : Medvedev a liberal ? CA implications
Turkmenistan : dealing in Turkey
China : Xinjiang terrorism and Tibetan protesters
Afghanisran : Russia and NATO near deal
Turkmeistan and Uxbekistan : Freedom House rankings
Pissed on Politics
Al Gore Nomination ?
Bush Clinton
There are alternatives
Greta van Susteren interview Hillary Clinton
Hillary Clinton - fraud trial witness
Neweurasia
Center for Political Studies - caprice of President's daughter or a real think-tank ?
( Uzbekistan )
Nexia 2 - the export car made not for Uzbeks
A red herring to hide failures...
Uzbek musical instruments Video clip
( He thinks the wedding horn pleasant ? )
Where are you now, ladies of pleasure ?
Islamic trends in Fergana valley
Welcome Navruz!!! The occasion of the People of the Happiest country in the World!!! ( Satire )
DEMONstrators in Tashkent ?
Uzbek government to free GM joint venture from taxes
The Global Buzz
A remembrance of things past ( Russia. Discounting concerns about worries re: loss of a buffer zone from possible assault. )
Clusterfuck at Heathrow
Financial globalization is dead ( Reaction to Bear Stearns )
Turkey : Still finding itself
What is the role of deterrence in the non-proliferation regime ?
The geopolitics of Tibet and other things
"For ethnic and religious minorities, their experience of China is one of subjugation."
Whither Marxist guerilla movements ?
China's intellectual firepower
The uses and abuses of CSR
The darkest side of globalization
"You never shoot the postman" ( Guess they didn't see the movie with Nicholas Cage ! )
Blood tin
China calls attention to U.S. human rights hypocrisy ( Might as well be walking aroung wearing a sign that says "Kick Me !" )
Are Republicans responsible for two largest housing slumps in history ?
Just Foreign Policy
FCNL cluster bomb video
4000 U.S. deaths should spark congressional debate on Iraq
Obama glosses Colombian attack : Clinton calls for escalation
U.S. caught trying to spy in Bolivia
Cool video : History of the US in Iran **
Feinstein : Get real with Iran diplomacy
Illinois town rejects war with Iran by a 4 - 1 margin
Steven Kinzer hits the road for peace with Iran
The Impudent Observer
The madness in Somalia goes on and on
Nobody asked me, but...
"I have never seen a security guard who engenders a feeling of security in me"
Arab Summit...who exactly will show up ?
Soldiers defend Barack Obama
Zimbabwe opposition claims huge victory !
Pakistan leaders move towards political solutions
Ides of March - willMugabwe kill democracy ?
German Chancellor Merkel will boycott Olympic events
Military leaders say Brown wrong on inquiry
Oh!pinion
Like Iraq war, getting out requires shared sacrifice
Nelson electoral reforms excellent, overdue
Democrats can't afford what Clinton wants
Bush quagmire hits 4000 as stupidity rolls on
No crackpot crusade to help Tibetans, not even a word
Privatization yields two-tiered system of privacy rights