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So, any of you lurkers wrinkling your nose or rolling your eyes at my objection to the ad depicting a young "HAWT CHICK" with the tagline "Organ donation is probably your only chance to get inside her" is over-reaction? That it's "just an ad", that guys don't really think like that? That it's just fun and games?

Well, go read this. 

  • One third of boys believe "it's not a big deal to hit a girl".
  • One in seven thought "it's OK to make a girl have sex with you if she was flirting".
  • 350,000 girls aged between 12 and 20 – one in seven – had experienced sexual assault or rape.
  • Almost one third of girls in Year 10 had experienced unwanted sex.

While I don't know the details of how the study was conducted, it found that one in seven boys thought it was ok to foce a girl to have sex if she'd been flirting.

The ads aren't produced in a vacuum. I'm not going to spend forever pondering chicken and egg, suffice to say there are connections. You have teenage boys exposed to violence towards women in their home, boys having attitudes like this, you have advertising that plays into it, you have a culture of disrespect for women...and the result? That one in four women will be raped, women will be held responsible for ‘preventing' themselves being raped, as if the onus is on us, men will do jackshit, and society will continue to perpetuate disrespectful shit about women and not take rape seriously.

Go on, tell me I don't have a sense of humour, I dare you.

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Video blog The Frank Factor on the U.S. finanical crisis and the way Republicans privatize profits and socialize failure. . . read more
Don't let Congress seal this Wall Street deal. High financial crimes have been commited... Democrat Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur wasn't happy with the attempt to drive the $700b bailout through. . . read more
The video the USA tried to ban. The torturer is seen to strangle a man with a cable tie and then chillingly tell him, "You have 3 minutes to live".  . . read more

As part of its alleged "desire not to hold detainees any longer than necessary," the Pentagon announced on Tuesday that two Guantánamo prisoners had been transferred to Algeria. This follows the repatriation of two other Algerians - Mustafa Hamlili and Abdul Raham Houari - at the start of July, the first Algerians to be released from the prison in its six-and-a-half year history.

Cynics could argue, with some justification, that the releases were less to do with benevolence than with the fact that the U.S. administration has finally decided to clear out as much of the dead wood at Guantánamo as possible, following the U.S. Supreme Court's momentous decision in June, that the prisoners have constitutional habeas corpus rights; in other words, that they have the right to challenge the basis of their long detention without charge or trial before an impartial judge.

Like Hamlili and Houari before them, the two men just released had been cleared for release, following what the Pentagon refers to as "a comprehensive series of review processes," since 2005-06, on the basis that they no longer constituted a threat to the U.S. and its allies and/or no longer had ongoing intelligence value. These have become such commonplace expressions in connection with the Guantánamo prisoners that it's easy to forget that holding prisoners for over six years without charge or trial and then releasing them because they are no longer regarded as a threat or as a source of intelligence to be exploited like lab animals is utterly illegal. [More]

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There is no doubt at all that the benefits to society of the fall in crime as a result of drug legalisation would be dramatic. The argument always put forward against this is that there would be a commensurate increase in drug use as a result of legalisation. This, it seems to me, is a bogus point: tobacco is a legal drug, whose use is declining, and precisely because it is legal, its users are far more amenable to Government control, education programmes and taxation than they would be otherwise. Studies suggest that the market is already almost saturated, and anyone who wishes to purchase the drug of their choice anywhere can already do so. The idea that many people are holding back solely because of a law which they know is already unenforceable is ridiculous.

Ultimately, people will make choices which harm themselves, whether they involve diet, smoking, drinking, lack of exercise, sexual activity or pursuit of extreme sports. In all these instances, the Government rightly takes the line that if these activities are to be pursued, society will ensure that those who pursue them have access to accurate information about the risks; can access assistance to change their harmful habits should they so wish; are protected by a legal standards regime; are taxed accordingly; and – crucially – do not harm other people. Only in the field of drugs does the Government take a different line.

The case is overwhelming. But I fear that policy will not catch up with the facts any time soon. It would take a mature society to accept that some individuals may hurt, or even kill themselves, as a result of a policy change, even if the evidence suggested that fewer people died or were harmed as a result. It would take a brave government to face down the tabloid fury in the face of anecdotes about middle-class children who bought drugs legally and came to grief. [More]

Julian Critchley was the former director of the UK Anti-Drug Co-Ordination Unit.

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Media operating in China continue to face many challenges despite the promise of complete freedom for foreign journalists for the Olympics. The picture is even murkier for local reporters. Ching Cheong, a China correspondent for Singapore's Straits Times newspaper, was locked up for 1,000 days for allegedly spying for Taiwan. Released six before the Olympics, he shares his experience.  . . read more

Time is short, but even at this late date, it would be a simple matter to impeach the president on some issues... President Bush has essentially dared Congress to act, admitting that he openly violated the FISA law - a felony, and openly admitting that he has refused to enact laws passed by the Congress, claiming a power - unitary executive authority - not even mentioned in the Constitution. He has openly admitted to having known about, and approved, “enhanced interrogation techniques” devised by his subordinates - techniques like waterboarding which clearly violate the Geneva Conventions and U.S. law. No hearings would be required to establish these high crimes and misdemeanors. They could simply be voted on by an Impeachment Committee and sent to the full House for a vote.

Even if there were no time for a Senate trial, the simple act of impeaching the president for one or more abuses of power would serve notice on future presidents that future such abuses would not be tolerated. Failure to do so, and allowing this administration to leave office unimpeached, would send the opposite message: that Congress is no longer a co-equal branch of government, but is merely a consultative body, at best, and that a president is in effect a dictator.

That Pelosi buckled and permitted a hearing on impeachable crimes by the Bush/Cheney administration is a major victory for the impeachment movement, but it must not be the end of the line... As former Republican representative Bob Barr, now the Libertarian candidate for president, told Friday’s hearing, “We had a nuclear clock during the Cold War. In the ‘90s we had a debt clock. Now we have a Constitution Clock.” That clock is getting close to midnight, and it is ticking. [More]

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Former White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan discusses how his disillusionment towards the Iraq war affected his relationship with former friend President George W. Bush. . . read more

America's largest export, measured by container loads, has become waste paper. 20 million tones of recycled paper was exported in 2007, most of it going to China, some to India. Does this tell us something about America's economic situation? Paper is not the only commodity that is reaping rich rewards for recycling - it's all of the metals, as well as glass. And in the free enterprise spirit that makes it what it is some Americans are stealing everything they can in order to recycle it - environmental morality at work. Trucks competing against each other to get to the recycle bins before the official collection.

Recycling finally working but it's not just simple competition. They are also stealing the newspaper deliveries before the newspapers are being read (all bundled up ready to go), recycling the goods before they're consumed. And stealing metal parts off houses, guttering off roofs, aluminium window screens, catalytic converters of cars for titanium and platinum anything that can be taken and melted down for recycling. Dozens of big cities are witnessing a wave of recycle looting.

This could be funny to read about but there is the saying "where America leads the rest of the world follows" and, despite how alternative or anarchic viewpoints might argue this will help people get over their over-consumption of unnecessary "stuff", the problem with stealing is the small thief hardly ever gets the full value out of it - the small thief gets 10-20 cents in the dollar at best. Most of the value is lost, is wasted like spilt milk. Only big organized crime gets value. In the world of average people, people feel poorer, public trust falls and stolen goods are sold at a big discount, sold now in this amazing way as brand new waste to be melted down or pulped for export to China and India.

On a different note the inner Sydney suburb of Enmore now has a Buddhist Op Shop, right next to a local church op shop both recycling clothes and kitchen things at bargain prices. The church volunteers are friendly and helpful to the newcomers and no-one's expecting any stealing.

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Now our planet itself is in peril. Not simply the Earth, but the fate of all its species, including humanity. The situation calls not for hand-wringing, but rather informed action.

Optimism is fueled by expectation that decisions will be guided by reason and evidence, not ideology. The danger is that special interests will dilute and torque government policies, causing the climate to pass tipping points, with grave consequences for all life on the planet.

The President-elect himself needs to be well-informed about the climate problem and its relation to energy needs and economic policies. He cannot rely on political systems to bring him solutions - the political systems provide too many opportunities for special interests.

Here is a message I think should be delivered to Barack Obama. This is a first draft. Criticisms would be much appreciated.

Climate threat. The world's temperature has increased about 1°F over the past few decades, about 2°F over land areas. Further warming is "in the pipeline" due to gases already in the air and the inevitable additional fossil fuel emissions.

Effects already evident include:

1. Mountain glaciers are receding worldwide and will be gone within 50 years if CO2 emissions continue to increase. This threatens the fresh water supply for billions of people, as rivers arising in the Himalayas, Andes and Rocky Mountains will begin to run dry in the summer and fall.

2. Coral reefs, home to a quarter of biological species in the ocean, could be destroyed by rising temperature and ocean acidification due to increasing CO2.

3. Dry subtropics are expanding poleward with warming, affecting the southern United States, the Mediterranean region, and Australia, with increasing drought and fires.

4. Arctic sea ice will disappear entirely in the summer, if CO2 continues to increase, with devastating effects on wildlife and indigenous people.

5. Intensity of hydrologic extremes, heavy rains, storms and floods on the one hand, and droughts and fires on the other, are increasing. Some people say we must learn to live with these effects, because it is an almost god-given fact that we must burn all fossil fuels. But now we understand, from the history of the Earth, that there would be two monstrous consequences of releasing the CO2 from all of the oil, gas and coal, consequences of an enormity that cannot be accepted. One effect would be extermination of a large fraction of the species on the planet. The other is initiation of ice sheet disintegration and sea level rise, out of humanity's control,eventually eliminating coastal cities and historical sites, creating havoc, hundreds of millions of refugees, and impoverishing nations.

Recent evidence reveals a situation more urgent than had been expected, even by those who were most attuned.

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12 oct

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I really like the quality of your content. It's remarkably consistently intelligent. Since I live in the American West a great deal is irrelevant for me personally, but its still worthwhile for the rest. Thank you :) - Anna 

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 Re: Bush: "Don't turn inwarddue to crisis"

Great slice and dicing of an addled administration in its age of collapse. A few rapier hits with Track Changes and Bush and Rice stand naked in cyberspace. Pity they can't hear the laughter. Can we have some more...? - Trish

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 Re: Fidel Castro's Blog

The international community is very close to resume diplomatic relations with Cuba. It will be interesting to see how it plays out. http://machete.gummyprint.com/cubas-reforms-solidarity-in-latin-america-and-declining-us-influence/ - Jonathan

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Re: No God higher than truth

Even tho' I believe truth is flexible under certain circumstances, I still relish Richard Neville's take on disinformation & the U.S military's pitiless war on civilians. Mainly I write to endorse his praise of the SBS series, The First Australians - edgy, balanced, enlightened. Unlike most commentators, this old hippie connects the dots - Emma
12 sep
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