Make this my home page
More buttons
Best of the Day
Page
We Used To Recycle Everything; What Happened?
Video
Arianna Huffington & Bill Maher on Obamas "Frienemies"
Blog
Monty Python Talks About... Music
Game
New Xbox Experience Intro Video
Art
Guo Wei - Hostile Youth
Cool tools
Hot links
Everything you need to know about microscopic water bears
News for nerds
For lovers of the Green Fairy
Stories and art from Australia's Yolgnu people
Australia's best science fiction author
Did the earth just move?
Don't discount journalism
Novelist and comic book legend's homepage
Searchable history of the internet
Exposing systematic torture in Iran
Museum of science fiction, utopia and extraordinary journeys
The real story of christianity
Image bookmarking
Developing tech to get the internet to its full potential
Free Culture, Open Government, Liberty

Search Results

11 found
Stake outs, testimony from informers, hidden cameras and tailing trucks full of stolen goods - it reads like a Hollywood movie, but it was an every day experience for Greenpeace activists in Japan, who spent four months cracking open a major conspiracy of corruption at the heart of Japan's government-backed, sham scientific whaling operation.  . . read more

Is Japan really killing whales for science? The Institute of Cetacean Research presents the results of years of scientific whaling.

 . . read more
Let’s hear it for sea shepherd activist Paul Watson, who makes the Greenpeace of today seem like a nursing home for nuns. Watson has been around for years – back in 1972 he skippered the boat Astral for Greenpeace – and he remains a hero of the High Seas and scourge of the Japanese. Yes, Australians are absurdly hypocritical, even racist, about whale hunting, but that is the nature of nation states. Slaughtered ‘roos on barbecues are a cultural tradition. Whales have a mightier claim on our compassion, being sentient, enormous, endangered and part of the West’s literary cannon.

Let’s hear it for Paul Watson, who shows you’re never too old to stir the possum. His antics on the boat have even managed to rescue the legacy of Steve Irwin from the horrors of Bindi-fication. Let Gen X’s populate boardrooms. Let Gen Y’s haunt My Space, obsessively photograph each other and fetishize fine dining. One day the world will come to its senses and become vegetarian. Until then, may the silver haired Watson keep hurling his stink bombs at predators.
 . . read more

Resolution after resolution has been passed at the annual International Whaling Commission meetings condemning the scientific take of whales on the scale that has been going on. Japan continues its whaling programme despite our protests. What is going on amounts to commercial whaling in drag.

All this is quite unnecessary. The world does not need to kill whales. There is plenty of food on this planet without killing whales. Their oil is no longer valuable. That trade stopped many years ago. There is no way that a whale can be killed humanely. Often they suffer for a long time before they finally die after being harpooned. They often have to be harpooned twice. Killing whales is not only unnecessary, it is inhumane.

Critics of whale conservation say the case for conservation is emotional. It is not emotional. It is based on sound environmental logic. We need to conserve the resources on this planet if we are not to lose them altogether. At a time when mega fauna like whales is beginning to be more widely appreciated around the world, it is out of tune with the times to kill whales. [More]

Sir Geoffrey Palmer is New Zealand's Commissioner to the International Whaling Commission

 . . read more
This video says Australians have no legal right to stop Japanese whalers in Antarctic waters. Australians are racists who treat their own native wildlife, like dingoes and kangaroos, cruelly. . . read more
The Australian boat the Rudd government promised to send to monitor the Japanese whaling fleet still hasn't left Australian waters. Activist group Greenpeace are a bit more energised - this is a report from the Greenpeace boat Esperanza on the hunt for whalers in the ice fields of the Southern Ocean. . . read more
Something gets lost in translation between English and Japanese. This video attempts to highlight the different meanings and discover how eating has become a science.  . . read more
Japan may have backed down on killing humpback whales but is going ahead with the biggest whale slaughter in decades, and some sort of confrontation with activist groups such as Greenpeace seems unavoidable. This video introduces us to the group of scientists who, in collaboration with Greenpeace, are conducting research to track the migration of humpback whales from their breeding areas in the Pacific to their feeding grounds in the Southern Ocean. . . read more

The Federal Government has confirmed it will send ships and aircraft to monitor the Japanese whaling fleet in the Southern Ocean, a decision which could lead to an international court challenge. Earlier this week, Brendan Nelson – opposition leader in the Australian Parliament – had criticised PM Kevin Rudd’s plan to monitor Japanese whalers close at hand as being ‘risky’. "It could threaten the relationship between Australia and Japan", he said.

But isn't leadership about embracing risk? Winston Churchill, John F Kennedy, Indira Ghandi, Gough Whitlam and Golda Meir were great leaders because they took risks rather than try to avoid them. Bob Hawke and John Howard were risk averse with their focus on consensus politics – and their ministries suffered accordingly.

The world of 2008 is crying out for leadership and in Australia what happens next in education, indigenous affairs, health, the environment and industrial relations will tell us whether re-imagining Australia is in play.

 . . read more
'Whale-safe' beer is being promoted with this savage anti-whaling ad. A boycott of Lion Nathan's beers is being urged as a large shareholder in the company is Japanese brewer Kirin. Kirin claims the ad is racist and that it has no connection to whaling. . . read more
12
   
Next
Obama says he wants to build up US military power; and he threatens to ignite a new war in Pakistan, killing yet more brown-skinned people. That will bring tears, too. Unlike those on election night, these other tears will be unseen in Chicago and London. This is not to doubt the sincerity of much of the response to Obama's election, which happened not because of the unction that has passed for news reporting from America since 4 November but for the same reasons that millions of angry emails were sent to the White House and Congress when the "bailout" of Wall Street was revealed, and because most Americans are fed up with war.

Two years ago, this anti-war vote installed a Democratic majority in Congress, only to watch the Democrats hand over more money to George W Bush to continue his blood fest. For his part, the "anti-war" Obama never said the illegal invasion of Iraq was wrong, merely that it was a "mistake". Thereafter, he voted in to give Bush what he wanted.

Yes, Obama's election is historic, a symbol of great change to many. But it is equally true that the American elite has grown adept at using the black middle and management class. The courageous Martin Luther King recognised this when he linked the human rights of black Americans with the human rights of the Vietnamese, then being slaughtered by a liberal Democratic administration. And he was shot. In striking contrast, a young black major serving in Vietnam, Colin Powell, was used to "investigate" and whitewash the infamous My Lai massacre. As Bush's secretary of state, Powell was often described as a "liberal" and was considered ideal to lie to the United Nations about Iraq's non-existent weapons of mass destruction. Condaleezza Rice, lauded as a successful black woman, has worked assiduously to deny the Palestinians justice.

Obama's first two crucial appointments represent a denial of the wishes of his supporters on the principal issues on which they voted. The vice-president-elect, Joe Biden, is a proud warmaker and Zionist. Rahm Emanuel, who is to be the all-important White House chief of staff, is a fervent "neoliberal" devoted to the doctrine that led to the present economic collapse and impoverishment of millions. He is also an "Israel-first" Zionist who served in the Israeli army and opposes meaningful justice for the Palestinians – an injustice that is at the root of Muslim people's loathing of the United States and the spawning of jihadism.

The once respected Observer newspaper, which supported Bush's war in Iraq, echoing his fabricated evidence, now announces, without evidence, that "America has restored the world's faith in its ideals". These "ideals", which Obama will swear to uphold, have overseen, since 1945, the destruction of 50 governments, including democracies, and 30 popular liberation movements, causing the deaths of countless men, women and children.

Prior to Blair's criminal warmaking, ideology was denied by him and his media mystics. "Blair can be a beacon to the world," declared the Guardian in 1997. "[He is] turning leadership into an art form."

Today, merely insert "Obama". As for historic moments, there is another that has gone unreported but is well under way – liberal democracy's shift towards a corporate dictatorship, managed by people regardless of ethnicity, with the media as its clichéd façade. "True democracy," wrote Penn Jones Jr, the Texas truth-teller, "is constant vigilance: not thinking the way you're meant to think and keeping your eyes wide open at all times."

Find out about our Widget

Feedback

12 oct

The HomepageDAILY community likes to co-create both content and process. What are you thinking right now about what we do and how we do it? Tell us about the news, videos and stories and anything else you see on HPD. What you like, what you don't like, what you'd like to see in future. Recommend a website, video or article; send us pix, new stories - share it with us and by so doing you are giving us permission to share it with the world.

Leave Feedback here

            *********************************

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 

            ********************************* 

 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

            *********************************

 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

            *********************************

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
10 aug
More feedback...
© 2007-2008 homePageDAILY - All rights reserved * Terms of Use * Privacy Policy * Advertising Information * Media Kit * Contact Us