Category: media


Lemjune13

June 2013

…just click above to access in English…
Plus…

“Wrecked lives for another ten cents’ profit”

  • Bangladesh’s exploitation economy — Olivier Cyran

    Before the collapse of Rana Plaza, which killed over a thousand people, most of them textile workers, there was the fire that killed a hundred at the Tazreen factory. A major cause is western companies’ greed for profits.
    Translated by George Miller
  • A tale of two fires — Olivier Cyran

    Translated by George Miller

eddie

‘…In normal times, an arithmetic mistake in an economics paper would be a complete nonevent as far as the wider world was concerned. But in April 2013, the discovery of such a mistake—actually, a coding error in a spreadsheet, coupled with several other flaws in the analysis—not only became the talk of the economics profession, but made headlines. Looking back, we might even conclude that it changed the course of policy…’

…click here to go through to the piece in full & free at The New York Review of Books…

data

Forget Big Brother. Companies and countries are discovering that algorithms programmed to scour vast quantities of data can be much more powerful. They can predict your next purchase, forecast car thefts and maybe even help cure cancer. But there is a down side. By Martin U. Müller, Marcel Rosenbach and Thomas Schulz more…


Clive Hamilton warned us of  ‘Growth Fetish’ back in 2003 – a decade on, and the advance of the rapacious continues unabated. Below a couple of snippets from George Monbiot’s disturbing, yet fascinating piece…

‘…Governments today have no vision but endless economic growth. They are judged not by the number of people in employment, let alone by the number of people in satisfying, pleasurable jobs, not by the happiness of the population or the protection of the natural world. Job-free, world-eating growth is fine, as long as it’s growth. There are no ends any more, just means.

In their interesting but curiously incomplete book, How Much is Enough?, Robert and Edward Skidelsky note that “Capitalism rests precisely on this endless expansion of wants. That is why, for all its success, it remains so unloved. It has given us wealth beyond measure, but has taken away the chief benefit of wealth: the consciousness of having enough. … The vanishing of all intrinsic ends leaves us with only two options: to be ahead or to be behind. Positional struggle is our fate.”(9)…’

To find out which billionaire megalomaniac has a throne in his 747 (sic), please click here to go through to the piece in full @ George Monbiot.

Economic determinism is a hungry beast; ugly too.

Below is an extract of a recent opinion piece by Bruce Haigh, who has very kindly given the interpretOr the okay to cite and link to his pieces…

 …To my mind the issue which has defined federal governments over the past decade and a half is the manner in which both major parties have chosen to handle refugees. Fearful of polls and lacking the quality most needed in politicians, that of leadership, they have chosen to demonise and bully the weakest amongst us, the one group requiring our care and compassion – asylum seekers.

Howard, Rudd, Gillard and Abbott have all used bullying as an instrument of politics. Their policies toward asylum seekers were and are not designed to protect and embrace those most in need, but rather to deter asylum seekers coming to Australia by boat.

The rhetoric of the Gillard government has been to claim that they are trying to break the people smuggler business model, and to assist they appointed an ‘expert panel’ to come up with policies to back their exclusionist boat policy. The government and opposition claim they want to stop people taking dangerous sea voyages, yet they stubbornly refuse to consider the option of processing on Indonesia for fear of encouraging more arrivals.

Current policies harm people. The victims are victimised, some incarcerated without hope of release because of fear they may engage in acts of terrorism. Advice tended to ASIO by a discredited Sri Lankan government, who happened to be the winner of a cruel civil war. The deal being if we detain their nominees they will prevent asylum seekers coming to Australia by boat. How low can we go as a nation?

Deterrence amounts to an unconscionable and prolonged act of state bullying…

…This piece can be read in full at Bruce’ site – just click here to go on through…

 

“One who stands up for the underdog, who refuses to tolerate oppression and injustice…”

(Green Left Weekly on the character of Jock Palfreeman, an Australian man currently imprisoned in Bulgaria for an act of conscience…of courage…)

Saturday, May 4, 2013
A rally for Jock Palfreeman was held in Sydney on April 30.

“In a different world — in a better world — Jock Palfreeman would not be in a jail serving a 20-year sentence. Instead he’d be awarded a medal for great courage, principle and instinctive support for victims of racist violence.

He would not be locked away in a jail in Bulgaria. He’d be toured around as an example of the sort of person we should all aspire to be. One who stands up for the underdog, who refuses to tolerate oppression and injustice.

His extraordinarily brave act in coming to the defence of two Roma men being attacked by a violent gang one dark night in Sofia, Bulgaria, would be discussed and studied in schools all over the world — as I believe it is studied in his old school, Riverview…

…click here for the piece in full @ Green Left Weekly…

lemd513

Current issue: May 2013

…tyranny of the one per centNorth Korea, scary and scared; China’s space war; UK, in or out? France and Nato, Védrine to Debray; those problem EU bordersthe Kurds’ changing reality; special report: do we need a basic minimum incomeenergy for people or profit? Gordon Ramsey’s tv coaching… supplement: the question of international solidarity… and more…

…just click the pic above to access…

 

“Eleven miles by ferry from Perth is Western Australia’s “premier tourist destination”. This is Rottnest Island, whose scabrous wild beauty and isolation evoked, for me, Robben Island in South Africa. Empires are never short of devil’s islands; what makes Rottnest different – indeed, what makes Australia different – is silence and denial on an epic scale…”

...click here to go through to Pilger’s piece in full @ the guardian...

V11

VII The Magazine

VII The Magazine is an innovative online project that will give
readers unprecedented intimate access and insight to the work of
the world’s leading photojournalists.

VII Photo represents 29 photojournalists working at the forefront
news industry. Their work appears regularly on the covers and pages
of the world’s leading news media including Time Magazine, National
Geographic, The New Yorker, The Times and now online at VII The
Magazine.

“How the photographers see the world”

…simply click the pic to go through to…

                                  VII The Magazine

艺术界 LEAP

LEAPCoversLEAP is the self-described INTERNATIONAL ART

MAGAZINE of contemporary CHINA.

Click a cover

to check it out…

ap

 April 2013

special report Venezuela without Chávez;Hollande’s rapid conversion to neoliberalism; Régis Debray, why France should leave Nato;Naples, model for a Europe in decline?Karachi, mirror of Pakistan’s failed state;Kenya, grandiose plans for a deep-water port; the high cost of cheap meatGuantanamo, the women who wait… and more…

…simply click the pic above to access English language edition…

The desperate, human plight of refugees and asylum seekers.

Let’s reject the myths and embrace our empathy and compassion…

Join the conversation by adding#rethinkrefugees to your tweets…

TamilHRW

Human Rights Watch has released “We Will Teach You a Lesson”

(February, 2013)

Sexual Violence against Tamils by Sri Lankan Security Forces:

(London) – Sri Lankan security forces have been using rape and other forms of sexual violence to torture suspected members or supporters of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), Human Rights Watch said in a report released February, 2013. While widespread rape in custody occurred during the armed conflict that ended in May 2009, Human Rights Watch found that politically motivated sexual violence by the military and police continues to the present...2013...
...Please click the image above to freely download the 144page report via HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH... 

March 26, 2013 Richard Denniss @ www.tai.org.au

“A cabinet reshuffle provides the perfect opportunity for a prime minister to clarify the role of incoming ministers. Now that Gary Gray has been confirmed as the Minister for Resources and Energy, the big question is whether the former director of corporate affairs for Woodside Petroleum will be responsible for Australia’s natural resources or follow Martin Ferguson’s lead and act as minister for the companies that extract Australia’s resources.

There’s a big difference.”

TooMuch

Too Much is an innovative not for profit site “dedicated to the notion that our world would be considerably more caring, prosperous, and democratic if we narrowed the vast gap that divides our wealthy from everyone else.”

Here @ the interpretOr, we came upon TooMuch via AlterNet which recently flagged signing up for their inequality weekly.

Too Much | A project of the Program on Inequality and the Common Good at the Institute for Policy Studies.

About the IPS:
IPS is a community of public scholars and organizers linking peace, justice, and the environment in the U.S. and globally. We work with social movements to promote true democracy and challenge concentrated wealth, corporate influence, and military power.
As Washington’s first progressive multi-issue think tank, the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) has served as a policy and research resource for visionary social justice movements for over four decades — from the anti-war and civil rights movements in the 1960s to the peace and global justice movements of the last decade. Some of the greatest progressive minds of the 20th and 21st centuries have found a home at IPS, starting with the organization's founders, Richard Barnet and Marcus Raskin. IPS scholars have included such luminaries as Arthur Waskow, Gar Alperovitz, Saul Landau, Bob Moses, Rita Mae Brown, Barbara Ehrenreich, Roger Wilkins and Orlando Letelier.

bobby“We’re living in extreme times and if you listened to modern rock music you wouldn’t know that,” says Gillespie. “I just think it’s odd there’s no protest, resistance or critique of what’s going down. It’s like people are tranquilised. All the rights people had fought for – people like trade unionists, anarchists, artists – are being clawed back by extremists. These people [in charge] aren’t rational thinkers. Someone like Boris Johnson hides behind that bumbling public schoolboy image but he’s a sinister rightwing c**t trying to bring in anti-strike legislation … we’ve got to fight these fucking people!”

Bobby Gillespie’s primal scream: click here to go to the interview in full @ the guardian

Peta, I’ve just Googled ‘abbott fascist’ said Tony…

“I think it is important that people, especially women, hear the truth about Tony Abbott, and not just the myths,” said Peta…

 

bigotpaper

 

lemmarch13

March 2013

… Iraq ten years on, special report; Tunisia, Ben Ali all over again? France’s unspoken shift to the right; Colombia, who’s missing from the table? South Africa’s new apartheid; Slovenia’s crisis is political; the great shale gas swindle; Benedict’s Latin America message; 3D printers, return to a craft ethos?buy before you fly

…just click any story above to access…

 

Iranian regime arrests scores more journalists, including bloggers and film makers, late January 2013.

IranWire, a project led by Maziar Bahari, produced this video calling for the journalists’ release.

Committee to Protect Journalists reports that Iran has maintained a revolving-door policy for imprisoning journalists, freeing some detainees on furloughs even as new arrests are made. In its December 2012 prison census, CPJ found that Iran was the world's second-worst jailer of journalists, with 45 journalists imprisoned in reprisal for their work. The threat of imprisonment has led scores of Iranian journalists to flee into exile in recent years.

the interpretOr supports open media and we now reach over 90 countries (source: WordPress.com). Why not share this post or video and let the Iranian regime know that the world is watching.

Wikipedia on Colin Barnett’s “Controversial Policies”:

In October 2004, Barnett led a campaign to re-criminalise homosexuality for anyone under the age of 18. This policy was met with fierce criticism from the community and was opposed by all other parliamentary parties, including the Nationals.[19]
In October 2009, Barnett announced a series of new policies relating to drug legislation including a repeal of the Cannabis Control Act 2003.[20] The previous laws were formulated by Geoff Gallop's drug summit, taking input from experts such as academics, police, social workers, lawyers, medical professionals and members of the public.[21] Barnett has stated it is his intention to overturn these laws because of his beliefs and stated that the drug summit members made a mistake introducing them[22] and that cannabis was a "gateway drug".[23] To help with the enforcement of this new policy, Barnett also supported legislation to give police the power to search and seize property without any suspicion or belief that a crime has been committed.[24] A Liberal parliamentarian, Peter Abetz, voiced support for these laws in parliament by drawing reference to the work Adolf Hitler did to bring security to Nazi Germany.[25][26] Barnett stood by Abetz's statements, saying he was making a valid point.[27]

The Weekend Australian of September the twenty fourth features another of Brendan O’Neill’s heart rending defences of the tattered image of News Ltd. Brendan is furious at “bigwigs who will poke their noses into the behaviour and morality of the media.” Given that the Murdoch press was poking their noses into other people’s behaviour and morality in a way that made it a criminal act seems to have been missed by Brendan. Here’s a tip Brendan, when you commit a criminal offence you will get noses poked in your business. Another point is that if you lie about knowing about the committing of a criminal offence that too will be scrutinised and judged by people with big wigs.

Now Brendan it is interesting that you have dredged up John Milton to complain about the paradise that you have lost.  “If then his Providence – Out of our evil seek to bring forth good, – Our labour must be to pervert that end,” Perhaps Milton did have some premonition of the Murdoch press. However, I don’t believe he had any inkling at that one man could so dominate world media and thereby politics, so pervasively and aggressive that any opposing voice is shouted down and campaigned against using not reason and debate but by personal abuse as was hurled at Cate Blanchette.

Brendan claims “Milton argued that public discussion, the battle of ideas, did not require a referee, certainly not one as powerful and biased as the state.”  This paraphrasing is a rather imaginative extrapolation from Milton’s “Let Truth and Falsehood grapple,” and “Who ever knew Truth put to the worse in a free and open encounter?” While this is a noble statement it does not fit his argument as the Murdoch media is not prone to presenting both sides of an argument and as Brendon’s article shows nor does it stick to the truth. For example Brendon states Not content with having brought about the closure of the News of The World, a paper read by7.5 million people, some campaigners seem to want to eradicate all publications they consider scuzzy and inferior.”

This statement is blatantly false. It was Rupert Murdoch who closed the News of The World in a desperate effort to limit the damage to the corporations credibility caused by that papers criminal hacking of phones and computers. The campaigners had nothing to do with it.

I note that Brendan presents himself as the “ordinary bloke” on the side of the man in the street. He bravely takes on the “elites” and the politicians and “celebrities’ and ‘bigwigs” and of course “academics”;  to whom he ascribes as exhibiting “eye swivelling snobbery”, whatever that is. This dislike of anyone who has intelligence or social status seems at odds with him choosing an archaic classical poet to give some credence to his defence of his master, who I might add, is clearly a bigwig.

Brendan’s ordinary bloke portrayal even goes so far as to use an identifying photo in which he has forsaken the usual business attire for the black tee shirt and facial stubble. One could easily imagine that it was snapped in his garage while he was tuning up his FJ Holden. There is a distinct odour of the Roger Ailes – Fox News resentment methodology in the Brendan O’Neill articles. Rolling Stone magazine wrote of Ailes “He takes the shame of people who feel that they are being looked down on, and he mobilizes it for political purposes. Roger Ailes is a direct link between the Nixonian politics of resentment and Sarah Palin’s politics of resentment. He’s the golden thread.”   Brendan is our own Aussie nickel plated version.

|

 

heart

Love is older than capitalism. But the romantic variety, along with its peculiar pains, takes cultural center stage just as capitalism makes its debut. That’s no coincidence. Capitalism and romantic love have grown together, reinforcing and reflecting each other in ways that we hardly notice…click here for piece in full @ free @AlterNet

“Look, good morning cadet Australians. This is none other than me…me, your leader…all rise for the flag” said Tony Abbott.

“I’m starting this morning’s national assemblies schools address series with the thrilling news….the thrilling news, cadets, that Don Voelte AO…Don Voelte AO is to become…look…Chairman of  new ABC INC…cadet Australian’s, Don’s legendary partnership with another great Australian, none other than Sir Pete Gammell d’Bush-Family- Hospitality, saw him appointed to the position of Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director of Seven West Media Limited, circa June 2012. A loyal Australian tower of moral courage across our rugged colony…Don’s been a director of Seven West Media Limited, and prior to the formation of Seven West Media Limited, West Australian Newspapers Holdings Limited since December 2008…

…As you’ll know from your history books, significant experience in the global oil and gas industry is a prerequisite of leadership in our great colony…and, prior to his retirement in June 2011, Donny was the Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of the legendary Woodside Petroleum Limited, a position he had held since joining the company in 2004, cadet Australians. Appropriate comunications are a hallmark of my Abbott administration and will stand our great colony in good…”

(TBC…)

 

Why, despite being one of the world’s wealthiest countries, is Australia unable to break the cycle of poverty? Al Jazeera:

http://aje.me/14P5foE

“According to surveys and reports, 2.2 million Australians live below the poverty line, while more than 600,000 children under 15 live in households where no one has a job.”

“The major energy-producing countries are still firmly under the control of the Western-backed dictatorships. So, actually, the progress made by the Arab Spring is limited, but it’s not insignificant. The Western-controlled dictatorial system is eroding. In fact, it’s been eroding for some time. So, for example, if you go back 50 years, the energy resources — the main concern of U.S. planners — have been mostly nationalized. There are constantly attempts to reverse that, but they have not succeeded…

….Take the U.S. invasion of Iraq, for example. To everyone except a dedicated ideologue, it was pretty obvious that we invaded Iraq not because of our love of democracy but because it’s maybe the second- or third-largest source of oil in the world, and is right in the middle of the major energy-producing region. You’re not supposed to say this. It’s considered a conspiracy theory…”

Click here for Chomsky’s piece in full @ AlterNet

Pyne

Alan Beresford B’Stard, MP.

B'Stard

Christopher Maurice Pyne, MP.

 

the price of privacy?

EuroprivacyDer Spiegel is reporting that the European Union is seeking to increase the private sphere of its citizens by strengthening data protection laws for the web. Large Internet firms and lobbyists are fighting the plans. Here’s a snapshot of the debate in Brussels:

…if the EU’s draft privacy and data protection law isn’t changed, Gmail and Facebook may be forced to abandon their ad-supported models and start charging their customers in Europe or stop providing them with these popular services altogether…”

By Konrad Lischka and Christian Stöcker @ SPIEGEL (english lang… )

lefeb13

Current issue: February 2013

DAFOH Advisory Board:

Jacob Lavee,
 MD, Associate Professor of Surgery, Director of Heart Transplantation Unit,
Sheba Medical Center,
 Tel Hashomer, ISRAEL

J. Wallis Marsh,
 MD, Professor of Surgery, Specialist for Liver Transplantation,
 Pittsburgh, USA

Narinder Mehra, 
MD, Professor and Head of Department of Transplant Immunology & Immunogenetics (AIIMS), 
New Delhi, INDIA

Maria A. Fiatarone Singh,
 MD, FRACP, Professor of Medicine, John Sutton Chair of Exercise and Sport Science, University of Sydney,
 Sydney, AUSTRALIA

Eric Jay Goldberg,
 MD, Senior Medical Director, Shire Regenerative Medicine, 
La Jolla, USA

Ghazali Ahmad,
 MD, Senior Consultant and Head Department of Nephrology Hospital Kuala Lumpur, 
Chairman of National Renal Registry,
Head of Nephrology Services,
Ministry of Health,
Kuala Lumpur, MALAYSIA

 

Julian Assange recently addressed the Oxford Union (UK) via videolink from the Ecuadorian Embassy, see earlier interpretOr post, and the accompanying audio (of his speech) via YouTube is currently muted. So, for the record, here is a synopsis of what was actually said (source: Oxford Union)

Julian Assange begins his address by saying that in 2007-08 he was looking at what was happening in Iran. He says that a lot of people did good work, especially Thomas Fingar in:Trying to correct the movement towards war with Iran based on lies.He says one of the worst modern deceptions of the western world happened only in 2003 where we went to war with Iraq based on lies where over 100, 000 people were killed and millions of Iraqi refugees displaced as a result.In 2008 WikiLeaks published Iraq's classified rules of engagement for the US army. In those rules there was a section that permitted a border skirmish to start up that allowed US troops to go into Iran under a variety of circumstances. Because of the leak Iran held a press conference saying that in no way are the US allowed into their territory. After this a second rules of engagement was published omitting the border skirmish. Between 20% and 50% of all wars have started as a result of these border skirmishes. 45 hostile military bases surrounds Iran's borders, because of this there is a constant fear of being invaded making for a very tense atmosphere in the country.He makes the point that WikiLeaks is not against intelligence agencies but mentions that corruption within intelligence agencies is born out of secrecy.Intelligence analysts mustn't be held responsible to the public through cultural bias but must be responsible to historical record.He mentions the WikiLeaks movie saying that it's a mass propaganda attack against the WikiLeaks organisation, also it fans the flames for war on Iran as is demonstrated in the opening scene of the film that is read out by Assange who has the script. The movie shows Iran as having an active nuclear program when intelligence reports have revealed in high confidence that this is not the case.Filmed on Wednesday 23rd January 2013

Assange mentions the WikiLeaks movie saying that it's a mass propaganda attack against the WikiLeaks organisation, also it fans the flames for war on Iran as is demonstrated in the opening scene of the film that is read out by Assange who has the script. The movie shows Iran as having an active nuclear program when intelligence reports have revealed in high confidence that this is not the case.

Filmed on Wednesday 23rd January 2013

lemonde

Arab Spring, Act Two: are the monarchies next? decoding Syria’s Alawites; Mali, is the war postponed? how Occupy Wall Street fell in love with itself; nuclear power, conflicting aims; fished out, our oceans privatised; enter China’s new photographers; Upstairs, Downstairs, our fascination with the past; if we only had the time… and more…

Current issue: January 2013

“Information is power. But like all power, there are those who want to keep it for themselves,”

Aaron Swartz

“Climate change clashes with the myth of a land where progress is limited only by the rate at which resources can be extracted…”

George Monbiot’s prescient piece calls fireman Abbott on “the most cynical kind of stunt politics” and articulates the challenge we all face in confronting the vested and powerful interests of those hereditary beasts – Rinehart, Murdoch, fair-dinkum-Andy Forrest et al. Click below to go through to Monbiot @ the Guardian…

…Australia is the world’s largest exporter of coal – the most carbon intensive fossil fuel. It’s also a…

here @ the interpretOr, we’ve just had a quick perusal of this morning’s Oz tabloid press and…it ain’t pretty…

Real-life Barbie is no blonde bimbo”     Finch’s not-so-secret wedding

Dannii’s successful 2013 in the bag

In marked contrast, over at Green Left Weekly, there’s an appeal by veteran journalist, John Pilger:

“Australia has the most restrictive media in the western world. Censorship by omission denies Australians their democratic right to make sense of whole stratas of political and foreign policy. That’s why Green Left Weekly is a beacon, doing a job of honourable journalism, as an agent of people, not power.”

John Pilger

click here for Green Left Weekly

@ the interpretOr, we maintain that when media organisations are answerable to share holders and the markets, the public interest is necessarily compromised. Objectivity cannot serve two masters. When media organisations collude and offer a seeming consensus of content and treatment, there is tremendous power in their ability to shape perceptions of actual and restrict perspectives of possible.

Don2“If I see another picture of Gwyneth Paltrow, I think I’ll put my head down the lavatory. Fake tans, Beckhams, Jamie Oliver. I can’t take any more of it. That’s why I’m going to Syria.”

veteran photojournalist, Don McCullin tells the Observer…