Category: news


A United Nations’ special rapporteur has called on the United States and Britain to release documents on their use of torture in the Iraq war, Press TV reports…

Guantanamo

“Despite this clear repudiation of the unlawful actions carried out by the Bush-era CIA, many of the facts remain classified, and no public official has so far been brought to justice in the United States…”

….UN special rapporteur on counter-terrorism Ben Emmerson said in a report to the UN Human Rights Council.

Emmerson, a British international lawyer, called on Washington “to publish without delay and to the fullest extent possible” the Senate Intelligence Committee report on the CIA rendition. He also called on Britain to submit its own version of the report as well.

…a fellow Bristolian-at-large…an interpretOr’s impression of Banksy in New York…as reuters.com reporting unexpected discovery of his painting, ‘the Banality of the Banality of Evil’, in Manhattan thrift store…plse. click image to access reuters

empirebanksy

Emma Donoghue in conversation with Sir Michael Rutter CBE FRS. This event was organised in partnership with the Royal Society of Literature and was held as part of the 2013 Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition.

Is the understanding of children a science or an art? Emma Donoghue’s seventh novel, Room, which has been garlanded with prizes and has sold over a million copies, explores the mind of a five-year-old, Jack, whose whole world is an 11 ft-square garden shed shared with his mother. Donoghue drew inspiration from ancient myths and from the horrific crimes of Josef Fritzl, but she has described the locked room as ‘a metaphor for the claustrophobic, tender bond of parenthood’, and much of the novel was based on close observation of her son, Finn. In a conversation chaired by Susannah Herbert, former literary editor of The Sunday Times, she talks to Sir Michael Rutter FRS, Professor of Developmental Psychopathology at the Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London, about the enduring emotional consequences of significant childhood experiences, and the long-term effects of psychological and physical neglect on the development of the brain.

Emma Donoghue is an award-winning author. Sir Michael Rutter CBE FRS is Professor of Developmental Psychopathology at the Institute of Psychiatry. This event is chaired by Susannah Herbert who is Executive Director at the Forward Arts Foundation and former editor of the Sunday Times News Review

Professor Maggie Snowling FBA FBPsS

About the lecture…

Without the ability to read fluently and with accurate comprehension, for many children there can be a downward spiral of poor educational achievement and career prospects. Studies following the development of children at family-risk of dyslexia have revealed that it is associated with language delays and speech difficulties in pre-school years before reading instruction even begins. Literacy outcomes in children depend not only on the risk factors that predispose reading difficulties but also on protective factors which mitigate the risk. Join Professor Snowling as she discusses the impact dyslexia has on society and asks whether it is possible to intervene early to ameliorate its impact.

About the speaker…

Professor Maggie Snowling FBA is President of St. John’s College, Oxford, and a Fellow of the British Psychological Society. She was a member of the Rose Review on Dyslexia and is Past-President of the Society for the Scientific Study of Reading. She is also a fellow of Academy of Medical Sciences.

::: please see our Psychology & wellbeing links section for further info :::

Lou Reed at Occupy Lincoln Center…

The late, great Lou Reed with Laurie Anderson joined Occupy Wall Street and Philip Glass to protest for free speech and assembly and against colonial-style arts funding, after the last performance of Glass’s “Satyagraha” opera at Lincoln Center Dec. 2011…

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animation: NASA

Anthropogenic climate change is the increase in average global temperatures due to human-caused changes in the earth’s atmosphere. Humans are intensifying the atmosphere’s natural greenhouse effect by releasing gases that trap heat energy, including carbon dioxide, methane, and water vapor, primarily through the burning of fossil fuels. These gases are changing in the chemical makeup of the atmosphere, leading to changes in the global climate. Overall, human release of greenhouse gas emissions leads to a rise in average global temperatures. At regional levels, this temperature increase can manifest in different ways depending on local factors.

There is a strong consensus amongst climate scientists, backed by decades of peer-reviewed research, that human greenhouse gas emissions are leading to unprecedented changes in the Earth’s climate.  If emissions exceed a critical ‘tipping point’, the planet is likely to be on course for abrupt or accelerated climate change, with grave risks to humans and ecosystems.


Reports & Studies


Helpful Links

“All of the prediction models suggest we are on a worst case trajectory and some cases worse than the worst case.”

James Murdoch, ‘This much I know’, Observer (UK), 7 June 2009 – via Murdoch’s Politics, David McKnight, Pluto Press (2013)

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The relentless pursuit of profit is killing people, homogenizing human life and destroying our planet. Billions of us consumer citizens being  subjected to a seemingly eternal onslaught of mendacious, managerialistic and euphemistic twaddle…conditioned by Global Murdoch,  PR and additional forms of propaganda. It’s no accident in a way that Edward Bernays, originator of ‘Public Relations’,  was part of the Freud dynasty…Sigmund’s nephew, infact…’Good PR’ – as in effective – is invisible, but the impact, indelible…

20 or so years ago, an ex CEO of Washington-based PR corporation Hill & Knowlton….gave a lecture that was to prove infamous, in which he held in the one hand that morning’s edition of the NY Times, and in the other, a red marker pen, and he said something like…

“OK. This is today’s Times. I’m gonna circle with the marker every piece of editorial content that I know is derived from the PR industry. The paid advertising is already obvious, so I’ll leave that alone…I won’t circle that. …”

He then proceeded to circle what would amount to 70% of all edit content…page after broadsheet page, filled up with those red circles. He then expressed regret over his pivotal role in selling Gulf war One to middle America and beyond…

Under this man’s watch, Hill & Knowlton were hired 1990 by the Kuwaiti Royal Family, and they pioneered the VNR – video news release – as a core communications solution to drumming up public awareness of Kuwait and “them dastardly Iraqis and that baad, baad maaan, Sadaaammm…”

‘…Hello Kuwaiti Royal Family, wanna know how to get right inside the heads of several hundred million Americans who currently have neither knowledge or care of your existence ???’

‘…Errr, well, YES. Yes please…’

Thousands upon thousands of video cassettes were churned out to hundreds, if not thousands of US tv news stations, channels…coast to coast, border to border…far and wide…couriered by new networks like Fed Ex…and this every day, en masse, for more than a year…

One of the first VNRs contained footage of testimony to a US Joint Session of Congress Hearing on alleged Iraqi atrocities…This was the emotive and galvanising testimony by a young woman who addressed the hearing in person, claiming to have been a nurse at Kuwait General hospital…before Congress…under oath…describing babies being taken out of incubators by invading Iraqi forces…this testimony was released on thousands of VNRs…BUT….as Wikipedia and the annals of history remind us…

Nayirah Testimony refers to the controversial testimony given before the non-governmental Congressional Human Rights Caucus on October 10, 1990, by a female who provided only her first name, Nayirah. In her emotional testimony, Nayirah stated that after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait she had witnessed Iraqi soldiers take babies out of incubators in a Kuwaiti hospital, take the incubators, and leave the babies to die. Though reporters did not then have access to Kuwait, her testimony was regarded as credible at the time and was widely publicized. It was cited numerous times by United States senators and the president in their rationale to back Kuwait in the Gulf War.

Her story was initially corroborated by Amnesty International[1] and testimony from evacuees. Following the liberation of Kuwait, reporters were given access to the country. An ABC report found that “patients, including premature babies, did die, when many of Kuwait’s nurses and doctors..fled” but Iraqi troops “almost certainly had not stolen hospital incubators and left hundreds of Kuwaiti babies to die.”[2][3]

In 1992, it was revealed that Nayirah’s last name was al-Ṣabaḥ (Arabic: نيره الصباح‎) and that she was the daughter of Saud bin Nasir Al-Sabah, the Kuwaiti ambassador to the United States. Furthermore, it was revealed that her testimony was organized as part of the Citizens for a Free Kuwait public relations campaign which was run by Hill & Knowlton for the Kuwaiti government. Following this, al-Sabah’s testimony has largely come to be regarded as wartime propaganda.

Making a killing?

Immigration Minister Scott Morrison has defended the use of the term “illegal arrivals” to describe asylum seekers, saying he is “calling a spade a spade”. (ABC News 21/10/13)

Here at the interpretOr, we are defending use of the term ‘gutless, nasty and deeply foul CONservative’ in describing Morrison, as we too are now “calling a spade a spade”

If you want to peel back the layers of deception pro-Israel groups and the media have created, Max Blumenthal’s new book.Goliath: Life and Loathing in Greater Israel is the perfect place to start. It’s the bluntest book you’ll read about the state of Israeli society, as it looks deep into the soul of an ethnocracy that dominates the lives of millions of Palestinians…

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Blumenthal’s book, based on four years of on-the-ground reporting and research, takes the reader from the occupied West Bank to prisons for African refugees to Palestinian areas within Israel. Through a series of profiles and vignettes, he paints a devastating portrait of a country obsessed with demographics bent on permanently subjugating the non-Jews who live between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan Riverclick here for interview with Max Blumenthal @ AlterNet

Max Blumenthal is an award-winning journalist and bestselling author whose articles and video documentaries have appeared in The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, The Nation, The Guardian, The Independent Film Channel, The Huffington Post, Salon.com, Al Jazeera English and many other publications. His new book, Goliath: Life and Loathing in Greater Israel, is in stores now. His 2009 book, Republican Gomorrah: Inside The Movement That Shattered The Party, is a New York Times and Los Angeles Times bestseller.

greenpeace

Ana Paula is a 31-year old from Brazil who wanted to peacefully protest Russia’s plans to drill the Arctic. Now she, along with her 29 crewmates from the Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise, is locked in a Russian jail with no release in sight. But we can throw her and the rest of her crew a lifeline.

The Greenpeace staff, some in solitary confinement, are now facing fifteen years in prison on trumped up charges of piracy. Their crime? Hanging a banner on a Russian oil rig to protest dangerous deepwater drilling in one of the earth’s most beautiful and fragile places. Many western governments have already spoken out, but now Ana Paula and Greenpeace are asking the Avaaz community to help build a truly global outcry. 

Together we can call on some of Russia’s strongest trade and political partners — Brazil, India, South Africa and the EU — to call for the release of the Arctic 30. Let’s reach 1 million to free Ana Paula and her friends. Once we hit that mark, Avaaz will project their faces in key public places to keep this story at the top of the news. (Avazz

click here to sign the petition via Avazz

Andy Forrest, welcome to Earthtalk.

 – G’day Breeonezlet, pleasure to be here…

Ok. Mr Forrest, as you know, this interview is likely to be reaching planets that are not entirely familiar with your profession. Can you describe a typical working day?

– Umm, yes. Yes, Breeonezlet, I can describe such a day. I tend to wear leeesure denims, nice shirts that are untucked, and I’m in charge of my very own mining company. We dig up iron ore – a vital resource. We keep the world turning.

 An important job, is it, back there on Earth?

– For me, mining is my life, my passion…kinda almost a religion.

Mr Forrest, how do your people feel about this ‘mining religion’?

– Look, at the end of the day, my people are very content, moving forwards.

 Mr Forrest, we understand that your area of Earth was populated by ‘traditional owners’ for around 90,000 of your Earth years. Can you describe your joy in sharing the bounty of the ‘mining religion’ with other ‘traditional owners’?

– Umm…well…My family have a long history in Western Australia, going as far back as the NINETEENTH CENTURY, Breeonezlet…quite frankly, we, umm…

Mr Forrest, you’re obviously a bright and numerate man, how does that compare to 350 centuries? 

– Well, the point is, the point is really…

 Mr Forrest, thank you. We’d better leave it there for now. Best wishes with your ‘mining religion’ job and we appreciate your time.

Well, viewers, that was Mr Forrest, one of Earth’s leading ‘miners’.  As we saw, he seemed reluctant to put his income source into perspective – this trait also has been a theme of this series on ‘Earth: roles, incomes and the future’

psych13

::: click here to access via issuu :::

The age of the superhuman

Christian Jarrett gets to grips with cyborg technology

I never forget a face!

Josh P. Davis, Ashok Jansari and Karen Lander investigate super-recognisers in the police and the general public

Who will become a super artist?
Jennifer E. Drake and Ellen Winner consider the significance of exceptional drawing skills in childhood

The super-altruists
Tom Farsides considers whether there is such a thing, and its potential cost

Searching for superhuman
Christopher C. French navigates the outer limits as he considers how psychologists should respond to extraordinary claims

::: click here to access via issuu :::

lmd1013

Current issue: October 2013

… Syrian crisis special report: US, France, Iran, UN; Germany, Merkel’s hat-trick, workers’ changing loyalties; US, decline of Detroit; Brazil, big business; Balkans, who lives where?North Korea, re-educating refugees; Burmese labour for Thailand’s fish trade; watching tv in China … and more…

::: just click cover pic to access :::

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syref

Watching the endless stream of dismal news from Syria, we can feel at a loss at how to help. The truth is that much more can be done to help millions bearing the brunt of the conflict; all that is missing is the political will to do it.

“Countries across the world can take concrete measures to alleviate the suffering of those who have been displaced by the conflict. More than 4.25 million have been displaced inside Syria and two million are refugees abroad, this amounts to nearly a third of the population. There is little political controversy in helping them, no bickering in the United Nations Security Council, no public disagreement between Russia and the USA. So why is it not happening? ” (AL Jazeera)

Amnesty International’s Deputy Director for Global Thematic Issues, outlines five concrete steps the international community can take to help those displaced by the Syrian conflict.

First: Borders must stay open to those escaping the conflict. Neighbouring countries have taken very large numbers of refugees but there have been some unfortunate exceptions. Jordan is not letting in, among others, Palestinian refugees who have been resident in Syria for decades. Egypt has turned away Syrians arriving in the country and deported several hundred others.

Second: The international community – particularly EU countries, Gulf countries Russia, China, India, the USA and others that have the economic means – must fully fund the UN humanitarian appeal for Syria. Humanitarian support must be sustained and not a one off contribution; there should be a clear commitment from individual countries and groupings like the G20 to ensure that humanitarian appeals continue to be funded.

Neighbouring countries, in particular Jordan and Lebanon, will need ongoing support to be able to continue hosting large numbers of refugees and providing them with essential services, such schooling and health care. Lebanon is now hosting 759,000 refugees from Syria; one in every six people in the country. Jordan, one of the most water-stressed countries in the world is now home to 525,000 refugees from Syria, a twelfth of the country’s population. Here again, the role of the international community is critical.

Third: Anyone fleeing Syria should be considered in need of international protection. The vast majority of refugees from Syria, including Palestinian refugees, are likely to meet the criteria for refugee status under international law. They should be able to access refugee protection and the benefits afforded by refugee status. Key to this is that refugees from Syria should not be restricted to short residency periods or excluded from family reunification.

Fourth: Refugees from Syria, like all refugees, should not be subject to immigration detention. Refugees from Syria have been detained in various countries including Bulgaria, Egypt and Greece. Immigration detention of refugees is unlawful under international law.

Fifth: European countries, which resettle a relatively small number of refugees, should take vulnerable refugees out of the region, either by offering to resettle them or through humanitarian admission programmes. These must be over and above paltry existing refugee resettlement programmes. And it must be a serious effort of resettling thousands of refugees, not just token numbers. Resettlement and humanitarian admission will only make a small dent in the very large number of refugees hosted by Syria’s neighbours, but it can be a very effective way of assisting those that are most vulnerable.


Will the new Iranian president’s diplomatic opening survive the onslaught from detractors like Israel, Saudi Arabia and members of the U.S. Congress?

The new Iranian leader’s diplomatic moves have brought hope to those searching for an end to hostility between Iran and the U.S. In the days leading up to the annual gathering of world leaders in New York, Iranian president Hassan Rouhani proclaimed to NBC News that Iran would not seek nuclear weapons under any circumstances and penned a Washington Post op-edin which he declared, “I’m committed to fulfilling my promises to my people, including my pledge to engage in constructive interaction with the world.”

It was all part of Rouhani’s effort to pave the way for a potential new chapter in U.S.-Iranian relations…

::: click here for piece in full @ AlterNet :::

 

childbps

Laboratory research pioneered by psychologist Carol Dweck has shown the short-term benefits of praising children for their efforts rather than their inherent traits. Doing so leads children to adopt a so-called “incremental mindset” – seeing ability as malleable and challenges as an opportunity to learn.

 

Now a new study co-authored by Dweck and led by Elizabeth Gunderson has made the first ever attempt to monitor how parents praise their young children in real-life situations, and to see how their style of praise is related to the children’s mindset five years later.

The researchers observed and recorded 53 individual parents interacting with their children in the home for 90 minutes, whether playing, having a meal or whatever. They did this when the children were aged 14, 26 and 38 months. Five years later, the researchers caught up with the kids and asked them questions about their attitudes and mindset towards ability, challenges and moral goodness.

 

The key finding was the more parents tended to praise their pre-school age children for effort (known as process praise, as in “good job”), the more likely it was that those children had a “incremental attitude” towards intelligence and morality when they were aged seven to eight…

::: click here for this piece in full at BPS Research Blog :::

 

Oz taxpayer money now funding the live export of children…

abbchild

The Australian government has started exporting children and their families to offshore detention facilities. The first four children went to Manus Island, a place notorious for it’s deadly form of malaria. Others will be slated for transfer to Nauru and Manus. The physical and psychological price of detaining these children cannot be calculated. But the dollar price can. According to the Expert Panel on Asylum Seekers the estimated cost of housing asylum seekers on Nauru and Manus Island will be $2.3 billion over four years (more if the number of boat arrivals continue to rise). That amounts to $575,000,000 a year, $1,575,342.46 a day, $65,639.27 per hour, $1093.99 per minute or $18.23 a second.

$483,054,183.03…as of 4.29pm 23 Sept ’13

 

A short animated film introducing OpenIDEO, an online community where people can create solutions to some of the world’s toughest challenges. http://openideo.com

There are reasons to celebrate despite continued economic stagnation and growing debt: the culture of resistance in the US is here and it’s having an effect. This week, AlterNet reflects on the second anniversary of Occupy Wall Street and the fifth anniversary of the financial collapse…

There are reasons to celebrate despite continued economic stagnation and growing debt: the culture of resistance in the US is here and it’s having an effect. The corporate power that has so blatantly stomped on our rights and whipped Congress to do its bidding is faltering and losing its grip. There are cracks in the pillars of power, and it’s up to us to pry them open and shine light on the lies and corruption that have been used to steal our future. We see a movement that is building momentum.

AlterNet looks back over the events of the past two years and we feel cautiously optimistic. We remember wondering as we watched the Arab Spring bloom and the encampments grow in Spain and state capitals like Madison whether people in the US were ready to rise up and demand more than the crumbs we’ve been convinced to accept for decades…

::: click here for piece in full @ Alternet :::

“Even as it (Britain) walked out on you and joined the Common Market, you were still looking for your MBEs and your knighthoods, and all the rest of the regalia that comes with it. You would take Australia right back down the time tunnel to the cultural cringe where you have always come from.”

Paul Keating addressing Australian CONservative supporters of monarchy…27 feb ’92…

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  1. Smashing the fash: fascism in Australia – Honi Soit | Honi Soit

    Aug 30, 2013 – Authoritarianism, nationalism, and, ultimately, fascism are not  who is currently running in the electorate of Cook against Scott Morrison.

  2. Extremism goes mainstream in Australian politics | Irish Echo

    Mar 6, 2013 – Liberal Party immigration spokesman Scott Morrison  aim at asylum seekers in a way that would make the fascist British National Party blush.

  3. Assange, WikiLeaks, Cloud, and Fascism Renewed | Scott Morrison

    scottmorrison.ulitzer.com/node/1645657

    Dec 11, 2010 – Cloud Computing has been flexing its muscles over the past week, much to the discomfiture of the American government and numerous other 

  4. Scott Morrison | you said it…

    theantibogan.wordpress.com/tag/scottmorrison/

    Tag Archives: Scott Morrison. Post navigation. Smashing the fash: fascism in Australia. Posted on August 31, 2013 by mindmadeup. Added by Rafi Alam on 

  5. Useless Fascist – Google Groups

    https://groups.google.com/d/topic/aus.politics/qeHhnoTMMPk

     Useless Fascist, SKD, 2/15/11 3:21 AM, “…Federal Opposition immigration spokesmanScott Morrison criticised tax-payer funded flights for relatives of some of 
  6. slackbastard | Anarchy and apathy battle it out on @ndy’s blog.

    slackbastard.anarchobase.com/

     2 days ago – The victim was a locally known MC and an anti-fascist activist.  to capture the seat of Cook from the capable hands of Scott Morrison, while the 
  7. Australia To Get Fascist Government | the interpretOr

    theinterpretor.wordpress.com/2013/08/18/5067/

     Aug 18, 2013 – Liberal Immigration Spokesperson Scott Morrison has unleashed a new the Liberal Party has crossed a significant line into world of fascism.
  8. Behaviour protocols part of asylum policy: Morrison

    tasmaniantimes.com/index.php?/weblog/article/behaviour…morrison/…

“This week Tony Abbott has lived up to all we feared.

Tony Abbott has been Prime Minister officially for only a little over a day and already he has:

  • Banished women from all but one of the senior positions in his Ministry – and made himself Minister for Women;
  • Shut down the Climate Commission and the Climate Change Authority, ending their roles in informing Australians of the impacts of global warming and the necessary emission reduction targets to address it;
  • Abolished AusAid, making a mockery of Australia’s commitment to tackling global poverty;
  • Re-introduced temporary protection visas, which will see refugees sent back to danger faster and is in breach of international law;
  • Abandoned Ministries for science, climate change, disabilities, aged care, families, community services, mental health, early childhood & childcare, youth, international development, housing & homelessness…

I know many people are feeling despair about what Tony Abbott and the Coalition have in store for Australia.

But you don’t need to feel powerless. Join with us now. “

brandabbott

The US intelligence agency NSA has been taking advantage of the smartphone boom. It has developed the ability to hack into iPhones, android devices and even the BlackBerry, previously believed to be particularly secure.

Michael Hayden has an interesting story to tell about the iPhone. He and his wife were in an Apple store in Virginia, Hayden, the former head of the United States National Security Agency (NSA), said at a conference in Washington recently. A salesman approached and raved about the iPhone, saying that there were already "400,000 apps" for the device. Hayden, amused, turned to his wife and quietly asked: "This kid doesn't know who I am, does he? Four-hundred-thousand apps means 400,000 possibilities for attacks."

::: click throuh here to SPIEGEL online :::

The British Psychological Society has a fantastic public access research hub, called  BPS Research Digest ( http://bps-research-digest.blogspot.com.au/), that continues to empower the visitor with an extensive array of topical and well researched pieces…here at the interpretOr, we just couldn’t go past this meta analysis on psychotherapy over drugs…extract below…

Kathryn McHugh and her colleagues identified 34 relevant peer-reviewed studies up to August 2011 involving 90,483 people, in which the participants were asked to indicate a straight preference between psychotherapy or drugs. Half the studies involved patients awaiting treatment, the others involved participants who were asked to indicate their preference if they were diagnosed with a psychiatric disorder. The researchers had hoped to study preferences among patients with a diverse range of diagnoses but they were restricted by the available literature – 65 per cent studies pertained to depression with the remainder mostly involving anxiety disorders.

Overall, 75 per cent of participants stated a preference for psychotherapy over drugs. Stated differently, participants were three times as likely to state that they preferred psychological treatment rather than medication. The preference for therapy remained but was slightly lower (69 per cent) when focusing just on treatment-seeking patients, and when focusing only on studies that looked at depression (70 per cent). Desire for psychotherapy was stronger in studies that involved more women or younger participants.

::: for the BPS Research Digest’s piece in full, including primary source citations, please click here to visit :::

lmd913September 2013

Egypt, foreign agendas, unloved liberals, the ballet company dances on; Tunisia suggests how to guarantee freedoms; canErdogan’s power be curbed? Serge Halimi, five years on; where now for the euro? Eastern Europe’s ‘nuclear bloc’; future imperfect forschool textbooksPeru’s new property bubble; the boy-girls of Saudi Arabia… and more…
::: just click cover shot to access :::

fuck2

this story first appeared 05 Sep 2013 | Scott Ludlam
Transport

Today’s threats from Tony Abbott to axe funding for Perth’s rail projects, slash public service jobs, and rip billions in aid from the world’s poorest people shows people must vote Greens in the Senate to maintain checks and balances.

“In the event of a Coalition Government it is crucial that one party doesn’t get total control of Parliament, and Mr Abbott certainly reminded us of that today with his drastic cuts,” said Greens Senator for Western Australia Scott Ludlam.

“Today Mr Abbott confirmed he will not provide one cent for rail in Perth. Perth is crying out for better transport infrastructure and the Coalition will cut $500 million in rail funding for Western Australia.

“Make no mistake – Perth’s urban rail was named on Mr Abbott’s hit list revealed today, marked ‘do not proceed’. This from the guy who wants to be known as an ‘infrastructure Prime Minister’.

“It is no wonder the Colin Barnett has tried to keep its Federal funding requests a secret – his Liberal mate Tony Abbott won’t give him a cent.

“Only the Greens have a costed, comprehensive plan to improve public transport in Perth.”

Senator Ludlam said the drastic cuts announced today showed the Coalition could not be trusted with total control of Parliament.

“The extreme cuts announced today are another reminder – people must vote Greens to keep Mr Abbott from controlling the Senate,” said Senator Ludlam.

The Greens public transport initiative for Western Australia:http://greensmps.org.au/sites/default/files/greens_transport_initiative_…

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Former detainees tell of lasting damage from immigration detention, as report shows increase in mental illness.

 Al Jazeera

…While the topic of asylum-seekers has dominated discussions in the lead-up to the country’s federal election, much of the attention by the Labor government and the opposition Liberal-National coalition has focused on “stopping the boats” and thwarting the trade of people smugglers.

But, advocates say, beyond the politics are the people seeking asylum; many of whom have suffered severe trauma and are in desperate need of a safe home….

::: click here ::: for story in full @ AlJazeera

 

review of immigration detention’s mental health impacts has found detained asylum-seekers have markedly increased rates of mental illness, including major depressive disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder, compared with those in the community.

suncovers

 

On the day of the 1992 UK general election, The Sun newspaper ran an “infamous”[37] front page featuring Labour leader, Neil Kinnock, with the headline: ‘If Kinnock wins today will the last person to leave Britain please turn out the lights’. Kinnock lost and the following day’s headline in The Sun was the triumphalist ‘It’s The Sun Wot Won It‘ (sic)

love

  1. Asbestos Bishop – The Real News Channel | Facebook

    Asbestos Bishop.  It just so happens that Julie… Bishop was also a Lawyer, but worked for  Edo Voloder Julie Bishop was a solicitor for ASBESTOS MINERS!

  2. Bishop’s lawyer work a source of shame | Herald Sun

    http://www.heraldsun.com.au/…/bishopslawyer…/story-e6frf7kf-1226525303…
     Nov 27, 2012 –  attack on deputy opposition leader Julie Bishop for her work as a lead lawyer  compensation claims from workers dying of asbestos diseases.
  3. Powerhouse | Asbestos: Dust Settles On The Low Moral Ground

    powerhouse.theglobalmail.org/dust-settles-on-the-low-moral-ground/

    Jun 3, 2013 – And guess which former lawyer-turned-federal-politician counted James That would be the Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party, Julie Bishop.

  4. Julie Bishop’s legal past: Clayton Utz work in wake of AWU scandal 

    http://www.crikey.com.au/…/juliebishop-on-her-own-legal-past-the-interview-…

     Nov 30, 2012 – I wouldn’t trust any lawyer who acted for a company mining asbestos, years after the health effects were widely known, Julie Bishop included.
  5. Blue murder at Wittenoom | Independent Australia

    http://www.independentaustralia.net/2013/politics/blue-murder-at-wittenoom/

     Jun 3, 2013 – With 60000 people likely to die by 2030 from mining asbestos at  Julie Bishop as lawyer for Wittendom “why should these people jump the 
  6. Julie Bishop faces questions on CSR asbestos cases

     Nov 19, 2012 – Julie Bishop faces questions on CSR asbestos cases  questions raised about her conduct as a lawyer are a transparent attempt by Labor to 
  7. Julie Bishop was a solicitor for ASBESTOS MINERS! | the interpretOr

    theinterpretor.wordpress.com/…/juliebishop-was-a-solicitor-for-asbestos

     Nov 27, 2012 – “We had to fight even for the right of dying cancer victims to get a speedy trial. I recall sitting in the WA Supreme Court in an interlocutory ..

Many young people diagnosed with mental disorders have acted on their beliefs in ways that threaten authorities…

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…Many young people diagnosed with mental disorders are essentially anarchists who have the bad luck of being misidentified by mental health professionals, who 1) are ignorant of the social philosophy of anarchism; 2) embrace, often without political consciousness, its opposite ideology of hierarchism; and 3) confuse the signs of anarchism with symptoms of mental illness.

The mass media equates anarchism with chaos and violence. However, the social philosophy of anarchism rejects authoritarian government, opposes coercion, strives for greatest freedom, works toward “mutual aid” and voluntary cooperation, and maintains that people organizing themselves without hierarchies creates the most satisfying social arrangement. Many anarchists adhere to the principle of nonviolence (though the question of violence has historically divided anarchists in their battle to eliminate authoritarianism). Nonviolent anarchists have energized the Occupy movement and other struggles for economic justice and freedom...writes psychologist Bruce e Levine…

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