Thursday, May 9, 2013

Not-so-Random Information: Introduction and Table of Contents

Events are unfolding rapidly on the global landscape. Wars are expanding, resources are dwindling (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7), ecosystems are collapsing, prices are rising (1), wages are stagnant, unemployment is staggering, rhetoric is stupefying (1, 2, 3, 4), and war crimes have been normalized. As our bubble economy (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) is being inflated again (1, 2), the mainstream media continues to spew propaganda as they try to mesmerize their audience with lies (1, 2).

I would consider this a poorly scripted farce if it wasn’t for the carnage. What is taking place right now will decide the fate of humanity; how we and future generations will live: in democracy or tyranny, in harmony or conflict, in abundance or scarcity, in bliss or misery, as a community or in disarray. What has taken place in the last decade and what is to come in the next two will pave the way for the next century.

As I stated previously, events are unfolding quite rapidly on the global landscape, so staying up to date is becoming a daunting task. As a result, I’ve decided to begin this series. In the next few years we will be privy to some interesting times, below you will find some selected highlights of what is taking place. Much more to come:

  1. Economy, Yemen, Environment, Government, Syria, Education, Intellectual Property, CIA and Drugs, Stats on Muslim’s, NATO vs. SCO, and Zionism

  2. Bitcoin and Decentralization, Inverted Totalitarianism, Growth, Energy, Israel, Iraq, Privacy, Environment, Revolution, James Steele, and Secrets and Lies

  3. Education, Peak Oil, Prohibition, Cannabis Experiment, War on Nature, Privacy, Birgitta Jónsdóttir, Resistance, Thatcherism, Sustainability Experiment, Dandelions

  4. War Crimes, Obama, Kissinger, Guantánamo, Internet, Prohibition, Elizabeth Warren, Harvey Kurtzman, TIE ONE, Terrorism, and Education

  5. Environment, McKibben's Sermon, Food, Whistleblowers, Freedom, Surveillance, Totalitarianism, Tyranny, Chomsky, Education, and Torture at Guantánamo

  6. Nixon and Thompson, Drugs, Manning, Chavez, Hedges, Transparency, Privacy, Schools, Education, Syria

  7. Excerpts from 21 Not-So-Random Articles, and a Video

  8. Four Articles and Four Videos: Computerization of Jobs, Determination, NSA, Jacob Appelbaum and Edward Snowden, United States Torturing Iran, Chomsky, Israel’s Propaganda Machine, and Max Blumenthal’s Breaking Point

  9. Four Articles, a Lecture, and Three Interviews: The ‘Economy’, Snowden and the Future, Columbus and the Indians, Syria, Barrett Brown, US Foreign Policy, Poverty and Health, and the Coming Depression

  10. Seymour Hersh on Obama and Syria, Canada’s Corporate Power and Inequality, Our Invisible Revolution, and David Simon on the Two Americas

  11. Russia, Ukraine and Western Mainstream Media: The Secret State and Its Assassination Program: Assange, WikiLeaks and the NSA: E.P.A. and Chemical Companies Silencing Scientist: Revolt, Unite and Conquer

  12. Corporate City States and the Oligarchy: World Bank and the Federal Reserve: Shadow Governments and Their Secrecy

  13. Government Sanctioned Monopolies, Net Neutrality, and the FCC: Capital Accumulation, Freedom-Crushing Legislation, and Rebellion: Working for the Spooks, Mathematicians' War, and Mesh Networking

  14. Update on Ukraine: NATO and Its Military Bases Surrounding Russia, Fracking and Natural Gas, US Policy and Disintegration of Ukraine, CIA, FBI and Obama’s Lies

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Some Not-so-Random Information, Set #6: Nixon and Thompson, Drugs, Manning, Chavez, Hedges, Transparency, Privacy, Schools, Education, Syria


Further information at: Not-so-Random Information: Introduction and Table of Contents
  1. Richard Nixon and Hunter Thompson

  2. War on Drugs

  3. Bradley Manning

  4. Chavez

  5. Chris Hedges

  6. Transparency

  7. Privacy

  8. Schools

  9. Corporate Education

  10. Rethinking Education

  11. Syria


I. Richard Nixon and Hunter Thompson


The Lyndon Johnson tapes: Richard Nixon's 'treason' (2013) - “Declassified tapes of President Lyndon Johnson's telephone calls provide a fresh insight into his world. Among the revelations - he planned a dramatic entry into the 1968 Democratic Convention to re-join the presidential race. And he caught Richard Nixon sabotaging the Vietnam peace talks... but said nothing.”

“He Was a Crook” by Hunter Thompson (1994) - “Richard Nixon is gone now, and I am poorer for it. He was the real thing -- a political monster straight out of Grendel and a very dangerous enemy. He could shake your hand and stab you in the back at the same time. He lied to his friends and betrayed the trust of his family. Not even Gerald Ford, the unhappy ex-president who pardoned Nixon and kept him out of prison, was immune to the evil fallout. Ford, who believes strongly in Heaven and Hell, has told more than one of his celebrity golf partners that ‘I know I will go to hell, because I pardoned Richard Nixon.’”

II. War on Drugs


15 Benefits of the War on Drugs - “With American drug use levels essentially the same as — and levels of drug-related violence either the same as or lower than — those in countries like the Netherlands with liberal drug laws, public support for the War on Drugs appears to be faltering. This was most recently evidenced in the victory of major drug decriminalization initiatives in Colorado and Washington. Some misguided commentators go so far as to say the Drug War is ‘a failure.’… The Drug War would indeed be a failure if its real function was to reduce drug consumption or drug-related violence. But the success or failure of state policies is rightly judged by the extent to which they promote the interests served by the state. The Drug War is a failure only if the state exists to serve you.”

III. Bradley Manning


Freedom of the Press Foundation Publishes Leaked Audio of Bradley Manning’s Statement - “Today, Freedom of the Press Foundation is publishing the full, previously unreleased audio recording of Private First Class Bradley Manning’s speech to the military court in Ft. Meade about his motivations for leaking over 700,000 government documents to WikiLeaks. In addition, we have published highlights from Manning’s statement to the court. While unofficial transcripts of this statement are available, this marks the first time the American public has heard the actual voice of Manning.”



IV. Chavez


What the Statistics Tell Us about Venezuela in the Chavez Era - “In the lead up to Venezuela’s presidential election earlier this year, the picture painted in most private media was that of a country falling apart—a corrupt regime drunk on oil money that was attempting to hold onto power after more than a decade of gross mismanagement of the country’s economy and public institutions. The young, energetic opposition candidate was riding a wave of enthusiasm among the tired masses that desired a change from the past and were looking for new leadership to move their country forward….But a brief look at the statistics offers a very different story about Venezuela. While there are certain elements of truth to the media campaign—indeed there have been persistent blackouts, some food shortages, and rising crime—understanding the context of the changes that the country has experienced under the Chavez government over the last decade tells a very distinct story. It is a story that helps explain why the majority of the Venezuelan people keep re-electing a government that, according to the private media, is driving the country into the ground. ”



V. Chris Hedges


EPL Presents Chris Hedges - “Days of Destruction, Days of Revolt: EPL presented Chris Hedges to launch Freedom to Read Week 2013 in Edmonton. Chris spoke about injustice and corporate greed in America...and argued Canada is travelling the same path.”



VI. Transparency


New Funding Group Calls for 100 More WikiLeaks to Offset Unprecedented Gov’t Secrecy - “WikiLeaks is set to receive major new financial support this week from a new group that funds independent journalism organizations dedicated to transparency and accountability in government. This comes as MasterCard, Visa and PayPal continue to refuse to process payments for WikiLeaks, making it difficult to send donations. ‘We don’t need just one WikiLeaks; we need 10 WikiLeaks or a hundred. We have a situation in this country where government secrecy is at an all-time high,’ says Freedom of the Press Foundation co-founder and executive director Trevor Timm. We are also joined by Guardian columnist Glenn Greenwald, who is a member of the foundation’s board.”



VII. Privacy


K-12 student database jazzes tech startups, spooks parents - “An education technology conference this week in Austin, Texas, will clang with bells and whistles as startups eagerly show off their latest wares. But the most influential new product may be the least flashy: a $100 million database built to chart the academic paths of public school students from kindergarten through high school. In operation just three months, the database already holds files on millions of children identified by name, address and sometimes social security number. Learning disabilities are documented, test scores recorded, attendance noted. In some cases, the database tracks student hobbies, career goals, attitudes toward school - even homework completion.”

VIII. Schools


What to do about Baltimore Schools - “Lester Spence and Marc Steiner discuss possible fixes to the crisis facing Baltimore public schools”



IX. Corporate Education


Joel Klein of New York to become an Executive for News Corp: Full spectrum dominance of education the goal - “Joel Klein announced Nov. 9 that at year’s end he will resign as York City’s Schools chancellor to become executive vice president at Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. Yesterday, the company announced that it was buying a technology company with big financial ties to the New York City school system. How nice. The neo-liberal corporate state has provided Klein the training ground to put forth neo-liberal market reforms that are proving to do the job of dismantling public education in the interest of the new corporate EduCare that is being built by private corporate interests to take over the educational means of production. Klein has done his job well, both with his support of the onerous Race to the Top and his corporate bootlicking and policy and personnel changes that promise the private sector a lock on public education.”

X. Rethinking Education


Sugata Mitra: Build a School in the Cloud - “Onstage at TED2013, Sugata Mitra makes his bold TED Prize wish: Help me design the School in the Cloud, a learning lab in India, where children can explore and learn from each other -- using resources and mentoring from the cloud. Hear his inspiring vision for Self Organized Learning Environments (SOLE), and learn more at tedprize.org.”



XI. Syria


Israeli bombing of Syria and moral relativism - “On Sunday, Israel dropped massive bombs near Damascus, ones which the New York Times, quoting residents, originally reported (then evidently deleted) resulted in explosions ‘more massive than anything the residents of the city. . . have witnessed during more than two years of war.’ The Jerusalem Post this morning quoted ‘a senior Syrian military source’ as claiming that ‘Israel used depleted uranium shells’, though that is not confirmed. The NYT cited a ‘high-ranking Syrian military official’ who said the bombs ‘struck several critical military facilities in some of the country's most tightly secured and strategic areas’ and killed ‘dozens of elite troops stationed near the presidential palace’, while the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that ‘at least 42 soldiers were killed in the strikes, and another 100 who would usually be at the targeted sites remain unaccounted for.’”

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Some Not-so-Random Information, Set #5: Environment, McKibben's Sermon, Food, Whistleblowers, Freedom, Surveillance, Totalitarianism, Tyranny, Chomsky, Education, and Torture at Guantánamo


Further information at: Not-so-Random Information: Introduction and Table of Contents
  1. Environment

  2. Bill McKibben's Sermon

  3. Food

  4. Whistleblowers

  5. Freedom

  6. Surveillance

  7. Totalitarianism

  8. Tyranny

  9. Chomsky Interview

  10. Education

  11. Torture at Guantánamo


I. Environment


The Keeling Curve: What Does 400 ppm Look Like? - “Recent estimates suggest CO2 levels reached as much as 415 parts per million (ppm) during the Pliocene. With that came global average temperatures that eventually reached 3 or 4 degrees C (5.4-7.2 degrees F) higher than today’s and as much as 10 degrees C (18 degrees F) warmer at the poles. Sea level ranged between five and 40 meters (16 to 131 feet) higher than today…. Richard Norris, a geologist at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego, said the concentration of CO2 is one means of comparison, but what is not comparable, and more significant, is the speed at which 400 ppm is being surpassed today.”

II. Bill McKibben's Sermon


Bill McKibben's Sermon at The Riverside Church - "God's Taunt" - “Bill McKibben’s Sermon on Job 38: 1-11 and Matthew 19: 16-22 from Sunday, April 28, 2013.”



III. Food


The Extraordinary Science of Addictive Junk Food - “On the evening of April 8, 1999, a long line of Town Cars and taxis pulled up to the Minneapolis headquarters of Pillsbury and discharged 11 men who controlled America’s largest food companies. Nestlé was in attendance, as were Kraft and Nabisco, General Mills and Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola and Mars. Rivals any other day, the C.E.O.’s and company presidents had come together for a rare, private meeting. On the agenda was one item: the emerging obesity epidemic and how to deal with it. While the atmosphere was cordial, the men assembled were hardly friends. Their stature was defined by their skill in fighting one another for what they called ‘stomach share’ — the amount of digestive space that any one company’s brand can grab from the competition.”

Salt Sugar Fat: NY Times Reporter Michael Moss on How the Food Giants Hooked America on Junk Food



Wave of "Ag Gag" Bills Threaten Food Safety and Freedom of the Press - “Remember ‘fecal soup’? A CBS ‘60 Minutes’ exposé in 1987 documented widespread food safety violations by the poultry industry, making use of undercover video from a hidden camera placed by the ‘60 Minutes’ crew. The episode vindicated U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) whistleblower Hobart Bartley, who had been ignored and threatened by his superiors and finally transferred to another plant when he warned of unsanitary conditions at a Simmons Industries plant in Missouri. Bartley was particularly irate about the ‘eight-foot-high vat of water called the 'chiller,' where as many as 10,000 chicken carcasses were routinely left to float, soaking up moisture to increase their selling weight. Dried blood, feces, and hair were floating in along with the dead birds. Diane Sawyer later called it 'fecal soup.' In the modern era, effective enforcement of food safety and the humane treatment of animals has long relied on undercover video investigations by reporters and citizens. The footage and images gained can serve as proof of criminal wrongdoing or lay ugly practices bare. Such images can vindicate whistleblowers who otherwise risk retaliation when speaking up. Now this practice, which has time and time again exposed hidden dangers -- including downer cows linked to Mad Cow disease in the food supply -- is under threat by a series of state bills dubbed ‘ag gag’ bills.”

Michael Pollan on How Reclaiming Cooking Can Save Our Food System, Make Us Healthy & Grow Democracy



IV. Whistleblowers


Julian Assange speech that was censored by the Oxford Union - “In an attempt to highlight the importance of whistleblowers, Julian Assange chose to have WikiLeaks' Collateral Murder footage as background for his speech at the Sam Adams Awards, an award dedicated to whistleblowers. The ceremony was organized by the Oxford Union. As a result of the video playing in the background and unsuccessful attempts to vet Julian's speech, the Union pulled the live stream from the event and spent two days substituting the US Army massacre footage with their logo. The Union claimed they feared that the US government would take legal action concerning "copyright" of the Apache gun camera footage. Wikileaks advised the Union that by law and practice the US government does not claim copyrights on footage or documents that it produces, the Union still decided to censor the video.”



V. Freedom


Jeremy Hammond on Aaron Swartz & the Criminalization of Digital Dissent - “The tragic death of internet freedom fighter Aaron Swartz reveals the government’s flawed ‘cyber security strategy’ as well as its systematic corruption involving computer crime investigations, intellectual property law, and government/corporate transparency. In a society supposedly based on principles of democracy and due process, Aaron’s efforts to liberate the internet, including free distribution of JSTOR academic essays, access to public court records on PACER, stopping the passage of SOPA/PIPA, and developing the Creative Commons, make him a hero, not a criminal. It is not the ‘crimes’ Aaron may have committed that made him a target of federal prosecution, but his ideas – elaborated in his ‘Guerrilla Open Access Manifesto’ – that the government has found so dangerous. The United States Attorney’s aggressive prosecution, riddled with abuse and misconduct, is what led to the death of this hero. This sad and angering chapter should serve as a wake up call for all of us to acknowledge the danger inherent in our criminal justice system.”

VI. Surveillance


The Program: The National Security Agency's Domestic Spying Program - “It took me a few days to work up the nerve to phone William Binney. As someone already a “target” of the United States government, I found it difficult not to worry about the chain of unintended consequences I might unleash by calling Mr. Binney, a 32-year veteran of the National Security Agency turned whistle-blower. He picked up. I nervously explained I was a documentary filmmaker and wanted to speak to him. To my surprise he replied: ‘I’m tired of my government harassing me and violating the Constitution. Yes, I’ll talk to you.’ Two weeks later, driving past the headquarters of the N.S.A. in Maryland, outside Washington, Mr. Binney described details about Stellar Wind, the N.S.A.’s top-secret domestic spying program begun after 9/11, which was so controversial that it nearly caused top Justice Department officials to resign in protest, in 2004.”



VII. Totalitarianism


Teenagers, social media, and terrorism: a threat level hard to assess - “The case of teenager Cameron Dambrosio might serve as an object lesson to young people everywhere about minding what you say online unless you are prepared to be arrested for terrorism. The Methuen, Mass., high school student was arrested last week after posting online videos that show him rapping an original song that police say contained ‘disturbing verbiage’ and reportedly mentioned the White House and the Boston Marathon bombing. He is charged with communicating terrorist threats, a state felony, and faces a potential 20 years in prison. Bail is set at $1 million.”

VIII. Tyranny


Five Steps To Tyranny - “This film analyzes the movement of a society from freedom to tyranny in five steps. It clearly shows how those in positions of power may cultivate the conditions of tyranny in any population by demonstrating how easily ordinary people may be manipulated into compliance with ‘authority’, into silence before criminality, and even how easily most people may be coerced into performing genuinely evil acts. Evocative of much that is happening in the world today.”



IX. Chomsky Interview


Professor Chomsky Interview: Reflections on Education and Creativity - “On January 25, Professor Chomsky sat down with Roy Danovitch of Danotations to discuss Education, Creativity, and Democracy.”



X. Education


The War on Kids: The Definitive Documentary on the Failure of the Public Education System - “This is a 2009 award winning, critically acclaimed documentary of the complete and utter failure of the public education system and United States demonization of home schoolers.”



XI. Torture at Guantánamo


Torture at Guantánamo: Lt. Col. Stuart Couch on His Refusal to Prosecute Abused Prisoner - “On Sept. 11, 2001, Marine Lt. Col. Stuart Couch’s friend died co-piloting the second plane to hit the World Trade Center. Soon after, Couch became one of the first military prosecutors assigned to the U.S. military base at Guantánamo Bay to prosecute men alleged to have carried out the terrorist plot. He ultimately would refuse to prosecute one detainee: Mohamedou Ould Slahi. "It became clear that what had been done to Slahi amounted to torture," Couch says. ‘Specifically, he had been subjected to a mock execution. He had sensory deprivation. He had environmental manipulation; that is, cell is too cold, or the cell is too hot. ... He was presented with a ruse that the United States had taken custody of his mother and his brother and that they were being brought to Guantánamo.’ Couch says he concluded Slahi’s treatment amounted to illegal torture. ‘I came to the conclusion we had knowingly set him up for mental suffering in order for him to provide information,’ Couch said. ‘We might very well have a significant problem with the body of evidence that we were able to present as to his guilt.’”

Monday, May 6, 2013

Some Not-so-Random Information, Set #4: War Crimes, Obama, Kissinger, Guantánamo, Internet, Prohibition, Elizabeth Warren, Harvey Kurtzman, TIE ONE, Terrorism, and Education


Further information at: Not-so-Random Information: Introduction and Table of Contents
  1. Iraq War Crimes

  2. Obama and Wall Street

  3. Kissinger Cables

  4. Guantánamo

  5. Control of the Internet

  6. Prohibition, National Disgrace

  7. Elizabeth Warren vs. Banks

  8. Harvey Kurtzman Tribute

  9. TIE ONE Tribute

  10. Terrorism and Religion

  11. Education


I. Iraq War Crimes


Iraq War Veteran Who Rescued Wounded Children in 2007 Apache Attack Describes Emotional Toll of Witnessing Infamous Killings - “Iraq war veteran Ethan McCord was one of three US soldiers who were on the ground during the Apache helicopter assault on twelve civilians in Baghdad in 2007 that was captured in a video released by WikiLeaks. McCord is seen on the video carrying one of the wounded children in his arms to get medical help.”



II. Obama and Wall Street


Pres Obama Signs Bill Killing Anti-Corruption, Pro-Transparency STOCK Act Provisions - “President Obama completed this rope-a-dope deception by signing this new bill, which stripped key provisions from the STOCK Act and rolled back a lot of the progress that the original bill made in promoting transparency and open government. The bill was signed without any cameras or fanfare, which is in stark contrast to the very public signing of the actual STOCK Act. It seems President Obama was glad to parade around the signing of the pro-transparency bill, but was not so open about his reversal of the most important parts of it a year later! Open Secrets describes the key provisions stripped out of the bill and labels this action ‘A reversal of the STOCK Act’:
The elements of the STOCK Act that were removed include:
  • Creation of searchable, sortable disclosure of the information contained in reports even for Congress, the president, vice president, the president’s cabinet and congressional candidates.
  • Required electronic filing for Congress, the president, vice president, the president’s cabinet and congressional candidates, as well as high-level executive and congressional branch employees. Even images of the staffers' filings will not be available for viewing on the web.


III. Kissinger Cables


Wikileaks Releases Kissinger Cables and Two Decisions in Manning Trial - “Michael Ratner: Kissinger files show important role Wikileaks continues to play revealing real history of US foreign policy; Judge makes one decision favorable to Manning, one not.”



IV. Guantánamo


Gitmo Is Killing Me - “ONE man here weighs just 77 pounds. Another, 98. Last thing I knew, I weighed 132, but that was a month ago. I’ve been on a hunger strike since Feb. 10 and have lost well over 30 pounds. I will not eat until they restore my dignity. I’ve been detained at Guantánamo for 11 years and three months. I have never been charged with any crime. I have never received a trial. I could have been home years ago — no one seriously thinks I am a threat — but still I am here. Years ago the military said I was a ‘guard’ for Osama bin Laden, but this was nonsense, like something out of the American movies I used to watch. They don’t even seem to believe it anymore. But they don’t seem to care how long I sit here, either.”

V. Control of the Internet


Digital Disconnect: Robert McChesney on "How Capitalism Is Turning the Internet Against Democracy" - “Longtime media-reform advocate Robert McChesney looks at how the future of American politics could be largely determined by who controls the Internet in his newest book. "'Digital Disconnect' talks about the difference between the mythology of the Internet, the hope of the Internet, that it would empower people and make democracy triumphant, versus the reality, which is that large corporate monopolies and the government, working together, are taking away the promise of the Internet to suit their interests," says McChesney, the co-founder of Free Press and the National Conference for Media Reform. His book begins with a simple claim: ‘The ways capitalism works and does not work determine the role the Internet might play in society.’”



VI. Prohibition, National Disgrace


National Disgrace - “Harry Levine has often described what reform of marijuana arrest policies should look like in this country: Everyone should be treated like white, upper-middle class people already are (“they don’t get arrested, ticketed, or fined”). The Queens College, CUNY sociology professor has published reports and articles about marijuana arrests in New York City, California, Colorado, Washington, and other states and major cities. His research, compiled with attorney Loren Siegel, has served as a key resource for those urging recognition that pot arrests in the United States are, as Levine tells TNI, racist to the point of national scandal.”

VII. Elizabeth Warren vs. Banks


Elizabeth Warren’s Foreclosure Settlement Bombshell: Banks Determined the Number of Victims of Their Own Foreclosure Frauds - “There is only one thing more Kafkaesque than the ongoing Wall Street frauds and that is watching a live United States Senate investigation of a diabolical settlement the banks themselves concocted to repay the victims of their own fraud. Such was the case yesterday when Senators Sherrod Brown, Jack Reed, and Elizabeth Warren grilled regulators from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and Federal Reserve along with outside consultants over allowing banks to hand pick the consultants to do their foreclosure reviews, negotiate confidentiality agreements with them and pay them directly.”

Further information on the Senate Hearing available at: U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs. The full session can be viewed at: Outsourcing Accountability? Examining the Role of Independent Consultants (Note: the coverage begins at approximately 25:25). Fifteen minute segment from the hearing embedded below.



VIII. Harvey Kurtzman Tribute


The Art of Harvey Kurtzman - “Cartoonist Harvey Kurtzman (1924-1993) founded the satirical MAD magazine in 1952 and forever altered the way young readers experienced the media and consumer culture around them. As the late film critic Roger Ebert explained, ‘I learned to be a movie critic by reading MAD magazine. I learned a lot of other things from the magazine too, including a whole new slant on society. MAD's parodies made me aware of the machine inside the skin--of the way a movie might look original on the outside, while inside it was just recycling the same dumb old formulas. I did not read the magazine, I plundered it for clues to the universe.’ After MAD, Kurtzman worked with a team of artists including Al Jaffee, Jack Davis and Will Elder on a series of short-lived but influential publications, including TRUMP, HUMBUG and HELP! At HELP!, a fortuitous nexus of nascent sketch comedy and underground ‘comix,’ Kurtzman worked with then unknowns Woody Allen, Gloria Steinem and R. Crumb, among many others. Terry Gilliam, who met John Cleese while working there, considered Kurtzman ‘one of the godparents of Monty Python.’”



IX. TIE ONE Tribute


Embedded below is a segment from the documentary: Piece By Piece (San Francisco Graffiti Documentary). Further info on TIE ONE at: The untimely death of a graffiti writer and Saber Remembers His Friend, TIE ONE .



X. Terrorism and Religion


Terrorism and the other Religions - “Muslims are not more violent than people of other religions. Murder rates in most of the Muslim world are very low compared to the United States. As for political violence, people of Christian heritage in the twentieth century polished off tens of millions of people in the two world wars and colonial repression. This massive carnage did not occur because European Christians are worse than or different from other human beings, but because they were the first to industrialize war and pursue a national model. Sometimes it is argued that they did not act in the name of religion but of nationalism. But, really, how naive. Religion and nationalism are closely intertwined. The British monarch is the head of the Church of England, and that still meant something in the first half of the twentieth century, at least.”



XI. Education


Massive Cheating Scandals Rock School Districts Nationwide - “New allegations of test impropriety under Michelle Rhee in Washington DC follow 35 criminal indictments in nation's largest ever cheating scandal in Atlanta.”

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Some Not-so-Random Information, Set #3: Education, Peak Oil, Prohibition, Cannabis Experiment, War on Nature, Privacy, Birgitta Jónsdóttir, Resistance, Thatcherism, Sustainability Experiment, Dandelions


Further information at: Not-so-Random Information: Introduction and Table of Contents
  1. Education

  2. Peak Oil

  3. Prohibition

  4. Cannabis Experiment

  5. War on Nature

  6. Privacy

  7. Birgitta Jónsdóttir

  8. Resistance

  9. Thatcherism

  10. Sustainability Experiment

  11. Dandelions in Permaculture


I. Education


Abby Martin interviews Richard Grove on Russia Today’s “Breaking the Set” (RT) - John Taylor Gatto playlist available at: The Ultimate History Lesson.



II. Peak Oil


New Zealand Parliament: The Next Oil Shock? - “The US Department of Energy (DoE) calls oil ‘the lifeblood of modern civilisation’. Around 86 million barrels (13.7 billion litres) are consumed each day. Oil supplies 37 percent of the world’s energy demand, including 40 percent of New Zealand’s energy demand. It powers nearly all of the world’s transportation, without which production and trade would grind to a halt. Studies have shown that GDP growth is very strongly related to increased use of oil. When the price of oil increases, the cost of nearly all economic activity rises. This often induces recessions. High oil prices have been associated with three major periods of economic recession in the past 40 years, including the lead-up to the recent global economic crisis. The world’s oil production capacity may not be sufficient to match growing demand in coming years. The potential for short-falls arises from geological, infrastructure, and political/economic constraints limiting the ability of world oil production capacity to grow while demand continues to rise. If oil supply cannot meet demand a price spike may be triggered, with major detrimental effects on economies, especially those heavily dependent on oil imports like New Zealand.”

III. Prohibition


Canada's War on Weed - “With a reported value of over six billion dollars, it's no secret that marijuana in British Columbia is big business. However, due to the recent legalization of weed in Washington and Colorado, the draconian crime laws pushed forward by the Canadian Conservative government's omnibus crime bill, and recent changes to medical marijuana regulations, the entire industry is suddenly facing an identity crisis. VICE Canada went west to talk to the people directly affected by these recent events: from the legalization activists and the large and small scale growers, to the illegal traffickers and law enforcement, we talked to the people on the front lines of the battle for control over one of Canada's most undervalued resource.”



IV. Cannabis Experiments


Local woman took part in weird 1972 experiment in marijuana use - “In the winter of 1972, 20 young women took part in one of the weirdest scientific experiments in this country’s history. For 98 days in a downtown Toronto hospital, their brains, hearts, kidneys, livers, blood and urine were rigorously tested and analyzed. A team of nurses kept round-the-clock records of their behaviour, logged at half-hour intervals. Just how was marijuana affecting the 10 who had to smoke it every day? Forty-one years later, these women are still wondering what exactly happened to them during their three-month stretch as human guinea pigs.”

V. War on Nature


Culture in Decline | Episode #4 "War On Nature" by Peter Joseph - “In this episode, Peter investigates the nature of War and human conflict; the White House declares War On Nature itself; a french chef prepares an international delicacy for the kids; Louie the Logic Gremlin returns to piss everyone off and our Man on the Street gets rowdy. Special guest appearances by Stephane Chivot, Katie Goodman & Rick Overton.”



VI. Privacy


Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) 2013 Privacy Report: Who Has Your Back? - “In this annual report, the Electronic Frontier Foundation examined the policies of major Internet companies — including ISPs, email providers, cloud storage providers, location-based services, blogging platforms, and social networking sites — to assess whether they publicly commit to standing with users when the government seeks access to user data. The purpose of this report is to incentivize companies to be transparent about how data flows to the government and encourage them to take a stand for user privacy whenever it is possible to do so.”

VII. Birgitta Jónsdóttir


Icelandic Lawmaker Birgitta Jónsdóttir on Challenging Gov’t Secrecy from Twitter to Bradley Manning (Part 2) - “Icelandic Parliamentarian Birgitta Jónsdóttir played a critical role in WikiLeaks’ release of the ‘Collateral Murder’ video, which showed a U.S. military helicopter in July 2007 as it killed 12 people and wounded two children in Iraq. Jónsdóttir joins us on her first trip to the United States since a secret grand jury in Alexandria, Virginia, began its investigation of WikiLeaks and Julian Assange. She also discusses her role at the center of another closely watched legal case — challenging of the government’s effort to obtain her Twitter records without a warrant — and why she has come to the United States to champion the cases of military whistleblower Bradley Manning and the accused hacker Jeremy Hammond.”





VIII. Resistance


The Fossil Fuel Resistance: As the world burns, a new movement to reverse climate change is emerging - fiercely, loudly and right next door - “It got so hot in Australia in January that the weather service had to add two new colors to its charts. A few weeks later, at the other end of the planet, new data from the CryoSat-2 satellite showed 80 percent of Arctic sea ice has disappeared. We're not breaking records anymore; we're breaking the planet. In 50 years, no one will care about the fiscal cliff or the Euro crisis. They'll just ask, ‘So the Arctic melted, and then what did you do?’ Here's the good news: We'll at least be able to say we fought. After decades of scant organized response to climate change, a powerful movement is quickly emerging around the country and around the world, building on the work of scattered front-line organizers who've been fighting the fossil-fuel industry for decades. It has no great charismatic leader and no central organization; it battles on a thousand fronts. But taken together, it's now big enough to matter, and it's growing fast.”

IX. Thatcherism


Glenda Jackson launches tirade against Thatcher in tribute debate - “Causing howls of outrage, and grimaces on fellow Labour MPs faces, Glenda Jackson MP defies the respectful mood of the chamber by launching a nasty, angry and ferocious assault on 'Thatcherism' - earrings bouncing around - in a debate marked by calm tribute to the late great Lady Thatcher.”



X. Sustainability Experiment


Arcosanti - “Arcosanti is an experimental town that began construction in 1970 in central Arizona, 70 mi (110 km) north of Phoenix, at an elevation of 3,732 feet (1,130 meters). Architect Paolo Soleri, using a concept he called arcology, started the town to demonstrate how urban conditions could be improved while minimizing the destructive impact on the earth.”

XI. Dandelions in Permaculture


Dandelions in Permaculture - “Eden Gal from True Nature Farm in Boulder, Utah starts off by telling us about how dandelions will soften soil. Alexia Allen pf Hawthorn Farm in Woodinville, Washington shows a polyculture with a lot of garlic and some huge dandelions. She finds a dandelion leaf that is more than half her height. And eat it. She talks about which leaves are less bitter and how her taste for bitter has developed as she has gotten older….”