Sunday, October 22, 2006

WTC7 controlled demolition

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Darwin online

Comprehensive guide to Darwin to be available online here:

The complete works of Darwin online

Persistence

Why oh why is this debate still going on?
Aishah Azmi, 23, a musim classroom was suspended from a school because pupils couldn't understand her properly.


Children as a whole learn how to communicate with sound and expression which is impossible to do if all but your eyes are visible to see. Maybe if Mrs Azmi is any good at her job she could teach blind and visually impaired kids as it would hardly matter, just so long as when she speaks, she does it showing a tad more character, personalty and emotion than her 15 minutes of fame on the television. Doesn't seem to me like the kind of woman i would like to be teaching my kids anyway... Is that discriminating? Nope, just my opinion and many others it would seem (seeing as official figures claim islam to only make up only 3% of Britain. This figure is way off the mark so how many are here illegally or failed to speak up for whatever reason).
Here's an individual so hell bent on personal beliefs it would be hard to deny that this wouldn't keep bobbing up on the surface of her 'teachings'.
I'm sorry, but i'm a little confused here. The Koran has been interpreted as saying the primary reason for women to wear a veil and conceal themselves is to prevent evil and sexual advances from men thousands of years ago. What kind of thought's are these children supposed to be having seeing this individuals' face? Lewd and of a sexual nature? Thought's of rape and pilage?

Mrs Azmi also believes politician's are making a rod for their own back too.
"Muslim women who wear the veils are not aliens, and politicians need to recognise that what they say can have a very dangerous impact on the lives of the minorities they treat as outcasts."
And minorities playing the race card over an issue that has no place in our society isn't? Would you open the door if i came knocking with a balaclava on?

She continues...
"I will continue to uphold my religious beliefs and urge Muslims to engage in dialogue with the wider community, despite the attacks that are being made upon them."
Not a bad idea providing this statement is meant with good intentions and you can understand them. Or even want to. Not sure what she means by the attacks made upon them, but biting the hand that feeds comes to mind.

Mrs Azmi lost her claim of religious discrimination at a tribunal. Her claims of religious discrimination and harassment on religious grounds were overuled, but Kirklees Council in Dewsbury, West Yorks, was ordered to pay her £1,100 for victimising her. And she wants more! She intends to appeal against the decision to dismiss her religious discrimination claims. I'd like to know her thoughts on Israel and how muslims dismiss that. So where is the compensation Nadia Eweida, 55, (who has been suspended from British Airways for wearing a cross) should now be reiceiving?

She goes on to say
"fearful of the consequences for Muslim women in this country who want to work".
I think she can leave the concerns and fears for the taxpayers to once again pick up the tab.

R

The limits of liberty: We're all suspects now

Identity cards. Number-plate surveillance. CCTV. Control orders. The list of ways in which the Government has sought to manipulate and define the limits of our liberty grows ever longer. Ten years ago, the novelist and polemicist Henry Porter would have felt silly speaking out about human rights in Britain. But that was before the most fundamental assault on personal freedom ever undertaken. Now, he argues, it's time we woke up to reality

On new year's day 1990, three days after becoming president of Czechoslovakia, Vaclav Havel looked his people in the eye and spoke to them as no one had done before. It is difficult to read his words without feeling the vibration of history of both the liberation and the horrors of the regime that had just expired, leaving the Czech people blinking in the cold sunlight of that extraordinary winter.

This is what he said. "The previous regime, armed with its arrogance and intolerant ideology, reduced man to a force of production. It reduced gifted and autonomous people to nuts and bolts of some monstrously huge, noisy, stinking machine whose real meaning was not clear to anyone. It could do no more but slowly and inexorably wear itself out, and all the nuts and bolts too."

That perfectly defines the true tyranny, where the state takes all liberty and bends each individual will to its own purpose. And here is the interesting thing that Havel put his finger on: no matter how brutal or ruthless the regime, the act of depriving people of their freedom starts the stopwatch on that regime's inevitable demise. What he was saying was that in modern times a state can only thrive in the fullest sense when individuals are accorded maximum freedom.

I agree. Individual liberty is not just the precondition for civilisation, not just morally right, not just the only way people can reach their full potential, live responsibly and have fun; it is also a necessity for the health of government. Ten years ago I would have felt silly speaking about liberty and rights in Britain with the very real concern that I have today. But I am worried. And it's not just me. Last month Le Monde asked "Is Democracy Dying in the West?". In the spring of this year Lord Steyn, the distinguished former law lord, made a speech despairing at this Government's neglect for the Rule of Law, which was followed by Baroness (Helena) Kennedy's alarm call in the James Cameron Lecture.

The inescapable fact is that we have a Prime Minister who repeatedly makes the point that civil liberties arguments are not so much wrong as made for another age [my italics]. We have a Government that has ignored the Rule of Law, reduced rights and has steadily moved to increase the centralised power of the state at the expense of the individual.

So I don't feel quite as silly or as alarmist as I might.

The relationship between the state and individual is really at the heart of any discussion about democracy and rights. In Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union it was the state's mission not just to prevent people from expressing themselves, from moving about freely and unobserved, from pursuing their chosen careers and acting upon their religious and political convictions, but to stop them from thinking freely. It needed to occupy people's thoughts - to take up a kind of permanent residency in the mind of the average citizen. And as the many psychological studies published in the Nineties make clear, this led to psychic disrepair on a massive scale - paranoia, clinical depression, chronic internalised anger and learned helplessness.

We fell morally ill, Havel said in that speech, because we became used to saying something different from what we thought. We learned not to believe in anything, to ignore one another, to care only about ourselves. Concepts such as love, friendship, compassion, humility or forgiveness lost their depth and dimensions, and for many of us represented only psychological peculiarities.

Why am I harping on about communism? It died and was buried 17 years ago, at least in Europe and Russia. We're into another century. We've got Google and speed-dating and globalisation and melting ice caps and reality TV and al-Qa'ida and al-Jazeera and Al Gore. We've moved on.

As a character in Alan Bennett's The History Boys says, there is no period more remote in history than the recent past. Indeed, but we need to remember that recent past a little more than we do. For one thing, our knowledge of what existed on the other side of the Iron Curtain meant we valued and looked after our own freedoms much more than we do today.



It is perhaps the absence of an obvious confrontation between freedom and tyranny that allows Tony Blair to say that civil liberties arguments are made for another age. I profoundly disagree with this. It is dangerous arrogance to say that the past has nothing to teach us and that all the problems we face now are unique to our time.



During his speech to the Labour Party conference, Tony Blair said: "I don't want to live in a police state, or a Big Brother society or put any of our essential freedoms in jeopardy. But because our idea of liberty is not keeping pace with change in reality, those freedoms are in jeopardy."



What in heaven's name did he mean by that? Liberty is liberty. You can't update it. You can't divide it. You are either free, or you're not. A society is either just, or it isn't. People have rights or they don't. The rule of law is upheld, or it isn't.

But Blair believes there is nothing that can't be modernised, updated, pared down or streamlined to keep pace with change. And liberty is no exception to the modernising fury which serves as New Labour's only ideological foundation. What the Prime Minister is saying in this cute little Orwellian paradox is that in the particular circumstances of the war on terror and the rash of crime and anti-social behaviour, we must give up freedom to be free.

What an odd idea! Who is to decide which freedoms are essential and which can be sacrificed to make us secure? Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, Lord Falconer or the former Stalinist and now Home Secretary John Reid?

"Those who would give up essential liberty," observed Benjamin Franklin, "to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither freedom or safety." That's exactly right because you can't barter one for the other even though that has been the tempting deal on offer from the British and American governments since 9/11. The truth of the matter is that relinquishing our rights in exchange for illusory security harms each one of us, and our children and grandchildren. Because once gone, these rights hardly ever return.

But let's just return to the first part of that statement by Tony Blair - the bit about him not wanting to live in a police state, or a Big Brother society. Don't get me wrong, we do not live in either a police state or a Big Brother society - yet. But there is no Englishman alive or dead who has done more to bring them about.

The trouble is that it's happening so very quietly, so very discreetly that few really see it. You have to concentrate very hard to understand what's going on and put the whole picture together because so much has been buried in obscure corners of legislation.

We used to believe in innocence until guilt was proved by a court. Not any longer. That distinction disappeared when the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act came into force and police started taking innocent people's DNA and fingerprints and treating them as a convicted criminals.

We used to believe in Habeas Corpus. Not any longer. Under terrorism laws, suspects may be held for 28 days without being charged. Now the Home Secretary wants to make that 90 days, and Gordon Brown seems to share that view.

We used to believe that there should be no punishment without a court deciding the law had been broken, and that every defendant had the right to know the evidence against him. Not any longer. Control orders effectively remove both those rights and John Reid said recently that he wanted stronger powers to detain and control, and stronger powers to deport, which would clearly require the UK to derogate from the European Convention on Human Rights.

We used to believe that an Englishman's home was his castle. Not any longer. A pincer movement by the Courts Act 2003 and the Domestic Violence, Crime and Victims Act 2004 put paid to the 400-year-old principle that entry into your home could not be forced in civil cases.

We used to believe in the right to be tried by jury. Not any longer. The Government plans to remove trial by jury in complicated fraud cases and where there is a likelihood of jury tampering. It would like to go further.

We used to believe there was a good reason not to allow hearsay evidence in court. Not any longer. The anti-social behaviour order legislation introduced hearsay evidence. The maximum penalty for breaking an Asbo can be up to five years in jail. Hearsay can send someone to jail.

We used to believe in free speech, but not any longer. People have been detained under terrorism laws for wearing anti-Blair T-shirts. Walter Wolfgang was removed from the Labour Conference for heckling Jack Straw about the Iraq war. A woman was charged under the Harassment Act for sending two e-mails to a company politely asking them not to conduct animal experiments. Her offence was to send two e-mails, for in that lies the repeated action that is now illegal. A man named Stephen Jago was arrested for displaying a placard quoting Orwell near Downing Street. It read: "In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act." And a mime artist named Neil Goodwin appeared in court recently charged under the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act for what? Well, doing an impersonation of Charlie Chaplin outside Parliament. His hearing was a grim comedy. Mr Goodwin's statement to the court concluded: "In truth, one of the first things to go under a dictatorship is a good sense of humour."

We used to believe that our private communications were sacrosanct. Not any longer. The Regulatory Investigatory Powers Act 2000 and its subsequent amendments provide such wide terms for the legitimate tapping of phones, the interception of e-mails and monitoring of internet connections that they amount to general warrants, last used in the 18th century under George III.

I could go on because there is much more, but I worry about boring you and I know I am beginning to seem obsessed. There will be many reasonable people among you who will argue that the fight against terrorism or some other compelling problem makes the removal of a fragment of liberty the best option available to us. A little bit here, a little bit there doesn't really matter, particularly when it involves somebody else's rights. Without thinking very deeply, we say to ourselves "if you've done nothing wrong you've got nothing to fear from these new laws". Not true. There is something to fear - because someone else's liberty is also your liberty. When it's removed from them, it's taken from you even though you may not be able to conceive of the circumstances when you might need it. A system of rights must apply to bank managers, illegal immigrant cockle pickers and every type of defendant otherwise it doesn't count.

Cumulatively, these small, barely noticed reductions in our rights add up to the greatest attack on liberty in the last hundred years. No wonder the Prime Minister dismisses traditional civil liberties arguments as being made for another age. With his record he can do nothing else.

In an e-mail exchange between him and me in the spring, he suggested a kind of super Asbo for major criminals. This is what the unmediated Blair sounds like. "I would go further. I would widen the powers of police to seize cash of suspected [my italics] drug dealers, the cars they drive round in and require them to prove that they came by them lawfully. I would impose restrictions on those suspected of being involved in organised crime. In fact I would harry, hassle and hound them until they give up or leave the country."

I'm sure that echoes many people's desire just to be rid of these awful people. But think about it for a moment: Tony Blair is a lawyer, yet nowhere is there any mention of due process or the courts. Apparently it will be enough for the authorities merely to suspect someone of wrongdoing for them to act. And the police won't be troubled by the tiresome business of courts, defence lawyers or defendants' rights. I wonder what Vaclav Havel would think of such a suggestion. Certainly, he would be all too familiar with the system of arbitrary arrest and state persecution that Blair seems to be suggesting.

Blair dresses up his views in a vocabulary of modernisation and inclusivity. Yet when he talks about rebalancing the criminal justice system in favour of the victim, it takes just a few moments to see that this will be achieved by doing away with the priority in our legal system of protecting the accused from miscarriages of justice. He simply wants to reduce defendants' rights in order to satisfy public demand for more prosecutions.

It is now plain that he intends nothing less than to open the ancient charters of British rights in order to tip acid into them.

The way cabinet ministers think of themselves today and what they do are at odds. They think of themselves as reasonable, tolerant, humane and liberal people, but their actions tell an altogether different story. This brings me to the Big Brother state that Tony Blair says he doesn't want to live in, but which has nevertheless rapidly come into being during his premiership.

Most people have very little understanding of what the ID card scheme will actually mean for them. They think that it just involves a little plastic identifier. But it is much more than that. Every adult will be required to provide 49 pieces of information about themselves which will include biometric measurements - probably an iris scan and fingerprinting. If you refuse to submit to what is called, without irony, enrolment, you will face repeated fines of up £2,500. The Government is deadly serious about this thing because of a simple truth. They want to know pretty much everything there is to know about you.

Personally, I find the idea of having a card repugnant and I cannot believe it will be long before policemen are stopping us on the street and asking for our papers. But this is by no means the most sinister aspect. Every time your card is swiped when you identify yourself, the National Identity Register will silently make a record of the time and date, your location and the purpose of the ID check. Gradually, a unique picture of your life will be built, to which nearly half-a-million civil servants are apparently going to have access.

But of course you will never be told who is looking at your file, or why. And nor will you be able to find out.

MPs must take responsibility for passing this invasive law but they cannot be blamed for the other half of the Big Brother society that is upon us. I refer to the total surveillance of our roads in a linked-up system of Automatic Number Plate Recognition cameras. These cameras cover every motorway, major dual carriageway, town and city centre and will feed information from billions of journeys into one computer, where the data will remain for two years.

The decision to put British motorists under blanket, round- the-clock surveillance was never taken by Parliament. It just happened. As the cost of processing enormous quantities of data came down, the police and Home Office just simply decided to go ahead. Traffic cameras became surveillance cameras. This, I gather, is known as function creep, and, as always, half the pressure comes from technological innovation.

We are about to become the most observed population in the world outside North Korea, and absolutely no work has been done on how this will affect each one of us and what it will do to our society and political institutions.

I worry that we are not alert to the possibilities of social control. No matter how discreet this surveillance, it increases the spectral presence of the state in the everyday consciousness of each individual. I grant that it is a slow process and that it is nothing like the leaden omnipresence of the Stasi in the GDR. But I think we're heading for a place from which we will not be able to return: the surveillance society where the state will crowd in on the individual human experience and threaten the unguarded freedoms of privacy, solitude, seclusion and anonymity. We may continue to attest to the feeling of freedom but in reality we will suffer more and more restrictions. Inexorably we are becoming subjects not citizens, units on a database that may be observed and classified by a Government which is taking control in areas where it has never dared in democratic times to trespass before.

Where this will all lead I cannot say, but I do know that it is neither good for us nor for the state. Humans work best when they have the maximum freedom, and so does government. As our Government gains more power in relation to us, confusing itself on the way with the entity and interests of the state, it will become less responsive to our needs and opinions, less transparent and less accountable.

Havel said of the Communist tyranny in that glorious but sombre new year's day speech: "None of us is just its victim. We are its co-creators." That is true of any society. And I believe we all need now to acknowledge what has happened to British rights and do something about it.

Firstly, there needs to be some kind of formal audit made of the rights which have been already compromised. An exact account. Linked to this should be a commission looking into the effects of mass surveillance. Second, we need a constitution which enshrines a bill of rights and places our rights beyond the reach of an ambitious Executive and Parliament. Third, we should be writing to our constituency MPs or clogging up their surgeries - asking what they are doing about the attack on liberty. And fourth, all schoolchildren should be taught about British rights and freedoms, what they mean and how they were won. History, as the National Trust is fond of saying, matters. Rights and liberties are as much a part of our heritage as St Paul's Cathedral and Shakespeare's plays.

This may all sound rather prescriptive but I have become certain over the last two years that we need to do something to save us from our Government and the Government from itself.

This was taken from the Summerfield Lecture given at the Everyman Theatre, Cheltenham, on 12 October as part of the annual literary festival. Research by Emily Butselaar

Source from the Independant

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

'Video Bloggers' under threat from EU broadcast rules

Well the un-elected peeps down in Brussels have mustered up another obtrusive act to justify their over inflated wages...

THE Government is seeking to prevent an EU directive that could
extend broadcasting regulations to the internet, hitting popular
video-sharing websites such as YouTube.

The European Commission proposal would require websites and mobile
phone services that feature video images to conform to standards
laid down in Brussels.

Ministers fear that the directive would hit not only successful
sites such as YouTube but also amateur “video bloggers” who post
material on their own sites. Personal websites would have to be
licensed as a “television-like service”.

Viviane Reding, the Media Commissioner, argues that the purpose
is simply to set minimum standards on areas such as advertising,
hate speech and the protection of children.

But Shaun Woodward, the Broadcasting Minister, described the draft
proposal as catastrophic. He said: “Supposing you set up a website
for your amateur rugby club, uploaded some images and added a link
advertising your local sports shop. You would then be a supplier
of moving images and need to be licensed and comply with the
regulations.”

The draft rules, known as the Television Without Frontiers
directive, extend the definition of broadcasting to cover services
such as video-on-demand or mobile phone clips.

Ministers argue that while television programmes should be subject
to minimum standards, the content of websites should not be subject
to EU regulation.

Mr Woodward is proposing a compromise that requires EU states to
agree a new definition of what constitutes “television”. He said:
“It’s common sense. If it looks like a TV programme and sounds like
one then it probably is. A programme transmitted by a broadcaster
over the net could be covered by extending existing legislation.
But video clips uploaded by someone is not television. YouTube and
MySpace should not be regulated.”

British criminal law already covers material that might incite hate
or cause harm to children, Mr Woodward added. The Government’s
definition of online broadcasting covers feature films, sports events,
situation comedy, documentary, children’s programmes and original
drama. It excludes personal websites and sites where people upload
and exchange video images.

“The real risk is we drive out the next MySpace because of the cost
of complying with unnecessary regulations,” Mr Woodward said. “These
businesses can easily operate outside the EU.”

Ofcom, the media regulator, is also opposing the proposed directive,
which it believes could discourage new multimedia business in Europe.

Mr Woodward is seeking EU member state support for the British
compromise. So far only Slovakia has pledged support, but Mr Woodward
believes that other nations will come onboard before a key EU Council
meeting on November 13.

The influence of “user-generated” websites was demonstrated last week
when Google bought YouTube for $1.65 billion (£883 million). Launched
in February 2005, it has grown into one of the most popular websites.
YouTube has 100 million videos viewed every day.

The House of Lords European Union Committee began an inquiry yesterday
into the directive, which could also introduce paid-for product
placement on UK television for the first time.

Lord Woolmer, the committee chairman, said: “The proposals bring
within the regulatory framework areas of the media previously
untouched by broadcasting legislation.

“Britain is at the cutting edge of new media and alternative
broadcasters in Europe, and we are keen to ensure that the proposals
will not damage this growing industry in seeking to incorporate them
into EU regulation.”

Article here TimesOnline

US Government Target American Bloggers As Enemy Propagandists

I have kept this article as is because it's wording and structure speak volumes and it wouldn't do it any credit to change the text.

Government Targets American Bloggers As Enemy Propagandists Military, Homeland Security, Bush White House strategy sharpen knives against anyone critical of the "war on terror"

Recent scientific polls that show around 84% don't believe the
government's explanation behind 9/11 and others confirming the
fact that support for the war in Iraq is at an all time low
have led the Bush administration to sharpen their knives
against the new breed of perceived "enemy propagandists,"
bloggers, journalists and online activists who dissent against
the "war on terror."

As Raw Story reports, CENTCOM announced earlier this year
that a team of employees would be "[engaging] bloggers who
are posting inaccurate or untrue information, as well as
bloggers who are posting incomplete information."

So when you're wasting your time arguing the finer points
of the collapse of Building 7 or the quagmire in Iraq with
someone who seems unable to grasp basic principles, your foe
could well be sat behind a plush U.S. government desk in a
uniform.

CENTCOM is infiltrating blogs and message boards to ensure
people, "have the opportunity to read positive stories,"presumably
about how Iraq is a wonderful liberated democracy and the war on
terror really is about protecting Americans.

The CENTCOM website features a useful section, "What Extremists
Are Saying," which provides a full catalogue and showcases the
diatribes of US government agents Abu Mus’ab al-Zarqawi,
Ayman al-Zawahiri and their sympathizers - rhetoric that CENTCOM
hopes surfers will seek out in order for them to grasp a true
understanding for the necessity of bombing the shit out of another
broken backed defenseless country in the name of "freedom."

The jaw-dropping hypocrisy of a regime and its military attack
arm that has engaged in the most gargantuan of deceit and
propaganda purges
against the American people then pointing
the finger at inquisitive bloggers for "aiding the enemy," is
alarming to behold.



President George W. Bush looks up as he signs the Military
Commissions Act
of 2006 in the East Room of the White House
in Washington. The bill effectively nullifies nine of the first
ten amendments to the U.S. constitution and ends the
"great experiment" known as The United States of America.

__________________________________________

The White House has made it perfectly clear that it will target
American citizens for propagating information harmful to the
interests of the U.S. government and classify them as enemy
combatants. This is codified in sub-section 27 of section 950v.
of the Military Commissions Act of 2006.

Bush's own strategy document for "winning the war on terror"
identifies "conspiracy theorists," meaning anyone who exposes
government corruption and lies about major domestic and world
events, as "terrorists recruiters," and vows to eliminate their
influence in society.

In a speech given Monday, Homeland Security director Michael
Chertoff
identified the web as a "terror training camp," through
which "disaffected people living in the United States" are
developing "radical ideologies and potentially violent skills."

Chertoff has pledged to dispatch Homeland Security agents to
local police departments in order to aid in the apprehension
of domestic terrorists who use the Internet as a political tool.

How long before influential online writers, bloggers and
journalists like Greg Palast, who was charged with aiding
the terrorists when filming "critical U.S. infrastructure,"
are arbitrarily gunned down on the street like in Russia or
the newly "free" Iraq?

The Bush administration's media mouthpieces have also been
mobilized to stereotype any kind of critical thinking as "giving
aid and comfort to the enemy," a recent case in point being
Fox News' Bill O'Reilly calling for the FBI to investigate
the 9/11 Scholars organization for possible ties to terrorist
organizations.

Will we witness a "night of the long knives" to silence any
and all dissent as the official dictatorship is announced or
does the chilling effect of simply threatening to treat bloggers
and journalists as terrorists go far enough to intimidate enough
people to keep their mouths shut?

A combination of this chilling effect and moves to license
websites, impose "hate speech" restrictions and kill off the
old internet in favor of a government regulated, China-style
"Internet 2"
are the tools in the arsenal of the neo-fascists
who wish to continue their domestic and imperial bloodletting
under the mandated consensus of total obedience.

Thanks to Paul Joseph Watson/Prison Planet.com for this article
Link to page on www.prisonplanet.com