Thursday 4 September 2008

Guantanamo Bay 2008

The U.S. detention camps at Guantanamo Bay have been operating now since 2002.
There are still over 250 people being held in these camps without formal arrest or charge.

The Rudd Government may ignore the moral and human rights implications of supporting the government which operates these camps and our courts may remain silent because the issue has not been before them.

However, the British High Court of Justice (Queens Bench Division) spoke out in a limited fashion in an open judgment on 21 August 2008, about certain circumstances making an arguable case that rendition, unlawful detention, cruel and degrading treatment had occurred to a former British resident currently held at Guantanamo.
Along with attempts to deny the ability to conduct a fully informed defence.

Judgment summary here.
Full judgment here.
The Nature Notes cartoon came from The Times online

Grafton Jacaranda Festival, 24 October to 2 November 2008

Time to mark your calendar for Grafton's Jacaranda Festival which has been held each year since 1935.

Markets, street float parade, pipe bands, dancing, fireworks, dragon boat racing, competitons, kids fun, exhibition gardens and an evening ball - just some of the things to enjoy.

Details here.
Photos from Hub Pages

A little Ginger Meggs grafitti

Opened up the local rag to what's become the most important page since Chapman turned it into an ersatz Tele and there lurked the background grafitti within Ginger Meggs:

Why experiment on animals when there's so many politicians around?

Ah Ginge, when all else fails you remind me that everything has its funny side.

Wednesday 3 September 2008

So you think you can run a council.....(5)

ABC TV Media Watch alerted us all to an amusing scenario last night.

It seems that National Party stalwart, Neil Marks, may have to face the possibility of an obviously unplanned loss of income if he is elected as a Lismore City councillor and mayor.

Neil Marks presents the breakfast show on Radio 2LM which is owned by Richmond River Broadcasters.

On this show he informed all and sundry of his registration as a candidate in the forthcoming local government elections and granted himself a bit of free air time to broadly outline his ticket.

Neil Marks: National Party is nothing to do with this. The people I am involved with in the, in the ticket have nothing to do with the National Party whatsoever. We are people who are just concerned, who want to see what we call sensible growth for the area... It will be pretty exciting I think and you know, I'll give it my best shot. — 2LM Breakfast, 13th August, 2008

Mr. Marks then came a cropper.

...should Mr Marks be elected to Council his future tenure at the station will be reviewed by 2LM management.— Email statement from Bill Caralis (Chairman, Richard River Broadcasters) to Media Watch, 1st September, 2008

Statement from Richmond River Broadcasters
here.

One may remember that Neil Marks stood for
National Party preselection in the seat of Page prior to last year's federal election campaign.

Here is Mr. Marks with his Nationals hat barely disguised when
interviewing Joe Hockey during that campaign.
Uncle Joe liked it so much he posted it on his own website.

U.S. intelligence wants our cute cat pictures!

A thought from My Heart's in Accra which started this ramble:

Web 1.0 was invented to allow physicists to share research papers.
Web 2.0 was created to allow people to share pictures of cute cats.



The Cute Cat Theory with notes on political activism and censorship found here.

Meanwhile according to CNet the U.S. intelligence community is not happy with the direction the Internet is taking.

Invented by American computer scientists during the 1970s, the Internet has been embraced around the globe. During the network's first three decades, most Internet traffic flowed through the United States. In many cases, data sent between two locations within a given country also passed through the United States.
Engineers who help run the Internet said that it would have been impossible for the United States to maintain its hegemony over the long run because of the very nature of the Internet; it has no central point of control.
And now, the balance of power is shifting. Data is increasingly flowing around the United States, which may have intelligence--and conceivably military--consequences.

American intelligence officials have warned about this shift. "Because of the nature of global telecommunications, we are playing with a tremendous home-field advantage, and we need to exploit that edge," Michael V. Hayden, the director of the Central Intelligence Agency, testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee in 2006. "We also need to protect that edge, and we need to protect those who provide it to us."
Indeed, Internet industry executives and government officials have acknowledged that Internet traffic passing through the switching equipment of companies based in the United States has proved a distinct advantage for American intelligence agencies. In December 2005, The New York Times reported that the National Security Agency had established a program with the cooperation of American telecommunications firms that included the interception of foreign Internet communications.

It seems that the mighty American security agencies would be bereft if they couldn't keep peeking at all those cute animal pictures (which are such an obvious front for urban terrorists and Taliban supporters) as they are being published on the Net.

Which begs the question of how subversive does the CIA or Homeland Security find the pic below?

Apologies to the dog's owner for making fun of such a sweet pic found at MSNBC News .

Smiling through the greenhouse gas.......


Someone at The Daily Telegraph obviously has a sense of humour.


Tim Blair (a renown climate change sceptic and purveyor of dubious 'coldening' facts) has a blog at this News Limited paper.


Yesterday his webpage featured the above advertisement.
* Click on graphic if Flashplayer freezes