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  • @kassem
    Kassem @kassem CC BY-NC-SA 5/07/2025
    5
    @biggrizzly
    @gonzo
    @sombre
    @arno
    @touti
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    Owen Jones sur X : “This 83-year-old priest has just been arrested for holding a sign which read: “I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action.” According to Starmer’s new law, this puts her in the same category as an ISIS or Al-Qaeda terrorist, with a prison sentence of up to 14 years.” / X
    ▻https://x.com/owenjonesjourno/status/1941516339728076834

    Cette pasteure de 83 ans vient d’être arrêtée pour avoir brandi une pancarte sur laquelle on pouvait lire :

    « Je m’oppose au génocide. Je soutiens Palestine Action. »

    Selon la nouvelle loi de Starmer, cela la place dans la même catégorie qu’un terroriste de l’EI ou d’Al-Qaïda, avec une peine de prison pouvant aller jusqu’à 14 ans.

    https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GvGm0W0XUAAkBbS?format=jpg&name=large#.jpg

    Kassem @kassem CC BY-NC-SA
    • @touti
      vide @touti 6/07/2025

      #england

      vide @touti
    • @kassem
      Kassem @kassem CC BY-NC-SA 6/07/2025

      James Jackson sur X : "A German Jew whose family were killed at Auschwitz was arrested and accused…
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/1124958

      #allemagne

      Kassem @kassem CC BY-NC-SA
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  • @oanth_rss
    oAnth_RSS @oanth_rss via RSS CC BY 19/04/2021

    Ausgehöhlte Rechtsstaatlichkeit: Der Fall Julian Assange | DW | 19....
    ▻https://diasp.eu/p/12774466

    Ausgehöhlte Rechtsstaatlichkeit: Der Fall Julian Assange | DW | 19.04.2021

    Justizskandal, Folter, politische Verfolgung - UN-Folterexperte Nils Melzer erhebt in seinem neuen Buch schwere Vorwürfe – untermauert mit den Ergebnissen einer zweijährigen Untersuchung. Ausgehöhlte Rechtsstaatlichkeit: Der Fall Julian Assange | DW | 19.04.2021 #Assange #Pressefreiheit #Wikileaks #NilsMelzer #England #Ecuador #USA #Schweden #Auslieferung

    oAnth_RSS @oanth_rss via RSS CC BY
    • @02myseenthis01
      oAnth @02myseenthis01 CC BY 30/04/2021

      propre lien :

      ▻https://www.dw.com/de/ausgehöhlte-rechtsstaatlichkeit-der-fall-julian-assange/a-57246180

      oAnth @02myseenthis01 CC BY
    • @02myseenthis01
      oAnth @02myseenthis01 CC BY 30/04/2021

      ÖJC-Podcast Folge 188: Buchpräsentation Prof. Nils Melzer
      •Premiere am 20.04.2021, 2h13min

      Österreichischer Journalist*innen Club

      ▻https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=__lL6JhJHjA

      Der Fall Julian Assange - Geschichte einer Verfolgung mit Prof. Nils Melzer Prof. Fred Turnheim Moderator Prof. Nils Melzer UNO-Sonderberichterstatter für Folter

      Ing. Barbara Meister MA ÖJC-Generalsekretärin „Ein Akt der Verzweiflung“

      UT: Internationale Buchpräsentation des UN-Sonderbeauftragten für Prof. Folter Nils Melzer über den „Fall Julian Assange“ – Weckruf für mehr Transparenz und Verantwortlichkeit – Kritik an Medien, die wegschauen Wien, 20.04.2021 –

      Als „Stresstest für die westlichen Demokratien“ bezeichnete der Schweizer Völkerrechtsexperte Prof. Nils Melzer, seit 2016 Sonderberichterstatter der Vereinten Nationen für Folter, die Art und Weise, wie durchaus honorige Staaten und deren Justiz mit dem WikiLeaks-Gründer Julian Assange umspringen. Er sei von den Staaten der Welt beauftragt worden, weltweit die Einhaltung des Folterverbots zu überwachen und gegebenenfalls gegen Foltermaßnahmen vorzugehen, betonte Melzer bei der Online-Präsentation seines jüngsten Buches, die vom Österreichischen Journalist*innen Club (ÖJC) am Montagabend veranstaltet wurde, und an der von Barbara Meister und Fred Turnheim moderierten Veranstaltung bis zu 80 Interessenten u. a. aus Österreich, Deutschland, Großbritannien, Skandinavien, den USA und Südamerika via Zoom und mehr als 900 Personen via Livestream auf Facebook teilnahmen. Er habe dieses Buch „Der Fall Julian Assange – Geschichte einer Verfolgung“ geschrieben, betonte Melzer, weil er im Bemühen um eine Freilassung Assanges immer wieder gegen Wände gelaufen sei. Acht Mal habe er für Assange diplomatisch interveniert und seine Bedenken über die Behandlung des in England im Hochsicherheitsgefängnis seit zwei Jahren Festgehaltenen vorgebracht, die er als „psychische Folter“ bezeichnet. Doch sämtliche Staaten hätten sich geweigert, mit ihm – „ich arbeite ja im Auftrag der Staaten!“ – zu kooperieren, im Gegenteil: mit diplomatischen Plattitüden sei er abgefertigt worden und wenn er insistiert hätte, hätten die jeweiligen Regierungen den Kontakt mit ihm ganz abgebrochen. Aber er werde nicht aufgeben, betonte Melzer. Die Systeme seien ja grundsätzlich in Ordnung, nur fehle leider in den meisten Fällen die Transparenz und der Mut, Verantwortung zu übernehmen. Und Melzer auf die Frage eines Zuhörers: „Ja, das Buch ist ein Akt der Verzweiflung, ein Hilferuf, ein Weckruf.“ Besonders gefährdet seien Menschen, die wie Assange die Wahrheit über schlimmste Kriegsverbrechen öffentlich machten, erklärte Melzer, denn sie gerieten in die Spionage- und Geheimhaltungsfalle. Das gehe dann so weit, dass der Beschuldigte nicht einmal die Möglichkeit einer Verteidigung bekomme. Im Falle Assange würde das so aussehen: Auslieferung aus Großbritannien an die USA, Geheimprozess vor einem speziellen Spionagegericht in Alexandria im Bundesstaat Virginia, Schuldspruch, Urteil bis zu 175 Jahre Gefängnis, die in einem Geheimgefängnis in Einzelhaft abzusitzen wären. Weil Staatsräson in Fällen wie diesem wichtiger sei als die Menschenrechte. Kritik übte der UN-Sonderberichterstatter auch an den Medien, die, wie er sagte, sehr oft wegschauen, „weshalb es dann auch kein Wunder ist, wenn Organisationen wie WikiLeaks sich solcher Fälle annehmen“, erklärte Melzer abschließend.

      oAnth @02myseenthis01 CC BY
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  • @oanth_rss
    oAnth_RSS @oanth_rss CC BY 5/06/2019

    More Good News for Assange : Swedish Court Blocks Extradition ; US Sa...
    ▻https://diasp.eu/p/9155201

    More Good News for Assange: Swedish Court Blocks Extradition; US Says No Vault 7 Indictment.... Imprisoned WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange scored two legal victories on Monday when a Swedish court refused prosecutors’ request to have Assange arrested and extradited from Britain to Sweden, while the U.S. Justice Dept. said it would not prosecute Assange for the publication of the CIA Vault 7 files, according to a report in Politico. The Uppsala District Court rejected a request for a European Arrest Warrant for Assange based on a reopened 2010 investigation into sexual assault allegations that has been twice dropped before. Without the warrant Assange cannot be extradited to Sweden to be questioned. #Assange #SWEDEN #COURT #EXTRADITION #LEGAL #USA #ENGLAND #CIA #VAULT_7 (...)

    • #Central Intelligence Agency
    • #Julian Assange
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  • @peweck
    Pierre-Emmanuel Weck @peweck CC BY 27/12/2018
    2
    @recriweb
    @vanderling
    2

    • Diane Bush — More Brits, England in the 1970s
    ▻https://www.caferoyalbooks.com/shop/diane-bush-more-brits-england-in-the-1970s

    https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5537e703e4b011692d40b11f/591cb9a08419c2c2550010c2/5bec6f444d7a9ce3244eaced/1542809671897/Diane_Bush_More_Brits_England_in_the_1970s_Arhive4_2.jpeg?format=2500w https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5537e703e4b011692d40b11f/591cb9a08419c2c2550010c2/5bec6f728a922dc591a2b4c9/1542809671912/Diane_Bush_More_Brits_England_in_the_1970s_Arhive4_8.jpeg?format=2500w https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5537e703e4b011692d40b11f/591cb9a08419c2c2550010c2/5bec6ff28a922dc591a2bd31/1542809671926/Diane_Bush_More_Brits_England_in_the_1970s_Arhive4_14.jpeg?format=2500w

    #photographie #caferoyalbooks #england

    Pierre-Emmanuel Weck @peweck CC BY
    • @philippe_de_jonckheere
      Philippe De Jonckheere @philippe_de_jonckheere CC BY 27/12/2018
      @peweck

      @peweck En bon dyslexique j’ai commencé par lire Diane Arbush...

      Philippe De Jonckheere @philippe_de_jonckheere CC BY
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  • @unagi
    unagi @unagi CC BY-NC 13/06/2017
    2
    @sandburg
    @reka
    2

    Shouting Matches: understanding interruptions in the BBC election debate 2017
    ▻http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/shouting-matches-understanding-interruptions-in-the-bbc-2017-election-d

    http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/files/2017/06/Figure-1-1-768x723.jpg

    “s there anything we can learn from the BBC’s election debate – other than what was actually said (and other than who did not take part)? Jack Bailey analyses the interruptions during the debate, and explains what they could mean for each party’s broader strategy.

    Theresa May was notable in her absence at BBC’s election debate. Explaining why she would not take part, she said that “politicians squabbling among themselves” added nothing to the campaign. Whatever one thinks of the Prime Minister’s decision, her description of the debates’ dynamics seems fair. Debuting in 2010, they are now a staple of UK general elections. Yet, for better or worse, their format has shifted to accommodate smaller parties and cautious leaders. With intense competition for attention, this has left debates instead resembling shouting matches.

    Even so, we are none-the-wiser on how these shouting matches play out. A sucker for punishment, I re-watched the debate and recorded each interruption. I then plotted this data as six networks, one for each topic.”

    unagi @unagi CC BY-NC
    • @sandburg
      Sandburg @sandburg CC BY-SA 13/06/2017

      #manipulation #graph #elections #england #uk

      Sandburg @sandburg CC BY-SA
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  • @stephane
    Stéphane Bortzmeyer @stephane CC BY-SA 10/07/2016
    1
    @reka
    1

    Useful lesson if you are confused about UK, GB and England.

    ▻https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=daB7np-RtOM

    #geography #UnitedKingdom #GreatBritain #England #Brexit #Commonwealth

    Stéphane Bortzmeyer @stephane CC BY-SA
    • @reka
      Phil Reka docs & archives @reka CC BY-NC-SA 10/07/2016

      #marrant

      Phil Reka docs & archives @reka CC BY-NC-SA
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  • @cela
    celine.a @cela 16/04/2016
    1
    @02myseenthis01
    1

    Photography Cambridge School of Art : Eaton Portrait Prize 2016 Winners announced
    ▻http://photographycsa.blogspot.co.uk/2016/04/eaton-portrait-prize-2016-winners.html

    Eaton #Portrait Prize 2016 Winners announced 1st Place
    ‘Sterrin’ - Anna Kressler

    https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-YGB8lM6F2j0/Vv0LmwpSugI/AAAAAAAAA_k/OGUszfW1tFYqNuH5wfKlvkKd3vRcd5CTQCKgB/s1600/Kressler_Anna.jpg

    A girl is smiling in a refugee #camp in the #Dunkirk suburb of Grand-Synthe in France. According to the mayor Damien Lent ‘in late July [2015], there were sixty [refugees] in Grande-Synthe, then 180 in mid-August. And 2,400-2,500 today [Jan | Feb 2016]", including more than 200 #children like Sterrin, who live in the camp in squalid conditions. I don’t know what happened to Sterrin but I hope that despite this uncertain future she and her family will one day be able to reach their desired destination, #England.

    #photography #refugees

    • #Eaton
    celine.a @cela
    • @odilon
      odilon @odilon CC BY-NC-ND 16/04/2016
      @cdb_77 @albertocampiphoto

      @cdb_77 @albertocampiphoto

      odilon @odilon CC BY-NC-ND
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  • @aktivulo1
    aktivulo @aktivulo1 16/01/2016

    Is 2016 The Year Grime Becomes An Anarchist Genre?

    ▻http://uk.complex.com/music/2016/01/grime-the-anarchist-genre

    Grime is getting political. Whilst always representing a scene that sticks two fingers up at the establishment and seeks to represent a distinct sub-culture against the norm, is 2016 the year grime becomes the new flag-bearer for a standout anarchist genre?

    #music #england #rap #uk anarchist #hiphop

    aktivulo @aktivulo1
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  • @cela
    celine.a @cela 12/01/2016

    Hope’s Show: French Officials Come To The ’Jungle’ 11/01/2015 by Jungala Radio | Soundclound
    ▻https://soundcloud.com/user-633219146/hopes-show-french-officials-come-to-the-jungle-11012015

    Monday in the Jungle saw French officials come to the camp to tell us that around 1500 peoples homes would have to be moved. Hope’s programme gives an update on the situation.

    #refugees #Calais #France #England #Europe #camp #community #migration

    celine.a @cela
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  • @cela
    celine.a @cela 27/11/2015
    2
    @reka
    @cdb_77
    2

    Threads. The Calais cartoon. - Cartoon Kate (Kate Evans)
    ▻http://www.cartoonkate.co.uk/threads-the-calais-cartoon

    Threads. The #Calais cartoon.
    Seven hundred and fifty thousand people have fled for their lives to Europe this year. (At least three thousand four hundred and six people died in the #Mediterranean sea.) Of that great mass of people, a few thousand have washed up Calais, France, trying to attempt the dangerous crossing to #England. By the French and British governments, they’ve been hung out to dry.

    #réfugiés #jungle #asile #Syrie #Middle_East #cartoon #art

    • #Calais
    celine.a @cela
    • @cela
      celine.a @cela 27/11/2015

      http://www.cartoonkate.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/WEBThread02-theJungle.jpg

      celine.a @cela
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 7/12/2015

      http://www.cartoonkate.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/WEBThread01-calaisLace.jpg http://www.cartoonkate.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/WEBThread05-Tunnel.jpg

      #Calais #BD #bande-dessinée #asile #migrations #réfugiés #dessin #murs #barrières_frontalières

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
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  • @al-akhbar
    Al-Akhbar English [RSS] @al-akhbar CC BY-NC-ND 18/02/2015
    1
    @reka
    1

    How Revolutions Fail
    ▻http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/how-revolutions-fail

    http://english.al-akhbar.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/4cols/leading_images/1166324.jpg

    A group of Egyptians who call themselves as ’Anti-Coup demonstrators’ stage a demonstration demanding to release of their arrested friends, at Cairo University in Giza, #Egypt on February 18, 2015. Anadolu Agency/Belal Wagdy A group of Egyptians who call themselves as ’Anti-Coup demonstrators’ stage a demonstration demanding to release of their arrested friends, at Cairo University in Giza, Egypt on February 18, 2015. Anadolu Agency/Belal Wagdy

    The conservative right has produced some of the best scholars on the birth of revolutions, exemplified by #Alexis_de_Tocqueville and his 1856 book “The Old Regime and the Revolution”.

    Mohammed Sayyid Rasas

    read (...)

    #Opinion #Ali_Abdullah_Saleh #Articles #England #France #French_Revolution #Karl_Marx #Mohammed_Mursi #Napoleon_Bonaparte #Russia #Tunisia #Yemen

    • #Giza
    • #Egypt
    • #Cairo University
    • #Anadolu Agency
    • #Cairo University
    Al-Akhbar English [RSS] @al-akhbar CC BY-NC-ND
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  • @al-akhbar
    Al-Akhbar English [RSS] @al-akhbar CC BY-NC-ND 29/07/2014

    English #cricket player warned against pro-Palestine #wristbands
    ▻http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/english-cricket-player-warned-against-pro-palestine-wristbands

    England’s Moeen Ali has been warned by world cricket chiefs not to wear wristbands declaring his support for the people of #Gaza again during international matches. But the International Cricket Council (ICC) said Ali would face no disciplinary action on this occasion after being warned about his future conduct by match referee David Boon, the former Australia batsman. Worcestershire all-rounder Ali wore wristbands during the third Test match against India on Monday that read “Save Gaza” and “Free Palestine,” while batting during #England's first innings at the Rose Bowl in Southampton. read more

    #Israel

    • #Gaza
    • #Australia
    • #Palestinian Territories
    • #United Kingdom
    • #cricket player
    • #cricket
    Al-Akhbar English [RSS] @al-akhbar CC BY-NC-ND
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  • @02myseenthis01
    oAnth @02myseenthis01 CC BY 18/06/2014
    2
    @thibnton
    @02myseenthis01
    2

    Chris #Hedges Interviews Noam #Chomsky (1/3)

    Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Chris Hedges speaks with Professor Noam Chomsky about working-class resistance during the Industrial Revolution, propaganda, and the historical role played by intellectuals in times of war - June 17, 14

    ▻https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwRf5HHm2Mo

    – chez TRNN avec une trace écrite: ▻http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=12006

    [...]

    [I]n the early 19th century, the business world recognized, both in England and the United States, that sufficient freedom had been won so that they could no longer control people just by violence. They had to turn to new means of control. The obvious ones were control of opinions and attitudes. That’s the origins of the massive public relations industry, which is explicitly dedicated to controlling minds and attitudes.

    The first—it partly was government. The first government commission was the British Ministry of Information. This is long before Orwell—he didn’t have to invent it. So the Ministry of Information had as its goal to control the minds of the people of the world, but particularly the minds of American intellectuals, for a very good reason: they knew that if they can delude American intellectuals into supporting British policy, they could be very effective in imposing that on the population of the United States. The British, of course, were desperate to get the Americans into the war with a pacifist population. Woodrow Wilson won the 1916 election with the slogan “Peace without Victory”. And they had to drive a pacifist population into a population that bitterly hated all things German, wanted to tear the Germans apart. The Boston Symphony Orchestra couldn’t play Beethoven. You know. And they succeeded.

    Wilson set up a counterpart to the Ministry of Information called the Committee on Public Information. You know, again, you can guess what it was. And they’ve at least felt, probably correctly, that they had succeeded in carrying out this massive change of opinion on the part of the population and driving the pacifist population into, you know, warmongering fanatics.

    And the people on the commission learned a lesson. One of them was Edward Bernays, who went on to found—the main guru of the public relations industry. Another one was Walter Lippman, who was the leading progressive intellectual of the 20th century. And they both drew the same lessons, and said so.

    The lessons were that we have what Lippmann called a “new art” in democracy, “manufacturing consent”. That’s where Ed Herman and I took the phrase from. For Bernays it was “engineering of consent”. The conception was that the intelligent minority, who of course is us, have to make sure that we can run the affairs of public affairs, affairs of state, the economy, and so on. We’re the only ones capable of doing it, of course. And we have to be—I’m quoting—"free of the trampling and the roar of the bewildered herd", the “ignorant and meddlesome outsiders”—the general public. They have a role. Their role is to be “spectators”, not participants. And every couple of years they’re permitted to choose among one of the “responsible men”, us.

    And the John Dewey circle took the same view. Dewey changed his mind a couple of years later, to his credit, but at that time, Dewey and his circle were writing that—speaking of the First World War, that this was the first war in history that was not organized and manipulated by the military and the political figures and so on, but rather it was carefully planned by rational calculation of “the intelligent men of the community”, namely us, and we thought it through carefully and decided that this is the reasonable thing to do, for all kind of benevolent reasons.

    And they were very proud of themselves.

    There were people who disagreed. Like, Randolph Bourne disagreed. He was kicked out. He couldn’t write in the Deweyite journals. He wasn’t killed, you know, but he was just excluded.

    And if you take a look around the world, it was pretty much the same. The intellectuals on all sides were passionately dedicated to the national cause—all sides, Germans, British, everywhere.

    There were a few, a fringe of dissenters, like Bertrand Russell, who was in jail; Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg, in jail; Randolph Bourne, marginalized; Eugene Debs, in jail for daring to question the magnificence of the war. In fact, Wilson hated him with such passion that when he finally declared an amnesty, Debs was left out, you know, had to wait for Warren Harding to release him. And he was the leading labor figure in the country. He was a candidate for president, Socialist Party, and so on.

    But the lesson that came out is we believe you can and of course ought to control the public, and if we can’t do it by force, we’ll do it by manufacturing consent, by engineering of consent. Out of that comes the huge public relations industry, massive industry dedicated to this.

    Incidentally, it’s also dedicated to undermining markets, a fact that’s rarely noticed but is quite obvious. Business hates markets. They don’t want to—and you can see it very clearly. Markets, if you take an economics course, are based on rational, informed consumers making rational choices. Turn on the television set and look at the first ad you see. It’s trying to create uninformed consumers making irrational choices. That’s the whole point of the huge advertising industry. But also to try to control and manipulate thought. And it takes various forms in different institutions. The media do it one way, the academic institutions do it another way, and the educational system is a crucial part of it.

    This is not a new observation. There’s actually an interesting essay by—Orwell’s, which is not very well known because it wasn’t published. It’s the introduction to Animal Farm. In the introduction, he addresses himself to the people of England and he says, you shouldn’t feel too self-righteous reading this satire of the totalitarian enemy, because in free England, ideas can be suppressed without the use of force. And he doesn’t say much about it. He actually has two sentences. He says one reason is the press “is owned by wealthy men” who have every reason not to want certain ideas to be expressed.

    But the second reason, and the more important one in my view, is a good education, so that if you’ve gone to all the good schools, you know, Oxford, Cambridge, and so on, you have instilled into you the understanding that there are certain things it wouldn’t do to say—and I don’t think he went far enough: wouldn’t do to think. And that’s very broad among the educated classes. That’s why overwhelmingly they tend to support state power and state violence, and maybe with some qualifications, like, say, Obama is regarded as a critic of the invasion of Iraq. Why? Because he thought it was a strategic blunder. That puts him on the same moral level as some Nazi general who thought that the second front was a strategic blunder—you should knock off England first. That’s called criticism.

    [...]

    #industrialisation
    #media #histoire #Geschichte #institution
    #USA #England #Angleterre
    #Grande-Bretagne #Great_Britain #Großbritannien
    #Allemagne #Germany #Deutschland

    #contrôle #Kontrolle
    #résistance #Widerstand
    #working_class #ouvriers #Arbeiterklasse
    #éducation #Bildung
    #intellectuels

    • #Iraq
    • #United Kingdom
    • #United States
    • #manufacturing consent
    • #Chris Hedges
    • #Edward Bernays
    • #Noam Chomsky
    • #Warren Harding
    • #Woodrow Wilson
    • #professor
    • #Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist
    oAnth @02myseenthis01 CC BY
    • @02myseenthis01
      oAnth @02myseenthis01 CC BY 19/06/2014

      Chris Hedges Interviews Noam Chomsky (2/3)

      ▻http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=12016

      [...]

      Like a lot of people, I’ve written a lot about media and intellectual propaganda, but there’s another question which isn’t studied much: how effective is it? And that’s—when you brought up the polls, it’s a striking illustration. The propaganda is—you can see from the poll results that the propaganda has only limited effectiveness. I mean, it can drive a population into terror and fear and war hysteria, like before the Iraq invasion or 1917 and so on, but over time, public attitudes remain quite different. In fact, studies even of what’s called the right-wing, you know, people who say, get the government off my back, that kind of sector, they turn out to be kind of social democratic. They want more spending on health, more spending on education, more spending on, say, women with dependent children, but not welfare, no spending on welfare, because Reagan, who was an extreme racist, succeeded in demonizing the notion of welfare. So in people’s minds welfare means a rich black woman driving in her limousine to the welfare office to steal your money. Well, nobody wants that. But they want what welfare does.

      Foreign aid is an interesting case. There’s an enormous propaganda against foreign aid, ’cause we’re giving everything to the undeserving people out there. You take a look at public attitudes. A lot of opposition to foreign aid. Very high. On the other hand, when you ask people, how much do we give in foreign aid? Way beyond what we give. When you ask what we should give in foreign aid, far above what we give.

      And this runs across the board. Take, say taxes. There’ve been studies of attitudes towards taxes for 40 years. Overwhelmingly the population says taxes are much too low for the rich and the corporate sector. You’ve got to raise it. What happens? Well, the opposite.

      [...]

      #propagande
      #effectiveness #efficacité #Effizienz

      oAnth @02myseenthis01 CC BY
    • @02myseenthis01
      oAnth @02myseenthis01 CC BY 20/06/2014

      Chris Hedges Interviews Noam Chomsky (3/3)

      ▻http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=12018

      #ows #occupy
      #cooperatives

      [...]

      Well, I think it’s a little misleading to call it a movement. Occupy was a tactic, in fact a brilliant tactic. I mean, if I’d been asked a couple of months earlier whether they should take over public places, I would have said it’s crazy. But it worked extremely well, and it lit a spark which went all over the place. Hundreds and hundreds of places in the country, there were Occupy events. It was all over the world. I mean, I gave talks in Sydney, Australia, to the Occupy movement there. But it was a tactic, a very effective tactic. Changed public discourse, not policy. It brought issues to the forefront.I think my own feeling is its most important contribution was just to break through the atomization of the society. I mean, it’s a very atomized society. There’s all sorts of efforts to separate people from one another, as if the ideal social unit is, you know, you and your TV set.

      HEDGES: You know, Hannah Arendt raises atomization as one of the key components of totalitarianism.

      CHOMSKY: Exactly. And the Occupy actions broke that down for a large part of the population. People could recognize that we can get together and do things for ourselves, we can have a common kitchen, we can have a place for public discourse, we can form our ideas and do something. Now, that’s an important attack on the core of the means by which the public is controlled. So you’re not just an individual trying to maximize your consumption, but there are other concerns in life, and you can do something about them. If those attitudes and associations and bonds can be sustained and move in other directions, that’ll be important.

      But going back to Occupy, it’s a tactic. Tactics have a kind of a half-life. You can’t keep doing them, and certainly you can’t keep occupying public places for very long. And was very successful, but it was not in itself a movement. The question is: what happens to the people who were involved in it? Do they go on and develop, do they move into communities, pick up community issues? Do they organize?

      Take, say, this business of, say, worker-owned industry. Right here in Massachusetts, not far from here, there was something similar. One of the multinationals decided to close down a fairly profitable small plant, which was producing aerospace equipment. High-skilled workers and so on, but it wasn’t profitable enough, so they were going to close it down. The union wanted to buy it. Company refused—usual class reasons, I think. If the Occupy efforts had been available at the time, they could have provided the public support for it.

      [...]

      Well, you know, a reconstituted auto industry could have turned in that direction under worker and community control. I don’t think these things are out of sight. And, incidentally, they even have so-called conservative support, because they’re within a broader what’s called capitalist framework (it’s not really capitalist). And those are directions that should be pressed.

      Right now, for example, the Steelworkers union is trying to establish some kind of relations with Mondragon, the huge worker-owned conglomerate in the Basque country in Spain, which is very successful, in fact, and includes industry, manufacturing, banks, hospitals, living quarters. It’s very broad. It’s not impossible that that can be brought here, and it’s potentially radical. It’s creating the basis for quite a different society.

      [...]

      #militarisation
      #Militarisierung #Aufrüstung

      #war_crime #Iraq
      #crime_de_guerre
      #Kriegsverbrechen
      #Nürnberg

      [...]

      Go back to the #Nuremberg judgments. I’m not telling you anything you don’t know, but in Nuremberg aggression was defined as “the supreme international crime,” differing from other war crimes in that it includes, it encompasses all of the evil that follows. Well, the U.S.-British invasion of Iraq is a textbook case of aggression. By the standards of Nuremberg, they’d all be hanged. And one of the things it did, one of the crimes was to ignite a Sunni-Shiite conflict which hadn’t been going on. I mean, there was, you know, various kinds of tensions, but Iraqis didn’t believe there could ever be a conflict. They were intermarried, they lived in the same places, and so on. But the invasion set it off. Took off on its own. By now it’s inflaming the whole region. Now we’re at the point where Sunni jihadi forces are actually marching on Baghdad.

      HEDGES: And the Iraqi army is collapsing.

      CHOMSKY: The Iraqi army’s just giving away their arms. There obviously is a lot of collaboration going on.And all of this is a U.S. crime if we believe in the validity of the judgments against the Nazis.

      And it’s kind of interesting. Robert Jackson, the chief prosecutor, a U.S. justice, at the tribunal, addressed the tribunal, and he pointed out, as he put it, that we’re giving these defendants a “poisoned chalice”, and if we ever sip from it, we have to be treated the same way, or else the whole thing is a farce and we should recognize this as just victor’s justice.

      [...]

      oAnth @02myseenthis01 CC BY
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  • @africasacountry
    Africa’s a Country [RSS] @africasacountry 4/03/2014

    The Tragedy of #Justin_Fashanu, soccer’s first openly gay player
    ▻http://africasacountry.com/the-tragedy-of-justin-fashanu-soccers-first-openly-gay-player

    With the ongoing crisis of #homophobia in #Nigeria, and a succession of high-profile athletes coming out in the past year, it’s well worth remembering Justin Fashanu, the first professional footballer to come out — way back in 1990 — and his tragic suicide in 1997. Our very own #Davy_Lane has written a rendering of […]

    #Football_is_a_Country #SPORT #England #Norwich_City #Nottingham_Forest

    • #Nigeria
    Africa’s a Country [RSS] @africasacountry
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  • @touti
    vide @touti 24/06/2013
    1
    @02myseenthis01
    1

    BBC News - Slough spy plane uncovers 210 suspected ’sheds with beds’
    ▻http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-berkshire-23028425

    Investigations of the illegal occupation of sheds in Slough by migrant workers has led to 210 new outbuildings being identified by a thermal-imaging plane.

    ▻http://www.come4news.com/uk-big-brother-traque-les-immigrants-avec-des-cameras-thermiques-720468
    Des caméras #thermiques traquent les migrants dans les logements insalubres de la ville de #Slough, subventionné par le ministère du #logement …

    #england #surveillance #migrants #drones #déprimant

    • #Slough
    • #spy
    vide @touti
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  • @touti
    vide @touti 8/02/2013
    @nddl

    Women’s Peace Camp from Greenham Common to Menwith Hill

    ▻http://www.thefword.org.uk/features/2003/09/from_greenham_to_menwith_the_womens_peace_campaign_at_menwith_hill

    In 1981 a small group of women and children marched from Cardiff to Greenham Common to protest against the siting of cruise missiles at the U.S military base in Newbury, Berkshire.

    ▻http://www.antiwarsongs.org/canzone.php?id=6925

    The last missiles left the camp in 1991 but the camp remained in place until 2000 after protestors won the right to house a memorial on the site.

    ▻http://www.fas.org/irp/facility/menwith.htm

    Women have been permanently camped at the Menwith Hill Women’s Peace Camp for several years to draw attention to the facility.

    @NDDL #courage! Fight the winter at (greenham) Notre-Dame-Des-Landes

    #luttes #nucléaire #échelon #campement #résistance #England #hiver-rigoureux #femmes

    • #Cardiff
    • #United States
    vide @touti
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  • @touti
    vide @touti 3/01/2013

    The Honey Cap - The Well-Timed Period
    ▻http://thewelltimedperiod.blogspot.fr/2007/05/honey-cap.html

    Saviez vous que le diaphragme au miel est un moyen de contraception. Je ne sais pas si on en trouve facilement en France, mais j’ai une amie qui va les chercher en Angleterre.

    The Honey Cap is just a regular diaphragm [usually a smaller size one, like the 60 mm] used in combination with honey, instead of a regular spermicide. The honey is added to the inside of the dome, and the diaphragm is soaked in honey before use. [When not in use it’s kept in a jar of honey.] The Honey Cap can be left in place for up to three days, as opposed to a maximum of 24 hours for the diaphragm-with-spermicide method.

    #Shirley-Bond #contraception #diaphragme #miel #england

    • #France
    vide @touti
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  • @vlentz
    vlentz @vlentz CC BY-SA 7/09/2012

    The Sundays - Here’s Where The Story Ends - 1990 - United Kingdom (cliquer sur l’image)

    ►http://youtu.be/n35C0j3LLB0

    #indie-pop #pop #the-sundays #rough-trade #UK #United-Kingdom #England #video #band

    vlentz @vlentz CC BY-SA
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