American Pot Calling Iran Kettle Black: US Hikers

Which given America's infinite capacity for hypocrisy, comes as no great surprise.

It's BSF here (before sparrow fart) so I haven't as yet watched the Democracy Now clip, but given my Jose Padilla post of two days ago, I thought this a very apt article.

Update:

Having watched the clip, quite lengthy, some twenty odd minutes, it becomes essential viewing, to truly appreciate that America doesn't have a moral leg to stand on. And Iran? Moral and Iran don't belong in the same sentence.



Bloggers. If you want to increase the size of Democracy Now's default player, change the 300 part of this code to whatever you require. You are watching this at 640.

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What media coverage omits about U.S. hikers released by Iran
By Glen Greenwald
Sep 26, 2011

Two American hikers imprisoned for more than two years by Iran on extremely dubious espionage charges and in highly oppressive conditions, Joshua Fattal and Shane Bauer, were released last week and spoke yesterday in Manhattan about their ordeal. Most establishment media accounts in the U.S. have predictably exploited the emotions of the drama as a means of bolstering the U.S.-is-Good/Iran-is-Evil narrative which they reflexively spout. But far more revealing is what these media accounts exclude, beginning with the important, insightful and brave remarks from the released prisoners themselves (their full press conference was broadcast this morning on Democracy Now).

Fattal began by recounting the horrible conditions of the prison in which they were held, including being kept virtually all day in a tiny cell alone and hearing other prisoners being beaten; he explained that, of everything that was done to them, "solitary confinement was the worst experience of all of our lives." Bauer then noted that they were imprisoned due solely to what he called the "32 years of mutual hostility between America and Iran," and said: "the irony is that [we] oppose U.S. policies towards Iran which perpetuate this hostility." After complaining that the two court sessions they attended were "total shams" and that "we'd been held in almost total isolation - stripped of our rights and freedoms," he explained:

In prison, every time we complained about our conditions, the guards would remind us of comparable conditions at Guantanamo Bay; they'd remind us of CIA prisons in other parts of the world; and conditions that Iranians and others experience in prisons in the U.S.

We do not believe that such human rights violation on the part of our government justify what has been done to us: not for a moment. However, we do believe that these actions on the part of the U.S. provide an excuse for other governments - including the government of Iran - to act in kind.

[Indeed, as harrowing and unjust as their imprisonment was, Bauer and Fattal on some level are fortunate not to have ended up in the grips of the American War on Terror detention system, where detainees remain for many more years without even the pretense of due process -- still -- to say nothing of the torture regime to which hundreds (at least) were subjected.]

Fattal then expressed "great thanks to world leaders and individuals" who worked for their release, including Hugo Chavez, the governments of Turkey and Brazil, Sean Penn, Noam Chomsky, Mohammad Ali, Cindy Sheehan, Desmond Tutu, as well as Muslims from around the world and "elements within the Iranian government," as well as U.S. officials.

Unsurprisingly, one searches in vain for the inclusion of these facts and remarks in American media accounts of their release and subsequent press conference. Instead, typical is this ABC News story, which featured tearful and celebratory reactions from their family, detailed descriptions of their conditions and the pain and fear their family endured, and melodramatic narratives about how their "long, grueling imprisonment is over" after "781 days in Iran's most notorious prison." This ABC News article on their press conference features many sentences about Iran's oppressiveness -- "Hikers Return to the U.S.: 'We Were Held Hostage'"; "we heard the screams of other prisoners being beaten" -- with hardly any mention of the criticisms Fattal and Bauer voiced regarding U.S. policy that provided the excuse for their mistreatment and similar treatment which the U.S. doles out both in War on Terror prisons around the world and even domestic prisons at home.

Their story deserves the attention it is getting, and Iran deserves the criticism. But the first duty of the American "watchdog media" should be highlighting the abuses of the U.S. Government, not those of other, already-hated regimes on the other side of the world. Instead, the abuses at home are routinely suppressed while those in the Hated Nations are endlessly touted. There have been thousands of people released after being held for years and years in U.S. detention despite having done nothing wrong. Many were tortured, and many were kept imprisoned despite U.S. government knowledge of their innocence. Have you ever seen anything close to this level of media attention being devoted to their plight, to hearing how America's lawless detention of them for years -- often on a strange island, thousands of miles away from everything they know -- and its systematic denial of any legal redress, devastated their families and destroyed their lives?

This is a repeat of what happened with the obsessive American media frenzy surrounding the arrest and imprisonment by Iran of Iranian-American journalist Roxana Saberi, convicted in a sham proceeding of espionage, sentenced to eight years in prison, but then ordered released by an Iranian appeals court after four months. Saberi's case became a true cause célèbre among American journalists, with large numbers of them flamboyantly denouncing Iran and demanding her release. But when their own government imprisoned numerous journalists for many years without any charges of any kind -- Al Jazeera's Sami al-Haj in Guantanamo, Associated Press' Bilal Hussein for more than two years in Iraq, Reuters' photographer Ibrahim Jassan even after an Iraqi court exonerated him, and literally dozens of other journalists without charge -- it was very difficult to find any mention of their cases in American media outlets.

What we find here yet again is that government-serving American establish media outlets relish the opportunity to report negatively on enemies and other adversaries of the U.S. government (that is the same mindset that accounts for the predicable, trite condescension by the New York Times toward the Wall Street protests, the same way they constantly downplayed Iraq War protests). But to exactly the same extent that they love depicting America's Enemies as Bad, they hate reporting facts that make the U.S. Government look the same.

That's why Fattal and Bauer receive so much attention while victims of America's ongoing lawless detention scheme are ignored. It's why media stars bravely denounce the conditions of Iran's "notorious prison" while ignoring America's own inhumane prison regime on both foreign and U.S. soil. It's why imprisonment via sham trials in Iran stir such outrage while due-process-free imprisonment (and assassinations) by the U.S. stir so little. And it's why so many Americans know Roxana Saberi but so few know Sami al-Haj.

An actual watchdog press is, first and foremost, eager to expose the corruption and wrongdoing of their own government. By contrast, a propaganda establishment press is eager to suppress that, and there is no better way of doing so than by obsessing on the sins of nations on the other side of the world while ignoring the ones at home. If only establishment media outlets displayed a fraction of the bravery and integrity of Josh Fattal and Shane Bauer, who had a good excuse to focus exclusively on Iran's sins but -- a mere few days after being released from a horrible, unjust ordeal -- chose instead to present the full picture. Salon

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Defense: Michael Jackson 'caused his own death'

So reads the headline. and that's as far as I went.

Given that he's shovelled every drug known to man and science down his neck for years, and still clamoured for more, I think it might be a fair assumption that he did.

Perverted demented pathetic paedophile wretch. When I first saw the falsetto fuck on Oprah, he made we want to barf, and then when I saw him on Martin Bashir, listening to how he groomed that kid! fuck me! Predatory cunt. If I'm X and you're Y, that fucker was from an alphabet entirely of his own.

Michael Jackson is a paedo cunt. Was a paedo cunt.

Michael Jackson was a fuckin' paedophile! Stop obsessin' over the cunt!

Glad Michael Jackson is dead the fucking paedo


Fuck Michael Jackson

There's one less child molester in the world today, and we're all going to be assaulted by memorial retrospective teevee specials about it for the next month. Michael Jackson is dead. And good riddance to the batshit crazy pedophile. Fuck him.

And fuck everyone who's driveling on about how "tragic" it is, and how sad they are, and how it's like their childhood died today. And screw the folks simpering about his poor, poor children who have to grow up without him … they're better off. I'm relieved for them. Of course they'll be sad and all, but maybe they'll be able to finish growing up surrounded by a little less crazy now. Maybe they'll be able to go out in public without masks on now … and get into some good therapy before they're permanently mentally fucked like their so-called dad (who is the only black man on earth who could "father" multiple white children, blonde mom or not).

And yeah, yeah, yeah, I know he was acquitted at his child molestation trial. Puh-leeeeeze. OJ was acquitted at his murder trial too, and how many people believe that means he's innocent? Seriously, grown men do not share their beds with little kids unless they're fathers and one of their own kids had a nightmare and came to sleep with mommy & daddy where it's safe. However, wronged people do shut the fuck up about things if very very rich people offer to buy their silence at the right price.

Seriously, even Jacko himself is probably better off dead, and I don't mean that in the "he's in a better place now" sort of way. I mean that as in utter and complete eternal oblivion (which is what I pretty much expect death to be) is preferable to living his life. The guy wasn't just "not firing on all cylinders" … he was trying to drag race with a seized engine and a gas tank full of coffee. His mind didn't exist on the same plane of reality as the rest of the world. Nobody who lives a happy and fulfilled life could possibly let a plastic surgeon turn them into a fucking sideshow freak like good ol' MJ did.

If he'd kicked off after Thriller came out, or maybe one album afterward, I might have been bummed. "Oh, the lost talent! Woe is humanity!" But the sad fact is that Michael Jackson lived long enough to turn into a miserable, deformed lunatic child molester. Big fucking loss to humanity. It's seriously not worth totally clogging the internet over. Wasn't there something important going on somewhere? Like maybe Iran or something? Fuck Michael Jackson

A tip from the comments section, funny and oh so true.



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Occupy Wall Street Protest: Democracy Now Video

Perhaps it's because I don't live in the land of self delusion, or America for that matter, although in reality they are one and the same, but for everything I have ever read, or everything I have ever watched pertaining to protest and civil disobedience during the last hundred years, is but one thing common.

That in this home of the brave, land of the free, how in an instant, do America's finest, strip away any pretence of being impartial representatives of law and order, and show themselves for what the truly are; stormtroopers of both the establishment and the rich and powerful.

Which side are you on boys, which side are you on?

The same Natalie Merchant rendition only different graphics. The first being solely US related.








Occupy Wall Street Protest Enters Second Week; 80 Arrested at Peaceful March

It is day 10 of the "Occupy Wall Street" campaign. On Saturday, more than 80 protesters were arrested as hundreds took part in yet another march to Wall Street. Many of them were committing civil disobedience by walking in the street, but some say they were on the sidewalk when officers with the New York City Police Department used nets and physical force to break up the crowd. Videos uploaded to YouTube show officers pepper-spraying protesters in the face from close range, punching demonstrators and dragging people through the street. Since Sept. 17, thousands have gathered near in New York City’s financial district near Wall Street to decry corporate greed. Many have said they have been inspired by other popular uprisings from Spain to the Arab Spring. On Sunday, protesters issued a communiqué calling for the resignation of the NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly and for a dialogue with Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Thanks to Democracy Now!’s Ryan Devereaux and Jon Gerberg for this report. Transcript

Related:
The Holy Ghost People, Taking Up Serpants and Tales From Stump Holler

Youtube search: Which side are you on
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Missionaries of Hate: American Evangelicals Spread Gay Hate in Uganda

Go to big updated post here.

This is becoming an ever increasingly topical subject. I shall try and find a few links on the morrow.

-

Here you go, Rachel Maddow has it all in eight minutes, the murder of gay activist, David Kato, inspired no doubt by, Scott Lively, Richard Cohen and ''The Family.''

The word ''Family'' in any US organisation, being a euphemism for a Jesus loving LGBT hate group.





Missionaries of Hate (2010)




Correspondent Mariana van Zeller travels to Uganda, where many question whether the growing influence of American religious groups has led to a movement to make homosexuality a crime punishable by death.

As an anti-gay movement spreads across the continent, gay Africans and their families face an increasingly uncertain future of isolation, imprisonment or even execution.

The film makes it much easier to understand why the general Ugandan public is so eager to send their peers to jail. If the most prominent spiritual leader in your community made it his life purpose to convince you that there were people coming to eat your poop and recruit your children, you would be against them too. They are only hearing one side of the story and it is the origin of their information that is truly infuriating.

Although Ugandan leaders are deeply offended by the notion, the facts definitively show that American evangelists have played a central role in defining the nation’s hard line against sexual minorities. The documentary focuses on American evangelist Dr. Scott Lively, who is widely credited with installing the dominant notion that homosexuals are after your children.

When asked if he condemns the legislation, Lively says that he condemns the death penalty aspects of the bill, but that overall the bill is a “lesser of two evils” compared to the prospect of having American gay activists do to Uganda what they have done to America.


Visit http://fuckcopyright.blogspot.com/2011/09/missionaries-of-hate-2010.html for streaming or download links and trailer. Or just visit the most remarkable activist site you are ever likely to come across.
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Our Island Britain The Genesis - Iain Stewart - Brian Cox - Neil Oliver

Given that I'm about to head out the gap for the day, and just this minute reading Brian Cox's tweets, acting as a reminder, I thought it would do no harm to bring across from another blog, this previous post.


I have to say, if history and cosmology are your things, which they are mine, then these past twelve months or so, I can only describe as being golden. A mini-golden age of knowledge, learning, understanding, and not least entertaining with it.

And the reason for this little renaissance, is that we are blessed with three talking heads who know their respective trades well, but also know how to put a television series together, and put it together equally well I hasten to add.

Professor Iain Stewart, geologist, who among his many presentations recently gave us, Men of Rock.

The irrepressible, Professor Brian Cox, a super brain with a Mancunian accent, and whose shear enthusiasm for his chosen subjects, particle physics and cosmology, is simply infectious. Cox has produced a raft of stuff, and I was just about to say, for a young fellow me lad and tender years. But having just looked him up, the bugger is forty three, but what harm, he did bring us the hugely entertaining and informative, Wonders of the Universe, recently, inbetween that is, getting his freak on with the LHC (Large Hadron Collider) . And something new from him coming shortly, as I was told in passing.

The assured archaeologist and historian, Neil Oliver, (home page) of Coast, A History of Scotland, now bringing us A History of Ancient Britain. Having watched the first episode myself on iplayer, (UK only I'm afraid) where, for what it's worth, I watch the little television that I do, free gratis and in my own time.


So here be the blurb. and a few clips of all three presenters chosen at random. Update: Not in the case of Iain Stewart, an absolute must watch if you have never seen the inside of the Naica Crystal Cave. And definitely not a random choice, the scrablands video. (Think Noah's flood and the Grand Canyon) Update: Now includes two short previews of a History of Ancient Britain.


The moment Britain became an island

Ancient Britain was a peninsula until a tsunami flooded its land-links to Europe some 8,000 years ago. Did that wave help shape the national character?

The coastline and landscape of what would become modern Britain began to emerge at the end of the last Ice Age around 10,000 years ago.

What had been a cold, dry tundra on the north-western edge of Europe grew warmer and wetter as the ice caps melted. The Irish Sea, North Sea and the Channel were all dry land, albeit land slowly being submerged as sea levels rose.

But it wasn't until 6,100BC that Britain broke free of mainland Europe for good, during the Mesolithic period - the Middle Stone Age.
Continue reading the main story
Find out more

It is thought a landslide in Norway triggered one of the biggest tsunamis ever recorded on Earth, when a landlocked sea in the Norwegian trench burst its banks.

The water struck the north-east of Britain with such force it travelled 40km inland, turning low-lying plains into what is now the North Sea, and marshlands to the south into the Channel. Britain became an island nation.

At the time it was home to a fragile and scattered population of about 5,000 hunter-gatherers, descended from the early humans who had followed migrating herds of mammoth and reindeer onto the jagged peninsula.

"The waves would have been maybe as much as 10m high," says geologist David Smith. "Anyone standing out on the mud flats at that time would have been dismembered. The speed [of the water] was just so great."

Relics of these pre-island times are being recovered from under the sea off the Isle of Wight, dating from when the Solent was dry land.

Grooved timbers preserved by the saltwater are thought to be the remains of 8,000-year-old log boats, and point to the site once being a sizable boat-building yard, says Garry Momber, of the Hampshire and Wight Trust for Maritime Archaeology (see video clip below).

The tsunami was a watershed in our history, says archaeologist Neil Oliver, presenter of BBC Two's A History of Ancient Britain.

"The people living in the land that would become Britain had become different. They'd been made different. And at the same time, they'd been made a wee bit special as well." More, pics and a clip.



















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John Yates is a Bent Scumbag Copper: It's Time He Was Nicked For Corruption

Ex-copper that should read.

''I've done nothing wrong, but I shall resign my two hundred grand a year job.''

Just like his gaffer resigned from his quarter of a million little earner.

Met spent £5,000 on Yates's legal bill without authorisation
By Cahal Milmo
26 September 2011

Scotland yard has been accused of spending more than £5,000 without authorisation on legal advice from a high-profile libel firm for one of its top police officers to enable him to pursue a defamation complaint, The Independent can reveal.

The Yard paid a total of £7,175 earlier this year to enable former assistant commissioner John Yates to hire the law firm Carter Ruck after a national newspaper published an article that he believed questioned his integrity with regard to the investigation of the News of the World phone-hacking scandal. Mr Yates resigned in July amid criticism of his conduct.

The Metropolitan Police Authority (MPA), which must authorise any spending by the Yard on external lawyers to defend the reputation of a serving officer, confirmed yesterday that it had set a cap of £1,500 on that expenditure.

Police sources said they believed the additional funding had been authorised, but the MPA has demanded an "urgent investigation" after its chairman, Kit Malthouse, was forced to apologise to MPs for providing incorrect information about the amount spent on legal fees. He also had to write to the Commons Home Affairs Select Committee to correct the figure.

An MPA source said Mr Malthouse was "not best pleased" at the disclosure of the additional spending.

Mr Malthouse said: "I have asked for an urgent inquiry as to why my decision to cap that expenditure was not adhered to."

The alleged unauthorised overspend came to light during the new Met Commissioner Bernard Hogan Howe's first appearance before the MPA last week. In response to a question from Liberal Democrat authority member Dee Doocey, Mr Hogan Howe said that in addition to a previously disclosed payment to Carter Ruck of £1,175 in March this year, the Yard had paid out a further £6,000 the following month. Carter Ruck, which has a reputation for aggressively pursuing its clients' defamation claims, sent letters to newspapers on behalf of Mr Yates after a story in The Guardian and other outlets about his decision in 2009 not to reopen the Yard's investigation into the hacking affair.

Mr Yates won an apology from the London Evening Standard for a story which suggested that he decided not to review the original investigation because he was afraid the News of the World would expose an alleged affair. But Mr Yates had separated from his wife and was openly in a new relationship. The Independent understands that the cost of the legal action against the Standard was not met by the MPA or the Yard.

In a statement, Scotland Yard said: "Funding for defamation work is available in exceptional cases where national publicity involves a major slur against the MPS as a whole, as opposed to an individual. It was felt that this case met that level and funding was approved.

"The request for payment was submitted in good faith.

"We will provide our fullest support to the MPA to help them find out exactly how the issue of the 'cap' was communicated." Independent
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Bachmann: HPV Vaccine makes You Mentally Retarded - She Must Have Had An Armful Then



Bachmann: I'm Not Responsible For The Words Coming Out Of My Mouth
By Adam Serwer
Sep. 23, 2011



In a television interview after the GOP presidential debate on September 12, Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann, who was attacking Texas Governor Rick Perry over his decision to mandate that adolescent girls receive a vaccine for HPV, made the shocking suggestion that the vaccine caused "mental retardation." This is what Bachmann said:

"There's a woman who came up crying to me tonight after the debate. She said her daughter was given that vaccine.… She told me her daughter suffered mental retardation as a result. There are very dangerous consequences."

On Thursday night, Bachmann was asked directly about those remarks, which, as my colleague Tim Murphy reported, are not only completely false but could have serious health consequences by dissuading people from vaccinating their children. Asked about her validating paranoid junk science, Bachmann disavowed all responsibility, insisting that she was just the messenger.

Well, first I didn't make that claim nor did I make that statement. Immediately after the debate, a mother came up to me and she was visibly shaken and heart broken because of what her daughter had gone through. I so I only related what her story was.

Bachmann went on to explain a far more justifiable objection to Perry's decision, namely that the mandate was really about his desire to help a campaign contributor.



For what it's worth, Bachmann's excuse is also false. She said that there "are very dangerous consequences" that come from mandating the HPV vaccine, and in context, it's clear she's referring to the false assertion that the vaccine causes mental problems. She wasn't merely "relaying" false information, she was endorsing it. Instead of simply admitting that it was wrong to validate and amplify a conspiracy theory, Bachmann basically said she's not at all responsible for making sure anything that comes out of her mouth is actually true. This is a shockingly glib response for someone who wants to run the most powerful country in the world. Mother Jones



Update:

Pediatrician: "The Problem is People Like Michele Bachmann" More, including this MP3



''I'm not a doctor, I'm not a scientist'' Michele Bachmann

''I'm not against religion, I'm against maniacs'' Brian Cox

h/t Maren
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