Category Archives: capitalism

Google, the government and privacy

US law enforcement agents request more information from Google than any other nation in the world.  Why bother to build a China-style firewall when you can just snoop on google searches to find naughty citizens?

Between January and June 2011, U.S. law enforcement agents made 5,950 requests for data about Google users. That was not only by far the highest reported total — India was second with 1,739 — it was a 29% increase over the previous 6 month period. So our government not only demands more information from Google than anyone else in the world, they’re continuing to ramp up these demands.

via U.S. Continues to Blow Away the Field in Demanding Information from Google » Blog of Rights: Official Blog of the American Civil Liberties Union.

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Propaganda of big soda

Thanks to consumerist.com for the alterered billboard image.

I gave up soda-type beverages a couple of years ago.  I certainly enjoyed the carbonated, caffeinated little cans of wonder, but somehow I knew that they weren’t good for me.  As a scholar of propaganda, I’m amazed at how similar the large soda manufacturing companies are to the large tobacco manufacturing companies.

The comparison is mostly that they seek to change audiences minds without letting them know that they have a vested interested in selling more soda. I’m not the only one who noticed this comparison.  Kelly Brownell writes the following in Time Magazine:

The soda industry funds scientists who reliably produce research showing no link between SSB consumption and health. The tobacco industry bought favor from community and national organizations by giving large donations. In an ironic twist, Coca Cola and PepsiCo are corporate sponsors of the American Dietetic Association.

The soda industry hit a new low this year. In 2010, Philadelphia’s mayor and health commissioner had both supported an SSB tax and came within one vote of having the tax passed by the city council. In 2011, when the mayor made it clear he would reintroduce the tax, the industry created an organization called Foundation for a Healthy America, which gave a gift of $10 million to the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia for research and prevention of childhood obesity. Would the hospital accept money from a tobacco company to study anti-smoking programs? The hospital tried to give some of the money to the city to run obesity programs through city health centers, but the mayor refused on the grounds it was funded by the beverage industry.

via Kelly Brownell on the Dirty Tactics of Soda Companies | TIME Ideas | TIME.com.

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Co-op music: Thes One & People under the stairs

My office is in the basement.  One of my fellow underground dwellers put up a poster for an old horror movie called “People under the stairs.”  We get a lot of leverage out of that joke. I’ve threatened to bring in a slightly more upbeat poster from the rap group People Under the Stairs.

Speaking of the musical People Under the Stairs, I’ve always felt a resonance with these dudes.  They make good music, they have fun and seem genuinely interested in innovation.  Here is one half of PUTS, Thes One on his newest musical vision.

And the fact of matter was that everyone around me did have material that was ready for release and there were no record labels left to come around and pick it up. So, I said what we should do is treat it like a co-op. Like if you’re a bunch of farmers — you share your materials, you share your tractors, this that or whatever, and when one person’s crop is ready, they bring money into the co-op. And then while their crop is growing, the other person’s is ready and they bring money. And that’s kind of how we’re treating it. The money that the record is bringing in right now is gonna help pay for the pressing of the next record and so on and so forth, and we’ll be all in it together.

via Thes One Discusses Aging In Hip Hop, Highlighter’s HD Release And Piecelock 70 [Part 1] | KevinNottingham.com | The Underground Hip Hop Authority | Hip Hop Music, Videos & Reviews.

Check out Highlighter — the new People Under the Stairs record.  Recorded and released in out-of-control high definition.

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Stockholder resistance inside Murdoch’s media empire

I have always been inspired by the story of Sister Daly — a Catholic nun who purchased stock shares in General Electric and then went to each stockholders meeting to propose more ethical and just business practices. Her practice is now widely used to pressure corporations.

One of the biggest struggles for social justice is reaching those who have the ability to change things.  Stockholders get access to C.E.O.s which in itself gives a platform for direct critique of corporate business practices.

But it is just as easy for corporate heads to circumvent and even exclude critical stockholder voices.   Many of the boards of directors have now stacked agendas and some have even changed internal policy to avoid the embarrassment of a nun holding the microphone asking about PCBs in the Hudson, or holding up photos of kids killed by U.S. made missiles.

Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News, recently assailed for hacking, lying and exploiting people to get stories or crush adversaries, faced a tough stockholder meeting yesterday.

Those attending included Edward Mason, secretary of the ethical investment advisory group of the Church of England, which owns about $6m worth of News Corp shares. “There needs to be decisive action in terms of holding people to account,” he said before the event, noting that it was the first time his group had attended a company annual meeting. At the meeting, Murdoch criticised the church’s investment track record, describing it as “not that great”.

Julie Tanner, assistant director of Christian Brothers Investment Services (CBIS), which represents more than 1,000 Catholic institutions worldwide, was the first at the meeting to question Murdoch’s track record, saying that the “extraordinary scandals” in the UK required corporate overhaul.

via Murdoch warned of ‘Mulcaire 2’ at News Corp shareholder meeting | Media | guardian.co.uk.

I am appreciative of some discussion of how a massive multinational news corporation would deal with internal criticism, especially from some people who have more than a token bit of stock.

I know it seems strange at times, but this is actually where a lot of big shifting changes happen.  The global protests against apartheid in South Africa are a pretty good example.  The sudden divestment of large universities who were facing  informed student/staff/faculty protest campaigns was key a contributing factor to the end of apartheid.

Don’t get me wrong.  My money is still on the autocratic media barons who at this moment have hired some smart staff to flip this whole conversation.

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Juxtaposition: legal immunity for soldiers in Iraq and South Korea

Artifact 1: US soldiers in Iraq and immunity from prosecution

One of the sticking points in the negotiations with Iraq was a US demand that American forces remaining in the country after December would enjoy the same immunity from prosecution as they do now. The Iraqi government, conscious of public anger over many controversial incidents involving US troops and defence contractors over the last decade, refused.

via Iraq rejects US request to maintain bases after troop withdrawal | World news | guardian.co.uk.

Artifact 2: US soldiers in South Korea and immunity from prosecution

Still, attitudes toward the 28,500 U.S. servicemen and women stationed in South Korea have deteriorated. Many residents call for the South Korean government to end its diplomatic agreement that allows for the U.S. troop presence, claiming that they’re more afraid of the U.S. military peacekeepers than the North Korean regime they are supposed to be protected them from.

Seoul dance clubs once frequented by U.S. military now bar admission to American soldiers after concern expressed by female patrons, according to local press reports here. South Korea also created a task force to seek revisions to the Status of Forces Agreement, or SOFA, that governs the legal status of U.S. troops in South Korea and elsewhere.

Activists here say that the SOFA, signed in 1965 and amended in 1995 and 2001, is unjust because it goes too far in protecting U.S. soldiers. Many want the police here to be given more legal jurisdiction to investigate sex crimes involving American soldiers.

via Alleged rapes by U.S. soldiers ratchet up anger in South Korea – latimes.com.

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Arundhati Roy on Indian Maoists

I like this article (and the original article) because of Roy’s awareness of how talking about ideas changes them.  This is at the core of the modern power of change — language and ideas.  Important stuff here.

“The country that I live in is becoming more and more repressive, more and more of a police state…. India is hardening as a state. It has to continue to give the impression of being a messy, cuddly democracy but actually what’s going on outside the arc lights is really desperate.”

But at the same time it remains an open society, and the arguments are there to be won. In 2009 the government announced Operation Greenhunt, a new, even tougher attempt to kill off the Maoist insurgency, but it sparked fierce resistance, both inside the forest and beyond. “Among the Indian elite it was okay just to call them Maoist terrorists: they had been de-humanised. So when I, who am not a Maoist, went in and wrote about who they were, it made them human beings, fighting for something very, very serious. And that makes a big difference.

“This is a very interesting time where I think the debates are being cracked open. Real intervention at a real moment can change the paradigm of the debate, even if it doesn’t instantly cause a revolution.”

via Arundhati Roy: ‘The next novel will just have to wait…’ – Features, Books – The Independent.

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Juxtaposition: Curfews vs. Tahrir square

Artifact 1:

January 31: Mubarak still refuses to step down, amid growing calls for his resignation. Protesters continue to defy the military-imposed curfew. About 250,000 people gather in Cairo’s Tahrir Square and hundreds march through Alexandria.

via Timeline: Egypt’s revolution – Middle East – Al Jazeera English.

Artifact 2:

SACRAMENTO (CBS13) — Protesters say they’re ready to face arrest again on the fourth day of the “Occupy Sacramento” demonstrations, but they are now calling for city leaders to rescind the curfew that makes it illegal to continue protests overnight.

About 14 protesters were arrested after midnight following Saturday’s event, and the attendees of Sunday’s march said they were prepared to follow suit and remain at Cesar Chavez Park until police arrested them.

“These arbitrary rules that say at midnight at this park, you’re not allowed to be here, that’s ridiculous,” said protester Morgan Lesko.

via ‘Occupy Sacramento’ Protests Demand City Rescind Park Curfew « CBS Sacramento.

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Illegal killings make us feel more safe

I’ve been thinking about the killing of US citizen and Yemeni firebrand Anwar Al-Awlaki.  We blew him up with a missile from a drone.  My basic take on this killing is that it is wrong.   I think that folks should be prosecuted, convicted, then punished. But I’m an old school 1776-type guy.

It seems like the pre-emptive assassination of American enemies has not served our nation well.  Here is President Obama’s press secretary explaining: piss off when a reporter asks if there is any evidence that can be shared with the public about Al-Awlaki’s actual evil deeds.

Thanks to What the fuck have you done, a website run by photog & scene guru Glen E. Friedman.

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Craigslist and making your own tofu

I like craigslist.   I appreciate the service and the chance to see a high-speed cross-section of person-to-person commerce.  I knew almost nothing about the creator(s) of the website.  But I like this quote from the awkward CEO/coder Jim Buckmaster:

A biochemistry college dropout, he studied classics in Michigan for much of his 20s, teaching himself about computer programming in his spare time while living in a communal housing scheme. How did this shape his business world view? He smiles wryly. “I don’t know if the time I spent grinding wheat with a hand grinder or making tofu, or making sandals out of car tyres, whether that translates into positives for the company,” he says, after staring at the voice recorder for what seems like an eternity. “Maybe in some kind of subconscious way.”

via Jim Buckmaster: Craigslist put up an ad for a programmer. It got a chief executive | Business | The Guardian.

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#occupy wall street vs. fox news

I have to run out to get to the eye doctor, but thanks to this clip, I can feel my vision getting better.

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