Puppet MastersS


Che Guevara

Best of the Web: Tens of thousands strike in Greece as military threatens to intervene against anti-austerity protests

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October 5, 2011: Kanellos the legendary riot dog marshals his troops as they hold the line against the authoritarian enforcers
Tens of thousands of workers, pensioners and youth protested throughout Greece Wednesday in a 24-hour public sector strike called by the ADEDY civil service trade union federation and the General Confederation of Greek Workers (GSEE).

The strike is the first since the social democratic PASOK government announced further austerity measures, including thousands of public sector sackings and a 40 percent pay cut for 30,000 civil servants. Last month, parliament approved a property tax, added to utility bills, that will force 80 percent of households to pay between 1,000 euros and 1,500 euros extra a year. Failure to pay the tax will result in the shutoff of electricity.

Workers employed in public transport, local government, tax and insurance offices struck nationwide. State hospitals ran with emergency staff only and some state schools were forced to close. Also striking for the first time were air traffic controllers, leading to the cancellation of more than 400 international and domestic flights. Ferry services were also disrupted and major tourist sites were closed, although the Athens Metro ran normally.

Bad Guys

Canada: Ontario elections serve as smokescreen for coming big business offensive

The corporate media and leading spokesmen for big business openly admit that Ontario's election campaign, which concluded yesterday, was an exercise in political theater: irrespective of their campaign promises, whichever party or combination of parties forms Ontario's next government, it will implement massive cuts to public services.

The National Post bluntly told its readers, "Platform reviews of Ontario's three main parties ... are almost superfluous. After all, none of them will be able to keep their promises."

David Dodge, a former head of Canada's central bank, told the Globe and Mail, "Whoever wins" the election, "will be seen to have lied to the public." Dodge, it should be noted, was a top aide to federal Finance Minister Paul Martin when he carried out the greatest social spending cuts in Canadian history.

Titled "Spending Cuts - the unspoken issue in the Ontario campaign," a September 26 Globe article cited investment fund manager Michael Decter as saying the next government will have to cut spending "and that's not being telegraphed very hard." Decter had a senior post in the Ontario New Democratic Party (NDP) government of the early 1990s that in response to a severe recession slashed public services and public sector workers' jobs and wages.

Question

What's Big Ag Keeping From You?

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© takepart.com
Food & Water Watch's report sheds light on genetically engineered food.

More than 365 million acres of genetically engineered (GE) crops were cultivated in 29 countries in 2010, Food & Water Watch (FWW) reported late last week. Where does the U.S. stand in that figure? At the front of the line, leading global production with 165 million acres.

For every acre that's planted, a question seems to pop up. What are the environmental risks? Is this a long-term solution? How do genetically modified foods compare to non-genetically modified foods?

Dollar

JPMorgan Chase Donates $4.6 Million To NYPD

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© n/aNot the best time for a donation.
While I can't say how effective the Occupy Wall Street protests have been at accomplishing... whatever their goal is, they have managed to do one thing: make the NYPD look bad. Which is fair, really, because the NYPD have handled this situation about as poorly as possible. From Deputy Inspector Anthony Bologna macing some women to yesterday's mass arrests on the Brooklyn Bridge, the NYPD have come out of the last few weeks looking like the villains. Then, just in case you had any doubts, JPMorgan Chase made the largest donation in the history of the New York City Police Foundation. Not the best PR move, guys.

EDIT: I had the timing of the donation incorrect, it did occur a few months back. I believe the general theory of the piece holds (that JPMorgan Chase might not want to publicize the large amounts of money it's giving to police right after they've made some questionable arrests) but I was probably too harsh on both the banks and the NYPD. I'm leaving the original text of the story up with this edit so that you can form your own opinion.

Eye 1

US: New York State Senators Say We've Got Too Much Free Speech; Introduce Bill To Revise 1st Amendment

We've been pointing out a variety of attempts to push back on the First Amendment lately. One fertile ground for such attacks are local politicians carrying the "cyberbullying" banner, in various attempts to magically outlaw being a "jerk" online, usually by making it illegal to offend someone online. Of course, making someone's action illegal based on how someone else feels about it is all kinds of crazy. It also would seem to violate the very principles of the First Amendment, which bar Congress (and local governments) from passing any laws that take away one's right to free speech.

In the past, lawmakers pushing these laws have tended to simply ignore the First Amendment issue, and focus on screaming "protect the children!" as loudly as possible (never mind the fact that kids seem much less concerned about "bullying" than all these adults seem to think). However, it appears that some state Senators in NY are trying a new line of attack: going directly after the First Amendment and suggesting that current interpretations are way too broad, and it's not really meant to protect any sort of free speech right. In fact, it sounds as though they're trying to redefine the right to free speech into a privilege that can be taken away. Seriously:
Proponents of a more refined First Amendment argue that this freedom should be treated not as a right but as a privilege - a special entitlement granted by the state on a conditional basis that can be revoked if it is ever abused or maltreated.

Comment: Can it be any more obvious the United States is an overt dictatorship that 'hates your freedom'? In a ponerized world where words are turned upside down, you can be sure this bill would be used against normal people coming together to free themselves of pathological influence. What these Senators are proposing is not protection from cyber-bullying but a protection for it. Freedom of Association is clearly a threat to the pervasiveness of pathology in our social systems.


Snowman

Winter Wonderland in October?! Snow hits West Virginia, US

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Snow falling at Snowshoe Mountain Resort in West Virginia on Oct. 1, 2011. Photo from the ski resort's facebook page.
Parts of the Appalachians looked like a winter wonderland during the few two days of October with snow and gusty winds howling.

Elevations of 3,000 to 3,500 feet in West Virginia got 1-3 inches of snow Saturday night into Sunday morning. Snowshoe Mountain in West Virginia picked up nearly 4 inches of snow through Sunday afternoon!

Other snow totals across the Appalachians include: 1 inch in Ebensburg, Pa., 1.2 inches in Philipsburg, Pa., and 0.7 inches at Laurel Summit, Pa.

More snow will continue through this evening at the highest elevations, but little additional accumulations are expected with the ground still remaining warm this time of year.

Snow also whitened some mountains all the way down to North Carolina late on Friday and early on Saturday morning.

Play

ManBearPig, Climategate and Watermelons: A conversation with author James Delingpole

James Delingpole is a bestselling British author and blogger who helped expose the Climategate scandal back in 2009. Reason.tv caught up with Delingpole in Los Angeles recently to learn more about his entertaining and provocative new book Watermelons: The Green Movement's True Colors. At its very roots, argues Delingpole, climate change is an ideological battle, not a scientific one. In other words, it's green on the outside and red on the inside. At the end of the day, according to Delingpole, the "watermelons" of the modern environmental movement do not want to save the world. They want to rule it.


Igloo

Coldest Arctic Start To Autumn Since 1996

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Daily mean temperatures for the Arctic area north of the 80th northern parallel, plotted with daily climate values calculated from the period 1958-2002.
Temperatures north of 80N have been normal to below normal for five months,obliterating global warming theory.

"The early and fast start to winter in the Arctic is due to cold temperatures not seen since 1996," says this article on Real-Science.com

Source of graph

See real-science.com

Thanks to Marc Morano for this link

Butterfly

Palestine State Quest Wins First Victory in UNESCO Vote

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© unknown
Palestine won a first diplomatic victory in its quest for statehood on Wednesday when the UNESCO executive committee backed its bid to become a member of the cultural body with the rights of a state.

Palestine's Arab allies braved intense US and French diplomatic pressure to bring the motion before the committee's member states, which passed it by 40 votes in favour to four against, with 14 abstentions.

The Palestinian bid will now be submitted to the UNESCO general assembly at the end of the month for final approval, a victory for a territory already seeking recognition as a state from the United Nations Security Council.

This request, which Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas presented to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on September 23, is being studied by council members, who are expected to vote in the coming weeks.

The United States wields a veto on the Security Council, and has said it will veto any statehood bid before Palestine comes to an agreement with US ally Israel over their longstanding territorial standoff.

Stormtrooper

Human Rights Going Downhill in Britain

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The UK, which used to boast of being a cradle of democracy and human rights, has in recent months witnessed a terminally downward trend in human rights on internal and international planes.

True to God, the Old Imperialist could have seen better days. Until recently, the history of human rights abuse in Britain pertained to its impish role in other countries but the violation of human rights in recent months has sufficed to put Britain high on the black list of countries with deplorable human rights abuse.

The first instance of such violation is the brutal crackdown on the peaceful student protests against the inconsiderate Tory-Liberal Democrat cuts and the massive cuts to third level education which shoved the British government closer to the verge of collapse as far as human rights are concerned. Tens of thousands of students took to the streets of London in November 2010 and protested against plans by the government to raise tuition fees by up to three times. However, the protests were received with the heavy-handed brutality of the British police who used the notorious technique known as kettling. Also known as containment or corralling, kettling is a violent tactic used by British police for controlling protesters. The tactic consists of forming large cordons of police officers who move onto the crowd to limit their movement or escape to the extent that the protestors are denied access to toilet, water or food.