April 3, 2009

END WAR, END NATO and G20 photo essay


Across the country, protests are planned against the war in Afghanistan and NATO.
A statement from the Regina peace Council is on the Canadian Peace Congress website.





Examples of cities with actions are Halifax and Winnipeg.

In halifax:

Saturday, April 4, 2009 from 1pm until 2pm.
Intersection of South Park and Spring Garden.
Intersection of South Park and Spring Garden Rd. Halifax Join our crosswalk banner action and leaflet. 


In Winnipeg, two events are planned for April 4th.

The first is a debate about NATO being put on by Peace Alliance Winnipeg.  It will be informative and held at St. Mathews Anglican Church at 1pm.






RALLY AT 4 O'CLOCK

The theme of the rally is to demand that Canada leave NATO and withdraw its troops from Afghanistan.

Date: Saturday, April 4, 2009
Time: 4:00 p.m.
Place: U.S. consulate in Winnipeg (corner of Portage Ave. & Notre Dame Avenue)
Sponsor: Manitoba Peace Council

Everyone is welcome. Bring your family, friends, workmates, placards,  and banners.

More on these events are on the Peace Alliance Winnipeg website.




These protests are global.  A reminder of that are the resistance camps set up by activists in Strasbourg, France.  Strasbourg is one of the NATO summit sites.






G20 PROTEST PHOTO ESSAY

The following photos of the London protests are from Indymedia:


clashes with police

 above: a view of the climate camp at the protests
 above: clown bankers 

This sure has been a busy week: the G20 summit, another Greek General Strike, and the Anti-NATO protests among others.

[edited on April 6th 2009, Italian protest of  April 4th added below]

Well, more busy than I thought.  The People's Weekly World reports 2.7 million marched through the streets of Rome on the weekend.  Protests in New York and Chicago as well.


it's in Italian, but the images say it all.

April 2, 2009

Two websites and a music review

MUSIC REVIEW: THE DILS





Above: Track from Album Class War, I hate the Rich.

Reading music reviews for me is always futile as words never do justice of describing how an album or song is. I am not one to write music reviews, but on a web page the ability to hear a tune or two for oneself makes me reconsider.

The Dils were a punk band in California from 1978 to 1980. In 2000, the Bacchus archives imprint of Dionysus records released an album (Class War-the title alone says it all) of a live show plus 2 studio tracks. A quote from the Bacchus website, actually old liner notes mentions:"...simply youthfully rebellious. It didn't matter if some members of the band were admitted communists, or that they were outspoken critics of the local scene..." One track, Red Rockers Rule makes it even more obvious. They are noted as opening for the Clash during that bands first North American tour.


For such a short lived band, their songs are well covered. According to a wikipedia article on the band, the song Your Not Blank was covered by the band Dillinger Four, while the song Class War was covered by the band D.O.A.


After the band ceased to exist, the members moved on from punk and politics. But the recordings in Class War are snapshots of a time when the members of the Dils were exactly what the liner notes said: "...simply youthfully rebellious." And I'll add: had the most impact.


if you want to view the track listing and hear track samples click on the link "Class War" above.




Above: a live set from 1978 (not on the Class War Album).


WEB SITES


VINYLCOMMUNICATIONS

VinylCommunications was a record label that released electronic music. The only reason I mention it is that it used the hammer and sickle in its logo.

This website is actually defunct and an archived page is shown. In fact the entire record label is defunct. I wonder what happened to the back catalogue? Why did it fold? This is a good question given the current debate on copyright and pirating music. Read more on this debate below.

YOU TOMB

How long will the You Tube links of the Dils above remain active?

You Tomb is a website that documents videos removed from You Tube due to copyright infringement.

It does not keep track of all videos, nor of removal for other reasons. The site is maintained by a student organization at MIT, called Free Culture. More about the site is on its info page. As the debate, or some may say, battle over copyright and its evil outgrowth, digital rights technology becomes more widespread, this site may well be a reference years down the road. Since the days of dubbed audio and VHS cassette tapes gave way to the audio file and movie file, lawyers at the major media corporations have been in a panic at the changing times. Some people have embraced this change and are adapting. Copyleft, Creative Commons licenses, are more common. Net labels have appeared releasing music for free, or donation. So, small labels can exist in a world of file sharing. Other revenue streams can thrive with free distribution and its result: free promotion. Bands like Radiohead have made waves by releasing entire studio albums (In Rainbows) on a donate what you can basis (which can mean: for free). Film maker Micheal Moore released an entire movie for free: Slacker Uprising.

The sharing of music through Napster, which held a massive directory list in central servers, was shutdown after a well publicized court case. However the decentralized setup of peer to peer (P2P) networks like Limewire, has filled the role that Napster once had. In response governments has made tougher copyright and anti-piracy laws to try to shore up the old order of things.

The free software movement, which fostered the Firefox web browser, Open Office word processor, and Linux operating system, is alive and well. No licenses need to be bought to run these software programs, unlike programs from corporations like Microsoft or Apple computer.

The idea of intellectual property as a commodity that can be bought, sold, or leased has been a large part of capitalism. The idea of greed or self interest to make money off one's ideas as a chief motivator in progress is old, but today, patents and copyrights often slow or stop development. Entire genres of music now depend on finding copyright clearances to produce new works. Laws have gone to the absurd extremes: colours, and even life forms can now be trademarked and patented. In Canada, the period of patent protection for new drugs was increased by years. With a longer time to hold monopolies on drugs, the cost of health care has increased and places vital drugs out of the reach of those who cannot afford them.


Ontario student leader calls for province-wide mobilizations


People's Voice
April 1-15, 2009

With the current economic down‑turn, province‑wide mobilizations are needed bringing together labour and students in the style of the Ontario Days of Action to demand substantial investments in public services, Ontario Chairperson of the Canadian Federation of Students (CFS) told People's Voice recently.

     Shelley Melanson criticised Ontario's McGuinty Liberal government for doing nothing on their anti‑poverty strategy, a response to widely condemned explosion of precarious work, growing income gaps and food bank usage across Ontario.

     "With the economic crisis more and more students are aware of the increasing privatization of institutions," Melanson told PV. "The Educational Policy Institute [a right‑wing US‑based think tank] was talking about a 25% increase in tuition. I think this sent shockwaves through the media and public discussion. It was front‑page of the Toronto Star." Melanson, who participated in numerous radio talk shows in response to the report, said she heard overwhelming support for immediate action on reduced tuition fees.

     EPI's report, "On the Brink: How the Recession of 2009 Will Affect Post‑Secondary Education in Canada", was co‑authored by Alex Usher. Back in 1995 (with the facilitation of the federal Liberals), Usher led a right‑wing split from the CFS, arguably to dampen large student mobilizations against drastic federal cut backs to social programmes and downloading.

     Melanson addressed revelations that the Conservative Party is training campus activists to manipulate student organizations, as well as the rising attack on freedom of speech on campuses.

     "Now, more than ever, students need to come together regardless of your political beliefs, and defend our Charter rights," she said. "I think that the minister of citizenship and immigration, Jason Kenney, has posed a serious threat to freedom expression and speech on campus. It would appear the Canadian government is not interested in people who disagree with them - for example their treatment of the Canadian Arab Federation, George Galloway, and the attempt to shut down discussion on international conflicts and occupations. "Can the government limit freedom of speech because of positions on war and international policy?"

     "This government clearly has an interest in undermining democratic organizational structures that exist on campuses," she said, pointing to a recent leak about the Conservative Party organizing workshops about keeping the CFS off campus, running candidates in student elections, overturning student levies, and setting up front group clubs by students affiliated with the Tories. "These workshops took place with sitting MPs in attendance," Melanson noted.

     On leaked tapes, a former student union president at the University of Waterloo describes how he coordinated directly with the local Conservative club to launch an attack on the campus chapter of the Ontario Public Interest Research Group. Melanson condemned this anti‑democratic involvement a political party in providing strategy and support for campaigns undermining student's right to organize.

     "I'm not necessarily shocked by what is happening. We've seen student codes of conduct - which should be about safety and equity, stopping harassment, safer spaces for women - instead used to stifle dissent," Melanson said. "Take the case of the fourteen students at the University of Toronto, who were engaged in a peaceful demonstration, and faced criminal charges, many of which have now been dropped and the students cleared, and also code of conduct charges. Perhaps [what is new is that] it is more visible, and there is more media attention. I think that institutions are more blatant."

     Melanson spoke to People's Voice at the end of a weekend‑long "Student Assembly Against War and Racism." The event, jointly organized by the Canadian Federation of Students and the Canadian Peace Alliance, aimed to provide an opportunity for students and allies to build skills for a sustained anti‑war movement on campuses. "We wanted to provide an opportunity for people with a significant background with activism to come together through skill building workshops with people who are just finding a political outlook."

     A major theme of the weekend was military recruitment on campuses, and military spending, both issues the CFS Ontario plans to continue to organize around. The effort will also help build for anti‑NATO demonstrations on April 4. The workshops "showcased in a variety of ways how our government is out of step with the sentiments of everyday Canadians and students" Melanson said.

March 31, 2009

Interactive on Economic Crisis



There is very little Canadian content here, but for that you can visit sites like Peoples Voice. Perhaps that is not surprising. Afterall, Al Jazeera is barred from Canada.

Biden: US won't lift blockade of Cuba


James Tweedie

Senior US politicians have hinted at better relations with Latin America's new wave of left-wing governments - except for Cuba.

US Vice-President Joe Biden said on Saturday that the US government has no plans to lift the nearly 50-year-old illegal blockade of the socialist island.

He and President Barack Obama "think that Cuban people should determine their own fate and they should be able to live in freedom," Mr Biden said after taking part in the Progressive Governance Summit in Chile, a gathering of centre-left leaders from Latin America and Europe.

The vice-president said a "transition" was needed in Washington's policy but that he was in Chile "to talk about the economy, not Cuba."

Meanwhile, in Colombia, former US president and Obama ally Bill Clinton told a meeting of the governors of the Inter-American Development Bank to maintain relations with the left-wing governments of Colombia's neighbours.

Without naming Bolivia, Ecuador and Venezuela, Mr Clinton said that "it shouldn't be surprising that a reaction to global inequality and America's withdrawal in the last eight years" under the Bush administration had produced governments "that are either too authoritarian or too hostile to market economics or both."

The UN general assembly has repeatedly passed resolutions condemning the blockade and calling for it to end.

Washington's isolation has increased in recent years as new progressive governments across the US's "back yard" of Latin America and the Caribbean have forged close ties with the ever-defiant Cuban people.

Despite the blockade, Cuba has provided practical solidarity across the developing world.

Mr Biden stressed that the White House was committed to the region.

"President Obama and I are absolutely committed to working closely with our neighbours in the hemisphere," he said at Chile's La Moneda presidential palace after meeting President Michelle Bachelet.

At a ceremony in Pretoria on Friday, South African President Kgalema Motlanthe bestowed the gold medal of the Order of the Companions of OR Thambo on Fidel Castro, presenting it to Cuban ambassador Angel Fernandez.

The order, named after former ANC president Oliver Thambo, is South Africa's highest award for solidarity with the anti-apartheid struggle.

It had previously been awarded posthumously to Martin Luther King Jr, Salvador Allende and Mahatma Gandhi.

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