Saturday, April 05, 2003

re: WFMU
There is a donor supported station in edmonton called CJSR that raises about 500 000 dollars every two-week pledge run (one in spring, one in fall). They are generally a very good station (and stream online) but cater to an older population that would rather hear the same old blues/bluegrass/jazz over and over (not that there's anything wrong with that, but I do wish there was more programming for some of the seriously fucked up kind of stuff that WFMU happily plays). They play it far too safe to get a really good review in my books, but when I'm forced to listen to the radio, I can always tolerate these guys, unlike any other station in Edmonton (though CJSR is sort of good too).

Uberorgan: god, I'm so pathetic compared to that. Amazing, simply amazing. I wish to see it but never will - how frustrating.
posted by Barrie , 11:28 PM Þ 
posted by Irdial , 10:45 PM Þ 

"This confirmed all of our suspicions that the Iranians are not our friends and not for peace in the region. They are in fact for a piece of the region,"

Washington Times

UPI
posted by Irdial , 10:36 PM Þ 


America dissapears an Intel employee:
http://www.freemikehawash.org/
posted by Irdial , 10:13 PM Þ 

Aljazeera English Maybe this time they will keep it online.
posted by Irdial , 10:12 PM Þ 



A colossal squid has been caught in Antarctic waters, the first example of Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni retrieved virtually intact from the surface of the ocean.

"All we knew prior to this specimen coming through was that this animal lived in the abyssal environment down in Antarctica," New Zealand squid expert and senior research fellow at Auckland University of Technology, Dr Steve O'Shea, told BBC News Online.

"Now we know that it is moving right through the water column, right up to the very surface and it grows to a spectacular size."

Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni was first identified in 1925 after two arms were recovered from a sperm whale's stomach.

BBC

Some things the BBC can do right!
posted by Irdial , 9:52 PM Þ 

Stop playing with the hosts file! You dont need to do that to block adverts. Download Mozilla and it will block the ads for you.

Dont kill your networking over this small thing!
posted by Irdial , 9:39 PM Þ 

It is a sound which has echoed down the centuries but which has not been heard here for 15 years - the wailing call to prayer.

On Friday however, at 0430 (0130 GMT), in the minutes before the desert dawn, the voice of the Imam rang out.

What Saddam's Baath party had forbidden, the British Army had restored.[...]

BBC

This is a total lie.

The Baath party has not "banned the call to prayer" anyone with an internet connection can watch IraqTV and see the call to prayer blasted out every day.

You have to do better than THAT BBC lie machine!
posted by Irdial , 9:37 PM Þ 

RAAaaaaarrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrgggghhhhh
just got up to the shitting war and im angry ..

Several residents were offended by the signs, which had yellow ribbons drawn on the bottom of them. At least 10 soldiers fighting in the war are from Sturgis. The men say that was "poor judgment" and meant no offense to military families. [...]
....typical american police state behaviour
soldiers:
they die.. good.. i just felt the world get lighter.. we lost another moron..
anybody who becomes a soldier must be stoopid anyway..
i mean who in their right mind is going to listen to a politician
tell them to go to a strange country and kill people
who are mostly walking about trying to ignore you
hey! do you notice that friendly fire seems to come from the US moistly?
yeah. thats becuase they are gung-ho ice-cream eating tele addicts
who only know how to consume, buy and die...
lets hope they do the latter and saddam wins his glorious war..
DEATH TO AMERICA AND BRITAIN!!! INFIDELS!!!!

trash who nicked my login
hey yo alun why dont you get an anti spam/popup fing??
you have to keep updating that file...
posted by Kris , 7:06 PM Þ 

I am such a clueless computer user. I'm trying the hosts thing, but can't even get past the first bit. I have no hosts file in the /etc/lookup dir I made. I think I'm supposed to create/copy a hosts file but.... dunno! Can't make it happen.

Oh dear.

Back to the instruction book.
posted by Alun , 5:07 PM Þ 

Are you listening to the 'space' discussion on Resonance?

Streaming radio is a revelation.




Ms Rice said Iraq was unique, and it was natural that those who had sacrificed blood and life would play a leading role in the aftermath.

Natural?
To the victor the spoils?
But this is simply 'liberation', right?
I mean, look at all the weapons of mass destruction we're now safe from. It is us that's being liberated, right? From the oppression of fear from mustachioed evil-doers, right?
Shit, for a minute there I thought I'd misunderstood the whole shebang.

And it's a good job that those Iraquis who 'sacrificed blood and life' understand that coalition B+L is the only stuff that counts.
posted by Alun , 4:03 PM Þ 

Nagasaki Journey

Nagasaki Journey - photographs taken August 10, 1945, the day after the bomb.
posted by Mikkel , 3:14 PM Þ 
posted by Alun , 2:57 PM Þ 

What (if anything) are you looking for behind the lines?

In this case, if it was shot by IraqTV then we can say that its probable that they didnt stumbple upon him. That logical conclusion is "reading between the lines".

We are looking (or should be looking) for the true facts behind footage and imagery, so that we can separate propaganda from fact.
posted by Irdial , 1:30 PM Þ 

“Let them march all they want, as long as they continue to pay their taxes.”
—Alexander Haig, U.S. Sec. of State, June 12, 1982

http://warresisters.org/wtr.htm

http://www.nwtrcc.org
posted by Irdial , 1:28 PM Þ 

Questions

What is behind the lines to be read?
If there is anything there, how will you know you understand it?
What (if anything) are you looking for behind the lines?
posted by captain davros , 12:57 PM Þ 

Iraqui TV is back on air, in its original form, broadcast quailty. They just showed the "President in the street" footage again.

If the original footage was shot by Iraqui TV, then its possible that the President was inside the car as it approached the site of the filming. This would explain how they "just found him in the street", which is unlikely.

When I saw the raw footage uplinked, the fact that it was a spanish speaking man that was uplinking it made it appear that it had not been shot by Iraqui TV.

The news never says who shoots footage, which is a bad thing® when you are trying to read behind the lines.
posted by Irdial , 11:16 AM Þ 
posted by Irdial , 10:47 AM Þ 

US formalises billion dollar debt write-off to Pakistan

Reuters

Washington, April 5: Pakistan and the United States signed a formal agreement on Saturday to write off a US $1.0 billion debt owed by Islamabad to Washington.

Washington decided to cancel Pakistan's $1.0 billion debt soon after President Pervez Musharraf threw his weight behind the US-led war on terror in neighbouring Afghanistan following the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. "Today's signing represents a promise kept and another milestone in our expanding relationship," Nancy Powell, US Ambassador to Pakistan, told reporters after the signing.

http://www.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?newsid=20286
posted by Irdial , 10:44 AM Þ 

Men arrested for “All Your Base” prank

By Holly Doyle News 3 Reporter
April 4, 2003 - 8:37AM
STURGIS (NEWS 3) - An April Fools joke has seven young men in Sturgis explaining a punchline that the police say was no laughing matter. They put up signs that read "ALL YOUR BASE ARE BELONG TO US, YOU HAVE NO CHANCE TO SURVIVE MAKE YOUR TIME."

It's a phrase, interpreted, that comes from a 1989 Japanese video game. It grew into an Internet cult with many web sites and even a music video devoted to it.

The young men, ranging in ages from 17 to 20, found it and thought it was funny. The video shows the words "ALL YOUR BASE" on everything, including businesses. They explain they were just doing the same thing hoping to get a laugh out of people when they saw the phrase everywhere.

"We thought it was funny. I thought everybody else would think it was funny too," explains J. P. Wolf, one of the men who taped up the signs.

"It wasn't meant to be anything harmful," adds friend Kyle Woodward. "It was just a joke. We wanted to make people laugh and that was it. We didn't have any clue it was going to come out something like this."

Several residents were offended by the signs, which had yellow ribbons drawn on the bottom of them. At least 10 soldiers fighting in the war are from Sturgis. The men say that was "poor judgment" and meant no offense to military families. [...]

wwmt.com
posted by Irdial , 10:12 AM Þ 

Iraqui TV is still on the air, but without the ITV logo. After a song about President Sadam Housein, the tape stopped, and then was rewound, live on the air.

The audio is overloaded. The colours are desaturated. It cuts out to a black screen and starts buzzing loudly.

The sound drops out...
posted by Irdial , 10:09 AM Þ 
Friday, April 04, 2003

I am looking Akin. Interested. If this is true, it is important. This must not be forgotten.

Here are some pics for you all: http://war.miniaturegigantic.com/gallery.html
posted by Mikkel , 9:19 PM Þ 

On the high bandwidth webcam from Baghdad, about 15,mins ago, a spanish mans voice gave a report, and then, about 5 minutes later, he fed some footage from a camera into the webfeed.

The footage was taken out of a moving car in the city, showing the usual dusty buildings, then, all of a sudden, the back of a man, in Baath uniform.

It was Saddam Husein, in the middle of the street, in the middle of the day.

Almost immediately, a crowd, most of them civilians and all of them armed, started to gather around him, shaking his hand and then kissing it with a salute to follow.

It appeared that the President was checking out the damage to the city and the camera crew suddenly, and accidentaly caught him in the street.

The crowd grew large, blocking traffic, all of them chanting the chant of Saddam.

No doubt, this footage will surface on the news shortly, accompanied by the usual disclaimers "Arabs shot it so it cant be real", "its either him or one of his doubles".

You know the score.

Now there is an Italian woman on the line....
posted by Irdial , 8:30 PM Þ 

Free speech.

Check out the 9 video feeds on one webpage:

http://www.webcamsue.demon.nl/
posted by Irdial , 7:30 PM Þ 

Speaking of covers of songs:
The Bad Plus is a jazz trio that does some amazing covers of popular songs including Smeels Like Teen Spirit, Heart of Glass and Aphex Twin's Flim. The pianist is Ethan Iverson who is really out control. Well worth a listen. You can catch snippets of all of those songs at their website. Plus you can listen to the entirety of Smells Like Teen Spirit from an NPR show. The solos he finds in the crevices of that simple melody are wonderful.
posted by Josh Carr , 6:31 PM Þ 

This show by Ken is a classic:
16 October 2002 | I Will Always Love You | See the playlist | Hear the show
posted by Irdial , 6:08 PM Þ 

They just raised $600,000 in their annual fund raiser. This is how radio should be done. The diversity is extraordinary, DJs can do whatever they like.

There is a late night "talk show" that has regular phone callers...it is priceless. They just ad lib for hours and hours, its hilarious, wonderful.

Two wise "old" dudes from London did something like this, spontaneously, after performing an extremely intense improvised radio noise work. It was the last show of the day; the station was to go off air at the end of the programme.

The engineer who allowed this spontaneous talk fest to explode onto the airwaves was fired.

Thats the difference between a station that can raise $600,000 in two weeks from its loyal listeners world wide (all foreigners listening online). And a starving for money and attention station without direction or vigor.
posted by Irdial , 5:49 PM Þ 

"We will commit a non-conventional act on them, not necessarily military. We will do something that will be a great example for these mercenaries.

"I send my condolences for now, and I'll tell them exactly how many will be killed today and tomorrow," he added.[...]

In a speech broadcast on Iraqi television today, President Saddam called on the people of Baghdad and predicted victory over US and British troops.

"Hit them with force, resist them, oh people of Baghdad, whenever they advance upon your city, and remain true to your principles, your faith and your honour," the Iraqi president, who was dressed in military uniform, said.

"You beloved ones, the people of Baghdad and the people of Iraq, the vanguard of victory, with the will of God you will be victorious, and by the will of God they will be defeated and damned," he said.[...]

The Guardian
posted by Irdial , 5:42 PM Þ 

I can't even believe the sounds I am hearing from WFMU right now. 40-odd Italian longshoremen singing unaccompanied from a "wine-soaked bar" recorded by Alan Lomax in 1954. It is otherworldly. The song was called La Partenza. I don't even know what to do with myself after hearing that...
posted by Josh Carr , 5:38 PM Þ 

------------------------------------------------------------------------
You have received this message from the "FIPR Alert" mailing list run by
the Foundation for Information Policy Research http://www.fipr.org/
------------------------------------------------------------------------

So much for free speech... Might be an opportunity for Freenet to get a
lot of new clients...

Akamai ends Al-Jazeera server support
By Sandeep Junnarkar
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
April 4, 2003, 7:20 AM PT
--
First came the crushing traffic and the hack attacks. Now Al-Jazeera has
lost Web server support for its troubled Internet news efforts.
--
Akamai Technologies, which provided Web server services to the Arabic
news network, has abruptly cancelled its contract after working only
briefly with the organization. Akamai has over 13,000 servers worldwide
that store data on behalf of clients.

"Akamai worked briefly this week with Al-Jazeera to understand the
issues they are having distributing their Web sites. We ultimately
decided not to continue a customer relationship with Al-Jazeera, and we
are not going to be providing them our services," according to a
statement released by Akamai. The company declined to elaborate on the
reasons...

http://news.com.com/2100-1035-995525.html?tag=fd_top


The reason for this is may be that one of the founders of Akami was killed on board one of the 911 airplanes.
posted by Irdial , 5:32 PM Þ 

A Confession
Once in a while,
I'm standing here, doing something.
And I think,
"What in the world am I doing here?"
It's a big surprise.
- The Poetry of D.H. Rumsfeld

This shit is terrible. Not as bad as Ashcroft's Let the Eagle Soar, though.
posted by Mikkel , 3:36 PM Þ 

Anti-war slogan coined, repurposed and Googlewashed... in 42 days

By Andrew Orlowski in San Francisco
Posted: 03/04/2003 at 12:12 GMT

This year marks the 100th anniversary of George Orwell's birth, and the writer who best explained the power of language on politics would be amazed what can be done with the Internet.

On February 17 a front page news analysis in the New York Times bylined by Patrick Tyler described the global anti-war protests as the emergence of "the second superpower".

Tyler wrote: "...the huge anti-war demonstrations around the world this weekend are reminders that there may still be two superpowers on the planet: the United States and world public opinion."

This potent phrase spread rapidly.

Anti-war campaigners, peace groups and NGOs took to describing the global popular protest as "the second superpower" [Greenpeace release]. And in less than a month, the phrase was being used by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan. [Financial Times - reg req'd].

And a week ago, a Google search for the phrase would have shown the vigorous propagation of this 'meme'. [...]

The Register
posted by Irdial , 3:08 PM Þ 
posted by Alun , 3:06 PM Þ 

Davros, this is for you. And Mikkel too.

Suckers for punishment, the pair of you.

Reminds me (tangentially) of V/VM and their 'Sick Love' set.
posted by Alun , 2:00 PM Þ 

Vaughn Bodé's War Lizard

Re-re-rediscovered Vaughn Bodé today. You wouldn't believe this shit was 30 years old. There's more behind the image.

I want that Moped mix of Clocks. /me gets with the SoleSeek
posted by Mikkel , 2:00 PM Þ 

I love scooter, me

even though their collected singles LP will not play on a cd rom drive.
posted by captain davros , 1:46 PM Þ 

re: Clocks
In the lab we now have (mainly) Radio 1. A couple of weeks ago the played (supposedly sent in by a listener) a remix of clocks. The guy had called his 'band' Moped, as a 'tribute band to Scooter'. So imagine Clocks with varispeed vocals, happy-house beats and dodgy euro-rapping.... It worked for me.

As for Coldplay.... They belong here, and nowhere near the people who brought us
Have Coldplay brought anything original to the musical table?
posted by Alun , 1:09 PM Þ 

I heard Coldplay's beautiful "Clocks" for the first time a week ago. Today, I heard it again, and, OMG its a Joy Division song (Temptation, Ceremony, Regret, mixed with some modern U2 eno production).

Jeez Louize:

People who have never heard vinyl, vag haired groups making 10million out of rehashed Joy Division songs, A pre emptive war wholesale military colonization of Arab countries, a stolen American presidency, Macs not sucking...$your_observation....

Can I wake up now?
posted by Irdial , 12:50 PM Þ 

US diplomats have been "allowed to leave" (evacuated) from China over SARS fears.
posted by Irdial , 12:39 PM Þ 

Behind the surgical masks bearing Burberry and Louis Vuitton logos, people in Hong Kong are growing increasingly worried about the spread of the Sars virus
can't find any images though. maybe in the 'real' guardian?
posted by Alun , 11:52 AM Þ 

...never heard music reproduced from vinyl....told you this would happen in my infamous 1992 essay.

This man is habituated to the sound of digital; for him that IS the sound of recorded music. Astonishing how quickly this has happened... Was it inevitable?
posted by Irdial , 11:25 AM Þ 

"If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, it expects what never was and never will be... The People cannot be safe without information. When the press is free, and every man is able to read, all is safe."

www.evworld.com
posted by Irdial , 11:09 AM Þ 


"Sir, let those laugh that win," Barry Lyndon
posted by Irdial , 10:25 AM Þ 



Welcome Kris. What's your music?
I seem to have acquired an account by accident
As far as I can tell, in my experience, Akin doesn't do accidents.


From Alisons link...
Of the 13 states with sodomy laws, four -- Texas, Kansas, Oklahoma and Missouri -- prohibit "deviate sexual intercourse," or oral and anal sex, between same-sex couples. The other nine ban consensual sodomy for everyone: Alabama, Florida, Idaho, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Utah and Virginia. [...] The case began in 1998, when a neighbor tricked police with a false report of a black man "going crazy" in John Geddes Lawrence's apartment. Police pushed their way in and found Lawrence having anal sex with another man, Tyron Garner. !!!!!!!!!!!!!Land of the free and all that...gotta love thy neighbour.

one of my work colleagues told me today that he has never ( except in a club ) heard music reproduced from vinyl WTF!? My dog, that makes me feel old.
posted by Alun , 9:33 AM Þ 

Oh Please
please
Oh God
God Damn it!


The perfume world is just around the corner....

Texas court
posted by Alison , 8:32 AM Þ 

oh yeah you check these out?
http://www.iraqwar.ru
http://www.aeronautics.ru

interestin.....
sorry couldnt get link to work
posted by Kris , 1:55 AM Þ 

er hello guys,
I seem to have acquired an account by accident
im not really sure about postin to this fing
so ill just do a first hello post type thing
and then after ill inundate you with my mindless opinions
you can welcome me first if you like
me names Kris and i make music
im from London (sarf)
im a bit of a lunatic
and i like slagging off major record companies
i'd like it better though if i could crush them in the palm of my hand
but lets face it im dreaming again. Long live Hilary Rosen!
later
K
posted by Kris , 1:38 AM Þ 

posted by chriszanf , 1:13 AM Þ 
Thursday, April 03, 2003

one of my work colleagues told me today that he has never ( except in a club ) heard music reproduced from vinyl
posted by a hymn in g to nann , 8:49 PM Þ 

I have these connected...


WFMU sounds nice...
posted by Alun , 8:28 PM Þ 

While Baghdad airport comes under attack, Iraqui TV is STILL transmitting.
posted by Irdial , 8:05 PM Þ 

better photos:



posted by Josh Carr , 7:40 PM Þ 

Tim Hawkinson's Uberorgan

[...]The room directly in front of the entrance, is the voice of the harpy, drawing the viewer in. The score is written out on giant strips of vellum, like the paper in a player piano. The dashes painted on the vellum are the musical notes and each dab is rolled over a photosensitive machine, reading the notes. This is where art becomes an engineer’s wet dream. Spooling over numerous rolling pins, a continuous length of about 200 feet of velum is encrypted with an aural medley. Derivations of classical music (Swan Lake), church hymns and improvisational patterns of sound are not at all obvious to even an attentive ear. The places where the black dashes pass over the 4ft-wide roll of velum physically block the beams emitted from twelve light- switches. A correlating note is sent to a reed- assembly station. This then forces air through a resonator. The “computer” and amplifier contain a number of filters, key shifters and scale inverters, randomly reshaping the “sheet music”. The flow of air is then routed to one of the many bulbous bagpipes. Each bagpipe is hooked up to an air valve that fills the air- impregnated tubes with pitch. The “Uberorgan” finally belches out through 20ft telescoping horns wrapped in a reflective material.[...]

posted by Josh Carr , 7:30 PM Þ 

Utterly Priceless:

http://www.pleatsplease.com/

and for sheer beauty and genius:

http://www.isseymiyake.com/
posted by Irdial , 7:22 PM Þ 

i only asked WHY!?!

they are damn pretty though. reminds me of takashi murakami. did anyone see the work he's done with louis vuitton?

posted by alex_tea , 7:06 PM Þ 


AT made me do it!
posted by Irdial , 7:01 PM Þ 

I changed my hosts file to the one that remember.mine.nu provided and it is totally amazing. A dreaded page like hotmail which is usually filled with annoying flashing images and useless text pleading for my attention is now a tame, empty space with only the mail functions I visit for. No more banner ads!

And yes, WFMU is one of the top reasons for musical living. I tune in at my house all the time, and it continuously beams onto my computer at work while I'm here (virtually nulling the 15 gigs of mp3s/OGGs I meticulously collected). Their programming is unfuckwithable (with the notable exception of pre-twentieth century composer-based musics) and they constantly throw sounds out there that make me gasp out loud (I wonder what my cubicle-mates must think). Nothing felt better than to give them a chunk of money during their recent pledge drive...
posted by Josh Carr , 6:37 PM Þ 

posted by Irdial , 5:42 PM Þ 

claus/mess... there's usually a messageboard in the merch room, leave messages there. i say we have a blogdial go kart race.
posted by alex_tea , 5:39 PM Þ 

Yaaaa! Look at this awesome interface to google and amazon showing related sites!

HT HT HT....
posted by Irdial , 5:38 PM Þ 

386 DX is Russian musician Alexei Shulgin who peforms with his 386 DX / 4Mb RAM / EGA / 40 Mb HD and Synchronized text-to-speech and midi synthesis. He does covers like Smells Like Teen Spirit, Enter Sandman and Purple Haze which you can listen to on his site. He also does these street performances where just the computer is present:




A Press Release from his site:

For Immediate Release


Contact: 323-644-1762 (US),
011-52 (6) 6789571 (cell phone, Mexico)
borderconcert@easylife.org
http://www.easylife.org/386dx

Alexei Shulgin and his 386 DX Cyberpunk band will perform at the US/Mexican border on Saturday December 18, 1999 at 6:00 PM.

The internationally renowned artist from Russia was invited to perform at Tijuana Media Center, Cinematik (http://cinematik.com). Due to strict American visa constraints and complicated immigration bureaucracy, the only way for his performance to reach Mexico is through a crack in the fence at the border.

At 6:00 PM this Saturday evening, all are invited to join Shulgin and his 386 DX Cyberpunk band perform across the border. The band consists of a single old computer which sings rock'n'roll hits and features a multimedia light show extravaganza. Come to the border to witness the start of a new era in which computers are replacing humans at all levels, with or without borders.

Shulgin will perform on the manicured lawn of Border Fields State Park, in the company of the uniformed gun-slinging men and women of the US Border Patrol, who will likely be patrolling the area for illegal Mexican immigrants. It is expected that the Patrol will execute a synchronous "ballet" for Shulgin's music by driving their distinctive white and green vehicles in the Tijuana river floodplain behind the artist.

Since borders have become more permeable for products and less passable for people, Shulgin's computer is allowed to travel freely between Mexico and the USA without a visa, but Shulgin must remain behind the chain-link fence that separates his hosting country, the land of equal opportunity, from Mexico.

This Saturday evening Shulgin's 386 DX computer will be in Mexico. Assistants will hand Shulgin his keyboard (and the occasional taco) through a crack in the fence. All are welcome to attend in either the USA at Border Fields State Park or in Mexico at Las Playas de Tijuana (at El Saro, where the Pacific Ocean and the border meet).

To get to Border Fields State Park on the US side, take Dairy Mart road (second of last exit on I-5) west until you arrive at the beach. In Mexico, take the Ensenada Highway west along the fence, get off at Las Playas, drive west to the beach, and then north to the fence.
posted by Josh Carr , 5:25 PM Þ 

Well good in London now

If you are in london, come see me.
posted by Irdial , 4:59 PM Þ 

Well good in London now. Chillin' for a day before I go to ATP. Thanks for the 411 Alex, I guess I'll find you. That Norman Foster buliding is looking mighty... ahem Mighty. Pockets filled with Danish cigarettes and partially functional 'use-once' cameras. Later some essential shopping (vodka and pasta) and off tomorrow. Cheers.
posted by Claus Eggers , 1:44 PM Þ 

AK, now that you are on broadband, you must, MUST "tune" into http://www.wfmu.org Yyou can keep the radio streaming whilst doing everything you like...dont bother with the 32k stream....
posted by Irdial , 1:35 PM Þ 

Some (a lot) of the content on this new Grauniad piece is provided by Nature magazine. Nature is almost the holy grail of publications for any scientist... but it abuses this position terribly, and has set up a plethora of money-spinning offshoots in the past few years. Whilst some of the papers in these are still high quality there is an abundance of shit not worthy of the 'Nature' name. Money is the Nature game nowadays, not science.

Alex - ta very much!
posted by Alun , 1:16 PM Þ 

alun.

some os x tips or whatever.

real browser: camino, safari and mozilla. get v67 of safari of a file share network for tabs etc. you can get webcore v68 and build it yourself if you want from dave hyatt's blog.

file sharing: acquisition, hotline (use the pitbull client) and kdx.

warez: macserialjunkie get SMX and you'll have all the serials you'll ever need. to get files use one of the programs above, you'll usually need accounts, but we have a free server running here, use home.r107.co.uk as the server address... leave a message for me and i'll give you an account. anyone really. a212's on there too.

if you want to do unix stuff get fink and read macdevcenter, here are some more os x/darwin/gnu links:

http://www.osxgnu.org/
http://fink.sourceforge.net/
http://sourceforge.net/
http://www.openoffice.org/
http://www.kung-foo.tv/xtips.php
http://www.macdevcenter.com/pub/a/mac/collections/unix.html
http://www.gnu-darwin.org/
http://www.macosxhints.com/

and to add to the april fools mac pranks thing try pressing CTRL-OPT-COMMAND and * on the keypad!!
posted by alex_tea , 1:14 PM Þ 

If you want to report science properly, dont waste time on negative, condecending, reports and articles, simply do it right in the first place. Take a look at this:

"New measurements from the Hubble space telescope hint that space is smooth - not grainy, as has been claimed. Scientists have peered at distant stars and galaxies, and seen a pin-sharp picture. This, they say, is at odds with the quantum physics prediction that space, time and gravity are split into pieces at the smallest scale, like the pixels of a photograph. "The theoreticians are very worried," says Richard Lieu of the University of Alabama in Huntsville. "There could be quite a bit of missing physics to be found."

This sort of dumb and innacurate waffle is the worst kind of science writing. Dr David Whitehouse of the BBC is another regular offender in this respect. And dont give me the bullshit about making science "understandable". Some science really is difficult to understand, and there is nothing to be done about it, except learn. It would be better not to "report" science at all, than waste space with this garbage; better still, why not simply reprint the original work, or link to it so we can bypass the trash.
posted by Irdial , 1:01 PM Þ 

"Be very afraid"

Oh dear. Without even clicking on the link, I KNEW what the tone of the "Bad Science" page would read like; more religious twaddle from self deluded control addicts out to stab us with their vile ideas, jab us with their vile potions, force feed us their frankenstein food and then chide us like children for not taking it with a smile.

I qoute from the article:

"Science, you see, is the optimum belief system"

"First, of course, we shall take on duff reporting: ill-informed, credulous journalists, taking their favourite loonies far too seriously, or misrepresenting good science, for the sake of a headline. They are the first against the wall."

"Next we'll move on the quacks: the creationists, the new-age healers, the fad diets. They're sad and they're lonely. I know that. But still they must learn."

"And finally, let us not forget the strays, the good scientists who have passed to the dark side. Was it those shares in that drug company, or the lust for fame and glory? Bad scientists, your days are numbered."

If this was meant to be funny, it failed miserably. Science is used as a pretext to control the lives of billions of people on this planet, to make money for corporations, practice social engineering and of course perfect the evils of war.

This high priest that the Guardian has hired is there only to ridicule everything that is not approved cult dogma. We have seen it all before, with the brain dead Skeptics, and quite frankly, its a bore.

The Guardian is, after all, just a newspaper written by journalists sometimes they get it completely wrong (like the double page spread story about the Firemans Union boss having an "expensive" curry) and sometimes they get it wrong on a large scale, and this is just what they are about to do.

And by the way, Dr Goldacre, we are already afraid, of you and your egomaniac ilk.

PS how appropriate that this "man" asks people to turn in others to his inquisition; as was done by his ancestors routing out witchcraft....hey, if it aint broke, dont fix it!
posted by Irdial , 12:53 PM Þ 

The Guardian has today launched a new science supplement called 'Life', which consists of a round up of the week's science stories, a section on the history of science (Far Out), profiles on interesting individuals (the first one being Jane Goodall, the primatologist), think pieces about the relevance of science to society (there's one by the author Matt Ridley on the need for more 'techno-optimism'), features (one about the history and future of nuclear power) and a news section supplied by Nature magazine. There's also a section called 'Bad Science' in which readers are invited to email in examples of bad science to a Dr Goldacre at bad.science@guardian.co.uk.

Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger provides an introduction in which he outlines his reasons for launching: the need to bring science into the mainstream, and onto the front pages; the need to address the fact that while scientists are often chided for mistrusting the press, the press is often guilty of sensationalising science, and that somewhere in the middle, the reader is losing out; his desire to 'dwarf the commitment to science on any other paper in this country' and do 'something similar for the understanding and general culture of science in this country as the New York Times has done - and continues to do - in America'.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/life/badscience/
http://www.guardian.co.uk/life/
posted by Alun , 12:24 PM Þ 

Iraqi TV just went off the air again!
posted by Irdial , 12:12 PM Þ 

US draws up secret plan to impose regime on Iraq

Brian Whitaker and Luke Harding in Sulaimaniya
Tuesday April 1, 2003

A disagreement has broken out at a senior level within the Bush administration over a new government that the US is secretly planning in Kuwait to rule Iraq in the immediate aftermath of the overthrow of Saddam Hussein.

Under the plan, the government will consist of 23 ministries, each headed by an American. Every ministry will also have four Iraqi advisers appointed by the Americans, the Guardian has learned.[...]

Decisions on the government's composition appear to be entirely in US hands, particularly those of Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy secretary of defence. This has annoyed Gen Garner, who is officially in charge but who, according to sources close to the planning of the government has had to accept a number of controversial Iraqis in advisory roles.[...]

The Guardian
posted by Irdial , 12:07 PM Þ 

AJN has suspended its reporting from Iraq, because the Iraqi govt has thrown out two of its journalists.

hmmmmmm
posted by Irdial , 10:51 AM Þ 

If you want to block adverts, use mozilla, which blocks popups with a single tick.

You can then use bannerblind to erase embedded adverts from webpages.

Boom! its done!
posted by Irdial , 10:49 AM Þ 

WARNING pictures almost made me faint....
Basra: Injured Children
posted by Alison , 10:48 AM Þ 

"You don't see a universe that is blurred," he said. "If you take any Hubble Space Telescope Deep Field image you see sharp images, which is enough to tell us that the light has not been distorted or perturbed by fluctuations in space-time from the source to the observer."[...]

uh oh...

Space.com
posted by Irdial , 10:47 AM Þ 

Thanks for the Hosts thing.
I have a lot to learn.
posted by Alun , 9:56 AM Þ 

posted by Irdial , 8:45 AM Þ 

Percodan? No, I prefer
posted by mary13 , 1:48 AM Þ 
posted by Mess Noone , 12:45 AM Þ 
Wednesday, April 02, 2003

"Human life is cheap, dirt cheap, according to this society, judged by the way it acts, the only true test, saw Christie, despite its pious mouthings. What it does in practice is not what it says it does. It does not care for human life: it shortens that life by the nature of the work it demands, it poisons that life in pursuit of mere profit, it organises wars from which it is certain mass killing will result... but you know the ways in which we are all diminished: I should not need to rehearse them further."

- B.S. Johnson, 'Christie Malry's Own Double-Entry'

posted by Mess Noone , 10:22 PM Þ 

Top General Denounces Internal Dissent on Iraq

[...]General Myers also reprimanded members of the news media for analyzing, criticizing and reporting anonymous dissent on a secret war plan they had never seen, although Mr. Rumsfeld cut him off with a playful reminder about constitutional protections and a free press.[...]
posted by Josh Carr , 10:01 PM Þ 

some notes before i leave. i'm late for a party.

HOSTs file. build the hosts file as normal and then parse it into NetInfo Manager. This may takea while if you have a huge hosts file, I installed the remember.mine.nu hosts file once and gave up cos it was taking so long and deleeted the hole hists dir in NI and started again from scratch.

Anyway read up on it here and here

ATP. i will be wearing lots of clothes on different days i guess. I might take one of the BBC banners I made to put up in the window of my chalet. Um. I'll find you. I think I iwll be having a different hair cut every day. I will be hanging with an international bunch. French, American, Candian.. and some others. We look pretty normal. You'll find us.

I wish I had an iPod so I could take A212 down with me and listen to it.
posted by alex_tea , 9:58 PM Þ 


Pir8s of AOL HAAARRRRRRR!
posted by Irdial , 7:02 PM Þ 

Yes, since you are now running a REAL operating system!

You need to find and edit your hosts file; here is a tutorial on how to do it.

Probally your best bet is to wait for Alex or Clegso to tell you how to do this, since they are actually running OSX and not just talking about it!
posted by Irdial , 6:49 PM Þ 

Akin,
10th March 02 you posted a supertrick for blocking sites in windoze. Is there a way to do the same in OSX?
posted by Alun , 5:50 PM Þ 

Warning - Raymi is not work safe!!!
posted by captain davros , 4:17 PM Þ 

“We don’t do body counts”
General Tommy Franks, US Central Command


Adversities such as wars and civil wars threaten the survival and dignity of millions of people. The victims of these conflicts are primarily, if not almost exclusively, civilians - ordinary men and women. Civilian casualties are the most unacceptable consequence of all wars. Each civilian death is a tragedy and should never be regarded as the “cost” of achieving our countries’ war aims, because it is not we who are paying this price. One in four killed in the US war on Afghanistan were civilians, and in Yugoslavia the proportion was even higher. We believe it is a moral and humanitarian duty for each such death to be recorded, publicised, given the weight it deserves and, where possible, investigated to establish whether there are grounds for criminal proceedings.

iraqbodycount.net
posted by chriszanf , 2:48 PM Þ 
posted by Irdial , 1:53 PM Þ 

Percodan -hey ha ha. I stumbled upon the Raymi complex of sites a couple of weeks ago, it's litterally hours of fun discovering the many sub-sites she's made.
posted by Claus Eggers , 12:45 PM Þ 

A charity single from the TV talent search American Idol is being changed to feature versions of two patriotic US songs.
The show's finalists had been expected to release the Burt Bacharach-Hal David composition, What the World Needs Now Is Love.

But following an "overwhelming" response from viewers, they will now record two Lee Greenwood songs, I'm Proud To Be an American and God Bless the USA.
posted by Alun , 10:58 AM Þ 

I got my mac. It's lovely!
And broadband too!
Now I need a real browser and secure e-mail, amongst other things. I have Dreamweaver, Fireworks, Flash, QuicktimeVR and all that malarkey so maybe I'll even have a web page one day.
And after seeing OSX, doesn't OS9.2 look DATED!

Anyway, I am excited.

War Oxymorons:


President George W. Bush
Military intelligence
Smart missile
Israeli help
Iraqui liberation
Middle East peace process
United Nations

Just Morons



posted by Alun , 10:39 AM Þ 

The mini-queaser has its own output jack (no speaker) but works from a pot. The Platypus has a light sensitive resistor but only a speaker for output - the reason being that I made it to go to a party and didn't want to mess around with amps etc (and I was short of sockets at the time too). Crap thing is that I never took it in the end either!
posted by captain davros , 10:19 AM Þ 





A billboard featuring the poster for the new film 'What A Girl Wants' is pictured at Warner Bros. studios in Burbank, California April 1, 2003 featuring actress Amanda Bynes (news) giving a 'V or peace sign.' Sensitive to the controversial war against Iraq (news - web sites), studio executives announced April 1 that they have changed an advertisement for the film that features the 16 year-old star flashing a peace sign and instead have her placing her hand on her hip. REUTERS/Fred Prouser
posted by Irdial , 10:10 AM Þ 

captain, your mini queaser looks fantastic ......... i like the idea of the additional light-sensitive resistor ... does it have an output jack, or just its own speaker ? ... any sounds you can post ?
posted by a hymn in g to nann , 9:03 AM Þ 

posted by Irdial , 8:32 AM Þ 

"Bechtel, the engineering giant that employed the likes of former Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, former Secretary of State George Schultz and former CIA Director William Casey before they took their government posts, gave $1.3 million in individual, PAC and soft money contributions between 1999 and 2002. As it prepares its bid for the postwar project, Bechtel is facing allegations that it contributed to Iraq's military buildup nearly two decades ago. The San Francisco Chronicle has reported that a German journalist uncovered a document prepared for the United Nations by Iraq that says Bechtel was among 24 U.S. companies that supplied the country with weapons during the '80s."

Postwar Profits

and updates

Every single bit of it makes me ill. How can people be this way? How can they be so one-sided, to think that their way of being is so correct, that they will smash and shatter people, and then profit? There is plenty for everyone, why can't they see?
posted by mary13 , 5:08 AM Þ 

December 31, 2003, dear Dav. Can't resist babies ...

posted by mary13 , 12:58 AM Þ 

U got your Mac Alun?

Here are some instruments of mine, two that I built recently, and one that I bought. Please look and let me know what you think.
posted by captain davros , 12:02 AM Þ 
Tuesday, April 01, 2003

Alex and Mess
Since you're both going to ATP we have the opportunity to meet. I will be wearing an old black army jacket with a yellow square on my back, that has the word STANDARD stenciled on it. See ya.
posted by Claus Eggers , 11:47 PM Þ 

Greetings from chez Kirby.
For the first time.
Mmmmm.
posted by Alun , 10:49 PM Þ 
posted by Mikkel , 8:24 PM Þ 

Meanwhile it has emerged - as a result of detective work on the internet by a Guardian reader - that the explosion in a Baghdad market which killed more than 60 people last Friday was indeed caused by a cruise missile and not an Iraqi anti-aircraft rocket as the US has suggested.

A metal fragment found at the scene by British journalist Robert Fisk carried various markings, including "MFR 96214 09". This, our reader pointed out in an email, is a manufacturer's identification number known as a "cage code".

Cage codes can be looked up on the internet (www.gidm.dlis.dla.mil), and keying in the number 96214 traces the fragment back to a plant in McKinney, Texas, owned by the Raytheon Company.

Raytheon, whose headquarters are in Lexington, Massachusetts, aspires "to be the most admired defence and aerospace systems supplier through world-class people and technology", according to its website (www.raytheon.com). It makes a vast array of military equipment, including the AGM-129 cruise missile which is launched from B-52 bombers.


I must have missed the military confirming this. Non? Surely they're not still 'investigating' it?
posted by Alun , 4:52 PM Þ 

Homeland Security has announced they will soon be implementing new software which will record every click of your mouse. It is their belief that it will operate completely transparently and that the average user will not notice any difference in performance. Click on the URL below to observe this incredible new technology.

While I agree we need to do what we can for national security, I think they may have gone too far!

http://users.chartertn.net/tonytemplin/FBI_eyes/
posted by captain davros , 2:48 PM Þ 

Flip

I wish there was a repository of all the image links we've posted to Blogdial. I know I had one of me playing guitar to my baby neice, but I've been plonking thru the calendar view with no luck of finding it and I got to get back to work...

Amongst other things, such a page of all images would look sehr |<e\/\/|_

posted by captain davros , 2:26 PM Þ 

What's That Number?
Go to the International pref pane and click the Numbers tab. For the example below I changed Symbol to 9, Decimal to 4 and Thousands to 6. This is a great trick because if your victim uses the default calculator, all of the answers will be off.


That's Not What I Pressed!!!
Go to the International pref pane and click the Input tab. Check "Dvorak" and then uncheck whatever was selected before. This will make the keyboard seemingly go crazy. For example, MacMerc.com when written in the dvorak layout is: MajM.pjvjrm


Stop That Flashing
Go to the Universal Access tab and click the hearing tab. Check the box next to "Flash the screen whenever an alert sound occurs". This gets amazingly annoying and almost no one knows where this jewel is stashed.


I Know What I Pressed Dammit
Go to the Universal Access tab and click Keyboard. Hit the radio button for Sticky keys. Now try hitting command, control, option or shift. Muahaha.


Nooo... I Need My Friggin Keypad!
Go to the Universal Access tab and click Mouse. Hit the radio button for Mouse Keys on. Try using that keypad now... If your company has an accountant that uses a Mac, this is your chance to get back.


My Dock! My beautiful Dock!
Find a folder with 30-75 items and hit command-a to select all the items. Now drag em to the Dock. The only way to get them out is one at a time... Don't try this unless you have a lot of free time (use it on your friend untested if you have to)


That's Not Photoshop!
This takes a lot of time, but it's a quality trick. Think of an application that your victim uses a LOT and one they don't use very much (probably a Utility). A good place to start is what is in the Dock.

Take a screen shot (command-shift-3) so you'll be able to make sure the end product looks right.

Command-click the icon of an app in the Dock to find it in the Finder and choose your second app.

Using get info (command-I) you can switch the icons all around. Just use the mouse and click on the icon in the info panel and use copy/paste. To do it without losing an icon, make a folder to store the icon temporarily. For instance, get info on Mail.app, copy the icon, go to the folder's info and paste the icon, copy Word's icon and paste it on Mail.app, grab the Mail.app icon from the folder and paste it to Word. Yes, this is pretty confusing but that's what makes it fun.

Once the icons are changed, switch the names

Once the names are done arrange the icons correctly in the Dock (using the screen shot).

Now trash the evidence.
posted by Claus Eggers , 2:03 PM Þ 
posted by captain davros , 1:42 PM Þ 

posted by Alison , 1:08 PM Þ 

Pang
posted by Irdial , 12:48 PM Þ 
posted by Irdial , 9:55 AM Þ 

The BBC: Blinded Bound Controlled
"It was wrong for Mr. Arnett to grant an interview with state-controlled Iraqi TV ..."
Is it no less wrong for Mr. Arnett to work for state-controlled US TV? I guess not. Hypocrisy... it's everywhere(tm).
Britain's Daily Mirror Hires Peter Arnett

Iraqis said some 4,000 Arabs have come to Iraq to help attack the Americans.
About these suicide attacks. Hussein could possibly become a sort of folk hero for many muslims dissilusioned with the western state, despite Hussein's being a total and utter bastard. This is a good viewpoint to look at concerning why this might be. If it really does get recognized by the Mullahs as a jihad (against "Fourth Crusade"), then not many muslims are going to take this sitting down - and then things will be really messy, not to mention the whole business with the Kurds already shaping up to be a fine mess.
I'm just thinking aloud here - any thoughts on this, anyone?

Why must my government be so wishy-washy? This is just embarrassing. Strangely appended to the end of that article is an "oh, by the way..." starting with this:
"Meanwhile, the Canadian Journalists for Free Expression expressed dismay at what it described as an "alarming number" of press-freedom violations against journalists covering the conflict in Iraq.
"The war enters its third week with an unacceptable number of attacks on journalists just doing their jobs," said Joel Ruimy, the group's executive director.

They do not give us any other leads on this subject nor are there further stories... odd, n'est ce pas?

I have not been able to find a large version of this picture. It looks INCREDIBLY strange - very posed, almost looks as if it's been spliced together. It looks fake, advertising a fake news story about Britons taking Basra... lies. It also appeared on the cover of the Edmonton Sun, another pro-war shitrag.
http://www.calgarysun.com/images/calsun/upload/sunpage0331.jpg

Rocket hits Kabul compound
A pompous fool that should not be listened to. Why do they report this garbage? What the fuck is the point?
posted by Barrie , 8:13 AM Þ 
Monday, March 31, 2003
posted by Irdial , 10:59 PM Þ 
posted by Irdial , 7:29 PM Þ 

The Euro And The War On Iraq

By Amir Butler
ATrueWord.com
info@atrueword.com
3-29-3

As Mark Twain once noted, prophecy is always difficult, particularly with regards to the future. However, it is a safe bet that as soon as Saddam is toppled one of the first tasks of the America-backed regime will be to restore the US dollar as the nation's oil currency.

In November 2000, Iraq began selling its oil for euros, moving away from the post-World War II standard of the US dollar as the currency of international trade. Whilst seen by many at the time as a bizarre act of political defiance, it has proved beneficial for Iraq, with the euro gaining almost 25% against the dollar during 2001. It now costs around USD$1.05 to buy one Euro.

Iraq's move towards the euro is indicative of a growing trend. Iran has already converted the majority of its central bank reserve funds to the euro, and has hinted at adopting the euro for all oil sales. On December 7th, 2002, the third member of the axis of evil, North Korea, officially dropped the dollar and began using euros for trade. Venezuela, not a member of the axis of evil yet, but a large oil producer nonetheless, is also considering a switch to the euro. More importantly, at its April 14th, 2002 meeting in Spain, OPEC expressed an interest in leaving the dollar in favour of the euro.

If OPEC were to switch to the euro as the standard for oil transactions, it would have serious ramifications for the US economy. Oil-consuming economies would have to flush the dollars out of their central bank holdings and convert them to euros. Some economists estimate that with the market flooded, the US dollar could drop up to 40% in value. As the currency falls, there would be a monetary evacuation by foreign investors abandoning the US stock markets and dollar-denominated assets. Imported products would cost Americans a lot more, and the trade deficit would be magnified. [...]

Rense
posted by Irdial , 7:24 PM Þ 

US military "Briefing" about depleted Uranium, Friday, March 14, 2003 -- 1 p.m.EST:

http://www.defenselink.mil

They are using these illegal weapons right now.
posted by Irdial , 7:07 PM Þ 

US forces' Use of Depleted Uranium Weapons is 'Illegal'

By Neil Mackay, Investigations Editor
Sunday Herald

Sunday 30 March 2003

British and American coalition forces are using depleted uranium (DU) shells in the war against Iraq and deliberately flouting a United Nations resolution which classifies the munitions as illegal weapons of mass destruction.

DU contaminates land, causes ill-health and cancers among the soldiers using the weapons, the armies they target and civilians, leading to birth defects in children.

Professor Doug Rokke, ex-director of the Pentagon's depleted uranium project -- a former professor of environmental science at Jacksonville University and onetime US army colonel who was tasked by the US department of defence with the post-first Gulf war depleted uranium desert clean-up -- said use of DU was a 'war crime'.

Rokke said: 'There is a moral point to be made here. This war was about Iraq possessing illegal weapons of mass destruction -- yet we are using weapons of mass destruction ourselves.' He added: 'Such double-standards are repellent.'

The latest use of DU in the current conflict came on Friday when an American A10 tankbuster plane fired a DU shell, killing one British soldier and injuring three others in a 'friendly fire' incident.

[..]

Truthout
posted by Irdial , 6:54 PM Þ 

FAIR Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting 112 W. 27th Street New York, NY 10001

MEDIA ADVISORY:
U.S. Media Applaud Bombing of Iraqi TV

March 27, 2003

When Iraqi TV offices in Baghdad were hit by a U.S missile strike on March 25, the targeting of media was strongly criticized by press and human rights groups. The general secretary of the International Federation of Journalists, Aidan White, suggested that "there should be a clear international investigation into whether or not this bombing violates the Geneva Conventions." White told Reuters (3/26/03), "Once again, we see military and political commanders from the democratic world targeting a television network simply because they don't like the message it gives out."

The Geneva Conventions forbid the targeting of civilian installations-- whether state-owned or not-- unless they are being used for military purposes. Amnesty International warned (3/26/03) that the attack may have been a "war crime" and emphasized that bombing a television station "simply because it is being used for the purposes of propaganda" is illegal under international humanitarian law. "The onus," said Amnesty, is on "coalition forces" to prove "the military use of the TV station and, if that is indeed the case, to show that the attack took into account the risk to civilian lives."

Likewise, Human Rights Watch affirmed (3/26/03) that it would be illegal to target Iraqi TV based on its propaganda value. "Although stopping enemy propaganda may serve to demoralize the Iraqi population and to undermine the government's political support," said HRW, "neither purpose offers the 'concrete and direct' military advantage necessary under international law to make civilian broadcast facilities a legitimate military target."

Some U.S. journalists, however, have not shown much concern about the targeting of Iraqi journalists. Prior to the bombing, some even seemed anxious to know why the broadcast facilities hadn't been attacked yet. Fox News Channel's John Gibson wondered (3/24/03): "Should we take Iraqi TV off the air? Should we put one down the stove pipe there?" Fox's Bill O'Reilly (3/24/03) agreed: "I think they should have taken out the television, the Iraqi television.... Why haven't they taken out the Iraqi television towers?" MSNBC correspondent David Shuster offered: "A lot of questions about why state-run television is allowed to continue broadcasting. After all, the coalition forces know where those broadcast towers are located." On CNBC, Forrest Sawyer offered tactical alternatives to bombing (3/24/03): "There are operatives in there. You could go in with sabotage, take out the building, you could take out the tower." [...]

http://www.fair.org/activism/iraqi-tv.html

ClEggSø eq "da'man"
posted by Irdial , 6:52 PM Þ 
posted by Claus Eggers , 6:46 PM Þ 

In other major developments:

# A suicide car bomb attack north of Najaf has resulted in a change of battle orders for U.S. troops. The new orders: Shoot to kill any drivers failing to stop at checkpoints. Since Saturday's attack, five drivers have been shot and at least two killed. Iraqis said some 4,000 Arabs have come to Iraq to help attack the Americans.

# The effort to encourage top Iraqi military leaders to surrender has been a failure, USA Today newspaper reports. Intelligence officials say their campaign of personal calls and e-mails underestimated most generals' loyalty to Saddam, fear of retribution or hate for the United States.

# The U.S.-led invasion force could use landmines, Central Command says. Brooks said any mines used would be for temporary protective rings around forward areas, and would be removed when troops moved on.

# At least 43 U.S. soldiers have been killed in the war and 17 are missing. There are seven U.S. prisoners of war. Twenty-four Britons have also been reported killed. Roughly 425 Iraqi civilians have been killed and more than 4,000 wounded, by Iraq’s tally. U.S. officials say they are holding 4,000 Iraqi prisoners of war.

# Journalist Peter Arnett, covering the war from Baghdad, told state-run Iraqi TV in an interview that the American-led coalition's first war plan had failed because of Iraq's resistance and said strategists are "trying to write another war plan." NBC severed ties with Arnett because of the interview.

# The Washington Post reports some of the Iraqis detained by American troops may be on their way to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where some combatants from the Afghan war are being held. "Right now at this point, we are treating all those that we have taken into our custody as enemy prisoners of war," Brooks said.

http://www.volunteertv.com
posted by Irdial , 6:37 PM Þ 

Pentagon pressure behind CNN firing of Peter Arnett

By Barry Grey
22 April 1999

CNN's firing of Peter Arnett, the Pulitzer Price winning journalist who achieved international acclaim for his on-the-spot reporting from Baghdad during the Gulf War, sheds further light on the subordination of the US media to the military and intelligence establishment.

CNN announced on Tuesday it had agreed to a settlement with Arnett, who has worked for the network for 18 years, to terminate his employment two and a half years in advance of the expiration of his current contract. The network's statement came one day after Arnett told the press that CNN had rejected his request to report on the current war from Belgrade, and had effectively muzzled him since last July.[...]

wsws, 1999


NBC Fires Peter Arnett Over Iraqi TV Interview

Reuters
Monday, March 31, 2003; 8:37 AM

By Mark Wilkinson

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - American television network NBC said on Monday it had severed its relations with veteran reporter Peter Arnett after he told Iraqi television that the U.S. war plan against Saddam Hussein had failed.

"Peter Arnett will no longer be reporting for NBC News and MSNBC," NBC said in a joint statement with National Geographic, for whom the Pulitzer prize-winning reporter was also working.

"I said in that interview essentially what we all know about the war, that there have been delays in implementing policy, there have been surprises," Arnett told NBC's "Today" show.

"But clearly by giving that interview I created a firestorm in the United States and for that I am truly sorry," added Arnett, widely known for his dramatic live reports during the bombing of Baghdad on the opening days of the 1991 Gulf War.

"My stupid misjudgment was to spend fifteen minutes in an impromptu interview with Iraqi television," he said.

"It was wrong for Mr. Arnett to grant an interview with state-controlled Iraqi TV, especially at a time of war and it was wrong for him to discuss his personal observations and opinions," NBC said in a statement.

"His remarks were analytical in nature and were not intended to be anything more," the network said.[...]

Washington Post
posted by Irdial , 6:28 PM Þ 

seeing as spymac are being dicks (that image is blocked to leechers claus [sorry], it probably showed ok for you cos of your cache) i'm reposting the image.

posted by alex_tea , 6:11 PM Þ 

Time traveller story busted by snopes!
posted by Irdial , 6:01 PM Þ 

posted by Claus Eggers , 5:25 PM Þ 

Its simple: Make a list of all clearchannel stations, put up a website to organize awareness of them and a boycott.

Listen only to WFMU.

Problem solved?

50% of Americans think that Iraq was behind 911. You will NEVER get them to stop acting like ediots.

Yes, EDIOTS.
posted by Irdial , 4:44 PM Þ 

Channels of Influence

[...]Until now, complaints about Clear Channel have focused on its business practices. Critics say it uses its power to squeeze recording companies and artists and contributes to the growing blandness of broadcast music. But now the company appears to be using its clout to help one side in a political dispute that deeply divides the nation.[...]

Clear Channel Communciations, owner of 1,200 radio stations in the US, organizing pro-war rallies and public destruction of Dixie Chicks CDs: what the fuck is going on here?!?!?
posted by Josh Carr , 4:07 PM Þ 

posted by Irdial , 3:48 PM Þ 

Retired general waits in the wings for Saddam's fall

By Ian Cobain and Elaine Monaghan

AMID almost obsessive secrecy, and in the incongruous setting of a row of luxury beachfront chalets on the Gulf, the next government of Iraq is slowly taking shape.

Its staff is said to run into “the low hundreds”, all living and working in the £366-a-night chalets 22 miles south of Kuwait City, alongside al-Ahmadi oilfield. But while its location is known, details of its plans and personnel are kept secret.

A number of Britons, however, are known to be involved with the embryonic authority. Until two weeks ago, few would admit to its existence because no official wanted to concede that war was inevitable. Since General Garner arrived in Kuwait the week before last, information has become even more scarce.

General Garner, from Florida, who retired from the army in 1997, was criticised recently for visiting Israel with the sponsorship of a right-wing group that believes that the United States needs Israel to project US force in the Middle East.

In October 2000 he put his name to a statement blaming Palestinians for the outbreak of Israeli-Palestinian violence and saying that a strong Israel was an important security asset to the United States.The statement was sponsored by the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs, which pays for senior retired US military officers to visit Israel for security briefings.

It is also becoming clear that General Garner is planning an administration based loosely upon the Ottoman model: the Turks who controlled the country for almost 400 years, until they were driven out by the British in 1917, established three governorates — in Baghdad, Basra and Mosul. [...]

The Times
posted by Irdial , 3:35 PM Þ 

"First they cleaned up Times Square, then they said you couldn't dance in bars or drink a beer in the park. Now you can't even smoke when you go out on the town," said Willie Martinez, 37, who sat, chain-smoking, in an East Village bar. "This is like no-fun city."

So, you can have a smoke in Baghdad, but not in New York?

Riiiiight....

wnbc
posted by Irdial , 1:38 PM Þ 
posted by Irdial , 1:37 PM Þ 



This is a REAL photo from Yahoo News. Deal with it.

" An U.S. marine from CSSC 117, a part of the Marine Corp, covered with a net to protect him from the sand reads a magazine in a trench on March 28, 2003 on the side of the road, some 150-km north of the town of Nassiriya on March 28, 2003. U.S. military convoys have been hampered on the road in the area by small groups of Iraqi soldiers. REUTERS/Oleg Popov"

Yahoo News
posted by Irdial , 1:09 PM Þ 

BBC
posted by alex_tea , 12:59 PM Þ 

The best author in Denmark at the moment: Jan Sonnergaard


»Jeg synes bare, det er at stille spørgsmålene, hvad er magt uden etik? Hvad er velstand uden kultur? Tag eksempelvis novellen om reklamemanden. Det kan godt være, han tjener over en million om året. Men hvad er det værd, når der ikke er andet. Hverken æstetik eller etik.«.

I just think, that one should ask the questions: What is power without etics? What is wealth without culture? Take the example in the shortstory about the advertising man. It might be he earns over a million dkr a year. But what is it worth, when there is nothing else? No aesthestics or etics.
posted by Alison , 12:53 PM Þ 

Get out that hacksaw, MDF etc and make some funky speakers

Mikkel, what do you mean by news? Blogdial posts you've made or news from other sources?
posted by captain davros , 10:17 AM Þ 

I am so tired of news not getting followed up upon. Even worse, I had this list in my head of news that had been forgotten, gathered from a dump I made of this blog of 2002. Anyway. I'd like it if you guys could help me find news that have been lost, stuff that was forgotten in the last year and where they went. I know there are at least 5.

This post is dedicated to my mother, cause she kicks ass.

omg si my mom
posted by Mikkel , 10:00 AM Þ 
Sunday, March 30, 2003

April 1, 2003, 11 AM New York time, 8 AM California Time (determine your own time zone based on this) Hundreds of thousands, if not millions of people, will join together for fifteen minutes as one mind and pray for President Bush (and all those who influence his decision making) to make all his decisions based on the highest good of all beings on earth. The Children suggested that we begin by imagining him as a little boy, and use our energy to empower his heart. They say that the boy is still within him, though he is very afraid. He doesn't need to be attacked for what he is doing, but loved, not for his actions, but for the Truth within him. We call this: "Seeing as God Sees and Loving as God Loves." If possible, gather with other people during this vigil, and please pass this E-mail on to as many people as you can to help spread the word.

Prayer Vigil
posted by mary13 , 11:53 PM Þ 

Resignation Letter from U.S. Diplomat

Saturday 29 March 2003

Editor's Note: The following is a copy of Mary Wright's letter of resignation to Secretary of State Colin Powell. Wright was most recently the deputy chief of mission at the U.S. embassy in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. She helped open the U.S. embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, in January 2002. Yet another diplomat has quit over Iraq.

U.S. Embassy
Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
March 19, 2003

Secretary of State Colin Powell
US Department of State
Washington, DC 20521

Dear Secretary Powell:

When I last saw you in Kabul in January, 2002 you arrived to officially open the US Embassy that I had helped reestablish in December, 2001 as the first political officer. At that time I could not have imagined that I would be writing a year later to resign from the Foreign Service because of US policies. All my adult life I have been in service to the United States. I have been a diplomat for fifteen years and the Deputy Chief of Mission in our Embassies in Sierra Leone, Micronesia, Afghanistan (briefly) and Mongolia. I have also had assignments in Somalia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Grenada and Nicaragua. I received the State
Department's Award for Heroism as Charge d'Affaires during the evacuation of Sierra Leone in 1997. I was 26 years in the US Army/Army Reserves and participated in civil reconstruction projects after military operations in Grenada, Panama and Somalia. I attained the rank of Colonel during my military service.

This is the only time in my many years serving America that I have felt I cannot represent the policies of an Administration of the United States. I disagree with the Administration's policies on Iraq, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, North Korea and curtailment of civil liberties in the U.S. itself. I believe the Administration's policies are making the world a more dangerous, not a safer, place. I feel obligated morally and professionally to set out my very deep and firm concerns on these policies and to resign from
government service as I cannot defend or implement them. [...]

Truthout
posted by Irdial , 8:25 PM Þ 

Iraq War Quiz by Stephen R. Shalom



1. The anti-war movement supports our troops by urging that they be brought home immediately so they neither kill nor get killed in a unjust war. How has the Bush administration shown its support for our troops?

a. The Republican-controlled House Budget Committee voted to cut $25 billion in veterans benefits over the next 10 years.

b. The Bush administration proposed cutting $172 million from impact aid programs which provide school funding for children of military personnel.

c. The administration ordered the Dept. of Veterans Affairs to stop publicizing health benefits available to veterans.

d. All of the above.

2. The anti-war movement believes that patriotism means urging our country to do what is right. How do Bush administration officials define patriotism?

a. Patriotism means emulating Dick Cheney, who serves as Vice-President while receiving $100,000-$1,000,000 a year from Halliburton, the multi-billion dollar company which is already lining up for major contracts in post-war Iraq.

b. Patriotism means emulating Richard Perle, the warhawk who serves as head of the Defense Intelligence Board while at the same time meeting with Saudi arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi on behalf of Trireme, a company of which he is a managing partner, involved in security and military technologies, and while agreeing to work as a paid lobbyist for Global Crossing, a telecommunications giant seeking a major Pentagon contract.

c. Patriotism means emulating George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, John Bolton, Tom DeLay, John Ashcroft, Lewis Libby, and others who enthusiastically supported the Vietnam War while avoiding serving in it and who now are sending others to kill and be killed in Iraq.

d. All of the above.

3. The Bush administration has accused Saddam Hussein of lying regarding his weapons of mass destruction. Which of the following might be considered less than truthful?

a. Constant claims by the Bush administration that there was documentary evidence linking Iraq to attempted uranium purchases in Niger, despite the fact that the documents were forgeries and CIA analysts doubted their authenticity. b. A British intelligence report on Iraq's security services that was in fact plagiarized, with selected modifications, from a student article. c. The frequent citation of the incriminating testimony of Iraqi defector Hussein Kamel, while suppressing that part of the testimony in which Kamel stated that Iraqi weapons of mass destruction had been destroyed following the 1991 Gulf War. d. All of the above.

4. White House Press Secretary Ari Fleisher stormed out of a press conference when the assembled reporters broke into laughter after he declared that the U.S. would never try to bribe members of the UN. What should Fleisher have said to defend himself?

a. It wasn't just bribery; we also ordered the bugging of the home and office phones and emails of the UN ambassadors of Security Council member states that were undecided on war.

b. Oh, come on! We've been doing this for years. In 1990 when Yemen voted against authorizing war with Iraq, the U.S. ambassador declared "That will be the most expensive 'no' vote you ever cast."

c. Why do you think the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act makes one of the conditions for an African country to receive preferential access to U.S. markets that it "not engage in activities that undermine United States national security or foreign policy interests"?

d. All of the above.

5. George Bush has declared that "we have no fight with the Iraqi people." What could he have cited as supporting evidence?

a. U.S. maintenance of 12 years of crippling sanctions that strengthened Saddam Hussein while contributing to the death of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians.

b. The fact that "coalition" forces have indicated that they will use cluster bombs in Iraq, despite warnings from human rights groups that "The use of cluster munitions in Iraq will endanger civilians for years to come."

c. By pointing to the analogy of Afghanistan, which the U.S. pledged not to forget about when the war was over, and for which the current Bush administration foreign aid budget request included not one cent in aid.

d. All of the above.

6. The Bush administration has touted the many nations that are part of the "coalition of the willing." Which of the following statements about this coalition is true?

a. In most of the coalition countries polls show that a majority, often an overwhelming majority, of the people oppose the war.

b. More than ten of the members of the coalition of the willing are actually a coalition of the unwilling - unwilling to reveal their names.

c. Coalition members - most of whose contributions to the war are negligible or even zero - constitute less than a quarter of the countries in the UN and contain less than 20% of the world's population.

d. All of the above.

7. The war on Iraq is said to be part of the "war on terrorism." Which of the following is true?

a. A senior American counterintelligence official said: "An American invasion of Iraq is already being used as a recruitment tool by Al Qaeda and other groups....And it is a very effective tool."

b. An American official, based in Europe, said Iraq had become "a battle cry, in a way," for Al Qaeda recruiters.

c. France's leading counter-terrorism judge said: "Bin Laden's strategy has always been to demonstrate to the Islamic community that the West, and especially the U.S., is starting a global war against Muslims. An attack on Iraq might confirm this vision for many Muslims. I am very worried about the next wave of recruits."

d. All of the above.

8. The Bush administration says it is waging war to stop the spread of weapons of mass destruction. Which of the following is true?

a. The United States has refused to ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, viewed worldwide as the litmus test for seriousness about nuclear disarmament.

b. The United States has insisted on a reservation to the Chemical Weapons Convention allowing the U.S. President the right to refuse an inspection of U.S. facilities on national security grounds, and blocked efforts to improve compliance with the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention.

c. Vice Admiral Lowell E. Jacoby, Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, testified on Feb. 11, 2003, "The long-term trends with respect to WMD and missile proliferation are bleak. States seek these capabilities for regional purposes, or to provide a hedge to deter or offset U.S. military superiority."

d. All of the above.

9. The Bush administration says it wants to bring democracy to Iraq and the Middle East. Which of the following is true?

a. If there were democracy in Saudi Arabia today, backing for the U.S. war effort would be the first thing to go, given the country's "increasingly anti-American population deeply opposed to the war."

b. The United States subverted some of the few democratic governments in the Middle East (Syria in 1949, Iran in 1953), and has backed undemocratic regimes in the region ever since.

c. The United States supported the crushing of anti-Saddam Hussein revolts in Iraq in 1991.

d. All of the above.

10. Colin Powell cited as evidence of an Iraq-Al Qaeda link an audiotape from bin Laden in which he called Saddam Hussein and his Baath Party regime "infidels." Which of the following is more compelling evidence?

a. An FBI official told the New York Times: "We've been looking at this hard for more than a year and you know what, we just don't think it's there."

b. According to a classified British intelligence report seen by BBC News, "There are no current links between the Iraqi regime and the al-Qaeda network."

c. According to Rohan Gunaratna, author of Inside Al Qaeda: Global Network of Terror, "Since U.S. intervention in Afghanistan in October 2001, I have examined several tens of thousands of documents recovered from Al Qaeda and Taliban sources. In addition to listening to 240 tapes taken from Al Qaeda's central registry, I debriefed several Al Qaeda and Taliban detainees. I could find no evidence of links between Iraq and Al Qaeda."

d. All of the above.

Answers and Sources

1. d (a) Cong. Lane Evans, "Veterans Programs Slashed by House Republicans," Press Release, 3/13/03, http://www.veterans.house.gov/democratic/press/108th/3-13-03budget.htm. (b) Brian Faler, "Educators Angry Over Proposed Cut in Aid; Many Children in Military Families Would Feel Impact," Washington Post, 3/19/03, p. A29. (c) See Veterans' for Common Sense, letter to George W. Bush, 3/20/03 http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/print.asp?id=563; Melissa B. Robinson, "Hospitals Face Budget Crunch," Associated Press, 7/31/02; Jason Tait, "Veterans angered by marketing ban," Eagle-Tribune (Lawrence, MA), 8/2/02, http://www.eagletribune.com/news/stories/20020802/FP_003.htm

2. d (a) Warren Vieth and Elizabeth Douglass, " Ousting Hussein could open the door for U.S. and British firms. French, Russian and Chinese rivals would lose their edge," Los Angeles Times, 3/12/03, p. I:1; Robert Bryce and Julian Borger, "Halliburton: Cheney is still paid by Pentagon contractor, Bush deputy gets Dollars 1m from firm with Iraq oil deal," Guardian (London), 3/12/03, p. 5 (which notes that Halliburton "would not say how much the payments are; the obligatory disclosure statement filled by all top government officials says only that they are in the range of" $100,000 and $1 million. (b) Seymour M. Hersh, "Lunch with the Chairman," New Yorker, 3/16/03; Stephen Labaton, "Pentagon Adviser Is Also Advising Global Crossing," NYT, 3/21/03, p. C1. Perle is to be paid $725,000 for his lobbying effort, including $600,000 if his lobbying is successful. (c) New Hampshire Gazette, "The Chickenhawks," http://nhgazette.com/chickenhawks.html.

3. d (a) See the evidence collected in Cong. Henry Waxman's letter to George W. Bush, 3/17/03, http://www.house.gov/waxman/text/admin_iraq_march_17_let.htm. (b) See Glen Rangwala's report, http://traprockpeace.org/britishdossier.html. (c) See Glen Rangwala's report, http://traprockpeace.org/kamel.html.

4. d (a) Martin Bright, Ed Vulliamy, and Peter Beaumont, The Observer (London), 3/2/03. (b) Quoted in Phyllis Bennis, Calling the Shots: How Washington Dominates Today's UN, New York: Olive Branch, 1996, p. 33. (c) Sarah Anderson, Phyllis Bennis, and John Cavanagh, Coalition of the Willing or Coalition of the Coerced?: How The Bush Administration Influences Allies in Its War on Iraq, Washington, DC: Institute for Policy Studies, 2/26/03, p. 4.

5. d (a) For background, see Anthony Arnove, ed., Iraq Under Siege: The Deadly Impact of Sanctions and War, Cambridge: South End Press, updated ed. 2003. (b) Paul Waugh, "Labour MPs Attack Hoon After He Reveals That British Forces Will Use Cluster Bombs," Independent, 3/21/03, p. 4; Human Rights Watch, Press Release, 3/18/03: "Persian Gulf: U.S. Cluster Bomb Duds A Threat; Warning Against Use of Cluster Bombs in Iraq." (c) Zvi Bar'el, "Flaws in the Afghan Model," Ha'aretz, 3/14/03, http://www.haaretzdaily.com/hasen/objects/pages/PrintArticleEn.jhtml?ite mNo=272884.

6. d (a) See, for example, the revealing comment of Secretary of State Powell: "We need to knock down this idea that nobody is on our side. So many nations recognize this danger [of Iraq's weapons]. And they do it in the face of public opposition." Quoted in Steven R. Weisman With Felicity Barringer, "Urgent Diplomacy Fails To Gain U.S. 9 Votes In The U.N." NYT, 3/10/03, p. A1) (b) U.S. Dept. of State, Daily Press Briefing, Richard Boucher, Washington, DC, 3/18/03. (c) Country list: White House, Statement of Support from Coalition, 3/25/03, http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/03/print/20030325-8.html; population calculated from Statistical Abstract of the United States, 2001, Washington, DC: 2001, table 1327. Total includes USA. The White House list includes countries whose leaders have done no more than state their support for the United States, and the listing changes from day to day, with some countries being added and some removed.

7. d (a) Don Van Natta Jr. and Desmond Butler, "Anger On Iraq Seen As New Qaeda Recruiting Tool," NYT, 3/16/03, p. I:1. (b) Van Natta and Butler, NYT, 3/16/03. (c) Van Natta and Butler, NYT, 3/16/03.

8. d (a) Colum Lynch, "U.S. Boycotts Nuclear Test Ban Meeting; Some Delegates at U.N. Session Upset at Latest Snub of Pact Bush Won't Back," Washington Post, 11/12/02, p. A6. (b) Amy E. Smithson, "U.S. Implementation of the CWC," in Jonathan B. Tucker, The Chemical Weapons Convention: Implementation Challenges and Solutions, Monterey Institute, April 2001, pp. 23-29, http://cns.miis.edu/pubs/reports/tuckcwc.htm; Jonathan Tucker, "The Fifth Review Conference of the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention," Feb. 2002, http://www.nti.org/e_research/e3_7b.html. (c) Testimony before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, excerpted at http://traprockpeace.org/usefulquotesoniraq.html.

9. d (a) Craig S. Smith, "Saudi Arabia Seems Calm But, Many Say, Is Seething," NYT, 3/24/03, p. B13. In fact, "Though the Saudi government officially denies it, the bombing campaign is being directed from Saudi Arabia - something that few Saudis realize." (b) On Syria, see Douglas Little, ACold War and Covert Action: The United States and Syria, 1945 1958,@ Middle East Journal, vol. 44, no. 1, Winter 1990, pp. 55 57. On Iran, see Mark J. Gasiorowski, "The 1953 Coup D'Etat in Iran," International Journal of Middle East Studies, vol. 19, Aug. 1987, pp. 261-86. (c) Andrew Cockburn and Patrick Cockburn, Out of the Ashes: The Resurrection of Saddam Hussein, New York: HarperPerennial. 1999, chap. 1.

10. d (re audiotape, see David Johnston, "Top U.S. Officials Press Case Linking Iraq To Al Qaeda," NYT, 2/12/03, p. A1; Mohamad Bazzi, "U.S. says bin Laden tape urging Iraqis to attack appears real," Newsday, 2/12/03, p. A5. (a) James Risen and David Johnston, "Split at C.I.A. and F.B.I. On Iraqi Ties to Al Qaeda," NYT, 2/2/03, p. I:13. (b) "Leaked Report Rejects Iraqi al-Qaeda Link," BBC News, 2/5/03. (c) Rohan Gunaratna, "Iraq and Al Qaeda: No Evidence of Alliance," International Herald Tribune, 2/19/03.

Interpreting Your Score

9-10 Correct: Excellent. Contact United for Peace and Justice, http://www.unitedforpeace.org/, and work to fight the war and the system that produced it.

6-8 Correct: Fair. You've been watching a few too many former generals and government officials who provide the "expert" commentary for the mainstream media. Read the alternative media!

3-5 Correct: Poor. Don't feel bad. George W. Bush only got a C- in International Relations at College.

0-2 Correct: Failing. You have a bright future as an "embedded" journalist.
posted by Claus Eggers , 5:18 PM Þ 
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