Archive for World Issues

Speak Truth to Power

// April 10th, 2008 // No Comments » // World Issues

Australian Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd “is the highest-profile western leader to visit China since unrest erupted in Tibet last month. Speaking in fluent Mandarin to students at Beijing University, he began by defying his hosts and voicing concern over human rights in the Himalayan region.

“Australia like most other countries recognises China’s sovereignty over Tibet. But we also believe it is necessary to recognise there are significant human rights problem in Tibet. The current situation in Tibet is of concern to Australians.

We recognise the need for all parties to avoid violence and find a solution through dialogue. As a long-standing friend of China I intend to have a straightforward discussion with China’s leaders on this.

We wish to see the year 2008 as one of harmony, and celebration – not one of conflict and contention. “

The Australian, April 09, 2008


Below, The Prime Minister apologises that his Mandarin was not as good as it had been, and cited a Chinese saying: “We don’t fear anything in heaven or earth except for a laowai, a foreigner, speaking Chinese.”. Awesome.

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A More Perfect Union

// March 18th, 2008 // 4 Comments » // World Issues

Today Barack Obama delivered one of the greatest political speeches I’ve heard. It was compassionate and revelatory, progressive and pragmatic, visionary and historical, humble and brilliantly spoken. This man will win the presidency.

(P.S. Brodie has raised some poignant points, the comments section is worth a look)

Political Will is a Renewable Resource- Al Gore in Bali

// December 15th, 2007 // No Comments » // World Issues


NUSA DUA, Indonesia, Dec 15 (Reuters) - Bali talks headed for a compromise on Saturday to launch negotiations on a global pact to fight climate change after the European Union toned down a key demand for sharp cuts in greenhouse gas emissions by 2020.

The Dec 3-14 talks had been bogged down by a row between the United States, which opposes a reference to non-binding goals for rich countries to curb emissions by 25-40 percent by 2020, and the European Union, which wanted a clear numerical target.

“This is a compromise. We can live with this. It’s in a footnote,” German Environment Minister Sigmar Gabriel said, referring to the 25 to 40 percent range for cuts.

The United States, the world’s top emitter of greenhouse gases, also said it was satisfied.

“We can live with the preamble,” U.S. negotiator Harlan Watson told Reuters of the introductory text of the talks draft that had been one of the main source of controversy for Washington because of its inclusion of a target range.

Waiting for the Guards

// November 23rd, 2007 // No Comments » // World Issues

Waiting For The Guards is the first of 3 films commissioned by Amnesty International to highlight the enhanced interrogation techniques used by the CIA in the “War on Terror”. The Directors approached the making of the film in a way that has never been done before, choosing to show the reality of Stress Positions in as authentic a way as possible. They filmed a person being put into Stress Positions over a 6 hour period. There is no acting on the part of the “prisoner” – his pain and anguish is for real. This powerful film shows without doubt that what the US administrations say is interrogation is in reality, torture and must be stopped.”

There isn’t much that will have tears filling my eyes at 9AM in an open office space- but this piece confronts one with such a deep well of anguish and sorrow that it’s simply overwhelming. It is a rare moment when the reality of the history unfolding around us can punch through the veil of apathy and comfortable ignorance, but as they say “some viewers may be disturbed”.

Well tough, the world is disturbing and who are we to pick and choose only the pretty pieces to colour our fantasies of this place in which we live. I think many share this feeling of strong resistance to this raw reality, but what is the basis of this fear? It’s not a fear of what this information might do to us or make us feel, it’s a fear of what we may no longer be able to do. I think we’re afraid to lose our ability to sit there and do nothing.

I suggest watching the higher resolution version, although a Youtube is below. Turn your speakers up.

The actor is Jiva Parthipan, his story is here. Unsubscribe is a campaign by Amnesty UK, welcoming people around the world to join them unsubscribing from human rights abuses in the ‘war on terror’.

Who’s Tripping?

// October 13th, 2007 // No Comments » // World Issues

“THE HAGUE (AFP) — The Dutch authorities agreed Friday to ban the sale of magic mushrooms, a move sure to annoy many tourists visiting the Netherlands, known for its liberal drugs policies. The Dutch health and justice ministers said Friday that they have agreed to change the drugs laws to ban the sale and cultivation of hallucinogenic mushrooms. The move comes during an ongoing debate in the Netherlands about the safety of the so-called magic mushrooms after a number of incidents involving tourists who had taken them…

In March, a 17-year-old French girl on a school trip to Amsterdam ate the drug before jumping from a bridge over a canal in the city. She died, and the case resulted in a majority in the Dutch Parliament calling for a total ban on all forms of the drug. Since then, a media debate has raged over that and other cases, including that of an Icelandic tourist who broke both legs jumping from a balcony and a Danish tourist veering his car wildly through a camp site.”

The Independent

“Around 500,000 “doses” of packaged mushrooms are sold here annually. According to a study published in January by Amsterdam’s health services said the city’s emergency services were summoned 148 times to deal with a bad reaction to mushrooms in 2004-2006. Of those 134 were foreigners, with Britons forming the largest group…

Marjan Heuving, a spokeswoman for the country’s Trimbos Institute, a drug policy think-tank, said mushrooms are not toxic and themselves pose no physical risk to users. But she agreed that people’s reaction to them is unpredictable, depending on factors such as weight; how much food they have eaten recently; their past drug experience; psychological health; and the setting in which they are taken.
“The main danger to the user is that he will somehow hurt himself,” she said. “I should add that that’s extremely rare.”

Half a million doses sold per year in the Netherlands and an average of fifty emergency calls related to mushrooms each year. Thus, only 0.01% of doses lead to emergencies. Far lower still is the chance of accidents resulting in death. There are zero cases of overdose from psilocybin, and as opposed to alcohol or aspirin the lethal dose for psylocybin is far more than can be physically consumed. No psilocybin mushroom related deaths are even counted in the UNODC literature, and the examples hyped up by the Dutch press contain only one fatality. Compare and contrast to the number of emergency calls for alcohol related accidents, sexual abuse and deaths. Not to mention any potential benefit in psychological treatment or development that might derive from these entheogens- as showcased in the medical studies referenced below and the thousand years of indigenous use in the Americas.

No need to reiterate the case. Here is a 2000 Risk Assessment by the Dutch Government’s “Coordination Centre for the Assessment and Monitoring of new drugs”, (CAM).

The late and great Bill Hicks should have closed the debate fifteen years ago.

Other interesting references: The Harvard_Psilocybin_Project from the 1960′s, the current DEA approved Psilocybin studies from MAPS, a BBC documentary/thought experiment on the effect of a radical liberalisation of drug policy, the informed and insightful writings of the late Terence McKenna- ethnobotanist and philosopher.

Update: Burmese Protests Expand

// September 24th, 2007 // No Comments » // World Issues

Photography by the AP.

Things have escalated in the Burmese Buddhist led protests over the weekend-

“Up to 100,000 people took part, among them perhaps 20,000 barefoot red- and orange-robed monks. At first, the monks limited themselves to chanting prayers and sermons, and urged the Burmese public not to join their marches. But over the weekend, a hitherto unknown group, the All Burma Monks’ Alliance, urged people to “struggle peacefully against the evil military dictatorship” until its downfall. Monday’s march was joined by some of the country’s best-known actors and musicians, as well as leaders of the opposition National League of Democracy (NLD) and crowds of ordinary Burmese.”

The Economist has the full story. Wikipedia news is tracking events as they unfold.

The International Crisis Group considers the situation in Myanmar. Human Rights Watch doubts that reforms will bring change in the country.

Pitiless Kings

// September 21st, 2007 // No Comments » // World Issues

Today is the U.N. International Day of Peace. I look at the UN, at our collective governments, and wonder if this is really the best they can achieve? A feel good factor that might make some of us feel that we can take control of this huge, violent monstrosity, even for a moment. When my bile settles, I reflect that anything that raises awareness and brings our focus closer to compassion is a good thing and that cynicism is too often the refuge of a crushed idealist.

So if this event is about attention, then my attention goes out to the thousands of Buddhist monks protesting peacefully this week against the military junta in Myanmar. 45 years of military rule, human rights violations, and surpressed uprisings- have left the country one of the poorest in Asia.
In a public statement the monks in Yangon declared yesterday.

“The clergy boycotts the violent, mean, cruel, ruthless, pitiless kings, the great thieves who live by stealing from the national treasury. The clergy hereby also refuses donations and preaching”

In January this year Russia and China vetoed a draft U.N. Security Council resolution that would have urged Myanmar to ease repression and release political prisoners, a resolution long called for by human rights groups. This makes the actions of monks even more important- and I imagine few are better trained for the non-violent action necessary. However, successful non-violence relies on engaging a powerful group who can intervene to address the injustice. Whether broader Burmese society has the power or the international players the interest to play this critical role we may soon discover- or perhaps this is just another rise and fall upon this cruelly drawn out story of repression.

(Art by Banky)

While Brave Men Die

// May 31st, 2007 // No Comments » // World Issues

“Eleven years later. Numbers have dehumanized us. Over breakfast coffee we read of 40,000 Americans dead in Vietnam. Instead of vomiting, we reach for the toast. Our morning rush through crowded streets is not to cry murder but to hit that trough before somebody else gobbles our share.

An equation: 40,000 dead young men = 3,000 tons of bone and flesh, 124,000 pounds of brain matter, 50,000 gallons of blood, 1,840,000 years of life that will never be lived, 100,000 children who will never be born.

Do we scream in the night when it touches our dreams? No. We don’t dream about it because we don’t think about it; we don’t think about it because we don’t care about it. We are much more interested in law and order, so that American streets may be made safe while we transform those of Vietnam into flowing sewers of blood which we replenish each year by forcing our sons to choose between a prison cell here or a coffin there. ‘Every time I look at the flag, my eyes fill with tears.’ Mine too.”

Dalton Trumbo, 1970. Read the full piece on LA Taco.

Poster at Berkeley, captured by ivangonecrazy

In August 1939, Dalton Trumbo published the American anti-war book of the century, Johnny Got His Gun. Days later Germany invaded Poland and such pacific perspectives were forgotten. Trumbo writes the narrative of a “deadman-who-is-alive”, a World War I soldier who has lost his arms, legs, ears, eyes and most of his face. This darkest night of the soul speaks a tragic and bitter journey of realisation, despair and attempted suicide that culminates in a rallying cry against the lies, cruelty and foolishness that buries men- and worse- in the name of liberty.

“And all the guys who died all the five million or seven million or ten million who went out and died to make the world safe for democracy to make the world safe for words without meaning how did they feel about it just before they died? How did they feel as they watched their blood pump out into the mud? How did they feel when the gas hit their lungs and began eating them all away? How did they feel as they lay crazed in hospitals and looked death straight in the face and saw him come and take them? If the thing they were fighting for was important enough to die for then it was also important enough for them to be thinking about it in the last minutes of their lives. That stood to reason. Life is awfully important so if you’ve given it away you’d ought to think with all your mind in the last moments of your life about the thing you traded it for. So did all those kids die thinking of democracy and freedom and liberty and honor and the safety of the home and the stars and stripes forever?

You’re goddamn right they didn’t.

They died crying in their minds like little babies. They forgot the thing they were fighting for the things they were dying for. They thought about things a man can understand. They died yearning for the face of a friend. They died whimpering for the voice of a mother a father a wife a child They died with their hearts sick for one more look at the place where they were born please god just one more look. They died moaning and sighing for life. They knew what was important They knew that life was everything and they died with screams and sobs. They died with only one thought in their minds and that was I want to live I want to live I want to live.

He ought to know.

He was the nearest thing to a dead man on earth.”

Dalton Trumbo, Johnny Got His Gun, 1939. An online excerpt can be found here.

The Fog of War- Marlene Dumas

// May 25th, 2007 // 3 Comments » // Art, Music & Poetry, World Issues

I finally took time to stop and read this poem; part of an art installation by Marlene Dumas. It hangs in a cultureless corridor filled with art, that I’d passed dozens of times on the way to my office. I wonder if I’m the only person whose stopped to read it, and if any others did whether they too shivered at the realisation of the vacuum surrounding them.