Tag Archives: current

The Great Whale Debate

Added On September 19, 2010 The debate over whaling and what is and isn't needed in the name of science. CNN's Anna Coren reports. added by: EthicalVegan

Driving Mr. Moneybags

Mr. Moneybags and his chauffeur, Wimbly, discuss taxation and public works. added by: Progresshiv

BP Oilspill Pronounced DEAD

After months of gushing 205 million gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, the US gov't has said, “We can finally announce that the Macondo 252 well is effectively dead.” Finally! http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/20/us/20well.html?_r=1&hp added by: frank_runyeon

Plastic Bottle Island

Here's the story: “Spiral Island is a name given to two floating artificial islands built by British eco-pioneer Richart “Rishi” Sowa. Sowa is a musician, artist, and carpenter. As an environmentalist, he believes in recycling and low-impact living. A book about Sowa’s journey in building the original island and his philosophies, Spiralogically Speaking, written by the German author Tanja Samed with Sowa, is due to be released in 2008. Spiral Island has been featured in a number of newspapers and TV documentaries around the world, including in Japan and South Korea, and was seen in an episode of the Ripley’s Believe It or Not! television program.” http://www.weirdpalace.com/plastic-bottle-island/ -Felipe added by: donf3lipe

Colin Powell: Illegal immigrants are what’s keeping this country’s lifeblood moving forward

Former Secretary of State Colin Powell says illegal immigrants do essential work in the U.S. and that he has firsthand knowledge of that — because they fix his house. A moderate Republican, Powell urged his party on Sunday to support immigration generally because those who come from abroad are, in his words, “what's keeping this country's lifeblood moving forward.” Powell said a path to legal status should be offered to illegal immigrants because they do work that needs to get done. At his own house, he said on NBC's “Meet the Press,” illegal immigrants are always around when he needs work done. He did not specify whether he hired them directly or they showed up with contractors. added by: Replicant

How Horrible is This! Teens share photos of rape on Facebook

The horrific gang rape of a 16-year-old girl is roiling Canada. It's suspected that she was drugged at a rave on Saturday and then assaulted in a nearby field by a group of males. Truly adding insult to injury: The attack in Pitt Meadows, B.C., was photographed and videotaped — and the evidence was then published on Facebook by one of her alleged attackers. The photos and video “have been viewed, shared, saved and reposted numerous times,” an official told the Vancouver Sun. The images are spreading like wildfire, and it's impossible to contain. This is the typical predicament law enforcement faces when it comes to online child pornography: Once it's out there, it's usually out there for good. The digital trail is just too difficult to trace. We've seen a similar thing with teen “sexting.” A boyfriend gets angry when his girlfriend breaks up with him, so he texts a naked photo of her to all his buddies, they send it to all their buddies, and so on and so forth. In the end, it's hard to know just how many people have seen the image and where it's ended up. This reminds me of reports earlier this year about a woman who goes by the pseudonym Amy: Her uncle sexually abused her as a little girl and circulated the photographic evidence in child porn circles. Now she's calling for damages from anyone caught with images of her abuse; so far, her photos have shown up in more than 800 child porn prosecutions. In a letter to the court, she wrote: “It is hard to describe what it feels like to know that at any moment, anywhere, someone is looking at pictures of me as a little girl being abused by my uncle and is getting some kind of sick enjoyment from it. It's like I am being abused over and over and over again.” The same could also be said about the images of the alleged gang rape. The major difference here is that the material is being distributed via a mainstream website. For the most part, these are not pedophilic child pornography collectors; many of the distributors are teenagers themselves. This of course has many adults asking that age-old question: What's wrong with kids these days? I suspect there are a couple explanations that do not require us to label “kids these days” as amoral animals. No. 1 on my list is, of course, the culture of victim blaming. According to one report, “only hours after disturbing pictures were posted on Facebook, teens were already suggesting the victim was a willing participant and asked for it.” This “othering” response allows people to mentally guard themselves against the possibility of ever being a victim themselves; it's what's known as the “just-world phenomenon” (and, ironically, it creates a less just world). Of course, the other defining element here is the Internet. The Web allows us to share videos — whether it's a crazy cat trick or footage of someone's death — with very few keystrokes, and often very little thought. These kids have grown up in the age of “Two Girls One Cup,” a coprophilic video that rose to viral status thanks to the utter horror that it inspired in viewers. There are legion examples of even journalistic videos and photographs that have whipped around the Web specifically because they are horrifying — think of the Neda Agha-Soltan video, for example. These sorts of images are the norm. We have access to them, they exist, and so we view them — duh. Carry this view a little further and it isn't hard to understand how even a nonsociopathic teenager might opt to view a photo of a girl's rape, or even send it along to a friend. This is so often how we share things, good and bad; we hit “forward” or “re-tweet” or “like,” etc. Technology offers us a sense of privacy, and detachment, even as we're sharing these things with the entire Web. The online mentality is one of entitlement and total freedom, no one has ownership over anything (just ask record label execs). I would venture to say that it hasn't even occurred to many of the kids — the ones who are not, you know, patently evil — that they are violating this girl themselves. added by: Future_America

Dead fish all over east coast-lack of oxygen from gulf ecocide?

What a coverup. It doesn't take a genius to figure out that the oil more than likely has entered the ocean current loop and may well be depriving oxygen to marinelife causing these huge fishkills all up the East Coast. The media is covering it up, the government is covering it up. And yes, there are such things as fishkills and that is understood. However, this seems out of the ordinary. It isn't enough that we are killing the oceans with our plastic, poisons, acidification, overfishing and agricultural run off, we will now let BP get away with dealing the final blow. added by: JanforGore

Teacher vs. Tolley

A Special Edition of Media NZ looks into why the PPTA strikes took place around New Zealand. Footage shot by: Corey Fuimaono & Colin Moisson http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9XhnwYjfvLY added by: Corey_Fuimaono

Man got pork spare rib stuck in his anus!

Eating too quickly landed a Taiwanese man in the hospital after he accidentally swallowed a large spare rib bone that got stuck in his anus! According to reports, the 44-year-old man swallowed the 1.5-inch long, 1-inch wide bone while eating sweet-and-sour spare ribs last Friday. It traveled down his throat to his stomach, then after making its way down his small intestines (a path that is HALF the size of the bone), it got lodged in the anus. The next day, he says he was in agony when he tried to use the bathroom. He strained so much that he bled profusely, but couldn’t pass the bone–so he went to the hospital. Doctors anesthetized his anus, then pulled the offending object from the region. http://www.tabloidprodigy.com/?p=21094 added by: knowandtell

Hemp, car parts and poo power

Scientists Jan Slaski, left, and John Wolodko use industrial hemp mixed with plastic to make everything from briefcases to cars parts. One of the briefcases is on the table above. The hemp replaces fibreglass in the production of lightweight materials. Photograph by: Rick Macwilliam, The Journal, Edmonton Journal http://www.edmontonjournal.com/life/Hemp+parts+power/3546633/story.html added by: JackHerer