Tuesday, March 23, 2010

HRW calls on other companies to follow Google ending all their censorship in China

Human Rights Watch, March 22, 2010 -

(New York) – Google’s decision to stop censoring its Chinese search engine is a strong step in favor of freedom of expression and information, and an indictment of the Chinese government’s insistence on censorship of the internet, Human Rights Watch said today.  Google announced today that it would not censor searches and instead redirect searches to its uncensored Hong Kong-based site that would provide results in simplified Chinese.  The company also said it would monitor and publicize any attempts at censorship of the site by the Chinese government.

“China is one of the world’s largest economies, but hundreds of millions of Chinese internet users are denied the basic access to information that people around the world take for granted,” said Arvind Ganesan, business and human rights director at Human Rights Watch. “Google’s decision to offer an uncensored search engine is an important step to challenge the Chinese government’s use of censorship to maintain its control over its citizens.”

China’s estimated 338 million internet users remain subject to the arbitrary dictates of state censorship. More than a dozen government agencies are involved in implementing a host of laws, regulations, policy guidelines, and other legal tools to try to keep information and ideas from the Chinese people. Various companies, including Google, Yahoo!, and Microsoft, have enabled this system by blocking terms they believe the Chinese government will want them to censor. Human Rights Watch documented this corporate complicity in internet censorship in China in “Race to the Bottom,” a 149-page report published in August 2006.

On January 12, 2010, Google announced that it was prepared to withdraw from China unless it could operate its Chinese search engine, Google.cn, free of censorship. This decision was made after the company disclosed “highly sophisticated and targeted attacks” on dozens of Gmail users who are advocates of human rights in China. Google said some 20 other companies were also targets of cyber attacks from China. On February 18, 2010, the New York Times reported that these attacks had been traced to Shanghai’s Jiaotong University and the Lanxiang Vocational School. The latter reportedly has close ties to the Chinese military.

In response to the prospect that Google might stop censoring its search engine, on March 12, Li Yizhong, China’s minister of industry and information technology, said, “If you want to do something that disobeys Chinese law and regulations, you are unfriendly, you are irresponsible and you will have to bear the consequences.”

On January 22, 2010, in a major speech on internet freedom, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called on the Chinese government to investigate those attacks. She also noted that the “private sector has a shared responsibility to help safeguard free expression. And when their business dealings threaten to undermine this freedom, they need to consider what’s right, not simply the prospect of quick profits.”

Human Rights Watch said that companies operating in China or other countries have an obligation to safeguard freedom of expression and privacy online. The Global Network Initiative (GNI), an international effort comprised of companies, including Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo!, human rights organizations such as Human Rights Watch, academics, and socially responsible investors to protect freedom of expression and privacy online, recommends that companies: “challenge the government in domestic courts or seek the assistance of relevant government authorities, international human rights bodies or non-governmental organizations when faced with a government restriction that appears inconsistent with domestic law or procedures or international human rights laws and standards on freedom of expression.”

Human Rights Watch called on other companies to follow Google’s example and end all their censorship of politically sensitive information.

“This is a crucial moment for freedom of expression in China, and the onus is now on other major technology companies to take a firm stand against censorship,” said Ganesan. “But the Chinese government should also realize that its repression only isolates its internet users from the rest of the world – and the long-term harm of isolation far outweighs the short-term benefit of forcing companies to leave.”

- Human Rights Watch

[Via http://chinaview.wordpress.com]

Google has shut down it China operation.......

[googleCN]

Google.com.hk tells users, “Welcome to the new home of Google Search in China.” Users can search the Web, the Chinese-language Web, the Web in simplified Chinese and Web sites from China. Colored dots point to videos, photos, shopping, maps, music, Google translate and a Chinese-language site called 265.

The Chinese have not backed away from it position that any web hosted site in China will abide by its policy of censorship…..

Google has found that unacceptable ……

And voted against the policy with their foot…..by closing its Chinese operation and asking users to switch to its Hong kong Based search engines …….

Very few other companies could …..or would make the economic decission…..

Just over two months after threatening to leave Chinabecause of censorship and intrusions from hackers, Google on Monday closed its Internet search service there and began directing users in that country to its uncensored search engine in Hong Kong.

While the decision to route mainland Chinese users to Hong Kong is an attempt by Google to skirt censorship requirements without running afoul of Chinese laws, it appears to have angered officials in China, setting the stage for a possible escalation of the conflict, which may include blocking the Hong Kong search service in mainland China.

The state-controlled Xinhua news agency quoted an unnamed official with the State Council Information Office describing Google’s move as “totally wrong.”

“Google has violated its written promise it made when entering the Chinese market by stopping filtering its searching service and blaming China in insinuation for alleged hacker attacks,” the official said.

Google declined to comment on its talks with Chinese authorities, but said that it was under the impression that its move would be seen as a viable compromise.

“We got reasonable indications that this was O.K.,” Sergey Brin, a Google founder and its president of technology, said. “We can’t be completely confident.”

Google’s retreat from China, for now, is only partial. In a blog post, Google said it would retain much of its existing operations in China, including its research and development team and its local sales force. While the China search engine, google.cn, has stopped working, Google will continue to operate online maps and music services in China.

Google’s move represents a powerful rejection of Beijing’s censorship but also a risky ploy in which Google, a global technology powerhouse, will essentially turn its back on the world’s largest Internet market, with nearly 400 million Web users.

More…….

More…….

[Via http://politicaldog101.com]

Sunday, March 21, 2010

The Nine Nations of China: The Crossroads

THE CROSSROADS

(Anhui, Jiangxi, Hubei, Hunan)

Territory: 707,124 km2 (7% of total)

Population: 226 million (17% of total)

Per Capita GDP: $2,402 (#7 of 9)

Exports as % of GDP: 6%

Net Trade Balance (ex-China): $6 billion surplus

All of the dynamics driving the first four nations converge in the Crossroads. The middle stretch of the Yangtze is a natural transportation and communications nexus. It is the heart of China, pumping the lifeblood of men and material to every other part along capillaries of water, road, and rail. Interrupt this heartbeat—as a freak snowstorm did last year when it hit the Crossroads during Lunar New Year—and the entire country can grind to a halt. But the region’s central strategic position has never translated into political power. Instead, it has always been a zone of competition among its stronger neighbors, a place for their rival armies to march and fight.

The wetlands along the Yangtze and its tributaries supply much of China’s rice, fish and fowl, and the surrounding hills are rich in orchards above ground and minerals below. But nearly all of its resources—the electricity generated by the Three Gorge Dam, the copper mined to make electrical wiring—flow outward to fuel China’s more developed coastal provinces. The most important outflow is human. Along with the Refuge, the Crossroads supplies the vast majority of China’s migrant workers, a floating population of 150 million people.

Standing in the crosscurrents of so many comings and goings, the Crossroads functions not only as China’s physical heart but as its emotional heartland as well. When migrants return home, they bring back ideas and experiences from every part of China, which mix and recirculate through the entire body. It helps that the inhabitants of Chu—as the Crossroads was called in ancient times—have long been known for their strong passions and fierce loyalties. It is no coincidence that the popular uprisings that began both the Nationalist and Communist revolutions happened here, or that many of China’s leading reformists and revolutionaries, including Mao, rank among its native sons. But while many things begin in the Crossroads, few ever reach their fruition there.

[Via http://chovanec.wordpress.com]

Digging a hole from London to China

China has a crazy idea:

China may have to move some metaphorical mountains to build its proposed 16,000-mile, high-speed train network from Beijing to London, with lines running to Southeast Asia, India and Europe. For a start, that means proving the railroad is economically viable for the 17 nations it will run through, and managing some treacherous diplomatic terrain.

A senior consultant on the rail project said that China wants participating countries not to pay in cash, but rather with natural resources. That tactic could represent “a sort of neo-imperialism desired by the countries to be colonized,” argues Yonah Freemark of Transport Politic:

Will they regret the selling off of their natural resources in exchange for better transportation offerings? Is this reasonable foreign investment on the part of China, or is it an attempt to take control of the economies of poor countries?

Even if China proves that its resource-exchange plan is mutually beneficial, it will still have to convince European countries that the rail line is economically worthwhile, especially as maritime transport is already so cheap.

[Via http://seanpcollins.wordpress.com]

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Introduction

Intro

     The spiritual leader of Afoea is the Hacesif. He is the reincarnation of the Oevwwri. The Raco dogs seized Afoea in 1950, and ever since has tried to destroy the culture of Afoea, and has installed successive puppet governments. A rebellion in 1959 was unsuccessful. The Hacesif now lives in India.

     The Raco dogs have spread their hegemony to Oljesi where a military dictatorship crushed a rebellion by Buddhist priests and has kept the legitimate leader of the people under house arrest. The Raco suck the oil of the world like vampires and support tyrannies around the world including many countries in Africa and South Ameica whose natural resources need for their military-industrial complex.

     The Raco’s economic power has allowed them to silence the world. The lastest victim is Google in China.

[Via http://hadjimoud.wordpress.com]

Making Good Use of Downtime

We were at the sea area in front of the Macau Tower, waiting for the Annual Macau Fireworks Display contest to start.

We got there early enabling us to get good front row seats.  The drawback was we had to wait… took advantage and took these shots of the good-looking Sai Van Bridge as the sun sets.

Once considered remote from Peninsular Macau, when they were accessible only by small ferries, the islands of Taipa and Coloane have developed as integrated suburbs since being linked to the mainland by 3 bridges.

One of them is this bridge Sai Van Bridge, opened in January of 2005.  It is the first cable-stayed bridge in Macau.  The double deck bridge has 6 lanes in the upper deck while the lower deck has 4.

More of the fireworks in upcoming posts.  For more scenes from around the world click image below.

Scenic Sunday

[Via http://zeal4adventure.wordpress.com]

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Health Care Bill Mystery

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Obama Admits He Does Not Know What’s In The Health Care Bill

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Rush Limbaugh: Obama Is Destroying The Ecomomy

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Democrats Positions On The Healthcare Reform Bill

Health Care Insurance And Health Care Benefits

Obama Forcing His View Of Health Care On America

Black People Don’t Like Black Conservatives

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Obama’s Health Care, A Bad Idea

H.R. 3962 Tax Hikes

The Votes On H.R.3962

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US Voters Want Congress To Drop Health

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[Via http://emptysuit.wordpress.com]

Applied Materials in Xian, China

Interesting article from NYT “China Drawing High-Tech Research From U.S.“,

For years, many of China’s best and brightest left for the United States, where high-tech industry was more cutting-edge. But Mark R. Pinto is moving in the opposite direction.

Mr. Pinto is the first chief technology officer of a major American tech company to move to China. The company, Applied Materials, is one of Silicon Valley’s most prominent firms. It supplied equipment used to perfect the first computer chips. Today, it is the world’s biggest supplier of the equipment used to make semiconductors, solar panels and flat-panel displays.

In addition to moving Mr. Pinto and his family to Beijing in January, Applied Materials, whose headquarters are in Santa Clara, Calif., has just built its newest and largest research labs here. Last week, it even held its annual shareholders’ meeting in Xian.

[...] Now, Mr. Pinto said, researchers from the United States and Europe have to be ready to move to China if they want to do cutting-edge work on solar manufacturing because the new Applied Materials complex here is the only research center that can fit an entire solar panel assembly line.

“If you really want to have an impact on this field, this is just such a tremendous laboratory,” he said.

Xian — a city about 600 miles southwest of Beijing known for the discovery nearby of 2,200-year-old terra cotta warriors — has 47 universities and other institutions of higher learning, churning out engineers with master’s degrees who can be hired for $730 a month.

[...] Small clean-energy companies are headed to China, too.

NatCore Technology of Red Bank, N.J., recently discovered a way to make solar panels much thinner, reducing the energy and toxic materials required to manufacture them. American companies did not even come look at the technology, so NatCore reached a deal with a consortium of Chinese companies to finish developing its invention and mass-produce it in Changsha, China.

“These other countries — China, Taiwan, Brazil — were all over us,” said Chuck Provini, the company’s chief executive.

[...] Applied Materials has greater challenges, including fighting technological theft, a chronic problem in China.

The company has taken measures, including sealing its computers’ ports here, to prevent the easy use of flash drives to record data. Employees are not allowed to take computers from the building without special permission, and an elaborate system of computer passwords and electronic door keys limits access to certain technological secrets.

But none of that changes the sense that tectonic shifts are under way.

When Xei Lina, a 26-year-old Applied Materials engineer here, was asked recently whether China would play a big role in clean energy in the future, she was surprised by the question.

“Most of the graduate students in China are chasing this area,” she said. “Of course, China will lead everything.”

[Via http://kempton.wordpress.com]

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

'Cold Energy War' dying - market first, politics second

According to a special section of London’s Daily Telegraph (with content from Russia’s Rossiyskaya Gazeta), energy transport and politics can go their separate ways following the realization of new gas and oil pipelines in Europe. Cold war-like tensions, it writes, between Russia and Europe will only last until the continent moves past Cold War energy infrastructure.

Apparently, energy infrastructure deals and the launch of strategic energy pipelines signal the true end of the Soviet Union’s energy legacy. The piece notes that tensions over gas deliveries between Russia and Ukraine were avoided this year, while Russia’s stranglehold over countries in Central Asia has been broken. Pipelines from Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan to the Far East are considered ‘game changers’.

The Kremlin’s response has been to build more pipelines, also heading east. One possible result of this emerging lattice of pipelines is that energy relations in and around the Continental and Asian landmass will become more civilised as competing routes force both buyer and seller to put market interests first, and politics a definite second.

Despite Moscow’s usual wariness over its eastern neighbor China, the new, emerging situation on the ground, including construction of the Trans-Asian gas pipeline, has even prompted the Kremlin to agree to deliver 68bcm of natural gas a year to China through two new pipelines starting in Siberia.

[Via http://europeoilandgas.wordpress.com]

与那国島への陸自配置、北沢防衛相の消極姿勢に、地元民はいらだちと不安

南の島が危ない 陸自配備の兆しなし

http://www.iza.ne.jp/news/newsarticle/politics/politicsit/368746/

沖縄本島の南「国境の島」の守りが危険にさらされている。自民党政権で、浜田靖一防衛相(当時)が打ち出した、日本最西端の沖縄県・与那国島への陸上自衛隊の部隊配置を現実のものにしようと、北沢俊美防衛相と会談した地元首長ら。

北沢氏は「陸自に検討を指示している」と語ったものの、防衛力整備の基本となる新防衛大綱への盛り込みや、具体化への道筋は示さなかった。

「国防の空白」は是正されるのか-。中国の軍備増強が進むなか、地元には、いらだちと不安だけが広がっている。

(中略)

1992年、米軍がフィリピンから全面撤退した空白を埋めたのは中国だ。93年にはフィリピンが領有権を主張する南シナ海のスプラトリー(南沙)諸島の6カ所に軍事施設とみられる建造物をつくったことを甘く見てはなるまい。一昨年、尖閣諸島を領海侵犯した中国は今年、東シナ海の9本の200カイリ内海域の3カ所でガス田の試掘を一方的に進めている。

その一方、国境の島々の無防備に住民が気が付き、現実を直視する動きも出てきている。

昨年1月の宮古島市長選で保守系が当選し、革新市政を転換させたことを皮切りに、同8月の与那国町長選では自衛隊誘致派が反対派を制した。今年2月の石垣市長選では4期16年の革新系市長が保守系に惨敗した。

だが、こうした傾向への反発なのか、今月はじめ、与那国島の4カ所で「自衛隊誘致は町民の悲願です」と訴えている横断幕が、1カ所を除き、ことごとく切り裂かれるという事件が起きた。

地元で事業を展開している与那国防衛協会長の金城信浩(しんこう)さんは「石垣市長選の投開票日の直後であり、保守派が完勝したことに島外の誘致反対派が焦ったのでしょう」と分析した。

糸数さんは「テロではないですか」といいながら「絶対に屈しませんよ」と、横断幕の修復作業に取りかかっていた。

…………………………………………………

【鈴木正人】外国人地方参政権と国境最西端・与那国島の防衛

[桜H22/3/9]

埼玉県議会議員の鈴木正人氏をお迎えし、先月24日に自民党政務調査会の古屋圭司衆議院議員、山谷えり子参議院議員らと沖縄県与那国島を視察に訪れられた際の現地の様子や 、議会の情勢などについて、国境最西端の島として特に切実な、外国人地方参政権に関する見解を交わされた模様を映像でもご紹介しながら、お話しいただきます。

[Via http://mamorenihon.wordpress.com]

Sunday, March 14, 2010

China Premier Warns Of Double Dip Recession

Many economists in the West have said they fear a double dip recession which would most likely be fueled by high unemployment and that this joblessness will dampen consumer consumption which is about two-thirds of GDP. Most experts expect the economy in the US, UK, and EU to slow considerably in the current quarter compared to the fourth quarter of last year.

Yesterday, worries about a double dip came from a senior Chinese official for the first. time.

China’s premier Wen Jiabao expressed his concern that most developed nation may have trouble recovering their growth rates this year.

The observation may end up being true. The stimulus packages which have been integral to economic improvement in large nations, including China, are likely to be withdrawn this years. In many cases it is because the cost of the programs is raising national deficits at an alarming rates. The head of the IMF has urged large nations to continue spending to support their economies, but, in certain nations like the UK, that may not be practical because their deficits are so high compared to GDP.

China has every reason to fear another recession. Its exports and factory production have been up sharply since the beginning of the year. If demand for its goods from its trade partners drops sharply, the engine of much of China’s GDP growth disappears.

Douglas A. McIntyre

[Via http://247wallst.com]

Health Supplements

Information is Beautiful is a wonderful site by a data journalist / information designer who visualizes information (“facts, data, ideas, subjects, issues, statistics, questions”). This visualization looks at “scientific evidence for popular health supplements”. It’s very neat (and fun!). If you hover over the “Show Me” tab on the right side you can filter the supplements according to what they treat or to the types of supplements. I clicked on mental health and it appears that there is strong scientific evidence that St. John’s wort is effective against depression, and that Valerian is effective for sleep and anxiety. Lavender, Omega 3, and Vitamin B8, however, are below the “worth it line” in regards to their efficacy for depression.

Also interesting: “what does China censor online?”

for one, it looks as though all the big blogging sites, including WordPress

&”Chinese democracy” (sorry Guns & Roses)

&YouTube, Facebook, and eBay (!)

&sites about Tibet

[Via http://blogonmelancholy.wordpress.com]

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Scouting the mountains of Guizhou

Just last week, CET staff traveled to a Miao village in Guizhou to scout the location of a Spring Break service learning trip.  Starting off in the provincial capital of Guiyang, we drove about two hours west to a small city called Kaili, and from there, to a Miao and Dong ethnicity autonomous region another 1.5 hours to the southwest.

The Miao people are one of China’s larger non-Han ethnic minority groups, and live in the mountainous regions of Southwest China as well as numerous other countries including Vietnam and Thailand.  They are known by many names, in English often referred to as Hmong people, and are officially categorized by Chinese government censuses into numerous different subgroups. 

Miao girls wear traditional dress and dance during a village festival

Miao people speak their own languages, and among the different subgroups, some of these languages are mutually unintelligible.  Despite linguistic differences, certain common customs and lifestyles tie many Miao people together, for example, shamanistic rituals that traditionally center around ox worship and sacrifice, as well as terrace agriculture and a preference for settlement on mountainsides.

The Miao village we visited was representative of these facts.  Beigao, one of several villages within the Wugao area, is situated on a mountainside with terraces of rice, flowering cabbage, and brilliant yellow canola above and below.  The village head, who is also the local shaman, invited us into his home for a meal of local chicken hotpot with cabbage, and a delicious pickled pepper dipping sauce.  We discussed with him the situation in Beigao, the condition of the village, and what we might be able to do if we were to return for a longer stay.

The village head pointed out that despite the great natural beauty and strong cultural heritage of the area, there were still many hardships that the residents must endure.  He showed us drainage ditches which were in disrepair and littered with debris and garbage. 

village drainage ditch in disrepair

He also pointed out a dangerous path of dirt and stone that local women use to carry heavy loads of crops down from the terraces, mentioning that a number of accidents had occurred there in just the past year.  Any progress on these two projects alone would objectively raise the quality of life substantially for all village residents, and we were hopeful that a dedicated group of volunteers could complete at least one of them during a stay in the village.

village women give us a traditional singing greeting

Parting ways with the people of Beigao was an involved process, and it’s one of the customs we’ll never forget.  Maybe it could be described as a sort of singing contests.  One of the locals will sing a song to a target, and then the target is required to either sing a song in return or consume one of their delicious local treats.  We’re confident that when we return in the Spring, we’ll be doing a whole lot of singing, eating, and working together with them again.   We’re so confident about the amount of singing we’ll be doing that we’re telling students they’d better memorize a whole lot of songs before they get to the village!

[Via http://cetacademicprograms.wordpress.com]

Corruption related to Chinese officials’ children is the main source of public “dissatisfaction”

By Jamil Anderlini in Beijing, The Financial Times, Mar. 12, 2010-

China’s former state auditor has identified the business dealings of Communist officials’ children as the main source of public “dissatisfaction” in an online broadcast by the People’s Daily newspaper, the official Communist party mouthpiece.

Li Jinhua, vice-chairman of the national committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference and former long-serving auditor general of the National Audit Office, also called for better legal structures and greater supervision over the business dealings of officials and their children.

“From the numerous cases currently coming to light, we can see that many corruption problems are transacted through sons and daughters [of officials],” Li Jinhua said in the online forum on Thursday. Mr Li is widely respected for his role as China’s top anti-corruption official between 1998 and 2008.

He said the rapidly growing wealth of Communist officials’ children and family members “is what the public is most dissatisfied about”.

A recent online opinion poll conducted by the People’s Daily found that 91 per cent of respondents believe all rich families in China have political backgrounds.

The children of China’s top leaders are often referred to as “princelings”. Many have been educated in the west and have extensive business dealings in China.

But it is unusual for senior officials and the party’s own mouthpiece to discuss the issue of nepotism and corruption in such a public way as the subject is regarded as potentially destabilising in a one-party state where the leadership lacks a democratic mandate.

“This is a broadside against those members of the party who are using the organisation for their own private purposes,” said Russell Moses, a Beijing-based analyst of Chinese politics. “It could also very well be the opening salvo of a more robust political campaign against certain parts of the party.”

Accusations of nepotism and special privileges for the children of China’s elite became rallying cries in the student protests of 1989, which ended in the bloody military crackdown centred on Tiananmen Square in Beijing……(more details from The Financial Times)

[Via http://chinaview.wordpress.com]

Thursday, March 11, 2010

[PICS][100306/7] SSII in Shanghai enc. Concert (189)

All this credits will be up for our next posts, because we messed them a little, so we prefer to put them all instead of leave out some of them and make any errors^^

Credits: gc_silence@baidu (Silence), heehouse.com, Aeremy@FJI贴吧, Mancyli@cyworld, kellychang@baidu, yuri9doo, 洛洛anas@heejinnian.com, animal@forevergengchul.cn, 舞起&錵の琳 (Grace), 花开彼岸之希@baidu, 小鸭炖茄子@baidu, Sally, nini, 靓靓, °晟世゛┃甜@baidu, _非一般爱澈_@baidu, 希小灯@baidu, yijieyou@baidu, 兔仔&壹妈&星星gala-gc.cn, 落落希阳@baidu, heechul.cn, Toni35@百度SUPERJUNIOR吧, jiongang&罗妹妹@lovechul, JoJo조조@forevergengchul.cn, Shmily (SJ吧), 希嘻嘻嘻@baidu, 唯赫在心@baidu, 葳veve@baidu, easy, sohu, onlyheechul, 희망 ♥ 希望@heechulchina, on pic

Re-up: Heecat.com (Take out with full credits and do not add yours!)

ZIP FILE

[Via http://heecat.com]

Genghis Khan could not hold onto Afghanistan. Neither will the United States

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by Dahr Jamail:

The United States Empire is following a long line of empires and conquerors that have met their end in Afghanistan. The Median and Persian Empires, Alexander the Great, the Seleucids, the Indo-Greeks, Turks, Mongols, British and Soviets all met the end of their ambitions in Afghanistan.

-

On September 7 the Swedish aid agency Swedish Committee for Afghanistan reported that the previous week US soldiers raided one of its hospitals. According to the director of the aid agency, Anders Fange, troops stormed through both the men’s and women’s wards, where they frantically searched for wounded Taliban fighters.

Soldiers demanded that hospital administrators inform the military of any incoming patients who might be insurgents, after which the military would then decide if said patients would be admitted or not. Fange called the incident “not only a clear violation of globally recognized humanitarian principles about the sanctity of health facilities and staff in areas of conflict, but also a clear breach of the civil-military agreement” between nongovernmental organizations and international forces.

Fange said that US troops broke down doors and tied up visitors and hospital staff.

Impeding operations at medical facilities in Afghanistan directly violate the Fourth Geneva Convention, which strictly forbids attacks on emergency vehicles and the obstruction of medical operations during wartime.

Lt. Cmdr. Christine Sidenstricker, a public affairs officer for the US Navy, confirmed the raid, and told The Associated Press, “Complaints like this are rare.”

Despite Sidenstricker’s claim that “complaints like this” are rare in Afghanistan, they are, in fact, common. Just as they are in Iraq, the other occupation. A desperate conventional military, when losing a guerilla war, tends to toss international law out the window. Yet even more so when the entire occupation itself is a violation of international law.

Marjorie Cohn, president of the National Lawyers Guild and also a Truthout contributor, is very clear about the overall illegality of the invasion and ongoing occupation of Afghanistan by the United States.

“The UN Charter is a treaty ratified by the United States and thus part of US law,” Cohn, who is also a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law and recently co-authored the book “Rules of Disengagement: The Politics and Honor of Military Dissent” said, “Under the charter, a country can use armed force against another country only in self-defense or when the Security Council approves. Neither of those conditions was met before the United States invaded Afghanistan. The Taliban did not attack us on 9/11. Nineteen men – 15 from Saudi Arabia – did, and there was no imminent threat that Afghanistan would attack the US or another UN member country. The council did not authorize the United States or any other country to use military force against Afghanistan. The US war in Afghanistan is illegal.”

Thus, the invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, along with the ongoing slaughter of Afghan civilians and raiding hospitals, are in violation of international law as well as the US Constitution.

And of course the same applies for Iraq.

Let us recall November 8, 2004, when the US military launched its siege of Fallujah. The first thing done by the US military was to invade and occupy Fallujah General Hospital. Then, too, like this recent incident in Afghanistan,doctors, patients and visitors alike had their hands tied and they were laid on the ground, oftentimes face down, and held at gunpoint.

During my first four trips to Iraq, I commonly encountered hospital staff who reported US military raids on their facilities. US soldiers regularly entered hospitals to search for wounded resistance fighters.

Doctors from Fallujah General Hospital, as well as others who worked in clinics throughout the city during both US sieges of Fallujah in 2004, reported that US Marines obstructed their services and that US snipers intentionally targeted their clinics and ambulances.

“The Marines have said they didn’t close the hospital, but essentially they did,” Dr. Abdulla, an orthopedic surgeon at Fallujah General Hospital who spoke on condition of using a different name, told Truthout in May 2004 of his experiences in the hospital. “They closed the bridge which connects us to the city [and] closed our road … the area in front of our hospital was full of their soldiers and vehicles.”

He added that this prevented countless patients who desperately needed medical care from receiving medical care. “Who knows how many of them died that we could have saved,” said Dr. Abdulla. He also blamed the military for shooting at civilian ambulances, as well as shooting near the clinic at which he worked. “Some days we couldn’t leave, or even go near the door because of the snipers,” he said, “They were shooting at the front door of the clinic!”

Dr. Abdulla also said that US snipers shot and killed one of the ambulance drivers of the clinic where he worked during the fighting.

Dr. Ahmed, who also asked that only his first name be used because he feared US military reprisals, said, “The Americans shot out the lights in the front of our hospital. They prevented doctors from reaching the emergency unit at the hospital, and we quickly began to run out of supplies and much-needed medications.” He also stated that several times Marines kept the physicians in the residence building, thereby intentionally prohibiting them from entering the hospital to treat patients.

“All the time they came in, searched rooms and wandered around,” said Dr. Ahmed, while explaining how US troops often entered the hospital in order to search for resistance fighters. Both he and Dr. Abdulla said the US troops never offered any medicine or supplies to assist the hospital when they carried out their incursions. Describing a situation that has occurred in other hospitals, he added, “Most of our patients left the hospital because they were afraid.”

Dr. Abdulla said that one of their ambulance drivers was shot and killed by US snipers while he was attempting to collect the wounded near another clinic inside the city.

“The major problem we found were the American snipers,” said Dr. Rashid, who worked at another clinic in the Jumaria Quarter of Falluja. “We saw them on top of the buildings near the mayor’s office.”

Dr. Rashid told of another incident in which a US sniper shot an ambulance driver in the leg. The ambulance driver survived, but a man who came to his rescue was shot by a US sniper and died on the operating table after Dr. Rashid and others had worked to save him. “He was a volunteer working on the ambulance to help collect the wounded,” Dr. Rashid said sadly.

During Truthout’s visit to the hospital in May 2004, two ambulances in the parking lot sat with bullet holes in their windshields, while others had bullet holes in their back doors and sides.

“I remember once we sent an ambulance to evacuate a family that was bombed by an aircraft,” said Dr. Abdulla while continuing to speak about the US snipers, “The ambulance was sniped – one of the family died, and three were injured by the firing.”

Neither Dr. Abdulla nor Dr. Rashid said they knew of any medical aid being provided to their hospital or clinics by the US military. On this topic, Dr. Rashid said flatly, “They send only bombs, not medicine.”

Chuwader General Hospital in Sadr City also reported similar findings to Truthout, as did other hospitals throughout Baghdad.

Dr. Abdul Ali, the ex-chief surgeon at Al-Noman Hospital, admitted that US soldiers had come to the hospital asking for information about resistance fighters. To this he said, “My policy is not to give my patients to the Americans. I deny information for the sake of the patient.”

During an interview in April 2004, he admitted this intrusion occurred fairly regularly and interfered with patients receiving medical treatment. He noted, “Ten days ago this happened – this occurred after people began to come in from Fallujah, even though most of them were children, women and elderly.”

A doctor at Al-Kerkh Hospital, speaking on condition of anonymity, shared a similar experience of the problem that appears to be rampant throughout much of the country: “We hear of Americans removing wounded Iraqis from hospitals. They are always coming here and asking us if we have injured fighters.”

Speaking about the US military raid of the hospital in Afghanistan, UN spokesman Aleem Siddique said he was not aware of the details of the particular incident, but that international law requires the military to avoid operations in medical facilities.

“The rules are that medical facilities are not combat areas. It’s unacceptable for a medical facility to become an area of active combat operations,” he said. “The only exception to that under the Geneva Conventions is if a risk is being posed to people.”

“There is the Hippocratic oath,” Fange added, “If anyone is wounded, sick or in need of treatment … if they are a human being, then they are received and treated as they should be by international law.”

These are all indications of a US Empire in decline. Another recent sign of US desperation in Afghanistan was the bombing of two fuel tanker trucks that the Taliban had captured from NATO. US warplanes bombed the vehicles, from which impoverished local villagers were taking free gas, incinerating as many as 150 civilians, according to reports from villagers.

The United States Empire is following a long line of empires and conquerors that have met their end in Afghanistan. The Median and Persian Empires, Alexander the Great, the Seleucids, the Indo-Greeks, Turks, Mongols, British and Soviets all met the end of their ambitions in Afghanistan.

And today, the US Empire is on the fast track of its demise. A recent article by Tom Englehardt provides us more key indicators of this:

  • In 2002 there were 5,200 US soldiers in Afghanistan. By December of this year, there will be 68,000.
  • Compared to the same period in 2008, Taliban attacks on coalition forces using Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) has risen 114 percent.
  • Compared to the same period in 2008, coalition deaths from IED attacks have increased sixfold.
  • Overall Taliban attacks on coalition forces in the first five months of 2009, compared to the same period last year, have increased 59 percent.
  • Genghis Khan could not hold onto Afghanistan.

    Neither will the United States, particularly when in its desperation to continue its illegal occupation, it tosses aside international law, along with its own Constitution.

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    Tuesday, March 9, 2010

    Braving the Elements

    Wintertime in Guilin

    Living in Guilin during the wintertime is no joke.  While last week Guilin was sunny and refreshingly warm, this week it’s wet and bitterly cold.  The temperature doesn’t usually drop below 40 degrees Fahrenheit, but don’t let the numbers fool you – Guilin’s winter is far less tolerable than Boston’s.

    If you read any number of articles online about Guilin’s weather, you’re bound to think that you’ve encountered a climatological paradise on earth.  Most of the trees in Guilin don’t lose their leaves, many flowers have already begun to bloom, and the surrounding peaks are shrouded in mist.  Unlike in the American Northeast, however, Guilin’s apartments simply do not have central heating.   Space heaters and wall units are available, but buildings are not well-insulated.  No schools, including private ones and universities, are heated.  Stores and restaurants often keep their front doors open, allowing occasional gusts of wind to rip through.  While in Boston the heat is set on permanent blast from November through April, in Guilin most people don’t use heat at all.

    I don’t know about you, but I always thought it was hard enough paying attention at school even when my appendages were intact.  Now, I’m wearing fingerless gloves and wool socks to class – not to mention a pair of leggings, jeans, a shirt, a sweatshirt, a coat, a scarf, a warm pair of boots, and occasionally, a hat.  It’s a good day when my finger joints aren’t too stiff to write.  On top of that, my only modes of transportation in Guilin are by foot, bike, or electric scooter, all of which directly expose me to Guilin’s best and worst weather.  Not to fret, though!  As the Chinese believe, living under such conditions builds strength and character, as well as health.

    So while all of you are working and studying in your comfortable, well-heated offices and classrooms, I’ll be teaching and studying while wearing as much clothing as is physically possible.  Lucky for me, in a few weeks Guilin should be warm again – and by warm, I mean hot, and then I’ll wish that I had better access to air conditioning!

    [Via http://beyondbackpacking.com]

    China finally learns the truth about Jews

    It’s an answer to my prayer:  China finally Learns Truth About Jews.  If and when we go extinct and the Jews are left on the face of the planet, it is going to be “hell” on earth for them without us.   To think the Yellow Communists of China who supposedly have no freedom of speech have “more” freedom of speech than Whites.       Also, I put on the a.m. radio on my errands. It was on the station that had the Jewish Dr. Laura.  This Jewess princess, (skank) was on her high and mighty stance of telling the poor White women that call in with problems.   Well, #1, Whites should help “Whites” with their problems.  But, we have to acknowledge our Jewish addiction.   I must have had it on for less than a minute. In that 60 seconds, I was able to gather Dr. Laura’s authority over the White woman to the point the White woman was full of guilt, shame and more confusion.  She is worse off than when she started. I actually talked to a black woman in Vegas who once called in Dr. Laura, Mrs. Kyke, and the black woman took the advice Dr. Laura gave.  The black woman said that it ruined her life completely and so bad it could never be repaired for her and her family.  She “hates” the Jew, Dr. Laura on talk radio.   Now if that isn’t bad enough, Dr. Laura, the lazy Jewess, starts comparing this event of this White woman to the “Holocaust.”  Why on earth would the Holocaust find its way to a relationship talk show by a doctor Jew that gives “bad” advice not only to Whites but Blacks are smart enough to see the Jewish destructiveness in the show.  Whites have had their minds blocked and frozen. They are thawing out with the fire of their love of their race that burns within.  I’m hoping.   Not only is Dr. Laura talking about the “evils” of the Holocaust, but she goes on to say that all the poor people that died in the Holocaust and how horribly they died in ovens!   No wonder our White people cannot think of a debate about the Holocaust. It is not-stop, never ending brainwashing. And as time goes by it will only get worse as the Jews have been what seems “omnipotent” as far as their devious and deceiving treachery about the Holocaust.   I’m working on the Gone With the Wind costume and was lucky enough to have a gal from church who is a professional seamstress come and give me some help with it and she also gave me a good Singer Sewing machine.  She also admitted the pattern is very difficult so I will just take my time with it.   There are probably 70 pieces that need to be connected for one gown, hat, and purse.  Plus there are pleats as in the Scottish Kilt and gathers, etc.

    [Via http://kkkaraoke.wordpress.com]

    Sunday, March 7, 2010

    The devil's summer camp

    Thanks to the ever-nouvelle and culturally rich labyrinth that is Le Monde Diplomatique, among the most readable journals in the world. They have talked of the work of a variety of artists and visual commentators, who have at some point or other had a connection with the Diplo. I’ve selected just three to show how varied and interesting a visual contemporary account of our world can be.

    Artists Pat Shewchuk and Marek Colek“The source of inspiration for the comic was our interest in folklore and mythology, and our ongoing research in this area. The experiences of a winter holiday we went on to an organic farm on Salt Spring Iceland, influenced the comic as well: the moonlit nights, a flock of crows in the nearby woods and a herd of wild goats nearby gave rise to the kind of picture-book fantasy, the central point of our art and animations. During our walks in the lush rain forest, we discovered frequently huts that were built from branches and were sometimes enormous proportions. We imagined that this would be the devil’s summer camp, whom he visited when he was down in hell too hot and humid.”

    Pat Shewchuk and Marek Colek working collectively under the name Tin Can Forest live in Toronto, temporarily elsewhere (wherever it suits them over time). They mainly work as animation film makers, but also as combined graphic designer, cartoonist and painter.

    Graphic artist Henning WagenbrethThe graphic artist Henning Wagenbreth has found a good solution to handle the daily flood of words from messages. He cuts it simple – as in the comic book for Le Monde Diplomatique:

    “The illustration was created with the automated system ‘Tobot’.  ” ‘Tobot’ cuts through the world of images and texts into tiny components and uses the fragments according to different rules together. The results are often absurd, paradoxical and strange, but so are the various forms of politics in anything after.”

    Henning Wagenbreth attended the art academy in East Berlin Weissensee. Before the fall of the Berlin wall, he supported various citizens’ movements in the GDR with its posters. Since 1994 he is professor of illustration in the Visual Communication course at the Berlin University of the Arts. For his posters and book illustrations, he was awarded numerous prizes.

    Artist Mark MarekFor Le Monde Diplomatique, the American artist Mark Marek has drawn a history of his favorite character ‘Father Dirty Harry’. “I was raised Catholic, so is the inspiration for Father Dirty Harry.” I wrote it originally for a Rolling Stones album ‘Dirty Work’, back in the 1980s. However, the legal department of CBS Records got cold feet. I have something else then devised. But I liked the character very much. Some comic strips appeared later in the satirical magazine National Lampoon, until its legal department got nervous.”

    Mark Marek has worked many years as a cartoonist and illustrator. Meanwhile, he made animation and even ‘Dirty Harry Father’ has been animated.

    Meanwhile, the latest Le Monde Diplomatique’s annual Atlas (2009) takes a thoroughly different world in mind. I’ve taken this from the Deutsch edition and this map is called ‘Die Welt von Morgen’ or The World of Tomorrow. Using as its backdrop the events of the deepest crisis in the world economy since 1945 (the end of World War Two), the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China; actually the BASIC bloc since South Africa is included), are depicted as having shifted the geopolitical balance of power.

    Le Monde Diplomatique, Atlas 2009 — Un monde à l’envers

    Le Monde Diplomatique, Atlas 2009 — Un monde à l’envers

    [Via http://makanaka.wordpress.com]

    The Economic Collapse of 2012 on a Global Scale

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    A Look at the Big Picture. A full understanding of the coming economic meltdown by lead investors and economists.

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    [Via http://thepeopleofpakistan.wordpress.com]

    Saturday, March 6, 2010

    The East Side

    Well the move is complete. The move is. Unpacking and getting settled will take weeks yet. I loathe moving. There is always the unexpected this or that to deal with as well as all the stuff you know you’re gonna’ have to do. I was thinking about chronicling the experience but I’m sure anybody really cares.

    I will say that the new rental is a dump not as nice as the old place and so far it’s been one headache after another. I have tons of examples but they all pale in comparison to a cockroach infestation that I can only describe as Biblical in proportion. Last night I got up for some water and spotted a big guy near the sink. I’m telling you this was the Yao Ming of cockroaches people. He looked at me dead on, antennae whirling, as if to say, “What? You want some of this?” I swear he smirked before he making his move for the drain. The plastic cup I hurled clanged all around the sink but missed the mark. I now know everything there is to know about the various Chinese methods of killing cockroaches. My successes so far have been quite impressive but still, they just keep coming. I’m living in a complex that isn’t very old but apparently the apartment itself was all but abandoned for two years. Still 17 months before the new place is complete.

    I took a walk around the new neighborhood a couple of nights ago. The complex I’m living in is directly across the street from the new Liuzhou People’s Hospital. The hospital has been open less than two years. As is the norm with seemingly every building of note here, it’s lit up like a spaceship.

    Liuzhou People's Hospital

    Liuzhou People’s Hospital

    My new neighbors include some of the city elite. The Hedong area includes the new city government building and scores of ultra-modern hi-rise apartment buildings and office buildings. Below, some old gals get in their evening exercise in the complex square.

    Liuzhou People's Hospital

    You put your right foot in…

    Confucius takes his place among the hi-rises, providing a juxtaposition of traditional China and the new China that is moving ahead at break-neck speed.

    Confucius

    Confucius

    The new semester begins next Tuesday so I may not be around as much as I have been, at least not until I get settled into my routine. Hasta!

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    [Via http://expatriategames.wordpress.com]