Category Archives: News

CCTV Useless

This makes sense:

(BBC NEWS)
Only one crime was solved by each 1,000 CCTV cameras in London last year, a report into the city’s surveillance network has claimed.

The internal police report found the million-plus cameras in London rarely help catch criminals.

In one month CCTV helped capture just eight out of 269 suspected robbers.

David Davis MP, the former shadow home secretary, said: “It should provoke a long overdue rethink on where the crime prevention budget is being spent.”

The Metropolitan Police has been extraordinarily slow to act to deal with the ineffectiveness of CCTV
David Davis MP

He added: “CCTV leads to massive expense and minimum effectiveness.

Lee Ronaldo’s Tennis Injury…

…causes Sonic Youth to postpone their West Coast Tour.

Sonic Youth News
Sonic Youth regretfully announce that guitarist Lee Ranaldo has fractured his left wrist — requiring the band to reschedule portions of their upcoming west coast tour to the following new dates:

Mon Jan 04 – Tucson, AZ – Rialto Theater
Tue Jan 05 – Phoenix, AZ – Marquee Theater
Thu Jan 07 – San Diego, CA – House of Blues
Fri Jan 08 – Pomona, CA – Fox Theater
Sat Jan 09 – Los Angeles, CA – The Wiltern

Tickets for the original dates will be honored or, if necessary, refunds will be made available at the point of purchase.
Two of the band’s planned Fall appearances will NOT be rescheduled, however – September 26 in Santa Barbara and October 4 at The Austin City Limits Festival. Refunds for the Santa Barbara performance will be available at the point of purchase. More ticket information on the calendar page.

Lee fractured his wrist while playing tennis. Please join us in wishing him a quick and thorough recovery.

Productivity…Rises!

WASHINGTON (Reuters) — U.S. non-farm productivity was stronger than initially thought in the second quarter as companies slashed costs to protect profits, data showed on Wednesday.

The Labor Department said non-farm productivity rose at a 6.6% annual rate, rather than the 6.4% pace it reported last month. That was the biggest increase since the third quarter of 2003.

Productivity rose at a 0.3% pace in the first quarter.

Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast productivity, which measures the hourly output per worker, rising at a 6.4% rate in the second quarter.

Unemployment still at an inadequate level.

US Funds Colombian Deaths Over Drugs

In her new book, Blood & Capital: The Paramilitarization of Colombia, author Jasmin Hristov writes: “For roughly forty years, the Colombian state has been playing a double game: prohibiting the formation of paramilitary groups with one law and facilitating their existence with another; condemning their barbarities and at the same time assisting their operations; promising to bring perpetrators of crime to justice, while opening the door to perpetual immunity; convicting them of narco-trafficking, yet profiting from their drug deals; announcing to the world the government’s persecution of paramilitary organizations, even though in reality these ‘illegal armed groups’ have been carrying out the dirty work unseemly for a state that claims to be democratic and worthy of billions of dollars in US military aid.”

As the largest recipient of US military aid in the hemisphere, Colombia has long been the US’ most important ally in Latin America. Simultaneously, Colombia has also become the hemisphere’s worst human rights violator, with Colombia’s numerous paramilitary organizations recently taking center stage, as they’ve gradually become directly responsible for more human rights atrocities than the formal military and police. In the name of fighting “narco-terrorism,” poor people and dissidents are massacred, assassinated, tortured, and disappeared, among other atrocities—done to eliminate particular individuals and to “set an example” by intimidating others in the community. 97 percent of human rights abuses remain unpunished.

In recent years, a variety of human rights organizations, as well as mainstream academics and journalists have found it impossible to ignore the astronomical human rights violations. However, even though these groups have accurately reported on the actual atrocities, Jasmin Hristov argues that in their reports, the atrocities are largely de-contextualized from the powerful forces in Colombia and the US that directly benefit from this repression. According to Hristov, this mainstream presentation serves to mask the fact that US and Colombian elites directly support (via funding, training, supervising, and providing legal immunity for) state repression carried out by the police and military, as well as illegal paramilitary groups that are unofficially sanctioned by the government. Whether it is murdering labor organizers or displacing an indigenous community because a US corporation wants to drill for oil on their land, Hristov passionately asserts that death squad violence is purposefully directed towards sectors of society that stand in the way of the ruling class’ efforts to maintain economic dominance and acquire more resources to make even more profit.

In her book, Hristov does make a convincing argument that Colombia’s notorious death squads are inherently linked to maintenance of the country’s extreme economic inequality. Particularly since the neoliberal reforms of the 1990s that have increased poverty, Colombia’s poor continue to resist their oppression in many different ways. In response, state repression on a variety of levels is needed to terrorize unarmed social movements and other community groups and activists.

Throughout Blood & Capital, Hristov seeks to expose the rational motivations behind state violence for capitalism’s economic elites in the US and Colombia. In meticulous detail, Hristov shows how the super-rich benefit from state repression and how the violators of human rights have essentially become immune from any consequences for their actions. If death squads are truly to be abolished in Colombia, we must look honestly at how and why they exist today. Hristov’s new book is a powerful tool for exposing who truly calls the shots.

Neoliberalism or neopoverty?

Hristov asserts that “it is not a mere coincidence that during the era of accelerated neoliberal restructuring, the deterioration in the living conditions of the working majority has been accompanied by an increase in the capabilities and activities of military, police, and paramilitary groups, as well as the portrayal of social movements as forces that must be monitored, silenced, and eventually dismantled.”

I don’t know if it’s fair to blame this atrocity on neoliberal ideology. But surely this helps make the case against prohibiting drugs. You’re only creating crime instead of discouraging it.

Report: Xe Services Seen In Pakistan

(WMR) — The mercenary private security contractor once known as Blackwater and now called Xe Services LLC is being reported in the Pakistani press as being seen with “other suspicious foreigners” in Peshawar and other parts of Pakistan.

A little history: “private security contractor” is a euphemism for “Team America.” Blackwater is a private militant force that helped the US government fight its war in Iraq. They’re not government-owned but they still work alongside US troops and other allies. As for this latest development, so much for that “respecting Pakistan’s status as a sovereign nation” bull. Let’s get Osama and then get the Hell out of the Middle East!

Andy Murray Loses In Staggering Upset

And now, some tennis news!

Playing an oddly listless match while exhibiting the body language of a man undergoing a tax audit, No. 2 seed Andy Murray was battered by No. 16 Marin Cilic in a stunning 7-5, 6-2, 6-2 fourth-round loss on Tuesday that produced a rare men’s upset in the United States Open.

Perhaps more surprising than the result, though, was how it happened. Murray, who used to have a reputation for moping when things went poorly, had climbed to the top of the rankings on his ability to adjust mid-match and create ways to win. But in this match, Murray’s game disintegrated as Cilic, an up-and-coming 20-year-old from Croatia, plowed through the match without showing any emotion.

“It just got away from me,” Murray said. “I couldn’t get myself back in the match. I couldn’t find any way to get into the games and he was dominating the points.”

Murray had come into the tournament looking strong, having won one of the two hard-court warm-up tournaments — in Montreal with a victory over Juan Martin del Potro — and losing to No. 1 Roger Federer in the semifinals of the other in Cincinnati.

But his game had no bite and after Cilic overcame some errors early in the match, he turned all of his varied weapons on a mystified Murray.

The match started slowly, with errors on both sides until they reached 5-5 in the first set. There, Murray played a horrible service game, double-faulting to 0-40 and Cilic converted his first break. He then held off Murray’s attempt to break and grabbed the first set.

“I returned poorly and he served well,” Murray said. “That was really the difference. Once he got that first set, he hit the ball really well and started playing really aggressive.”

Murray visibly sagged after that swing of events and Cilic pounced on his growing vulnerability, breaking Murray in the first game of the second set.

From there, it became a march to Murray’s demise. He hung his head, swung his racket in frustration and swore to no one in particular after one Cilic mis-hit dropped in for a point. After the second set loss, Murray threw his racket to the ground.

From there, Cilic kept his all-business expression and never let Murray back into the match. He was painting the lines with forehand winners while Murray struggled to keep his forehand in the court. Murray never adjusted his game or tried any new tactics, other than growing continually more annoyed at what was happening.

Serving at 2-4 in the third set and defeat seemingly inevitable, Murray played perhaps his most dispirited game, flubbing a forehand into the net to get broken a final time. Cilic served out the set with ease and the upset was complete.

Cilic was not the most likely candidate to pull off this upset. Though on the rise at age 20, having reached his No. 17 ranking, he had never beaten a top-three player. While he is a strong server, it has never been a true weapon in top-tier matches. Against Murray, though, he had 10 aces and faced few challenges on his service games.

Now, he draws del Potro in the quarterfinals after del Potro advanced with a dominating 6-3, 6-3, 6-3 victory over Juan Carlos Ferrero in their fourth-round match.

Germany Defends Killing Of Afghan Civilians (or, Sometimes Humorous Comments Just Write Themselves)

Angela_Merkel

BERLIN — The German chancellor, Angela Merkel, pushed back Tuesday against international criticism over an airstrike ordered by German troops that claimed the lives of scores of people in northern Afghanistan, even as NATO announced that it appeared civilians had been among those killed in the bombing.

Well hey, we have a war to fight, and unfortunately civilians will sometimes be victims. So this is totally justifiable, right?

I mean, it’s not like the chancellor of Germany has no problem killing innocent people, right?

…right?

Black Lips Are “Assholes”…Really?

Exclaim News
You can add the music festival All Tomorrow’s Parties to the list of “Things the Black Lips Have Been Kicked Out Of.” In a recent interview with the Village Voice [via Brooklyn Vegan], ATP organizer Barry Hogan said that “the Black Lips will never play again — they’re assholes. They broke into a chalet and started stealing stuff.”

Fellow organizer Deborah Kee Higgins agreed, stating: “We have a ‘No Assholes’ policy. You can play once because we don’t know you’re an asshole, but you can’t play twice.”

Harsh words, to be sure, but we’re guessing that the Atlanta punks aren’t losing any sleep over it. After all, the group had to flee the Indian police earlier this year after being accused of indecent exposure following a raucous gig in Chennai. Compared to the wrath of the Tamil authorities, the words of two foul-mouthed promoters probably don’t seem like such a big deal.

Black Lips don’t need ATP.

King Khan + GZA

N+I.W.A (Niggaz plus Indian with Attitude)

Spinner.com
While rumours have been swirling about the possibility of a formal collaboration between the pair for sometime, Khan is finally ready to confirm that it looks like the union is going ahead. Don’t expect The Shrines’ eccentric frontman to pass himself off as the first Indian-Canadian member of Wu-Tang Clan just yet though. “The whole thing is really surreal,” he says, clearly still trying to wrap his head around the amazing turn of events.

The union marks the second time that GZA has reached out to the garage rock community for musical input. Khan’s rambunctious Almighty Defender bandmates, Black Lips, first performed along side the famed hip-hoper at SXSW this past March and subsequently recorded ‘The Drop I Hold’ with the urban pioneer. Continue reading King Khan + GZA