Sandra Finley

Nov 152013
 

The Trans-PACIFIC Partnership (TPP).

  • Canadians and Americans are together in the same trade deal with Asian countries (unlike Europe –  two separate (but same) deals).

 

People scrambling – today Wikileaks released draft text.  From Malaysian perspective:

 

There is pandemonium on both sides of the border as the powers try to fast-track signing of the deal.   Word is out:  the Trans-Pacific “Partners” meet next week in Salt Lake City.

 

 

  • UNITED STATES:   Secret TPP Meetings In Salt Lake City Set To Begin

Request from friends in the U.S. (March Against Monsanto): 

If you or someone you know can be in Salt Lake to protest this constitutional abomination, please be here. The conference (Trans-PACIFIC Partnership, TPP) is taking place November 19-24th and any support you could offer in getting as many activists as possible in SLC is greatly appreciated.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – –

PLEASE pass the appended information on.  Together we know tons of Americans.

We can’t compete against the money of the Transnational Corporations,  but honey!  We got the numbers!

WHO is behind this effort called ExposeTheTPP?

  • I see the American group Anonymous in one place.
  • The global March Against Monsanto has obviously picked it up.

A corporatocracy has taken over.

International Trade Deals are trampling what is left of democracy.

We are working across continents and oceans to stop what is happening.

Have fun getting in touch with old friends.  Know that it matters!

/Sandra

APPENDED

From: On Behalf Of Subscribe to March Against Monsanto


Secret TPP Meetings   In Salt Lake City Set To Begin

Posted: 14 Nov 2013 10:29 AM PST

At this very moment, representatives from 12 countries are   arriving in Salt Lake City for a days long conference pushing for the Fast   Tracking of the TPP. The Trans-Pacific Partnership affects many of our   liberties including internet privacy, access to medicine, biological patents   and many civil rights. If you or someone you know can be in Salt Lake to   protest this constitutional abomination, please be here. The conference is   taking place November 19-24th and any support you could offer in getting as   many activists as possible in SLC is greatly appreciated. Thank you!

Learn more:

National Day of Action – Distribute Flyers
http://tinyurl.com/Nov16TppNatnlAction

“JOIN” your State Action Group
www.tinyurl.com/StateActionGroups

Learn more:
www.ExposeTheTPP.org

 

Nov 152013
 

 

                                                              

It’s   worse – much worse – than we thought. A bombshell leak by Wikileaks just   revealed how giant U.S. conglomerates are about to impose an extreme Internet   censorship plan that will wreck Canada’s digital future. They’re trying to wrap this up — we have to stop this   right now. Tell Stephen Harper not to let American interests break Canada’s   digital future.

    

Unelected lobbyists and government bureaucrats have taken extreme measures to keep the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) a secret.1

Now we know why.

Wikileaks just made public secret documents that show how U.S. lobbyists are trying to force Canada to sign up to their extreme Internet censorship scheme. Join over 100,000 people to tell Stephen Harper to protect Canadians from U.S. lobbyists.

We knew the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) was a serious threat to Canada’s digital future. It turns out it’s worse – much worse – than we thought. In a bombshell development, the full text of the TPP’s Internet censorship plan has been made public by Wikileaks for all to see.2

The leaked documents show that the TPP will:

  • Replace      carefully crafted Canadian laws with extreme Internet censorship rules      drafted in secret by U.S. lobbyists
  • Give      giant U.S. conglomerates the power to kick entire families off the      Internet if their kids are accused of downloading the wrong content      online.3
  • Force      your ISP to act as the “Internet Police”, monitoring your Internet use and      even shutting down entire websites. This will certainly make your      Internet bill more expensive.4

In short, this plan has no place in the 21st century. It will have wide-ranging implications for our economy, free expression online and your monthly bills.

Stephen Harper promised to stand up for Canada. Now it’s time to remind him of that promise — tell him not to let giant U.S. interests wreck Canada’s digital economy.

They’re trying to wrap this up in the next few weeks5. The time to act is now.

Every voice counts. Please – speak up today.

For an open and affordable future,

Steve, Reilly, and Jason, and your OpenMedia.ca team

P.S. This plan is worse than our worst fears. Your small team here at OpenMedia.ca are working hard to make sure Canadians know the truth about what’s going on. Can you play your part by chipping in what you can today towards our campaign?

Footnotes

[1] Trans-Pacific Partnership: Canadian MPs Have No Access To Drafts U.S. Pols Can See, NDP says. Source: Huffington Post

[2] Secret Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP). Source: Wikileaks

[3] What’s actually in the TPP? Source: Public Knowledge

[4] “TPP Creates Legal Incentives for ISPs to Police the Internet. What is at risk? Your rights.” Source: Electronic Frontier Foundation

[5] U.S. Still Aiming For Completed TPP Talks By Year’s End. Source: Law360


        OpenMedia.ca   is a non-profit organization that relies on donations from people like you to   operate. Our small   but dedicated team ensures even the smallest contributions go a long way to   make your voice heard. Please donate today.We are an   award-winning network of people and organizations working to safeguard the   possibilities of the open Internet. We work toward informed and participatory   digital policy. You can follow us on Twitter, and like us on Facebook.

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Nov 142013
 

There are trade deals to cross the Atlantic Ocean and the Pacific!

 

Leaked Asia trade text sees US backing firms, The Malaysian Insider.

http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/business/article/leaked-asia-trade-text-sees-us-backing-firms

The United States is seeking broader protections for its pharmaceutical and other companies in negotiations on an ambitious Pacific trade deal, according to a document released yesterday by WikiLeaks.

Julian Assange’s anti-secrecy activist website published what it said was the draft text as of late August for a chapter of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which is being negotiated among 12 countries that comprise more than 40% of the world economy.

The text shows widespread disagreements among negotiators, despite calls from President Barack Obama to seal the agreement by the end of the year. Talks are scheduled to resume Tuesday in Salt Lake City, Utah.

In the notes, most nations part ways with the United States and support two-decade-old exemptions under the World Trade Organization for patents in certain areas related to public health.

The text also shows that the United States and Japan are seeking to restrict nations from denying patents on the argument that products do not result in “enhanced efficacy”.

Generic drug leader India, which is not part of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, has cited that reason to deny patent protections, enraging major pharmaceutical companies.

Public Citizen, a Washington advocacy group critical of globalisation, charged that the Trans-Pacific Partnership marked a step backward and would lock consumers into high prices for medication.

“The Obama administration’s shameful bullying on behalf of the giant drug companies would lead to preventable suffering and death in Asia-Pacific countries,” Peter Maybarduk, director of Public Citizen’s global access to medicines programme, said in a statement.

Pharmaceutical companies have traditionally argued that they need revenue from their inventions to fund further research into potentially life-saving drugs.

In a separate section, the United States and Australia are marked as opposing moves to limit liability of Internet service providers for copyright infringement that takes place over their networks.

Obama has argued that the Trans-Pacific Partnership will create US jobs by enhancing exports while ensuring top-notch labor and environmental standards.

A spokeswoman for the US Trade Representative’s office declined comment on the content or authenticity of the document released by WikiLeaks, saying that negotiations were ongoing.

But the leak renewed concerns among Obama’s political base, which has complained it has not been consulted on negotiations.

In a letter yesterday, 151 House of Representative members from his Democratic Party opposed granting so-called “fast-track” authority that would give the Obama administration greater authority to negotiate the Trans-Pacific Partnership, with Congress still voting up-or-down but unable to revise the text.

“We are deeply committed to transforming US trade policy into a tool for creating and retaining family-wage jobs in America, safeguarding the environment, maintaining consumer protection and improving the quality of life throughout the country,” the lawmakers wrote to Obama.

The text released by WikiLeaks did not cover agriculture, an area which the trade pact has concerned groups ranging from US Midwestern dairy farmers to Japanese rice farmers.

Many officials view the Trans-Pacific Partnership not only as an economic but as a geopolitical tool. Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, in deciding to enter talks, spoke of ensuring Tokyo’s role in shaping the future of a region marked by China’s rise.

China, Asia’s second largest economy, is not part of the talks, which include Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United States and Vietnam. – AFP, November 14, 2013.

Nov 122013
 

Lobbying is the least of it: corporate interests have captured the entire democratic process. No wonder so many have given up on politics  . . .

Until the issue of corporate interests is addressed, our efforts (on many different fronts) bear little fruit.

The flow of information I see, says that more and more people in the “western democracies” are arriving at the same conclusion.

“The usual” actions (talking to elected officials, voting, and so on) do not change things in a corporatocracy.

Different actions are required.

/Sandra

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

It’s business that really rules us now

Lobbying is the least of it: corporate interests have captured the entire democratic process. No wonder so many have given up on politics

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/nov/11/business-rules-lobbying-corporate-interests?CMP=EMCNEWEML6619I2

(Note:  The text is below.  But you may want to go to the URL – – I did not copy the links in the text.   /S)

Jump to       comments (1110)

(PHOTO)

‘Tony Blair and Gordon Brown purged the party of any residue of opposition to corporations and the people who run them. That’s what New Labour was all about.’

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

It’s the reason for the collapse of democratic choice. It’s the source of our growing disillusionment with politics. It’s the great unmentionable. Corporate power. The media will scarcely whisper its name. It is howlingly absent from parliamentary debates. Until we name it and confront it, politics is a waste of time.

The political role of business corporations is generally interpreted as that of lobbyists, seeking to influence government policy. In reality they belong on the inside. They are part of the nexus of power that creates policy. They face no significant resistance, from either government or opposition, as their interests have now been woven into the fabric of all three main political parties in Britain.

Most of the scandals that leave people in despair about politics arise from this source. On Monday, for instance, the Guardian revealed that the government’s subsidy system for gas-burning power stations is being designed by an executive from the Dublin-based company ESB International, who has been seconded into the Department of Energy. What does ESB do? Oh, it builds gas-burning power stations.

On the same day we learned that a government minister, Nick Boles, has privately assured the gambling company Ladbrokes that it needn’t worry about attempts by local authorities to stop the spread of betting shops. His new law will prevent councils from taking action.

Last week we discovered that G4S’s contract to run immigration removal centres will be expanded, even though all further business with the state was supposed to be frozen while allegations of fraud were investigated.

Every week we learn that systemic failures on the part of government contractors are no barrier to obtaining further work, that the promise of efficiency, improvements and value for money delivered by outsourcing and privatisation have failed to materialise.

The monitoring which was meant to keep these companies honest is haphazard, the penalties almost nonexistent, the rewards can be stupendous, dizzying, corrupting. Yet none of this deters the government. Since 2008, the outsourcing of public services has doubled, to £20bn. It is due to rise to £100bn by 2015.

This policy becomes explicable only when you recognise where power really lies. The role of the self-hating state is to deliver itself to big business. In doing so it creates a tollbooth economy: a system of corporate turnpikes, operated by companies with effective monopolies.

It’s hardly surprising that the lobbying bill – now stalled by the House of Lords – offered almost no checks on the power of corporate lobbyists, while hog-tying the charities who criticise them. But it’s not just that ministers are not discouraged from hobnobbing with corporate executives: they are now obliged to do so.

Thanks to an initiative by Lord Green, large companies have ministerial “buddies”, who have to meet them when the companies request it. There were 698 of these meetings during the first 18 months of the scheme, called by corporations these ministers are supposed be regulating. Lord Green, by the way, is currently a government trade minister. Before that he was chairman of HSBC, presiding over the bank while it laundered vast amounts of money stashed by Mexican drugs barons. Ministers, lobbyists – can you tell them apart?

That the words corporate power seldom feature in the corporate press is not altogether surprising. It’s more disturbing to see those parts of the media that are not owned by Rupert Murdoch or Lord Rothermere acting as if they are.

For example, for five days every week the BBC’s Today programme starts with a business report in which only insiders are interviewed. They are treated with a deference otherwise reserved for God on Thought for the Day. There’s even a slot called Friday Boss, in which the programme’s usual rules of engagement are set aside and its reporters grovel before the corporate idol. Imagine the outcry if Today had a segment called Friday Trade Unionist or Friday Corporate Critic.

This, in my view, is a much graver breach of BBC guidelines than giving unchallenged airtime to one political party but not others, as the bosses are the people who possess real power – those, in other words, whom the BBC has the greatest duty to accost. Research conducted by the Cardiff school of journalism shows business representatives now receive 11% of airtime on the BBC’s 6 o’clock news (this has risen from 7% in 2007), while trade unionists receive 0.6% (which has fallen from 1.4%). Balance? Impartiality? The BBC puts a match to its principles every day.

And where, beyond the Green party, Plaid Cymru, a few ageing Labour backbenchers, is the political resistance? After the article I wrote last week, about the grave threat the transatlantic trade and investment partnership presents to parliamentary sovereignty and democratic choice, several correspondents asked me what response there has been from the Labour party. It’s easy to answer: nothing.

Tony Blair and Gordon Brown purged the party of any residue of opposition to corporations and the people who run them. That’s what New Labour was all about. Now opposition MPs stare mutely as their powers are given away to a system of offshore arbitration panels run by corporate lawyers.

Since Blair, parliament operates much as Congress in the United States does: the lefthand glove puppet argues with the righthand glove puppet, but neither side will turn around to face the corporate capital that controls almost all our politics. This is why the assertion that parliamentary democracy has been reduced to a self-important farce has resonated so widely over the past fortnight.

So I don’t blame people for giving up on politics. I haven’t given up yet, but I find it ever harder to explain why. When a state-corporate nexus of power has bypassed democracy and made a mockery of the voting process, when an unreformed political funding system ensures that parties can be bought and sold, when politicians of the three main parties stand and watch as public services are divvied up by a grubby cabal of privateers, what is left of this system that inspires us to participate?

Twitter: @georgemonbiot

A fully referenced version of this article can be found at monbiot.com

Nov 102013
 

RECOMMEND:  Go to the original.  Click on the URL.

NEWS JUNKIE POST

http://newsjunkiepost.com/2013/11/10/on-solitude/#sthash.dZqAKqWf.dpuf

(OPENING EXCERPT – – I have not copied the full text.  Just enough to capture attention!)

A communion with oneself…. A state of being alone within the confines of one´s self-consciousness….  A singular moment of intimate encounter with one´s soul….  A spontaneous course that takes one to the infinite terrain of her/his inner space….

In most instances we don’t purposefully get into it. There just seems to be some potent energy that pulls us into solitude and settles our minds in it to better understand ourselves as well as certain circumstances in life and the particular space we have in them. It is a mental state that seeks respite and tranquility. Hence, to be in solitude in this sense is a natural impulse.

Solitude has a degree of depth and intensity that leads fragments of experience to converge at a point of meaningfulness and enhanced awareness. In many instances, solitude heads towards enlightenment and the emergence of new insights. It is a moment that renews and refreshes one’s being in the silence of the heart.

 

Nov 092013
 
. . .  treat(ies) that would let rapacious companies subvert our laws, rights and national sovereignty

(de-confuse CETA, TTIP and TTP, just 3 of the trade deals):

  • CETA,  the trade deal between Canada & Europe, the  Canada-EU Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement 

See   http://www.canadians.org/search/node/CETA

(Wish I had time to do a clause-by-clause comparison.  I expect the two deals are almost carbon copies of each other.)

Do not confuse with the TPP (the Trans-PACIFIC Partnership).  Canada and the U.S. are both partners in this trade deal with “Pacific” countries.  See  2013-11-14  Leaked Asia trade text sees US backing firms, The Malaysian Insider. (TPP includes Canada)  Assange’s Wikileaks.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

 

It is important to send this to your friends.  It is not only Eli Lilly that Canadians will be paying:  

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

If you require inspiration like “We Can!”, listen to the podcast, Democracy Now (Amy Goodman) at:

“We Are Living in the World Occupy Made”:  New York City Voters Elect Mayor Who Vows to Tax the Rich

Tuesday’s election signaled a political sea change in New York City as voters chose a candidate who repeatedly emphasized his progressive vision . . . 

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

People ARE doing the hard work required to turn the ship around!

Many, many success stories – – we just have to get in there and do our part!

Man The Torpedoes!  sink CETA  (or, on the U.S. side, the TTIP.)

FIRST, let’s just circulate more info.

Action plans don’t work if others don’t know what we’re talking about.

 

Nov 092013
 
. . .  a treaty that would let rapacious companies subvert our laws, rights and national sovereignty
  • CETA:  The trade deal between Canada & Europe is the

Canada-EU Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (Ref  http://www.canadians.org/search/node/CETA)

 

(Wish I had time to do a clause-by-clause comparison!  I expect the two deals are almost carbon copies of each other.)

Both are not to be confused with the TPP  (Trans PACIFIC Partnership).   See   2013-11-14  Leaked Asia trade text sees US backing firms, The Malaysian Insider. (TPP includes Canada)  Assange’s Wikileaks.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Note:  George Monbiot sometimes answers questions in the “Comments” section below his on-line articles.

Is there anyone working against this trade deal?

George Monbiot replied:  04 November 2013 8:52pm

(writing from the U.K. – U.S.A. trade deal perspective )

Corporate Europe Observatory, Democracy Centre, Glyn Moody et al have been documenting it well, but as far as I can tell (and forgive me if I’m wrong) a well-coordinated movement against it has yet to emerge. We urgently need the unions, NGOs and citizens’ movements to mobilise.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –  – – – – – – – –

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/nov/04/us-trade-deal-full-frontal-assault-on-democracy

Brussels has kept quiet about a treaty that would let rapacious companies subvert our laws, rights and national sovereignty

Cameron and Obama, south lawn, White House

David Cameron with Barack Obama at a state dinner in Cameron’s honour in 2012 at the White House. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

 

Remember that referendum about whether we should create a single market with the United States? You know, the one that asked whether corporations should have the power to strike down our laws? No, I don’t either. Mind you, I spent 10 minutes looking for my watch the other day before I realised I was wearing it. Forgetting about the referendum is another sign of ageing. Because there must have been one, mustn’t there? After all that agonising over whether or not we should stay in the European Union, the government wouldn’t cede our sovereignty to some shadowy, undemocratic body without consulting us. Would it?

The purpose of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership is to remove the regulatory differences between the US and European nations. I mentioned it a couple of weeks ago. But I left out the most important issue: the remarkable ability it would grant big business to sue the living daylights out of governments which try to defend their citizens. It would allow a secretive panel of corporate lawyers to overrule the will of parliament and destroy our legal protections. Yet the defenders of our sovereignty say nothing.

The mechanism through which this is achieved is known as investor-state dispute settlement. It’s already being used in many parts of the world to kill regulations protecting people and the living planet.

The Australian government, after massive debates in and out of parliament, decided that cigarettes should be sold in plain packets, marked only with shocking health warnings. The decision was validated by the Australian supreme court. But, using a trade agreement Australia struck with Hong Kong, the tobacco company Philip Morris has asked an offshore tribunal to award it a vast sum in compensation for the loss of what it calls its intellectual property.

During its financial crisis, and in response to public anger over rocketing charges, Argentina imposed a freeze on people’s energy and water bills (does this sound familiar?). It was sued by the international utility companies whose vast bills had prompted the government to act. For this and other such crimes, it has been forced to pay out over a billion dollars in compensation. In El Salvador, local communities managed at great cost (three campaigners were murdered) to persuade the government to refuse permission for a vast gold mine which threatened to contaminate their water supplies. A victory for democracy? Not for long, perhaps. The Canadian company which sought to dig the mine is now suing El Salvador for $315m – for the loss of its anticipated future profits.

In Canada, the courts revoked two patents owned by the American drugs firm Eli Lilly, on the grounds that the company had not produced enough evidence that they had the beneficial effects it claimed. Eli Lilly is now suing the Canadian government for $500m, and demanding that Canada’s patent laws are changed.

These companies (along with hundreds of others) are using the investor-state dispute rules embedded in trade treaties signed by the countries they are suing. The rules are enforced by panels which have none of the safeguards we expect in our own courts. The hearings are held in secret. The judges are corporate lawyers, many of whom work for companies of the kind whose cases they hear. Citizens and communities affected by their decisions have no legal standing. There is no right of appeal on the merits of the case. Yet they can overthrow the sovereignty of parliaments and the rulings of supreme courts.

You don’t believe it? Here’s what one of the judges on these tribunals says about his work. “When I wake up at night and think about arbitration, it never ceases to amaze me that sovereign states have agreed to investment arbitration at all … Three private individuals are entrusted with the power to review, without any restriction or appeal procedure, all actions of the government, all decisions of the courts, and all laws and regulations emanating from parliament.”

There are no corresponding rights for citizens. We can’t use these tribunals to demand better protections from corporate greed. As the Democracy Centre says, this is “a privatised justice system for global corporations”.

Even if these suits don’t succeed, they can exert a powerful chilling effect on legislation. One Canadian government official, speaking about the rules introduced by the North American Free Trade Agreement, remarked: “I’ve seen the letters from the New York and DC law firms coming up to the Canadian government on virtually every new environmental regulation and proposition in the last five years. They involved dry-cleaning chemicals, pharmaceuticals, pesticides, patent law. Virtually all of the new initiatives were targeted and most of them never saw the light of day.” Democracy, as a meaningful proposition, is impossible under these circumstances.

This is the system to which we will be subject if the transatlantic treaty goes ahead. The US and the European commission, both of which have been captured by the corporations they are supposed to regulate, are pressing for investor-state dispute resolution to be included in the agreement.

The commission justifies this policy by claiming that domestic courts don’t offer corporations sufficient protection because they “might be biased or lack independence”. Which courts is it talking about? Those of the US? Its own member states? It doesn’t say. In fact it fails to produce a single concrete example demonstrating the need for a new, extrajudicial system. It is precisely because our courts are generally not biased or lacking independence that the corporations want to bypass them. The EC seeks to replace open, accountable, sovereign courts with a closed, corrupt system riddled with conflicts of interest and arbitrary powers.

Investor-state rules could be used to smash any attempt to save the NHS from corporate control, to re-regulate the banks, to curb the greed of the energy companies, to renationalise the railways, to leave fossil fuels in the ground. These rules shut down democratic alternatives. They outlaw leftwing politics.

This is why there has been no attempt by the UK government to inform us about this monstrous assault on democracy, let alone consult us. This is why the Conservatives who huff and puff about sovereignty are silent. Wake up, people we’re being shafted.

Twitter: @georgemonbiot. A fully referenced version of this article can be found at monbiot.com

Nov 072013
 

Hi Everyone,

We can lend a hand here:

  • Pandora’s Promise is a slick piece of propaganda for the nuclear industry, airing on CNN.
  • The Atomic States of America (bless good people) tells a different story.  I watched it – it’s well done, worth your time, and free on-line for the next 2 days.

Please pass it along.  The battle over nuclear is being waged on many fronts by thousands of people, at the moment much of it over disposal of radioactive waste (Great Lakes area).

Remember Fukishima.  My brother’s reaction to today’s BBC science report on Fukishima (appended):  now which way is that jetstream flowing ?  We all have a stake.

Read on! . . . .   /Sandra

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Help Counter Pandora’s Promise on CNN – Atomic States of America will air free online Nov. 6 – 8.

CNN will nationally broadcast the much criticized, pro-nuclear power film Pandora’s Promise on Thursday, November 7. CNN is airing the film without offering any opposing viewpoints despite requests and petitions from Beyond Nuclear and others. To help provide balance and a critical perspective on nuclear power, The Atomic States of America film will be available to view free online from November 6 – 8. Atomic States provides a comprehensive exploration of the history and impact of nuclear power to date, and investigates the truths and myths about nuclear energy. Please help promote the film’s availability to your networks and friends. More

– – – – – – – – – – – – —

Beyond Nuclear’s Kevin Kamps (and native of Michigan) will debate Michael Shellenberger (re: Pandora’s Promise) on CNN Headline News, Thursday, November 7th at 7:45pm! Everyone tune in!

Pandora’s Promise on CNN – cnn.com 9 PM ET Thursday
www.cnn.com/ PandorasPromise
What Price Would you Pay to Power the Future? Watch Thursday 9p ET.

Pandora’s False Promises [ From Beyond Nuclear]
Pandora’s Promise, is a new pro-nuclear propaganda documentary released theatrically in the US in July 2013. It is funded in part by individuals with a vested interest in seeing the development of new reactors and is seemingly a vehicle by which to raise the profile of the anti-environmental Oakland think tank, The Breakthrough Institute, whose personnel feature prominently in the film. Despite the film’s premise and early claim that it features “a growing number of leading former anti-nuclear activists” who now support nuclear energy, no one in the film ever led the anti-nuclear movement. Nor was any credible, independent scientific or medical professional with expertise in the areas covered in the film consulted or featured. Beyond Nuclear has bird-dogged the film from the beginning, and has produced numerous critiques. We have also published a definitive report – Pandora’s False Promises: Busting the pro-nuclear propaganda – and a two-page synopsis. These documents address virtually all of the myths, lies and omissions typically found in pro-nuclear rhetoric and are intended to address these long after Pandora’s Promise fades into deserved oblivion.

 

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

—–Original Message—–

To: Sandra Finley

Subject: jet

 

now which way is that jetstream flowing ? www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-24843657

BBC Science report on Fukishima, Nov 6 by Shukman

 

—–Reply—–

Unlikely to be reported in the Saskatoon Star Phoenix, in spite of the Province’s big investment in the industry. Gotta keep the locals drugged and dopey.

Nov 052013
 

I joined numerous peace groups on-line.  Skimming the comments, there is a common thread of people’s optimism.  Maria from Italy: ” a new awarenes among common people that is encouraging and make us hope that together we really can”. 

Nima from Libya makes a valiant effort to communicate in English.  Run down her postings in hieroglyphics unknown to me . . . some translated items . . . easy to see that she is doing the same work as am I.

Libya is predominantly Muslim;  I don’t care about Nima’s religion.  She and I are closely connected in spirit and heart.  I am moved that she will try to understand my language and communicate in it – – must be really hard to do.  I feel love for this person.

To Maria’s “We (common people) CAN”, I replied:

I don’t know if the link below can be helpful, it is from a Canadian perspective.

Canadian leaders have sold us out to American Corporate interests and ideology (exploit and use violence to get your way in the World).

For them to be successful, they have to make “Muslims” into “enemies”.

When I challenged a hate email, I came to see the role of ego – – it makes good people vulnerable to hate messages.

What I hope:  the “awareness among common people” described by Maria will be helped if more people can understand the role played by ego.  If we can neutralize its power, we will be more likely to succeed in “Together We Can”.

Here is the link:  http://sandrafinley.ca/?p=10753Ego – its role in putting democracy to rest.  (Hoax:  A German’s view on Islam)

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

You may be interested in this article:

A Field Guide to Losing Friends, Influencing No One, and Alienating the Middle East

By Bob Dreyfuss

Nov 012013
 

http://www.nationofchange.org/nsa-spying-really-about-blackmail-1383294652

 

I POSTED A RESPONSE TO THE ABOVE ARTICLE: 

(changed from the original)

 

RE: the spying .. to target up-and-coming potential leaders of so-called “friendly states.”
AND your suggestion that the NSA might represent “the heads of key corporate interests“.

 

I am a citizen of a “friendly state” (Canada).  There is an overlooked point in your very good article.  My read on the reason for targeting by the NSA of “potential leaders” in other nations? . . .

Evidence points to a well-known practice of the American military-industrial-congressional complex:

set up PUPPET REGIMES in countries whose resources the corporations want to exploit.

  • the NSA monitors the “potential leaders” in order to identify the ones with quisling potential
  • the American military-industrial-congressional complex then    BANKROLLS their selected candidate
  • Once “elected”, the quislings can be relied upon to sell their souls and their country. The corporatocracy has taken over.

In Canada we have seen a terrible capitulation to “key (American) corporate interests”. Those interests have infiltrated our politics, bureaucracy and universities.

    • Lockheed Martin & others in the war industry
    • Monsanto & others in the chemical/GMO industry
    • Oil & Gas companies
    • Nuclear interests

The dismantling of democracy that has happened rapidly in the last years is breath-taking. Vote fraud is high on the list.   Corruption? – – don’t look in Africa, it is abundant right here in North America.  It is the consequence of “public-private-partnerships”.

The corruption is predictable.  See   Thinkers of the Day on the Unholy Alliances between Government (public institutions) and Industry