Posts written by Vninect

view post Posted: 17/5/2012, 14:54 Iceland - Media, Language, Politics and Public Service
QUOTE (FionaK @ 17/5/2012, 15:34) 
Former CEO of Kraupthing bank convicted of fraud today. He only has to pay back the 500 million krona he stole so not such a big sentence: but it is something: would that bankers elsewhere were subject to such action

He must be laughing his pants off: He gets a lighter sentence than petty theft criminals.
view post Posted: 16/5/2012, 21:13 #OccupyWallStreet - Call to Action - Media, Language, Politics and Public Service
QUOTE (FionaK @ 16/5/2012, 21:57) 
http://slatest.slate.com/posts/2012/05/16/..._sidewalk_.html

One of the first people to face charges because of their role in OWS has been acquitted: apparently the police evidence did not stand up in face of activists footage and the police's own arrest report

QUOTE
He was charged with blocking traffic while standing in the middle of the street, accusations that his arresting officers reaffirmed under oath Monday.
The problem, however, was that video by well-known OWS live-streamer Tim Pool showed that Arbuckle and the other protesters were standing firmly on the sidewalk, something that was backed up by Arbuckle's own photographs and the NYPD's documentation of the arrest, according to the Village Voice.

Time to counter-sue for perjury and/or professional misconduct!
view post Posted: 16/5/2012, 21:07 Elections in France - Media, Language, Politics and Public Service
Yes, I see what you mean. "Hollande as French president hits confidence" is extremely biased compared to "difficult to fund during economic crisis", while in the latter case it was also a political decision that broke the deal (namely, Germany pulling out of nuclear after Fukushima).
view post Posted: 16/5/2012, 20:44 Elections in France - Media, Language, Politics and Public Service
Nuclear power plants are extremely expensive to build, and also quite expensive to maintain. EDF belongs to the state, so it will be cut back if Hollande follows through on his promise to cut back (spending for) nuclear power. And that means the other remaining parties will have to find new funds to build the plant. I assume a sufficient funding base was only possible with the pledge of EDF - if the operation is profitable, you surely want to share your profits with as few partners as you can.

Also, it says that construction is put back - again, perhaps because the remaining parties need time to find funds.
view post Posted: 16/5/2012, 20:22 Europe's emergency aid to Greece - Media, Language, Politics and Public Service
I find this extremely helpful.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-18056677

Quoting in full:

QUOTE
This is less of a blog more of a series of notes to try and enhance understanding of who Syriza and its leader Alexis Tsipras actually are, and how they might behave if, as polls suggest, they become the winning party in a second Greek general election. I've been troubled by the lack of historical depth; and of course my own knowledge is limited to English sources. Get ready to hear about parties and political currents that most commentators believed were insignificant just a few years ago.



1. Syriza is an acronym signifying "Coalition of the Radical Left". It's key component is a party called Synaspismos, itself an umbrella group of the far left in Greece.

2. Alexis Tsipras is the 38-year-old leader of the Synaspismos party, and rose to prominence as its candidate for the mayor of Athens in 2006. Tsipras originated from the youth wing of the Communist Party, the KKE.

3. Greek communism, like most of Western communism after the 1970s, was split into two hostile parties: the KKE of the "interior" and that of the "exterior" - the latter denoting a Moscow-oriented party - the former denoting a Euro-communist, more parliamentary and socially liberal agenda.

4. Initially Synaspismos was the electoral alliance between the two KKEs. But in the early 1990s the main Moscow-oriented KKE quit the alliance, purging about 45% of its members, who then stayed inside Synaspismos with the Eurocommunists. These included Tsipras.

5. Synaspismos then evolved in an interesting direction. Reacting to the rise of the anti-globalisation movement, first of all the party itself became a highly diverse left umbrella group: of Eurocommunists, left-social Democrats, far leftists, and ecologists. It played a significant role in mobilisations against summits, beginning in Genoa 2001 and beyond. Meanwhile the main KKE remained a traditional Communist party, rooted in public sector and manual trade unions.

6. Then, in the 2004 election, Synaspismos came together with other small parties to form Syriza. These included a split-off from the British SWP, a split off from the main Communist Party and another group of eco-leftists.

7. Under Tsipras' leadership, and invigorated by now including the entire left, except the traditionalist KKE, Syriza grew the far left's vote from 3.3% to 5.6% in the 2007 election - giving it 14 MPs.

8. The crisis which broke out in December 2008, after the police shooting of a 15-year-old schoolboy, led to two weeks of rioting by the youth and poor of Athens, and further strengthened Syriza as a left pole of attraction. Though the parties inside Syriza remained in the low thousands of members, many young people began to identify with them - above all in a country where Marxism has massive prestige due to its role in both the anti-fascist resistance and in the 1946-49 Civil War. In addition, those migrants with the right to vote, hearing a rising chorus of anti-migrant rhetoric from the centre as well as the right, have flocked to vote Syriza.

9. Once George Papandreou's Pasok party committed itself to supporting EU-designed austerity programmes, after January 2010, a huge political gap opened up on the left of Greek politics - which arguably forms a natural majority. Only the KKE and Syriza were opposed to austerity and of the two, Syriza had a political leadership of youth, resilience and global vision.

10. (It is worth noting here the character of Pasok. It emerged in the inter-war years as a split from republican liberalism, and while it became a traditional social democratic party after the fall of the Colonels regime in 1974, its forms of organisation, and mass base among civil servants and small business people, lead some to compare it to Argentine "Peronism" - that is left nationalism with a working class base. This affects the political dynamics the moment the Pasok leadership loses its claim to represent "the nation" in conflict with the EU.)

11. As events pulled Syriza leftward and swelled its support, one final split took place that may prove highly significant. Veteran leaders of the old KKE-interior - that is, the Eurocommunists - split from Synaspismos and formed the Democratic Left, led by Fotis Kouvelis - in March 2010. They formed a separate parliamentary group of four until the recent election massively swelled their numbers to 19. At the first congress of the Democratic Left, in March 2011, in an extraordinary move, the then serving Pasok prime minister, George Papandreou, attended. He sat in the front row of the audience and applauded.

12. Now, how to make sense of this, and why does it matter?

13. The mainstream Pasok party split before the May 2012 election. Six sitting MPs joined the Democratic Left, while others tried to form an anti-austerity left social democratic party, led by charismatic female MP Louka Katseli. The latter disappeared without trace. But the Pasok left and its voters now co-exist with the former Eurocommunists in a fairly moderate, anti-austerity but essentially left social democratic, pro-Euro party - the Dem Left - which now has 19 seats.

14. Syriza massively scooped up the votes of leftist, progressive, socially liberal young people, as well as the trade union voters, not specifically aligned with the Communist Party, to gain 52 seats.

15. The Communist Party itself, while growing its vote, did not break out of its traditional demographic base - manual workers, older lifelong Communists with family loyalty traced back to the pre-war workers' movement. The KKE gained 26 seats.

16. In the negotiations to form a government this week the Pasok leader, Venizelos, got the Democratic Left as far as agreeing to a programme to "progressively disengage" from the Troika-imposed austerity. But they could not persuade Syriza to join, and without Syriza, the Dem Left knew it would be the captive of a Pasok/ND coalition.

17. As new elections loom, obviously one possible outcome is the return of voters to ND and Pasok. But the latest polls do not signal this. They signal a growth in support for Syriza, which is seen as a consistent opponent of austerity on the left, and which has narrative and momentum among the traditional base of all other leftist parties.

18. If we look at the demographics of the left, there are the following:

- Anarchist-minded youth, living alternative lifestyles among the poor, who will only vote for Syriza or not at all. (Anecdotally, even some members of the "black bloc" were reported to have joined Syriza, after accepting the futility of constant rioting/counterculture.)
- Middle-class and professional workers, including many public servants who've been hit by tax rises, wage cuts, arbitrary deductions, loss of entitlements and job losses
- Private sector trade unionists ranging from centre-left social democrats through to communists and Trotskyists
- Migrants and the urban poor
- Small businesspeople who were formerly the base of Pasok but who have been radicalised by the tax rises, tax clampdowns and repeated heavy policing of demonstrations, and who are the most likely to be ruined by any long-term structural reform in Greece.

19. The success of Syriza then seems down to its ability to attract voters and activists from all these groups, eating into almost every part of the left including the old Moscow-style KKE.

20. In the process of negotiations over the past seven days, Tsipras and his close advisers have further upped their own credibility by being seen to play the game of constitutional negotiations; sticking to their economic rejection of austerity stance, but in general not going out of their way to alienate, rhetorically, natural Pasok, Dem Left or KKE voters.

21. In the NET poll, taken while Tsipras was making his doomed attempt to form an anti-austerity government of the left, Syriza scored 27% - compared to its election showing of 17% - clearly demonstrating that it had created momentum as the pole of attraction for left voters wanting a showdown with the EU. Pasok was losing ground to both Syriza and the Dem Left. Some KKE voters were saying they would switch votes to Syriza in a second election.

22. When I spoke to leading members of Syriza in summer 2011, they were privately very pessimistic about the possibility of forming a government - even an alliance of all the left including splits from Pasok. At that time they said the most obvious solution would be an above-politics left-nationalist figure, a "Greek Kirchner" or "Greek Morales", and that the absence of such a figure would make it impossible to form what Marxists refer to as a "workers government" - ie a radical reforming government with the participation of the far left, but limited to parliamentary means.

23. Now however, the charisma of Mr Tsipras, the fear of a far-right backlash, the depth of the crisis and the seeming inability of Pasok to recover, may thrust Tsipras himself into the Morales role. Of all the left party leaders he is the least encumbered by a rigid ideology, because Syriza remains highly diverse and internally democratic as a party. And he is tangibly a generation younger than the other leaders. (Pasok's further problem is that its younger politicians tend to be on the technocratic right of social democracy).

24. When I interviewed a Syriza spokesman earlier this year I explored the problem of a far-left party, which is anti-Nato etc, taking power in a country whose riot police have been regularly clashing with that party's youth since 2008. The message was that they would be purposefully limited in aim, and that the core of any programme would be a debtor-led partial default - that is, the suspension of interest payments on the remaining debt and a repudiation of the terms of both Troika-brokered bailouts. What Syriza shares with the Dem Left and Pasok is its commitment to the EU social model: they are left globalists. Hence they could make any attempt to force Greece out of the Euro look, to the Greek population, like a Brussels/Berlin initiative, no matter how it looks to the rest of the world.

25. If, in the next election, Syriza scores 26% it would get about the same number of seats, under the vote redistribution rule, as ND got this time - say just over 100. If, on top of that the Dem Left vote holds up, with about 20 seats, and the Communists retain their 26 seats, that is very close to the 150 they would need for a majority.

26. It is being rumoured that Syriza may soon transform itself into a single party and extend membership to a far left group called Antarsia (which gained 1%) and the Louka Katseli group from Pasok which failed to gain seats, and the Eco-Greens, who polled below 3%. That would extend its reach even further, both to its right and left.

27. Even without a majority, a Syriza-DL minority could attempt a legislative programme that relied on the abstention of some of Pasok's remaining MPs, tacit "non-opposition" form the KKE, and, paradoxically, the non-opposition of the right-wing anti-austerity party Independent Greeks (conservative nationalist). One current obstacle to this is the KKE's historic enmity to Syriza and indeed the entire rest of the Greek left.

Whatever the outcome, the above explains how a combination of historical factors, the position of the EU and a demographic radicalisation of young people propelled one of the furthest left parties in any European parliament to within a few steps of forming a government; and provoking a showdown with the EU that would doubtless see Greece's suspension or exit from the Euro.

At the same time it explains that the resulting government may, in effect, be little more than a left-social democratic government, despite its symbology and the radicalism of some of its voters. By forcing the mainstream parties into positions where they could not express the will of the majority of centrist voters, the EU may end up destroying the Greek party system as it has been shaped since 1974.

view post Posted: 15/5/2012, 10:28 Elections in France - Media, Language, Politics and Public Service
The subtitle (now?) is: "Earthwork preparation of Hinkley site put back as election of Francois Hollande as French president hits confidence."

And in the body of the article is:
QUOTE
Half of the big six energy firms have already abandoned their nuclear plans as too costly, but Hinkley is backed by the most pro-nuclear of them, EDF, which is 83% owned by the French state.

Replacing the UK's ageing nuclear plants is central to coalition plans to cut greenhouse gas emissions while keeping the lights on. EDF was seen as the most committed company, with France getting 75% of its electricity from nuclear power.

Reports of rising reactor costs and the election of François Hollande as French president, with promises to cut back on nuclear power, have dented confidence.

Which does link Hollande's policy promises quite firmly to Hinkley nuclear power plant construction??
view post Posted: 14/5/2012, 00:30 Italian Anarchists kneecap Nuclear CEO - Media, Language, Politics and Public Service
Unrest also in Italy. Anarchists there have shot a Nuclear energy firm's CEO in the knee. They call themselves the Olga cell, after a Greek anarchists who is currently in jail. Recently, Olga and 7 more Greek anarchists have been jailed; 7 more attacks were announced by the Italian anarchists.

They chose this target partly in retaliation for the Fukushima disaster, and as a warning before such a disaster also happens in Europe.

http://m.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/may/11/...ld&type=article

Crazy?
view post Posted: 14/5/2012, 00:18 Apparently free education is an "affront" - Media, Language, Politics and Public Service
QUOTE
Ms Lamont at the Scottish Fabian Society [..] claimed that the SNP’s policy on free education was holding back some of Scotland’s most talented youngsters.

That took me 3 times reading... Still don't see an argument here.

QUOTE
The leader of the Labour party in Scotland claims the Scottish Government’s policy on free education [..] is actually preventing students from poorer areas from attending college or university.

This I recognized immediately, however. From Orwell.
view post Posted: 12/5/2012, 12:54 Europe's emergency aid to Greece - Media, Language, Politics and Public Service
QUOTE (FionaK @ 12/5/2012, 09:09) 
The fig leaf represented by Merkel et al is inadequate to cover the dick which is shafting us.

Truth! hahahaha
view post Posted: 11/5/2012, 15:10 Europe's emergency aid to Greece - Media, Language, Politics and Public Service
New polls from Greece suggest a continuing surge of the radical left:

SYRIZA first party with 27,7%
New Democracy 20,3%
PASOK 12,6%
Independent Greeks 10,2%
KKE 7%
Golden Nazis 5,7%
Democratic Left 4,9%
Ecologists 2,5%
LAOS 2,3%
Democratic Alliance 2,3%
Creation Again 1,8%

This would give Syriza about 128 seats. The only partner for a coalition is the Democratic left (DIMAR). But they would have only about 15 seats, so that is still enough. (151 needed)

The communist party (KKE) refuses to be in a coalition. PASOK and New Democracy have caused the humanitarian crisis. And the Independent Greeks, although against austerity, are too right-wing in other areas.

Let's hope the trend of the left gaining support continues.
view post Posted: 5/5/2012, 23:34 Europe's emergency aid to Greece - Media, Language, Politics and Public Service
Tomorrow is the rushed election in Greece. In the polls, no single party has managed to amass more than 25% of the votes, and unless the radical left or communist party decides to cooperate with the current ruling parties (New Democracy and PASOK), there will need to be a coalition of at least 4 parties. The left is thoroughly splintered up. There is also a neo-nazi party with a neo-nazi type flag, at 5.5% of the votes. This might get quite interesting. And/or slow.

Collection of polls here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_legisla...2#Opinion_polls
view post Posted: 5/5/2012, 11:44 My new job. - Social Work
It makes me sad and angry, too!
view post Posted: 2/5/2012, 21:04 What is the nature of a real conspiracy? - Media, Language, Politics and Public Service
It seems some rather severe allegations are on the table:

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/polit...ct-7704392.html

some excerpts:

QUOTE
Rupert Murdoch was "not a fit person to exercise the stewardship of a major international company", the report concluded, in a judgment that divided the MPs on the committee. He had "turned a blind eye and exhibited wilful blindness", they said. The wrongdoing at News International was the symptom of a "culture [that] permeated from the top", and "speaks volumes about lack of effective corporate governance", MPs said.

Mr Murdoch's "self-portrayal" to Parliament as a hands-off proprietor was a "misleading account of his involvement and influence with his newspapers".

His son James, who resigned earlier this year from control of the company's European operations, was guilty of "wilful ignorance" about what had been going on at News International, the MPs said, and his decision to sign off £700,000 to a hacking victim without asking to see a legal opinion "clearly raises questions of competence", they said.

The repeated allegations from the MPs of "wilful blindness" and "wilful ignorance" against the the Murdochs and unnamed directors of News International appeared carefully crafted to raise alarm in America by echoing legal terms that suggest criminal liability for corporate wrongdoing.

[...]

Parliamentary clerks were locked in a meeting for several hours last night, grappling with the dilemma of what to do about the three former News International executives accused of misleading the Culture select committee. It is the first time a committee has accused witnesses of giving misleading evidence.

The clerks were deciding what powers the Commons has to punish the alleged offenders – the former News Group lawyer Tom Crone, former News International executive Les Hinton, and former News of the World editor Colin Myler.

There is an offence of contempt of Parliament, which is untested in recent times – the last time the Commons used the power was 1666.

view post Posted: 2/5/2012, 15:58 #OccupyWallStreet - Call to Action - Media, Language, Politics and Public Service
An offshoot of the OWS actions of earlier this year organized into reclaiming May Day in America. Attendance was not gigantic, and that left many newspapers underwhelmed. It does show that OWS networks work, and will probably keep popping up every now and then, with any good enough excuse for protest and solidarity.

Instead of linking to a sympathetic newspaper, and/or a serious one, here's a correspondent from the Washington Times for a laugh: http://communities.washingtontimes.com/nei...or-lawlessness/
view post Posted: 28/4/2012, 14:47 How many cuts does it take to pay for trident? - Catch-all
I quickly noticed there was a counter for how many pounds were spent on Trident while looking at the site. Went up real fast, so I immediately closed the site. You can thank me later, Britain.
753 replies since 12/5/2011