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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Planes | Unnecessary Censorship – Video

Posted: October 26, 2014 at 10:42 pm


Planes | Unnecessary Censorship
I hope you enjoyed watching this censorship video for "Planes". I definitely enjoyed making it! If you like my videos, don #39;t forget to leave a like and subscribe. These take a lot of time...

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In Xinjiang, China, journalists work in the shadow of censorship

Posted: at 10:42 pm

Uplifting propaganda posters touting President Xi Jinping's "China Dream" catchphrase are plastered across many cities in China these days. But throughout the country's westernmost province, an unrelenting series of billboards, red banners and spray-painted signs suggests menace lurking everywhere.

"It is strictly forbidden to transmit violent terrorist videos," warn banners hung from government buildings and draped across traffic lane dividers. "Young men should not grow beards and young women should not cover their faces with veils," some signs read.

The messages make it clear whom authorities blame for the explosions, knifings, riots and other violent incidents that have left hundreds dead this year in Xinjiang province: Islamic extremists and separatists with ties to foreign forces.

But even as Chinese officials insist that this is a clear-cut battle against religious zealots and hard-core separatists, local authorities are making it difficult for anyone to independently question (or substantiate) that narrative. Outsiders inquiring about the scale or causes of the carnage in Xinjiang are unwelcome, and locals are discouraged from speaking freely about it.

That became abundantly clear on a recent Thursday when I and my assistant, our driver and guide suddenly found ourselves accompanied by two extremely persistent Xinjiang security officers who trailed us for hours and whose intimidating presence ensured that no one would talk openly to us.

China's state-run media must follow the Communist Party line, but foreign journalists are supposed to be able to travel freely anywhere in the country except Tibet and interview anyone who consents.

In reality, though, authorities employ various tactics to stifle coverage. In a recent survey by the Foreign Correspondents' Club of China, two-thirds of overseas reporters here said they had experienced interference, harassment or violence while attempting to report.

At my hotel in Kashgar, I was questioned and photographed by police; in Yafuquan, where I stopped to observe a village market and wasn't interviewing anyone, officers nonetheless approached our van within 20 minutes, demanded my passport, photographed it and told us to leave the area.

I actually got off lightly compared with Australian Broadcasting Corp. correspondent Stephen McDonell, who said he was recently trailed for 10 days in Xinjiang, sometimes followed by five cars carrying officials and plainclothes officers.

Later, Chinese Embassy representatives visited McDonell's bosses in Canberra, he said, urging them to quash any report on the trip and warning that any broadcast about his experience could harm relations between the two countries.

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Ron Paul Says Hillary Clinton Would Be ‘Mediocre’ President | Ora TV – Video

Posted: at 10:42 pm


Ron Paul Says Hillary Clinton Would Be #39;Mediocre #39; President | Ora TV
Ron Paul Says Hillary Clinton Would Be #39;Mediocre #39; President | Ora TV SUBSCRIBE to Larry King #39;s YouTube Channel:http://bit.ly/131HuYM Former Republican congre...

By: Larry King

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Ron Paul Says Hillary Clinton Would Be 'Mediocre' President | Ora TV - Video

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PREVIEW: Ron Paul Blasts ‘Deeply Flawed’ U.S. Foreign Policy | Ora TV – Video

Posted: at 10:42 pm


PREVIEW: Ron Paul Blasts #39;Deeply Flawed #39; U.S. Foreign Policy | Ora TV
PREVIEW: Ron Paul Blasts #39;Deeply Flawed #39; U.S. Foreign Policy | Ora TV SUBSCRIBE to Larry King #39;s YouTube Channel:http://bit.ly/131HuYM Former Republican congr...

By: Larry King

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PREVIEW: Ron Paul Blasts 'Deeply Flawed' U.S. Foreign Policy | Ora TV - Video

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Ron Paul & Julie Borowski on Ebola, Drug War and Libertarianism – Video

Posted: at 10:41 pm


Ron Paul Julie Borowski on Ebola, Drug War and Libertarianism
Julie Borowski, a policy analyst for FreedomWorks and VOL Contributor, joins former Congressman Ron Paul to discuss various topics including Ebola, the drug war, foreign policy, and how she...

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Prof. Sachs speaks on poverty and mentions that Libertarianism is vulgar. Speaking on the Smiley and – Video

Posted: at 10:41 pm


Prof. Sachs speaks on poverty and mentions that Libertarianism is vulgar. Speaking on the Smiley and
Prof. Sachs speaks on poverty and mentions that Libertarianism is vulgar. Speaking on the Smiley and West show 1/6/12.

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My unusual libertarian journey: How a former outlaw broke the political mold

Posted: at 10:41 pm

Editor's note: Salon has posted numerous critiques of libertarianism. This response was one of several we received offering a different view. (For more of our coverage on the topic, please see here.)

The Koch brothers have marvelous taste in art. That was the first thought that raced across my mind as I strode down the bustling hallway of one of the most secretive and influential buildings in American politics. Slipped against a wall of churning rural winds and rolling wheat fields, Koch Industries the media-christened Death Star of contemporary libertarian insurrection was the last place I ever intended to visit. Six years earlier I was serving time in a West Coast county jail, not defending public choice theory. But trial and error will do strange things to a politically inclined and introspective desperado.

I dont just break the libertarian mold, I napalm it. Im Hispanic. I live below the poverty line. I joined a gang by 15, dropped out of high school by 17, and spent the first half of my 20s playing guitar in a raucous punk band. Yet despite how unconventional my background might seem, it unmistakably epitomizes just how diverse the broader libertarian movement has become over a relatively short burst of time, even as archaic perceptions in the media and public continue to stubbornly linger.

Following my release from jail I enrolled in community college and worked hard to account for misplaced time. Eventually I earned a speech communication scholarship and admittance into a number of highly regarded universities, including my dream school the University of California-Berkeley. It was the moment I had been waiting for. But by the time I procured housing in Oakland, old inclinations began to take hold. I knew that if I remained in California I would either gravitate back toward the violent gang world, or the drug-laden music world, I knew so well.

So I made a drastic decision. At the last minute I instead took up an offer from the most conservative school in the most conservative state in the country Brigham Young University in Utah. The education was superb, but the social setting was difficult. I stood out on campus with all my tattoos. I was irritable because I had agreed to abstain from alcohol and sex. And though students and faculty always treated me with dignity and respect, I sometimes had trouble relating to people.

Eventually I stumbled across a libertarian student group at a separate university across town. From there I attended a number of events, made a few new friends and began perusing literature from prominent free-market philosophers such as Friedrich Hayek, Milton Friedman and Ludwig von Mises all of whom contested everything I thought I knew about Republicans, Democrats and government.

The limited government message appealed to me. I recalled playing in a band and struggling to comply with overbearing tax laws. I remembered serving time with low-level drug offenders convicted under mandatory minimum sentencing laws. I thought back to the Mexican communities I had grown up in and the undocumented immigrants I knew who had been forced into a life of obscurity because of convoluted immigration policies. The assortment of unique experiences I had taken in over time suddenly swiveled full circle.

Within a year I was organizing full time and attending dinners with governors, prominent activists and presidential candidates such as Ron Paul. Eventually I returned to the West Coast to finish school. From there I was introduced to a number of Koch-funded organizations. The opportunities these organizations presented would prove invaluable. As a student, I interned through various summer programs. As a writer, I wrote for various websites and journals. And as a speaker, I spoke to various groups.

The libertarian movement never judged me because of my background. Though I was still rough around the edges, I was embraced and provided with more tools and opportunities to improve myself than I knew what to do with. These organizations not only helped hone my innate abilities, but taught me the value of tolerance and restraint (Im still working on the latter).

Ultimately, libertarianism didnt radicalize me, it moderated me. As a wayward teen I once adored revolutionaries like Che Guevara and took part in violent and destructive protests. I smashed windows of private businesses and helped overturn police cars in my misplaced animosity toward legal constructs and trade. Later I abandoned my progressive leanings and explored conservatism. I supported the war in Iraq and brandished an American flag in a clich spectacle of nationalism and machismo. Like most libertarians, I paddled both ends of the whirling political waters in search of something, anything, that put the puzzle pieces together.

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The Buzz: A vegetarian alternative to the red meat attack

Posted: at 10:41 pm

The Buzz: A vegetarian alternative to the red meat attack

Shawn Steel

COURTESY OF SHAWN STEEL

Red meat attacks are as old as politics: Wave something in front of voters that creates a visceral reaction, regardless of its factual nutritional value.

But now Shawn Steel, husband of county supervisor candidate Michelle Steel, has debuted the vegan smackdown.

Steel was in prime form when he gave a talk to the Newport Mesa Tea Party on Aug. 14, displaying his trademark blend of erudition, libertarianism and hyperbole.

But when he came to mentioning Democratic state Senate candidate Jose Solorio, Steel delivered a line that was remarkable even by his standards.

I got nothing against Jose Solorio, but hes a vegan. What a freak! Steel said, drawing chuckles. Thats like a fascist. Thats like ISIS.

Steel, a Surfside resident, is one the states three members on the Republican National Committee and is former chairman of the state GOP. He is backing Solorios opponent, Republican Janet Nguyen.

Solorio brushed aside the dietary assault.

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No Longer Human

Posted: at 10:41 pm

Osamu Dazais No Longer Human comprises a series of three fictionalized notebooks, with each increasingly darker than the last. The character writing these books, Yozo, is detached from the beginning and is afraid of human interactions, but he learns how to socialize with people by playing the clown and entertaining his way into favor from a young age. Yet his alienation remains, despite how he may appear from the outside.

No Longer Human, by Osamu Dazai, Translated by Donald Keene. New Directons, Fiction.

People talk of social outcasts, Dazai writes through Yozo. The words apparently denote the miserable losers of the world, the vicious ones, but I feel as though I have been a social outcast from the moment I was born.

After Yozo moves to Tokyo, he is captivated by the combination of the allure of women and alcoholic mirth, yet his enjoyment of life soon dissipates as he develops an alcohol addiction, and even the love of women does little to alleviate his internal suffering. The work recalls Fyodor Dostoyevskys Notes From the Underground, another novel about a misanthropic young man alienated from society and sickened by humanity in general.

Although the events of No Longer Human bare similarity to Dazais own personal life, the blunt style without sentiment or nostalgia distances it from the tone of an actual autobiography. The novel has a timeless quality: The struggle of the individual to fit into a normalizing society remains just as relevant today as it was at the time of writing.

Read archived reviews of Japanese classics at jtimes.jp/essential.

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Human Rights Among Others Discussed At Asean Meeting In Jakarta

Posted: at 10:41 pm

BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN: Brunei Civil Society Organisations attended a dialogue which was held recently between the Asean Secretary-General, Asean Secretariat, Asean Committee of Permanent Representatives (CPRs) and Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) from October 22-24 in Jakarta, based on the theme of a "Human Rights Roadmap", which was raised by the CSOs for the purpose of providing input for the new Asean Community 2016-2030 blueprint.

The blueprint is to focus mostly on human rights as well as effective and meaningful ways for civil society to engage with the regional bloc. CSO participants came from non-governmental organisations and think-tanks representing member states.

Asean Secretary-General, Le Loung Minh, welcomed the CSO representatives alongside Deputy Secretary General for Community and Corporate Affairs, AKP Mochtan.

The CSOs inputs were in the form of a summary statement regarding the human rights roadmap after 2015 and was presented to officials at the gathering.

The CSOs took note that the Asean Charter and the Post-2015 Asean Community Blueprint are reflections of the bloc's commitment to the protection and promotion of human rights in the region, however, not all the actions in the blueprints are consistent with the principle of human rights.

Human rights are virtually ignored on provisions related to free trade, labour mobility, traditional security, trafficking in persons and the issue of identity. "All human rights are cross-cutting, inherent, interrelated, indivisible and should concern everyone," was the message reiterated by the CSO statement.

It is important that the Post-2015 Asean Community Blueprint not only focuses on building an integrated society but also develop a roadmap towards achieving human rights and equality. A roadmap in which people are treated as the rights holders and key actors in the decisions that affect them making the aspiration of Asean to be people-centred a reality.

Brunei CSOs were represented by Vice President 1 of the Brunei Council on Social Welfare, Nur Judy Abdullah, and Head of the Youth Entrepreneurship Programme and International Relations Unit at the Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sports, Ak Kamal Ghadafi Pg Hj Suhaimi.

Brunei's CSO representatives had the opportunity to meet Permanent Representative of Brunei Darussalam to Asean, Emaleen Abdul Rahman Teo, during the third Asean Community dialogue between the CSOs and the CPRs.

The Centre for Strategic and International Studies and Human Rights Working Group supported by the Embassy of Switzerland in Jakarta organised the dialogue which was based on 'The Future of Human Rights in Asean Community: Opportunities and Challenges'. BRUDIRECT.COM

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