Friday, December 12, 2003

China to adopt a green GDP index to measure economic growth:

"Development should be balanced and sustainable. It should pursue harmony between cities and rural areas; between regions; between society and the economy; between man and nature; and between domestic and external economies" (Wen Jiabao, China premier).

At 8% GDP growth per year for the past 25 years, the environmental cost of expansion in China has been huge. The Yellow River often runs dry, 90% of cities suffer serious water pollution, the atmosphere is often choked with smog, wildlife is scarce and the desert is advancing. Adopting a green GDP index is a step toward sustainable development: the index would be calculated by subtracting values for resource depletion and pollution from gross domestic product. "We might end up with a green GDP figure that is negative" (Financial Times)
"Communication is a universal right, not a priviledge" says the chairman of Nokia at the opening of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) in Geneva. The WSIS, hosted under the auspices of the United Nations, brings together Heads of State, United Nations agencies, NGOs, civil society entities, industry leaders and media representatives to promote the urgently needed access of all countries to information, knowledge and communication technologies for development. A good reason to work for a socially responsible Finnish company .. :-)

Wednesday, November 12, 2003

From the "Iraq and peace in the world" European Comission poll (full pdf)
Europeans were asked if the following countries presented a threat to peace in the world and .. Israel and the US rank as high, even higher, than Iran and North Korea.






















Israel United States

North Korea

Iran
Afghanistan Pakistan Syria

Libya

Arabia
China India

Russia
Somalia EU
59% 53% 50% 48% 36% 30% 21% 16% 8%


Denmark is the only country where a majority of respondents (57%) believe that military intervention in Iraq was justified. EU countries as a whole believe that the war was not justified (68%). Read some reaction from the Jewish press, the Arab press, and an analysis from the World Socialist Web Site.

Friday, October 31, 2003

U.S. government: a "source of evil"
Why Afghanistan? "It was about the Taliban being very, very bad people and that they treated women very badly, you see." Well, that's not what it was about. What it was really about: an imperial grab for energy resources.

"The Taliban -- whom the US installed at the time of the Russian occupation -- were getting too flaky and because Unocal, the California corporation, had made a deal with the Taliban for a pipeline to get the Caspian-area oil, which is the richest oil reserve on Earth. They wanted to get that oil by pipeline through Afghanistan to Pakistan to Karachi and from there to ship it off to China, which would be enormously profitable. Whichever big company could cash in would make a fortune. And you'll see that all these companies go back to Bush or Cheney or to Rumsfeld or someone else on the Gas and Oil Junta, which, along with the Pentagon, governs the United States."

"After 9/11 the country was really shocked and terrified. Bush does a little war dance and talks about evil axis and all the countries he's going to go after. And how long it is all going to take, he says with a happy smile, because it means billions and trillions for the Pentagon and for his oil friends. And it means curtailing our liberties, so this is all very thrilling for him. He's right out there reacting, bombing Afghanistan. Well, he might as well have been bombing Denmark. Denmark had nothing to do with 9/11. And neither did Afghanistan."

(It might as well have been Michael Moore.. Gore Vidal.)

Real success in Iraq, the American way: "I like grease and I need the weight". Believe it or not, the former Saddam International Airport now houses Iraq's first Burger King! (Courrier International, Washington Post)

Tuesday, October 28, 2003

U.S. Republican presidents of the past 50 years had an average IQ of 115.5, with President Nixon having the highest IQ, at 155. President G. W. Bush was rated the lowest of all the Republicans with an IQ of 91.

Democrat presidents had IQs with an average of 156, with President Clinton having the highest IQ, at 182. President Lyndon B. Johnson was rated the lowest of all the Democrats with an IQ of 126.

(Lovenstein Institute think tank)

Monday, September 29, 2003

A rule-based system of international cooperation is one of the conditions for global peace and security. As Kofi Annan reminded us this week "unilateral preemptive attacks on nations is illogical and unsustainable". "Might makes right" is out of step with our modern democratic beliefs. Only a global institution representing the balance of world opinion can provide legitimacy for interventions. Improving the UN should also be on the agenda: how can the total exclusion of Latin America, Africa and the Middle East from the Security Council make sense?

The UN position on terrorists: "We must never, in the fight against terrorism, lower our standards to theirs. The promotion and protection of human rights - the deep respect for the dignity of each person - , as well as the strict observance of international humanitarian law, should be at the centre of anti-terrorism strategies.." (UN Press Release)
Sustainable and efficient urban transport? 40% of the transport sector's CO2 emissions are produced by the use of private cars in cities.. September 22nd was a Car Free Day accross the world. (check out earthday, carfreeday and 22september)

Monday, September 22, 2003

Who decides beauty?

The International Art Exhibition in Venice is a must .. every two year as its name indicates. The exhibition is set in the unusual and fascinating spaces of the Arsenale, in old shipyards and warehouses that used to build and fit the fleets of the Venetian Republic..

Thursday, July 31, 2003

"Neoliberalism's unreserved endorsement of market-orientated global capitalism shows how far it draws from a narrow economic liberalism that is uninterested in other matters. Neoliberals are not concerned by the implications for democracy of the growing power of transnational corporations, the difficulty of reconciling unbridled consumerism and competitive individualism with any meaningful notion of human flourishing, or the threat posed to economic and cultural diversity by the emergence of global goods, the trend towards merger and monopoly, and the impact on the environment. Neoliberalism amounts to a form of market fundamentalism." (Andrew Heywood, Political Ideologies - 2003 - an interesting read to gain valuable insight in various political possibilities shaping our world)

Wednesday, July 23, 2003

Patriotism breeds xenophobia.

Wednesday, July 16, 2003

No casus belli, no weapons of mass destruction, no legal case. "So what?" 33% of Americans believe weapons of mass destruction have been found and 22% are convinced Saddam used them during the war, but this is only due to patriotic TV channels that let rumors and suppositions make the news. In reality, the official reason for war was based on "forgeries and murky, inconsistent sources". The Peace of Westphalia (1648) guarantees absolute integrity to nation states, unless they present a "direct or imminent threat". "But Saddam was bad, he was killing his own people! It was our duty to 'liberate' them.." On these grounds, 3 million dead in D.R.Congo in the last 4 years should justify some kind of intervention, shouldn't it?

The truth is: the US under Bush has no commitment for global human rights, justice and democracy. Its sole interest is to protect its petrol and military industries and sustain its oil-guzzling lifestyle at any cost. No Kyoto. No International Criminal Court. No United Nations. No respect for the Geneva Convention. No respect even for its own constitution "Equal Justice under Law" for the Guantanamo detainees..

Occupation is terrorism.

yann (most info from FT July15-16th and for fun: Democratic Underground)

Monday, June 30, 2003


Illustrating May 20th post about integration.. (in french "Finally!")

Friday, June 06, 2003

1700 civilians (1482~2009) killed during the take-over of Baghdad alone. Today between 5500 and 7200 civilians casualties since the start of the war. That is twice the number of civilian casualties from 9/11. Is the revenge over yet? Talking about revenge: Dogville is a must see. Danish director Lars von Trier comments "I would love to start a “Free America” campaign, because we just had a “Free Iraq” campaign.."

Monday, June 02, 2003

What do Paris, New York and Cuba have in common? They are all candidate hosts for the 2012 Olympics

Wednesday, May 28, 2003

"What also concerns me is this new doctrine of preemptive strikes. I continue to believe that this policy of preemptive strikes is a dangerous policy that carries unintended consequences. When America acts unilaterally to enforce its will on other nations, without an imminent, direct threat to our security and without regard for the rest of the world or even our traditional allies, we endanger the peace of the world. America is the world's remaining superpower. But that unique status does not give America the right to impose its will whenever and wherever it chooses. We have a responsibility to lead, not to bully." (Unknown but wise American)

Tuesday, May 27, 2003

Canadian Justice Minister Martin Cauchon introduced a bill to decriminalize possession of small amounts of marijuana. The Canadian position considers the American 'Zero Tolerance' approach a failure as young Americans smoke more than young Dutch people. Canadian Senators recomment outright legalization: « Dans une société libre et démocratique qui reconnaît fondamentalement mais non exclusivement la primauté du droit comme source de règles normatives, et où la puissance publique doit le plus possible favoriser l'autonomie et conséquemment utiliser avec parcimonie les outils de contrainte, une politique publique sur les substances psychoactives doit s'articuler sur des principes directeurs respectant la vie, la santé, la sécurité et les droits et libertés de chaque individu qui, naturellement et légitimement, recherche son bien-être et son épanouissement, et a la capacité de reconnaître la présence, la différence et l'équivalence de l'autre. »
(Funnily, Radio-Canada in French presents the news as "Pot: Ottawa introduces Bill", but with more reluctance on english Radio-Canada "'No intention' to legalize pot: Cauchon" .. )

Tuesday, May 20, 2003

Hearing the blond Flemish pop star on BBC who chose to represent the right-wing VlaamsBlok in Belgium... we have heard her lines before in Austria, France, Holland and Denmark: "Immigrants coming to our country must adapt to our culture, learn our language and integrate to our society or they will be deported".

In this matter, Canada has a lot to teach to European countries.

This approach is wrong and vowed to fail, because it puts the burden of 'integration' entirely on the shoulder of the immigrant. It attempts to remove the need for residents to participate in this integration, promoting them to the role of not-to-be-disturbed spectators and all-powerful integration judges. But integration goes both ways! One cannot expect an Indian to become Flemish. He will never speak, act or think like a 'traditional' Flemish. Even if he eventually does - after 2 or 3 generations maybe - his skin will never become Flemishly white..

The only way for integration to succeed is to understand, accept and embrace each other's cultures. The Flemish (or Danish or French..) culture need not be static. The only way to go forward and integrate successfully is to recognize the benefits and shortcomings of both cultures and, together, build a new culture that will respect and integrate all its citizens. The harsh rules right-wing parties propose will only bring more hatred, misunderstanding and racism. For integration to be successful, we must make immigrants feel respected, welcomed and appreciated. The role of a government is to foster mutual interest and understanding between old and new residents.

An Indian arriving in Canada will not be asked to become Canadian. He will be asked, "How can you contribute to the Canadian culture". Being Canadian is primarily being you and participating in the flowering of the Canadian culture. I believe this model is the only way out for a Europe still entrenched in its past.

yann.

Saturday, May 17, 2003

"Nationalism is dangerous, but the nationalism of the oppressed seeking freedom is far less dangerous than the nationalism of the oppressor"

Thursday, May 15, 2003

Denmark is stepping up efforts to shut down Christiana, the alternative town in the southern part of Copenhagen. Christiana, also called the Freetown or, more officially, the 'social experiment', started in 1970 as a mixture of anarchy and love, endorsing an alternative life based on communal living and freedom (all details on history and self-governement here).

The current Danish governement, a nationalist and often racist, right-wing, EU-skeptic and Bush supporting party, is going ahead with its plan to make room for more revenue-generating constructions in this much sought-after area. It is unfortunate that the frustrated right-wingers fail to understand the importance of Christiana. Christiania has become a self-controlled safe-haven for all the marginality of society as well as a continuous source of inspiration for all forms of art. Without Christiania, Denmark would be negating its social tradition and culture of tolerance, already much under threats by the current government. Copenhagen would become a boring and uniform city at best, displacing the marginality and softdrug trade on everyone's doorstep instead of being beautifully contained in one known area..

To save Christiania, click and sign here

Tuesday, May 13, 2003

The International Criminal Court objective is to hold accountable and bring to justice individuals responsible for mass murder, genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes (read more here). The court was created in July 1998 in Rome and entered into force in April 2002, taking seat in The Hague in the Netherlands. The US, in its neo-conservatist commitment to American global leadership, nullified its previous ratification and is now gathering support for impunity agreements, that is, Bush wants all US citizens to be exempted from prosecution in the court. Already 32 countries have been duped in agreeing on US immunity or agreed in exchange for reciprocity due to their own bad human rights record (ex. Israel, Rwanda, D.R.Congo, Siera Leone, Romania, Albania and maybe soon Latvia). On top of creating a dangerous precedent in 'unsigning' a previously signed international agreement, the US proves again it has no intention to support human rights justice and democracy on on global scale.. (Rome Statute, ICC)

Friday, May 02, 2003

"To end consumerism, we must reeducate ourselves on the separation of needs from desires. If capitalism emerged originally to fulfill a need, its offspring, consumerism, created and fed desires. Today so many of these desires have been exposed as artificial.. The craving for possessions, status and material wealth has become addictive and we feed our addictions by creating and consuming more of everything. But at the same time our desires have overtaken and eclipsed our needs. We seem to be trapped in a perpetual cycle of demand. The demise of competing ideologies allowed those living in capitalist societies a brief period of satisfaction before people began to ask: "Is this it?" (Richard.Donkin@ft.com, Financial Times, May 2)

It was about oil after all. Sir Jonathan Porritt, Tony Blair 's most Senior Environment Adviser, said Iraqi Oil was a "very strong factor" in going to war with Iraq. "There would not have been a war if Iraq didn't have the world's largest oil reserves". (In Danish) The US Energy Department forecast oil demand will climb 50% by 2025, indicating alternative energy sources were going to play a marginal role. Bush made the introduction of hydrogen cars a priority .. within the next 2 decades! A plan for no change, sure to please Bush&Co, car manufaturers and oil producers. CO2 emissions are projected to increase by 59%. (Financial Times May 2)

Thursday, May 01, 2003



The first May Day, in 1886, was a call for eight-hour workdays by the workers in many American cities. During a labor rally in Chicago, a policeman was killed. The leaders of the local labor movement, eight anarchists, were put on trial and all were found guilty; four were hanged, one committed suicide in jail, and the remaining three were freed and officially granted pardon in 1893 as innocent and victims of hysteria, packed juries and a biased judge.

State, business leaders, and the media would want to hide the true history of May Day. The International Workers' Holiday is still described as a "commie" event in the US, and Labor Day was moved to September on a day devoid of any historical significance. Though not an official holiday in my american company, activities and concerts are taking place in the city - particularly grand in Rome!

"This is the first and only International Labor Day. It belongs to the working class and is dedicated to the revolution." (Wahington U., Anarchy.no)

Tuesday, April 22, 2003

Pure corporate propaganda II, the return? I have 6 weeks to take an internal training program about compliance with US export laws, boycott laws, and anti-boycott laws. "The company and all foreign affiliates must comply with export control and economic sanctions laws of the United States. All employees are required to comply with these laws without exception."

As a canadian working for a company registered in Denmark with a Danish employment contract, how can I be legally obliged to follow U.S.-specific export restrictions and laws? Neither Canada, the EU nor Denmark have export restrictions with Cuba. On what legal ground US laws should have precedence? This is confirmed by the European Commission which effectively neutralizes such extraterritorial laws.

The US anti-boycott law is even more controversial: it prohibits U.S. companies and their foreign affiliates from complying with economic boycotts in which the United States does not participate (The principal target being the Arab boycott of Israel). How can you ask an employee to break the laws of his country of residence? The EU is clearly against such laws: "It (the anti-boycott law) establishes the unwelcome principle that one country can dictate the foreign policy of others".

Wednesday, April 09, 2003

Already published on 6 Billion Brains, and an interesting read: America went to war to .. safeguard the American economy by returning the second largest oil reserve (Iraq) to trading oil in US dollars. Keeping the dollar as the exclusive oil currency is the only way "to protect the American way of life" in the most debt-ridden nation on earth.. (Not Oil, But Dollars vs. Euros, Geoffrey Heard, GlobalPolicy.org)
40 years in Politics for Jean Chrétien, Canada's Prime Minister. He is behind Canada's refusal to participate in a war without UN approval. "A question of principle: engaging Canada in a conflict cannot be decided based on economical considerations or friendship with another country."

Tuesday, April 08, 2003

Liberating Iraq.. for people passively absorbing mainstream news, one could almost feel content with the current situation: an easy win by the world's strongest army against .. well not much really, just the "weakest kid that nobody likes anyway". If defending oneself in Iraq is suicide and in the US unpatriotic, this doesn't make the whole issue any more justifiable. End result? All official reasons to go to war proved shaky: weapons of mass destruction? Where? Danger to the world? Far from it. Democracy? Far far far from it, both inside and outside America, both inside Iraq and on a world scale. So what is left? A religious war for petrol? A need to boost army morale to justify further army industry spending and further profits for the Bush cartel? A family sweet revenge for Bush padre? A stint at reviving patriotism in a country in disarray economically and above all, psychologically? All of the above, surely. Shame and sadness is all I can feel as a westerner.. Can't wait for that first lifeless and superficial shopping mall to open in Baghdad, it will be super! Let's get that global warming going!
yann.

Thursday, April 03, 2003

Late evening Turkish humour! President BUSH went for a check up. His British doctor said: "Mr. President, I am your doctor; I am sorry to inform you, that you have a problem in your BRAIN. Your brain has two parts, one Left and one Right. The Left Part has nothing RIGHT in it, and the Right Part has nothing LEFT in it." :-)
This week the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) bared the only independent broadcasting voice in the Arab world, the television station Al Jazeera, because 'insufficiently supportive of America and its war in Iraq'. Suprisingly, other countries to ban Al Jazeera are .. Lybia, Tunisia and Jordan, because the station gives too much time to opposition leaders and Israeli officials. Too objective? For the Arab world to enjoy a free, democratic life, shouldn't Al Jazeera be encouraged instead? (New York Times)

Monday, March 31, 2003



Frustrated with the United Nations' "consistent, blatant regard for the will of its 188 member nations," the U.S. announced Monday the formation of its own international governing body, the U.S.U.N. Read it all on the ONION !

Friday, March 28, 2003

Pure corporate propaganda? Officially in reaction to the fictitious security alerts issued by the U.S. Government, my company 'Security Command Center' (sigh) is sending 'Travel Advisory' (sigh) emails explicitly requesting all employees to avoid demonstrations. American friends have confirmed receiving such emails at school or work, leading to beleive the neo-conservatists are behind all this..

March 26th: "Travel security tends to focus on air transportation, but now there are other personal safety issues for travelers, most notably avoiding anti-American/Coalition demonstrations in many parts of the world. Inadvertent exposure to these events could result in animosity or violence, and travelers could become targets of individual or crowd reaction."

February 10th: "There is significant concern that the initiation of military operations against Iraq will generate notable animosity in many parts of the world. This animosity will likely take the form of protests, demonstrations and possible terrorist activity. Even demonstrations intended to be peaceful can turn into confrontational situations and possibly escalate into violence.. Avoid locations where demonstrations or large gatherings may occur." (see full mail here)

Thursday, March 27, 2003

"The only thing we have to fear is fear itself."-- Franklin D. Roosevelt. A must read:"Bush has stampeded America into conflict" by the Chicago Tribune. (click here for local copy) "Bush is using fear as a weapon, not to build courage among Americans but to stampede them into endorsing a case for a war that has been built literally on a grab bag of possibilities, contingencies, ifs and maybes, of things that haven't happened but could happen, of bad guys who might hit us if we don't hit them first. Bush and his neoconservative advisers have manufactured an unneeded war, for reasons of their own, and are leading an America that, with its power and lack of restraint, is more dangerous to world order than Hussein ever could be. The thought that a Third World international pariah could multiply its strength and turn itself into a power sufficient to blackmail the most powerful nation in the history of the world is nothing but panic-mongering. National hysterias come and go, leaving a great deal of damage and creating a sense of communal shame when the panic wears off .."
Oh, civilian casualties update here. You can decide if they are 'heroes' or 'collateral damage'. ~300 as of today..
"Bombing for peace is like fucking for virginity"

.. which the Danish fail to understand with 54% supporting the war and rising ..

Monday, March 24, 2003

"September 11 an 'America-changing' event but not a 'world-changing' event. The rest of the world sees American arrogance as at least responsible for the atrocities." (Financial Times today) -> Will this ever resonate in the US? The WTC bombing was indeed an America-changing event, but not as the world anticipated: the US rejected all blame and self-criticism, and saw the event as "a justification - whether merited or not is arguable - for a much more assertive American foreign policy doctrine, one that included the explicit idea of military action to pre-empt attack." So, since 9/11 didn't make the US learn from their mistakes, what will humble them? Another Vietnam? Sad ..
"Fears make the world go round" (Louise Bourgois, in Louisiana until June). She also said (and proves!) that "Art is the guarantee of sanity" .. "Cell (Glass Spheres and Hands)" (below), is enacting in space the drama of human-beings prisoners of their own fragile 'bubble' (on the chairs), not communicating together despite the hope of the 'hands' (on the table). (Kofi Annan as the hands, Bush, Blair, Chirac, Saddam, Sharon .. as the bubbles?)

From fears to fear culture, Michael Moore won the Oscar for Best Documentary with Bowling for Columbine: "Shame on you and your fictitious reasons and fictitious orange alerts, Mr. Bush".

Friday, March 21, 2003

In today's Financial Times: World overwhelmingly opposed to war even in countries supporting the US: Italy and Spain 81%, Russia 87%, Turkey 86%, UK 61% are opposed. "Military power alone will never be enough to guarantee America's security. Without the friendship, respect and support of its allies, it will ever be vulnerable.. We are back to the world in which right is measured only by might. Frightening." Finally, "Paris has been made the scapegoat for US and British diplomatic failure. This risks leaving the west with deep and lasting divisions. France must resist the dangerous drift to react to american 'francophobia', and not resort to tit-for-tat anti-Americanism and anglophobia."
"It is always a simple matter to drag (the common) people along (in a war) whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. All you have to do is to tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism"
(Nazi H.Goering after WWII)

Thursday, March 20, 2003

A day of shame for the start of an illegal and illegitimate war: Kofi Annan and Hans Blix were sad and somber.. "Violating the norms of international behaviour" (China) - "Military action can in no way be justified." (Russia) - "I hope that all parties will scrupulously observe the requirements of international humanitarian law" (UN Kofi Annan) - "This is not an attack on Islam but an attack on humanity" (Asian Islamic leaders) - "This despicable war exposes the ugliness of America" (Malaysia) - "United Nations is the only legitimate framework to build peace in Iraq as elsewhere" (France). Meanwhile the US dares to call this "Operation Iraqi Freedom" (sigh). Now to start thinking about the best outcome for this for the world community: Mille Merci, président Bush (Paulo Coelho) (en Français)

Wednesday, March 19, 2003

Pictures of Baghdad we rarely see .. here
"How bad do you have to suck to lose a popularity contest with Saddam Hussein? The whole world is against you, Mr. Bush"(Michael Moore) <- check his site for more..

Bush Idiot

Tuesday, March 18, 2003

So the question is, why does the "Bush Cartel" wants war so badly despite all consequences? Who benefits? Who loses?. The Persian golf has always been of vital interest to the US to maintain its economy and lifestyle, and the US considers multilateralism and all international agreements as a threat to its transformation into a new type of military state, similarly to old colonial powers, all in the name of grand ideals: democracy, civilisation, freedom. (Ignacio Ramonet - en français)
Shame, shame, shame..

Bush bullied and burried all international agreements, institutions and laws until the end. My view on this is straightforward: as human beings living on one planet with limited resources to share, as we are split into nations, the supreme power is the United Nations - the best we have as a democratic forum for all. As much as Bush would like to topple Saddam, "no single country should be allowed to police the world", however powerful they might be. As this is an illegitimate invasion of a sovereign country - similar to Iraq invading Kuwait for the same reasons really - the UN should .. stop and disarm the US. Some might argue the US can be trusted while others can't. I argue nobody can be trusted with power, the use of this power must always be monitored and controlled by a wider democratic body.. in this case, the UN. Some might argue the US liberated Europe and no other superpower introduced freedom: true, but things change, nothing can be taken for granted, and freedom is loosing a lot of ground in the US itself as the country is slowly building itself into a fortress, falling into disinformation, and transgressing more and more personal freedoms in the name of national security. As the US and Bush become the outlawed world policeman, democracy, freedom, justice, multicultural understanding and respect, and global long term security are now all at stake. Luckily, this 6 months of UN tractations will at least force the US to show restraint in their illegitimate invasion of Iraq, and prove to the world their claimed good intentions, notably by being very careful with 'collateral damage' (a nice term for what they call 'heroes' in the US i.e. civilian casualties).
Shame, shame, shame..

Monday, March 17, 2003

Remove the world's number 1 warmonger.. George Bush

Sick of the war? Boycott CNN .. and call sick on the first day of the war. Follow citizen actions in San Francisco (Indy Media) and New York (Village Voice)
CNN seemed so biased.. because it is. CNN reporters have been reminded to comply to the "script approval policy", where officials in Atlanta must approve and authorise all package scripts before they are aired. Robert Fisk, The Independent (Fisk won the Association of Journalists of Rome Silver Microphone award)

Wednesday, March 12, 2003

Who said "No one should have dominion over the world" ?

He lived a life as opposed as possible to technology. He refused to let the material world draw the boundaries of life. He came to think of the internal combustion engine as the greatest evil ever put upon this earth. Why? Because technology is powerful, seductive and addictive.. and everyone can be tempted into evil uses of power.

Suprise: it is Tolkien, author of Lord of the Rings. His trilogy is the most read novel after.. the bible. He describes his work as "fundamentally religious and Catholic". But "No one should have dominion over the world" still 'rings' quite true today..

Tuesday, March 11, 2003

Insight from Harvard: why there is no american hegemony and why Europe is a key player in this 3D chess game. "US military expenditure is equal to the next two dozen countries combined.. but there are more European than US troops helping to keep the peace today in the Balkans and in Afghanistan.. Europe's culture, values and the success of the EU have produced a good deal of soft power, the ability to attract rather than merely coerce others." ("Europe is too powerful to be ignored" by Joseph Nye in Financial Times)


coincidence?

Saturday, March 08, 2003

Friends fighting the beast from the inside..

(The Mission, San Francisco)
War is certainly not the path to democracy. The roots of international conflicts are numerous and complex, "elles plongent dans le tumulte des siècles", they cannot be solved by war. War will only bring further hatred, further cultural and identity clash. "Regardons les choses avec lucidité : nous sommes en train de définir une méthode de règlement des crises. Nous sommes en train de choisir l'organisation du monde dans laquelle nous voulons que vivent nos enfants." -> another lucid and committed speach by French Foreign Minister de Villepin.

Friday, March 07, 2003

Slowly bringing Big Brother to life: "Delta Airlines assigns a rating of green, yellow, or red to every airline passenger based on that person's credit, banking, and criminal history" (Wired, BoycottDelta)
"Civilization is threatened not only by terrorists but also by the means we use to fight them.." Though illegal in the US, the Bush commando claims their right to use 'stress and duress techniques' overseas to extract information from 'terrorists'. In violation of international laws and agreements, the CIA opened a torture facility in Bagram, Afghanistan. (Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, Guardian, Human Rights News)

Thursday, March 06, 2003

In Denmark, nationalism is well alive - a stark contrast with its southern neighbour where waving the german flag brings unease (remember 'na' in nazi stands for nationalism).. Here, it is customary to decorate everything with Danish flags on special days. For my birthday, they were sensible enough to put... United Nations flags! Nice touch.

Friday, February 28, 2003

Inspections on the US weapons of mass destructions by Canadian and Danish members of parliament. Why in the US? According to the Bush administration, the most dangerous states are those run by leaders who
1) have massive stockpiles of chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons (<- see the map)
2) ignore due process at the United Nations
3) refuse to sign and honour international treaties
4) have come to power through illegitimate means
Rooting out evil

Wednesday, February 26, 2003

Washington Post: "A preemptive war defies international law, signals the rebirth of colonialism and imperialism. An invasion serves only the Bush administration whose ignorance is matched only by their greed." Said Naggar, World Bank Veteran. "This is occupation, this is an American occupation of Arab land." Professor Mohamed Kamal, Cairo University

Tuesday, February 25, 2003

"We swear to destroy your planet.. to make money!" While some watch CNN, the French watch this. Hilarious.

Monday, February 24, 2003

Catching up on the daily dose of 'Impartial and objective journalism of the highest standard' on BBC world (CNN would not come close to claiming this, mind you). "No single country should be allowed to police the world" Dr. Mahathir bin Mohamad (Malaysian PM). "The risk of Iraqi missiles hitting Israel on a scale of 10? .. zero" Barbara Plett, BBC correspondant interviewing Israeli official. Finally: Bruce Springsteen wins Grammys for his patriotic album - brainwashed or opportunist? Luckily some are wiser: "I am not anti-american.. I am anti the current american administration" Dustin Hofman
Mm the future looks sooo bleak.. Potential future US Democrat candidates: Richard Gephardt: "In the Middle East, it has always been imperative that our nation maintain unflinching support for Israel's security". John Edwards: "I supported the use of force to disarm Iraqi President Saddam Hussein". John Kerry : "..we must redouble our information gathering efforts.. Oudated military equipment may please defense contractors, but it won't win tomorrow's battles." (still Kerry is the most reasonable..) Joseph Lieberman: "U.S. armed forces must pursue those terrorists more aggressively"
Americans must choose between extremist right-wingers and .. right-wing extremists.
Living free, or living scared? Just came back from watching Bowling for Columbine. A must to convince yourself, if need still be, that the world's first power is an America of chaos: "a culture of fear and consumption" Marylin Manson

Saturday, February 22, 2003

The joke of the year: www.ready.gov! If radiation knocks on your door, do not answer. Check out the spoof. Note: overusing the rhetoric of fear to provoke and gain support for war is not new - Hitler was also pretty good at it.
"..And let's face it, Mr Bush's carefully thought-out policy towards Iraq is the only way to bring about international peace and security. The one certain way to stop Muslim fundamentalist suicide bombers targeting the US or the UK is to bomb a few Muslim countries that have never threatened us.."
Terry Jones (yes, of Monty Python). Letter to the Observer Jan 26

Friday, February 21, 2003

In accordance with the Charter of the United Nations: "..States must refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any State.."
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation on Nuclear Weapons (1968) (en français)