TOKYO MASTER BANNER

MINISTRY OF TOKYO
US-ANGLO CAPITALISMEU-NATO IMPERIALISM
Illegitimate Transfer of Inalienable European Rights via Convention(s) & Supranational Bodies
Establishment of Sovereignty-Usurping Supranational Body Dictatorships
Enduring Program of DEMOGRAPHICS WAR on Europeans
Enduring Program of PSYCHOLOGICAL WAR on Europeans
Enduring Program of European Displacement, Dismemberment, Dispossession, & Dissolution
No wars or conditions abroad (& no domestic or global economic pretexts) justify government policy facilitating the invasion of ancestral European homelands, the rape of European women, the destruction of European societies, & the genocide of Europeans.
U.S. RULING OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR TO SALVAGE HEGEMONY
[LINK | Article]

*U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR* | U.S. Empire's Casino Unsustainable | Destabilised U.S. Monetary & Financial System | U.S. Defaults Twice A Year | Causes for Global Financial Crisis of 2008 Remain | Financial Pyramids Composed of Derivatives & National Debt Are Growing | *U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR* | U.S. Empire's Casino Unsustainable | Destabilised U.S. Monetary & Financial System | U.S. Defaults Twice A Year | Causes for Global Financial Crisis of 2008 Remain | Financial Pyramids Composed of Derivatives & National Debt Are Growing | *U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR*

Who's preaching world democracy, democracy, democracy? —Who wants to make free people free?
[info from Craig Murray video appearance, follows]  US-Anglo Alliance DELIBERATELY STOKING ANTI-RUSSIAN FEELING & RAMPING UP TENSION BETWEEN EASTERN EUROPE & RUSSIA.  British military/government feeding media PROPAGANDA.  Media choosing to PUBLISH government PROPAGANDA.  US naval aggression against Russia:  Baltic Sea — US naval aggression against China:  South China Sea.  Continued NATO pressure on Russia:  US missile systems moving into Eastern Europe.     [info from John Pilger interview follows]  War Hawk:  Hillary Clinton — embodiment of seamless aggressive American imperialist post-WWII system.  USA in frenzy of preparation for a conflict.  Greatest US-led build-up of forces since WWII gathered in Eastern Europe and in Baltic states.  US expansion & military preparation HAS NOT BEEN REPORTED IN THE WEST.  Since US paid for & controlled US coup, UKRAINE has become an American preserve and CIA Theme Park, on Russia's borderland, through which Germans invaded in the 1940s, costing 27 million Russian lives.  Imagine equivalent occurring on US borders in Canada or Mexico.  US military preparations against RUSSIA and against CHINA have NOT been reported by MEDIA.  US has sent guided missile ships to diputed zone in South China Sea.  DANGER OF US PRE-EMPTIVE NUCLEAR STRIKES.  China is on HIGH NUCLEAR ALERT.  US spy plane intercepted by Chinese fighter jets.  Public is primed to accept so-called 'aggressive' moves by China, when these are in fact defensive moves:  US 400 major bases encircling China; Okinawa has 32 American military installations; Japan has 130 American military bases in all.  WARNING PENTAGON MILITARY THINKING DOMINATES WASHINGTON. ⟴  

June 24, 2016

#Hillary2016: Stand By for More Dirt on US Presidential Candidate Hillary Clinton (Democrats)




WikiLeaks




Friday, Jun 24, 2016 06:15 AM AEST

Despite 4 years trapped in embassy, Assange says WikiLeaks has “very big year” ahead

At NYC event, Assange said WikiLeaks has big new leaks, and warned a Hillary Clinton presidency "means endless war"

Ben Norton

June 19, 2016 marked the fourth year that Julian Assange, the editor-in-chief of whistleblowing journalism organization WikiLeaks, has been trapped in the Ecuadoran embassy in London.

Several events were organized this week in cities throughout Europe, Latin America and the U.S. to commemorate this anniversary, and to bring attention to the escalating war on whistleblowers and journalists.

Assange spoke via videostream at an event in New York City on Wednesday (video below).

He stressed in his message that he has been effectively detained by the U.K. for five and a half years, even though he has never been charged with a crime.

In February, the U.N. ruled that Assange is being arbitrarily and illegally detained, and is due compensation for the “different forms of deprivation of liberty.”

Despite the hardship, nevertheless, Assange was excited about the months ahead. “It’s going to be a very big year for WikiLeaks,” he said.

Assange implored the audience to “get ready to gather around” in order “to protect our ability to be publishing.” “It will be very necessary in the coming months,” the WikiLeaks editor stressed.

Many of the upcoming releases, he said, concern Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.

“I’ve come to know Hillary quite well,” Assange joked. WikiLeaks has released thousands of Clinton’s emails, and he has read many of them.

“She is an extremely ambitious liberal interventionist hawk,” he explained. This is, of course, no surprise, he added, but the extreme degree of her belligerence is often not understood.

Clinton “was the leading figure behind the destruction of Libya,” he said, echoing comments he said in an interview with Salon in February.

“If Hillary Clinton gets into office, it means endless war,” Assange warned. “We are in fact already, under Obama, in endless war, but I think it will significantly ramp up under Hillary Clinton.”

And “with a Democratic president in office, there is no strong Democratic opposition” to these policies, he noted.

Assange added that, at the end of the day, the differences between Clinton and her opponent, presidential candidate Donald Trump, will not have a big impact on the U.S. empire.

“I’m not sure it makes much difference which president” is in office, he said. Rather, the roughly 3,000 people appointed by the president are those who control how the U.S. empire operates. And the people whom Clinton chooses to surround herself with are hawkish liberal interventionists themselves.

Of those who work under her, Assange said, Clinton demands “total sucking up” and constant flattery. She “surrounds herself with people who don’t really challenge her.”

It’s “a liberal interventionist who surrounds herself with liberal interventionists,” he described it, citing figures like Anne-Marie Slaughter, another so-called humanitarian interventionist.

The New York Times, which endorsed Clinton for president, pointed out that she is even more hawkish than her Republican rivals. The U.S. newspaper of record described her as “the last true hawk left in the race.”
A digital Library of Alexandria

Assange was joined at the event by a panel of renowned journalists and activists, including Academy Award-winning filmmaker Michael Moore, Democracy Now founder Amy Goodman, The Intercept co-founder Jeremy Scahill and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Chris Hedges, among others.

Amy Goodman, who moderated the discussion, said it is amazing that, despite the sanctions, assassination threats and effective imprisonment Assange has endured for years, WikiLeaks remains strong.

“How have you kept WikiLeaks going?” she asked.

“I don’t know,” Assange joked in reply. He said it has only been possible thanks to the help he has gotten from the WikiLeaks staff and from people throughout the world.

Assange added that he has had many “false friends,” who have betrayed him or were cowardly and timid in time of need. But he also thanked those who have supported WikiLeaks’ work.

Besides, if he weren’t doing it, someone would take his place and continue the work, Assange argued.

Goodman followed up, asking him what he is proudest of. Assange said it is simply keeping Wikileaks alive.

“We have built a grand project, in some ways a grand dream,” he said, likening it to a contemporary digital Library of Alexandria.

WikiLeaks has actually now published more documents while Assange has been detained than it did before. “And we have not fired a single person,” he added.

Assange also spoke highly of The Intercept, the publication co-founded by Jeremy Scahill and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Glenn Greenwald, who worked with NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden.

“It’s use it or lose it,” Assange told Scahill, expressing support The Intercept’s work.
The media

Assange had pretty harsh words for the rest of the media.

He noted that the Pentagon has 20,000 people involved in public relations. The defense department writes thousands of propaganda stories each year “that they give away for free to the press.”

Meanwhile, WikiLeaks’ documents have largely been ignored by the English-language press, although they are much more frequently cited in the international media, Assange said.

“We’re happy to accept the ‘bad boy’ label,” he joked.

“We are completely beyond the pale as far as a lot of the mainstream” press goes, Assange continued. But “we perceive those outlets to be beyond the pale” too.

“They destroy history; they contain it in themselves; they privatize it.”

“History does not belong to journalists; history does not belong to a media organization,”
he argued.

Assange added, “history does also not belong to whistleblowers,” even though they can be “the most important part” in helping to create it.

History belongs to human civilization to understand in order to better itself,” he stressed.
The U.S. government

The WikiLeaks editor vociferously challenged the U.S. government’s claim that his organization’s work has harmed national security.

“It’s all rubbish; it’s just all garbage,” Assange said. “The information that we have published has never led” to anyone facing violence.

The government has tried “desperately” to find a single case of a U.S. official being harmed, he noted, but has come up with nothing.

In a lighter moment, Assange also noted that, while he has major problems with the U.S. government, the U.S. “does have some good things going for it.”

He said he quite likes U.S. culture, and applauded the country’s enormous diversity.

London is a city-state” on the other hand, he lamented; it’s an “inbred system.

When asked about the June 23 vote on Brexit, the referendum on whether the U.K. should leave the E.U., Assange said it might not be so bad to do so.

He noted the E.U. frequently acts “in service of transnational capital.” He read from a 2008 cable released by Wikileaks in which William Hague, then shadow foreign secretary for the Conservative Party and later first secretary of state and foreign secretary, stressed that any prime minister inevitably “learns of the essential nature of the relationship with America.”

“We want a pro-American regime. We need it. The world needs it,” Hague said.

Assange also criticized Sweden, noting that, while it is sometimes applauded for its social democratic government, it is one of the world’s largest per capita exporter of arms, and the only country that does rendition on its own people
 
Aaron Schwartz
Someone in the audience asked about electronic activist Aaron Schwartz. Assange said he had empathized a lot with Schwartz, and understood the pain he went through.

The government’s harsh crackdown on Schwartz, after he made millions of documents and scholarly articles freely available on the internet, ultimately led to his suicide.

“Aaron Schwartz was largely the victim of the crackdown against WikiLeaks,” Assange said.

Assange recalled being afraid of speaking with Schwartz during the government’s investigation, because “there was such intense focus on me,” and he didn’t want to bring it to Schwartz. Assange said he regrets that now.

Civil rights activists have spoken of how the effect of COINTELPRO, grand juries and FBI investigations was to “atomize people,” Assange noted. “There can be terrible side effects of that.”
“An unusual power”

Assange remains optimistic, however. He even managed to find a silver lining in his unfortunate situation.

“There are some consolations to being an accused person and detained unlawfully,” Assange said.

People who are accused develop “an unusual power” — and, he added, “there is no more severe accusation than being accused by a superpower.”


[CLICK IMAGE TO ENLARGE]


http://falkvinge.net/2013/01/04/two-swedes-renditioned-to-the-us-possibly-to-death-penalty-in-secrecy-and-without-lawyers-knowledge/

Two Swedes Renditioned To The US, Possibly To Death Penalty, In Secrecy And Without Lawyers’ Knowledge


Process of Law – Henrik Alexandersson

Mid-November, two Swedish citizens with Somali origins were renditioned from Djibouti to a prison in the United States of America.

According to the US, they are hardened terrorists. According to other people, they tried to leave the terrorist-branded organization al-Shabaab. What’s true there is unclear. But that’s not the point that makes us interested in the story.

An representative of United States Intelligence Services is reported to have told the two Swedes that “We’re waiting for permission from Swedish authorities to take you to the United States”. This is something that the Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs first didn’t want to be associated with, and later declines any and all forms of comment.

Here, we have a natural and special interest, as the two men are Swedish citizens. Are they suspected of committing an act which carries criminal penalties in Sweden – and if so, should they not be indicted and prosecuted in Sweden? Or has the Swedish government given the USA a carte blanche to “take care of” two Swedish citizens in the name of the war on terror – and if so, on what grounds? (Further, the suspicions concern acts committed in Somalia, where the US doesn’t have jurisdiction.)

Suspicions of terror or not – the process of law must be respected, and international law followed. The government has no right to throw people into dark dungeons without a proper trial. We have a right to demand some form of damn order here.

This affair has a distinct image of not having respected due process. This image is further strengthened by the fact that the two Swedes’ lawyers and relatives were kept in the dark for several weeks about what had already happened.

If Sweden has agreed to rendition two people – Swedish citizens or not – to the United States of America within the context of what’s known as extraordinary renditions, this affair goes far beyond the questions about the formal due process. In such a case, it’s necessary to ask how much the Swedish governments’ promises are worth, when they promise to not extradite people to countries where they risk torture or death. This is a question that’s current and relevant in other cases, for example, regarding the Wikileaks founder Julian Assange.

This affair smells really bad…

Read More: Washington Post [in English], Svenska Dagbladet [in Swedish].

UPDATE: The lawyer of the two Swedes was informed of the rendition on December 7, about three weeks after the fact. When the lawyer was informed, and only then, were relatives informed. This has eerie similarities with banana-republic “disappearances”.

This article was originally published in Swedish on Hax’ blog. Translated into English by Rick Falkvinge.

http://falkvinge.net/2013/01/04/two-swedes-renditioned-to-the-us-possibly-to-death-penalty-in-secrecy-and-without-lawyers-knowledge/




C  O  M  M  E  N  T

Sweden isn't all 'feminist foreign policy', Abba, IKEA ... or otherwise all that it would seem.




BREXIT - F*CK YOU VERY MUCH, EU








F*CK YOU VERY MUCH, EU
Victory for Working-Class Britain
http://www.news.com.au/world/europe/count-begins-as-world-awaits-result/news-story/51c092941d4bb60376bf83b19edb8c2e

EXTRACTS


3.20pm

UK’s divorce from EU sees sterling suffer biggest one-day fall

Britain is leaving the EU after 45 years of membership, with the vote count complete and the shockwaves reverberating across the globe.

With 374 out of 382 regional results declared, there were 16.8 million votes for “Leave” and 15.7 million for “Remain”, making it mathematically impossible for “Remain” to win.

French far-right leader Marine Le Pen hailed Britain’s decision to leave the European Union and called for a similar referendum in France.  [comment:  the media 'far right' is anyone that is opposed to nation-destroying liberal-left ideology]

“Victory for Freedom! As I have been asking for years we must now have the same referendum in France and EU countries,” the National Front (FN) leader tweeted.

Dutch anti-Islam MP Geert Wilders on Friday called for the Netherlands to hold a referendum on whether to leave the EU.


http://www.news.com.au/world/europe/count-begins-as-world-awaits-result/news-story/51c092941d4bb60376bf83b19edb8c2e




C   O   M   M   E   N   T
I can't believe it.

I thought it was going to be like all their other rigged votes.

What happened?

---

Hours later, I still can't believe THE PEOPLE WON!!!

That means that people can maybe influence some things.



Electorate, Would I Lie to You?




ELECTORATE
Would I Lie to You?
AAP

http://www.skynews.com.au/news/politics/federal/2016/06/24/pm-says-shorten-caught-lying-on-medicare.html

PM says Shorten caught lying on Medicare 

Published: 12:09 pm, Friday, 24 June 2016


PM Malcolm Turnbull says Bill Shorten has been 'caught out lying' on his Medicare scare campaign.

Malcolm Turnbull insists Bill Shorten has been 'caught out lying' over Labor's Medicare scare campaign.

The opposition leader, appearing on the ABC's 7.30 program, was not prepared to put hand on heart and repeat his claim the coalition had a plan to privatise Medicare.  [comment:  what are they, 5 years old?  It doesn't matter where their hands are, these tossers aren't to be believed.]

Instead Mr Shorten told host Leigh Sales: 'I can say to the people of Australia that this election and their vote on July 2 will determine the future of Medicare'.

He also took the opportunity to argue the Liberal plan, which included a freeze on indexed Medicare rebates, was 'scary'.

The prime minister, campaigning in Launceston on Friday, seized on Mr Shorten's apparent change of language.

'He was asked to put his hand on his heart and repeat his lies and he wouldn't,' Mr Turnbull told reporters.

'He has been lying about Medicare and he's been caught out.'

Mr Turnbull accused Labor and trade unions of calling older voters at night and 'frightening them with lies'.

'Now if somebody is running for prime minister and they're prepared to lie about something as important as that to vulnerable Australians, how can you trust anything else he says?'

Mr Shorten, for his part, accused the prime minister of having 'his hand in the policy cookie jar'.

'It is not what Malcolm Turnbull is saying now about a particular privatisation task force that's got me worried, what it is piece by piece, if given the chance, he will dismantle Medicare,' he told reporters in Darwin.

Labor campaign spokeswoman Katy Gallagher denied Mr Shorten was softening Labor's line of attack.

'There hasn't been any change to Labor's position at all,' she told reporters in Canberra.

'We are continuing to talk about our concerns about Medicare and potential privatisation.'

AAP

http://www.skynews.com.au/news/politics/federal/2016/06/24/pm-says-shorten-caught-lying-on-medicare.html

LABOR PSEUDO LEFT
BILL SHORTEN

RE:  DONALD TRUMP
REPUBLICAN, USA
Australian Financial Review


" ... Mr Trump reached the number of delegates needed to secure his party's presidential nomination on Thursday. He has vowed to break the North American Free Trade Agreementand the Paris climate agreement, does not support the Trans Pacific Partnership and said he would slap a 20 per cent tariff on imported products."


Bill Shorten ... saying US Republican candidate Donald Trump's views are "barking mad"

...  Shorten feels free to hurl insults

Malcolm Turnbull hit out at Mr Shorten over the comments on Friday, despite two of his ministers raising serious concerns about a Trump presidency.

AFR

COMMENT

The Shorten pseudo 'left' politician, from a party that wants wants to give their country away, has the nerve to be critical of Trump, while he and his Labor party parrot Liberal party policies, having abandoned Australian working classes, as far back as the late 1960s.

Notice that both Liberal and Labor capitalist serving & nation screwing assh*les are at one when it comes to slagging off an American patriot that's opposed to trade agreements.

Is there any actual material distinction between these two capitalist serving Australian political party assh*les?

 
Donald Trump, US Republican, position sounds more my idea of the left than anything the Australian Labor Party lowlifes stand for.

The Australian Labor Party & its union buddies ought to be challenged by forming alternative authentic left political parties and unions that represent socially conservative Anglo-Australian / European working-class interests ... assuming there still remains anything left of an Anglo-Australian or European working class in the country.  


COMMENT

Medicare is destined to be privatised when the politicians sign up for the US 'free trade agreement' (Transpacific Partnership (TPP)), which is a corporate free for all, in which national sovereignty, democracy, the welfare and the will of the people, will mean jack sh*t, on signing up for this American corporate rort.

I don't see that Shorten Labor tosser opposing the free trade agreement.

All his political party opposes is the ISDS clause.

While that's a positive, the entire free trade arrangement is sh*t and would be opposed in its entirety by any genuine left party that had national (and, particularly, mass, working-class) interests as a concern.

Both the Liberals and Labor are sh*t.  Greens are even sh*ttier.

I wouldn't vote for any of these assh*les.


ONLY VOTE WORTH MAKING IS A NATIONALIST VOTE


COMMENT 

Labor's refugee/immigration policy negates any reason whatsoever to vote for this capitalist serving, working-class undercutting and working-class resource redistributing, fraud of a 'left'.

CORPORATIONS
GET THE TAXCUTS

... Prime Minister used similar rhetoric in Sunday night’s debate against Bill Shorten to make the case for his plan to cut taxes for firms with revenue of more than $2 million.

... look at how far, or how low, Labor has drifted since Keating’s time.

Shorten described the Turnbull government’s plan to cut company tax as “useless and hopeless”.

It went largely unreported, although for a leader to describe a tax cut as useless and hopeless in an election campaign sounds like news to me.
Next day when he was quizzed about it, Shorten back-pedalled slightly to say “the truth (or troof if we are to be strictly accurate) of the matter” was that it was the wrong time and the wrong priority, despite the fact after last year’s budget he chided the government for not providing small business with an even bigger tax cut and invited it to work with him to take the rate down even further.
... Shorten also told the Australian Council of Social Service that “corporate tax reform helps Australia’s private sector grow and it creates jobs right up and down the income ladder”.
Under Shorten, after prodding from the unions, Labor baulked at the free-trade deal with China and equivocates over the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement.

The Australian



Australia Foreign Policy
http://www.eastasiaforum.org/2016/06/12/australias-uncertain-election-season/

Australian election offers few choices on foreign policy
12 June 2016


Author: Russell Trood, Griffith University


Australians will go to a federal election on 2 July 2016. At first glance the 19 seats in the House of Representatives that the Labor Party — the current Opposition — needs to win to take government seems a heroic undertaking. Yet, if the early polls are any indication, this may not be too far beyond its reach.

There are several dimensions to the 2016 election that add to the mystery of the result. The leaders of Australia’s mainstream political parties have only held their positions for a relatively short period of time. Neither has led his party through the gruelling demands of a federal election. And this year the election campaign period will go for around two months, nearly twice as long as usual.

But perhaps the greatest challenge is that this is a ‘double dissolution’ election — meaning that all 150 seats in the House of Representatives and 76 in the Senate will be up for grabs. It is the first time in nearly 30 years that Australians have experienced a double dissolution election. Predicting the result will be especially difficult.

To form government the winning party will need to secure a majority of seats on the floor of the House, but to be confident of providing stable, effective government and to pass its legislative agenda, it will also need to have a reliable coalition of supportive senators in the Upper House. This has been wanting in recent Australian parliaments and partly explains the rationale for a double dissolution election.

That said, this will likely be a very orthodox election with domestic political issues dominating the agenda over any significant international or foreign policy change. The Labor Party is making its pitch on increasing education funding, sustaining Australia’s high-class health care system and protecting the social security interests of its low-to-middle-class constituency. For Bill Shorten, the Opposition leader and former president of Australia’s trade union movement, this is the heartland of Australian politics.

In contrast, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s national economic plan of ‘jobs and growth’ draws on his more eclectic life experience, including as an international businessman. Since becoming prime minister in September last year, Turnbull has consistently emphasised the great economic opportunities offered to Australians by the transitions (and disruptions) now taking place in the global economy. He has stressed that there has never been more exciting time to live in a world of change and transition where enterprise and innovation can flourish and underpin significant domestic economic gains.

Against this background, it is unlikely that the election will provide much guidance on the future direction of Australian foreign policy. There is already a high degree of consensus, at least among Australia’s mainstream political elites, about foreign policy priorities. These include sustaining and deepening Australia’s security relationship with the United States, engaging with the Indo-Pacific, countering radical extremist terrorism and protecting homeland security.

During his three years as opposition leader, Shorten has done little to embellish this agenda, being content to respond to international issues as they emerge. And while the election will demand a more comprehensive statement of policy, it will likely be well within the parameters of the liberal internationalism that has long been the cornerstone of Labor’s foreign policy.

By contrast, the Turnbull government has already clearly marked its foreign policy ambitions. It will seek deeper engagement with the global economy through comprehensive free trade agreements and partnerships with Indonesia and India. Turnbull will also press hard, though perhaps unsuccessfully, for the Trans-Pacific Partnership to become a reality. Perhaps most notably, and with a significantly higher degree of emphasis from previous  statements on the subject, the Turnbull government’s recent Defence White Paper gives high priority to working with all countries to ‘build a rules based global order’ which incorporates agreed rules of international law and regional security arrangements.

Once settled, the victor will have to face up to the pressing issues on Australia’s foreign policy horizon. In Japan, the Abe government was widely reported to have been disappointed, if not stunned, when Australia failed to award the contract for the development and manufacture of its new generation of conventional submarines to the Japanese contender. The decision raised doubts in Japan as to whether Canberra was seriously interested in developing a deeper strategic partnership. The answer is almost certainly yes, but rebuilding trust and confidence will demand some assiduous diplomatic attention.

Likely to be of a more enduring difficulty for Canberra is China’s determined push to expand its maritime boundaries in the South China Sea. Australia shares widespread regional concerns about the destabilising consequences of these actions. But Canberra is wary of being drawn into confrontation with Beijing and will need to strike a finely tuned policy balanceespecially with the United States — which protects its own national security interests.

Finally, Australia has to address the Papua New Guinea Supreme Court’s decision to close the refugee detention centre on Manus Island. The decision punches a large hole in Canberra’s elaborately conceived regime to deter people smugglers and asylum seekers from looking to Australia. The issue resonates deeply within the Australian body politic and is highly controversial among wide sections of the community. The bipartisan consensus between the government and Labor on the issue is a further complication. Labor is struggling to hold together a febrile internal policy consensus against left wing opposition. The government will certainly exploit this split within Labor to its political advantage.

At the start of the campaign, opinion polls indicated that the election could hardly be closer, with one predicting a Labor victory of 51 per cent to the Coalition’s 49 per cent, while another reversed these results. Over the coming weeks, the polls will no doubt fluctuate as Australian voters wrestle with the choice they have to make on 2 July. At this stage it is almost impossible to say that either side can be confident it has a clear path to success.

Russell Trood is Director of the Griffith Asia Institute, Griffith University.
http://www.eastasiaforum.org/2016/06/12/australias-uncertain-election-season/


Free Trade Agreements
http://www.law360.com/articles/804406/australia-s-labor-party-wants-isds-nixed-from-trade-deals
Australia's Labor Party Wants ISDS Nixed From Trade Deals

By Caroline Simson

Law360, New York (June 7, 2016, 7:54 PM ET) --


Ahead of a July federal election, Australia's shadow minister for trade and investment and member of the country's Labor party said Tuesday that a Labor government would oppose investor-state dispute settlement provisions in trade agreements and work to remove them altogether from existing deals.

Speaking at the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry Trade Forum, Sen. Penny Wong, an opposition leader in the Australian Senate, said that a Labor government would not accept ISDS provisions in any proposed trade agreements.

Previous trade deals signed by Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and former Prime Minister Tony Abbott contain ISDS provisions, including the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership, despite concerns about the mechanism that have occurred in the country for years, she said.

In addition, she noted that there are
ISDS provisions in four of Australia’s earlier free trade agreements and in 21 bilateral investment treaties.

"Some of these provisions were drafted many years ago and do not contain the safeguards, carveouts and tighter definitions of more contemporary ISDS provisions," she said. "A Shorten Labor government will develop a negotiating plan to remove ISDS provisions in these agreements. Where this is not possible we will seek to update the provisions with modern safeguards."

Bill Shorten is the leader of the opposition for the Australian Labor Party.

Concerns over the way ISDS provisions are being used to challenge public policies have been raised by economic and legal experts, including the government's Productivity Commission and the chief justice of the High Court of Australia, she said.

Australia's minister for trade and investment, Steven Ciobo, is a member of the Liberal Party and has come out in favor of the TPP, calling it "very good news for Australia" in a February interview with Australian media transcribed on the trade ministry's website. He accused Wong of continuing to "fuel misinformation in relation to the impact of ... the [TPP]."

"[ISDS] is a feature that has been in trade agreements ... for something like 30 years. In 30 years we've had one issue come up, and guess what? Australia won on that one occasion it came up," he said. "The Labor Party runs around and says they're going to tear up all of our trade agreements, that they want to renegotiate them all. It's just a really bad approach from Labor, so my criticism is actually directed towards Penny Wong and the Australian Labor Party."

In December, Australia defeated a claim over its plain packaging legislation for cigarettes lodged by Hong Kong-based Philip Morris Asia Ltd., which is the Asian regional affiliate of the Philip Morris International group of companies.  [comment:  as if this is reason enough to ignore the future costs.  it looks like it's a win on a technicality specific to this case:  Philip Morris restructuring to take advantage of a treaty.  it's not exactly protection against future claims by companies.]

The company claimed in the arbitration that the 2011 law, which imposed a sweeping ban on trademarks of any kind on cigarette packages, violated its rights under a 1993 bilateral investment treaty between Hong Kong and Australia by substantially diminishing the value of its investments in Australia.

But a tribunal for the Permanent Court of Arbitration rejected the claim during an initial jurisdictional phase, ruling that the arbitration was an abuse of right because Philip Morris had restructured itself to take advantage of the Hong Kong-Australia treaty when it knew that a dispute was on the horizon.

--Editing by Aaron Pelc.

http://www.law360.com/articles/804406/australia-s-labor-party-wants-isds-nixed-from-trade-deals

http://archive.is/rDPxt


This was a bastard to edit.  Don't know why.  It was all over the shop.  I'm so sick of looking at this.  

No matter how many times I look, it looks wrong to me ... as wrong as those mainstream Australian politicians.  LOL
Blogger throwing up unwanted code is sending me mental.  When I look at the back end, trying to edit things, I see a gazillion unnecessary font and like codes it's easier to leave in than edit out.  But when it later comes to editing specific portions, it's a nightmare of picking through vandalised code because of the automatic Blogger unwanted insertions EVERYWHERE.  Blogger, please don't help.  LOL



BrexitClub - BREXIT 2016 - Assange, WikiLeaks




WikiLeaks



BREXIT CLUB

BrexitClub - BREXIT 2016 - Assange, WikiLeaks


BLOCKED BY GHOSTERY
PLACED ON GHOSTERY
'SAFE LIST'
"Browser does not support Livestream playback"
after making BrexitClub site
a 'safe site' in Ghostery


No luck watching this. 

I'm on Firefox browser, on a Linux OS, that possibly has plugins disabled something?  

I'm no techie, so I've no idea.  But if it does have AdobeFlash and Javascript disabled, it may not be such a bad thing.  They're full of holes hackers use to get into systems.

Javascript can't be completely disabled on here.  I'm pretty sure it's required for access to various sites.


VIDEO OF THE LIVE STREAM HAS NOW BEEN POSTED

VIDEO of the Brexit Club Live Stream
LINK | YouTube



-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
IGNORE THIS RAMBLE ABOUT NOTHING BELOW

Attempted remedy I tried (without success):

BREXIT CLUB - Attempt to Watch Live Stream
6 hour live broadcast from the Ecuadorian Embassy in London
Brexit referendum

---------------------------------------------------------------------

ISSUE / PROBLEM:
REDIRECT BLOCKED by Ghostery.  

Attempt to 'undo' block unsuccessful.  Placed BrexitClub site on safe list, but it made no difference.


ISSUE / PROBLEM:

SUBSEQUENT MESSAGE:  

"Browser does not support Livestream playback"
SOURCED SITE THAT MIGHT HELP:
http://xmodulo.com/watch-live-streaming-video-command-line-linux.html

How to watch live streaming video from the command line on Linux:

Livestreamer is a command line interface (CLI) client:

  • "upon giving a streaming URL, retrieves live streaming video from the URL"
  • "pipes it into a native video player running on local host"
"Livestreamer supports streaming from over 20 different web sites including Dailymotion, YouTube Live, Twitch/Justin.tv, Livestream and UStream"

To install Livestreamer on Debian, Ubuntu or Linux Mint:

$ sudo apt-get install python-pip
$ sudo pip install livestreamer


$ livestreamer  <target URL> best

to watch in best available quality

info source (as above):
Dan Nanni
http://xmodulo.com/watch-live-streaming-video-command-line-linux.html


-- Progress --

1.  Installed python-pip
2.  Installed Livestreamer via pip
     Livestreamer script installed to:  /usr/local/bin

    WARNING appears: no files found matching 'AUTHORS'
    Successful installation featuring 'singledispatch'

3.  Ran command:  livestreamer http://brexitclub.eu best


[I think.  There was a typo in this, so there's no telling what command I really ran.  LOL]


   FAIL

    tokyo@tokyo:~$ livestreamer http://brexitclub.eu/ best
    error: No plugin can handle URL: http://brexitclub.eu/ 

  (wrong site no doubt.  not sure what the target site should be)

CONCLUSION

I'm guess this failed because I'm instructing Livestreamer to read from the BrexitClub site itself, rather than from the site BrexitClub is redirecting to (and presumably the source of the video streaming, or whatever it is).

Not sure how to remedy this problem, as I cannot see / determine the URL of the REDIRECT site that BrexitClub site is sending viewers to.

Could try Tor browser, but it means shutting a sh*tload of windows etc and then having to reload again, just to maybe try to get the URL.

Cannot watch it on Tor because it's a 'low bandwith' or something, meaning it's going to be slow, interrupted viewing, if I manage to view, and it's not the done thing because it disrupts things across board.

But Tor would probably be on Mozilla is piggy-backed onto the Mozilla (I think), so maybe this isn't even supported on Tor browser.  Yeah, just checked.  Says "Tor browser is built on the Mozilla platform - Link here."




Live Results
‘Brexit’ Referendum


Annoying not to be able to see what's going on, but maybe it's just as well. 

I'm completely opposed to middle-class intelligentsia wankerism, and I'm guessing there would have been an entire cast of those deluded wankers on this program, shilling for 'unity in diversity' and the oneness of being, or some such preening and posturing, according to mainstream, modern, secular, Western intellectual 'universalist' moralistic dogma dictates (the platform, promotion and dissemination of which was probably sponsored for decades by the CIA and the US State Department ... and, no, I'm not kidding... LOL).  Or something like that. 

So far, Assange is the exception.  Not sure why.  Guess it's because he walks the walk?  Don't know.  LOL

The rest of them tend to generally illicit elicit disgust and an aggressive impulse in me, these days.  

LOL ... but quite a few other things do, too.  Yikes, it's a permanent state.      ;)


[Edit: typos everywhere I look. I don't know what's wrong with me. Or maybe this is normal, but I don't normally notice? ... LOL]

------------------




Weird Rules
Why is 'exited' (as in, to exit) only one 't' when 'spotted' is two?

The rules don't make sense.





June 23, 2016

GIF - Holy




Planet Tokyo---


Uta von Ballenstedt
aka Uta of Naumburg
Saxon heritage
b. circa 1000 AD - d. 1046  AD

Sister of Gisela of Swabia
Empress Consort of the
Holy Roman Empire
(1027-1039 AD)
both parents
descendants of Charlemagne

GERMAN HERITAGE
HEART OF EUROPE
DESTROYED by Germany's (and Europe's) 
modern-day politicians & their capitalist masters



Redbone (1972)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yT62TQjmrBg


Edit #1
no time to finish GIF.  sleepy.
broke past the sleep barrier, but now i'm zombied out.


tried to find Roman chants or something similar,
but it's too hard to get into them after a day of 1960s music


---


AUDIO | here

Funerary Crown
 Gisela of Swabia
Empress consort

of the
Holy Roman Empire
1027 to 1039 AD
  by third marriage to

Emperor Conrad II
    mother of Emperor Henry III
    third marriage to Conrad II
    took place January 1017
elected
King of the Romans(1024)
crowned
Holy Roman Emperor (1027)
    died of dysentery 1043 at Imperial Palace of Goslar
    remains at Speyer Cathedral
    tomb opened 1900
    172 cm (5' 8") tall, blonde hair

Planet Tokyo