Early morning Wednesday.
* We finally saw Up! tonight. All I can say is if the first ten minutes don't break your heart you have no soul.
* Blackwater founder Erik Prince has apparently been implicated in a huge swath of crimes by a former employee and a Marine working with the company, ranging from tax evasion and money laundering to weapons smuggling to obstruction of justice and destruction of evidence to crimes of war and even to the murder of federal informants. (See MetaFilter for more.) My now-incredibly-timely review of Master of War is getting bumped up accordingly and will probably be online (updated) at Independent Weekly in a day or so. This is all pretty shocking, even by Blackwater standards.
* In not-completely-frakked-up news, Bill Clinton did a good thing today, a win for just about everybody but infamous douchebag of liberty John Bolton.
* More on the Olbermann/O'Reilly saga from Glenn Greenwald, Jane Hamsher, and David Sirota. While I appreciate that he finds himself in a tough spot here, Olbermann is not doing himself any favors with his behavior; making one type of statement on-the-air and another off makes it very clear what is going on, and makes him look like a fool.
* The 100 Greatest Sci-Fi Movies. Outraged to see Galaxy Quest only squeaking by at #95. And 12 Monkeys quietly buried in the 80s? Nonsense.
* "In Which I Ruin Rashomon For Everyone, Forever."
* And your short pictorial history of robots.
Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
12:36 AM
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Labels: 12 Monkeys, actually existing media bias, Bill Clinton, Bill O'Reilly, Don't mention the war, douchebags of liberty, film, Fox News, Galaxy Quest, Jericho, John Bolton, Keith Olbermann, Kurosawa, MSNBC, North Korea, politics, Rashomon, readymades, robots, science fiction, war crimes
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Mitch sends along this fascinating article about North Korea and reinsurance fraud.
"The exact scale of the fraud is hard to determine . . . because the insurance industry has been so gullible," Asher said. North Korean insurance fraud "was absolutely something I should have been looking into more when I was running the [State Department's] illicit activities initiative," he added.
Some details emerged in London last year when lawyers for German insurance giant Allianz Global Investors, Lloyd's of London and several other reinsurers disputed a North Korean reinsurance claim for the 2005 crash of a helicopter into a government-owned warehouse in Pyongyang. According to court documents, the companies alleged that the helicopter crash had been staged, that a North Korean court's decision to uphold the claim had been rigged and that the North Korean government routinely used insurance fraud to raise money for the personal use of Kim Jong Il.
A British appeals court allowed the case to go forward, but as it went to trial in December, the insurance companies agreed to a settlement that amounted to a nearly complete victory for the North Koreans: The insurers retracted all allegations of fraud against Korea National Insurance Corp. (KNIC) and paid out about $58 million, or 95 percent of the North Korean claim for the crash.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
3:19 PM
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Labels: insurance, North Korea, scams
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
Kim-Jong Il is apparently seriously ill and may even have recently suffered a stroke.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
12:16 AM
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Labels: Kim-Jong Il, North Korea
Thursday, August 28, 2008
North Korean propaganda posters, at California Literary Review.
Left: “Let’s drive the US imperialists out and reunite the fatherland!”
Right: “When we say we will, we will. We do not talk idly!”
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
4:19 PM
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Labels: America, North Korea, propaganda
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Thursday morning links.
* For my people, the right to listen to Bruce Springsteen is literally a matter of life and death.
* Also in the news: a "sniff-squad" of qualified experts is being brought in to determine whether the landfills in Northhampton, Massachusetts, are "bearable" or "foul beyond belief."
* Retro Sabotage has a 100% true documentary on the secret origins of Pac-Man as a tool for mass manipulation and brainwashing.
Very early in its development, it was decided that the game itself should also, at a symbolic level, carry consumerist values. The main character was then reduced to a mouth eating everything that came across its path. At first it would be chased by a stylized specter, symbolic of guilt, but, during play, the guilt itself would be overcome and swallowed.The North Korean version of the game, towards the end of the documentary, is actually sort of fun...
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
10:18 AM
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Labels: Australia, games, North Korea, Pac-Man, pollution, Springsteen, things that smell bad, trash