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hydrarchist writes:

Pepsi Ads Wink at Music Downloading

Theresa Howard, USA TODAY




NEW YORK — A new sort of Pepsi Generation will get air time on the Super Bowl: music downloaders.



Annie Leith, sued by the recording industry over music downloads, appears in a Pepsi ads.

"New York City Cops Training for GOP Convention"

Glenn Thrush, Newsday


Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said the NYPD is creating a specialized
training program for rookie cops to prepare them for possible disturbances
at this summer's Republican National Convention.


The commissioner plans to deploy many of the 730 recruits who were sworn
in Wednesday to the area surrounding the convention at Madison Square
Garden after they graduate in July.

"Appeals Court Allows N.Y. Anti-Mask Law"

Gail Appleson, Reuters, Tue January 20, 2004

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A federal appeals court on Tuesday ruled that a New
York state law barring public demonstrators from wearing masks is valid
under the U.S. Constitution and does not violate Ku Klux Klan members' free
speech rights.


The U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals' ruling reverses a trial court's
finding that the state law violated the First Amendment. The three-judge
panel said the mask was not protected by the free-speech provision because
it does not convey a message independently of the robe and hood.

"New Kinds of Drug Tests Weighed for Federal Workers

Bush Administration Considers Sampling Hair, Saliva, Sweat"

Christopher Lee, Washington Post

Federal workers who submit to drug screening soon may have their saliva,
sweat or hair tested as the Bush administration increases efforts to deter
and detect illegal drug use among 1.6 million civilian employees.


Officials have relied on urine samples alone in the federal government's
nearly two-decade-old drug-testing program, begun in 1986 when President
Ronald Reagan issued an executive order declaring that the federal
workplace be drug-free. Bush administration officials want to give
agencies the option of using the alternative tests to catch drug use that
urine tests may miss because of masking agents or because an employee took
the drugs weeks earlier.

FCC Chief Wants Crackdown on Airwaves Obscenity

Bono's On-Air Comment Stirs Cry for Increased Broadcaster Fines


WASHINGTON (CNN) -- FCC Commissioner Michael Powell said Wednesday he
is calling for a dramatic increase in fines for broadcasters that
allow the "F-word" and other obscenities on the air.

"Denmark Enclave Tears Down Hashish Stands"

COPENHAGEN, Denmark - Residents who openly bought and sold hashish at a
famous hippie enclave in Copenhagen abruptly demolished their booths on
Sunday, trying to head off a government crackdown on illegal drug sales.

nolympics writes:

This from AFP; readers will remember the German greens' u-turn on nuclear power a couple of years ago, accepting that it too is here to stay.

"German Greens Roll Over on GM Food"

BERLIN: Germany is drawing up a law to regulate cultivation of bio-engineered crops, Consumer Minister Renate Kuenast said, admitting that the controversial technology was here to stay.

Kuenast, a member of the pro-enviromentalist Greens party, said the government saw no consumer health risks in genetically modified (GM) foods.

"With or without a law, bio-technology is on the market," she told a press conference.

The law would effectively put into action existing EU directives on exactly what can be grown, where and under what conditions, and on labelling.

Germany, where the pro-environmentalist Greens are a part of the governing coalition, has long been seen as among the countries most sceptical about the technology.

Kuenast said the law would set clear rules and responsibilities on growing bio-crops and offer protection to those farmers whose non-GM produce might be affected by accidental contamination.

Clear labelling would also increase consumer choice by informing them about exactly what they were buying.

She said the bill, to be approved by the cabinet in February, was "a great success for consumers and farmers" after months of negotiations.

Kuenast said ground rules were needed for the cultivation of GM crops in Germany because of the growing use of bio-technology worldwide. She warned of a danger of "creeping infiltration" of such foodstuffs into the country without any labelling if no action is taken.

The law stipulates that farmers growing GM crops must protect neighbouring farmers growing non-GM produce, such as by erecting hedge barriers to prevent cross-pollination.

Compensation would be paid in case of accidental contamination.

Local registers would list all bio-crop producers, who would not be allowed to plant the seeds in or near ecologically sensitive areas.

"The law is a breakthrough. Personally I'm very pleased with this success. For the first time, it will give consumers freedom of choice and farmers will have safe guidelines," she told Monday's issue of the Berliner Zeitung daily.

The European Commission is expected later this year to lift a four-year ban on the import of GM sweet corn, seen as a test case that could pave the way for the authorisation of new GM produce.

Opponents of GM technology say it is being pushed by big corporations with little knowledge about the long-term impact on health and the environment.

Advocates argue that the novel crops could greatly increase yields and help alleviate global hunger, particularly if GM strains could be developed to cope with climate change.

hydrarchist writes
:
From A.M and F. in Rome.

The EU meets Laborary Italy: on incendiary devices and mysterious acronyms.

The European Union reveals itself so fragile as to be shaken after four or five incendiary packets arrive at the modern offices and luxury homes of heads of institutions.

No-one was injured but its more than enough to howl about 'terrorism' which for the first time 'threatens European integration". The police forces of several countries are now co-organizing the investigation of so-called "anarcho-insurrectionalists". In Italy the hunt begins yet again. The government even floats a further extension of the law on subversive association (270 bis) and the police centralize the investigation as already occurred in the case of the Red Brigades. Bologna is at the epicenter because it was there that on December 21st two containers exploded in a bin under Romano Prodi's house, and it from there - according to the postage stamps - that the packages to Prodi, the banker Trichet in Frankfurt, the headquarters of Europol and Eurojust in Ajax, various European Parliamentarians in Brussels and in Great Britain were sent. During the first days dozens of searches were carried out in Bologna and the Appenine border between Toscany and Emilia, but to no avail.

Punkerslut writes:

America: Police State Incorporated

By Punkerslut

[Author's Note: Written on Friday, June 27, 2003.]
Dedication...
To my street crew...
Jeff Stewart, Pockets, Humble, Twitch, Stray, Skittles, Bear, Beast, and Johnny and Heather...
Introduction

        Unlike many of my other works, this piece is not about theory or ideology. It does not discuss evidence, or reasoning, or logic, as to the ideas that I believe about society. Rather, it is a confession, of the things I have witnessed, as I was a homeless person. There is some discussion of ideology and beliefs in the following pages. But, it must be understood that the topic of this paper is what I had personally witnessed while being homeless. The location of this was in southern Louisiana, in and around New Orleans (other towns include Metairie and Gretna). The time frame of this is December to March, including Mardi Gras ("Fat Tuesday"). And now, I tell my story...

"Professors at War:

Searching for Dissent at the MLA"

Scott Jaschik, Boston Globe

"Why are you headed to San Diego?" asked the man next to me on the plane. "I'm going to a meeting of English professors to hear what they have to say about the war with Iraq," I replied.


"English professors? On the war?" The man smirked. "I can't imagine what they would have to say."


Plenty, it turns out. This past week, about 8,000 professors and graduate students gathered here for the annual meeting of the Modern Language Association. Most came for job interviews, to catch up with old friends, and to attend some of the 763 panels of scholars. But among the panels on topics ranging from Hawthorne to Asian cinema to "The Aesthetics of Trash" were a surprising number of sessions dealing with the war in Iraq, terrorism, patriotism, and American foreign policy.

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