Governments and commentators keen on promoting a war against Iran should be stridently opposed, not so much because of the threat to world peace, but because their reasons display a shocking lack of imagination.
The most common one is that Iran has "Weapons of Mass Destruction". How pathetic to pick the same excuse twice in a row. They should make it more interesting, by revealing evidence that Ahmadinejad has built a Terminator, or plans to fill the Strait of Hormuz with a giant Alka-Seltzer so the Persian Gulf fizzes over Kuwait.
912
Amnesty International has called on Israel to , who has been held since December without charge under Israel's infamous policy of 鈥渁dministrative detention鈥.
The call came after Adnan, near death, ended a 66-day hunger strike when Israel signed a deal on February 22 agreeing to release the 33-year-old father of two by April 17.
In the kabuki theatre of British parliamentary politics, great crimes do not happen and criminals go free.
It is theatre after all; the pirouettes matter, not actions taken at remove in distance and culture from their consequences. It is a secure arrangement guarded by cast and critics alike.
The farewell speech of one of the most artful, Tony Blair, had "a sense of moral conviction running through it", effused the television presenter Jon Snow, as if Blair's appeal to kabuki devotees was mystical. That he was a war criminal was irrelevant.
Len Cooper, the secretary of the Victorian Telecommunications Division of the Communications, Electrical and Plumbing Union, wrote to Victorian unions last August inviting them to take part in a discussion 鈥渁imed at leading to the formation of a campaign on the right to strike鈥.
The Victorian Trades Hall Council (VTHC) endorsed the campaign as a sub-committee of the hall on February 10. It committed to back a motion on the right to strike at the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) national congress, which takes place in Sydney in May.
The abridged statement below was initiated by the British Coalition of Resistance and signed by dozens of groups and individuals around the world 鈥 including Australia's . See for the list of signatories and to add your name.
* * *
Fifty-seven Spanish cities and towns came to a stop on February 19. Up to 2 million people marched in protest against the new labour 鈥渞eform鈥 of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's Popular Party (PP) government.
The marches brought together veterans of the struggle for union and worker rights under the Franco dictatorship, activists from the 1970s 鈥渢ransition to democracy鈥 and today鈥檚 indignados.
鈥淥ld鈥 slogans (鈥淚f you don鈥檛 fight, you lose鈥) mixed with new (鈥淭hey piss on us and say it鈥檚 raining鈥).
Ten thousand people mobilised in Dresden on February 18 to stop an annual march of European neo-Nazis.
A broad coalition of political parties, church groups, trade unions and other anti-fascist groups formed a united front campaign to stop the planned neo-Nazi march through peaceful, mass blockades.
Six days earlier, a group of more than 1000 neo-Nazis gathered in Dresden for a march supposedly to commemorate the innocent deaths caused by the 1945 bombing of Dresden by the Allied forces.
Powerful US free-market think tank The Heartland Institute is reeling after leaked internal documents were showing the powerful corporate interests behind its well-known campaign against climate science.
Desmogblog said the leaked documents 鈥渆xpose the heart of the climate denial machine鈥, which 鈥渞elies on huge corporate and foundation funding from US businesses鈥.
Will the Spanish economy benefit from Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy government鈥檚 anti-worker labour market reform?
The US response to the uprisings in the Arab world remains deeply hypocritical.
鈥淚t is time to stop the killing of Syrian citizens by their own government,鈥 US President Barack Obama said at a February 24 meeting in Tunis of the representatives of 60 countries, led by the Western powers and their Arab allies.
The group cynically called itself the 鈥淔riends of Syria鈥.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton took the opportunity to lash out at the US鈥檚 main global competitors, Russia and China.
Despite heavy police intimidation and media racism, the Nyoongar Tent Embassy at Matagarup, otherwise known as Heirisson Island in Perth, is still standing strong.
The Tent Embassy was founded by local Aboriginal people to voice dissent against a proposed deal with the state government that would include giving up native title rights.
The embassy is also about asserting Aboriginal sovereignty. Embassy participant Iva Hayward-Jackson told聽 91自拍论坛 Weekly聽 the embassy is about asserting Nyoongar sovereignty and protecting sacredness of Aboriginal culture.
German President Christian Wulff resigned on February 17 after prosecutors applied to have his presidential immunity stripped in a corruption scandal.
Wulff has been accused of having received kickbacks from businessmen, including a home loan of 500,000 euros (paid via an anonymous bank cheque) in 2008.
When German tabloid Bild threatened to publish the allegations, Wulff left voice messages on the editor's phone threatening "war".
- Previous page
- Page 2
- Next page