Russia does not have a functioning criminal justice system at all, in the sense of a trial mechanism aimed at determining innocence or guilt. Exactly as in Uzbekistan, the conviction rate in criminal trials is over 99%. If the prosecutors, who are inextricably an arm of the executive government, want to send you to jail, there is absolutely no judicial system to protect you. The judges are purely there for show.
When critics of Putin like Alexei Navalny are convicted, therefore, we have absolutely no reassurance that the motivation behind the prosecution or the assessment of guilt was genuine. Which is not to say that Navalny is innocent; I am in no position to judge. People are complex. I sacrificed my own pretty decent career to the cause of human rights, but in my personal and family life I was by no means the most moral of individuals. I see no reason for it to be impossible that all of Navalny’s excellent political work did not co-exist with a fatal weakness. But his criticisms of Putin made him a marked man, who the state was out to get, and the most probable explanation – especially as prosecutors had looked at the allegations before and decided not to proceed – is that he is suffering for his criticisms of the President rather than a genuine offence.
It fascinates me that the Western media view the previous decision by the prosecutors not to proceed as evidence the case is politically motivated against Navalny; but fail to draw the same conclusion from precisely the same circumstance in the Assange case.
David Ward MP has not been sent to jail. He has however had the Lib Dem whip removed, which under Clegg’s leadership perhaps he ought to consider an honour. It is rather a commonplace sentiment that it is a terribly sad thing, that their community having suffered dreadfully in the Holocaust, the European Jews involved in founding the state of Israel went on themselves to inflict terrible pain and devastation on the Palestinians in the Nakba. Both the Holocaust and the Nakba were horrific events of human suffering. For this not startling observation, David Ward is removed from the Liberal Democrats. He also stated that, with its ever increasing number of racially specific laws, its walls and racially restricted roads, Israel is becoming an apartheid state. That is so commonplace even Sky News’ security correspondent Sam Kiley said it a few months ago, without repercussion. In Russia you cannot say Putin is corrupt; in the UK you cannot say Israeli state policy is malign. Neither national state can claim to uphold freedom of speech. Meanwhile, of course, David Cameron announces plans to place filters on the internet access of all UK households.
In the United States, the House of Representatives failed by just 12 votes to make illegal the mass snooping by the NSA which was not widely publicised until Edward Snowden’s revelations. What Snowden said was so important that almost half the country’s legislators wished to act on his information. Yet the executive wish to pursue him and remove all his freedom for the rest of his life, as they are doing to Bradley Manning for Manning’s exposure of war crimes and extreme duplicity.
Around this complex of issues and the persons of Manning, Navalny, Snowden and Assange there is a kind of new ideological competition between the governments of Russia, the US and UK as to which is truly promoting the values of human freedom. The answer is none of them are. All these states are, largely in reaction to the liberating possibilities of the internet, promoting a concerted attack on freedom of speech and liberty of thought.
States are the enemy. We are the people.
Phil – “I really didn’t intend to misrepresent you I just want you to stop killing kittens with your hate mongering.”
I’ve found other ways to kill kittens, Phil.
A Public Awareness Message –
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/1/11/God-kills-kitten.jpg
“I’ve found other ways to kill kittens, Phil.”
So it could be the RSPCA lobbying for filtering of the internet.
I’d assumed it was one of the charities for the blind.
Craig, you may be interested in a book by James Patrick, The rest is silence. It is about Tessa May, Tom Winsor and G4S and how they are all interwoven in the privatisation of the police service. May her husband and Winsor have financial links that should be exposed.
James is a serving police officer with the Metropolitan police. He is under investigation by the Mets professional standards in relation to the content of the book. The content of which certain individuals don’t want exposed.
Jemand – Censorship Improves History 28 Jul, 2013 – 2:15 pm
For every example of conflict there is an example of cooperation, but conflict makes it on tv. Which is sort of the point.
No one’s denying competiton and conflict. Just that our mainstream culture disproportionately emphasises competition over cooperation for ideological reasons.
New perspective video of Hastings crash. What do you think? One explosion or two?
http://whowhatwhy.com/2013/07/28/the-crash-video/
@ Jemand :
“but my comment was directed towards the nonsensical implication in Someone’s comment that Muslims are demonstrably more generous people than others.”
____________
Well, you’ll be happy to hear that I, at least, understood what your point was.
I find interesting the (delicate? embarrassed?) silence when it transpired that most of the charity from Muslims went to Muslim causes and to promote Islam.
Nothing wrong with that, of course, but I can imagine the sneers and howls of outrage if someone were to point out that most of Jewish charity work is directed towards Jewish causes. Indeed, poeple have alluded to this on various threads of this blog and kindly supplied their own sneers and howls of outrage justr in case. 🙂
You just need a laptop….
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-23443215
Oh shit. Planes, trains and automobiles.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2380245/Researchers-major-GPS-flaw-allow-terrorists-hackers-hijack-commercial-ships-planes.html
Ben Franklin -Machine Gun Preacher (unleaded version) 28 Jul, 2013 – 4:40 pm
The two research projects discussed on that link pretty much remove any doubt that cars can be hacked. Now all you need is a motive and you’ve found your killer(s).
Did you review the video, Phil?
“You just need a laptop….”
Then you need to plug it into someone’s car and sit in the back seat without them noticing.
You’ve met Navalny. Now meet Aleksandr Buzgalin.
http://www.therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=10470&updaterx=2013-07-26+22%3A46%3A53
Fred 28 Jul, 2013 – 5:00 pm
“Then you need to plug it into someone’s car and sit in the back seat without them noticing.”
Ben’s BBC link discussed that this research, to take control of vehicle functions, was built to complement previous research which gained remote access. Maybe someone is combining the two as we talk.
Fred; There have been remotely-controlled model airplanes for decades. Commercial flights fly-by-wire. Pilots are just there to keep the passengers comfortable. You don’t see any remote-joystick capability on a car?
“The two research projects discussed on that link pretty much remove any doubt that cars can be hacked. Now all you need is a motive and you’ve found your killer(s).”
Of course cars can be hacked, I’ve hacked them myself, lots of people have, it’s never been any secret, the equipment has been for sale on ebay for years.
Here, a step by step guide, spend 10 quid and hack your car.
http://theksmith.com/technology/hack-vehicle-bus-cheap-easy-part-1/
Oh sure. Now that the mobsters have culled their goods.
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/cyprus-lenders-set-bank-cyprus-104408907.html
“NICOSIA (Reuters) – Cyprus and its international lenders have agreed to convert 47.5 percent of deposits exceeding 100,000 euros in Bank of Cyprus to equity to recapitalize it, banking sources said on Sunday.
Under a programme agreed between Cyprus and lenders in March, large depositors in Bank of Cyprus were earmarked to pay for the recapitalisation of the bank. Authorities initially converted 37.5 percent of deposits exceeding 100,000 euros into equity, and held an additional 22.5 percent as a buffer in the event of further needs.
“There was an agreement concluding at a final figure of 47.5 percent this morning,” a source close to consultations told Reuters.”
“One explosion or two?”
No idea. Can’t tell.
“a final figure of 47.5 percent”
Bail ins, the new bail out. The laws are being put in place:
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/05/20/us-eu-banks-idUSBRE94J0AC20130520
@Ben
Take a look at:
http://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2013/06/work-for-the-un/comment-page-2/#comment-413666
That’s me saying it could be done before the first news report on the subject.
It isn’t rocket science, it isn’t new, it isn’t a secret why all the hype?
Fred; Do you have any opinions on the video? I have looked at many collisions on Youtube which show even slower speeds can result in a fireball. Since the tranny was found some 130 feet away it’s possible the fuel line being torn asunder would precipitate a fire, but some have speculated that for the trans to be carried that far the car would have to travel some 225 mph. My observation of the speed appears to be over 100, but not 225 which would be impossible even for the Benz.
Too many coincidences.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/07/27/us-hacker-death-idUSBRE96P0K120130727
“Do you have any opinions on the video?”
I don’t think it’s possible to ascertain much from the video, a car goes past and it crashes.
I think there is a strong possibility he was whacked but that it is by no means certain.
I believe in conspiracy theories, I’m just highly dubious of the people who believe all of them and the people who will believe in non.
“But I’m not here to speak ill of the dead. I’m here to state that I’ve seen dozens of cars hit walls and stuff at high speeds and the number of them that I have observed to eject their powertrains and immediately catch massive fire is, um, ah, zero.
Modern cars are very good at not catching fire in accidents. The Mercedes-Benz C-Class, which is an evolutionary design from a company known for sweating the safety details over and above the Euro NCAP requirements, should be leading the pack in the not-catching-on-fire category.”
http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com/2013/06/famed-non-automotive-journalist-michael-hastings-turns-a-c250-into-a-bomb/
Three other cases where engines have been ejected from cars found in about as many seconds.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iMVDWs5tUY4
http://jalopnik.com/5907068/this-shelby-gt500-crashed-so-hard-its-engine-detached-and-hit-another-car
http://www.thewestonforum.com/4561/news-alert-norwalk-woman-charged-with-negligent-homicide-in-weston-car-crash/
Three seconds more to get a fire with that ejected engine, Kempe.
A couple of Mercs that have burst into flames.
http://www.kentonline.co.uk/gravesend_messenger/news/car-fire-at-shopping-centre-3773/
http://www.getsurrey.co.uk/news/local-news/m25-gridlock-after-mercedes-bursts-4720565
Cars do occasionally burst into flames after an accident whether the engine is ejected or not. Having the engine fly out and rip the fuel lines off would appear to make it more likely although by no means a certainty.
Proving that something CAN be done is very different from proving that it WAS done. Any evidence that Hasting’s car was actually hacked?
” Any evidence that Hasting’s car was actually hacked?”
None. But use your counter-intuitive research skills to give an explanation as to why so many intrusive journalists have died mysterious deaths with evidence collected from authorities similarly disposed to conspiracy theory.
http://editorials.voa.gov/content/mysterious-death-of-journalist–135699988/1482874.html
http://www.osw.waw.pl/en/publikacje/eastweek/2010-09-09/mysterious-death-a-belarusian-journalist
http://barryjenningsmystery.blogspot.com/
http://en.rsf.org/guatemala-mystery-death-of-journalist-found-25-01-2008,25215.html
http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/journalists-death-shrouded-in-mystery/article3689904.ece
Israel Agrees Release Of Palestinian Prisoners
The renewal of Middle East peace talks moves a step closer as Israel agrees the release of 104 Palestinian prisoners.http://news.sky.com/story/1121435/israel-agrees-release-of-palestinian-prisoners
~~
Compare that number, 104, to the thousands detailed below.
Statistics on Palestinians in the custody of the Israeli security forces.
Updated: 25 Jul 2013
At the end of June 2013, some 4,827 Palestinian security detainees and prisoners were held in Israeli prisons, 409 of them from the Gaza Strip. An additional 1,267 Palestinians were held in Israel Prison Service facilities for being in Israel illegally, 24 of them from the Gaza Strip. The IPS considers these Palestinians – both detainees and prisoners – criminal offenders. A few dozen other Palestinians (we do not have precise figures) are held in IDF facilities for short periods of time. The following data were provided by the military and by the IPS.
+ graph
http://www.btselem.org/statistics/detainees_and_prisoners
http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/12506623-mysterious-death-of-22yearold-journalist-armando-montano-is-being-investigated
http://tribune.com.pk/story/367240/mystery-crime-journalist-found-dead-in-artists-dha-studio/
http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/did-he-jump-or-was-he-pushed/2007/03/06/1173166696138.html
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/greenslade/2009/jun/30/russia-press-freedom
I could go on, and on and on….