Image via WikipediaFrom Britain comes this latest piece of advice:
An extra helping of brandy butter may well prove to be a life saver. Doctors and scientists want to extract stem cells from our excess fat to keep on hand our own personal body repair kit. We're turning vehicular.
Seriously though, our flabbyhips and thighs could help the future treatment of many illnesses such as heart diseases,arthritis, motor neutron disease and diabetes.
Scientists say the beauty of human body fat it is, unlike embryos, is in plentiful supply and has does not raise any ethical concerns.
Malcolm Alison, professor of stem cell biological research at Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry, said recently. "Storing these cells is wothwhile because scientists are showing these are very versatile cells and it is best to use your own cells(for the treatment)."
He said people should store the cells before they become ill, because it could avoid any delay, for acute liver failure for instance, it could be days to grow and extract cells the old way.
Professor Alisonis carrying out research to convert stem cells from body fat into insulin- producing cells to treat diabetes.
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Monday, December 20, 2010
Information, disinformation and changing the rules...
Information, disinformation and changing the rules
At first glance, ‘Cablegate’ – the mass leaking of US embassy cables to five of the world’s newspapers, including the Guardian here in the UK – might seem a bit of a disappointment to the conspiracy theorist, laying bare the unsurprising duplicity (and bitchiness, one might add) of diplomacy but revealing nothing of grand-scale world-domination plots or evil puppet-masters behind the operations of international diplomacy. The US government's heavy-handed response, however, has provided plenty of grist to the conspiracy mill, while the escalating war between secrecy and transparency must have implications for conspiracy theory’s future.
So far, Julian Assange and WikiLeaks have been broadly supported by conspiracy theorists – support that the arrest of Assange and apparent pressure on WikiLeaks from the US government is likely to encourage. WikiLeaks has been applauded on conspiracy forums as a paragon of disclosure and a shining example to the cowardly US media: as one poster on rense.com put it: “The American media is a whore, whereas the courageous blood of warriors runs through WikiLeaks’ veins.”
But WikiLeaks is not above suspicion. There were stirrings after the release of the Afghan war logs, which, posters suggested, was a disinformation campaign meant to hide the involvement of the US and UK in drug smuggling; or else it was a covert attack on Pakistan to please India and Israel. Now with the release of the embassy cables, it is Israel that is again drawing the attention of suspicious minds. It's a Mossad plot, runs the argument, to make Iran look like the bad guy, so advancing the clash of civilisations scenario. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad himself blames the US for the release of the cables, claiming it’s all a ploy to undermine him. The idea is gaining credence on conspiracy forums. Users point to the cables’ pro-American tone (apparently oblivious to the fact that they were written by American diplomats), and speculate that the 'leak' is in fact a false flag operation à la 9/11, a pretext either for bringing forward an imminent war on Islam or curtailing freedom of speech. In a neat think-twist beloved by conspiracy theorists everywhere, further evidence for this comes from the fact that the leak was allowed to happen: Washington is too clever and powerful to have been outwitted by WikiLeaks; the very fact of disclosure proves that disclosure to be false. [1] Out on the wilder fringes of conspiracydom, more exotic theories speculate that the Russians, George Soros, demons or aliens are really behind the whole affair.
But while many conspiracy theorists might support Assange, he has made clear his contempt for them, saying “Many weirdos email us about UFOs or how they discovered that they were the antichrist while talking with their ex-wife at a garden party over a pot-plant.” And this despite Assange sharing similar character traits (paranoia, self-righteousness, a conviction of his own unique intelligence, individual-against-the-system rhetoric) [2] and having as an ultimate goal the dissolution of all conspiracies.
This one-time hacker isn’t simply a freedom of information activist, though: He wants to reorganise society and speaks of “radically shifting regime behaviour”. And while identifying his primary targets as oppressive regimes such as those in China and Russia, he has also said that exposing secrets could “bring down many administrations that rely on concealing reality – including the US administration”. Many commentators have argued that the material Assange has chosen to leak reveals, in fact, an openly anti-US agenda.
Where Assange differs from many other conspiracy theorists is in seeing the operation of the state – any state – as, by definition, a conspiracy: states, along with big business, constitute conspiratorial institutional hierarchies, or “patronage networks”. Laying out his philosophy in two 2006 tracts, “Conspiracy as Governance” and “State and Terrorist Conspiracies”, Assange wrote: “Authoritarian regimes give rise to forces which oppose them by pushing against the individual and collective will to freedom, truth and self realization. Plans which assist authoritarian rule, once discovered, induce resistance. Hence these plans are concealed by successful authoritarian powers. This is enough to define their behaviour as conspiratorial.” He explains such conspiracies as being predicated on the communication links between members; disrupt these links, he says, and you will induce fear and paranoia, forcing the organisation to turn in on itself, making communication less effective – meaning it is less able to think or conspire and thus hold on to power. “If total conspiratorial power is zero, there is no information flow between the conspirators and hence no conspiracy.” Secretive and unjust organisations are to be made more secretive and unjust in order that they might implode: “When we look at an authoritarian conspiracy as a whole, we see a system of interacting organs, a beast with arteries and veins whose blood may be thickened and slowed until it falls, stupefied; unable to sufficiently comprehend and control the forces in its environment.”
Like many anarchists, Assange has been less forthcoming about exactly what would replace the current system. His idea seems to be of a collection of individuals, each free to experience emotions and enjoy full self-actualisation. [3] Ironically, it would seem that this most tech-savvy and plugged-in of men would like this to happen in a Rousseauesque rural idyll. As he wrote on his personal website, iq.org: “I’d take a deep book, a backpack of food and a tent and go walking for three months along the .au or .nzdecalibrate by disconnecting behaviour and reward and failing to provide the sense data that our biological mental and physical structures have evolved to require.”
The contradictions of Assange’s position have not gone unremarked. His own organisation is highly secretive and depends on encrypted channels of communication between individuals. The lack of transparency of WikiLeaks’ own funding has also raised eyebrows, not least those of John Young, who set up document-leaking site Cryptome in 1996 and helped found WikiLeaks before leaving over concerns about its hubris, size, and the money if was seeking to raise (he is still broadly supportive of the site, despite remarks comparing it to a cult, government or spy organisation which were interpreted by the more conspiracy-minded as clear proof of WikiLeaks being a CIA-front).
WikiLeaks, one might argue, enjoys just the kind of power without accountability of which Assange is so critical. His attempts to cut the communication links of his enemies could themselves be seen as a form of censorship. Assange has argued that the ends justify the means – that he and WikiLeaks members might get “blood on our hands” from publishing, for example, a document about electromagnetic devices used by soldiers to prevent IEDs from being triggered, but that the ultimate goal makes that a price worth paying. To some, this makes him as morally compromised as those he’d like to expose, and his own authoritarian style, control freakery and grandstanding seem out of line with his ideological pronouncements and the ethos of the hacker community from which he emerged.
Still, while not everyone agrees with his personal style and subversive ambitions, he has certainly fired up the freedom of information debate. As we go to press, it seems no one is quite sure whether, legally speaking, the leaking of secrets in this manner is wrong. Assange himself, of course, is in no doubt. In 2008, after lawyers demanded that WikiLeaks take down the Scientology manuals it had posted online, Assange retorted: "WikiLeaks will not comply with legally abusive requests from Scientology any more than WikiLeaks has complied with similar demands from Swiss banks, Russian offshore stem-cell centers, former African kleptocrats, or the Pentagon."
As the Justice Department desperately tries to put together a case against Assange, an infowar is raging in cyberspace. Whether under the direct control of Washington or not (there is, after all, the First Amendement to consider), forces are conspiring to take WikiLeaks down. Amazon, which hosted its servers in the US, withdrew services on the grounds that the site was breaking its terms and conditions, as did domain name firm EveryDNS; Visa, Mastcard and PayPal (who claimed to have acted under US government pressure, then retracted the statement) suspended all payments to the site. All of these companies subsequently suffered revenge attacks by hackers, in a series of DDoS (distributed denial-of-service) attacks orchestrated by the collective Anonymous under the moniker 'Operation: Payback'. Declaring “the major shitstorm has begun”, Anonymous (which describes itself as "an anonymous, decentralised movement that fights against censorship and copywrong") is also attacking the sites of other assorted WikiLeaks ‘enemies’, including Joe Lieberman and Sarah Palin, and it threatened Twitter after suggestions, which Twitter denies, that #wikileaks was being prevented from trending. WikiLeaks has itself been bombarded with DDoS attacks, apparently by hackers favourable to the cause of the US government. WikiLeaks will be incredibly hard, however, to take down permanently, largely because of the complexity of its infrastructure. It has its content on many servers and hundreds of domain names; it is woven through the Internet, and where it has physical locations these are spread between different countries and frequently have to be traced back through third parties. There are also now hundreds of mirror sites, and an encrypted file released by WikiLeaks and containing all the embassy cables is now being furiously copied and shared via peer-to-peer networks like BitTorrent.
Even if Assange were to be silenced or WikiLeaks shut down, the genie is out of the bottle. Other document hosting sites – Cryptome, IndoLeaks, BalkanLeaks – already exist, and more will spring up to take WikiLeaks’s place. More widely, the ranks of those fighting for transparency are swelling: for instance, Peter Sunde (one of the founders of The Pirate Bay), is attempting to create a new root server to compete with ICANN, the system which controls the internet's domain name system and can take down domains considered to be breaking the law; Iceland has passed the Icelandic Modern Media Initiative (IMMI), which seeks to create a legal safe haven for journalists by combining all the source-protection, freedom of information and transparency laws from around the world.
This is a war about secrecy in an Internet age: is secrecy desirable, and if so, is it possible? Who wins the war is of great moment to the conspiracy theorist. If the forces for concealment triumph, increasingly lurid conspiracies will flourish, even if hounded to the edges of the net. But Assange’s focus is not on what is revealed so much as on the process of revealing; and if the movement for transparency comes out on top, the traditional conspiracy theorist may have to choose between joining in the practical fight for disclosure or clinging to pet theories in the face of mounting lack of evidence and becoming an irrelevance.
In that case, the Internet, commonly held to have been a boon to conspiracy theory, could become, in some senses, the agent of its collapse. The other possibility is that a growing avalanche of leaks eventually exposes the existence of some nefarious New World Order scheme to take over the world, proving the conspiracy theorists to have been right all along…
Notes
1 This, for example, from gem_man on abovetopsecret, is typical of posts in this vein: "I'm also starting to think that Wikileaks is a disinfo agent of the US government. Disseminate some truth and sprinkle them with lies. The US government can easily embargo the Wikileaks website but they don't do it. The other purpose of Wikileaks is to give the US government some public support in suppressing the information flowing in the internet. They can always say that they have to regulate the internet because the internet is a threat to national security."
2 "When my eyes see phrases like 'right thing to do', 'appropriate' etc, I wonder what unstated world view I am meant to share. These phrases smell of that unusually putrid whip; social sanction. But every man has experienced social sanction as the direct manifestation of morons baying at the moon, nodding and calling the result consensus.”
3 From iq.org: "Do not be concerned about when one is to do good, who defines good, etc. Act in the way you do because to do otherwise would [to be] at odds with yourself. Being on a path true to your character carries with it a state of flow, where the thoughts about your next step come upon waking, unbidden, but welcome."
Sources
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-11928899
rense.com
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/08/world/08leak.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2010/dec/08/paypal-us-pressure-wikileaks-mastercard
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/06/07/100607fa_fact_khatchadourian?current
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/blog/2010/dec/03/julian-assange-wikileaks
http://iq.org/conspiracies.pdf
http://web.archive.org/web/20070110200827/
http://iq.org/conspiracies.pdf
http://zunguzungu.wordpress.com/2010/11/29/julian-assange-and-the-computer-conspiracy-%E2%80%9Cto-destroy-this-invisible-government%E2%80%9D/ abovetopsecret.com
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/12/columbia-wikileaks-policy/
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn19816-info-pirates-seek-an-alternative-internet.html
http://catastrophist.wordpress.com/2010/08/14/john-young-internet-vast-spying-machine/
http://catastrophist.wordpress.com/2010/07/29/wikileaks-internal-dissent/
http://www.techeye.net/internet/wau-holland-foundation-sheds-light-on-wikileaks-donations
http://news.cnet.com/8301-31921_3-20011106-281.html
http://blather.net/zeitgeist/archives/2010/04/cryptome_definitively_supports.html
http://blogs.forbes.com/andygreenberg/2010/11/29/wikileaks-julian-assange-wants-to-spill-your-corporate-secrets/
http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread634966/pg1
http://web.archive.org/web/20071020051936/
http://iq.org/
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/crime/news/article.cfm?c_id=30&objectid=10692956
http://www.aolnews.com/2010/12/16/weird-offbeat-and-funny-news-pictures-photos/
So far, Julian Assange and WikiLeaks have been broadly supported by conspiracy theorists – support that the arrest of Assange and apparent pressure on WikiLeaks from the US government is likely to encourage. WikiLeaks has been applauded on conspiracy forums as a paragon of disclosure and a shining example to the cowardly US media: as one poster on rense.com put it: “The American media is a whore, whereas the courageous blood of warriors runs through WikiLeaks’ veins.”
But WikiLeaks is not above suspicion. There were stirrings after the release of the Afghan war logs, which, posters suggested, was a disinformation campaign meant to hide the involvement of the US and UK in drug smuggling; or else it was a covert attack on Pakistan to please India and Israel. Now with the release of the embassy cables, it is Israel that is again drawing the attention of suspicious minds. It's a Mossad plot, runs the argument, to make Iran look like the bad guy, so advancing the clash of civilisations scenario. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad himself blames the US for the release of the cables, claiming it’s all a ploy to undermine him. The idea is gaining credence on conspiracy forums. Users point to the cables’ pro-American tone (apparently oblivious to the fact that they were written by American diplomats), and speculate that the 'leak' is in fact a false flag operation à la 9/11, a pretext either for bringing forward an imminent war on Islam or curtailing freedom of speech. In a neat think-twist beloved by conspiracy theorists everywhere, further evidence for this comes from the fact that the leak was allowed to happen: Washington is too clever and powerful to have been outwitted by WikiLeaks; the very fact of disclosure proves that disclosure to be false. [1] Out on the wilder fringes of conspiracydom, more exotic theories speculate that the Russians, George Soros, demons or aliens are really behind the whole affair.
But while many conspiracy theorists might support Assange, he has made clear his contempt for them, saying “Many weirdos email us about UFOs or how they discovered that they were the antichrist while talking with their ex-wife at a garden party over a pot-plant.” And this despite Assange sharing similar character traits (paranoia, self-righteousness, a conviction of his own unique intelligence, individual-against-the-system rhetoric) [2] and having as an ultimate goal the dissolution of all conspiracies.
This one-time hacker isn’t simply a freedom of information activist, though: He wants to reorganise society and speaks of “radically shifting regime behaviour”. And while identifying his primary targets as oppressive regimes such as those in China and Russia, he has also said that exposing secrets could “bring down many administrations that rely on concealing reality – including the US administration”. Many commentators have argued that the material Assange has chosen to leak reveals, in fact, an openly anti-US agenda.
Where Assange differs from many other conspiracy theorists is in seeing the operation of the state – any state – as, by definition, a conspiracy: states, along with big business, constitute conspiratorial institutional hierarchies, or “patronage networks”. Laying out his philosophy in two 2006 tracts, “Conspiracy as Governance” and “State and Terrorist Conspiracies”, Assange wrote: “Authoritarian regimes give rise to forces which oppose them by pushing against the individual and collective will to freedom, truth and self realization. Plans which assist authoritarian rule, once discovered, induce resistance. Hence these plans are concealed by successful authoritarian powers. This is enough to define their behaviour as conspiratorial.” He explains such conspiracies as being predicated on the communication links between members; disrupt these links, he says, and you will induce fear and paranoia, forcing the organisation to turn in on itself, making communication less effective – meaning it is less able to think or conspire and thus hold on to power. “If total conspiratorial power is zero, there is no information flow between the conspirators and hence no conspiracy.” Secretive and unjust organisations are to be made more secretive and unjust in order that they might implode: “When we look at an authoritarian conspiracy as a whole, we see a system of interacting organs, a beast with arteries and veins whose blood may be thickened and slowed until it falls, stupefied; unable to sufficiently comprehend and control the forces in its environment.”
Like many anarchists, Assange has been less forthcoming about exactly what would replace the current system. His idea seems to be of a collection of individuals, each free to experience emotions and enjoy full self-actualisation. [3] Ironically, it would seem that this most tech-savvy and plugged-in of men would like this to happen in a Rousseauesque rural idyll. As he wrote on his personal website, iq.org: “I’d take a deep book, a backpack of food and a tent and go walking for three months along the .au or .nzdecalibrate by disconnecting behaviour and reward and failing to provide the sense data that our biological mental and physical structures have evolved to require.”
The contradictions of Assange’s position have not gone unremarked. His own organisation is highly secretive and depends on encrypted channels of communication between individuals. The lack of transparency of WikiLeaks’ own funding has also raised eyebrows, not least those of John Young, who set up document-leaking site Cryptome in 1996 and helped found WikiLeaks before leaving over concerns about its hubris, size, and the money if was seeking to raise (he is still broadly supportive of the site, despite remarks comparing it to a cult, government or spy organisation which were interpreted by the more conspiracy-minded as clear proof of WikiLeaks being a CIA-front).
WikiLeaks, one might argue, enjoys just the kind of power without accountability of which Assange is so critical. His attempts to cut the communication links of his enemies could themselves be seen as a form of censorship. Assange has argued that the ends justify the means – that he and WikiLeaks members might get “blood on our hands” from publishing, for example, a document about electromagnetic devices used by soldiers to prevent IEDs from being triggered, but that the ultimate goal makes that a price worth paying. To some, this makes him as morally compromised as those he’d like to expose, and his own authoritarian style, control freakery and grandstanding seem out of line with his ideological pronouncements and the ethos of the hacker community from which he emerged.
Still, while not everyone agrees with his personal style and subversive ambitions, he has certainly fired up the freedom of information debate. As we go to press, it seems no one is quite sure whether, legally speaking, the leaking of secrets in this manner is wrong. Assange himself, of course, is in no doubt. In 2008, after lawyers demanded that WikiLeaks take down the Scientology manuals it had posted online, Assange retorted: "WikiLeaks will not comply with legally abusive requests from Scientology any more than WikiLeaks has complied with similar demands from Swiss banks, Russian offshore stem-cell centers, former African kleptocrats, or the Pentagon."
As the Justice Department desperately tries to put together a case against Assange, an infowar is raging in cyberspace. Whether under the direct control of Washington or not (there is, after all, the First Amendement to consider), forces are conspiring to take WikiLeaks down. Amazon, which hosted its servers in the US, withdrew services on the grounds that the site was breaking its terms and conditions, as did domain name firm EveryDNS; Visa, Mastcard and PayPal (who claimed to have acted under US government pressure, then retracted the statement) suspended all payments to the site. All of these companies subsequently suffered revenge attacks by hackers, in a series of DDoS (distributed denial-of-service) attacks orchestrated by the collective Anonymous under the moniker 'Operation: Payback'. Declaring “the major shitstorm has begun”, Anonymous (which describes itself as "an anonymous, decentralised movement that fights against censorship and copywrong") is also attacking the sites of other assorted WikiLeaks ‘enemies’, including Joe Lieberman and Sarah Palin, and it threatened Twitter after suggestions, which Twitter denies, that #wikileaks was being prevented from trending. WikiLeaks has itself been bombarded with DDoS attacks, apparently by hackers favourable to the cause of the US government. WikiLeaks will be incredibly hard, however, to take down permanently, largely because of the complexity of its infrastructure. It has its content on many servers and hundreds of domain names; it is woven through the Internet, and where it has physical locations these are spread between different countries and frequently have to be traced back through third parties. There are also now hundreds of mirror sites, and an encrypted file released by WikiLeaks and containing all the embassy cables is now being furiously copied and shared via peer-to-peer networks like BitTorrent.
Even if Assange were to be silenced or WikiLeaks shut down, the genie is out of the bottle. Other document hosting sites – Cryptome, IndoLeaks, BalkanLeaks – already exist, and more will spring up to take WikiLeaks’s place. More widely, the ranks of those fighting for transparency are swelling: for instance, Peter Sunde (one of the founders of The Pirate Bay), is attempting to create a new root server to compete with ICANN, the system which controls the internet's domain name system and can take down domains considered to be breaking the law; Iceland has passed the Icelandic Modern Media Initiative (IMMI), which seeks to create a legal safe haven for journalists by combining all the source-protection, freedom of information and transparency laws from around the world.
This is a war about secrecy in an Internet age: is secrecy desirable, and if so, is it possible? Who wins the war is of great moment to the conspiracy theorist. If the forces for concealment triumph, increasingly lurid conspiracies will flourish, even if hounded to the edges of the net. But Assange’s focus is not on what is revealed so much as on the process of revealing; and if the movement for transparency comes out on top, the traditional conspiracy theorist may have to choose between joining in the practical fight for disclosure or clinging to pet theories in the face of mounting lack of evidence and becoming an irrelevance.
In that case, the Internet, commonly held to have been a boon to conspiracy theory, could become, in some senses, the agent of its collapse. The other possibility is that a growing avalanche of leaks eventually exposes the existence of some nefarious New World Order scheme to take over the world, proving the conspiracy theorists to have been right all along…
Notes
1 This, for example, from gem_man on abovetopsecret, is typical of posts in this vein: "I'm also starting to think that Wikileaks is a disinfo agent of the US government. Disseminate some truth and sprinkle them with lies. The US government can easily embargo the Wikileaks website but they don't do it. The other purpose of Wikileaks is to give the US government some public support in suppressing the information flowing in the internet. They can always say that they have to regulate the internet because the internet is a threat to national security."
2 "When my eyes see phrases like 'right thing to do', 'appropriate' etc, I wonder what unstated world view I am meant to share. These phrases smell of that unusually putrid whip; social sanction. But every man has experienced social sanction as the direct manifestation of morons baying at the moon, nodding and calling the result consensus.”
3 From iq.org: "Do not be concerned about when one is to do good, who defines good, etc. Act in the way you do because to do otherwise would [to be] at odds with yourself. Being on a path true to your character carries with it a state of flow, where the thoughts about your next step come upon waking, unbidden, but welcome."
Sources
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-11928899
rense.com
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/08/world/08leak.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2010/dec/08/paypal-us-pressure-wikileaks-mastercard
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/06/07/100607fa_fact_khatchadourian?current
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/blog/2010/dec/03/julian-assange-wikileaks
http://iq.org/conspiracies.pdf
http://web.archive.org/web/20070110200827/
http://iq.org/conspiracies.pdf
http://zunguzungu.wordpress.com/2010/11/29/julian-assange-and-the-computer-conspiracy-%E2%80%9Cto-destroy-this-invisible-government%E2%80%9D/ abovetopsecret.com
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/12/columbia-wikileaks-policy/
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn19816-info-pirates-seek-an-alternative-internet.html
http://catastrophist.wordpress.com/2010/08/14/john-young-internet-vast-spying-machine/
http://catastrophist.wordpress.com/2010/07/29/wikileaks-internal-dissent/
http://www.techeye.net/internet/wau-holland-foundation-sheds-light-on-wikileaks-donations
http://news.cnet.com/8301-31921_3-20011106-281.html
http://blather.net/zeitgeist/archives/2010/04/cryptome_definitively_supports.html
http://blogs.forbes.com/andygreenberg/2010/11/29/wikileaks-julian-assange-wants-to-spill-your-corporate-secrets/
http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread634966/pg1
http://web.archive.org/web/20071020051936/
http://iq.org/
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/crime/news/article.cfm?c_id=30&objectid=10692956
http://www.aolnews.com/2010/12/16/weird-offbeat-and-funny-news-pictures-photos/
Related articles
- Just what does Julian Assange want? | Theo Brainin (guardian.co.uk)
- Julian Assange Sweden Police Report Details Alleged Sexual Offenses (huffingtonpost.com)
- WikiLeaks boss Julian Assange's week in Sweden grows ever sleazier (dailymail.co.uk)
- "Conspiracy Theorists: Israel Is Behind WikiLeaks" and related posts (theyeshivaworld.com)
- WikiLeaks' Assange equates government with conspiracy (theglobeandmail.com)
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Accidental condom inhalation...
Image via Wikipedia
Accidental condom inhalation...
Arya CL, Gupta R, Arora VK.
Jaswant Rai Speciality Hospital, Meerut, India.
Abstract
Abstract
A 27-year-old lady presented with persistent cough, sputum and fever for the preceding six months. Inspite of trials with antibiotics and anti-tuberculosis treatment for the preceeding four months, her symptoms did not improve. A subsequent chest radiograph showed non-homogeneous collapse-consolidation of right upper lobe. Videobronchoscopy revealed an inverted bag like structure in right upper lobe bronchus and rigid bronchoscopic removal with biopsy forceps confirmed the presence of a condom. Detailed retrospective history also confirmed accidental inhalation of the condom during fellatio.
Acknowledgements: Rainyday Superstar/Buzz
Related articles
- NCBI ROFL: Accidental condom inhalation. | Discoblog (blogs.discovermagazine.com)
- Would You Be More Likely to Use 'Fashionable' Condoms? (thegloss.com)
- It's Like Super Mario Bros, But With A Condom [Video] (kotaku.com)
- Cost-Conscious Contraceptive Ads - Sir Richard's Condoms Prevent Parents with Dependents (GALLERY) (trendhunter.com)
- Analysis of retractions in PubMed (r-bloggers.com)
- Poll: Do Fancy Condoms Put You In The Mood For Sex? (crushable.com)
Monday, December 6, 2010
The real Odessa: Blind refugee led Israel to Eichmann...
Image via Wikipedia
Uki Goni, the Guardian's correspondent in Argentina, reveals in a new book the extraordinary truth behind the Nazi fugitive's capture
- The Guardian,
- Article history
For more than 40 years the world has believed that it was the Israeli secret service, Mossad, backed up by the Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal, which orchestrated the dramatic capture of Adolf Eichmann in Argentina, which led to his trial and execution. But the truth is far stranger than that. The man who burst the protective bubble around Eichmann, the organiser of the deportation of millions of Jews to Hitler's concentration camps and the most notorious Nazi to gain refuge in Argentina, was not an Israeli super-sleuth but a blind refugee from Nazi persecution who had arrived in Argentina in 1938. Lothar Hermann, who was half Jewish, was imprisoned in Dachau concentration camp in 1935-36 for his socialist activities. After the events of Kristallnacht he decided it was time to leave Germany. Some years after his arrival in Buenos Aires he lost his sight as a delayed result of the severe beatings he had received from the Gestapo in Dachau. Hermann, his wife and their beautiful young daughter Sylvia lived in the Olivos area of Buenos Aires as non-Jewish Germans. Sylvia became friendly with the Eichmann sons, in particular the eldest, Klaus, whom she apparently dated. Klaus Eichmann visited Sylvia's home on various occasions, and made strongly anti-semitic remarks, including his regret that the Nazis could not complete the extermination of the Jews, and added that his father had served in the war. Sylvia was never invited to the young man's home and was unaware that his father lived under the alias Klement, as Eichmann had insisted on his sons continuing to bear the real family name. Lost contact Some time later the Hermanns moved to Coronel Suarez, a town 300 miles from Buenos Aires, and lost contact with the Eichmanns. But in 1957 the name of Adolf Eichmann cropped up in newspaper reports of a Nazi trial in Frankfurt. It did not take long for Hermann to figure out that the man being mentioned was in all probability Klaus Eichmann's father. Hermann dutifully sent a letter to the Frankfurt judicial authorities alerting them to Eichmann's presence in Argentina. His letter fell into the hands of Fritz Bauer a state attorney general who later led the groundbreaking Auschwitz trials in 1963. Bauer sent Hermann a description of Eichmann and asked him to find out more details. The blind man and his daughter did as they were asked, travelling to Buenos Aires to try to discover Eichmann's exact address. Sylvia found the house quite quickly. A knock at the door was answered by Klaus's mother. "Is this the Eichmann home?" Sylvia asked. Suddenly a middle-aged man appeared at the door. Sylvia asked if Klaus was home. The man said he was working late. "Are you Herr Eichmann?" Sylvia asked innocently. The man did not answer but finally conceded that he was Klaus's father. Sylvia explained that she was a friend who was looking for him, and then said goodbye. Hermann and his daughter promptly sent off a new letter to Frankfurt positively identifying, according to Bauer's description, the former chief of "Jewish affairs", and giving his address as 4261 Chacabuco Street in Olivos. Bauer knew enough about the Nazi-riddled judicial system of his own country to realise that Eichmann would at once be alerted to any action against him by Germany. So in September 1957 he secretly informed Israel that he had received confidential information stating that Eichmann was living in Argentina. Mossad took a mild interest in Bauer's lead, sending Yoel Goren to Buenos Aires in January 1958. After a quick inspection of the middle-class Olivos neighbourhood he reported that it was impossible for an important Nazi to be living there. Bauer was not ready to give up so easily, however. By revealing Hermann's identity to Mossad he was able to convince the Israelis to send a second mission. An agent called Efraim Hofstetter visited the Hermanns and their daughter in Coronel Suarez. Hermann complained loudly that the information he had provided was sufficient to proceed with Eichmann's arrest, but Hofstetter said he needed more proof, such as a copy of Eichmann's Argentinian ID picture. He left Hermann $130 to cover expenses and gave him a US address to write to from then on. So it was that a blind man living 10 hours by train from Buenos Aires was left with the task of proving Eichmann's identity. It did not intimidate Hermann. He obtained the information that the house on Chacabuco Street was owned by an Austrian called Francisco Schmidt, and for a time he became convinced that Schmidt was Eichmann's alias, and sent off more letters with this mistaken hypothesis to the new address he was given. In Israel, meanwhile, the Mossad chiefs had lost all interest in the lead and the order was given for communication with Hermann to be gradually discontinued. Reward But Hermann was determined. Excited by a $10,000 reward announced in the newspapers by Tuviah Friedman of the Haifa Documentation Centre in Israel, he started letting more people in on his secret. In a letter to Friedman dated October 17 1959 he claimed to possess the "name and exact details" of Eichmann's Argentinian ID papers. On December 29, growing ever more impatient, he met the leader of Argentina's main Jewish organisation. Suddenly the number of people who knew of Eichmann's whereabouts had expanded way beyond a small group of Israeli agents. Still, nothing seemed to be happening. Fearful that his role in Eichmann's eventual capture was being minimised to cut him out of the reward, in March 1960 Hermann wrote an angry letter to Friedman. "It seems that you attach little value to the speedy conclusion of the matter or that you have no interest at all to arrest Eichmann," Hermann fumed. The rest of the story is well known. A special Mossad team was assembled and sent to Buenos Aires to kidnap Eichmann, who had meanwhile moved from middle class Olivos to a small house he had built for himself and his family in the desolate outskirts of San Fernando. Seeking his extradition was ruled out from the very start, after Germany's failed attempt to extradite Josef Mengele. Eichmann was ignominiously snatched on an earth road on May 11 1960 as he returned from work, and taken to a secret hiding place outside Buenos Aires. For 10 days he was kept blindfolded and handcuffed to a bed while Mossad decided how to get him out of Argentina. Finally, on May 21, Eichmann was disguised in the uniform of an El Al flight attendant and was bundled on to a plane to Tel Aviv. On May 23 the Israeli prime minister, David Ben Gurian, announced his capture to the world: "Eichmann is already in this country under arrest and will shortly be brought to trial." What he did not add was that a blind man who lived on a meagre pension in the middle of the pampas had achieved what seemed impossible. Not only had he single-handedly located a notorious Nazi criminal, he had also managed to galvanise a lethargic Mossad, which had shown decidedly little interest in pursuing the case. Israel was practically shamed into capturing Eichmann. Eichmann was found guilty in Jerusalem and sentenced to death by hanging. The execution was carried out on May 31 1962. His last words were: "Long live Germany, long live Argentina, long live Austria. I shall not forget them." Hermann's part in Eichmann's capture remained a closely guarded secret until 1971 when the Mossad director Isser Harel revealed it to the Israeli press. From Argentina Hermann began to bombard Friedman with furious letters demanding his reward. Finally, in July 1972, the Israeli prime minister Golda Meier settled the debt. Acknowledgements: This is an edited extract from The Real Odessa: How Peron Brought the Nazi War Criminals to Argentina, by Uki Goni, published by Granta Books at £20 http"//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ODESSA
http://greyfalcon.us/The Real Odessa.htm
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Thursday, December 2, 2010
The World Aids Day is celebrated on 1 December each year...
The World Aids day is celebrated on 1st December every year. It is dedicated to elevate the awareness of AIDS pandemic sources by spreading of HIV infectivity. It is ordinary to hold remembrance to respect persons who have expired from HIV/AIDS on this day. Health officials and Govt detect the event, often with forums or speeches on AIDS theme. Since 1995, the President of United States has created an official announcement on the World AIDS Day. Govt of other states have made similar announcement on this day.
This disease has killed above 25 million people between 1981 and 2007. About 33.2 million people universal live with HIV/AIDS as of 2007. It has become the most critical epidemic in the recorded history.
Read more::http://www.altiusdirectory.com/society/world-aids-day.php
This disease has killed above 25 million people between 1981 and 2007. About 33.2 million people universal live with HIV/AIDS as of 2007. It has become the most critical epidemic in the recorded history.
Read more::http://www.altiusdirectory.com/society/world-aids-day.php
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