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Showing posts with label ecology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ecology. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 12

@dustcirclenews - 22 Free DOCUMENTARIES: Trading into Thin Air, My Brother the Islamist, Money and Life, Craig Venter: Designing Life, This is What Winning Looks Like, Young Kids; Hard Time, Shadows of Liberty, Inside the Klan, Money Lobby, Colour of War, Great Culling: Our Water, America's Medicated Kids, Spy Satellite Hunter, Sex & Death and the Gods, River of Waste: Factory Farms Truths, Codes of Gender, Tomorrow's World, Deportee Purgatory, Rise of the Superbugs, Unveiled and Lifted, Sext Up Kids, This "Illegal" American Life.


If the videos don't show up in the emails, they are viewable at: http://www.dustcircle.com

Trading on Thin Air

Trading on Thin Air explains the methods used by the financial oligarchy in the past to extract the wealth of the nation and shows how the same strategy is being used today to subvert a movement for conservation and sustainability and harness it in order to create the next big bubble.



















My Brother the Islamist

Barking, East London, patriotic crowds gather as a regiment of soldiers from the 1st Battalion of Royal Anglians return home from Afghanistan. The author of the documentary, Robb Leech, is there to see a soldier too.



















Money and Life

Money and Life is a passionate and inspirational essay-style documentary that asks a provocative question: can we see the economic crisis not as a disaster, but as a tremendous opportunity?



















Craig Venter: Designing life

Some regard him as the most important scientist since Darwin. But he himself is only a little more modest. For the first time now, he can actually design life in a computer, make the DNA software, and create new life forms that have never existed before.



















This Is What Winning Looks Like

This is a disturbing, new documentary about the ineptitude, drug abuse, sexual misconduct, and corruption of the Afghan security forces as well as the reduced role of US Marines due to the troop withdrawal.



















Young Kids, Hard Time

Behind every crime headline there is mountain of tragedy for everyone involved. Wabash Valley Correctional Facility in Southwestern Indiana is a vault for these headlines. Twenty one hundred prisoners locked up for everything from rape to murder.


















SHADOWS OF LIBERTY
Shadows of Liberty reveals the phenomenal truth behind the news media: censorship, cover-ups and corporate control. The documentary takes a journey through the darker corridors of the American media landscape, where global conglomerates exercise extraordinary political, social, and economic power.

INSIDE THE KLAN
The KKK has had a surge in popularity, mostly because of the US’s first black president. The Klan claim to have softened, but can an organisation racist to its core really be as benign as they make out?

THE MONEY LOBBY
They say money is the root of all evil. Well, nowhere is this more true than in US politics. The 2012 US presidential and congressional elections were the most expensive in history, costing six billion dollars.

COLOUR OF WAR
Colour of War is a very good documentary about WWII and how it affected life around the world between 1940 and 1945. The entire documentary is a collection of authentic images, all in colour, of which a lot have been previously unreleased. Some images can be quite shocking at times and no doubt leave you with a bitter impression on how horrible war can be. The commentator also reads out a lot of letters or diary fragments from people who lived or died during World War II. Knowing this, you might think that the documentary in a whole would loose coherence but it’s quite the opposite because even though “Colour of War” is mainly a collection of authentic images and letters it felt like everything fitted together very well.

THE GREAT CULLING: OUR WATER
The Great Culling of the human race already has begun. Covertly, insidiously, mercilessly, a global depopulation agenda has been launched. As this plays out, the vast majority of the human race will be removed from the gene pool. Genetically annihilated. Will you and your genetic lineage survive?


America’s Medicated Kids

In America’s Medicated Kids, Louis Theroux travels to one of America’s leading children’s psychiatric treatment centres, in Pennsylvania, to learn and understand what drives parents to put their kids on drugs.

The Man Who Hunts Spy Satellites

Thierry Legault is not your average amateur astronomer, inviting the kids over and pointing a dinky backyard telescope at the Big Dipper. He’s a renowned astrophotographer, painstakingly chronicling the orbits of planets, distant galaxies, spaceships, and—to the chagrin of the intelligence community—of the spy satellites we’re not supposed to see.

Sex, Death And The Gods

This BBC documentary focuses on the Devadasi young Indian girls denied the chance to marry after being ‘dedicated’ to a deity or temple. Many spend the remainder of their lives involved in prostitution despite laws which make the practice illegal.

A River of Waste: The Hazardous Truth About Factory Farms

A heart-stopping new documentary, A RIVER OF WASTE exposes a huge health and environmental scandal in our modern industrial system of meat and poultry production. Some scientists have gone so far as to call the condemned current factory farm practices as “mini Chernobyls.” In the U.S. and elsewhere, the meat and poultry industry is dominated by dangerous uses of arsenic, antibiotics, growth hormones and by the dumping of massive amounts of sewage in fragile waterways and environments. The film documents the vast catastrophic impact on the environment and public health as well as focuses on the individual lives damaged and destroyed.

The Codes of Gender

The Codes of Gender applies the late sociologist Erving Goffman’s ground-breaking analysis of advertising to the contemporary commercial landscape, showing how one of American popular culture’s most influential forms communicates normative ideas about masculinity and femininity, the relationship between gender and power, and the everyday performance of cultural norms.

Tomorrow’s World

Tomorrow’s World delves in to the world of invention, revealing the people and technologies set to transform all our lives. Liz Bonnin examines the conditions that are promising to make the 21st century a golden age of innovation and meets some of the world’s foremost visionaries, mavericks and dreamers.

Deportee Purgatory

Each year, more than 30 million people flow between the US and Mexico through the San Ysidro Port of Entry, the busiest land-border crossing in the world. Situated between San Diego and Tijuana, at one time the area around San Ysidro was a prime spot to cross illegally into the US. But in 1994, Operation Gatekeeper expanded the border wall and increased the number of checkpoints. With the more recent addition of unmanned drone patrols along the border, Tijuana has become one of the most fortified border points in the Americas. Border crossers have been forced to turn to alternative sites of crossing, such as the Sonoran Desert, where hundreds of people die each year.

Rise of the Superbugs

Antibiotics are the wonder drugs of modern medicine. They’ve allowed doctors to save and extend life by killing infection and enabling ground breaking surgery. But imagine a world where antibiotics don’t work – that would be a place dominated by superbugs, bacteria that don’t respond to antibiotics. Scientists say this would end many modern medical procedures and they claim the threat is greater than we realise. Rampant use of antibiotics coupled with an explosion in global travel has led to superbugs spreading worldwide. Rise of the Superbugs steps into the lab with leading experts on antibiotic resistance, and listen to shocking stories of the health implications. Let’s face up to the horror of antibiotic resistance before it’s too late.

Unveiled and Lifted

In the current anxiety concerning overpopulation, pollution, ecological imbalance, and the potential of disasters of nuclear fusion, it is only seldom recognized that governed nations have become self destroying institutions, paralyzed and bogged in their own complications, and suffocated beneath mountains of paper.

Sext Up Kids

In Sext Up Kids, teens and pre-teens show and tell what they are doing and why they are doing it. Experts reveal startling new research, tracking how the pressure to be sexy is changing teen and sexual behaviour in alarming ways, as “anal becomes the new oral.”

This (Illegal) American Life

From a small town in Oaxaca, Mexico, and from a kitchen table in East Los Angeles, from a flophouse in a coastal farming town, to a strip-mall in Phoenix, Arizona, these are snapshots of illegal immigration in America. It’s estimated that as many as 12 million people are living in United States illegally, but this story is about just two.

Friday, April 19

@dustcirclenews - 11 Free DOCUMENTARIES: Crash Course in Ecology, Solar Mamas, Unending War, Deconversion, Bipolar Living, DPRK, The Phase, Crossroads, Land Rush, Permaculture Design Introduction, American Juggalo


The Video-related content I send out will have a link to the website so you can view the videos, instead of seeing just a list: http://www.dustcircle.com
Crash Course: Ecology
Population ecology is the study of groups within a species that interact mostly with each other, and it examines how they live together in one geographic area to understand why these populations are different in one time and place than they are in another. How is that in any way useful to anyone ever?


















Solar Mamas
An inspiring film about one woman’s attempt to light up her world. Rafea is an uneducated Bedouin mother from the Jordanian desert.


















The Unending War
The US invasions and occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan after the September 11th incidents, under the name of war against terrorism, were the most costly wars in the history of the US which took a heavy tool of human lives and properties for the US, Iraq, and Afghanistan.


















Deconversion, Belief, and the Power of Silence
The author’s hope in making this documentary is that he can be, for one person, the person he never had in his life through the years of losing everything he believed in. It is OK to not be a Christian.


















Up/Down: Bipolar Living
In short, Up/Down is a personal analysis of bipolar disorder from those living with it. Bipolar disorder is just one of many mental illnesses that is still highly stigmatized in our culture today, and Up/Down could certainly be instrumental in changing that fact.


















DPRK: The Land of Whispers
North Korea lies somewhere between a 1930′s Soviet Union frozen in time and a dark, futuristic vision of society… as imagined back in the 70′s. Land of Whispers invites you to visit arguably the most unique and isolated travel destination in the world – not to criticize, but to observe and listen.


















The Phase
It’s an astounding coincidence: in the absolute majority of accounts of the supernatural, be they biblical miracles, UFOs or paranormal phenomena, the protagonist had been falling asleep or waking up at the crucial moment.


















Crossroads: Labor Pains of a New Worldview
Humanity has reached a crossroad. Our species, the species of human beings is coming to a place where we are deciding about ourselves. We are making a huge decision about “Who are we?” and “Who do we really choose to be?”


















Land Rush
In 2008, the world’s food system began to fall apart. However, threatened with hunger, rich countries have started buying up and leasing fertile tracts of the developing world.


















Introduction to Permaculture Design
Permaculture is a system for sustainable living on Earth that benefits all creatures and supplies all the needs of humanity. Present systems are failing miserably: resource depletion, water storage, degraded landscape, food shortage, climate change.


















American Juggalo
American Juggalo is a look at the often mocked and misunderstood subculture of Juggalos, hardcore Insane Clown Posse fans who meet once a year for four days at The Gathering of the Juggalos.

Monday, March 11

11.Mar.2013 - DOCUMENTARIES: Manchester's Homeless, Aliens of the Deep, Who Killed the Honey Bee? Man's World, Weight of Chains, Money as Debt, Cropsy, Under Our Skin.

Shelter: A Look at Manchester's Homeless
Manchester City Council state only 7 people sleep rough in the city. If they are sleeping in a bus shelter, that counts as a roof. With the number of people sleeping rough in the UK rising, this film take a look at the people that the council say don’t exist.


Aliens of the Deep
James Cameron journeys to some of the Earth’s deepest, most extreme and unknown environments in search of the strange and alien creatures that live there. Joining him is a team of young NASA scientists and marine biologists who consider how these life forms represent life we may one day find in outer space not only on distant planets orbiting distant stars, but also within our own solar system. Aliens of the Deep is the result of expeditions to several hydrothermal vent sites in the Atlantic and the Pacific. These are violent volcanic regions where new planet is literally being born and where the interaction between ocean and molten rock creates plumes of super-heated, chemically-charged water that serve as oases for animals unlike anything ever discovered. Six-foot tall worms with blood-red plumes and no stomach, blind white crabs, and a biomass of shrimp capable of “seeing” heat!


Who Killed the Honey Bee?
Bees are dying in their millions. It is an ecological crisis that threatens to bring global agriculture to a standstill. Introduced by Martha Kearney, this documentary explores the reasons behind the decline of bee colonies across the globe, investigating what might be at the root of this devastation.


It's a Man's World
Gang rape hit the headlines last year after the brutal attack of a woman on a bus in India’s capital, Delhi. But new research suggests that gang rape is a wider problem across Asia – with some of the highest recorded levels of violence against women in the world to be found within the Asia-Pacific region.


The Weight of Chains
“The Weight of Chains” is a Canadian documentary film that takes a critical look at the role that the US, NATO and the EU played in the tragic breakup of a once peaceful and prosperous European state – Yugoslavia. The film, bursting with rare stock footage never before seen by Western audiences, is a creative first-hand look at why the West intervened in the Yugoslav conflict, with an impressive roster of interviews with academics, diplomats, media personalities and ordinary citizens of the former Yugoslav republics.

Money as Debt
Money As Debt is a fast-paced & highly entertaining animated feature by artist & videographer, Paul Grignon. It explains today’s magically perverse DEBT-MONEY SYSTEM in terms that are easy to understand. This is a must see for anyone interested in the economy and how it works.


Cropsy
Realizing the urban legend of their youth has actually come true; two filmmakers delve into the mystery surrounding five missing children and the real-life boogeyman linked to their disappearances. Cropsey is an investigative-crime horror-documentary film, written and directed by Joshua Zeman and Barbara Brancaccio.













Under Our Skin
A real-life thriller, this shocking festival hit exposes the controversy surrounding chronic Lyme disease. Following the stories of individuals fighting for their lives, director Andy Abrahams Wilson reveals with beauty and horror a natural world out of balance and a human nature all too willing to put profits before patients.








Saturday, July 21

The Crisis of Civilization : Full Movie



The Doctrine Of Unlimited Growth
"Industrial Civilization Is Unsustainable"

"This civilization in its current form can not survive the 21st Century"
The Crisis of Civilization is a documentary feature film investigating how global crises like ecological disaster, financial meltdown, dwindling oil reserves, terrorism and food shortages are converging symptoms of a single, failed global system.

 Video Posted July 21, 2012



Directed by Dean Puckett
Animations by Lucca Benney

Based on the Book by Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed : 
http://crisisofcivilization.com/book/

Thursday, May 17

Imagine a Stadium

1



Imagine we were to assemble in one massive stadium everyone who favors changing societies to attain political, economic, and social justice for all. Everyone who wants to end war and poverty and begin civilization.
What views would this endlessly diverse assembly overwhelmingly share? 
  • Capitalism must be replaced. We need to produce and consume so that everyone has a fair influence in determining outcomes and everyone gets a fair share of the social product. The needs and desires of all, not the dictates of competition or advance of a few, should guide outcomes. All social and environmental costs and benefits should be accounted. We need economics without exploitation and alienation, economics without class rule.
  • Patriarchy must be replaced. We need to nurture and socialize the next generation, handle daily life arrangements, engage in sexual life, and generally interrelate across genders, ages, and preferences such that no groups are subordinated to any others. We need kinship without denial and denigration, kinship without sexist hierarchy. 
  • Racism and community hierarchies of all kinds must be replaced. We need communities to celebrate life, language, belief systems, and habits - whether national, religious, ethnic, or racial - such that those involved always respect ways different than their own. We need free entry and exit from cultural communities that guarantee all cultural communities ample room to develop and operate. We need culture without subordination and superiority, culture without cultural hierarchy.
  • Authoritarian polity, whether dictatorial or electoral, must be replaced. We need legislation, adjudication, and collective endeavor that deliver to each actor collectively self managing say in their lives and in the life of the whole community. We need polity without having a state above its population. We need politics without ruling and being ruled, politics without political hierarchy. 
  • Ecology must be protected and unsustainable choices replaced. We need ecological and social practices that take into account the full ecological implications of our options wherein people deciding their own fates take into account those implications to decide outcomes consistent with environmental wisdom. We need ecology without un-sustainability, ecology without ecological suicide.
  • The world's peoples must be nourished and protected. We need international relations which transcend violent war. We need an end to international relations that relegate some to poverty or exclusion while others are enriched or elevated. We need international relations without war. International exchange without colonialism and imperialism, internationalism without national hierarchies or any others.
  • Finally, in pursuing the implications of all the above, activists who develop vision and strategy and engage in programmatic tactics and projects should practice mutual respect and mutual aid. We should guard against sectarianism. We should welcome and protect dissent should. While shared views should guide and create a basis for all else, beyond what is shared and foundational, variety should be welcome. The seeds of a better future should be planted in the present both by the demands we win for society but also by the relations we establish for ourselves in our own efforts.
I claim that sober and calm discussion, even for just a short span, if it could occur within the giant stadium of leftists we have imagined, would yield very wide and deep agreement with the above points. In fact, it would probably yield more agreement than what is noted above, but at least that much. 
That said, we have a problem to solve. If hundreds of thousands and perhaps even millions of people share the above views, how many manifest that commonality jointly? How many seek to collectively participate along with the rest to pursue the implied changes? How many want, seek, and would rush to join the rest who share the above views in an organization operating locally in cities, nationally in countries, and internationally for the world? 
So far, we know the historical answer. We have seen no such massive federated unity in the past five decades, and more. We have had no vehicle cohering the energy and desire of all lefties, or most lefties, or honestly, even a significant minority of lefties, into organizational coherence sufficient for them to together share vision, strategy, and collective campaigns spanning the globe or even most countries. The closest I can remember lefties coming, post sixties, internationally, to this type coherence, is the World Social Forum - but that wasn't an organization in which lefties worked together. Rather it was a wonderful project with a small set of convenors and hosts which had no enunciated collectively shared politics, vision, and program, though it did span many countries. 
So, if it is true that when given a little time for sharing and trusting, we lefties in an imagined stadium would discover that we think and feel pretty alike about at least the points listed earlier, why haven't we gotten together? What is stopping us?
Is it the power of the states we confront? Is it police and jails that have obstructed deep and wide unity? No. Not that I am aware of. Not over the past fifty years. Of course states with their police raise obstacles, induce fear, and repress dissent. But to say we haven't gotten together into federated local, national, and international organization that has shared analysis, vision, strategy, and structural commitments roughly at the level of the earlier listed points because states have prevented us from doing so is tantamount to saying that all over the world, the act of joining a unifying organization would yield violent, unavoidable, and insurmountable repression. Certainly that hasn't occurred. And even where something akin to that has occurred, it has rarely itself been a wholly effective deterrent to shared organization. In fact, the actual repression often even spurs greater response from those repressed, at least until that response devolves for other reasons.
Is the obfuscation and confusion sown by mainstream media the obstacle preventing deep and wide unity? Certainly media madness factor also exists. Certainly media madness plays a quite large role for non leftists, for example. But for those who already share the above listed views, while media madness can and does often induce some confusion, depression, and somnolence, to say media madness is the cause of our not getting together goes too far. Watching, hearing, or reading media doesn't extinguish our capacity for mutual aid and collectivity. It doesn't cause us to renounce our views, for example those listed earlier. Even with media madness, we can still conceive the above mentioned level of wide agreement. We can also, if we choose, seek to implement it organizationally and programmatically.
Is the obstacle preventing emergence of wide and deep organization with shared vision and strategy - that we just can't stand each other? Is it that we are so individualist and so nasty that our personal selfishness and arrogance and plain old anti social orneriness literally undoes our efforts to get together? There is some truth to that, but to say our antisociality is it - do you believe it? I don't.
I think, actually, even all these factors taken together don't amount to a compelling explanation. Not for lefties who already share the views listed earlier. On the other hand, the fear in our minds that these factors will cripple us, even if they in fact haven't done so in life and can't do so in life, materially, I think that has a lot more weight. The fear that these factors will rear their ugly ways forcing us to fail, is far more powerful than the reality of these factors actually having a material impact. That is, the belief we will fail due to these reasons has way more weight than the actual power of any of these reasons, or even all of them, to cause us to fail if we didn't give them such power in our minds. 
In other words, our worries about failing - whether due to repression, due to confusion, or due to our selfish anti sociality - is far more powerful than any actual manifestations of these factors materially interfering with our efforts. In short, we worry about failing for these various reasons, making these factors important by self fulfilling prophesy.  
But I would conjecture that even the fear of failure on these particular grounds is only part of the obstacle to trying to succeed. 
I think, in truth, we not only fear failure and thus don't try to succeed, but we fear success and for that reason too, don't try to succeed. 
We don't try because we think trying will be a waste of time because we won't succeed. But we also don't try because we think we may succeed, and if we do succeed, it will be harmful or at best useless, and in any event, not highly beneficial. 
There are two sides to this. First, we think we may well be able to get together and generate mutual aid and coherent action, but, even if we do, we won't get far in winning a new world anyway - either because there is no new world to be won, or because the opposition is just too damn powerful to overcome. Or, second, we think we may well be able to get together, and we may even be effective enough to win a new world, but, if we are, we will just usher in even worse outcomes than those we currently endure. 
I am not saying that everyone gets up each morning, looks in the mirror, and chants, "we can't work together. We can't get along. We can't overcome repression. We can't win against powerful opponents. We can't win anything worthy because there is nothing worthy to win." I am saying these beliefs, assumptions, fears, and worries, inhabit our minds and keep us separate and weak, and they do this when we don't admit they are there, much less explicitly express them.
So what is to be done? Well, there are three pretty obvious ways out of this largely emotional and psychological cul de sac.
  • First, we can seriously assess history and society, our visions and our own inclinations and capacities, and in a reasoned manner, come to the conclusion that the idea we can't win a better world is pure nonsense. We can. We must. And we will.
  • Alternatively, we can arrive at the same mindset by a different route - a kind of faith. Call it optimism of the will if you want. Call it religious. Call it whatever you wish. We can simply have faith and have that annihilate our fears.
  • Third, we can ignore our fears and worries, even as they do persist, and simply act as though they are not there. Why would we ignore our persisting, rational, worries? Because if they are true, we are doomed. But if they are false, our large scale inaction is the problem - and our large scale inaction is a problem we can try to solve.
Maybe organizational coherence has been a worthy and appropriate aim for a long time, but whether it has or not, it is certainly an appropriate aim now. We don't need a few good folks exerting to the hilt, thinking, conceiving, acting - and multitudes of other folks following in their parade. We need a whole lot of good folks, really a whole lot, all thinking, conceiving, acting, and, to the extent they find the space to personally do so, locally, nationally, and internationally exerting to the hilt, together.

We need a participatory movement, projects, and organization, and there is no way to have these other than for all the people who could sign on to the above listed points to rise above our doubts and fears, and not just to join some project or some movement, but especially to together join and create an organization embodying all the views mentioned earlier, and more, as the case may be. 
So, okay, think back to the stadium we are all in. We have arrived at our shared commitments. We elaborate them some. We pledge to refine and develop them together. And we ask - how many are on board?

Maybe the way to go is the International Organization for Participatory Society. If the above makes sense to all of us, or most of us, or a nice sector of us, or any of us, in that hypotentical stadium, we should check that effort out, as a possible approach. Seems like doing so would make sense - given that it exists, is growing, and elaborates just the views we all basically share. Then those who like what they find, could hook up by joining and engaging, contributing to the effort evolving into a powerful organization of the sort we all want. Those who don't like it, however, could think about why, and then come up with what they feel is a better approach and make that happen. 
That is where the above conjectures and assessments seem to me, at least, to lead. It really isn't apocalyptic or overdramatic to say: If not now, when? If not us, who?
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