a curious Yankee in Europe's court

blog about living in Europe, and Italy

Links you may have missed (Nov 20, 2011)

Posted on the November 20th, 2011

Italy’s ‘lost generation’  (Aljazeera) – video

While Rome was burning: Berlusconi and the politics of Italy’s patronage (openDemocracy)

Paghiamo le picconate tedesche (Epistemes.org) – Italian only

Germany’s Central Bank against the World (Spiegel Online International)

Journalists and the European Project (Huffington Post)

 

“We teach life, sir” – Palestinian Rafeef Ziadah (Antony Loewenstein blog) – video

Paramilitary Policing From Seattle to Occupy Wall Street (The Nation) – call for police reform from former Seattle Chief of Police

 

Neutrinos still faster than light in latest version of experiment (Guardian)

From Hemingway to Twitterature: The Short and Shorter of It (Journal of Electronic Publishing, JEP) – highly recommend the section on Twitterature.

Noel Fielding: The Scribblings of a Madcap Shambleton (Guardian) – audio slide show, click on screenshot below

 

 


Mayor Bloomberg versus First Amendment and Occupy Movement

Posted on the November 15th, 2011

A post just up on Firedoglake details the astoundingly repressive tactics that New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg used while evicting the Occupy Wall Street protesters from Zuccotti Park last night.

Excerpt:

The Brooklyn Bridge and almost all subway trains leading to Wall Street were closed over night. Counter-terrorism agents were on the scene. An LRAD sonic cannon was used. The NYPD blocked the airspace over the park to news helicopters. One journalist told a cop that she was press, and was told back, “Not tonight.” Even residential buildings around Zuccotti were locked down. This was real police state stuff.

The post also links to a report that several city mayors across the US had participated in a conference call earlier to coordinate the eviction sweep of Occupy movements in their cities.

Read full Firedoglake post here.

The guarantees of freedom of speech, freedom of press, and freedom of assembly guaranteed by the First Amendment of the US Constitution is a bedrock concept of democracy in the country.  Last night, Mayor Bloomberg simply spit all over it.


Links you may have missed (Nov 14, 2011)

Posted on the November 14th, 2011

From the Failure of Europe to Possible Growth in the Real Economy (Social Europe Journal) – an Italian view of the state of things.

Monti seeks to build new Italian government (Aljazeera) – short news video

The Eurozone Crisis and the Silence of Social Democracy (Social Europe Journal) – excerpt below:

Throughout the 20th century social democrats across Europe had won concessions at national level for workers and citizens. It was here that they forced compromises on business and secured social gains on pensions, wages, health and welfare provisions. It was a settlement that mainstream Christian Democracy accepted after World War Two.  Globalisation has broken that hinge economically, while Thatcherism and neo-liberalism more generally have led the political assault. Currently, across Europe, they have turned a crisis caused by reckless financial globalisation into a crisis of government revenues and demanded a policy of austerity. The European Left has stood open-mouthed and paralysed in response.

 

“Così ho regalato il web al mondo” (la Repubblica) – interview published today with Tim Berners-Lee in Rome (Italian only)

Wired releases images via Creative Commons, but reopens a debate on what “noncommercial” means (Nieman Journalism Lab)

News24: Sydney papers work round the clock (editorsweblog.org) – a newspaper decides to embrace the pace of the web

 

Stefanie Posavec On Her Handmade Charts Of Famous Novels (Fast Company’s CoDesign) – data visualisation by hand!?

Dogs, scientists, men: Who needs the leash? (ohmidog!)

La ricetta perfetta: Carbonara (dissapore) – buon appetito! – click on screenshot below for recipe (Italian only)

 

 


Who wants to leave the Euro?

Posted on the November 11th, 2011

Surely I’m not the only one to take notice that the bulk of the doomsday talk these days about the imminent fall of the euro is coming either from outside Europe or from eurosceptics.

An underlying assumption of this dire talk, perhaps, may be the idea that eurozone citizens are so discontented that they are demanding return to national currencies. But where is there evidence of this?  Even most Greeks, supposedly mad as hell at EU leadership, reportedly want to stay with the euro (see here, for example).

And, although it’s admittedly an anecdotal report, I can say I’ve not heard or seen either a peep or a scribble of any such San Pietro! let’s return to the lira talk here in Italy either. That is, except for the usual disgruntled voices of the northern far right who, more or less, want to exit everything including the southern half of their own country.

And then this just now in the UK Guardian‘s live blog on the eurozone crisis:

1.47pm: Almost four out of five Germans believe the 17-nation single currency will survive, according to poll for ZDF television. Some 78% of people asked said the euro would survive despite its problems while 56% felt chancellor Angela Merkel was doing a good job of managing the crisis. That’s an improvement on a similar poll in October which had her approval rating at 45%.

How much of a role does the European public play in the rise or fall of the euro? I have no idea really, given the murky fog that constitutes most financial reporting, and the politicians’ backroom political jockeying. But if eurozone voters’ support is needed to drive the currency into collapse, seems to me that’s a non-starter.


Links you may have missed (Nov 6, 2011)

Posted on the November 6th, 2011

#OccupyOakland General Strike Closes Port, 5th Biggest in US (Naked Capitalism) – great post!

Bill Black on the Real News Network on His Three Big, Simple Demands (Naked Capitalism) – another link from Yves Smith’s Naked Capitalism, one of the most informative websites about finance and current events.

Ma SuperMario non basta (epistemes.org) – commentary about new ECB chief Mario Draghi (in Italian only).

Laurie Penny: A woman’s opinion is the mini-skirt of the internet (The Independent)

Lindblad Expeditions: Day 12 (Carl Safina blog)

The best of our graphic short story prize (Guardian) – if you like cartoonists, this is a feast.

“United”  (Playing For Change/United Nations Population Fund) – click on screenshot below for music video.


Beware of Greeks cradling democracy

Posted on the November 3rd, 2011

This morning while reading a couple of analyses about the great Greek referendum brouhaha, the shade of John Lennon floated past murmuring “Democracy is what happens while politicians are busy making other plans.”

Might that be the case if the Greeks are allowed to vote on the EU’s latest proposal to rescue/doom them into penury for years to come? Wouldn’t that be nice (shades of the Beach Boys just now floated by). Messy? Maybe yes, but maybe not.

The two informative commentaries mentioned above are “Time to resign Mr Papandreou” by Greek economics professor Yanis Varoufakis (here), and “Papandreou shows no regret as he faces a grilling from Sarkozy and Merkel” by the Guardian‘s Helena Smith (here). They offer differing perspectives on the Greek PM. Varoufakis scorns his government leader’s latest referendum maneuver as political ploy only. Smith, in contrast, casts Papandreou more admirably, as in this quote from an unidentified “adviser”:

He is not afraid to upset others if he firmly believes it is in the interests of his country. And as a committed socialist George really does believe in the value of participatory democracy.

Well, notwithstanding that Varoufakis makes powerful argument to the contrary, we can hope that Smith’s featured adviser may prove to be auspicious. That whether mere political operator or democracy’s champion, Papandreou will by hook or crook give the people a voice. That would be true democratic process, wouldn’t it?

Imagine.

 


Links you may have missed (Oct 30, 2011)

Posted on the October 30th, 2011

No details, flimsy numbers: Varoufakis (ABC TV – Australia) — Greek economics professor Yanis Varoufakis interviewed about EU’s latest rescue plan for his country and the eurozone — not exactly a rave review. Video — click on screenshot above.

How Germany Became Europe’s Green Leader: A Look at Four Decades of Sustainable Policymaking (The Solutions Journal)

CONVEGNO: “UN’EUROPA. MOLTE LINGUE. NUOVE OPPORTUNITÀ” (Mediapolitika) — saw this thanks to Ivan Turatti — interesting Umberto Eco quote, “The language of Europe is translation.”

Looks like Congress has declared war on the internet (GigaOM)

Celebrate with us on December 10…  TerraMadre Day (Slow Food)

In Honor of Bella – Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee Slideshow (The Elephant Sanctuary) – Bella died this week. Click on screenshot below to see slide show of Bella and her boon companion Tarra.


Links you may have missed (Oct 26, 2011)

Posted on the October 26th, 2011

I greatly pruned my recommended links collection from last week because I’m a bit late in posting them.

 

Soft toys make people more ethical (The Economic Times/India Times)

Mocking Europe, neo-liberals, shouldn’t make you feel good (Antony Loewenstein.com)

Revolutionary Daughters (Aljazeera) – video (24 min) – shows work of two young women activists in India.

Meet the Artist: Lang Lang (BBC Music Magazine) – video and intro – click on screenshot below.

 


Wikileaks needs you

Posted on the October 25th, 2011

As for me, I prefer to make my own decisions about who I do or don’t support, rather than allow banks and credit card companies to make them for me.

Click on image above to play video.


Links you may have missed (Oct 16, 2011)

Posted on the October 16th, 2011

Elizabeth Warren on Debt Crisis, Fair Taxation (YouTube) – precisely put! No wonder her fan base is growing.

Panic of the Plutocrats (New York Times) – Paul Krugman

The Story Of Occupy Wall Street Told Through Online Videos (Social Times)

Chimamanda Adichie: The danger of a single story (TEDTalks) – video – from 2009 but golden.

Mike Biddle: We can recycle plastic (TEDTalks) – video – this may be some of the very best news for planet earth.

Did Van Gogh die in an unfortunate brush with fate? (The Independent)

Neo and Toxedo – Two Dogs in Paris (Dogwork.com) – fantastico!

Canzoni di 18mila giorni, il ritorno di Gianmaria Testa (la Repubblica) – music video – click on screenshot below