Their blood runs red and their
breath stinks too,
Our loony tunes media looking always for a superficial
reality
Anyone could sniff round Bohemian Grove-
Fruitless?
Better buy gold?
Walter Cronkite out of a plastic speaker?
Alex Jones?
The Empire is on the run?
Nah, it is as approachable as water;
The drill sergeant callls one two three-
And 200 haircutted marinated mad marines scream
"Kill!"
Digitalised feudalism my friend,
Spin and lies,
Bill O'Reilly reads his half-truths,
from his corporate bosses
Not Norman Rockwell anymore -
Appreciate what you have,
Listen to some tunes-
Information age a joke, oh god-
Keep it simple-
Charles Manson got it wrong WRONG!!
Avoid the rat-hole Matrix
Love?
Maybe.
Poetry rules still and always will.
We live but to hair cut , scrub
tooth plaque , check the weather
And do mind sleep and night sleep
and again postpone nail cutting.
The funeral parlour wll take care of
it though. Oh yes!
Copenhagen activists risk arrest for future
crimes
New Danish law permits pre-emptive arrest
and detention for up to 40 days of protestorsIn a move that environmental activists and
civil libertarians are describing as "deeply worrying", the
Danish parliament yesterday passed legislation that gives
police the power of 'pre-emptive arrest' ahead of the UN
climate talks which begin in Copenhagen on December 7. The
new measures will allow officers to arrest and detain
anyone for up to 12 hours who they believe is
liable to break the law in the near future.
With thousands of activists due in Denmark
over the next few days to rally outside the summit, it is
fairly obvious who the law is intended for. The law will
also apply to any foreigner arrested under it, and Danish
police will have a further power to jail protestors for up
to 40 days if they are charged with hindering the police.
The law also allows for fines of up to 5,000kr (€670) to be
levied on transgressors.
The laws, which were initially proposed on
October 18, have been rushed on to the statute book amid
fears that the 30,000 protestors expected in the Danish
capital could overwhelm police. Already the country has had
to borrow helicopters and police cars from Sweden and
Germany in preparation.
Chief inspector Per Larsen said: "We want
this summit and its associated events to be a celebration
and not the occasion to destroy our city, as claimed by some
small extremist groups. We will be supple enough, but there
will be limits." A police press release issued in August
warned that "gatherings that may disturb the public order
must not take place".
The new laws have been condemned for being
anti-democratic. Tannie Nyboe of Climate Justice Action in
Denmark, said: "These laws are a big restraint in people's
freedom of speech and it will increase the police repression
for anyone coming to Copenhagen to protest. Denmark normally
boasts of how open and democratic a country we are. With
this law we can't boast about this anymore."
Nyboe continued: "It will increase the
repression of any protester or activist coming to
Copenhagen. This law creates an image of anyone concerned
about climate change being a criminal, which will of course
also influence the general treatment of any activist who
comes into contact with the police or other
authorities."
Kevin Smith, one of the participants in
Climate Justice Action, an umbrella group
for organisations protesting against climate change, told
The First Post: "Climate activists from the UK
travelling to Copenhagen have been detained under
anti-terrorist legislation, and now the Danish government
have ushered in all these new repressive laws in time for
the COP.
"It's testament to the extent of the growing
movement of people around the world who are going to be
articulating their opposition to the corrupt and ineffective
means of carbon trading and offsetting being promoted under
Kyoto that the authorities feel the need to be clamping down
like this." http://www.bestpoet.com
The greatBill O'Reilly needs his words on a
screen