Overpriced, overblown and over here

Our Coffee, Ourselves - In These Times
Part history, part ethnography, part marketing theory and part coffee memoir, Everything but the Coffee places Starbucks at the center of the hypocrisy of the American middle class. Simon has to stretch a great deal here, as he explores why, for a time, the American middle class saw Starbucks as central to its identity.

Simon shows us how we really live, and it ain’t pretty. There was a time, not so long ago, Simon reminds us, that many of us wondered why people would pay so much money for a cup of coffee—even as we were edging closer in line to place our own order. Starbucks, writes Simon, “had little to do with coffee, and everything to do with style, status, identity and aspiration. … Starbucks delivered more than a stiff shot of caffeine. It pinpointed, packaged, and made easily available, if only through smoke and mirrors, the things that the broad American middle class wanted and thought it needed to make its public and private lives better.” Starbucks fed our emotional needs for status. It became our little “self-gift,” an emotional pick-me-up. It allowed us to feel successful.

It also provided a safe, clean “third space” between home and work, those big chairs and couches becoming our new public sphere. It brought us exotic places and sounds, exposed us to an underground in the safety of a cushy seat: teaching us about places where our coffee came from, and new music and literary voices. It tried to be our cultural guide and helped us feel good about our environmental footprint through its green campaigns and aid to farmers, even if Starbucks did little and we did nothing but buy coffee. It did so consciously, purposefully manipulating our desires, hopes and aspirations, all the while making us feel good about ordering up a venti soy latte.
Via A&L Daily

Obama's Oceania

New Statesman - John Piger - Welcome to Orwell’s world
Barack Obama is the leader of a contemporary Oceania. In two speeches at the close of the decade, the Nobel Peace Prize-winner affirmed that peace was no longer peace, but rather a permanent war that "extends well beyond Afghanistan and Pakistan" to "disorderly regions, failed states, diffuse enemies". He called this "global security" and invited our gratitude. To the people of Afghanistan, which the US has invaded and occupied, he said wittily: "We have no interest in occupying your country."

In Oceania, truth and lies are indivisible. According to Obama, the American attack on Afghanistan in 2001 was authorised by the United Nations Security Council. There was no UN authority. He said that "the world" supported the invasion in the wake of the 11 September 2001 attacks. In truth, all but three of 37 countries surveyed by Gallup expressed overwhelming opposition. He said that America invaded Afghanistan "only after the Taliban refused to turn over Osama Bin Laden". In 2001, the Taliban tried three times to hand over Bin Laden for trial, Pakistan's military regime reported, and they were ignored.

Noughties movies

Peter Z. Scheer: The 20 Best Socially Conscious Movies of the Decade
The last 10 years were abundant with films that pushed limits and attacked real issues in real time. The documentary and the foreign film both gained unprecedented mainstream acceptance, the studios experimented with edgier independent movies (though many have now given it up) and even the biggest blockbusters sometimes needled the Establishment.

Black(water) day for justice

US judge dismisses Blackwater massacre charges

Good to see US justice alive and well. The prosecutors had used statements made by the murderous Blackwater employees themselves immediately after the incident.
"In their zeal to bring charges against the defendant(s), the prosecutors and investigators aggressively sought out statements the defendants had been compelled to make to government investigators in the immediate aftermath of the shooting and in the subsequent investigation", said the judge. 
Zealously pursuing killers? Seeking out incriminating statements? Good grief. Whatever next?

You can bet that somewhere in Iraq at this very moment plans are afoot to exact revenge. So even more people will die as a result of the activities of these homicidal mercenaries.

UPDATE: There are alternative views:
Mishandled by the government on purpose to get their buddies at Blackwater off? Ha! Things like that don’t happen outside the movies. That’s crazy talk!

Drinkers pay their way

Rising alcohol addiction costs 'could cripple the NHS'
Professor Ian Gilmore, president of the Royal College of Physicians, said: "The nation's growing addiction to alcohol is putting an immense strain on health services, especially in hospitals, costing the NHS over £2.7 billion each year."

"This burden is no longer sustainable," he said.
The answer seems simple to me. Just spend some more of the £9 billion that was collected from drinkers last year in alcohol duty .
Cheers!

Forget the stoopid pants bomber...

Dissident republican bomb plot foiled in Northern Ireland
Components and material for a huge bomb have been found in Northern Ireland, police revealed today. The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said a major dissident republican bomb plot had been foiled after a lorry packed with material which could be used to build a 1,000lb – about 500kg – explosive device was found under a flyover in South Armagh. It was discovered on the A1 Newry road at Cloghogue, part of the upgraded carriageway between Dublin and Belfast. The vehicle had been there for several days.
Forget Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, these guys know what they are doing, they've done it before, they are white and they live in the UK.

Too bad they weren't 'manic-depressives'

Balance of Terror: From Detroit City to Ghazi Khan

A lone man on an airliner makes a badly botched attempt to ignite what appears to be some kind of hastily cobbled-together device that might or might not have caused some kind of unspecified but apparently non-crippling damage to the plane. The plane lands safely; no one is killed. Yet the reverberations from this half-baked enterprise quickly roiled the entire world. Within hours, a whole range of new, even more intrusive and draconian security procedures were imposed on travellers across the globe...

Here is another story in the news: in an isolated rural province in Afghanistan, 10 people were killed in a raid by American-led forces. The Afghan government, installed and sustained in power by the United States, said the victims were all civilians, including eight schoolboys. But there was no international outcry about this incident; it barely garnered a few mentions in the global press...

What a scream

Ultimate irony: Snowstorm squelches “screaming” climate change protest « Watts Up With That?
(KCPW News) Climate change activists will stage a “scream-in” today at the Gateway Mall in downtown Salt Lake City to vent their frustrations about the Copenhagen Accord adopted by global leaders two weeks ago. University of Utah student Cléa Major says the demonstration is intended to call attention to the fact that the accord doesn’t require countries to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
The protest managed to gather support from six people who quickly gave up in the blizzard conditions.

(Oh, and the same thing happened to them last year!)

Make mine a large one

Home drinkers 'over-pour spirits'
http://s4.hubimg.com/u/73019_f260.jpgMost people who drink spirits at home pour well over what they would get in a pub when trying to give a single measure, figures suggest...It could also mean that people wrongly think they are drinking within the NHS recommended limits** of two to three units a day for women and three to four units a day for men.
Of course they do!
One of the joys of drinking at home is pouring a decent amount of rum or whisky into a glass rather than the pathetic, overpriced dribble you get in pubs and bars.
But wait! Here danger lurks....
Public health minister Gillian Merron said: "Many of us enjoy a drink, especially at new year. But it's easy to get carried away and it's worrying to see just how much more people might be unwittingly pouring for themselves and their friends at home on a regular basis.  If you want to minimise your risk of diseases like cancer, heart disease and stroke, it's worth paying attention to the size of your measures."
**Would these be the alcohol limits that were plucked from the arses of the members of the Royal College of Physicians committee that was set up to look into alcohol misuse back in 1987?

The Noughties

The decade that politics forgot - spiked
The politics of behaviour: This was a phrase coined by a New Labourite to describe the UK government’s increased interest in legislating for everything from what we eat to what we should think and say. Political leaders with no grand ideas or vision of the future have lowered their horizons to micro-managing our lives. Abandoning any aspirations to mobilise people and forge the Good Society, they have instead focused on imposing their notions of the good citizen on the allegedly ‘anti-social’ masses.