Tuesday

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9 comments to Tuesday

  • #

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c5y35qz73n8o#comments

    “UK to finish with coal power after 142 years”

    A typical BBC story – tells almost half the story.
    The comments section has been prolific – well over 2000 comments, not a few from folk who – incomprehensibly, if one ignores the brainwashing of the last 30 years or so – think this is good – for ‘An island of Coal, Surrounded by Fish’ as one [Labour?] Pollie put is seventy or eighty years ago.
    Some comments have a more realistic view – the UK is now at the mercy of those – like France – who can choose to supply us with power. Historically, relying on France has a somewhat mixed record, of course.
    Some of the commenters seem very sensible – that this is a big mistake – it won’t take much to cause blackout, nuclear should have been pushed, Miliband should be sacked, etc. etc.

    I haven’t read, even skimmed, even 20% of the comment – so they may be some gems there.

    Auto

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    • #
      Salty Seadog

      I listened to the 09:00 news on BBC Radio 4 and the irony made me laugh out loud. First item was closing the last coal fired power station. The second item was changing the Port Talbot steel works to ‘clean’ energy with the loss of 2000 jobs (and a 500 million bung from us taxpayers). The third item was UK growth was only 0.5% in the quarter.

      So get rid of coal, which leads to 2000 job losses and a 500 million on-cost, followed by ‘growth only 0.5%’, possibly caused by humungous energy costs , who could have foreseen that?

      If only the BBC could join the dots.

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  • #
    Skepticynic

    PACE hearing on Julian Assange’s detention and conviction and their chilling effects on human rights

    Live in 15 hours

    Julian Assange is to take part in this hearing, organised by the Legal Affairs Committee of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe in Strasbourg, beginning at 8.30 a.m. CEST on Tuesday 1 October.

    The following day, on Wednesday 2 October, the Assembly is due to hold a plenary debate and vote on this topic, based on a report by Thorhildur Sunna Ævarsdóttir (Iceland, SOC). Mr Assange is expected to be watching from the public gallery.

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Mq85IZMeigc

    https://pace.coe.int/en/news/9600/julian-assange-to-attend-a-pace-hearing-in-strasbourg-on-his-detention-and-conviction-and-their-chilling-effect-on-human-rights?__cf_chl_tk=4D5Iwjg5Na2pAC7gSs9xXA8AJ.fQ54G4334yhbQQqG0-1727709586-0.0.1.1-6057

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    • #
      Skepticynic

      https://x.com/wikileaks/status/1838609231681065144

      PRESS RELEASE:

      Julian Assange to Address Council of Europe Following Confirmation of his Status as a Political Prisoner

      On October 1, Julian Assange will arrive in Strasbourg to give evidence before the Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) which is scheduled to meet from 8.30am to 10am at the Palace of Europe.

      This comes following the release of the PACE inquiry report into the Assange case, authored by Rapporteur Thórhildur Sunna Ævarsdóttir. The report focuses on the implications of his detention and its broader effects on human rights, in particular freedom of journalism. The report confirms that Assange qualifies as a political prisoner and calls on the UK conduct an independent review into whether he was exposed to inhuman or degrading treatment.

      Sunna Ævarsdóttir serves as the General Rapporteur for Political Prisoners and is the Chair of the Sub-Committee on Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights within PACE’s Legal Affairs Committee. She emphasises how Assange’s case is a high profile example of transnational repression. The report discusses how governments employ both legal and extralegal measures to suppress dissent across borders, which poses significant threats to press freedom and human rights.

      Julian Assange is still in recovery following his release from prison in June 2024. He is attending this session in person due to the exceptional nature of the invitation and to embrace the support received from PACE and its delegates over the past years. PACE has a mandate to safeguard human rights and has repeatedly called for Julian Assange’s release when he was in prison.

      He will give testimony before the committee, which will also hear the findings that his imprisonment was politically motivated.

      The hearing marks Assange’s first official testimony on his case since before his imprisonment in 2019. His appearance before Europe’s foremost human rights and treaty-setting body emphasises the broader implications of his case.

      https://pace.coe.int/en/news/9578/committee-expresses-deep-concern-at-harsh-treatment-of-julian-assange-warns-of-its-chilling-effect-for-the-press

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      • #
        Mike Jonas

        Although the Julian Assange case appears to map along freedom of speech lines, which tallies with the case against the proposed Misinformation Bill in Australia, I don’t agree with what Julian Assange did. The world is far from perfect, and governments do have information for which secrecy is a legitimate national requirement. Even in peacetime countries have enemies, and the western democracies have some particularly nasty active enemies. Release of covert government information of particular value to the enemies of democracy is not in the public’s interest. By not discriminating between public interest and government intelligence, and particularly by not recognising the value of some of the information to enemies of democracy, Julian Assange did his country and their allies a serious disservice.

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  • #
    David Maddison

    A very long 3 hr 16 min documentary about Neanderthals. Best to watch it in portions or if you can’t sleep.

    Everything you need to know about this species or probably subspecies, not wanting to be speciest. Non-African humans did breed with them, after all.

    https://youtu.be/NNVA6tl4Im4

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  • #
    David Maddison

    Apart from the current legislation before parliament in Australia, the e Safety Kommissar already has extensive censorship powers and has been vigorously censoring, a role she enthusiastically spoke to the WEF about, see her videos on YouTube.

    Anyway, the following article is from May and the Elon Musk case. It was about a “take down” order she issued against X and Elon Musk who thankfully fought it. It showed a terrorist attack against a priest who himself wanted the footage posted.

    Is shows the e Safety Kommissar’s desire for global censorship, the dream of the Left.

    A rare case of a wise decision in an Australian court.

    https://www.skynews.com.au/australia-news/federal-court-eviscerates-esafety-commissioners-takedown-order-against-x-claiming-it-would-interfere-with-comity-of-nations/news-story/3738ad2127971773f09b5e406c3288f5

    X Corp had complied with the order by geo-blocking posts containing the footage, but the eSafety Commissioner claimed this was insufficient because Australians could still access the content if they were using a VPN.

    Appealing to the court, the Commissioner sought an injunction that would force X Corp to entirely remove the footage from its platform – a demand Musk said amounted to “global censorship”.

    Federal Court Judge Geoffrey Kennett denied the eSafety Commissioner’s request for an injunction on Monday, with the full ruling being released on Tuesday morning.

    Judge Kennett ruled that the Safety Commissioner’s demand went beyond what was “reasonable” because it would amount to Australian law being applied worldwide, when the jurisdiction “properly belongs to some other sovereign or state”.

    “If given the reach contended for by the Commissioner, the removal notice would govern (and subject to punitive consequences under Australian law) the activities of a foreign corporation in the United States (where X Corp’s corporate decision-making occurs) and every country where its servers are located,” Judge Kennett wrote.

    “It would likewise govern the relationships between that corporation and its users everywhere in the world.”

    “The Commissioner, exercising her power under s 109, would be deciding what users of social media services throughout the world were allowed to see on those services.”

    “…it would be a clear case of a national law purporting to apply to “persons or matters over which, according to the comity of nations, the jurisdiction properly belongs to some other sovereign or State”.

    Judge Kennett said such a global application of Australian law would have obvious consequences.

    “The potential consequences for orderly and amicable relations between nations, if a notice with the breadth contended for were enforced, are obvious. Most likely, the notice would be ignored or disparaged in other countries,” he said.

    SEE LINK FOR REST

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  • #
    TdeF

    A vision of the disaster which awaits Australia.

    Britain’s final coal-fired power station and its penultimate steel plant shut their doors today, a consequence of the government’s hard push for decarbonisation, even at the cost of affordable energy or an indigenous steel making capacity, crucial for the defence industry.

    They’re hundreds of miles away from each other but two of the final bastions of the British industrial revolution shut forever today, their respective demises very linked through the slow-burning but very much ongoing British electricity price crisis. Ratcliffe on Soar, once the cutting-edge in coal-fired steam turbine electricity production and the blast furnace at Port Talbot both close on Monday, coincidentally just days after fresh figures show Britain has the most expensive electricity prices in the world by a considerable margin.

    Idiocy is not peculiar to Australia. It starts in the UK.

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    • #
      TdeF

      And as in Australia “The power station is now to be pulled down and the land redeveloped, removing any chance of reactivating the plant should a sudden change in the global energy picture again impact supply.”

      There’s no going back. The communists have decided. While China is opening a coal fired power station every week, we will be refusing to use the filthy stuff. To save the planet. For whom?

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