Monday 25th of November 2024

the existential threat of crunchy peanut butter .....

the existential threat of crunchy peanut butter .....

This is a story of two letters and two Britains. The first letter was written by Sebastian Coe, the former athlete who chairs the London Olympics Organising Committee. He is now called Lord Coe.

In the New Statesman of 21 June, I reported an urgent appeal to Coe by the Vietnam Women's Union that he and his IOC colleagues reconsider their decision to accept sponsorship from Dow Chemical, one of the companies that manufactured dioxin, a poison used against the population of Vietnam. Code-named Agent Orange, this weapon of mass destruction was "dumped" on Vietnam, according to a US Senate report in 1970, in what was called Operation Hades. The letter to Coe estimates that today 4.8 million victims of Agent Orange are children, all of them shockingly deformed.

In his reply, Coe describes Agent Orange as "a highly emotional issue" whose development and use "was made by the US government [which] has rightly led the process of addressing the many issues that have resulted". He refers to a "constructive dialogue" between the US and Vietnamese governments "to resolve issues". They are "best placed to manage the reconciliation of these two countries." When I read this, I was reminded of the weasel letters that are a specialty of the Foreign Office in London in denying the evidence of crimes of state and corporate power, such as the lucrative export of terrible weapons. The former Iraq Desk Officer, Mark Higson, called this sophistry "a culture of lying".

I sent Coe's letter to a number of authorities on Agent Orange. The reactions were unerring. "There has been no initiative at all by the US government to address the health and economic effects on the people of Vietnam affected by dioxin," wrote the respected US attorney Constantine Kokkoris, who led an action against Dow Chemical. He noted that "manufacturers like Dow were aware of the presence and harmfulness of dioxin in their product but failed to inform the government in an effort to avoid regulation."

According to the War legacies League, none of the health, environmental and economic problems caused by the world's most enduring chemical warfare has been addressed by the US. Non-government agencies have helped "only a small number of those in need". A "clean up" in a "dioxin hot spot" in the city of Da Nang, to which Coe refers, is a sham; none of the money allocated by the US Congress has gone directly to the Vietnamese or has reached those most severely disabled from the cancers associated with Agent Orange.

For this reason, Coe's mention of "reconciliation" is profane, as if there were an equivalence between an invading superpower and its victims. His letter exemplifies the London Olympics' razor-wired, PR and money-fuelled totalitarian state within a state, which you enter, appropriately, through a Westfield mega shopping mall. How dare you complain about the missiles on the roof of your flats, hectored a magistrate to 86 residents of London's East End. How dare any of you protest at the "Zil car lanes", reminiscent of Moscow in the Soviet era, for Olympic apparatchiks and the boys from Dow and Coke. With the media in charge of Olympics excitement, as it was for 'Shock and Awe' in Iraq in 2003, now enter the man who played a starring role in making both spectacles possible.

On 11 July, a so-called Olympics evening - "a coming together of the Labour tribe", declared the Labour Party leader Ed Milliband - celebrated its "star guest" Tony Blair and his 2005 "gift" of the Games and "provided the perfect opportunity for Blair's return to frontline politics", reported the Guardian. The organiser of this contrivance was Alistair Campbell, chief spinner of the bloodbath Blair and he gifted to the Iraqi people. And just as the victims of Dow Chemical are of no interest to the Olympic elite, so the epic criminality of Labour's star guest was unmentionable.

The source of the Olympics' chaotic security is also unmentionable. As established studies in Britain have long conceded, it was the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq and the rest of the "war on terror" that served to recruit new jihadists and bolster other forms of resistance that led directly to the London bombs of 7/7. These were Blair's bombs. In his current rehabilitation, courtesy of his Olympics "legacy", there is the additional spin that Blair's huge post-Downing Street wealth is concentrated on charities.
The second letter I mentioned was sent to me by Josh Richards who lives in Bristol. In March 2003, Josh and four others set out to disable an American B-52 bomber based at RAF Fairford, Gloucestershire, before it could bomb Iraq. So did four other people. It was a non-violent action faithful to the Nuremberg principles that a war of aggression was the "paramount war crime". Josh was arrested and charged with planning to lay explosives. "This was based on the ludicrous idea," he wrote, "that some peanut butter I had on me was actually a bomb component. The charge was later abandoned after the Ministry of Defence performed extensive tests on my Tesco crunchy nut peanut butter."

During two trials and two hung juries, Josh was finally acquitted. It was a landmark case in which he spoke in open court about the genocidal embargo imposed upon Iraq by the British and US governments prior to their invasion and the false justifications of the "war on terror". His acquittal meant that he had acted in the name of the law and his intention had been to save lives.

The letter Josh wrote to me included a copy of my book, The New Rulers of the World, which, he pointed out, had provided him with the facts he needed for his defence. Meticulously page-marked and highlighted, it had accompanied Josh on a three-year journey through courtrooms and prison cells. Of all the letters I have received, Josh's epitomises a decency, modesty and determination of moral purpose that represent another Britain and antidotes to poisonous Olympic sponsors and rehabilitated warmongers.

During these extraordinary times, such an example ought to give others heart and inspiration to reclaim this receding democracy.

 

© John Pilger - www.johnpilger.com 

 

dreams are made of this...

WHEN Michael Knight, Sydney's Olympics minister for the 2000 Games, was asked why he was so dictatorial, his answer was direct: "We only have one chance to get it right on the world stage."

Knight, the basketballer-tall Labour head kicker, had to use all his backroom brawling skills to pull together the Olympics still regarded as the 'best ever'...  as bestowed by then IOC chief Juan Antonio Samaranch.

The UK does not have a designated full-time Olympics minister capable of bringing every arm of government into Olympic delivery. Mistake number one. Olympics delivery is no place for teddy bear huggers such as Cameron, Boris, Lord Coe - or the minister with part-time responsibility for London 2012, Jeremy Hunt.

....

And all that arm twisting and training worked. Sydney was the best ever Games... and the city's public transport has never been so on-time, friendly or clean since.

Footnote: Michael Knight ended up being sacked as a minister and bowed out of politics. Even being an effective bovver boy in Sydney politics has a short shelf life.

Read more: http://www.theweek.co.uk/olympics/london-games-2012/48068/sydney-strayas-guide-putting-bonza-olympics#ixzz21Cq5L0JM

 

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As a Sydneysider it brings tears to my eyes...

I know many people who were involved in the "olympic organisation" and there were some difficult moments... But the clear crisp weather was perfect.

 

There was a bit of discreet dissent. A few small signs propped up here and there: "O-limp-pricks" but that was puerile failed-university nerdy level spray-can stencilled grammar.

 

And many Sydneysiders took the opportunity to flee their city... MORE people left Sydney than came to watch the damn olympic thingy. 

 

Amazing, for most of the games, a magic street like King Street, Newtown (of which I often show pictures on this site) was DESERTED... One could drive at any time of the day in 2 minutes flat from one end to the other... Most shops were doing lousy business... Usually it takes 10 minutes on a good clearway day to travel through... More often than not, one can languish half an hour, driving through. It's faster to walk and it's a walking street — a beautiful street...

of whingeing poms and romans...

 

LONDON: While the world's athletes limber up at the Olympic Park, Londoners are practising some of their own favourite sports: complaining, expecting the worst and cursing the authorities.

Asked ''What do you feel about the Olympics?'', people gave answers that included bitter laughter and the words ''fiasco,'' ''disaster'' and ''police state''.

''It's a pain in the backside,'' Steve Rogers, a construction site manager, said. Particularly painful, he said, were the London underground plans (''absolute shambles''), the road closings (''complete nightmare'') and the fact that instead of creating construction jobs for Britons, the Olympics had provided work for ''a bunch of Lithuanians, Romanians and Czechs''.

Even in the best of times, whingeing is part of the national condition - as integral to the country's character as its Eeyoreish attitude toward the weather (''Start Planning for Floods,'' The Daily Mail advised recently). But even allowing for the traditional exaggeration, this degree of distress has a different tone to it.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/olympics/news-london-2012/if-whingeing-was-a-sport-londoners-would-win-the-gold-20120720-22fco.html#ixzz21Cw8RZ00

And please note: I repeat the "OLYMPIC GAMES" ARE A PRIVATE ENTERPRISE... sponsored by countries and big organisations with big bux.... The empire is reviving the Coliseum of the Roman empire... and paying for it with wars in the east... The Coliseum having been partly sponsored by the fall of (and looting of) Jerusalem...

Mind you if the whingers were given free tickets, who knows...

 

of branding cow burgers...

When Michael Payne, a British sports-marketing executive, was hired by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in 1983, things were looking rather bleak. The US had boycotted the Moscow Games, the Soviet Union was about to do the same to Los Angeles and the movement was on the verge of bankruptcy.

"Most journalists were writing the obituary of the Olympics movement," he says. "You know, 'They were nice, they were good fun for the last 80 years, but they've evolved, they've become too costly, too political, and they won't continue'."

His big idea was the Olympic Partner, or TOP, programme, which brought in big sponsors like Coca-Cola and McDonald's, which paid vast sums to sponsor several Games. These payments were shared between host cities and divided among almost every country in the world, to cover their costs of sending athletes to the Games.

In return, the companies were given exclusive rights to the Olympics trademarks and guarantees that only their products would be sold at Olympic venues. As the architect of restrictions that have proved so controversial in London, you might expect Mr Payne to mount a stern defence of these rules. But he is far from impressed.

London 2012 organisers have, he says, applied these exclusivity rights far more aggressively than in previous Games, to the point where it is bad news even for the sponsors themselves. "I have said to Locog and to the IOC, 'I think you're scoring an own goal here.' If I were a sponsor I would be saying to the IOC after the closing ceremony: 'Were the rules allowed to be applied so strictly that is has come back to bite us?' There is no question in my view that the controls and protections have gone too far when it is starting to suffocate local street traders and I don't think that is necessarily what the Olympic sponsors are looking for.

http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/olympics/news/father-of-olympic-branding-my-rules-are-being-abused-7962593.html