Latin America: the hidden war on democracy

In an article for the New Statesman, John Pilger argues that an unreported war is being waged by the United States, and Britain, to restore power to the privileged classes at the expense of the majority.

Beyond the sound and fury of its conquest of Iraq and campaign against Iran, the world’s dominant power is waging a largely unreported war on another continent – Latin America. Using proxies, Washington aims to restore and reinforce the political control of a privileged group calling itself middle-class, to shift the responsibility for massacres and drug trafficking away from the psychotic regime in Colombia and its mafiosi, and to extinguish hopes raised among Latin America’s impoverished majority by the reform governments of Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia.

read more »

RADIOACTIVE TOUR 2008

May 9th – 18th 2008

The Radioactive Exposure Tour is on again. Join Friends of the Earth for a journey to remote northern South Australia where we will visit the Olympic Dam uranium mine at Roxby Downs, the Beverley Uranium Project in the Gammon Ranges, the beautiful Lake Eyre and Mound Springs environments and meet with indigenous peoples and local communities campaigning against the nuclear industry. The tour offers a unique opportunity to go out on to country and witness the impacts of the nuclear industry on people and the environment.

read more »

Nanotechnology in Food and Agriculture

Public presentation by Georgia Miller. Hosted presented by Reclaim the Food Chain, the sustainable food campaign of Friends of the Earth Adelaide and The Bob Hawke Prime Ministerial Centre, UniSA

Monday 5 May 2008, 6.30pm
UniSA City West Campus, Hawke Building, level 5, Bradley Forum

Georgia Miller is co-author of the report ‘Out of the Laboratory and on to our Plates: Nanotechnology in Food and Agriculture’

Get ready for the new high-tech intervention in our food system – after genetic engineering comes nanotechnology.

read more »

Working Women’s Centres abandoned by ALP

The decision by the Rudd Government to remove funding from Working Women’s Centres has shocked the Australian Greens.

“Just yesterday we had the Government boasting about how better off working women were going to be under the new budget, yet at the same time they are cutting funding to the most disadvantaged working women” said Senator Rachel Siewert, Greens spokesperson on employment and workplace relations.

“Working Women’s Centres (WWCs) are community based not-for profit organisations offering important advice on employment and workplace issues to women, particularly disadvantaged women – the women who are at most risk of social exclusion and should be front and centre of the new Government’s agenda,” she said.

read more »

Nice show, but we voted for real change

No matter how hard you search the 2020 Summit documents, you just can’t find it.

Among all the Big Ideas there’s no reference to our rights at work, nor is there anything about getting the troops out of Iraq (let alone Afghanistan).

Yet everyone (even the Liberals) now acknowledges that hostility to WorkChoices and a desire for decent wages and conditions, job security and union rights were the key reasons Labor won the election.

read more »

MAY DAY RALLY May 3 2008 - 10:00am

Rally at Victoria Square (Tarndanyangga) at 10am. March to Barr Smith Lawns at Adelaide Uni.

The Iron Wall – Green Left film night
Adelaide
Start: 10 May 2008 – 6:30pm

“This is a powerful film exposing one of the most pressing issues of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

read more »

Climate crisis - urgent action needed now!

The following statement was initiated by the participants in the Climate Change|Social Change conference, held in Sydney, Australia on April 11-13, 2008. Anyone who agrees with it is welcome to add their signature, and an updated list of signatories will be issued on a regular basis. The statement is being distributed to environmental, trade union, Indigenous, migrant, religious and community organisations to help build the movement against global warming

1.

read more »

Alarm bells ring on food crisis

Bob Briton

From “The Guardian” 23 April, 2008

The warnings are dire: “Imminent wars will break out due to worsening living conditions in poor countries,” UN Special Rapporteur for the Right to Food Jean Ziegler said recently. On top of the planet’s climate change crisis and oil resources crisis, we now have a food crisis that threatens the existing order. The world market price of staple foods has gone up 75 percent in the past two months.

read more »

Public Private Partnerships: Community Benefit or Crony Capitalism?

Source: A Communist Party of Australia (Marxist-Leninist) perspective

1. Introduction

In 2002 the Department of Treasury and Finance of the Government of South Australia released Partnerships SA. This document was a set of administrative instructions applicable to all government agencies in SA in relation to the development of infrastructure and the provision of services.

read more »

Capitalism versus the planet

Renfrey Clarke

19 April 2008

John Bellamy Foster, author of Marx’s Ecology: Materialism and Nature and an editor of the prestigious US-based socialist journal Monthly Review (), was a featured speaker at Green Left Weekly’s April 11-13 Climate Change — Social Change conference in Sydney. He spoke to GLW’s Renfrey Clarke.

@question = Is humanity going to pull through this environmental crisis? If it is, what are the changes that are necessary?

Well, I think there are a couple of ways you could answer that question — one way would be that, as Noam Chomsky has answered it, it’s a question of optimism or pessimism, and in some way that’s a psychological issue.

read more »

For a Just, Democratic and Sovereign Australian Republic

Amongst the plethora of submissions to the Australia 2020 Summit the following was submitted by the SPIRIT OF EUREKA COMMITTEE. It grabbed Critical Times attention due to its far reaching proposals. If readers know of other submissions that really challenge the status quo please email them to us and we will consider them for an airing on our site.

read more »

Garrett lets the cat out of the bag: CCS is expensive

Environment Minister, Peter Garrett, let the coal cat out of the bag on ABC Radio National this morning, when he admitted that the proposed ‘clean coal’ is “expensive”, not the cheap solution that would allow us to continue to use cheap coal.

Australian Greens climate change spokesperson, Senator Christine Milne, said “There can be no excuse for the Government making the already uneven playing field even more biased in favour of fossil fuels, as a coalition of lobby groups is calling for in Canberra today.

“It makes no sense for the Government to throw taxpayers’ dollars at an expensive and unproven technology when the renewable energy and energy efficiency alternatives are affordable and ready to be rolled out immediately.

read more »

UNIONS TO SEEK MAKE UP PAY FOR WORKCOVER SHORTFALL

Some of South Australia’s largest and most powerful unions will flex their industrial muscle to ensure their members aren’t short changed by the state government’s controversial changes to WorkCover.

The Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union, the National Union of Workers, the Australian Workers Union and the Australian Education Union will seek “make up” pay if there are cuts to WorkCover entitlements.

SA Unions Secretary, Janet Giles says unions are determined that workers injured through no fault of their own are not financially penalised.

read more »

No climate improvement, says Gore

NOBEL Peace Prize-winner Al Gore says there has been no improvement in the fight against climate change since his Oscar-winning film was released.

Speaking to The Sun, the former US vice-president said that the situation had got worse since his documentary An Inconvenient Truth hit cinemas in 2006.

“I have to say the situation has not improved since I made the movie in 2006,” Mr Gore told the paper.

read more »

Cut the perks for polluting and invest in a clean future

ACF’s executive director has called on the Federal Government to use this year’s Budget to do away with tax breaks that encourage greenhouse pollution and cost the taxpayer more than $7.8 billion a year.

In a speech to the National Press Club today Don Henry said the Government should restructure the fuel tax credits scheme (costing $4.

read more »

Is real change in the air?

Corey Oakley

There has been no shortage of “watershed events” over the last few years.

First was the US congressional election at the end of 2006, when the Republicans were trounced at the polls, signalling a dramatic rejection of the Iraq war by the American people.

Following a succession of other leaders of the coalition of the killing, Blair left office at the beginning of 2007.

read more »

Barr Smith Library - University of Adelaide

Monday 7 April 2008 6pm

Photographic Exhibition Launch

When the world said NO to war

A photographic exhibition on the historic anti-war protests that took place around the world in February 2003. These 32 photographs from Australian and round the world. show that this war was opposed by men, women and children from all walks of life, all religions, political and socio-economic backgrounds.

read more »

World’s Largest Tidal Turbine Successfully Installed

The world’s largest tidal turbine, weighing 1000 tonnes, has been installed in Northern Ireland’s Strangford Lough. The tidal turbine is rated at 1.2 megawatts, which is enough to power a thousand local homes.

read more »

Green light for cannabis farming

New South Wales farmers will soon be able to legally grow a type of cannabis.

The State Government is set to introduce a licensing scheme that will allow farmers to grow industrial hemp for use in textiles, skin-care products and even dog food.

A trial plantation is already under way around Griffith, in the state’s south-west.

read more »

Earth in crisis, NASA scientist warns

GLOBAL warming has plunged the planet into a crisis and the fossil fuel industries are trying to hide the extent of the problem from the public, NASA’s top climate scientist says.
NASA’s James Hansen

NASA’s James Hansen believes fossil fuel industries are trying to hide the extent of the global warming crisis from the public. AFP
“We’ve already reached the dangerous level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere,” James Hansen, director of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York, told AFP.

read more »