Sunday, 16 March 2014

IN DOG WE TRUST


Photo: Nachodogg via his Instagram.


Hello dog lover! Hope you're having a fabulous Sunday!

Here are some links for you:




Woman marries her dog. Yep, her dog.







Video of the week: First Sniff


Enjoy your Sunday! And follow Nacho on Instagram
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In Dog We Trust is edited by: Carola Melguizo from La Guía del Perro.

 

Sunday, 9 March 2014

The Procrastinator (some) Times Sunday 9th of March Edition



EDITORIAL

In this editorial I want to share with you how hard is keep covering an ongoing crisis. I know. It's logical, but I have never tried to do it before. I manage to keep following Venezuela mainly because is my country and I understand what is happening. With Ukraine, it's a lot harder. I'll keep posting the links that I find more interesting and explicative. Hope someone finds it useful. And I also hope this Cold War finishes soon, this time for good. (Have a look at Jean Jullien's Cold War II illustration).

In our Culture & Entertainment section we have cool articles from some of our favorite writes from The Atlantic and The New Yorker, about selfies in Crimea and HBO's True Detective. In Photoautomat, the second post about war photographer Tim Hetherington. In Science, news about the orgasm machine, of course. In Design & Business an RSA article about the Power of Create. And finally In Dog We Trust introduce us to the lovely Fred the pug.

Happy Sunday and happy reading.


PS: Sorry for the broken links early today, it's all been fixed now.


NEWS


Photo via Quartz.


The Venezuelan situation keeps unfolding towards I don't know exactly where. The government won't stop insulting and repressing the opposition, and reinforcing fallacies that then people and international media keep replicating. The economic war; there is no other economic war than the one they are leading against their own country (watch Rafael Ramírez admit not to have had a plan for oil income, ever).

Nor Panamá neither Jared Leto words are prove that the US is leading a slow coup d'etat. If the US was the enemy I guess that as energetically as we broke diplomatic links with Panamá we would have stop selling them oil. But we haven't, and we won't. They don't have proves, they never show any prove to back up their statements.

The opposition is not a small group, and the great majority are not rich, posh, right-wing people; right now a university professor in Venezuela earns around US$ 180,00/month according to the black market rate (the one that sets the prices of every consumer good). That's Venezuelan "middle class". The use of black and white terms is a great way to fill with simplifications, prejudgements and distortions, a very complex situation, and they know it. They sell themselves, as a socialist-left-wing-Robin-Hood utopia, when all they are is just good old (and dramatically inefficient) Latin American populist government with a strong like for totalitarianism and an insane personality cult. Absolutely corrupted by their absolute power.

People often talk about about how the rate of extreme poverty decrease in Venezuela, but actually they only managed to take some people out of extreme poverty by giving them some spare money coming from our oil incomes. Not opportunities or education. Just cheap, bad quality, houses, washing machines and TVs, propaganda and slogans. The greatest gift from the government to "the people" is dependence. They strangled the economy, make private industries go bankrupt by not letting them change dollars, so more people keep depending on the government, and their "generosity". A couple of weeks ago the Minister of Education said that it was not in the interest of the government to take people out of poverty to make them become opposition.

I believe in socialism, Norwegian style. I subscribe the words of that Colombian major who said that a prosperous country was not one where "the poor have cars, but where the rich use public transportation". Public services for all, food for all, medicines for all, and respect. Respect for our lives, our opinions and our dreams. That is all we ask for. Being the country with the biggest reserves of oil of the world shouldn't be our curse, should be our blessing! We could be so great!

But we are not. And that is a fact. Philip K. Dick has a great phrase about reality, he says that "reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn’t go away.” And you can have the ideology you prefer, the world is big enough, I don't mind, but the reality is that in Venezuela there is no food, no medicines, no freedom, no peace, no happy socialism. In Venezuela there is death, there is fear, there is armed paramilitary, there is violence of all sorts, and there is torture (even if the Human Rights Ombudswoman wants to twist the universal definition). And whether you stop believing or not, is not going away.

That is why one of the most relevant news from this week is not necessarily about the ongoing protests, but about one of our major crisis: being one of the most dangerous country on earth. Roberto Ferdman in Quartz writes: There have already been almost 3000 murders in Venezuela since the start of the year. "In the first two months of 2014 (link in Spanish) 2,841 people were murdered, a more than 10% jump from the same period last year, when 2,576 murders were registered. Homicides have grown almost systematically of late in Venezuela. Last year nearly 25,000 people were murdered, or almost 70 people per day. Murders are up 89% since 2010, and almost 500% since 1997, before Hugo Chavez became president (in 1999)."

Only 9% of the crimes in Venezuela are prosecuted and punished. But in the past month there has been around a 1300 students arrested. There is an image going around in social media that says that if we make a minute of silence for every Venezuelan killed last year we would have to be silent for 17 days.

This is not ideology. These are facts and they don't go away.


Other articles:

New York Times: Fear spreads that Venezuela is approaching bloody face-off. (Added 13 March)

The Washington Post: Student that lives with parents rises as leader in Venezuela's protests. (Added 13 March)

VICE NEWS: Venezuela Rising. Dispatch 6. (Added 12 March)

New York Times (cartoon): Protests in Venezuela. (Added 12 March)

BBC: Three die in clashes in central Venezuela, while rival protests take place in Caracas to mark 1 month of unrest. (Added 12 March)

The Economist: A test of political maturity. Excellent article that summarizes Venezuela's current situation and the test it poses to the region. (Added 10 March)

VICE NEWS: Venezuela Rising. Dispatch 5. (Added 10 March)

AFP: Venezuelans queue long hours at markets to buy "whatever they have".

BBC: Venezuela opposition holds anti-Maduro rally in Caracas.

Business Insider: Here's What Outsiders Get Completely Wrong About The Crisis In Venezuela.

Time: 3 Reasons Venezuelans protesters won't win

Mashable: Venezuela's March 8th Demonstrations.

Hootsuite: Who to follow on Twitter for crisis news.



En español:

El País: El régimen venezolano esctrecha el cerco sobre Internet. (Agregado 14 de marzo).

EL País: Los intelectuales y el principio de realidad. (Agregado 10 Marzo)

Radar de los barrios: ¿Protesta en los barrios? ¡Claro que sí!. (Agregado 10 Marzo)

El Nacional: El costo de la protesta popular. "Si protestan, los matamos."  (Agregado 10 Marzo)

El Universal: Salverio Vivas: La oposición del barrio es más madura que la del este.

El País: La principal ciudad de los Andes venezolanos se rebela contra Maduro.



En français:

Le Nouvel Observateur / AFP: Nouvelle manifestation mercredi à Caracas pour marquer un mois de mobilisation. (Added 12 March)



Videos:

YouTube: Armed "colectivos" shooting inside a building 7M in Los Ruices. (Added 10M)

YouTube: Young man kidnapped by the Sebin (political police) in Caracas I. (Added 10M)

YouTube: Young man kidnapped by the Sebin (political police) in Caracas II. (Added 10M)


Past posts about Venezuela's crisis in the blog: 16th of February and 23rd of February and 2nd of March.

SCIENCE



Sleeper still via Zimbio.

"If you’ve seen Sleeper, you’ve probably secretly wished you could own an orgasmatron, the giant, fictional, shower-like machine that gives users an interminable series of shrieking orgasms. While there are unfortunately no patents for such a device on the horizon, we may soon be getting the next best thing: a surgical implant for women who have anorgasmia, or an inability to achieve orgasms".  Read full article in The Daily Dot. E.T.P. 4'


DESIGN, BUSINESS & INNOVATION


V&A Museum. Photo The Procrastinator (some) Times.


Interesting reflections from RSA about the Power to Create and bitcoin! "Here at the RSA, we’re getting very interested in what we call the ‘Power to Create’: the notion that by unleashing the desire of billions to turn their own, unique ideas into reality, we’ll all end up richer, solve some of our biggest problems and feel a lot more fulfilled along the way." Read full post in RSA Blog. E.T.P. 7'

CULTURE & ENTERTAINMENT


One of our favorite TV critics Alexis Madrigal writes an intersting article in The Atlantic about one of our favorite TV series, The Sacrifical Landscape of True Detective: "True Detective is a compelling show. People love the acting and are thrilled by the mystery. No arguments there. But two recent interviews with people who worked on it highlight another reason the show works: the petrochemical landscape of Louisiana." Read full article in The Atlantic. E.T.P. 8' 


Illustration via The New Yorker.

Ben Yagoda very accurately asserts in The New Yorker that "hack" is the word of the moment. "A psychologist wants to tell us how to “hack the happiness molecule.” The Web site Lifehacker offers tips on “how to install a laundry chute,” “make a DIY rapid-fire mouse button,” and “how to stop giving a f*ck what people think.” Online marketers desperately want to “growth hack.” The venture capitalist Paul Graham constantly talks about how tech entrepreneurs must have “hacker eyes”; his startup incubator, Y Combinator, runs an online news aggregator called Hacker News. A technology company recently recalled “a disastrous hack,” while in recent months Target, Neiman Marcus, Richard Engel, and the University of Maryland have all been “hacked.” Find out how the meaning of the word has evolved in his article: A Short History of 'Hack'. E.T.P. 6'




Finally, also in The Atlantic Uri Friedman decided to go in defense of the selfies from Crimea and Ukraine, and this is what he says: "Putting aside one of the explanations for this stream of selfies—a substantial pro-Moscow, ethnic Russian population on the peninsula—it's actually quite fitting that amateur and professional photographers are experimenting with new technology this week to document Russia's occupation of the Ukrainian peninsula. A century and a half ago, Crimea served as the breeding ground for modern war photography . . . Now, photographers are once again mediating our experience of a conflict in Crimea. And they're choosing Instagram, which launched in 2010, for specific reasons." Quite interesting position. Read full article in The Atlantic. E.T.P. 8'

PHOTOAUTOMAT

Buno, Korengal Valley, Kunar Province, Afghanistan,2008.
Tim Hetherington. (5 December 1970 – 20 April 2011).
British-American photojournalist, filmmaker. 
Second Part.
When shooting the war documentary Restrepo with Sebastian Junger in Afghanistan’s Korengal Valley. He created a series of photographs of man bonding and the sleeping soldiers. Most of these intimate photographs depict American soldiers in , while others capture images from the Liberian civil war. As Junger puts it, “the artistic choices he made were incredibly risky, but he was very sure of himself and wound up completely re-inventing his craft. The title of my film, Which Way Is the Front Line from Here?, refers as much to Tim’s artistic instincts as to any combat situation he may have been in.” (Read full article here).


"...the war machine is too put a group of man together in extreme circumstances, and get them to bond together and they will kill and be killed for each other"

"at the end of the day you realize that it was just a group of young men that were pout in this mountain and they are trying to do is survive just looking after for each (...), and that was it really, nothing to do with war, nothing to do with politics."

-What are you doing?
-Don't you get it?
-(...)this is what the american publics never gets to see, (...) we want to see the soldiers as strong, we don't wanna know that they are also this vulnerable boys."

Murphy, Korengal Valley, Kunar Province, Afghanistan, 2008.

Kelso, Korengal Valley, Kunar Province, Afghanistan, 2008.




The PhotoAutomat section is edited by the Brooklyn-based photographer Andreína Restrepo

IN DOG WE TRUST



Photo: lovely Fred via his Instagram.
Hello dog lover! Hope you're having a lovely weekend!

Here are some links for your Sunday morning:









Video of the week: Slow Motion Fetch

Enjoy your Sunday! And follow Fred on Instagram

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In Dog We Trust is edited by: Carola Melguizo from La Guía del Perro.



Sunday, 2 March 2014

The Procrastinator (some) Times Sunday 2nd of March Edition


EDITORIAL

In our first March edition, sadly Venezuela and Ukraine remain in our news section as their crisis seem far away of reaching an end. In Venezuela, there was an incomplete/empty "peace conference" while students still were brutally repressed, imprisoned, and government representatives keeps using violent language to refer to the opposition. Extra "festive" carnival days were ordered by President Maduro in the hope of making the street manifestations go away, but the protests along with the ridiculously long queues to buy food, the violence, and the inflation, stand still. In Ukraine, the situation is really delicate as Putin received approval from the Russian Parliament to use force in Crimea, and Ukraine forces are in combat alert.

The rest of our edition includes, among other interesting articles, images from the BioScapes photo competition and a Mini Museum in the Science Section; a helpful guide to understand "Business English" from Britain and the successor of the GIF in our Business Section; Juman Malouf's character sketches for the The Grand Budapest Hotel in our Culture section; one of our favorite Miranda July's video in Our Weekly Procrastination via our friend Carla; in Photoautomat, Andreína share the first post of a March series about the great war photographer Tim Hetherington;  and of course the always lovely In Dog We Trust by La Guía del Perro.

Happy Sunday, happy reading and keep on keeping on!

NEWS

Russian army vehicles in the Crimean town of Balaklava on Saturday. Baz Ratner/Reuters via The New York Times.

The perspectives for Ukraine are really disheartening as Putin's desire to re-build the Soviet Union as a colonial power starts to feel less rhetoric and more real. Putin's biographer Masha Gessen argues in The Observer that now Russians realise he was serious and this will mean Russian aggression abroad and repression at home.

The Guardian has Live Updates of Ukraine's crisis. And these are the articles I found interesting during the week:

The New York Times: Kremlin prepares for military intervention.

The Atlantic: The Crimean Crisis We Should Have Seen Coming.

Foreign Policy: Meet the journalists exposing Yanukovych's deepest wettest secrets.

The New Yorker: Putin Goes to War in Crimea.

Quartz: Here's what's really happening in Ukraine, according to Russian bloggers.


*****UPDATES

The New York Times. Ukraine Crisis in Maps. Added 06 March.


Anti-government demonstrators take cover from a police water cannon in Caracas, Feb. 28, 2014. Photo AP via TIME.
Photo: Reuters via The Economist.

Time magazine publishes some recent photos of the protests in Venezuela and points out that the country "approaches a full month of nationwide instability and violence as protests against the government of Nicolas Maduro continue and anger at the country’s repressive turn and basket-case economy smolders. At least 17 people have died in clashes between security forces and pro- and anti-government demonstrators". Watch the photos here.

The Economist published the 27 of February a good article titled:  Dialogue, not repression, is the way for Nicolás Maduro to save his government and his country. "The echoes are striking: division, a government combining a democratic mandate with thuggery, and an opposition that is increasingly radicalised. The parallels between Venezuela and Ukraine are not exact: the fractures in Venezuela are based largely on class, and those in Ukraine partly on geography. But both are caught in a spiral of protest and violent response." The sad part is that he only cares about his government, about "winning", about their old consignes, about an ideal that just does not fit.

Javier Corrales in The Washington Post writes "The students are inspired and ready to press on. The government shows no signs of ceding ground. Yet in this stalemate, the students have already achieved two significant victories. First, they have delivered a message to the government that the formal opposition has failed to convey. Second, and more important, the protesters have revealed to the world the true nature of Venezuela’s regime." 

And finally Moisés Naim in the Atlantic, writes: "Venezuelans younger than 30 years of age (the majority of the population) have not known any government other than that of Chávez or Maduro. For them, "Chavismo" is the past. As for the promises of a better future: The results are in. The catastrophic consequences of Chávez's 21st Century Socialism are impossible to mask any longer and the government has run out of excuses. Blaming the CIA, the “fascist opposition,” or “dark international forces,” as Maduro and his allies customarily do, has become fodder for parodies flooding YouTube. The concrete effects of 15 years of Chavismo are all too visible in empty shelves and overflowing morgues. The youth who are continuing to protest in almost all of Venezuela’s large cities, risking brutal beatings, savage torture, and death, are convinced that they will not have a better future unless the policies to which this government is strongly committed are changed." Read full article here.

If you haven't heard anything about protest in Venezuela yet, you can have a look at my posts from the past two weeks (16th of February and 23rd of February), there are a lot of articles, links, photos and videos from all sort of sources.

These are another interesting articles and news from this week, and I'll keep updating this post during the week.

English:

AP Big Story: 2 Dead as Venezuelans crash in protests barricades. Added March 07.

Business Insider: Here's What Outsiders Get Completely Wrong About The Crisis In Venezuela. Added March 06. Important reading!

AP: UN experts demand answers about Venezuela violenceAdded March 06.

Vice News: Why more people are murdered in Caracas than in BagdadAdded March 06.

You Tube: The Repression was televised. This video has music, I know, it can be argued that that makes it less "objective" but forget about it for a minute and watch. (Contain strong images / NSFW) Added March 06.

Vice News: Venezuela Rising. Dispatches 1-4. Added 04 March.

Europäische Parlament: Venezuela peaceful and respectfucl dialogue only way out of the crisis, MEPs say.

Esquire: Before and after: Venezuela on Instagram.  30 photographs of how normal life changed in a matter of days when the people stood up to what they feel is an oppressive regime.

The New Yorker: Where Protests End: From Ukraine to Venezuela. "It is an age of protest and volatility. In the face of entrenched authoritarian governments, ineffectual parliaments, and insufficient rule of law, chronic instability is becoming the norm. First it was Egypt and Libya and Syria, and, in the past few days, it has been Ukraine and Venezuela—and Turkey and Thailand, too. In most of these cases, protesters and police do battle as in some extended Kabuki drama, without apparent conclusion. " 

The Huffington Post: White House Eyes Venezuela 'Mediation' As Lawmakers Call For Sanctions. "Kerry acknowledged U.S. lawmakers want a tougher approach, but emphasized the need for "a dialogue," in line with the Obama administration's position that the conflict must be resolved between Maduro and the Venezuelan people."

In related news:

Mashable: Here's Jared Leto's Beyond Perfect Acceptance Speech with mentions to Ukraine, Venezuela, and all the dreamers out there.


Español:

El Universal: Fotos: Muchacho (Alcalde de Chacao) denunció represión "cobarde y violatoria de los Derechos Humanos a vecinos. Agregado 06 Marzo.

You Tube: La represión sí fue televisada. Este video está editado con música, no sé por qué la gente sigue haciendo eso, pero olvídense de eso por un momento y véanlo. (Contiene imágenes fuertes / NSFW) Added March 06.

CNN: Video: Guardia Nacional ingresa ilegalmente a un edificio y detiene a estudiante. Agregado 06 Marzo.

El Nacional: Ex-Presidentes Latinoamericanos se pronuncian sobre la situación en Venezuela. Oscar Arias, Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Ricardo Lagos y Alejandro Toledo suscribieron un comunicado donde critican la desproporcionada represión contra manifestaciones estudiantiles y la detención de Leopoldo López. (Agregado 05 Marzo).

El Espectador (Colombia): La buena televisión chavista. Y acá el video mencionado

YouTube: Las declaraciones del chamo de Petare a Fernando del Rincón CNN.

Yahoo Noticias / EFE: La ONU condena la violencia en Venezuela e insta a respetar la libertad de expresión.

El País: La soledad de los estudiantes venezolanos. Mientras el país se encamina hacia una dictadura, en Latinoamérica hay un apoyo al chavismo por parte de la izquierda derivado, en el fondo, del prestigio menguado pero extrañamente vivo de la Revolución cubana.

El Nacional: Casos de torturas hicieron llorar a muchos. Víctimas y familiares contaron a quienes manifestaron ayer (28F) las prácticas inhumanas de los uniformados.

El Nacional. El patrón de la muerte. La reconstrucción de los fallecimientos de Robert Redman, Génesis Carmona, Geraldine Moreno y José Alejandro Márquez revela acciones y omisiones que comprometen a la Guardia Nacional Bolivariana con homicidios de civiles o con perpetradores de esos delitos cometidos a partir del 12 de febrero.  

Y en noticias relacionadas:

La Nación: Rusia planea expandir su presencia militar en Nicaragua, Venezuela y Cuba. ¿Quién dijo que la Guerra Fría había terminado?


Français:

Les Echos: Au Venezuela, le bilan des manifestations s’alourdit.  + VIDEO Après trois semaines d’une répression sanglante, les manifestations faiblissent en cette période de carnaval. La « conférence pour la paix » de Nicolas Maduro n’a toutefois pas apaisé la contestation à l’encontre de sa politique.

Le Figaro: Le Venezuela c'est l'Ukranie de l'Amerique Latine.

SCIENCE



Photos via The Creators Project.


"BioScapes Photo Competition Winners Prove Sometimes Nature Is The Best Artist. An annual contest that challenges both scientists and every day nature enthusiasts to find beauty in the tiniest of microbes, the Humped Bladderwort beat out over 2,100 still images submitted from 71 countries for the grand prize and unofficial title of "the hottest thing under a microscope."  Read full article and see some pretty amazing photos in The Creators Project. E.T.P. 5'


Photo via The Independent.

"How would you like to own 33 of the most interesting items in the world? This is the pitch behind a new Kickstarter project called the Mini Museum, which promises pocket-sized collections from objects spanning “billions of years of life, science and history”. For $239 (£143) backers of the project will receive a resin block containing various rare fragments. Everything from mammoth hair to a fragment of coal from the Titanic is included". Read full article in The Independent. E.T.P. 3'