kateoplis

Month

July 2011

Jul 26, 2011452 notes
#I'll play with mine tonight #tech #music #bjork
“Evil can kill a person but it cannot kill a people.

We will punish the guilty. The punishment will be more generosity, more tolerance, more democracy.”
—Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg & Oslo mayor Fabian Stang 
Jul 26, 2011439 notes
#Oslo #Norway #wisdom #heads up USA
Jul 26, 2011146 notes
#fashion #sci-fi #not your grammie's little black dress
Jul 26, 2011711 notes
#war #ww ll #vintage
Jul 26, 2011128 notes
#architecture #renovations
Jul 26, 2011628 notes
#vintage #sports
Listen

Bon Iver // Come Talk to Me (Peter Gabriel)

Jul 26, 2011118 notes
#music
Jul 26, 2011201 notes
#landscape #space shuttle
Jul 26, 2011134 notes
#crackle
Jul 26, 2011723 notes
#meh
Jul 25, 2011153 notes
#film #documentary #art
“You develop an instant global consciousness, a people orientation, an intense dissatisfaction with the state of the world, and a compulsion to do something about it. From out there on the moon, international politics look so pretty. You want to grab a politician by the scruff of the neck and drag him a quarter of a million miles out and say, ‘Look at that, you son of a bitch.’” —Edgar Mitchell, Apollo 14 astronaut
Jul 25, 2011254 notes
Jul 25, 2011132 notes
#architecture #vintage #black and white #John Lautner
Jul 25, 201185 notes
#climate change #china
Jul 25, 201180 notes
#landscape #life
Jul 25, 201111,556 notes
#news #Somalia
By showing that a single photon obeys Einstein's Theory that nothing can travel faster than the speed of light--scientists prove that TIME TRAVEL is IMPOSSIBLE. → news.discovery.com

“The study, which showed that single photons also obey the speed limit c, confirms Einstein’s causality; that is, an effect cannot occur before its cause.”

Sorry kids.

Jul 25, 2011312 notes
#more bad news monday #science
Dear Guardian, Where's the Transparency? → kateoplis.tumblr.com

The Guardian, one of my favorite papers which I often quote here, has completely re-written an article on the Oslo tragedy originally titled, Oslo Bomb: Suspicion Falls on Islamist Militants, by Peter Beaumont, the foreign affairs editor for their sister paper, The Observer. I quoted an excerpt here on Friday at 9:22am, shortly after it was written. At the time, the responsible party was unknown and news of the shooting was just being broken. Mr. Beaumont offered his “expert” opinion on who could be responsible in an article that pointed all fingers to Islamist groups.

It has been known for some time that al-Qaida and other related “franchises” – including the most active groups in Yemen – have been trying to develop operations. Which leads to a second question: why Norway? 

The answer is threefold. In the first instance, with increased levels of security and surveillance in the UK and the US as well as other European capitals, Norway might have been seen as a softer target despite the recent breaking up of an al-Qaida cell in Norway. […]

A second possible factor behind the attack is a Norwegian newspaper’s reprinting in 2006 of a series of Danish cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad, which prompted threats against the country. A third potential explanation is the decision last week by a Norwegian prosecutor to file terror charges against an Iraqi-born cleric for threatening to kill Norwegian politicians if he is deported.

Not only has that excerpt been wiped in its entirety and the title replaced with, Norway Attacks Suggest Political Motive, the central theme of the article, which prematurely blamed Islamist extremists has been re-written as:

The re-appearance of an apparently large scale and co-ordinated terrorist attack in a European capital raises the inevitable questions of who was behind it. The most tempting and immediate conclusion was that it would be a jihadist group, as the style of the Oslo attack bore strong similarities to other earlier attacks in Europe and elsewhere. […] 

Nowhere is the phrase, “As I reported/speculated earlier”.

It’s especially interesting in the light of a new article by Charlie Brooker, The News Coverage of the Norway Mass-Killings was Fact-Free Conjecture:

Let’s be absolutely clear, it wasn’t experts speculating, it was guessers guessing – and they were terrible. […] 

In the aftermath of the initial bombing, they proceeded to wrestle with the one key question: why do Muslims hate Norway?

Luckily, the experts were on hand to expertly share their expert solutions to plug this apparent plot hole in the ongoing news narrative. Why do Muslims hate Norway? There had to be a reason. Norway was targeted because of its role in Afghanistan. Norway was targeted because Norwegian authorities had recently charged an extremist Muslim cleric. Norway was targeted because one of its newspapers had reprinted the controversial Danish cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad. Norway was targeted because, compared to the US and UK, it is a “soft target” – in other words, they targeted it because no one expected them to. 

I expect this behavior from lower papers, not from you. What gives, Guardian?

Jul 25, 2011180 notes
#norway #journalism #oslo #ethics
When I Fall In Love Bill Evans

ckck:

When I Fall In Love // Bill Evans

Sunday jazz.

Everyday jazz.

Jul 25, 2011283 notes
#EvansForLyfe
Jul 25, 2011281 notes
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