July192012

:/ Really, Nolan. Really?

Because this movie doesn’t scream propaganda:

Bane’s dastardly plot involves a massive transfer of wealth using the stock exchange. It consists further of inciting civil unrest and taking control of cutting-edge technologies that can be used for good or ill. Nolan’s critique of Wall Street is implicit in the portrayal of the rapacious and arrogant Wall Street traders, but some uneasiness about the Occupy movement is evident, as well, in the film’s depiction of people’s tribunals. However, to say that the movie steers a middle course would be to impose coherence on what seems more like a scattered set of fears and impressions.

- Source

The final half-hour is cleverly written and on a spectacular scale. You may have seen a city trashed in many a blockbuster, but never quite like this.

The picture also has the courage to grapple, however superficially, with two big themes: the fear of terrorism and economic collapse.

The bad guy, Bane (Tom Hardy), is like an 18th-century French revolutionary hoping to unite the oppressed masses against the capitalists and authorities who have kept them under control for so long. 

- Source

February52012
Unfortunately, Mr. Fleming, “The Onion” is not a credible news source.
Do you really want to ask why we protest money and politicians in parks, now?

Unfortunately, Mr. Fleming, “The Onion” is not a credible news source.

Do you really want to ask why we protest money and politicians in parks, now?

January172012
January132012
November22011
October262011

Google has been asked by a US law enforcement agency to remove several videos exposing police brutality from the video sharing service YouTube, the company has revealed in its latest update to an online transparency report. Another request filed by a different agency required Google to remove videos allegedly defaming law enforcement officials. The two requests were among 92 submissions for content removal by various authorities in the US filed between January and June 2011. Both were rejected by Google along with 27 per cent of the submissions. The IT giant says the overall number of requests for content removal it receives from governmental agencies has risen, and so has the number of requests to disclose the private data of Google users.

October162011
October122011
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