Humanity 61 results

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I have created an official E-Mail account for this blog, so now you can contact me via E-Mail as ...

Your Top 5 of 2010

Top5

Are you tired of disagreeing with all those weird Top 5/10/20 of 2010 lists? No matter if it's about music, film, art, books, somehow I never agree with those lists. So now I want you to tell me all about your Top 5! You can choose any topic you want. Your Top 5 memories, Top 5 books, Top 5 music videos, Top 5 Christmas presents, Top 5 artists, Top 5 video games, Top 5 exhibitions, Top 5 celebrity couples, Top 5 singles...... I think you get what I mean now. So go ahead! Either hit the comment button, or contact me via Twitter @adiek84 I will add those to the blog then, so come and visit this post now and then as I will continue to update it. On December 31st I will then post my Top 5 here! I can't wait to read all your submissions! Yay, first submissions on Twitter! Please follow those people, they seem to have good taste! ...

New Theme!

Just in case you haven't noticed (which would be kinda weird, I guess), I have changed the theme of ...

Peace-ful Protest: List of Countries Boycotting Nobel Grows (via NewsFeed)

If you, like China, think that the Nobel committee is a bunch of "clowns" who are ...

Bidding Opens On Original Shinoda Painting: “Follow The Leader” (via Mike Shinoda’s Blog)

Happy Holidays.  I painted the piece above, entitled "Follow The Leader", for Ron ...

Why Stevens’ Anti-Death-Penalty Argument Is Powerful

By Adam Cohen Wednesday, Dec. 01, 2010 Former Justice John Paul Stevens, who retired from the Supreme Court in June after turning 90, has come out swinging in the past few days against the death penalty. In an appearance on 60 Minutes this past Sunday and a New York Review of Books essay that is now online, Justice Stevens makes the case that capital punishment as it is now administered in the U.S. is hopelessly flawed — and unconstitutional. In so doing, he is pushing the death-penalty debate just where it needs to go. ...

Modern Day Slavery: A Woman. A Prostitute. A Slave.

By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF November 27, 2010 New York Times Americans tend to associate “modern slavery” with illiterate girls in India or Cambodia. Yet there I was the other day, interviewing a college graduate who says she spent three years terrorized by pimps in a brothel in Midtown Manhattan. Those who think that commercial sex in this country is invariably voluntary — and especially men who pay for sex — should listen to her story. The men buying her services all mistakenly assumed that she was working of her own volition, she says. ...

CELEBRITIES DIE FOR GOOD CAUSE

By AMY WALLACE Published: November 28, 2010 ON Wednesday, Kim Kardashian is going to die a little. So is her sister, Khloé, not to mention Lady Gaga, David LaChapelle, Justin Timberlake, Usher, Serena Williams and Elijah Wood. That day is World AIDS Day, and each of these people (as well as a host of others - the list keeps growing) will sacrifice his or her own digital life. By which these celebrities mean they will stop communicating via Twitter and Facebook. They will not be resuscitated, they say, until their fans donate $1 million. "Dry your eyes, everybody," Ryan Seacrest, the "American Idol" host and another participant in this cyberstunt, says in a videotaped "Last Tweet and Testament" that will be posted on his Facebook profile - and appended to a final post on Twitter - sometime after midnight on Tuesday night. "I don't plan to be dead for too long." He adds, "Please buy back my life." "Come on, y'all," the actress Jennifer Hudson says in a similar videotaped plea. "Buy my life back. Go on a shopping spree and buy as much of it as you can." It's all part of the latest gambit by ...

Chinese woman sentenced to a year in labour camp over tweet

Amnesty International today urged the Chinese authorities to release a woman sentenced to a year in a labour camp for retweeting a supposedly anti-Japanese message. Chinese online activist Cheng Jianping was sentenced to one year of ‘Re-education Through Labour’ on Monday for “disturbing social order”, having retweeted a satirical suggestion on October 17 that the Japanese Pavilion at the Shanghai Expo be attacked. Cheng disappeared ten days later, on what was to be her wedding day, her whereabouts unknown until it emerged this week ...

Activist Artist Goes on Trial in Beijing

BEIJING — In a case that has galvanized the Chinese arts community, a prominent artist who helped lead a short-lived demonstration along the nation’s most politically hallowed thoroughfare went on trial Wednesday on assault charges that supporters say are aimed at punishing him for his political activism. The defendant, Wu Yuren, 39, is accused of assaulting a group of police officers at a Beijing police station last May. He had gone to the stationhouse with a friend who was seeking to file a complaint against his landlord, but Mr. Wu ended up in a verbal confrontation with several officers after they grabbed his cellphone, the friend, Yang Licai, said. The police officers say Mr. Wu attacked them. Mr. Wu claims ...
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