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sydney alternative media - non-profit community independent trustworthy
Friday, 5 January 2007
Oz uranium deal with China a big mistake say Greens
Mood:  blue
Topic: nuke threats

Press release follows

Selling uranium to China a mistake

5 January 2007

Australian Greens Senator Kerry Nettle said the federal government's
decision to permit the sale of Australian uranium to China was a mistake
which will fuel regional insecurity and that Prime Minister John Howard
will bear responsibility for the consequences.

The government today announced that Australia and China have ratified an
agreement to permit the sale of Australian uranium, from as early as
this year.

"Selling uranium to China is a mistake with potentially catastrophic
consequences", Senator Nettle said.

"Prime Minister Howard has ignored serious concerns in paving the way
for Australian uranium sales to China and he will bear responsibility
for the consequences.

"A report by federal parliament's Joint Standing Committee on Treaties
on the bilateral agreement to permit this trade last month highlighted
serious shortcomings in safeguards, including deficiencies in the
international inspection regime and the ability to ensure our uranium is
not misused.

"The world doesn't need more uranium and nuclear power. Australia should
be developing and selling clean and safe renewable energy technology to
China, not adding to regional instability.

"The Greens call on Foreign Minister Downer to rule out selling uranium
to India, which is not a signatory to the nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty."

Contact: Max Phillips 0414 ... ....


Posted by editor at 8:30 PM EADT
Updated: Thursday, 8 February 2007 7:05 AM EADT
Little Terns nesting on site of planned port terminal at Botany Bay
Mood:  crushed out
Topic: ecology
HI ALL,
Please pass this on to any bird watchers you know.  Little Terns are nesting at Penrhyn Spit - right where the new port terminal will be built.  There are eggs and chicks and National Parks has fenced off the area.  Please lend your support by coming down (with binos) to take a look (at a distance) and alert other users of the area of how important this event is.
Lynda Newnam
www.botanybay.info

remote Posted by editor at 8:00 PM EADT
Updated: Friday, 5 January 2007 8:15 PM EADT
Sovereignty Day event by original Australians, January 26th 2007
Mood:  special
Topic: indigenous
[This following is an amalgam of two emails from world renowned street artist Benny Zable with the final version of the artwork. Thanks Benny, we think it's just about perfect: editor]
 
Sent: Friday, January 05, 2007 [11.30 PM]
Subject: Sovereignty Day POSTER Jan 26th-27th Tent Embassy

Enclosed is the new [Sovereignty] Day poster authorised by Michael Anderson Aboriginal. The new poster extends an invitation to stay there at the Tent Embassy till Tuesday, February 6th, to prepare actions for the opening of Parliament 2007.
It has been stressed that drugs and alcohol not be brought onto the site and to support and respect the Aboriginal agenda.

Benny Zable

[In a third email received from ever humble expert Zable: 'This final copy was crafted with Isabel Coe [Wiradjuri woman, co founder Aboriginal Tent Embassy in Canberra 30 years ago]. Franklin Scarf did the art work actually. Between a whole lot of us this became the final copy. The credits are to a whole lot of people stumblin around in our isolation to attempt to get it right. My part was speaking with different people listening to criticisms and to eventually come up with this.' Yours Benny Zable]



Posted by editor at 7:35 PM EADT
Updated: Saturday, 6 January 2007 9:11 AM EADT
Dioxin in Sydney Harbour is much bigger than a quick and dirty $40M fix?
Mood:  incredulous
Topic: ecology

Talk of fixing the dioxin problem in Sydney Harbour surfaced again on ABC 702 radio this morning, and here:

 Toxic harbour to cost $40m - NEWS.com.au - 10 hours ago

Opposition Leader Debnam mentioned his clean up policy. This echoes a smaller $20M policy from memory of ex Premier Bob Carr trailed around for nearly a decade, as limited and ineffective as he was for the 5 years leading up to and since the so called Green Olympics in 2000 sited at Homebush Bay which Greenpeace in the end only gave 'a bronze medal' for greenology.

[Indeed both the ALP and Coalition Parties in NSW seem to be engaging in early skirmishs prior to the election in late March 2007 to establish their moral credentials on more general concerns of the environment as above,  and similarly the big Githubal Aboriginal Land Use deal with our Indigenous on the front page The Australian (News Ltd) 2nd January:

Deal struck on native Eden - Githabul win rights to national parks Graham Lloyd (subscriber material),

That is until the really big electoral policies of economy, health, education, transport etc are rolled out.]

An extensive track of the mainstream reporting of the dioxin issue is contained here on the SAM editor's ecology action home page:

"Sydney’s dioxin time bomb reflects an Olympic sized missed opportunity":
Sydney Harbour dioxin -  

The traverse of media coverage of the 10 years and longer embarrassing history of the dioxin issue was posted researched early in 2006 and posted by this writer becaue the NSW govt had to close fishing in Sydney Harbour in early 2006 because of real injury to professional fishers:

Sydney Harbour and fishing – overview and facts about dioxins

http://www.foodauthority.nsw.gov.au/consumer/c-dioxins.htm

especially this media release:

"Media Release 24 January 2006 – Temporary closure of commercial fishing in Sydney Harbour (partly superceded)"

also reported here by insightful reporter Jonathan Harley at the time http://www.abc.net.au/7.30/content/2006/s1555375.htm

Sometime just prior to Christmas 2006 the abc tv nightly news helpfully reported for the state government fishing on the ocean eastern side of the Bridge was officially okay again to some degree: More here  http://www.dpi.nsw.gov.au/fisheries/sydney-harbour-closure

and especially here:

Media release 9 Dec 06 - New Dietary Advice for Anglers is Catch of the Day

based on early study of results of fish species caught on that side.

But the problem in Homebush waters and land was always west of the Bridge anyway. The area doesn't make this horror list of the world's worst pollution hotspots:

World's 10 Worst Pollution Spots http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/oct2006/2006-10-18-02.asp

But don't be misled. Most of the dioxin is still there capped with clean fill on the land side, and still in the mud on the water side at risk of disturbance from say passing River Cats (the wash is known to damage river banks) or bad weather. Even a chunky $40 million, better than Carr's $20M promise, using limited technology will only put a dent in the century of industrial legacy. The resolution will probably cost hundreds of millions of dollars and no one is promising that.

So the dioxin in Sydney Harbour and the fish probably isn't going away in our lifetime.


Posted by editor at 9:38 AM EADT
Updated: Friday, 5 January 2007 7:32 PM EADT
Sir Laurence Street really the corruption reformer wanted by many in the Doomadgee wrongful death case, after AWB comments?
Mood:  sad
Topic: indigenous

The editor noted with interest on AM quality ABC news

 

http://www.abc.net.au/am/

 

this morning respected semi retired lawyer Sir Laurence Street of NSW has been appointed by the Queensland government in the terribly tragic case of the death of an Aboriginal man, Mulrunji Doomadgee, 36 in 2004 at Palm Island from horrific internal injuries. There has been huge community backlash since then. The story is also carried here

 

http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/exjudge-tests-palm-island-ruling/2007/01/04/1167777218774.html

 

A little research will show Sir Laurence

 

http://www.laurencestreet.com.au/

 

was asked in March 2006 what he thought of the highly limited terms of reference (TOR) of the Royal Commission like Cole Inquiry of the now infamous scandal over the Australian Wheat Board bribery of now dead Saddam government in Iraq:

 

"SIR LAURENCE STREET, FORMER ROYAL COMMISSIONER" There is always a temptation when one is a royal commissioner to think, "Well, look, I'll clean up all of this." And one thing I'll suggest to the Government. I'll do this I'll do that. I'm not going to be specific, but we all can recollect a royal commission that got way, way out beyond its original terms of reference, as the commissioner followed various rabbits down various burrows. That's not what a royal commission is about. A royal commission is a specific - or a commission such as this in the federal arena - is a commission to inquire into a particular topic and report back to executive government.

MICHAEL BRISSENDEN: Sir Lawrence Street is one of Australia's most respected legal minds and he's no stranger to royal commissions himself.

SIR LAURENCE STREET: I don't criticise politicians for one moment. I've done high-profile political inquiries myself. That's the political arena is the political arena. The arena is the fourth estate in which you and your colleagues function, Mr Brissenden is another. But the judicial arena, or the judicial arena such as an inquiry such as this, although it's not an adjudicative function, is something which is apart and has to be ruthlessly protected by the integrity of the commissioner to ensure that he or she doesn't find themselves pushed out beyond what is the proper scope of their terms of reference."

 

and a moment later in the same interveiw:

 

"MICHAEL BRISSENDEN: Veterans like Sir Laurence Street agree the position for Cole is difficult, but he simply has to play it straight.

SIR LAURENCE STREET: His duty is to carry out the inquiry as it is laid down in the terms of reference. He's not the guardian of all aspects of public interest associated with this topic. He's been given a specific task and his duty is to get on with that task and make his report. I may say a duty that he's discharging with admiral balance and, as one would expect, integrity. He's a judge of enormous stature, of shining integrity and he's doing I think a very praiseworthy job in a difficult political climate."

 

The full interveiw is here: Australian Broadcasting Corporation TV PROGRAM TRANSCRIPT LOCATION: http://www.abc.net.au/7.30/content/2006/s1604156.htm

Broadcast: 29/03/2006 Cole inquiry lacks powers: Opposition Reporter: Michael Brissenden

 

Street who it is fair to say is a bastion of the legal establishment in NSW for many decades said that the TOR have to be limited otherwise the AWB inquiry could grow like topsy as per a certain Royal Commission held in Australia in the 1980's.

 

If memory serves this writer, a junior solicitor here in NSW, thinks Sir Laurence is almost certainly referring to the hugely significant anti corruption Fitzgerald Inquiry in Qld in the 1980's. This is the same Fitzgerald Inquiry that Premier Peter Beatie appears to have obliquely referred to at times as ‘a lawyers picnic’ for becoming very expensive and possibly endless: There is one very serious veiw of history that the Fitz RC was moving from the corrupt Bjelke Peterson government of the National Party to the entrenched corruption in the Qld ALP but never got the chance. Topsy indeed.

 

Nor is this writer so naive about the legal and moral issues in the tragedy of every single premature Indigenous death. At one time in my life I was effectively a surrogate father figure to a 5 year old Aboriginal lad called Jimari for six months and I worry about his future most days of my life. I have also met a gifted Aboriginal artist friend of my sister called Glen from Palm Island with teeth missing from the frightening violence in that community. On another occassion at an environmental stall held at a peace rally in Belmore Park, Sydney CBD, on Palm Sunday many years ago a drunken Aboriginal young man stole all my Jabiluka stickers and started handing them out: Maybe I should have accepted this situation as paying the rent but when challenged for 'this disrespect to the Gundjehmi elders campaign on Jabiluka' given the stickers were a fundraising project against a uranium mine, he grabbed a stick and started to break it as if to stab me with the pointed end. He wanted my blood. When I took it off him he complained that he was 'homeless' and so it was my fault. But I didn't make him drunk at 11 am in the morning, nor are most Aboriginal People drinkers. Far more in the white community. In 1989 I completed my honours thesis 'A legal foundation for Aboriginal Rights' predicting the famous Mabo High Cout decision 3 years later. Once I got my car window broken while donating books to the Redfern Community centre. The undercover cops watched the whole thing as I negotiated to get my address book back.

 

Indeed respected lawyer Andrew Boe has been involved in the Doomadgee controversy as here March 2005

 

http://www.countercurrents.org/hr-boe170305.htm

 

and here up to late 2006

 

http://www.boelawyers.com.au/current%20focus.html

 

and notes the complex social problems at Palm Island leading to violence in too many situations. So what share of responsibility of the policeman Chris Hurley in this death? I don't know. The facts and the coroner's findings are highly relevant of course. It's a matter for professionals and family much closer to the facts of the tragedy. Only this writer lacks confidence in Sir Laurence being quite the corruption fighting reformer others, especially in the Aboriginal community, might be hoping for. On the other hand Sir Street may do well in brokering a quasi legal resolution with the family and community stakeholders. Maybe. Here's hoping.

 

Postscript #1

Minimalist lawyer Street to shut down Doomadgee case file as predicted?
by Tom McLoughlin solicitor Monday January 15, 2007 at 03:32 PM

As predicted and advised to [Melbourne Indymedia website]  readers perhaps a week ago, this breaking news report on Sydney Daily Telegraph says it all: 'Not open ended', and 'not taking any new evidence'

As I understand it Noel Pearson Aboriginal lawyer of Cape York and national figure wrote in The Australian around 6th January that it was imperative that whoever takes on reviewing this file be able to look at new evidence or new information.

At least as I recall it on the Lavartus Prodeo web blog I read yesterday.

Here we have Street who in one interview on 7.30 Report

1. criticised the famous Fitzgerald corruption inquiry 'for chasing every rabbit down every hole' and

2. commended the cautious narrow rigour (my words) of the Cole AWB as if to bless its limits

also now stating it's going to be a 1 week flash in the pan job after 2 to 3 years of full on controversy over the death in custody riots and national controversy as per Telegraph report below.

Well here is something very interesting I noticed: The heat on the Beattie govt really increased when National President of the ALP prominent Aboriginal man Warren Mundine started hitting the airwaves a few weeks back saying its not good enough after the DPP appeared to cancel out the Coroner.

Warren Mundine is pretty quiet now. But guess what: The big articles that broke the story about the largely but not entirely symbolic and big Githabul native title successful land use agreement with the NSW ALP government over Christmas New Year involved the one and same Warren Mundine. Warren has had a big victory on indigenous rights as "chief executive of NSW Native Title Services, which funded the claim, [and] told the ABC that the deal is a watershed.

"It gives an opportunity for that community to have lands returned. It gives an opportunity for that community to have an economic base as well as a cultural base to operate from" said Mr Mundine"

In The Epoch Times Jan 3-9 2007 quoting AAP.

I'm sure Warren Mundine is more than capable of covering two big items of indigenous controversy at once, but I sure hope he is not trading one State ALP indigenous issue for another State ALP win on Black rights, all in the ALP family so to speak?

Sure is an interesting coincidence. Qld side of the border has not cooperated in the Githabul land use agreement. I wonder what that means?

Street's report looks like a hopeless avenue for the Palm Island Aboriginal community on the basis of this article posted at midday at News Ltd (and notice the spin about Sir Street being an ex WW2 veteran as if this could possibly be relevant. Is this undue vanity?)

http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,21060943-5001028,00.html


Palm Island report 'due soon'

January 15, 2007 12:00

THE man appointed to review Palm Island's controversial death in custody case says he expects to finalise his report in as little as a week.

Sir Laurence Street will arrive in Brisbane from Sydney this afternoon, before flying out to the north Queensland island tomorrow to get a "feel" for where Mulrunji Doomadgee died in November 2004.

The respected former NSW chief justice was appointed earlier this month to review the Director of Public Prosecution's (DPP) decision not to charge Senior Sergeant Chris Hurley over Mulrunji's death in custody in 2004. Leanne Clare's ruling came despite a coroner finding the officer was responsible for Mulrunji's death.

Sir Laurence said he would take his senior counsel assisting, a barrister and crown law officers with him on a "three or four" hour trip to Palm Island.

The WWII veteran said his visit came after working "virtually full-time" on the matter since receiving the files last Monday.

"It's a matter which should be finished within a matter of a week or so," Sir Laurence said today.

"It's not open-ended. I have the material. It's a question of our team evaluating it."

Sir Laurence will visit the site of Mulrunji's death in the island's watchhouse, which was later burnt down in a riot.

He stressed he would not be collecting any evidence during the trip.

"I won't be receiving any information or interviewing anybody," Sir Laurence said.

"All the information is already in the documents that have been gathered by the coroner and by the DPP.

"I'm going over to enlarge my understanding (of what happened)."

Sir Laurence said that included rejecting any attempt by Mulrunji's family to provide him with further information.

"It's not within my province to do so. In any event, there's no purpose in doing so because there's exhausted material already gathered by the coroner and by the DPP," he said.

Sir Laurence will return to Brisbane on Wednesday before flying back to Sydney to continue reviewing the case.

Postscript #2

Death is the final silence, Sir Laurence
by Tom McLoughlin Wednesday January 17, 2007 at 02:06 AM

Even Laurence Street had the self knowledge to hesitate on camera on late SBS tv news tonight at the death of the critical 24 year old witness who swung from a noose and died in the last 24 hours.

The witness that likely had more to say but Sir Street said was irrelevant to his review because they were not taking any 'new evidence'.

Perhaps the dead man agreed that silence was indeed his future fate, and there indeed is nothing more silent than DEATH.

The report below is at

http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,21070012-5005941,00.html

timed at midday Tues 16th January 07

with Sir Street referring to his 'coincidental' visit. Trouble it seems related not coincidental.

My belief is Street's visit and the form and shape of his investigation could well have influenced the deceased Bramwell that he wasn't going to be listened to yet again. He was 'nothing' yet again, to a legal system, and broader Australian society, and he'd had enough of it and us, and in particular the 'Street Review'.

Sir  Street made it very clear he was not even going to talk to Bramwell as per reports in the last day or two in the general press, and echoed here on Melb IMC


Doomadgee co-arrested found hanged

By Dave Donaghy

January 16, 2007 12:00
Article from: AAP

A WITNESS in the Mulrunji Doomadgee death-in-custody case has been found hanged on Palm Island.

The discovery coincided with the arrival on Palm Island of New South Wales chief justice Sir Laurence Street', who is reviewing the Queensland Director of Public Prosecution's (DPP) decision not to charge Senior Sergeant Chris Hurley over Mulrunji's death in custody in November 2004.

When he arrived on the island today Sir Laurence learned that Patrick Bramwell, who was arrested alongside Mulrunji, had committed suicide on the north Queensland island overnight.

"There's maybe even more point in me coming here on a day like this because it's very tragic," Sir Laurence said.

Mr Bramwell was arrested by police for swearing on November 19, 2004, just before Mulrunji was arrested for the same offence.

The two men, who knew each other, were taken to the watchhouse in the same paddy wagon.

Mulrunji later died from injuries deputy state coroner Christine Clements found had been caused by Snr Sgt Hurley during a scuffle at the police watchhouse.

Sir Laurence visited the site of Mulrunji's death and the local council during his brief visit to the island, 60km northeast of Townsville.

He expects to finish his report soon and the State Government has promised to release the results when parliament resumes next month.

However, Acting Premier Anna Bligh has said if Sir Laurence made a finding against Snr Sgt Hurley, the report would not be tabled in the parliament until after the matter went to court "to ensure that nothing in the report jeopardised the success or otherwise of the prosecution".

Ms Bligh said Mr Bramwell's death was a "tragic incident" but declined to comment further for cultural reasons.

"The death of a young person is always a tragedy," she said.

[You can say that again, and tragic for the administration of justice in the whole state of Qld.]


Posted by editor at 9:09 AM EADT
Updated: Wednesday, 17 January 2007 2:35 PM EADT
Thursday, 4 January 2007
Morris lets the container truck monster loose at sensitive Penrhyn Estuary
Mood:  down
Topic: ecology

Message from community group Botany Bay & Catchment Association follows regarding the ongoing saga of massive expansion of the shipping container/truck sector affecting Botany Bay first, but then all of transport and amenity in the rest of metropolitan Sydney, as if it wasn't congested enough:

Sent: Wednesday, January 03, 2007 3:34 PM
Subject: PLAN FOR PENRHYN ESTUARY

Dear All,
Sydney Ports has distributed a DRAFT Environmental Management Plan for Penrhyn Estuary with reference, of course, to the whole of Botany Bay.  Some of the chapters - such as Marine Mammal Management, Bird Management etc are on our website at www.botanybay.info
Please take a look at what interests you and forward on the link to others who may be able to make some input.  We need to get any comments collated before the end of January.
Regards,
Lynda Newnam
www.botanybay.info
protecting environment=protecting people

Posted by editor at 11:13 PM EADT
Updated: Thursday, 4 January 2007 11:51 PM EADT
Green Party backs Military Court director on shameful legal process for Hicks
Mood:  sad
Topic: human rights
Howard shoud listen to Brigadier McDade on Hicks
 
2 January 2007
 
Australian Greens Senator Kerry Nettle today called on John Howard to
listen to Brigadier McDade, director of the Australian Military Court,
on the treatment of David Hicks, and called on all parliamentarians to
back the Greens Bill to remove recognition of the US Military
Commissions.
 
"John Howard should listen to the advice of our top military prosecutor
rather than the prolonged excuses of the increasingly troubled Bush
Administration," said Senator Nettle.
 
"David Hicks has been held for over five years now, in terrible
conditions and with no prospect of a fair trial.  The Brigadier is spot
on in labelling his treatment 'abominable'.
 
"It is not good enough for the Prime Minister to shift his rhetoric
slightly. He can and should act by picking up the phone and calling
George Bush to ensure David Hicks is brought home.
 
"The Greens have introduced a Private Members Bill that would remove
recognition of the flawed US Military Commissions from Australian law.
Government backbenchers have an opportunity to signal their discontent
about inaction on Hicks by voting for this bill when Parliament
resumes".
 
Contact: Max Phillips 0414 ...........

Posted by editor at 11:05 PM EADT
Updated: Thursday, 8 February 2007 7:04 AM EADT
How the public can post on Sydney Alternative Media for now
Mood:  party time!
Topic: publish a story

Open letter:

 

Well I got a bit bored waiting for Sydney indymedia to set up again in the new year so I did this website last night which I now call SAM, short for Sydney Alternative Media.

There is not much there at the moment. A welcome and review of the West Wing tv series no.s 1 to 5.

 

SAM is a somewhat interactive news focused website, although a bit clunky at this stage, as original posts from the public have to be moderated by me before they can go on the site, which sort of dampens the frisson of excitement one gets when self publishing a sincere post of some sort. And these original posts need to be sent in by email too.

 

Even so your alternative news itch can be satisfied here now simply by sending an email to

 

 

 

I will then take a look at the very earliest convenience, and as soon as I ensure it's not spam I can shepherd it onto the website. It won't matter if I agree with it or not as long as it's within legal bounds and not too long to check out. I've got quite a thick skin like that.

 

If your story is not getting through for any reason try ringing our mobile phone number 0410 558838.

 

It will help if it's got a real person signing off on it, because that usually helps to sort the wheat from the chaff. Also not too long and boring please! The most powerful news is often the most brief like this: One small step for man, one giant step for mankind. (Neil Armstrong first person on the moon.) That's only ten words and forgive the gender bias of the 1960's.

 

No story is too profound or humble in my view at least at this stage of the finances.

 

Have a good day, and happy new year.

 

Cheers, Tom McLoughlin


Posted by editor at 3:02 PM EADT
Updated: Wednesday, 4 July 2007 10:02 PM NZT
Issues of interactivity - how to give responsible access to friends of SAM self publishing?
Mood:  accident prone
Topic: independent media

Sydney Alternative Media (SAM) website is pretty humble on its first day out. A 'welcome' article and a second article being a review of the West Wing tv series (from 1999 to 2005).

What is needed is the capacity for interactive publishing from the community like traditional indymedia users, and anyone else who might become interested from around the Sydney metroplitan area and further afield.

I'm still working this side of things out so I don't run the risk of a massive spam attack making the thing unmanageable literally as the door opens.

Most options with the SAM hosting service seems to require active moderating of the site which looks a bit demanding. I'm playing with some password, and remote email to blog, possibilities to promote interactivity, so sensible people with good faith interest in publishing their news free of big or biased special interests can get their material up, but ratbags will move on to something else simpler to amuse themselves.

It's the frisson as they say, the excitement of having your own sincere views up on the web within seconds of submitting them to the publishing platform that I am looking for with SAM. It won't be nearly as good if they have to wait for me to analyse and edit some hours later. On the other hand it does need some quality control to mediate the destructive and angry posts.

This is proving a pretty big hurdle to jump for a non geek but let's see if it's possible somehow.

 The editor.


Posted by editor at 2:01 PM EADT
Updated: Thursday, 4 January 2007 2:23 PM EADT
West Wing tv series, bourgeois wank or worthy response to Ed Murrow's example?
Mood:  caffeinated
Topic: big media

Summary

 

My quest: What is WW? Is it really good (in no particular order: educational, moving, wise, appealing, entertaining) or stupid and fake? It’s created a frisson ....The answer to the questions above is “yes” thankfully for such an investment of time, with some tricks in their tv trade worth noting, and some constructive criticism too.

 

Ed Murrow’s challenge

Ed Murrow was the idealist tv journalist of the 1950’s who wanted television to help inform and therefore empower democracy in the USA:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_Night,_and_Good_Luck.

Murrow was mightily unimpressed with the low brow race to the common denominator bottom advertising dollar. And he was soooo right with shiny car adverts today polluting most advertising minutes of most channels as the world exhausted and/or fouls itself in a sleep walk to destruction: The cars and the lifestyle it represents, that are killing my ecology for their inputs from mining for metals and drilling for oil, to greenhouse emissions hyperventilating the climate, to inexorable demand for more road base crushing community spirit, extending city limits, green lighting money politics through our planning regime.

The West Wing effect here

I’ve spent roughly 80 hours this holiday watching West Wing episodes on DVD and I’m not finished yet. Blinds lowered, fruit and veg supplies in, prawn oven bake snacks, smoked mussels on linseed rye. Dry ginger ale and long blacks. In fact I’ve spent so much time with these folks this holidays they almost feel like friends, but please don’t call me a groupie.

My quest: To find the answer to this: What is WW? Is it really good (in no particular order: educational, moving, wise, appealing, entertaining) or stupid and fake? It’s created a frisson

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/frisson

in the Australian political community influencing the lexicon

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/lexicon

so I need to know and enjoy where I can too. Sure one can just read this enormous entry here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_West_Wing_%28tv_series%29


but actually watching is surely the best way to measure up the show’s worth, that is on the terms it was meant to be assessed, on a tv screen fresh to a viewer without background research.

There is a full list of episode break downs here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_The_West_Wing_episodes


Some people like to drive away in summer to see the sights and meet and drink and I do too, but my driving job makes this less appealing, and I’m in training tea total now, and just sitting propped up on cushions on the floor of my live and work space ducking out for supplies, chatting with Video Ezy staff, the odd cycle down to the community centre, feels just fine so far.

After 80 odd episodes being most of series 1, 2, 3 and some of 4, I can say some things that might interest and even intrigue West Wing fans. Perhaps a vocational political activist has more chance than the average viewer in this respect.

The answer to the questions above is “yes” thankfully for such an investment of time, with some tricks in their tv trade worth noting, and some constructive criticism too.

A little background: WW is a forty minute quality tv production per week, fast paced sit com mostly centred in the Whitehouse of the USA President in the only military industrial super power on this planet. Thus it is essentially about the ways and means, trappings and perversities, of Big Power from that angle. There is plenty of other angles one could find same, say the Pentagon (military), or CBS/ABC/CNN/Fox (media), boardroom of Microsoft/General Motors (industry) etc. And absent a super power’s military the issues that come up face most governments I suppose.

As chief writer Aaron Sorkin points out in a trailer, in his WW we find ‘a love letter to government people in public service’.

Nevertheless the USA being as it is an economic and military behemoth, the WW is also a means of convenient PR of the host culture for their hegemony over the particularly western English speaking world, including all the way down to a room in Marrickville, Sydney where I am checking it out. Is it simply bourgeoisie wank as per the title above or perhaps that and a whole lot more, indeed a great broadcasting achievement to inform society in a way that Ed Murrow, the conscience of the television industry, told us is the real standard? In a complex political world these outcomes, wank and transcendence, are probably not mutually exclusive.

The review task

– compressed viewing

Some practical comments: Watching 50 hours (with more to go) of 1 hour format tv has problems: You get sick of the hyperbolic orchestral intro music pretty soon. What is meant to be a safe once per week dose soon becomes cheesy and pretentious. That’s an artefact of compressed viewing. Similarly the twee music over the end credits jarrs especially when it bookends a sombre storyline e.g. the murder of dignified African leader winning $1 billion in HIV/AIDS drug aid, only to find perhaps like chess which features a lot in the series, his journey has allowed a coup in their absence such that he is ‘killed in the airport parking lot’ on return: The desperately needed aid from the ostensible USA camelot of President Jed Bartlett dying with them.

Roll end credit twee music. Aaaargh!

- still not very dated

Fortunately the episodes date very well. The show began broadcasting in the United States of America (I don’t say America which disrespects all of South America etc) in 1999 and apparently has shut down in mid 2006.

An African President angst filled visit was in episode 26 "In This White House" (series 2 no. 4) but like good writing, acting and production, the story lines don’t go stale because most really big power struggles like epidemics, poverty, corruption, Middle East, environment, gender, energy, labour, capital special interests, racism, and did I say epidemics, are all here in familiar form 6 years after first showing in the USA, as everyone in politics knows.

One story is shockingly current: “War Crimes” at episode 49 (series 3 no. 5): ‘All wars are a crime’ notes the General to White House Chief of Staff and airforce veteran Leo McGarry explaining USA refusal to support an international court of justice on war crimes. All wars are a crime.

- language threads (beware ‘he Things’

Compressed viewing means you notice repeated phrases a lot easier: There are witty sparse phrases in moderate tones, to summarise, soften and mediate complex ‘insider power dynamics’: Big actual or potential problems become “a Thing” and “the Thing” (my capitalisation) which is intuitively contextualised as distinct from ‘the Thing’ yesterday, last week or indeed another Thing running parallel but in another policy area altogether.

(One could do a decent satire on such like: ‘Things’ as in Frankenstein monster political problems wander all of the corridors in this place and must be put to rest.)

The show is literally about Things lifted from big and oh so real political fights I read about for a vocation in a government near you. This is why it is worth watching the WW. It’s a gym work out for the mind concerned with democratic service, but also a really quite decent level of emotional and psychological intelligence. Good writing indeed. The influence of Clinton White House Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers seems apparent.

I also noted these terms:

“waddyaneed?” and equally “What do you need?” as in how I can help, not what I can exploit for my own career. That’s a healthy spirit of team work, and admirable.

"I'm on it" Meaning to voluntarily deal with a problem, culture of seeking responsibility amongst a high achieving ambitious culture

"blow off" In  Australia we would say 'piss someone or something off', to get rid of or dismiss.

“go away” and “get away from me” meant as an emotional safety valve, when the physical space will always be as close as the next office or corridor no matter how angry, disappointed, upset or horrified by workmates. Indeed space from those most dangerous to our sense of identity – our closest friends and colleagues. Time out for adults.

“not for nothin” a verbal underline prefacing something meant very sincerely in a world where conversation is so much insincere sales talk (at least in fast talking bullshit prone USA where child entrepreneurs charge a coin for classmates to borrow their pencil rubber).

“stop talking” when words dig a political problem deeper. Every political staffer knows the feeling of drowning where words usually so useful are the opposite.

“candy ass” as in what we would say ‘fairy floss arse’, all air and no substance, a flake

“get on the couch and I’ll do you right now” One of many amusing graphic verbal sex metaphors to mark an in fact sexless yet joyful political success. There is no sex amongst the President’s staff in all but a few storylines, but there are plenty of ‘adult themes’. Invariably invokes a genuine laugh perhaps relating to the age old truism that the pleasures of power compares, and competes, quite well with sex. Truth is these folks are married to their jobs, that is to power and ethical exercise of same. And if partners exist they are effectively widow(er)s. More of that below.

“what’s going on?” Because there is always something covert ‘going on’ in the office next door or corridor. To which there might be a useful answer or a ‘get away from me’ answer.

“paint a picture” Which of course is what political communicators always want to do either of their opponents (unflattering) or of themselves (appealing), and reminds me of abstract expressionism art on walls in big law firms here in Sydney. In that case it signifies they can paint any picture the client asks and can pay for!

“look at my face” meaning ‘I am really serious and your obtuse failure to notice my mood is pissing me off even more’. This is the Italian suit wearing version of a rap street kid’s ‘speak to the hand/the face don’t understand’ riposte.

“that’s a lid” – savvy media talk meaning end of daily news briefings.

“are you inside?” or “do you want to come inside?”– meaning the access/exclusion to a policy decision/debate.

“head’s up” as in tip off about a situation arising

"what's next?" the typical refrain of the smart busy person that you go to to get things done!

"wheels up/wheels down" meaning literal aeroplane travelling time (say on Airforce 1) perhaps out of cell phone contact for telecommunicate work, or free from ground based political troubles. Again 'busy person' talk.

- fast paced repartee

Never in all my news and current affairs watching, and then into popular culture, have I had to strain so much to really hear everything that’s going in the dialogue. So I got my headphones and watched the WW on computer. Lo and behold 20%, and it might be said sometimes the shiniest gem stones, was revealed to me. I have had this experience with some really subtle pop music and read a review once saying Mark Knopfler, the inspired plucker from Dire Straits, also deserves this attention to detail.

Homage to recent tv/film legends

There is the odd breath taking cross reference to recent quality broadcast history in keeping with the Ed Murrow quest outlined by Clooney’s movie referred above, that keeps the hardcore quality tv (remember that?) fan coming back to the WW even if only in hope of another: In episode 44 (no.22 in Series 2 called "Two Cathedrals") when CJ the press secretary character complains that ‘even Ted Baxter’ will ask the embarrassing question they are all dreading, no one blinks, everyone in character of the storyline knows, yet in truth’Ted Baxter’ finished as a fictional character on tv maybe 20 years previous: The iconic classic flaky (ie ‘candy ass’) bril creamed news presenter in the Mary Tyler Moore Show made in the feminist awakenings of the 1970’s. Loved that reference.

Incredible how a throw away line like that could say so much on so many levels.

On reflection MTM indeed was a kind of poor man’s West Wing about moderate power/human frailty but from the media angle not a politician’s office. Ed Murrow would have approved of grouchy Lou Grant the news director played by Ed Asner in the MTM show. A very moving show that WW writers surely lean on in modern times. A good read of the history here:

http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/M/htmlM/marytylermo/marytylermo.htm

Murrow surely would have liked MTM and WW both, I have no doubt. True to Murrow’s worst fears, the highly flaky totally dispensible craven Ted Baxter newsreader type survives an economic purge at the station and everyone else is sacked as revealed in the link above.
Another fine moment for the viewers tipping the WW hat to those coming before, was the same really big bold episode of Pres Bartlett facing a huge hall of press corps over his once secret ‘remitting recurring MS’ health problem. Not so far fetched given real President Ronald Reagan really did have creeping Alzheimer’s, while noting the less fraught mild MS problem does not actually cook the intellect, while Reagan’s surely did for real while still in harness.

What I am referring to in broadcast history terms was the music overlay and surreal imagery of that episode: It was a 60’s faded guitar echo of the Doors with ‘The End My Friend’ or very similar, which in turn reprised Sheen’s earlier character of gritty, and thus ‘most dangerous when cornered’ Captain Willard way back in a giant movie achievement Apocalypse Now directed by Francis Ford Coppola:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apocalypse_Now

(The fact a slice of Mark Knopfler’s Dire Staits spooky ‘Brothers in Arms’ tune was weaved in just prior underlined it all in another cute cross reference, a quite deserved slice for ‘deep well’ Knopfler’s work inserted this top line show: When you track MK’s stuff it is very social welfare and humanist in content. Very. And poetic too seeing him inevitably working with iconic fellow traveller Bob Dylan on album Slow Train Coming. I notice WW writer Aaron Sorkin is said to be a strong fan of Dire Staits too here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aaron_Sorkin )

Here was Sheen/Willard/Bartlet in one giant film/tv industry symbol facing massive destruction as director Coppola apparently did in the making of his film, and surviving somehow. Surviving being surely one of the most admirable qualities of humanity, sometimes against all odds.

Sheen/Bartlet/Willard/Apocalypse Now/West Wing. The artistic cross over was very powerful and moving. The ghost of pivotal maternal and feminist straight talking character Mrs Landingham, his guardian angel, leading him over the threshold from failure to success, as her character crossed the ultimate threshold herself of life into death, well that was sublime scripting. A wondrous climax. No wonder Hollywood writers are going back to tv with episodes like that.

Actor Rob Lowe who plays saintly Sam Seaborne series 1 to 3 inclusive (more of that religious dimension below) in the pioneering phases of the series, actually mentions in a DVD special feature: ‘the body of work of Martin Sheen including Apocalypse Now makes it easy to take orders from Martin as if he really was the President’. Mary Tyler Moore ….or is it Mrs Landingham now 30 years later?, and Apocalypse Now are two great works WW builds on.

The other great aspect of that climactic finale to series two was the Shakespearean use of weather parallel to the turmoil in the affairs of people. One can say its artifice but this writer recalls “not for nothing” by which I mean for real on Friday the 13th of Sept 1994 when the thunder clouds pounced on Sydney, the day the NSW then government made a terrible decision against the environment to be thrown out of office 6 months later. I am reminded of this too as the daughter of that premier John Fahey was in the newspapers earlier this week front page killed in a car crash at 27, may her soul rest in peace.

Cryptic name games

From the outset I want to say “not for nothing” that creator Aaron Sorkin is having a lend of us in a gentle charming way with his character names. You can be sure the makers were thinking about the sound of the names too: In one episode they joke about an engagement of Shellburne and Seaborn as hopeless as the double barrel name would sound stupid. Here are my personal decodes:

- Josh Lyman as political tactics man. Well who else but a ‘joshing lie man’? Mind you his character actually knows flake from barramundi so to speak. He won’t back the slick but vacuous Presidential candidate John Hoynes because ‘he’s not the real deal’. Bartlet gets this tactics prodigy instead.

- Toby Ziggler. A ‘tubby stickler’ very dogmatic about ethical government for the people and not powerful special interests. A good contrast to joshing man above.

- Leo McGarry. A ‘gritty lion’, not least his looks which we are told later is ‘made of leather, a map of the world’. See what I mean about poetic.

- Donna Moss. Sadly D…. M….. is actually a charming elegant indeed talented ‘door mat’ however idealistic and dedicated. In fact because of those very things. Every show we hear joshing man shout out imperiously to “DONNA!” his assistant that she is institutionalised to react to. We know this is partly by choice and personal psychology because she her ex boyfriend was ‘Dr Free Loader’ she supported through medical school before taking on co dependent Joshing man. She even turns down a high paid Issues Director slot with an internet start up for the same reason – it’s a stand alone position so no co dependence involved. Mercifully she breaks out of the cycle by the 5th series, but only after a car bomb shakes her sense of identity and mortality.

- Mandy Hampton. ‘Man’ ish with ‘tons’ of ‘ham’. Mannish but only in the alpha male tough driven personality aspect. Physically she is a pocket rocket feminista, very cute and knows it. And a comic ‘ton’ load of ‘ham’ ish hyperbole in her character ….like ignoring traffic cops on her mobile because she is just too busy to be arrested, kerb jumping in her bmw, trading down a $900K salary to work on the Hill. That tons of ham alpha man Mandy Hampton replaced by Amy Gardner character.

- Sam Seaborn. ‘C- born’. Geddit?! Like ‘Christ’ some people are just made both smart and yet totally good all the way through. No muck in them. Makes platonic friends with a prostitute and doesn’t disown her when the heat is on, just like a certain high minded God Jesus is reported to have done with Mary Magdalen. Sam’s righteous fury is frightening and dramatic firing the arse of 2 coward lawyer weasels to help Ainsley (see below). Writes the ‘cure for cancer’ speech which you just know won’t make the cut, angles for ‘super conductor/colliders’ for the purpose of ‘discovery’ over pork barrel small mindedness. An inspired performance by Rob Lowe, replaced by Will Bailey character.

- Ainsley Hayes who is ‘inanely hazed’, that is mindlessly cruelly mistreated on arrival.

- Will Bailey – This is really funny, like Toby is Tubby above (Tubby looks a lot thinner later in the long running series, and they even have him eating a salad which I think he calls weeds?). Will moves in to take on actor Rob Lowe’s pivotal role as Sam Seaborn who obviously wants to ‘bail’ out of the series after 3 solid seasons: Fair enough still youngish, surely has more professional plans of some kind. So we have actor Joshua Malina who literally ‘will bail’ out the West Wing after the critical loss of Rob Lowe who when you look at the early dust jackets is listed first in star quality ahead of all others including Sheen. Roll on series 4 and 5 in the business that is now the WW.

- Amy Gardener – Ambitious toiler for the fruits of the world. Amy is a sharp youngish career feminista like Mandy above. Amy is well dressed in black with the perfect accessory, a smart mouth. Like Mandy the ex girlfriend to joshing man who came on platonically as a staffer, so Amy becomes actual love interest of joshing Man as a staffer. It’s either that or consummate the tension between Donna and Josh man. One of the few actual sex amongst staff plot lines is with Amy. But it doesn’t work out. She overcooks the ambition for Josh and maybe herself.

- Lord John ‘Marbury’, as in here we go round the ‘Mulberry bush’. Eccentric brilliant UK ambassador. Always walking and talking ‘in circles’ and at quite ‘frenetic speed’. But always gets the job done too …like preventing a war on the Subcontinent being the best of british champ that he is. Just like the nursery rhyme here:
http://www.niehs.nih.gov/kids/lyrics/mulberry.htm

- Joey Lucas – looks like a baby kangaroo ‘joey’ in facial features, and petite frame is suggestive. Cute with it too. Plays the deaf polling expert who ‘links us’ to the voting public’s thinking. Step on up Joey Lucas.

- ‘Abbey’ Bartlett – is effectively a nun in an ‘Abbey’ widowed like so many other politician spouses by her dear husband’s election to President. Short for “Abigail” but rarely heard. On one occasion the couple reveal they haven’t had the opportunity for sex for 14 weeks for various reasons and not for the lack of interest. Way too classy to be a victim of circumstance and as a feminista ‘aircraft carrier’ amongst sail boats, she roams the world sewing emancipation, practices medicine even when she ought not and loves her hubby Jed, father of her 3 daughters. Played masterfully by Stockard Channing which has to be one of the best names for an actor in the world.

- Jed Bartlet – The real reason is because he is a convenient namesake of a real figure of American history as here
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josiah_Bartlett who actually did sing the Declaration of Independence. But I like this version too:

‘Jedi’ ‘Bart’ ‘let’. The suggestion here is ‘Jed’ is the human presidential version of an all saving hero ‘Jedi’ in the highly popular Star Wars franchise:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jedi

As to Bart: A “bart” apparently according to
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/bart includes this definition “best available retrofit technology” as per American Heritage Abbreviations Dictionary 3rd Edition

Think back to 1998 or so one year before West Wing broadcast 1999. The submission here is that in the West Wing the US Democrats effort is to retrofit or ‘bart’ the increasingly melodramatic and hysterical media presentation of President Bill Clinton at year 5 or 6 of his presidency facing impeachment 1998-9

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Clinton

with a better fictional version in Jedi Bart. It’s a little television screen fictional retrofit, so it’s a ‘bartlet’ (like pig/piglet).

Jed Bartlet in WW has this ‘once in a generation’ mind including ‘Nobel Prize for economics’, ‘successful State Governor’, doesn’t rely on shouting to solve problems. You could be forgiven (once maybe) for saying Bartlet ‘barks less” than he bites, because with all that intellectual power he doesn’t need to. His secret service name is Eagle for obvious reasons – US Presidential coat of arms has the eagle, but then so does a patrol in the 7th Warrnambool Boy Scouts (I know because I invented the name in about 1974).

- Charlie Young – Charlie as in Charlie ‘Brown’ (as the character is distinctively Afro American) and Young because he is conspicuously ‘young’.

- CJ (aka Claudi Jean Cregg) CJ looks like what we lawyers call a ‘Chief Judge’ always shortened to CJ in law reports – as in very judicious standing before and above the press throng, making decisions on all questions served up, and C as in sees everything which is what you want in a media manager. Also being an actress physically as tall as a light house probably helps. ‘Flamingo’ secret service term because she looks like one in colouring and slenderness. You can’t say they don’t enjoy names and their echo on the WW.

Danny Concannon – looks in complexion and whimsy a bit like ‘Danny’ Kaye the famous comic actor. Also con is latin for with. And Danny definitely has ‘a cannon’ known as the Washington Post newspaper as per his very own Wikipedia entry here complete with fictional Pulitzer prize:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danny_Concannon He gets the girl in the end apparently.

There are other amusing names in the show with bit parts straight out of Dickens like: Caprice, an office assistant. And Lieutenant Gantry the aircraft officer, gantry being a metal arm for loading unloading in big hangers and warehouses. All good for a laugh. Lawyer character Cliff Calley also springs to mind for willingness to jump off that cliff for friend Donna.

General comments

There is a serious degree of affluence exhibited in this show you might call the ooh and aah factor exploiting voyeuristic viewer envy. The parade of Modern Rome to the provinces (that us here in Oz) not unlike a recent movie review of ostentatious Marie Antoinette
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0422720/

directed by, and get this, someone called Sofia Coppola. How’s that for tangential connection to the West Wing via homage to Apocalypse Now director Francis Ford Coppola as above.
No doubt it generates the credibility of realism essential to the raison detre but from a long way away it looks egregiously selfish too in a world of pain and need. Thus my hard lefty friend refers to it’s bourgeoisie sit com flavour which does become quite apparent around episode 59 "Dead Irish Writers" (series 3 # 15) in their ball gowns and finery on display.
There is quite a deal of realism which is summarised by contrast with real events here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_West_Wing_(TV_series)#Real_world_events
Above is already discussed parallel of real Pres Clinton’s impeachment travails of 98 and 99 even if in flippant context by me about cryptic names, not to mention the grand jury process challenging fictional president Bartlet over non disclosure of a serious health issue crossing over to Reagan’s real health problems.

The black hat for real was investigator Kenneth Starr chasing after Bill Clinton which seems close to the plot line of "Ways and Means" episode 47 (series 3 #3) especially when you read

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenneth_Starr#Time_as_Independent_Counsel

The show on Oct 3rd 2001 was a direct reaction to Sept 11th bombing with whole jet aircraft with hostages, and was called "Isaac and Ishmael" . It is about as moderate education as you might expect for a nation in shock and television industry likely back on its heels trying to work out how to approach the unprecedented viewer audience.

But in comparison to what they generated before and since covering complex fraught real politik it was pretty boring and more of a high school lecture full of existential angst, so no wonder it’s excluded from the general episode lists on wikipedia though it is included in the sequence on the DVD hire.

There are some inconsistencies over time of years too. Early on the McGarry character lays down the standards, stating ‘we don’t strut’ meaning to avoid arrogance and exhibitionism. But really there is quite a bit of strutting in the back office and in the ball gowns later on.

Overall its very entertaining and interesting I think for those wanting to improve and engage mainstream politics. I would recommend it to any activist or political science student at least to compare in a mature way how the Haves can do things better than George W Bush in power at the moment now, even if it leaves a lot to be desired as regards deeper solutions for the Have Nots of this world. These could only dream of the income and working conditions of these folks at the apex of the government sector out of 250 million population in modern Rome.

And not for intrinsic superiority. Basic statistics show there is an Einstein, a Newton, a Mandela, a Clinton and a Bartlet amongst the impoverished and disease affected in the world marching to an early death. A Jesse Jackson, a Shane Warne, a Federer, a [take your pick of modern sport stars]. It’s all about affluence and corruption at many levels and places.

For instance the model of democracy outlined in the synthesis of diverse White House characters with their different strengths and weakness is not much different to Nelson Mandela’s description in his autobiography Long Walk to Freedom (1994) of traditional chiefs meeting and talking for days at a time at a local village venue. So what else is new from rural black South Africa of the 1930’s to the White House in 2006?

Fictional Bartlet himself is quoted at the end of episode 80 "Inauguration Over There" (series 4 # 15) with the famous quote of American anthropologist Margaret Mead

“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed it’s the only thing that ever has.”

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Mead

Sure, we all sort of always knew that. It’s not the model of discussion and debate that varies in successful political decision making societies. It always involves a sensible synthesis of a wide variety of views expertise and experience in a respectful process of listening and adjustment, testing against evidence in a constant feedback loop. Rather its structural economic and military abuse and likely other institutional abuse of power across the world that is at the heart of human suffering.

It will take more than playing Jeff Buckley’s version of Hallelujah from the renowned album Grace

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grace_%28album%29

in episode 65 (Posse Comitatus, series 3 #22) to justify ex judicial assassination of a terrorist Arabic diplomat, while doing business with other murderers around the world, not least various thugs of the former Soviet Union, or China in the case of Rupert Murdoch’s News Ltd.

Indeed the resolution of structural corruption involving USA oil dependence probably has a lot more to do with the thesis of Syrianna

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syriana

with lead actor George Clooney, ironically the same Clooney as director of the love letter to Ed Murrow in Good Night Good Luck referred to at the outset for which West Wing surely was meant to address. Would Murrow

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_R._Murrow

a decorated World War 2 correspondent at the liberation of Buchenwald, who flew in bombing raids, who reported from London in the Blitz and then famous tv broadcaster agree with covert assassination, even of a terrorist diplomat? I wonder. How can secret killing ever be justified?

That’s the trouble with self defence built on economic fascism as outlined in Syrianna: It’s a descending vortex of cruel self reinforcing violence.

With Rob Lowe and highly praised writer Aaron Sorkin both absent from the 4th and following series (anything to do with a drugs possession charge in Sorkin's case?) I will watch the fifth series now to see how the show changed for better or worse.

I wonder.

First published 1st January 2007 on

http://melbourne.indymedia.org/news/2006/12/135198.php


……………….

Postscript #1

a 'frisson' for USA nuke silos here?

by author of string Tuesday January 02, 2007 at 11:46 AM

First a correction: WW is about 40 minutes long per episode not 1 hour.

Secondly, we have this cute word "frisson" popping up last night on abc tv prime time news last night or was it 7.30 Report (I don't remember) as if someone gives a damn about my MIM piece here. Perhaps just a coincidence from my use of the unusual word above then into the media darwinian jungle/melting pot.

Also I was gratified to notice my presience regarding this paragraph of mine near the end of the main post:

"Would Murrow

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_R._Murrow

a decorated World War 2 correspondent at the liberation of Buchenwald, who flew in bombing raids, who reported from London in the Blitz and then famous tv broadcaster agree with covert assassination, even of a terrorist diplomat? I wonder. How can secret killing ever be justified?

That’s the trouble with self defence built on economic fascism as outlined in Syrianna: It’s a descending vortex of cruel self reinforcing violence."

Indeed this huge moral question i discuss is picked up pretty early in the 5th series by the script writers, at

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dogs_of_War_%28The_West_Wing%29

In the show we have these full on (in fact so profound its worth noting commencing at 20 min 20 sec) , quotes about the USA modus operandi in foreign policy (the show was broadcast on Oct 1 2003, say 6 months after the Iraq war):

delivered by fictional Pres Bartlet to chief of Staff McGarry

"It’s about our allowing situations to develop in countries like this in the first place. We choose the order and certainty of petty despots over the uncertainty and chaos of developing democracies …..”

And then quoting Dr Martin Luther King (as if both characters had met the 39 year old civil rights lawyer personally before he was gunned down in 1968

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Luther_King,_Jr.):

“The ultimate weakness of violence is that it is a descending spiral, returning violence with violence only multiplies violence adding deeper darkeness to a night already devoid of stars ….I’m part of that darkness now. When did that happen?”

And surely we are indeed in that geopolitical night in Iraq, Palestine, Africa. There are no horrors mankind is not capable of.

Fictional McGarry, who is the vietnam veteran airforce pilot

(who is compromised by a recent briefing, that unbeknownst 30 years earlier that McGarry killed 11 Viet civillians unintentionally when he bombed a dam wall as per instructions, in 'War Crimes' episode 49 broadcast Nov. 7 2001 which is 2 months after Sept 11, bombing with planes full of hostages of the WTC, a war crime like so many others).

responds to the Bartlet soliliquy above leaning on King's advice by saying:

'Dr King wasn't wrong he just didn’t have your job'

Elsewhere in the show McGarry points out the President’s problem is he ‘won’, meaning the election i.e. it goes with the job.

Consider however in the series 1 trailer for the show, actor Martin Sheen says there are plenty of things in series 2 and perhaps 3 that he greatly dislikes about his character, that he is a pacifist and environmentalist off screen unlike the character he plays.

These issues of violence and democracy seem reinforced somehow with this particular episodes heavy base and melodic soundtrack so familiar to the Thin Red Line movie soundtrack by Hans Zimmer: TRL again with Clooney in the cast briefly with idealists Sean Penn etc.

(A movie essentially about refusing an order in grossly violent ww2 Guadalcanal campaign, the essence of democracy in fact, but same informed defiance leading to victory over the ruthless Japanese army, in short democracy winning over totalitarianism for its lack of diversity. Quite profound movie adding to the genre here.)

There are lessons for Australia from this world of fiction and art in WW so well breifed by such as Dee Dee Myers of the actual Clinton administration as per the credits:

It would be a wise ally in a country like Australia to understand that 1st priority of the USA in all cases is the USA including breach of international law where arguably forced to.

This puts Australia’s situation a long way second despite all the flattery and mutual back slapping Australia America Leadership Dialogues petting of prominent professionals in the provinces here of Modern Rome (I’m thinking folks like Maxine McKew, or that sacked abc radio presenter Sally Loane).

Say for instance using Australia as a dumping ground for USA nuke waste, but just as likely or in parallel nuclear military silos. USA interest first, Australia interest way second.

Indeed in another episode, #90 entitled ‘Han’ about North Korea piano defector, broadcast only 2 episodes later Oct 22nd 2003, press secretary character CJ refers to North Korea having the ability to nuke Australia, with same McGarry character like this (at 1 minute into the show proper):

CJ: “You [North Korea[ could obliterate Australia but you are still just a punk”
McGarry: “Good opener, use that”

[said in gentle sarcastic way as they go to meet the NK piano player and his two govt minders in uniform]

Remember this show is broadcast back in late 2003 and this script is generated and broadcast in Modern Rome to the gratification and entertainment of the whole USA govt sector right and left. The general context of the script is nuke negotiations with North Korea that fail.

It is quite clear what the popular perception in the USA of what Australia’s role should be regarding North Korea here (just like Chile should do what its told in 1973 in the Cold War?):

Australia, at primary risk like Seoul/South Korea from demented North Korea, and therefore a pawn in Modern Rome’s geopolitik, whether we in Australia actually agree or not to being positioned in that way, say at the next federal election where we vote Rudd or Howard, or is there any difference between them, on USA nuke silos here?

I wonder. Demonstrably Rudd is against nuke power, so is that the subtext really between the federal ALP and federal Coalition - uneconomic nuke power but really national interest on nuke weapon silos on 'USS aircraft carrier Australia'.

Or, or perhaps additionally, is nuke power simply Howard's craven admission clean coal' is 'a joke PR term' of the coal industry (which is the view of another episode broadcast fully 3 years ago to the govt sector in Modern Rome # 93 "Constituency of One" broadcast around the same period Oct 29, 2003.

You really start to notice we are in the provinces of Modern Rome with all this 3 year time delay on stuff affecting us in Australia 2007.

…………………….

 

Postscript #2

Garrett MP gets it for all his slick sellout?

I did a deep sledge of Peter Garrett on MIM before Christmas but I give him credit for this column, which truth to be told is Fairfax's way, green ink graphic and all, of positioning PG as the moderate environmental candidate to shove more radical Bob Brown machine aside as much as possible:

http://www.smh.com.au/news/opinion/false-future-parades-a-green-sheen/2007/01/01/1167500060557.html

Most of it is in there: waste, terrorism risk, uneconomic, international waste dump.

He doesn't mention nuke weapons silos but I feel sure its behind Howard's enthusiasm via covert deal with Bush regime, eh? To lay off the AWB oversight farce, eh? That cost us alot in sovereignty eh?

Which in an indy media sense reinforces the great need for an independent pro green/Green mainstream press. And for that requires a platform of decent distribution. It all comes down to distribution capacity (or not as in the case of sorry arse offline Sydney indymedia at the moment for some 3 weeks).

 


Posted by editor at 8:56 AM EADT
Updated: Wednesday, 24 January 2007 11:11 AM EADT

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