Category Archives: freedom

Just a notice about this blog

A partir de hoy,este blog sera disponsible solamente en los archivos.

You can follow the following,if you please

http://insomniadiary.wordpress.com/

http://dogmaandgeopolitics.wordpress.com

http://insomnia.pinguinland.eu/

http://auntiedogmasgardenspot.wordpress.com/

I’d rather be in good friends’company than keeping a blog on my own,gotta admit its quite tiring.

Same kind of posts and a touch of music in the Diary of my insomnia (oops got me a new blog title)

Thank you very much for reading my posts,for following,for forming a community. I really appreciate it. Hope to see you soon enough on the mentioned links- not redirecting any of you.

Anyone can use-copy-repost the blog archives,just please be kind enough to mention the source & the original one,thank you.And when i say you can use the archives I mean it. Just help yourselves 😉

Special thanks to my friend Moorbey for nominating this humble blog,thank you compañera

Thanks to my Malatesta friend 🙂  nada mal con tu testa

Thanks to all of you for your constant support.Without you this tiny blog would mean nothing.

See you around and dance to the music:)

 


‘A Fourth Reich in the Sun?’

21st Century Wire TV Episode 1


Tierra de Cóndores





Jach’ a Uru


This is not a love song


Since the great destruction skipped this insignificant rock passing through the insignificant galaxies in an insignificant date

that was supposed to be significant,heres a lil bit of a flashback


fav one 😀 so dedicated to silence

Yes i am old enough to have listened to those songs:D Was hoping my generation the early 70's one would make this huge difference kind of the hippies' kids but we weren't and we haven't and we proved it so disgracefully,hope the coming ones will make the difference we never did


Ha nacido en el país prohibido,
perdido en la falda de una montaña.
Dicen que es la reencarnación de un Dios.
En el misterio del gran monasterio,
los lamas preparan el viaje.
Van a buscar al futuro gran señor.

Siguiendo los designios de un oráculo especial,
barrieron las montañas
y encontraron un chaval.
Sabio en la memoria pudo recordar
cual fue su rosario y su campana
y hasta el emisario.

Ay Dalai Lama Dalai Lama Dalai
Ay Dalai Lama ay Dalai Dalai
Ay Dalai

Pronto el cielo como un avispero
de amarillos que volaban hacia el suelo,
y el temor que precede a la invasión.
Como hojas los estrellas rojas
cayeron sobre el valle de Lhasa
a liberar al pueblo de su religión.

En nombre del progreso y de la revolución
quemaron tradiciones y pisaron el honor.
El rey de las montañas tuvo que escapar
vestido de mendigo
y con el alma envuelta en el ombligo.

Ay Dalai Lama Dalai Lama Dalai
A falta de petróleo no hubo amigos en el mar
dejando las naciones tu barquito naufragar.
Nobel en la guerra,
nobel de la paz.


I voted for a drone killer for you to be happy

 

Not a recently released YouTube big score video. It does not predict any planet alignement for tomorrow the 21st. The 21 st was meant to be a cultural shift not an earthenly destruction. Yet some in the Bollywood profited from the people’s fear of the unknown.Shame on them. They made this chinese girl go into shock and stab ppl..So what do you really think of 2012 the tomorrow ?? the 21 st of december? the equinox? The everything and its theories?

Will tell you what to think: instead of building shelters and buying candles for the 3-days BS darkness you should be all be aware of the REAL darkness surrounding you and thats your and mine and everyone’s governments.So yes this is my top video. If it were yours too,this world would have been a better place

Never forget that whenever you throw the ballot in the darn slot you are voting for my future as well My kids future,your kids and everyones kids. Because I never wanted Obama to be re-elected nor i believed in Romney and all that  PR BS but you did

 

If tomorrow you were to die ,what would you say to your kids? That I voted for a drone killer for you to be happy??

 

My kindest regards and a happy new “fear”

 


Remember All the Children, Mr. President

This arrived to my inbox from a friend,i copy and paste it without changing a single thing

to undisclosed recipients
Remember All the Children, Mr. President

By Bill Quigley

December 17, 2012
Remember the 20 children who died in Newtown, Connecticut.
Remember the 35 children who died in Gaza this month from Israeli bombardments.
Remember the 168 children who have been killed by US drone attacks in Pakistan since 2006.
Remember the 231 children killed in Afghanistan in the first 6 months of this year.
Remember the 400 other children in the US under the age of 15 who die from gunshot wounds each year.
Remember the 921 children killed by US air strikes against insurgents in Iraq.
Remember the 1,770 US children who die each year from child abuse and maltreatment.
Remember the 16,000 children who die each day around the world from hunger.
These tragedies must end.
Bill Quigley is Associate Director of the Center for Constitutional Rights and a law professor at Loyola University New Orleans. He volunteers with the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti (IJDH) and the Bureau de Avocats Internationaux (BAI) in Port au Prince. Contact Bill at quigley77@gmail.com


Dichotomous, a short film -Greek Ultra-Nationalists


Short Film Summary

Dichotomous:

Dichotomous is, at it’s core, a post-modern tale of redemption. The film follows two strangers, Nick Dysmas and a character known only as the Chief. These two strangers with nothing in common but a love for a broken nation on the other side of the world, are both searching for the same thing; Redemption. Through a twist of fate, their roads converge leading them down a path which will test their beliefs and endanger everything they hold dear.


Oil vs Gold or both?

watch judge comment think.Above all Think


Rape: A Rough Path to Walk

Visit Women Against Violence Against Women

Interactive Visual procedure.

It is never your fault. Nobody deserves to be raped. Nothing you have done means that you caused the rape.

•    Get to a safe place. It is important that your safety is your number one priority.

•    Tell someone you trust what happened. This person may be asked to support your evidence in court, and is known as the ‘first report witness’. If the first person you tell is a stranger, try to write down their details, and remember their name.This way the police will be able to contact them.

•    If you have to change your clothes, put your clothing in a paper bag. A paper bag keeps the evidence intact, whereas a plastic bag will affect evidence.

•    If you are going to report your rape, do not wash yourself even if you really want to. At  the health facility they will collect evidence from your body, which could assist the investigation.

•    Try not to eat or drink if your mouth has come into contact with the alleged perpetrator’s body or penis.

•    Even if you are drunk or under the influence of drugs, you still have a right to report the rape. Do not let this stop you from accessing help.

Reporting the rape to the police

You don’t have to decide if you are going to report the rape to the police straight away. It is your right to report up to twenty years after the event.

But, evidence is most able to be collected soon after the rape (within three days). Reporting within three days also increases the chances that the police are able to catch the alleged perpetrator.

Go to a health centre for care

•    If you are injured, go straight to a health facility (hospital, your doctor, community health centre) for treatment.

•    If you are at a police station, they can call an ambulance for you to take you to the health care facility.

•    Tell the health care worker that you have been raped, and they will assist you with getting medication that can prevent the transmission of HIV if you are currently HIV negative. These medicines are only effective within 72 hours of exposure to HIV, and are most effective within eight hours of the rape, so it is important that you try to visit a health care facility as soon as possible.

•    They will also treat any injuries you have. If you decide to report the rape, the health care worker can call the police to the health care facility.

Get medical attention

To prevent infection from any injuries, and to issue medication to prevent HIV transmission and Sexually Transmitted Infection (STI) transmission

·         To prevent possible pregnancy

·         To collect evidence

Reporting the rape to the police can be scary for both women and men. It is a good idea to go to a health facility first to get your injuries treated, and to get Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP) to prevent HIV transmission. The sooner a doctor examines you, the sooner they will be able to find proof of the rape (for example hair, skin cells, and semen from the alleged rapist).

You also have the option of going straight to police station first. See Part 3 of the series for more information.

If you are at a health care centre and want to report

·         If possible, call a friend or family member to come and be with you whilst waiting to be examined and afterwards. Ask if they can bring some spare clean clothes for you.

·         The health care worker can call a police officer to come to the health facility. If you decide to report, at the health facility they will also collect forensic evidence from your body. It is your right to ask questions, and to be treated with respect.

·         If you need to go to the bathroom or are having your period, keep any toilet paper, sanitary towels, or tampons as they may contain evidence. These should be placed in an envelope or paper packet when dry.

·         If you think you have been drugged, tell the health care worker and s/he will test your urine and blood for evidence.

·         If you have eaten or drunk anything after the rape, tell the doctor so that s/he is aware of this when you are examined. If you were not raped orally, tell the doctor so that you can take medication against infection.

The forensic examination

·         At the health care facility the doctor (district surgeon) will conduct what is known as the forensic examination. This examination is for the purpose of looking for evidence of the rape on your body including in your hair, and genital and anal regions. The doctor should inform you of what they are going to do to you.

·         The doctor will ask you about your medical history, and about what happened during the rape.

·         Your clothes will also be taken from you in order to collect evidence from them as well. It is important that if you have taken off your clothes that you have put them in a paper bag, or wrapped them in newspaper.

·         After the examination you will have the opportunity to bath or shower, brush your teeth, and eat something. If the police officer has come to the health facility, s/he will ask you questions ideally in a private room.
After you have visited the health facility it is important to listen to information about when you should return for a check up, and to collect more PEP medication if you are HIV negative.

Talking to the police: You have the option of reporting a rape, or reporting a rape and laying a charge.

You have the right to speak to a female police officer. Sometimes special detectives who deal with reports of sexual offences are not based at every station and may take some time to arrive.

Delays in reporting cannot be used against you in court, but the sooner you report the rape, the easier it is to collect evidence, and catch the perpetrator.

Reporting without laying a charge

If you decide to report without laying a charge the police officer must record the report in the occurrence book and give you an occurrence book number (OB number).

Reporting and laying a charge

Ideally your statement should be taken in a private room by an officer of the same gender as you. If you are very upset, are drunk or drugged, or are injured, they make take a preliminary statement and then take a second statement when you are feeling better.

•    If you decide to report the rape to the police, you must go to the station nearest to where the rape happened. Take a friend or family member with you for support.

•    Ideally take a notebook with you to write down the details and telephone numbers of those who assisted you, as well as your case number. If you are afraid that the alleged rapist(s) will come after you, tell the police this. This may make it less likely that the alleged rapist(s) is allowed out on bail after being arrested.

•    The police will ask you details about what happened to you and will write this all down. It is your right to do so in your home language, and the police should get someone to assist you with this. Do not sign your statement until you are happy with it, and that it says exactly what you have said.

•    It is your right to get a copy of any statements you make from the police.

•    When giving details of the rape it is important to tell the police if you were drunk or under the influence of drugs. This will not be used against you. If you are drunk or on drugs you cannot consent to sex.

•    You have the right to ask that the alleged rapist be tested for HIV at the state’s expense if he is caught. Remember to take PEP medicine as the doctor prescribed it, even if the test comes back negative.

•    If the police say you cannot report your rape, do not give up. It is your right to report, even if the rape happened a long time ago. If they still refuse, go to another station and explain what happened. You can then make a complaint about this.

When a case has been opened

•    An investigating officer (IO) will take over your case. The police should give you the IO’s contact details.

•    If the perpetrator is arrested, the IO has a responsibility to inform you.

•    If bail is granted, the IO has a responsibility to inform you.

•    If you have to identify the perpetrator, you should be made to feel safe by the police. This may happen in an identity parade if you can recognise the perpetrator, or via mug shots or an identikit if you don’t know them.

If you would like to find out more about the process of reporting a rape, watch the virtual tour of the criminal justice system here.