Hi Kevin,

Yes, absolutely disgraceful.

"Negotiating a climate treaty is a high-stakes game, not just because of 
the danger warming poses to civilisation but also because re-engineering 
the global economy to a low-carbon model will see the flow of billions 
of dollars redirected."

I remember in November 2009, when the University of East Anglia's 
research site was hacked just a couple of days before the Copenhagen 
Climate talks. Later on, it was finally decided 'officially', that there 
was no evidence of scientific malpractice and "that while sharing of 
data and methods was in line with common scientific practice, it was 
desirable that there should be greater openness and information 
sharing." http://www.nature.com/news/2010/100922/full/467381a.html

The coverage and the mainstream media's attacks on the scientists at the 
time, were pretty dumb and irresponsible; ignoring the obvious question 
of why these emails were hacked in the first place and by whom? It's 
like, if one suddenly decides to throw these blood hungry hounds a bone, 
they all suddenly chase in it one direction all together, before even 
thinking about why they are chasing it. It's certainly not about news, 
it's more about grabbing product to fill spaces, infotainment; without 
'real' critical reasoning until its too late.

wishing you well.

marc

 > It was so depressing when after all the hype the Copenhagen Climate 
talks were was a disaster.
 > Now we know why 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/dec/03/wikileaks-us-manipulated-climate-accord
 > Disgraceful
 >
 > Kevin
 >
 > On 4 December 2010 11:03, Michael Szpakowski <[email protected]> wrote:
 >
 >     Absolutely - she couldn't have put it more clearly. What it 
shows, too, is our rulers' complete contempt for us, for ordinary 
people, who couldn't possibly be expected to understand what goes on in 
"diplomacy" or even allowed a sniff at it.
 >     When I was in Poland in the summer of 1980, during the birth of 
Solidarity, the Polish workers showed how to bring the mighty down to 
size by insisting that all negotiations with the government be patched 
in to the public telephone system so that anyone who could pick up a 
phone could hear what was going on...
 >     michael
 >
 >     --- On Sat, 12/4/10, marc garrett <[email protected]> 
wrote:
 >
 >
 >         From: marc garrett <[email protected]>
 >         Subject: [NetBehaviour] My mum & Wikileaks...
 >         To: "netBehaviour for networked distributed creativity" 
<[email protected]>
 >         Date: Saturday, December 4, 2010, 10:44 AM
 >
 >
 >         My mum on the phone the other night, surprised me by saying 
that she
 >         sees Julian Assange of Wikileaks, as a modern day Robin Hood 
- stealing
 >         information from the rich and handing it over to the poor. I 
was proud
 >         of her :-)
 >
 >         marc
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 >
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