Recoznet:

Just read Matthew's message. I know it is not the subject matter of this 
forum but does any one by chance have any information/sites concerning 
protests against the 'bondi beach volleyball.'

Regards
Bob



>From: tassy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: [recoznet2] Re: CNNSI - An uproar Down Under
>Date: Wed, 19 Apr 2000 12:19:16 +0800
>
>             Hi!,
>                   The real news is that Sydney's Olympics were declared a
>"Green Games" by the sell-out Greenpeace, when Greens around the world, not
>only in Olympics, decry Stadium Developments as unneccessary commercialism 
>in
>already over-crowded urban areas.
>
>         Sydney is being "trashed" all right, It has been for just over 200
>years now, when us white people started pissing in the Tank Stream.  Now 
>it's
>turning Sydney into a Toxic Waste Dump with the backing of several people 
>who
>should know better.
>
>         As far as Greenpeace's sell-out is concerned, and the real news
>regarding what the establishment press call "public relations disasters",
>there is a book John Pilger recommends on the influence of capitalist 
>public
>relations industries upon the popular social movements for better use of
>natural resources.  This book is called:
>
>     "Global Spin:  The Corporate Assualt on Environmentalism", from Sharon
>Beder, which has a section devoted to the manufactured mythology of
>Greenpeace's "Green Olympics".
>
>       This "Green Marketing" phenomenon is doing no good for 
>environmentalism
>whatsoever.  Any claim that Sydney's environment is going to be better 
>after
>the Games is a fabrication invented by public relations consultants, both 
>in
>the employ of Greenpeace and in the state.
>
>     As Pilger says of the book:
>
>     "Global Spin is outstanding.  Sharon Beder has taken the taboo 
>subjects of
>propoganda and censorship in free societies and exposed their insidious
>threat.  This is such an important book that I would put in on every school
>curriculum".
>
>      I've only read a chapter so far, but the growth of PR Consultancies
>during the 1970's and 80's is postively frightening.  Many environmental
>consultancies, operating under assumed names like "Coalition for Clean and
>Renewable Energy" and "The Foundation for Clean Air Progress", etc..  What
>emerges is that many, if not most, are subsidised by corporations like 
>Quebec
>Canada, or by business organisations like the Business Council of 
>Australia.
>They pose as grassroots campaigners and claim to represent the genuine 
>voice
>of the Green social movement, when in fact they represnent nothing more 
>than
>the corporate bottom line.  They are there to harass the genuine activists 
>and
>produce misleading data to get the development to proceed.
>
>    Predicatably, the book has been almost completely ignored by the
>establishment press, but is actually selling quite well.  I am reading the
>latest, revised edition.  I am, as they say, ahead of the news on this one,
>and I was even before I brought the book; the whole claim that you can 
>build a
>big toxic Stadium out of plastics, turn land into parking lots, being Green
>and public-use of finite resources was all just a load of hot air and slick
>commercialism on the part of people who as I say, should know a lot better,
>and socially contradict themselves in many ways.
>
>    The real debate's a whole lot more than Beach Volleyball.  That's just 
>the
>tip of a very big iceberg.  That's just challenging the corporate agenda in 
>a
>small way.  Bondi Beach is only one potential disaster area.  The other is 
>the
>use of PVC by the designers of the Olympics stadium, which is an 
>environmental
>disaster of the first magnitude, as it would have been completely 
>preventable
>if it weren't for Greenpeace's sell-out and the usual inertia of these
>hang-overs from 1970's-trained and corporatised green movements anyway.
>
>     Cheers,
>     Matthew Davis
>
>Trudy Bray wrote:
>
> > CNN - Sports Illustrated
> > Olympic Protests
> >
> >  An Uproar Down Under
> >
> >  By Gary Smith
> >
> >   What host country wouldn't feel uneasy?
> >   They're arriving soon, those crotchety aunts
> >  who look under beds, sniff inside cupboards and just can't
> >  bear to keep a couple of cockroaches or hair balls to
> >  themselves. They're nearly here, the world media coming to
> >  cover the Summer Olympics -- 15,000 crotchety aunts always
> >  on the lookout for dirt.
> >
> >  Five months before the start of the Summer Games, that
> >  uneasiness turned to pit-of-the-gut dread in Australia last
> >  week. Just when the country's house seemed nearly in order
> >  -- Olympic venues virtually completed, streets and sidewalks
> >  renovated, economy booming and dust finally settling over
> >  Games tickets covertly snatched from the public allotment so
> >  they could be quietly sold at fat prices to the rich -- damned if
> >  somebody didn't open the one closet jammed with Australia's
> >  most embarrassing skeletons.
> >
> >  Aboriginal Affairs Minister John Herron made the blunder
> >  when he submitted to a Senate committee a report that
> >  debunked as myth the stolen generation, the term used for the
> >  legions of Aboriginal children taken from their parents and
> >  placed in white foster care and institutions from 1910 to '70.
> >  The report, which was supported by Prime Minister John
> >  Howard and reflected government wariness over potential
> >  compensation claims, stated that the numbers of those
> >  affected had been greatly exaggerated and had never exceeded
> >  10% of the Aboriginal population, which currently stands at
> >  300,000 in a nation of 19 million. "There was never a
> >  'generation' of stolen children," the submission stated. "[T]he
> >  treatment of separated Aboriginal children was essentially
> >  lawful and benign in intent."
> >
> >  Outrage was immediate and widespread, especially among a
> >  minority for whom the stolen generation stands as a symbol
> >  of so many thefts and so much pain since the arrival of whites
> >  in the late 1700s. Aboriginal activist Charles Perkins, who was
> >  taken from his family as a child, threatened violence during
> >  the Olympics: "Burning cars and burning buildings.
> >  Reconciliation is finished now. We are not going to lie down
> >  like a mongrel dog so people can come along and kick us. We
> >  are going to start biting."
> >
> >  "All bets are off," declared Lyall Munro of the Metropolitan
> >  Aboriginal Land Council. "Aboriginal people will rise up and
> >  show the world how racist Australia is."
> >
> >  The ill-timed Senate submission re-ignited smoldering
> >  Aboriginal fury over the recent suicide of a 15-year-old boy
> >  serving a 28-day sentence for stealing oil and paint worth $30,
> >  under mandatory sentencing laws that exist in the Northern
> >  Territories.
> >
> >  It remains to be seen how effective Aborigines might be at
> >  trashing Australia's house during the Olympics, especially
> >  since the country's greatest hope for gold in track and field,
> >  400-meter world champion Cathy Freeman, an Aborigine,
> >  voiced her view two months ago that politics should be left
> >  out of the Games. But recent events have hardened resolve to
> >  shame the Games with marches and the opening of a shadow
> >  embassy in Sydney to expose world media and VIPs to
> >  poverty-devastated indigenous communities and to statistics
> >  showing that Aborigines earn half as much and live an average
> >  of 20 years less than other Aussies.
> >
> >  The threat of a public relations disaster, along with a possible
> >  fracture within his Liberal Party, had Howard racing around
> >  with bucket and broom last week. He persuaded the chief
> >  minister of the Northern Territories to end mandatory
> >  sentences for juveniles who commit minor crimes and issued
> >  a half-baked apology to those offended by the submission.
> >
> >  Meanwhile, hundreds of Bondi Warriors threatened to chain
> >  themselves to bulldozers and prevent construction next month
> >  of the final Olympic venue, the temporary beach volleyball
> >  stadium planned for Sydney's most famous crescent of sand,
> >  Bondi Beach. Government and Games officials could only
> >  groan, look out their windows at Sydney's sparkling harbor
> >  and eccentric white-roofed building, and hope to distract the
> >  crotchety aunts with ferry rides and opera.
> >
> >  Issue date: April 17, 2000
> > Copyright � 2000
> >   CNN/Sports Illustrated
> >   A Time Warner Company.
> >   All Rights Reserved.
> >
> > 
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