Plus international and local news and features
What this country's poorest really need is higher house prices. That's the basis of the government's Housing Renewal Pathfinder schemes - demolishing 400,000 houses across the North of England to build more expensive homes.
Read more: http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/newsletter/issue23/part1.htm
ACTION!
TAKING ACTION AGAINST PATHFINDER
Corporate Watch talks to Natasha LeaJones, secretary of Home Environments at Redearth Triange (HEART), one of the groups taking action against the Elevate East Lancashire Housing 'Pathfinder' scheme in Darwen, Lancashire.
Read more: http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/newsletter/issue23/part9.htm
FIGHTING FOR OUR HOMES
Community resistance to Prescott's Pathfinder demolitions...
Read more: http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/newsletter/issue23/part8.htm
THE GREAT COUNCIL HOUSING BLACKMAIL
Labour's current policy amounts to nothing less than the destruction of council housing as we know it. Cllr Matt Sellwood, Oxford City Council Green Group.
Read more: http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/newsletter/issue23/part10.htm
WORLD
SAVING ICELAND: THE BUCK STOPS HERE
In March 2004, the government of Iceland held a conference in the capital Reykjavik. It was a private conference, attended by representatives of the top multinational corporations, Rio Tinto, Alcoa and Alcan among them, and the population were not told about it in advance. Iceland, a government spokesman informed its people afterwards, was now open for business.
Read more: http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/newsletter/issue23/part11.htm
‘SUSTAINABLE’ GREEN DESERTS
Vast eucalyptus monocultures are taking over giant swathes of the Brazilian landscape, feeding the pulp/paper and iron industries. Now 'forestry' corporations are claiming carbon credits for these green deserts, giving Western companies a license to burn more fossil fuels, at the expense of the indigenous people with a rightful claim to the land.
Read more: http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/newsletter/issue23/part12.htm
RESISTING THE ECONOMIC WAR IN IRAQ
Interview with Hassan Juma'a Awad, president of the Basra Oil Union By Greg Muttitt of Platform.
Read more: http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/newsletter/issue23/part13.htm
UK NEWS
GOVERNMENT COMMISSIONS, IGNORES, NANOTECH REPORT
Last year's Royal Society and Royal Academy of Engineers (RS/RAE) report Nanoscience and Nanotechnologies: Opportunities and Uncertainties, although narrow in its remit, was far from glowing in its assessment of nanotechnology. The report was significant in that it was the first time that such pillars of the scientific establishment as the RS/RAE had urged caution about nanotechnology. '.
Read more: http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/newsletter/issue23/part7.htm
UK DEVELOPMENT AID FUELS CLIMATE CHANGE AND POVERTY
UK aid money is creating an 'oil curse' for developing economies, according to a new report from Plan B. 'Pumping Poverty: Britain's Department for International Development and the oil industry' (17 March, 2005). The report finds that taxpayers' money is being spent on supporting energy projects which benefit UK and US oil companies, but do little to help the countries where they are based.
Read more: http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/newsletter/issue23/part5.htm
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Comments
Hide the following 20 comments
nanotechnology?
06.04.2005 17:01
Please someone give me a sensible answer, thank you.
interested
where do you get your info?
06.04.2005 17:16
How do you deal with mistakes you have made in previous reports?
Do you have a 'customer service' dept. who politly and promptly deal with enquiries?
I like the idea of an organisation who watch (big) corporations and try to ensure that they behave in a morally responsible way but not at the expense of truth and honesty. That would be too much like Tony Blair's relience on so called 'intelligence' in order to agree with George Bush's desire to attack Iraq!
intelligence seeker
Mistakes?
06.04.2005 22:35
rjh
is there anybody out there?
07.04.2005 13:58
My experience of pointing out errors to Corporate Watch is that it takes ages to get any sort of acknowledgement from them, let alone be able to give them information correcting what they've written. It's unfortunate, as they do raise relevant issues and open up areas of corporate operation that many would prefer weren't put on display. However, if a corporate customer response machine was as bad as CW's own, CW would no doubt be complaining bitterly about it.
Come on CW, take your own medicine and talk to us who want to get things right!
Radjel
not the only one to see mistakes then
07.04.2005 14:59
jm
Correcting mistakes
07.04.2005 15:03
My experience of pointing out errors to Corporate Watch is that it takes ages to get any sort of acknowledgement from them, let alone be able to give them information correcting what they've written. It's unfortunate, as they do raise relevant issues and open up areas of corporate operation that many would prefer weren't put on display. However, if a corporate customer response machine was as bad as CW's own, CW would no doubt be complaining bitterly about it.
Come on CW, take your own medicine and talk to us who want to get things right!
Radjel
Corrections?
08.04.2005 11:26
On the question of our sources, we footnote as much of our work as possible, so it should be possible for people to check our stories agains the data that we have researched it from.
Loukas
Corrections please
08.04.2005 16:21
OK, so you are "interested" to hear about "correction and clarifications". But what are you going to do when these things are pointed out? Will (do?) you publish the correct information, giving it as much prominence as the original article, or will you ignore it or give it much less prominence - like the mainstream media?
As to sources, CW's credibility should be such that we can trust what you publish, and not have to check your stories ourselves. Knowing that even one item is incorrect calls into question the truth of anything you publish.
Radjel
Whats your problem?
08.04.2005 17:45
While holding CW to account is perfectly fine, you seem to be overly sceptical about their motivation. The people who work at Corporate Watch do so for pretty crappy pay in order to expose corporate behaviour that otherwise would go unnoticed and unremarked. Whats your agenda? I note that you have also gone on a long rant about the Dissent! network on another thread, again for no particular reason other than a seemingly generalised distrust of progressive organisations.
If you have a specific complaint, then fair enough, but why are you going around the IMC casting aspersions on honest people's work?
Matt
Matt S
Not a problem for me
09.04.2005 10:41
I'm not sure what your point is, other than a (obviously completely unjustified in my view) emotive personal attack. If you count comments on two threads across the whole of IndyMedia as "going around", there are probably many more culpable candidates than me that you should be trying to slag off (stop?) first. I thought IndyMedia was a forum for anyone to express views, make comments and try and move alternative thinking forwards. If you only want people who agree with each other all the time, what's the point? The world won't change unless the majority of people in it want it to - that's the real challenge. And I don't necessarily disagree - I just would like information to help me decide.
CW : no attempt to hold them to account, what they want to do is up to them. I don't know how much they get paid (what exactly do you call "crappy pay"?) - whatever it is is totally irrelevant to information they post. If CW wants to be seen as credible, and believed, then they have to make sure that what they put on their website is correct. If people point out an error, or want to offer more information, I would expect CW to welcome any such approach and put such corrections/additions out there as well. They also should be able to speak for themselves, and give us all the information that "intelligence seeker" (posting above) is after.
Dissent! Network : suggest you reread my posts. If you can't accept there's an irony in a well-organised, branded and logo'ed campaign against global capitalism, that's a shame. And if other posters prefer to indulge in attempted sarcasm rather than give me more information, that's also a shame. You say I have a "seemingly generalised distrust of progressive organisations" - I think you are inferring far more from my observations than is justified. Apart from the irony, it did seem that D!N were keeping their underlying principles (PGA Hallmarks) very much to themselves, there for those who look rather than those who merely participate in response to a notice. I see that on a later IMC newsthread they have "come out". About time; and it would be good if they made this clear every time a D!N event was advertised.
And what's your agenda Matt? Are you policing IMC on behalf of y0urself, or someone else? Do you (and if so, why?) object to me making comments in 1, 2 or more threads? Are you trying to stop me post at all? Of more relevance to this thread, what involvement do you have with CW and can you provide any answers to the questions being posed here?
Radjel
Not a problem
10.04.2005 07:50
I'm not sure what your point is, other than a (obviously completely unjustified in my view) emotive personal attack. If you count comments on two threads across the whole of IndyMedia as "going around", there are probably many more culpable candidates than me that you should be trying to slag off (stop?) first. I thought IndyMedia was a forum for anyone to express views, make comments and try and move alternative thinking forwards. If you only want people who agree with each other all the time, what's the point? The world won't change unless the majority of people in it want it to - that's the real challenge. And I don't necessarily disagree - I just would like information to help me decide.
CW : no attempt to hold them to account, what they want to do is up to them. I don't know how much they get paid (what exactly do you call "crappy pay"?) - whatever it is is totally irrelevant to information they post. If CW wants to be seen as credible, and believed, then they have to make sure that what they put on their website is correct. If people point out an error, or want to offer more information, I would expect CW to welcome any such approach and put such corrections/additions out there as well. They also should be able to speak for themselves, and give us all the information that "intelligence seeker" (posting above) is after.
Dissent! Network : suggest you reread my posts. If you can't accept there's an irony in a well-organised, branded and logo'ed campaign against global capitalism, that's a shame. And if other posters prefer to indulge in attempted sarcasm rather than give me more information, that's also a shame. You say I have a "seemingly generalised distrust of progressive organisations" - I think you are inferring far more from my observations than is justified. Apart from the irony, it did seem that D!N were keeping their underlying principles (PGA Hallmarks) very much to themselves, there for those who look rather than those who merely participate in response to a notice. I see that on a later IMC newsthread they have "come out". About time; and it would be good if they made this clear every time a D!N event was advertised.
And what's your agenda Matt? Are you policing IMC on behalf of y0urself, or someone else? Do you (and if so, why?) object to me making comments in 1, 2 or more threads? Are you trying to stop me post at all? Of more relevance to this thread, what involvement do you have with CW and can you provide any answers to the questions being posed here?
Radjel
Reasonable
10.04.2005 16:56
If that is not the impression you wish to give, then fair enough - I simply point out that on both this thread and the one on Dissent! you have been fairly scathing about organisations which, in my opinion, are in the main *excellent* and very positive.
You're perfectly entitled to your opinions, of course - I'm just saying that to some people they read as rather *too* sceptical - you can hold people to account without seeming to suggest that they are somehow dishonest.
Matt
Matt S
What mistakes?
11.04.2005 09:54
rjh
Unanswered questions..
11.04.2005 16:45
"casting unsubstantiated aspersions?" Nothing of the kind. And, on this thread at least, CW have not told me that "it welcomes corrections". That's exactly what I would like to hear - look at the post from Loukas on 08.04, and my response. My point was/is that they haven't said what they will do with corrections, and haven't answered the questions posted by "intelligence seeker".
Radjel
Completely reasonable
11.04.2005 17:00
I have carefully tried to address the points you raised in your post on 08.04, but you seem to have avoided both recognising the points I am trying to make and answering the questions being raised by various posters on this thread.
Are CW negligent? Haven't the faintest idea, not that bothered, people can make up their own minds and I certainly wouldn't seek to influence others through posts using emotive language such as yours and those of rjh. All I would like to know is CW's approach to corrections. So far I've seen Loukas' post. I would expect them to be more than just
"always interested". And what I can't understand is why it is so difficult to get this out of them.
Not sure where the "ulterior motive" bit comes from, can't see that fits with this topic. Suggest that if you want to give me more information about D!N then we switch back to that thread. Dishonest? Your word, not mine - if I think someone is being dishonest then I will say so, and give my reasons.
Radjel
To clarify
12.04.2005 16:50
Loukas
Thank you
12.04.2005 17:38
Radjel
at last, thankyou
13.04.2005 08:41
I notice that no-one has responded to the enquiry on nanotechnology...
intelligence seeker
where is my comment
13.04.2005 19:20
how long do i have to wait to see my comment?
where
Some stuff on Nanomaterials
14.04.2005 12:39
Here's my take for what it's worth.
There's nothing inherently wrong with nanomaterials - the particle size is extremely small, but the chemical composition isn't any different. The small particle size means an extremely large surface area, and this leads to different physical properties and more complete/effective chemical reactions.
The main concern is that free particles of nanomaterial may have physical properties like other substances of a similar size with identifiable risk eg asbestos. Once the nanos are fixed (like in paint, or makeup) then there is little likelihood of any risk - they've been used like this for many years already without known numbers of the population keeling over.
There is a nanomaterial known commercially as Envirox, a diesel additive, that Stagecoach is adopting for all its vehicles - the advantage is that fuel consumption is improved by about 10%, but the consequence is (potentially) that the exhaust fumes contain free nanoparticles, and such emissions are not covered by any healt/safety regulation, and not enough testing has been carried out (eg do nanos cause the same disease as asbestos?).
I have contacted the developers, Oxonica, (www.oxonica.co.uk) who gave me the courtesy of a reply, but it was fairly content free - follow all current regulations/tests etc. I sent a follow up with more quizzing on health testing they might have thought of doing themselves before unleashing such stuff into the atmosphere, but have yet to get a response.
I'm sure there's lots more that others can add, but hope this little helps.
Radjel