la prochain episode c'est : Naruto Shippuden Episode 252 [The Angelic Herald Of Death]
Ultimate Marvel VS Capcom 3 : deux vidéos : Heroes and Heralds
Ultimate Marvel vs Capcom 3 : Heroes and Heralds
Invité sur Eurosport, Bernard Lapasset a confirmé que Bonnaire ne sera pas sanctionné après la photo publiée par le New Zealand Herald.
Australia Taxing Plant Food (CO2): 2 of 2 - President Vaclav Klaus, 2011 Australian Tour - Introduction by 2GB's Alan Jones - July 26, 2011 Introduction by Australia's highest rating radio presenter, 2GB's Alan Jones AO. President Klaus' 2011 tour was sponsored by the Institute of Public Affairs and this presentation was filmed at the Sofitel Hotel, Sydney on 26 July 2011. Vaclav Klaus was elected President of the Czech Republic in 2003. His scepticism about anthropogenic climate change was the defining policy position of his presidency. He has published over 20 books on general social, political and economics subjects, including "Blue Planet in Green Shakles". He holds a number of international awards and honorary doctorates from universities all over the world. President Klaus is a vocal critic of the notion that any global warming is anthropogenic: "Global warming is a false myth and every serious person and scientist says so". In 2007, President Klaus called ambitious environmentalism 'the biggest threat to freedom, democracy, the market economy and prosperity'.At the 2009 UN Climate Change Conference, President Klaus again voiced his disapproval, calling the gathering 'propogandistic' and 'undignified'. Production by: No Carbon Tax Team www.nocarbontax.com.au Technical Crew: Camera: Sean Morris John Jung Wook Kim Green agenda has parrallels with excesses of communism From: Herald Sun July 28, 2011 12:00AM Czech President Vaclav Klaus says the climate change movement is a threat to democracy. Herald Sun IN a serendipitous coincidence of timing, in the space of two hours this week, Australians were afforded a sharp, momentary insight into the two opposing ideological mindsets that are competing for the soul of our nation. In a Sydney hotel on Monday night, Czech President Vaclav Klaus, an economist who fought against communism, was warning of the new threats to our freedom he recognises in the doctrine of global warming. Almost simultaneously, in a Hobart casino, Greens senator Christine Milne was unilaterally announcing, on ABC-TV's Q&A show, that the Government would be conducting an inquiry into the section of the Australian media that she finds "extreme(ly) bias(ed) against action on climate change". Milne's every illiberal pronouncement was greeted with applause by an audience that seemed full of tree huggers, bearded public servants and other recipients of government largesse, about the only growth industry left in Tasmania. Klaus, on the other hand, was speaking to an audience of economic liberals and climate change realists invited by the Institute of Public Affairs, the Melbourne-based free-market think tank. "Twenty years ago we still felt threatened by the remnants of communism. This is really over," Klaus said. "I feel threatened now, not by global warming -- I don't see any -- (but) by the global warming doctrine, which I consider a new dangerous attempt to control and mastermind my life and our lives, in the name of controlling the climate or temperature." Klaus, 70, who has twice been elected as Czech President and is its former prime minister, is one of the most important figures in post-communist Europe. His experiences under totalitarian rule have made him exquisitely alert to the erosion of democratic freedoms. He said environmentalists had been arguing for decades that we should reduce our consumption of fossil fuels, using various farcical ploys from the exhaustion of natural resources to the threat of "imminent mass poverty and starvation for billions". Those same environmentalists shamelessly talk now about dangerous global warming. "They don't care about resources or poverty or pollution. "They hate us, the humans. They consider us dangerous and sinful creatures who must be controlled by them. "I used to live in a similar world called communism. And I know it led to the worst environmental damage the world has ever experienced." Global warming alarmists "want to change us, they want to change our behaviour, our way of life, our values and preferences. They want to restrict our freedom because they themselves believe they know what is good for us. They are not interested in climate. They misuse the climate in their goal to restrict our freedom. Therefore ...what is in danger is freedom, not the climate". He described the parallels he sees between the loss of freedom under communism and the new global warming doctrine. Under communism, "politics dictated the economics and dictated life. Our main ambition during the dark communist days was to change that and create an autonomous society and autonomous economic system with only a marginal role played by politics ... I am sorry to discover now politics dictates the economics again. And the global warming debate is the same story (in which) politicians dictate the issue". He said because of his experience of communism, "maybe I am over-sensitive. I am afraid that some of the people who spend their lives in a free society don't appreciate sufficiently all the issues connected with freedom. "So my over-sensitivity is like an alarm clock warning about the potential development, which I am really afraid of." With Klaus's words ringing in my ears I went home and watched a recording of Milne's performance on Q&A. There Milne was equating those decent Australians who have been exercising their democratic right to protest at anti-carbon tax rallies with the crazed gunman who killed 76 people in Norway on the weekend. "It's been pretty shocking around Australia over the last month or two in relation particularly to the carbon price," she said. Coupled with her view that the voices of those in the media who are against the carbon tax ought to be investigated, it was a chilling echo of the attack on freedom Klaus had just warned against. The speed at which the arrogance of the Greens has grown since they entered a power-sharing arrangement with the Gillard Government almost a year ago, and the shambolic acquiescence of the Government to their demands, has caught us unawares. It has lulled us into accepting as normal some remarkably illiberal ideas. For instance, there is the drastic reshaping of the economy by the carbon tax Gillard assured us we would not have, and its six unaccountable new bureaucracies. There is the media inquiry flagrantly designed by the Government and Greens to punish only the media organisation whose newspapers (such as this one) have most embarrassed them and exposed their mistakes. THERE is the idea that companies that create wealth and jobs for Australia are evil "big polluters", and that our most important industry, mining, should be saddled with a "super-profits tax". There is the idea that there is something so wrong with private school funding that an inquiry is needed, and that the Greens' policy of 30 per cent death duties on estates over $5 million is perfectly reasonable. We are like frogs in boiling water. Even Reserve Bank chairman Glenn Stevens this week blamed the "increasingly bitter political debate" for declining consumer confidence. No, the bitterness of the debate comes from the fact people feel their way of life being compromised by a Government that is a rule unto itself and seems to believe it knows better than us what is good for us. The carbon tax is a factor, but the single most unsettling event was the live cattle trade fiasco, which is still unresolved. It prompted the feeling that, if the Government can suddenly and arbitrarily stop a legitimate thriving industry in its tracks, based on a one-sided television show, with no right of reply, then what can it do to me? That is a very sobering thought. It is what stops people shopping, and it is what makes the debate bitter. The more the Government turns a deaf ear to the people, the louder the people shout. And then, what is the reaction of an undemocratic Government but to find ways to muzzle dissent? devinemiranda@hotmail.com source: http://www.heraldsun.com.au/opinion/green-agenda-has-parrallels-with-excesses-of-communism/story-e6frfhqf-1226103023674 ----------------------------------------------------------------- Source: Name: smmediatv888 Website: http://www.youtube.com/user/smmediatv888 Country: Australia ----------------------------------------------------------------
Australia Taxing Plant Food (CO2): 1 of 2 - President Vaclav Klaus, 2011 Australian Tour - Introduction by 2GB's Alan Jones - July 26, 2011 Introduction by Australia's highest rating radio presenter, 2GB's Alan Jones AO. President Klaus' 2011 tour was sponsored by the Institute of Public Affairs and this presentation was filmed at the Sofitel Hotel, Sydney on 26 July 2011. Vaclav Klaus was elected President of the Czech Republic in 2003. His scepticism about anthropogenic climate change was the defining policy position of his presidency. He has published over 20 books on general social, political and economics subjects, including "Blue Planet in Green Shakles". He holds a number of international awards and honorary doctorates from universities all over the world. President Klaus is a vocal critic of the notion that any global warming is anthropogenic: "Global warming is a false myth and every serious person and scientist says so". In 2007, President Klaus called ambitious environmentalism 'the biggest threat to freedom, democracy, the market economy and prosperity'.At the 2009 UN Climate Change Conference, President Klaus again voiced his disapproval, calling the gathering 'propogandistic' and 'undignified'. Production by: No Carbon Tax Team www.nocarbontax.com.au Technical Crew: Camera: Sean Morris John Jung Wook Kim Green agenda has parrallels with excesses of communism From: Herald Sun July 28, 2011 12:00AM Czech President Vaclav Klaus says the climate change movement is a threat to democracy. Herald Sun IN a serendipitous coincidence of timing, in the space of two hours this week, Australians were afforded a sharp, momentary insight into the two opposing ideological mindsets that are competing for the soul of our nation. In a Sydney hotel on Monday night, Czech President Vaclav Klaus, an economist who fought against communism, was warning of the new threats to our freedom he recognises in the doctrine of global warming. Almost simultaneously, in a Hobart casino, Greens senator Christine Milne was unilaterally announcing, on ABC-TV's Q&A show, that the Government would be conducting an inquiry into the section of the Australian media that she finds "extreme(ly) bias(ed) against action on climate change". Milne's every illiberal pronouncement was greeted with applause by an audience that seemed full of tree huggers, bearded public servants and other recipients of government largesse, about the only growth industry left in Tasmania. Klaus, on the other hand, was speaking to an audience of economic liberals and climate change realists invited by the Institute of Public Affairs, the Melbourne-based free-market think tank. "Twenty years ago we still felt threatened by the remnants of communism. This is really over," Klaus said. "I feel threatened now, not by global warming -- I don't see any -- (but) by the global warming doctrine, which I consider a new dangerous attempt to control and mastermind my life and our lives, in the name of controlling the climate or temperature." Klaus, 70, who has twice been elected as Czech President and is its former prime minister, is one of the most important figures in post-communist Europe. His experiences under totalitarian rule have made him exquisitely alert to the erosion of democratic freedoms. He said environmentalists had been arguing for decades that we should reduce our consumption of fossil fuels, using various farcical ploys from the exhaustion of natural resources to the threat of "imminent mass poverty and starvation for billions". Those same environmentalists shamelessly talk now about dangerous global warming. "They don't care about resources or poverty or pollution. "They hate us, the humans. They consider us dangerous and sinful creatures who must be controlled by them. "I used to live in a similar world called communism. And I know it led to the worst environmental damage the world has ever experienced." Global warming alarmists "want to change us, they want to change our behaviour, our way of life, our values and preferences. They want to restrict our freedom because they themselves believe they know what is good for us. They are not interested in climate. They misuse the climate in their goal to restrict our freedom. Therefore ...what is in danger is freedom, not the climate". He described the parallels he sees between the loss of freedom under communism and the new global warming doctrine. Under communism, "politics dictated the economics and dictated life. Our main ambition during the dark communist days was to change that and create an autonomous society and autonomous economic system with only a marginal role played by politics ... I am sorry to discover now politics dictates the economics again. And the global warming debate is the same story (in which) politicians dictate the issue". He said because of his experience of communism, "maybe I am over-sensitive. I am afraid that some of the people who spend their lives in a free society don't appreciate sufficiently all the issues connected with freedom. "So my over-sensitivity is like an alarm clock warning about the potential development, which I am really afraid of." With Klaus's words ringing in my ears I went home and watched a recording of Milne's performance on Q&A. There Milne was equating those decent Australians who have been exercising their democratic right to protest at anti-carbon tax rallies with the crazed gunman who killed 76 people in Norway on the weekend. "It's been pretty shocking around Australia over the last month or two in relation particularly to the carbon price," she said. Coupled with her view that the voices of those in the media who are against the carbon tax ought to be investigated, it was a chilling echo of the attack on freedom Klaus had just warned against. The speed at which the arrogance of the Greens has grown since they entered a power-sharing arrangement with the Gillard Government almost a year ago, and the shambolic acquiescence of the Government to their demands, has caught us unawares. It has lulled us into accepting as normal some remarkably illiberal ideas. For instance, there is the drastic reshaping of the economy by the carbon tax Gillard assured us we would not have, and its six unaccountable new bureaucracies. There is the media inquiry flagrantly designed by the Government and Greens to punish only the media organisation whose newspapers (such as this one) have most embarrassed them and exposed their mistakes. THERE is the idea that companies that create wealth and jobs for Australia are evil "big polluters", and that our most important industry, mining, should be saddled with a "super-profits tax". There is the idea that there is something so wrong with private school funding that an inquiry is needed, and that the Greens' policy of 30 per cent death duties on estates over $5 million is perfectly reasonable. We are like frogs in boiling water. Even Reserve Bank chairman Glenn Stevens this week blamed the "increasingly bitter political debate" for declining consumer confidence. No, the bitterness of the debate comes from the fact people feel their way of life being compromised by a Government that is a rule unto itself and seems to believe it knows better than us what is good for us. The carbon tax is a factor, but the single most unsettling event was the live cattle trade fiasco, which is still unresolved. It prompted the feeling that, if the Government can suddenly and arbitrarily stop a legitimate thriving industry in its tracks, based on a one-sided television show, with no right of reply, then what can it do to me? That is a very sobering thought. It is what stops people shopping, and it is what makes the debate bitter. The more the Government turns a deaf ear to the people, the louder the people shout. And then, what is the reaction of an undemocratic Government but to find ways to muzzle dissent? devinemiranda@hotmail.com source: http://www.heraldsun.com.au/opinion/green-agenda-has-parrallels-with-excesses-of-communism/story-e6frfhqf-1226103023674 ----------------------------------------------------------------- Source: Name: smmediatv888 Website: http://www.youtube.com/user/smmediatv888 Country: Australia ----------------------------------------------------------------
China: Australian PM Spotlights China's Human Rights - April 28, 2011 Follow us on TWITTER: http://twitter.com/cnforbiddennews Like us on FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/chinaforbiddennews In her visit to China, Australian Premier Julia Gillard spoke with the Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao . about her concerns of China's human rights record, ethnic minorities issues, religious freedom, and the treatment of human rights activists. Wen denied China's human rights regression. Julia Gillard spoke with Wen Jiabao on April 26 during her first visit to China as a Prime Minister. Gillard said her talks focused on trade relations, as well as human rights issues. "I did have the opportunity to raise with Premier Wen issues associated with Australia's concerns with human rights", Gillard told reporters. "He did indicate his view is China has not taken a backward step on human rights." When asked if she was satisfied with Wen's response, Gillard replied, "What we do is raise our concerns and I've done that very clearly with Premier Wen today." According to AFP's April 26 report, Wen's reponse has deeply disappointed the Chinese public. The public questions the human rights situation in China, pointing to recent cases of human rights violation, including the arrest of Jasmine Rallies' participants, suppression of religious groups, the disappearance of Ai Weiwei, and the persecution of lawyer Jin Guanghong. Zhang Xiaogang, Secretary General of Independent Chinese PEN Center told VOA that he believes Gillard' mention of human rights was "only superficial formality". According to a recent LOWY institute poll, 79% of Australians believes China's economic development will benefit Australia; yet nearly 2/3 of the people surveyed worried that the rise of China would pose a threat to Australia. The Australian reported that during her recent visit to Japan, Gillard told Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan, it is vital that the U.S. lift its political engagement in the Asia-Pacific region to promote security in the face of the rise of China. Both leaders discussed the "expansion" of China, which has been increasing its military budget to the consternation of nearby nations, including Japan and Korea. According to Sydney Morning Herald, Gillard "has moved to strengthen defense ties with Japan and will seek to elevate links with South Korea, adding to China's unease about new U.S.-anchored security networks emerging on its borders." Reuters notes that Gillard's meetings with Chinese leaders "highlight the awkward challenges facing Australia and other Western governments: the desire to prod Beijing over human rights and regional friction while nurturing trade ties with the world's second biggest economy." NTD reporters Tang Rui and Wu Huizhen ------------------------------------------------------------------- Source: Name: China Forbidden News Websites: http://www.youtube.com/user/ChinaForbiddenNews http://ntdtv.com/ -------------------------------------------------------------------
New Zealand - Post Earthquake: Anger erupts in Christchurch CBD after the earthquake - March 20, 2011 Report by Simon Baker - New Zealand Herald Protests intensified in Christchurch as fed-up business owners broke cordons to try to get to their quake-hit businesses. --------------------------------------------------------------- Source: Name: nzherald Websites: http://www.youtube.com/user/nzheraldtv http://www.nzherald.co.nz/ Country: New Zealand ---------------------------------------------------------------
Il neige en arbre de Noël, avec un mini arbre de Noël et de couleur claire lumières changeantes en place, jouant 18 chansons de Noël, 12cmx18cm, alimentation USB ou alimentation 3xAAA, une utilisation en intérieur. Contenu musical: 1. Jingle Bells + Noël blanc 2. Le Père Noël arrive en ville + Nous vous souhaitons un Joyeux Noël 3. The First Noel + Silent Night 4. Lors de la Housetop + Angels We Have Heard On High 5. Il est venu sur Midnight Clear + Joy to the World 6. Les douze jours de Noël + Frosty The Snowman 7. Rudolph, le renne au nez rouge + Hark! The Herald Angels Sing 8. Arbre de Noël + Deck The Halls 9. Come All Ye Faithful Bells + Silver Fournisseur de la Chine: Courrier électronique: fangzhengcn@hotmail.com Skype ID: chanceller819 http://chinagift.en.ecplaza.net
Oil Spill: Part 1 Spill Children: The Untold Story of the BP Gulf Oil Disaster - February 20, 2011 Credits Photo - Los Angeles Times Photo - Panama City News Herald Living on Earth Radio - Ira Leifer (NASA, UCSB Professor) WKRG - Jessica Taloney (Reporter) Intel Hub - Project Gulf Impact Seattle Forum Jerry Cope - John Bean, (P2S Supervisor a BP Sub-Contractor) In Discussion with David Gibbons - Wilma Subra (Chemist) National Resources Defense Council - Darla Rooks (Shrimper) Grassroots Connection Radio - Lorrie Williams (Crabber) WWL-TV - Lorrie Williams (Crabber) Freedom Files Radio - Kindra Arnesen (BP Community Liaison) Living on Earth Radio - Cherri Foytlin (Gulf Change) Project Gulf Impact - Kindra Arnesen (BP Community Liaison) Living on Earth Radio - Riki Ott (Toxicologist) WKRG - Pat Peterson (Reporter) WKRG - Ray Melick (BP Spokesman) Music - Thieves Of The American Dream (At The Order Of Fire) Music - Devotchka (How It Ends) ...Part 2 coming soon... ---------------------------------------------------------------- Source: Name: OilFlorida Websites: http://www.youtube.com/user/OilFlorida http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/ ----------------------------------------------------------------
Michael Coren on Egypt's islamic revolution - January 28, 2011 Michael Coren with guests; Michael Coren, Claire Hoy, Ricki Gurwitz and Sid Ryan discuss the recent events taking place in Egypt. Egypt's uprising: Egypt's Mubarak refuses to quit Facing a popular uprising, Egypt’s president has fired his cabinet after protesters engulfed his country in chaos – battling police with stones and firebombs and burning down the ruling party headquarters. AU to set up panel on Ivory Coast crisis The ... Beeld - January 29, 2011 GOP Rep. Thad McCotter: We must stand with our invaluable ally Egypt Though many will be tempted to superficially interpret the Egyptian demonstrations as an uprising for populist democracy, they must recall how such similar initial views of the 1979 Iranian Revolution were belied by the mullahs’ radical jackbooted ... Hotair.com - January 29, 2011 Egypt shuts down Web access L ocal Egyptians’ eyes were glued to their computer screens hoping for updates from their loved ones yesterday after the government shut down Internet access to help stem an uprising fueled by social media. Ahmed Elewa, 30, a student at the University of ... Boston Herald - January 29, 2011 Amid violent protests, Egypt leader fires Cabinet State television said 13 were killed in Suez and 75 injured; a total of at least six were dead in Cairo and Giza. Egypt's uprising here was the biggest outbreak yet in a wave of revolts around the Arab world since the Jan. 14 ouster of President Zine El ... Austin American-Statesman - January 29, 2011 From Tunisia, to Egypt, to Yemen: Al Jazeera fuels Arab anger Its reporter in Tunisia became a leading partisan in the uprising there. And critics speculate that the network bowed to the diplomatic interests of the Qatari emir, its patron, by initially playing down the protests in Egypt. Not since the 2003 invasion ... Mynews India - January 29, 2011 Furor forces Mubarak’s hand The uprising here was also the biggest outbreak yet in a wave of youth-led revolts around the region since the Jan. 14 ouster of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali of Tunisia — a country with just half Cairo’s population of 20 million. “Egyptians ... Boston Globe - January 29, 2011 Egypt’s Internet Shutdown Can’t Stop Mass Protests But the so-called “Day of Wrath” is uninterrupted. On al-Jazeera a few minutes ago, a functionary from Mubarak’s National Democratic Party called the uprising “unprecedented” and conceded that the government needs a “nontraditional way of ... Wired News - January 29, 2011 Unrest across the Arab world CAIRO - The uprising in Tunisia, which led to the ouster of president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali on January 14, has had a ripple effect across the Arab world: January 25 sees the start of unprecedented demonstrations against the regime of President Hosni ... The Vancouver Sun - January 29, 2011 David Ignatius: Arab future up for grabs But from the French and Russian revolutions to the Iranian uprising of 1979, the idealistic but disorganized street protesters usually give way to a manipulative revolutionary elite. One Arab intelligence analyst speaks of Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen and Jordan ... Indianapolis Star - January 29, 2011 Mubarak defiant as Egypt toll rises, Obama wades in The demonstrations, inspired by events in Tunisia, have swelled into the largest uprising in Egypt in the three decades of Mubarak's rule, sending shock waves across the region. At least 27 people have now been killed, hundreds more injured and some 1,000 ... Bangkok Post - January 29, 2011 Michael Coren http://www.youtube.com/user/sdamatt2
"Il poema del vento e degli alberi" ("Kaze to ki no uta") è un OAV prodotto dalla Herald Enterprise e dalla Shogakukan nel 1987. È stato pubblicato in Italia su VHS nel 1997 e su DVD nel 2006. È un anime a tema omoerotico che con splendidi disegni e un’animazione curata e piacevole ci narra una storia di passione, dolore e morte ambientata in un collegio della Provenza, nel 1880. Serge, un nuovo studente del collegio, viene messo in stanza con Gilbert, un bellissimo efebo biondo dai delicati lineamenti e dagli occhi profondi e pieni di amarezza. Gilbert, usato e cercato dagli altri studenti del collegio per i loro sfoghi, ma disprezzato pubblicamente per il suo atteggiamento spavaldo, anticonformista e decadente, finisce per innamorarsi di Serge. Quest’ultimo subisce il fascino del compagno di stanza e cerca di aiutarlo a essere accettato dagli altri ospiti del collegio.
"Il poema del vento e degli alberi" ("Kaze to ki no uta") è un OAV prodotto dalla Herald Enterprise e dalla Shogakukan nel 1987. È stato pubblicato in Italia su VHS nel 1997 e su DVD nel 2006. È un anime a tema omoerotico che con splendidi disegni e un’animazione curata e piacevole ci narra una storia di passione, dolore e morte ambientata in un collegio della Provenza, nel 1880. Serge, un nuovo studente del collegio, viene messo in stanza con Gilbert, un bellissimo efebo biondo dai delicati lineamenti e dagli occhi profondi e pieni di amarezza. Gilbert, usato e cercato dagli altri studenti del collegio per i loro sfoghi, ma disprezzato pubblicamente per il suo atteggiamento spavaldo, anticonformista e decadente, finisce per innamorarsi di Serge. Quest’ultimo subisce il fascino del compagno di stanza e cerca di aiutarlo a essere accettato dagli altri ospiti del collegio.
"Il poema del vento e degli alberi" ("Kaze to ki no uta") è un OAV prodotto dalla Herald Enterprise e dalla Shogakukan nel 1987. È stato pubblicato in Italia su VHS nel 1997 e su DVD nel 2006. È un anime a tema omoerotico che con splendidi disegni e un’animazione curata e piacevole ci narra una storia di passione, dolore e morte ambientata in un collegio della Provenza, nel 1880. Serge, un nuovo studente del collegio, viene messo in stanza con Gilbert, un bellissimo efebo biondo dai delicati lineamenti e dagli occhi profondi e pieni di amarezza. Gilbert, usato e cercato dagli altri studenti del collegio per i loro sfoghi, ma disprezzato pubblicamente per il suo atteggiamento spavaldo, anticonformista e decadente, finisce per innamorarsi di Serge. Quest’ultimo subisce il fascino del compagno di stanza e cerca di aiutarlo a essere accettato dagli altri ospiti del collegio.
"Il poema del vento e degli alberi" ("Kaze to ki no uta") è un OAV prodotto dalla Herald Enterprise e dalla Shogakukan nel 1987. È stato pubblicato in Italia su VHS nel 1997 e su DVD nel 2006. È un anime a tema omoerotico che con splendidi disegni e un’animazione curata e piacevole ci narra una storia di passione, dolore e morte ambientata in un collegio della Provenza, nel 1880. Serge, un nuovo studente del collegio, viene messo in stanza con Gilbert, un bellissimo efebo biondo dai delicati lineamenti e dagli occhi profondi e pieni di amarezza. Gilbert, usato e cercato dagli altri studenti del collegio per i loro sfoghi, ma disprezzato pubblicamente per il suo atteggiamento spavaldo, anticonformista e decadente, finisce per innamorarsi di Serge. Quest’ultimo subisce il fascino del compagno di stanza e cerca di aiutarlo a essere accettato dagli altri ospiti del collegio.
"Il poema del vento e degli alberi" ("Kaze to ki no uta") è un OAV prodotto dalla Herald Enterprise e dalla Shogakukan nel 1987. È stato pubblicato in Italia su VHS nel 1997 e su DVD nel 2006. È un anime a tema omoerotico che con splendidi disegni e un’animazione curata e piacevole ci narra una storia di passione, dolore e morte ambientata in un collegio della Provenza, nel 1880. Serge, un nuovo studente del collegio, viene messo in stanza con Gilbert, un bellissimo efebo biondo dai delicati lineamenti e dagli occhi profondi e pieni di amarezza. Gilbert, usato e cercato dagli altri studenti del collegio per i loro sfoghi, ma disprezzato pubblicamente per il suo atteggiamento spavaldo, anticonformista e decadente, finisce per innamorarsi di Serge. Quest’ultimo subisce il fascino del compagno di stanza e cerca di aiutarlo a essere accettato dagli altri ospiti del collegio.
"Il poema del vento e degli alberi" ("Kaze to ki no uta") è un OAV prodotto dalla Herald Enterprise e dalla Shogakukan nel 1987. È stato pubblicato in Italia su VHS nel 1997 e su DVD nel 2006. È un anime a tema omoerotico che con splendidi disegni e un’animazione curata e piacevole ci narra una storia di passione, dolore e morte ambientata in un collegio della Provenza, nel 1880. Serge, un nuovo studente del collegio, viene messo in stanza con Gilbert, un bellissimo efebo biondo dai delicati lineamenti e dagli occhi profondi e pieni di amarezza. Gilbert, usato e cercato dagli altri studenti del collegio per i loro sfoghi, ma disprezzato pubblicamente per il suo atteggiamento spavaldo, anticonformista e decadente, finisce per innamorarsi di Serge. Quest’ultimo subisce il fascino del compagno di stanza e cerca di aiutarlo a essere accettato dagli altri ospiti del collegio.
"Il poema del vento e degli alberi" ("Kaze to ki no uta") è un OAV prodotto dalla Herald Enterprise e dalla Shogakukan nel 1987. È stato pubblicato in Italia su VHS nel 1997 e su DVD nel 2006. È un anime a tema omoerotico che con splendidi disegni e un’animazione curata e piacevole ci narra una storia di passione, dolore e morte ambientata in un collegio della Provenza, nel 1880. Serge, un nuovo studente del collegio, viene messo in stanza con Gilbert, un bellissimo efebo biondo dai delicati lineamenti e dagli occhi profondi e pieni di amarezza. Gilbert, usato e cercato dagli altri studenti del collegio per i loro sfoghi, ma disprezzato pubblicamente per il suo atteggiamento spavaldo, anticonformista e decadente, finisce per innamorarsi di Serge. Quest’ultimo subisce il fascino del compagno di stanza e cerca di aiutarlo a essere accettato dagli altri ospiti del collegio.
RESUME La rue parle, comme en 1936, comme en 1968. Le sujet de ce film expérimental, ciné -tract : Une manifestation – toutes les manifestations. Un défilé unitaire intersyndical organisé lors des grandes mobilisations de 2010. Les slogans sont repris et affichés en intertitres inspirés par l’époque du cinéma muet. La désinformation est contestée via des images de téléviseurs déphasés. Un slogan est privilégié : celui – très réaliste- appelant à la « grève générale interprofessionnelle ». LA METHODE Ce film documentaire de onze minutes a été filmé avec un caméscope DV Canon et des rushes DVCam puis monté sur Final Cut Pro. La bande son est pour l’essentiel constituée des sons du réel : ceux d’une manifestation. L’expression de l’auteur est communiquée via un bref commentaire et des intertitres qui font hommage à l’époque du cinéma muet. Une intertextualité est là, aussi, via des citations de Pierre Bourdieu, Che Guevarra, et Karl Marx. TEXTE INTEGRAL COMMENTAIRE D’AUTEUR EN VOIX OFF « En France, la rue parle. Comme en 1936. Comme en 1968. Ouvriers, étudiants, infirmières, Employés, lycéens, routiers, Et bien d’autres encore, s’expriment. Et au même moment, le pays s’installe dans la grève. Très majoritairement, la population approuve le mouvement social. Et que conteste-t-on ? Une nouvelle régression sociale : L’allongement de la durée du travail, sous prétexte d’économie de fonds publics, tandis que, dans le même temps, le pouvoir multiplie cadeaux et allégements fiscaux aux plus riches. Qu’entend-on dans les rues ? Que lit-on sur les banderoles ? Ecoutons et regardons. » COMMENTAIRE D’AUTEUR EN INTERTITRES INTERTITRE CENSURES INTERTITRE Images brouillées. Que cacher ? INTERTITRE Milliers de grévistes Millions de Manifestants INTERTITRE Et cependant, des informations non censurées circulent. Le Mouvement s'étend CITATION D’EXTRAITS DE PRESSE EN INTERTITRE INTERTITRE "Le blocage social est total". Le Monde. 14 octobre 2010 INTERTITRE "More than one million people have taken to the streets". International. Herald Tribune. October, 15th, 2010 INTERTITRE "3,5 millions de personnes ont manifesté". L'Humanité. 20 octobre 2010 INTERTITRE "Le cocktail habituel, en France, des grands mouvements sociaux". Le Nouvel Observateur. 20 octobre 2010 COMMENTAIRE D’AUTEUR EN INTERTITRES INTERTITRE Et tandis que le Pouvoir semble mépriser l'expression de la volonté du peuple INTERTITRE Ouvriers, routiers, lycéens, employés, infirmières, professeurs, intermittents organisent INTERTITRE LA GREVE INTERTITRE UNE MANIFESTATION, TOUTES LES MANIFESTATIONS CITATIONS EN INTERTITRES DES SLOGANS ENTENDUS LORS DES MANIFESTATIONS INTERTITRE Des millions de voix : "Qui sème LA MISERE Récolte LA COLERE !" INTERTITRES Des millions de voix : "LES JEUNES DANS LA GALERE ! LES VIEUX DANS LA MISERE !" "LA CULTURE QU'ON ENTERRE !" "ON N 'EN VEUT PAS DE CETTE SOCIETE LA !" INTERTITRE Des millions de voix : "CHO ! CHO ! CHOMAGE, RAS LE BOL !" INTERTITRE Lu sur une pancarte : "TRAVAILLER PLUS, POUR GAGNER MOINS !" INTERTITRE Lu sur une pancarte : "BOUCLIER FISCAL POUR LES RICHES, MATRACAGE SOCIAL POUR LES AUTRES !" INTERTITRE Des millions de voix : "TAXONS! TAXONS ! LES PROFITS FINANCIERS !" INTERTITRE Des millions de voix : "DE L'ARGENT, IL Y EN A, DANS LES POCHES DU PATRONAT !" INTERTITRE Des millions de voix : "NOS RETRAITES C'EST VITAL ! TAXONS, TAXONS LE CAPITAL !" INTERTITRE Des millions de voix : "METRO ! BOULOT ! DODO ! CAVEAU !" INTERTITRE Des millions de voix : "RESPECTEZ LE DROIT DE GREVE !" INTERTITRE Des millions de voix : "NOUS TRAVAILLONS, ILS PROFITENT !" INTERTITRE Des millions de voix : "CHO ! CHO ! CHOMAGE, RAS LE BOL !" INTERTITRE Lu sur une pancarte : "71% DES FRANÇAIS SONT AVEC NOUS " INTERTITRES Des millions de voix : "C'EST PAS LES RETRAITéS ! C'EST PAS LES SALARIéS, C'EST LES ACTIONS QU'IL FAUT TAXER !" COMMENTAIRE D’AUTEUR EN INTERTITRES Rappelons - nous : En 1995, Gare de Lyon, avec les Cheminots, Pierre BOURDIEU CITATION EN INTERTITRE "Je suis ici pour dire notre soutien à tous ceux qui luttent (.../...) contre la destruction d'une civilisation, associée à l'existence du service public, celle de l'égalité républicaine des droits, droits à l'éducation, à la santé, à la culture, à la recherche, à l'art, et, par- dessus tout, au travail. Je suis ici pour dire que nous comprenons ce mouvement profond, c'est-à-dire à la fois le désespoir et les espoirs qui s'y expriment, et que nous ressentons aussi". Pierre BOURDIEU Discours aux cheminots grévistes, Paris, Gare de Lyon, 12 décembre 1995. CITATIONS EN INTERTITRES DES SLOGANS ENTENDUS LORS DES MANIFESTATIONS INTERTITRE Des millions de voix : "QUI SEME LA MISERE RECOLTE LA RAGE !" INTERTITRE Des millions de voix : "ASSEZ, ASSEZ ! D'INJUSTICE SOCIALE !" INTERTITRE Des millions de voix : "HALTE AU MEPRIS !" COMMENTAIRE D’AUTEUR EN INTERTITRES INTERTITRE COMME EN 1968, LES MURS PARLENT CITATION EN INTERTITRE "Les amoureux fervents Et les savants austères Aiment également, Dans leur mûre saison, Les chats" Charles Baudelaire COMMENTAIRE D’AUTEUR EN INTERTITRES INTERTITRE COMME EN 1968, LA GREVE S'INSTALLE INTERTITRES DANS LES GARES, DANS LES LYCEES ET UNIVERSITES, SUR LES ROUTES, ET EN BIEN D'AUTRES LIEUX ENCORE INTERTITRE Un fantôme hante les rues : "EL CHE VIVE !" CITATION EN INTERTITRE "Soyons réalistes : Exigeons l'impossible" Ernerto Che Guevarra COMMENTAIRE D’AUTEUR EN INTERTITRES INTERTITRE Et tandis que des millions de travailleurs résistent, INTERTITRE Les médias dominés par les Puissances tentent de cacher l'immensité des foules CITATION EN INTERTITRE « Les pensées de la classe dominante sont aussi, à toutes les époques, les pensées dominantes, autrement dit la classe qui est la puissance matérielle dominante de la société est aussi la puissance dominante spirituelle. La classe qui dispose des moyens de la production matérielle dispose, du même coup des moyens de la production intellectuelle, si bien que, l'un dans l'autre, les pensées de ceux à qui sont refusés les moyens de production intellectuelle sont soumises du même coup à cette classe dominante ». Karl Marx INTERTITRE Des millions de voix : "TOUS ENSEMBLE ! "TOUS ENSEMBLE ! ET GREVE GENERALE !" FICHE TECHNIQUE . Film documentaire expérimental dédié aux Groupes Medvekine . Tourné avec caméscope DV et intégrations de rushes DVCam et de photos . Monté avec Final Cut Pro . Auteur réalisateur, image, son, montage : Didier Mauro, . Interprètes : Didier Mauro . Pays de tournage : France . Autoroduction de LA SEINE TV . Diffusé par YOUTUBE depuis le 26 octobre 2010 . Liens : http://www.youtube.com/user/TV1WEBDIDIERMAURO . Année de production : 2010 . Durée : 11 minutes . Supports disponibles : DVCam, DV, DVD, MP4 CONTACT LA SEINE TV Productions de programmes pour la télévision Email : contact@laseine.tv Site Internet : http://laseine.tv Téléphone : 33 01 45 20 99 70 Adresse : LA SEINE TV, 10 Allée du Bord de l’eau, F – 75016 Paris.
A l'occasion: "Les Nocturnes de Ferrières" 2010. _"L'envoyé des Sables" _ _ Spectacle médiéval au camp de soldats. Alexis DIENNA __ Contact : alexisoise@yahoo.fr Web : http://escrimecascade.centerblog.net/ Lien: Frédéric TRIN: -- http://escrimeartistique.e-monsite.com -- . . . . . . ............................................. Mots clefs: escrime medievale artistique theatrale medieval bretteur bretteuse de theatre spectacle comedien comedian les nocturnes de ferrieres en gatinais 2010 centre loiret chevalier chevalerie feodal feodale feodaux bouclier lance hallebarde batarde hast estramaçon plilori magicien feodalite ordalie jugement de dieux lice campement guerrier pietaille banquet pouvoir magique sort tournoi joute cote de maille casque heaume heraldie heraldique blason baniere drapeau rondache templier templiers moudjahidin moudjahidins cimeterre turc invasion paysan gueux gueuse villageois villageoise pouilleux pouilleuse chatelain seigneur seigneurie heretique ensorcellement ensorcelle envoute envoutement divertissement acteur actor europe france senlis cinema theatre,creation artistique escrimeur escrimeuse tireur demonstration, scenique theatre de rue arts du interpretation performing arts entertainment divertissements manifestations culturelles culturelle manifestations festivals prestation presentations representations animations loisirs cultures sports ancienne scène cape et feu fire sword fencing artistic theatrical troupe de theatre femme homme d'arme medievale epoque intemporel fantastique timeless fantastic historique faires historical reenactment historic assaut parade riposte estoc sabre saber epee sword dague dagger main gauche batarde cimetere hache fleaux bouclier glaive couteau arme blanche canne demonstration scene d'action mouvement d'enssemble mouvement collectif, duel cane cascade cascadeur performeur performers stunt duel combat bagarre bataille battle street fight spectacle,show
Genome breakthrough heralds new dawn for agriculture
6 août 2010 A beautiful nugget from Spitzer's "Hidden Universe." Behind a dark veil of dust in the constellation Sagittarius, a lurking dragon has been revealed by the infrared eye of NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. The red dots along its dark filaments are baby stars forming at a furious rate. The dark Dragon appears to fly away from M17, its brightly glowing neighbor known alternately as the Omega or Swan nebula. Oddly, astronomers have found that both the Dragon and the Swan are forming roughly the same numbers of stars. If so, why should they look so different from one another? The answer may be that dragons, rather than ugly ducklings, grow up to become swans. While the Dragon is forming fairly large type B stars, only in the Swan do we find the very largest O stars. Their brilliant glare illuminates and disperses the dust, creating a nebula that is equally vivid in infrared and visible light. The gas and dust clouds in this region appear to be passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm, a kind of gravitational traffic jam. Astronomers have long believed clouds will bunch up when they enter a spiral arm, triggering the gravitational collapse needed to form stars. When the first generation of smaller stars form in the Dragon, they seem to further compress the nearby dust. This enables a second generation of even more massive O stars to form and light up the area, destroying the surrounding dust clouds. Further downstream from the Swan, a cluster of O stars sits at the center of a blown-out bubble. This is likely the fading remains of an older nebula, now largely dispersed as it exits the other side of the spiral arm. In this one picture, Spitzer has captured a snapshot of the evolution of a star-forming region. From Dragon, to Swan, to bubble, it heralds a new generation of Milky Way stars.