Blog

  • Chinese shooting Tibetan refugees.

    In this week’s dose of anti-news: stuff you should care about but won’t hear in the news, we have video footage of Chinese officials shooting and killing Tibetans. Warning: Video contains disturbing footage. Not for children.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KagCLqdwsgU

    At first they said they didn’t know. “I’ve seen the reports about this, but I’ve no knowledge of the specific situation,” Liu Jianchao, a ministry spokesman, told a news conference in Beijing about the shootings at Nangpa La.

    That’s when the pictures showed up.

    Only hours later, China admitted. But now they claimed self-defense. A Xinhua report said that the people trying to cross the border attacked the soldiers, who were then “forced to defend themselves.”

    Fear of monks and a child

    Not a chance, reported Romanian climber Sergiu Matei. ”The Chinese militias were hunting Tibetans onto the glacier…shooting them like rats, dogs, rabbits – you name it.” And Sergiu has video to prove it.

    Taipei Times wrote 2 years back about a China/Tibet incident, “the cowardice of the Communists is apparent. How truly timid and insecure they are to fear monks and a child.”

    The Nangpa La refugees were mostly kids led by a young nun who was shot dead and a number of young adults. Out of the group of 70 people, 40 escaped but 30, including a large number of children still remain unaccounted for.

    The video clearly depicts that the Tibetans had their backs to the soldiers, were unarmed, and offered no resistance. The nun who died, Kelsang Namtso, appears to have been shot in the back. During the shooting, a mountaineer in the cameraman’s group can be heard saying: “They are shooting them like dogs.”

    That’s part of the report from MountEverest.net of all people. Due to it’s rapid rate of technological modernization and economic boom, people often dismiss the Chinese authoritarian regime. They associate it’s newfound capitalism with newfound freedoms and rights.

    It simply isn’t the case. While China is, yes, opening up, it’s people are not free yet. There is a genocide going on in Tibet. A silent genocide but its there, through the use of forced assimilation, tactical destruction of cultural heritage sites, and of course countless unreported executions. China’s main news agency, XinHua, is nothing more than a mouthpiece for the government. It’s “negative” coverage of natural disasters gives it the impression of being open, but it is merely an illusion. XinHua will never be critical of any government-led action, much less injustices, in the nation.

    Yet Western people seem so uncaring. I was watching the Daily Planet the other day. They covered this news of Chinese Olympians training for the 2008 games. Here was this girl, who, since the age of 3 was forced to train 12 hours a day in gymnastics. She was never able to go to even elementary school. She was never allowed to see her family, except for 2 hours during Saturdays. She is now 12, and her entire youth was sacrificed for a potential spot in the Olympics. When covering the story, the Daily Planet didn’t bat an eye at this. In fact, they spun this story as a tale of incredible dedication. While thankfully the child was well, a system that throws lives away as such for furthering its own status certainly is not.

    China is not a free society. That should not be forgotten.

  • Made the PCWorld.ca frontpage!

    An article I wrote on teens and the digital music marketplace made the cover of PCWorld.ca! Or at least did so last week. Given the high rate of respondents, I didn’t want to post about it here until at least a week later. From the article:

    The lawsuit was eventually dismissed, and eight years later these portable music players have become as ubiquitous as cell phones amongst Canada’s youth. Brands such as the iPod are now household names, and have even spawned a new generation of words such as Podcasting. Still, the MP3 format is facing very uncertain times.

    At the core of the issue is the fact that the MP3 revolution was one which the industry did not anticipate, or particularly want. Still, it was evident after the rise of Napster that the industry had to come up with a legitimate means to deal with this popular force.

    The article was also slashdotted.

  • o2600 Website Up; QCD Skin hit 2000 Downloads…

    Well, a few new tidbits. First of all, I’ve just quickly completed the new Ottawa 2600 website. It’s to replace the old… um… txtfile that served as the Ottawa 2600 front for the longest while. You can access the new website from www.o2600.com.

    In other news, Black & White, the Quintessential Player skin I designed, just hit the 2000 download mark. w00t!

  • GEO3166 Field Notes, GPS Data, and Photos

    Heya! Okay so new today we have the Field Notes for Blackburn Hamlet, GPS data, and more photos. The GPS data comes in two flavours: A CSV file (you can open it with Excel or Notepad), and an ArcGIS SHP file. Both are found in the ZIP file downloadable from below. I’ve uploaded the new photos; including some of the surroundings of the outcrop area to give a sense of general location.

    Download Field Notes for Blackburn Hamlet here. (ZIP File; 9KB)
    Download Field Notes for Aviation Parkway here. (DOC File; 56KB)
    Download GPS Data here. (ZIP File; 3KB)
    View all photos taken here [link removed].

  • GEO3166, GEG4102

    Students of GEO3166 and GEG4102, I’ve uploaded the photos for your respective classes.

    They photos can be accessed from here (GEO3166) and here (GEG4102.)