Media Search:



LDP_Khem Veasna_League For Democracy Party_Public Forum On 2014 07 19_Angkor Chum_Siem Reab_ Part_1 – Video


LDP_Khem Veasna_League For Democracy Party_Public Forum On 2014 07 19_Angkor Chum_Siem Reab_ Part_1
You Can Subscribe, Comment and Share Khem Veasna Videos or League For Democracy Party Voice.For More Information: htpp://www.camldp.org, LDP has been trying to share knowledge and ...

By: LDP CBR

Excerpt from:
LDP_Khem Veasna_League For Democracy Party_Public Forum On 2014 07 19_Angkor Chum_Siem Reab_ Part_1 - Video

The Noise Of Democracy – Video


The Noise Of Democracy
The Noise Of Democracy Blue Meanies 2006 Thick Records Released on: 2007-01-11 Auto-generated by YouTube.

By: Blue Meanies - Topic

Follow this link:
The Noise Of Democracy - Video

Hong Kong student leaders say they may stay on the streets until June

Student leaders of Hong Kongs pro-democracy protests said Friday they might stay on the streets until next June if their attempt to seek talks with authorities in Beijing fails to resolve their political impasse.

The Hong Kong Federation of Students, a leading protest group, backed off earlier plans to send a delegation to the Chinese capital to seek a direct dialogue with top Communist Party leaders during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit taking place in coming days. Such a move while more than a dozen world leaders -- including President Obama -- are in Beijing could have been regarded as highly provocative.

The student group has instead reached out to former Hong Kong leader Tung Chee-Hwa, asking him to arrange a meeting between students and a senior Chinese official either in Hong Kong or Beijing to discuss the framework for the semi-autonomous territorys 2017 election.

Alex Chow, secretary-general of the federation, said a one-time dialogue can hardly solve the problem, and that the pro-democracy Occupy Central movement might persist until June 2015. Thats when Hong Kongs Legislative Council is expected to vote on the Hong Kong government's proposal for how the 2017 chief executive election should work. The proposal, which will be put forth by chief executive Leung Chun-Ying, is likely to echo an August decision that drove thousands of protesters to the streets.

Everyone agreed we wont retreat for no reason before the legislature takes a vote on the political reform bill, said Chow. Twenty-six of the city's 27 lawmakers from the so-called pan-democrats group have said they will veto any proposal for the 2017 chief executive election that does not meet international standards for universal suffrage.

In order for a reform proposal to be passed in the legislature, it has to have the support of two-thirds of the city's 70 lawmakers.

Protesters in Hong Kong, a former British territory that returned to Chinese rule in 1997 under a framework known as one country, two systems, took to the streets in late September after the Standing Committee of Chinas National People's Congress laid down a tougher-than-expected framework for Hong Kongs 2017 election for chief executive. The panel essentially decreed that only two or three candidates would be allowed and all must pass muster with a screening committee.

A two-hour dialogue between protest leaders and five Hong Kong government officials last month yielded little common ground. The session was the first of what was expected to be several rounds of talks aimed at resolving the political crisis, but a second round has yet to be scheduled.

In an open letter to Tung, who was chief executive from 1997 to 2005, the student group appealed to him to "demonstrate the statesmanship" to help the demands of Hong Kongers be heard.

The group urged Tung to respond by Sunday. Otherwise, they said they would head to Beijing directly to seek talks after APEC.

View post:
Hong Kong student leaders say they may stay on the streets until June

Disrupting Democracy

You have to grudgingly admire the black-hat political hackers who have pwned the American electoral system. First, entrench a two-party dichotomy; second, gerrymander districts into tortuous shapes; third, cultivate an electorate so polarized that no matter how much voters dislike their incumbent, they hate the alternative worse; fourth, profit! Its elegant, horrifying brilliance.

The whole point of democracy is to make it easy to throw bad governments out. (Putting good governments in would be a nice bonus, but tends to be a crap shoot.) I think its safe to say that American democracy has gotten stunningly bad at that. On Tuesday, despite an appalling 14% approval rating, across 435 Congressional districts, only twelve saw incumbents lose. Twelve. Because gerrymandering to protect incumbents has left only about 50 of 435 House seats in play in any election.

(To those of you in the rest of the world; I sympathize. Im not even American myself. Bear with me.)

Technology may be to blame for this, to some extent. The age of social media has probably made political polarization worse by aggravating filter-bubble confirmation bias. And as Ive been arguing for years, tech-driven social changes has made polling a whole lot less reliable, which doesnt affect the results, but can make them much more shocking.

On the other hand, tech has a role to play in making democracy more robust. In particular, I give you end-to-end auditable voting systems like Punchscan and Scantegrity, which use cryptography to allow voters to confirm that their vote was in fact counted, without anyone being able to track individual votes back to voters. These dont directly defend against ballot-box stuffing, but theyre a start, and in the age of hackable voting machines, really should be rolled out forthwith.

(But we should not move to online votingthe applause at Black Hat when Dan Geer declared this sounded very nearly unanimous, which tells you a lotand we should always have a physical paper trail for ballots. That makes it much harder to hack a recount.)

In a sane world, technology would fight gerrymanding, too. Instead of districts being drawn by hand, their boundaries should be set algorithmically, using only geographic contiguity and population counts as factors, not voting predilections. Of course the political hackers who have seized control of the system will never allow that to happen. It will have to be forced on them. But vulnerable systems have to be patched somehow if you want them to keep running.

Algorithmically defined districts would have another huge advantage: they would make it easy to create new virtual districts not tied to the tyranny of geography. Back when modern democracies were invented, that was the only viable option, but in our hyperconnected today, wouldnt it make as much senseif not moreto allow voters to register for online constituencies, instead of the one in which they happen to physically live?

Imagine a world in which any subculture or movement able to muster enough people could send its own post-geographical representative to their Parliament or Congress. That body would become enormously more representativeand less defined by two or three dominant parties.

Technology could obviously make direct democracy easier, too. But it wouldnt make it any better. Direct democracy, ie rule by referendums and popular ballots, is actually pretty awful. I realize thats an unpopular statement, at least in San Francisco, in an era when direct democracy recently legalized marijuana and helped bring in same-sex marriage (both of which I strongly support.) But even the American president is elected indirectly. Theres a reason for that. Direct democracy is not a scalable, sustainable solution, and it never will be.

Go here to read the rest:
Disrupting Democracy

Goundamani epic troll about visay’s communism – Video


Goundamani epic troll about visay #39;s communism
Goundamani epic troll about visay #39;s communism. Aduthavan Story thirudiputtu,scenes lam thirudiputtu UN Thatula irukura idly unakae sontham kedaiyathunu Vadai...

By: Vijaymama HatersSangam

Read the original here:
Goundamani epic troll about visay's communism - Video