Sunday, 8 April 2012

Upside Down - by Eduardo Galeano (1998) - A2 Inequality



 
In 1960, the richest 20 percent of humanity had thirty times as much as the poorest 20 percent. By 1990, that figure had increased to seventy times. And the scissors continue to open: in the year 2000 the gap will be ninety times.

Between the richest of the rich, who appear on the pornofinancial pages of Forbes and Fortune, and the poorest of the poor, who appear on the streets and in the fields, the chasm is even greater. A pregnant woman in Africa is a hundred times more likely to die than a pregnant woman in Europe. The value of pet products sold annually in the United States is four times the GNP of Ethiopia. The sales of just the two giants General Motors and Ford easily surpass the value of all black Africa's economies. According to the United Nations Development Program, "Ten people, the ten richest men on the planet, own wealth equivalent to the value of the total production of fifty countries, and 447 multimillionaires own a greater fortune than the annual income of half of humanity." The head of this UN agency, James Gustave Speth, declared in 1997 that over the past half century the number of rich people doubled while the number of poor tripled and that 1.6 billion people were worse off than they had been only fifteen years earlier.

Read more here...

The Battle of Orgreave - BBC doctored footage?




An example from history of the media, in this case the BBC, allegedly doctoring footage to back the government of the time.  Below, a few links for background info and an italicised quote from one to give you a brief intro...

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In 1984, the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) went on strike. On 18 June, thousands of miners bravely defended themselves from police batons, snatch squads and cavalry charges in a field outside Orgreave coking plant near Rotherham in Yorkshire. Scandalously, the BBC – acting as part of the state’s propaganda machine – reversed the footage of the attack so that it looked as if the miners instigated the violence. The BBC was forced to issue an apology for this ‘mistake’ – but only in 1991.


China does it too, of course...

China TV 'substitutes Top Gun for air force footage'

Friday, 30 March 2012

Documentaries

Some related to sociology syllabus, most are just for general interest reasons, something to watch if you have the time...










































The Weather Underground

9/11 and aftermath  Nine Magnum photographers reflect on how they covered 9/11, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as Guantanamo.


more here...

and this is a list of films, you'll need to pick some and see if you can find them online, I'm a little busy right now.

Tuesday, 27 March 2012

Quiet Rage: The Stanford Prison Experiment

Nice shades, pillock.

This is worth watching for general knowledge reasons, it's more psychology than sociology but I feel obliged to give you an all-round education so you have a slightly better chance of not spending the rest of your lives living in a skip and eating cold pilchards from a tin whilst wiping the tears from your eyes with a pair of soiled pants you stole from a tramp.

Watch it here!

Brass Eye - Paedogeddon (2001 Special) and Drugs