Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Ukraine Recaptures Sloviansk: Russian Roulette

From VICE News

Published on Jul 8, 2014 Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News

On July 5, the eastern Ukrainian town of Sloviansk was recaptured by the Ukrainian military, driving out pro-Russia rebels and ending their three-month occupation. VICE News correspondent Simon Ostrovsky travels back to Sloviansk and visits the cell in which he was held for days by those rebels in April. The city is in shambles and residents are struggling to find food and water despite a considerable humanitarian effort. The pro-Russia rebels have retreated to Donetsk, but the Ukrainian government is determined to pursue its anti-terror operation until there are no rebels left.

Keiser Report: Empire of Fictional Cash

From RT

Published on Jul 8, 2014

In this episode of the Keiser Report, Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert discuss exorbitant privilege that is the dollar hegemony which offers nothing on the upside and only subjugation and humiliation on the downside. And despite having an empire of fictional money, the US appears to still have gone bankrupt on these fictional debts. But all that is to change as European companies, like Total, and officials, like the Bank of France governor, fight back suggesting an end to US dollar transactions on international trade.

In the second half, Max interviews Arjen Kamphuis about his new and free digital manual The Infosecurity Handbook For Journalists and about driving the cost of NSA spying from the current 0.08 cents per person per day to $10,000 per person per day - thus, driving them out of business.

The Fall of Iraq - What You Aren't Being Told

From StormCloudsGathering

The NDAA Explained

From StormCloudsGathering

Australia and Japan Sign Free Trade Agreement


Press Release from The Australian Trade Minister

Link to release

Today Australia signed a historic Economic Partnership Agreement (JAEPA) with Japan, our second-biggest trading partner with two-way trade worth over $70 billion.

Minister for Trade and Investment Andrew Robb said the agreement will leverage Australia’s strengths to drive economic growth and job creation.

More than 97 per cent of Australia’s exports to Japan will receive preferential access or enter duty-free when the Agreement is fully implemented.

“This is the most ambitious trade deal Japan has ever concluded with anyone and affords Australia major concessions across a range of areas, most notably services and agriculture, an area of traditional sensitivity for the Japanese,” Mr Robb said.

“JAEPA represents a strong outcome for Australian beef our biggest agricultural export to Japan, as well as for fruit, vegetables, nuts, wine, seafood, processed food and other commodities, with many tariffs eliminated on entry into force,” Mr Robb said.

The Australian Government will continue to push for additional outcomes through scheduled renegotiations for key agricultural products under JAEPA, and in other negotiating fora, including in the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations.

Effectively 100 per cent of Australia’s resources, energy and manufacturing exports will also benefit from tariff-free entry into Japan under this agreement.

JAEPA also guarantees access to the Japanese market for a range of services where Australia has an enviable reputation, including financial, legal, education and telecommunications services. Australian suppliers will also be guaranteed non-discriminatory access to the lucrative Japanese government procurement market.

“Australian consumers will also benefit from cheaper Japanese cars and parts, and a range of household items including white goods and electronics through the elimination of tariffs,” Mr Robb said.

Japanese made components used in Australian production and manufacturing will also become more affordable which will aid our competitiveness. Cheaper Japanese imports improve consumer buying power and enhance our standards of living.”

JAEPA will afford private Japanese investment in non-sensitive areas a new screening threshold of $1.078 billion, up from $248 million.

“This agreement also sends a strong signal to Japanese investors that we both welcome their capital and are open for business, which is most important given Australia is a country that has always relied on foreign investment to develop our commerce, infrastructure and standards of living,” Mr Robb said.

JAEPA will enter into force after the completion of domestic legal and parliamentary processes by both countries, including consideration by the Joint Standing Committee on Treaties.

The full text of the agreement is now publicly available online at: www.dfat.gov.au/fta/jaepa/