User: ibanezboy |
Pearl Jam - Dissident Pearl Jam - Dissident, live at Reading Festival 2006. Tags: Pearl Jam Dissident Reading Festival 2006 |
User: lucasserra92 |
Pearl Jam - Dissident Name: Dissident Artist: Pearl Jam Album: Vs Year: 1994 Tags: grunge pearl jam eddie vedder dissident vs |
User: smobeepj |
Pearl Jam{RARE} - Dissident (Soldier Field 1995) Pearl Jam performing Dissident Live at Soldier Field in Chicago, 1995. Tags: Pearl Jam Soldier Field 1995 Dissident Rare Vs Eddie Vedder Live Music performance concert Chicago |
User: TheGaryNull |
Leading AIDS Dissident: David Crowe Speaks Out (Part 1 of 3) AIDS Inc. Excerpt Leading AIDS Dissident: David Crowe Speaks Out (Part 1 of 3) Tags: AIDS HIV AFRICA GARY NULL RETHINKER DISSIDENT DAVID CROWE |
User: Nimwghen |
Nascent Dissident Movement Inside North Korea A part of the film was made on this spot in Hoeryong: http://wikimapia.org/#y=42440484&x=129743195&z=18&l=0&m=a&v=2 The market shown on this tape,is in Hoeryong: http://wikimapia.org/#y=42441456&x=129741953&z=18&l=0&m=a&v=2 With shaking hands, the North Korean climbed onto the shoulders of a buddy to reach the underside of the bridge. As another accomplice stood guard, he hung up a banner denouncing North Korean leader Kim Jong Il in bright red paint. Then he took out a video camera, disguised to look like a carton of cigarettes, and filmed his handiwork for posterity. Today, the North Korean who says he shot the video on behalf of a group called the Freedom Youth League lives in hiding in Thailand under an assumed name. A small, wiry man in his 30s, he smoked L&M cigarettes nervously as he recalled his daring feat against the totalitarian government. Everything had to be done with the utmost secrecy, he said, to the point that he and his associates communicated by means of notes passed in sacks of potatoes. He didn't dare tell even his wife. "If we were caught, everybody would be dead," said the man, who goes by the name Park Dae Heung. The 33-minute tape has created a sensation in Japan and South Korea, where it has aired repeatedly. South Korean human rights advocates say it is the first evidence of a nascent dissident movement inside North Korea. Besides the banner hung on the bridge, the video shows an anti-government banner in a factory restroom and has one particularly eye-catching scene in which the camera pans over an official photograph of Kim Jong Il defaced with graffiti as a man denounces him off-camera. The video is one of a series of samizdat videos that provide a rare glimpse of life in what may be the most secretive country in the world. Since the beginning of this year, videos have emerged from inside North Korea of a public execution, children begging at a train station and humanitarian aid from the United Nations being sold at a market. Among North Korea watchers, there is some debate about whether the filmmakers were motivated mainly by their opposition to the government or by greed. Many of the videos have been sold to Japanese television stations, which have paid as much as $200,000 for choice footage, according to some accounts. That people are able to make such videos challenges many of the assumptions about Kim's grip on power. The videos do not necessarily mean the government is on the verge of collapse — the majority opinion among analysts is that it is not — but their existence shows that social control is fraying at the edges. "Nobody would have dared to do such a thing three or four years ago," said Hitoshi Takase, president of Japan Independent News Net, a Tokyo-based company that distributed footage in March of an apparent public execution in North Korea. The footage of the anti-government banners was smuggled out of North Korea across the Chinese border by activists working with the Seoul-based Citizens Coalition for Human Rights of Abductees and North Korean Refugees. It has been widely shown on television and Internet sites, including http://www.dailynk.com/file/2005/01/19/DNKR00001267.wmv . Do Hee Yun, secretary-general of the group, says it is the first solid evidence of nascent dissident activity within North Korea. "Of course, the filmmakers have made some money with these videos, but I don't think that is their primary motivation," said Do, who introduced a Los Angeles Times reporter to Park, the defector, for his first interview with the Western press. "They believe their society should change, and they want to bring the world's attention to the human rights situation." Do said Japanese television paid his organization $15,000 for the video and that it tried to pass on all of the money to Park's group, but that after money brokers took their cut, only $3,000 made it into North Korea. Park, who fled North Korea early this year, said he worked as a driver for a state-owned company in Hoeryong, a city near the Chinese border. About five years ago, he was approached by a well-connected trader from the capital, Pyongyang, with a business proposition. The trader asked him to use his car to distribute pirated DVDs and videos that were being smuggled in from China. Foreign films are banned by the government, which considers them cultural imperialism. But then his Pyongyang contact asked Park to start shooting videos to send abroad. Park said he was eager to oblige. Even though he was a member of the ruling Korean Workers' Party, and relatively privileged, he said he was disenchanted. "I saw that everybody was starving, and the state wasn't doing anything but building mausoleums to Kim Il Sung" — the late founder of North Korea and father of Kim Jong Il — "and villas for Kim Jong Il." Moreover, Park had watched many of the DVDs he was distributing, and from his glimpses of life abroad, at least as depicted by Hollywood, he knew that North Korea badly lagged. Park started filming in 2003 with a small camera that was smuggled across the Chinese border. He concealed it in a shoulder bag or an empty cigarette carton, pointing the lens through a small hole. He recruited several other people he knew in Hoeryong to help. With his hidden camera, he shot footage of wanted posters, of women crouching in the dirt at a dismal black market and of people waiting to hitch rides. Last fall, he painted three anti-government banners in his apartment and with two other people put them up. The posters were only up for a few hours. But the filmmakers wanted the footage to serve as a gesture of their resistance to the government because it is impossible to hold a demonstration or speak out openly. "The camera is our weapon," Park said. "We wanted to break the myth that North Korea is an impenetrable fortress.... Our goal is to bring down the regime by spreading knowledge to the outside world." Their posters were all signed in the name of the Freedom Youth League, an appellation chosen to embody hopes for the next generation, and detailed their accusations against Kim Jong Il. They blamed him for the country's poverty and for stifling reforms. They accused him of arresting reformers and causing the death of his father, who they claimed died of grief because of the country's deterioration. Park said his Pyongyang boss told him that the Freedom Youth League had cells in other cities — Pyongyang, Chongjin, Kaesong, Musan and Nampo — but that for security reasons he never met anyone other than the few he was working with in Hoeryong. Much of Park's account can be confirmed. A Japanese broadcaster, Asahi Television, which also interviewed Park, did a sound analysis and concluded that he was the man whose voice is heard in the footage, program director Hiromichi Shizume said. Numerous defectors who have seen the footage say that several scenes, particularly the one at the bridge, were clearly shot in Hoeryong. But they, along with North Korea analysts, expressed doubts about whether the Freedom Youth League was a genuine dissident movement or just a few guys trying to make a quick buck. "I don't believe there are conditions in North Korea for any kind of real opposition movement. These people are out for money," said journalist Chu Sung Ha, a defector in Seoul who covers North Korea. North Korea permits only state-owned publications or broadcasting; even the slightest criticism of Kim Jong Il can result in execution or deportation to a prison camp. Under its law, three generations of a family can be punished for the crimes of one member. Regardless of the motives, there is little doubt that a growing number of North Koreans have found new purpose as amateur filmmakers trying to document their country for foreign TV. In many cases, the video cameras have been supplied by activists and defectors living in South Korea. In March, Japan's NTV aired the most dramatic footage, purportedly of a firing squad executing three men in Hoeryong for helping North Koreans escape across the river to China. It was apparently filmed by a North Korean who was among the hundreds of spectators. The first underground footage from North Korea appeared in 1998, when the Japan-based Rescue the North Koreans group gave a camera to a North Korean refugee in China and sent him back across the border. He captured harrowing images of people lying near death in the streets and begging children that helped to convince the world that refugee accounts of a famine ravaging the country were true. "It was almost impossible to film inside North Korea then, because nobody owned a camera," said Lee Young Hwa, the founder of the Rescue organization. "Now, it has gotten much easier and you're seeing many videos. There are some rich people in North Korea who own video cameras. You don't immediately fall under suspicion just because you have a camera." The videos are stored on slim memory cards that are easy to smuggle into China. From there, they usually end up in Japan. "All the videos have been shot with the cooperation of South Koreans, but they go to Japan. The reason is that the South Korean government is reluctant to criticize North Korea," Takase, the TV executive, said. "In Japan, the demand for North Korean videos is very high, as are the prices." The most coveted footage is that from inside the political prison camps, but nobody has succeeded in penetrating what is widely considered a gulag holding up to 200,000 people. There have, however, been shots of ordinary prisoners. When Park Dae Heung was told that the video of the posters had been aired in Japan and South Korea, his career as an underground filmmaker came to an end. Fearful that his voice could be identified reading out the denunciation of Kim Jong Il, Park fled across the Tumen River into China. He has been in hiding ever since and is seeking political asylum in the U.S. or South Korea. Tags: DPRK North Korea Kim Jong Il Starvation Hoeryong Secret Movie |
User: BGF324 |
Judas Priest / Slayer - Dissident Agressor Song: Dissident agressor From the "Sin after sin" album (1977). Also on Slayer's South of Heaven (1988). Lyrics: Grand canyons of space and time universal My mind is subjected to all Stab! Bawl! Punch! Crawl! Hooks to my brain are well in Stab! Bawl! Punch! Crawl! I know what I am, I'm Berlin Through cracked, blackened memories of unit dispersal I face the impregnable wall Stab! Bawl! Punch! Crawl! Hooks to my brain are well in Stab! Bawl! Punch! Crawl! I know what I am, I'm Berlin Exploding, reloading, this quest never ending Until I give out my last breath I'm stabbing and bawling, I'm punching and crawling Hooks to my brain are well in I'm stabbing and bawling, I'm punching and crawling I know what I am, I'm Berlin Tags: Rob Halford K.K. Downing Glenn Tipton Ian Hill Tom Araya Dave Lombardo Kerry King Jeff Hanneman dissident agressor |
User: holmanpt |
Judas Priest-Dissident Aggressor Judas Priest-Dissident Aggressor is off the greatest hits album "Metal Works 73'-93'" Tags: metal |
User: sjice69 |
Pearl Jam - Dissident - Cruzan Amphitheater - 06/11/08 Dissident by Pearl Jam. Tags: Pearl Jam Dissident Cruzan Amphitheater 06/11/08 June 11 2008 West Palm Beach |
User: marsboy683 |
Dissident Assassinations USA (#43) http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=2967542171184509301 See the 45min doc film, MONARCH, potential enemies used by intelligence cabal as human guinea pigs to perfect microwave weapons. Describes how the CIA and Military intelligence involved in the Phoenix Program view anti-war protesters as treasonous, and now use MW RFR warfare to attack potential trouble makers with silent kill technology. Tags: microwave non-lethal weapon vietnam war death squads phoenix program CIA military intelligence ELF radiation silent kill |
User: TheGaryNull |
AIDS Dissident: Charles Geshekter, PhD (Part 1 of 3) AIDS Dissident: Charles Geshekter, PhD (Part 1 of 3) Tags: AIDS HIV AFRICA GARY NULL RETHINKER DISSIDENT CHARLES GESHEKTER |
User: RazorbackViking |
Slayer- Dissident Aggressor © Slayer.Written by Judas Priest recorded by Slayer(as a cover). This is put up purely for entertainment. The only people that deserve credit for this is Slayer (and Priest!). Tags: Slayer Dissident Aggressor |
User: ViniciusLimar |
Pearl Jam - Dissident Touring Band 2000 Tags: Pearl Jam Dissident Touring Band 2000 |
User: AssociatedPress |
Raw Video: Dissident Author Laid to Rest SelectPlusRaw Video: Dissident Author Laid to RestRaw Video: Dissident Author Laid to RestThe Associated PressAlexander Solzhenitsyn, the Nobel Prize-winning author whose books exposed the horrors of Soviet slave labour camps, was buried on Wednesday in a Russian Orthodox ceremony. Solzhenitsyn died on Sunday at the age of 89. (August 6)[Notes:ANCHOR VOICE] ___ ___, The Associated Press.(****END****) ANCHOR VOICE:-------------------------VIDEO PRODUCER: Kevin White------------------------------VIDEO SOURCE: APTN--------------------------VIDEO APPROVAL:------------------------------VIDEO RESTRICTIONS: No Access Russia----------------------------------SCRIPT/WIRE SOURCE: AP-APTN-0930: +Russia Solzhenitsyn 2------------------------------------ Tags: solzhenitsyn funeral raw video: dissident author laid |
User: journeymanpictures |
China Dissident - Who's Afraid of Wei Jingsheng? July 2008 Mr Wei was jailed for 18 years for writing an article that criticised the then-Premier Deng Xiao Ping. Now, he is a leading figure in China's democracy movement and has hit the campaign trail in the months before the Beijing Games. Tags: Wei Jingsheng political prisinor beijing olympics democracy Journeyman Pictures |
User: TheGaryNull |
Leading AIDS Dissident: David Crowe Speaks Out (Part 2 of 3) AIDS Inc. Excerpt Leading AIDS Dissident: David Crowe Speaks Out (Part 2 of 3) Tags: AIDS HIV AFRICA GARY NULL RETHINKER DISSIDENT DAVID CROWE |
User: RockNRomeo |
Judas Priest - Dissident Aggressor @ Icehall in Helsinki, Fi Judas Priest playing Dissident Aggressor on the first show of their Priest Feast Tour 2008. Date 3-6-2008. Tags: Judas Priest Feast Tour Dissident Aggressor Helsinki Icehall Nostradamus |
User: TheGaryNull |
Leading AIDS Dissident: David Crowe Speaks Out (Part 3 of 3) AIDS Inc. Excerpt Leading AIDS Dissident: David Crowe Speaks Out (Part 3 of 3) Tags: AIDS HIV AFRICA GARY NULL RETHINKER DISSIDENT DAVID CROWE |
User: StovoKhor |
Thomas Dolby: Dissidents one nice video from 2° album: the flat earth Tags: music video thomas dolby |
User: NTDTV |
Well-Known dissident Hu Jia Sentenced to Jail in China Anna Chan: Today a Chinese court sentenced well-known dissident Hu Jia to three and a half years in jail. The decision is likely to draw more international criticism of the country's political controls ahead of the Beijing Olympics. The Beijing Number One Intermediate People's Court found the 34-year-old human rights activist guilty of "inciting subversion of state power", a charge often used against people who openly criticize the CCP. Hu emerged as one of the nation's most vocal advocates of democratic rights, religious freedom and self-determination for Tibet. His conviction is likely to become a focus for critics of the Communist Party's strict controls on dissent and protest ahead of the Beijing Olympic Games in August. U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice raised Hu's case while in Beijing in February. The European Union and other Western governments have also pressed China on the case. His wife, Zeng Jinyan and their infant daughter remain under house arrest, with their telephone line cut off. During the court sentencing, Zeng Jinyan was present under police escort. [Li Fangping, Hu Jia's Lawyer]: "Yes, his mother and his wife will be permitted to attend his hearing and this is according to Chinese law because its the verdict not the trial." Hu was detained by police in late December after spending more than 200 days under house arrest in a Beijing apartment complex. Friends and well-wishers waited outside the courtroom to hear the result of the verdict. One supporter, who would not give her name, was escorted back to her home province in the past for petitioning in Beijing. "I heard that Hu Jia's verdict was today so I came back to support him wholeheartedly. Hu Jia hasn't done anything wrong, we all support him." Another Chinese dissident, Yang Chunlin, who called for human rights to take precedence over the Olympic Games, was sentenced to five years in jail on charges of inciting subversion in late March. Tags: ntd ntdtv news Hu Jia sentenced jail beijing olympics China politics suppression activist democracy rights religious |
User: ChinaSupportNetwork |
Chinese dissident begins 500 mile walk Chinese dissident Dr. Yang Jianli is walking from Boston to Washington DC, May 4 - June 4, 2008. This is his speech at the kick off rally at Boston City Hall Plaza, May 4 2008: Good afternoon. Thank you for coming to send me off on my walk to Washington DC. We, people of different faiths and of different ethnicities came together for a peaceful assembly to make a profound testimony: that under God, we are all equal. (applause) And we can live together without fear. And we can speak out without facing persecution. Today, May 4th, is a very significant date in the history of China. 89 years ago, Beijing students demonstrated, calling for democracy, which marked the beginning of China's modern peaceful democracy movement. And today, this cause has not yet been accomplished. We start our GongMin walk today here in Boston. GongMin in Chinese means "citizen." It is my firm belief that China's hopeful future lives in the awakening of its citizen spirit, and the growth of its citizen power. (applause) Being a citizen means that we have the right to make our voice heard. Being a citizen, we have many responsibilities for our country we love so deeply. Our walk will conclude in Washington DC on June 4th, another historic date. On that day, I will join a large group of human rights advocates and political and religious leaders to remember untold numbers of Chinese compatriots who were killed on that date 19 years ago in Tiananmen Square. After five years as a political prisoner, I'm once again free, thanks to the efforts of countless friends in the United States. But I'm not walking simply for my personal freedom, as blessed as I am to have it. I'm walking on behalf of the millions of others who cannot walk with freedom --who cannot speak for freedom without fear of persecution. At a time when the eyes of the world are on China, as it prepares to host the Olympic Games, I'm walking to draw attention to the people the Chinese government tries to make invisible. I'm walking for the powerless whose land has been grabbed by China's officials and their associates. I'm walking for the powerless who face forced evictions because their homes were demolished for Olympic beautification and to make a way for government supported developers. I'm walking for the powerless who are constantly subjected to exploitation by predatory officials and deprived of all means to make their grievances heard. I'm walking for the Tibetan monks, the Falun Gong practitioners, the underground house church members, the petitioners, the human rights defenders, the political prisoners who fill Chinese prisons. I'm walking for all citizens of China who wish for freedom and democracy. (applause) Earlier today, I walked the Freedom Trail. My heart was filled with hope. If this great monument to the founding principles of this country is to resonate more broadly in the 21st century, it must extend beyond Boston. It must extend to Tiananmen Square. (applause) It must extend to the Chinese countryside as well as to the people of Tibet. (applause) I'm walking with a deep love for my compatriots and my homeland. Chinese farmers, workers, thinkers, holy men, students, and ordinary citizens, men and women, are entitled to a government that respects their rights as human beings. Rural Chinese deserve land. Urban Chinese deserve housing. Both deserve shelters in which they are protected, not just from wind and rain, but also from the King's unwanted entrance. Today, this 500 mile GongMin Walk begins our new steps to continue the same walk the Beijing students started, and have marched for nearly a century. My friends, I stand here today knowing that the Chinese people want change. And that that change will come only as a result of brave efforts inside China and our supportive efforts outside China. It may not be change that comes as quickly as we want it to; but it will come, one step at a time. Or perhaps, 1,408,000 steps -- that is 500 miles -- at a time! (applause) Our cause is true and of justice. Because freedom is our birthright. It is, in the words of Jefferson, inalienable. Because the lord who gave us life gave us liberty. I believe the onward march of freedom is irreversible. And with the grace of God, freedom will prevail. Thank you. God bless you all. Tags: Chinese democracy movement raises human rights issues ahead of Beijing Olympic Games |
User: kontexte |
Dissident - Universe Eat Universe (video) "Universe Eat Universe" is a debut video by Dissident. Edited by Slava Makeychik Subtle Audio, SUBTLE010 http://subtleaudiorecordings.com http://dissident.fromru.com Tags: Dissident Subtle Audio Unverse Eat Universe SUBTLE010 drum'n'bass drumfunk leftfield |
User: TheGaryNull |
AIDS Dissident: Charles Geshekter, PhD (Part 3 of 3) AIDS Dissident: Charles Geshekter, PhD (Part 3 of 3) Tags: AIDS HIV AFRICA GARY NULL RETHINKER DISSIDENT CHARLES GESHEKTER |
User: Democracy4Cuba |
Dissident: Oswaldo Payá and the Varela Project (Part I) Loki Film's Rachel Grady and Heidi Ewing's acclaimed documentary "Dissident: Oswaldo Paya and the Varela Project" chronicles brave efforts to bring democracy to Cuba. The film made its big screen debut at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York City and continues to show at human rights events around the world. For more information visit Loki Films, www.lokifilms.com Tags: Cuba Democracy Oswaldo Paya Varela Project Reform Dissident |
User: Democracy4Cuba |
Dissident: Oswaldo Payá and the Varela Project (Part II) Loki Film's Rachel Grady and Heidi Ewing's acclaimed documentary "Dissident: Oswaldo Paya and the Varela Project" chronicles brave efforts to bring democracy to Cuba. The film made its big screen debut at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York City and continues to show at human rights events around the world. For more information visit Loki Films, www.lokifilms.com Tags: Cuba Democracy Oswaldo Paya Varela Project Reform Dissident |
User: ucberkeleyevents |
Irshad Manji - Confessions of a Muslim Dissident Irshad Manji is the author of the controversial bestseller, "The Trouble With Islam Today: A Muslim's Call for Reform in Her Faith". [events] [glopubaffairs] [gspp] Credits: producers:UC Berkeley Educational Technology Services Tags: ucberkeley educational howto |