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John MacFarlane

John MacFarlane is a writer, producer and editor from Montreal, Canada. He has an MA in media studies, a grad diploma in journalism and a B.Eng in electrical engineering. His MA thesis was about the Daily Show. He's interested in civic engagement and communications theory, the digital divide and alternative economic theories, and saving nature.


Posts by john

Views on Mbeki | John MacFarlane
(Thu, 10/16/2008 - 12:47)
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There have been a lot of postmortems on Thabo Mbeki, who resigned as president of South Africa under great pressure both from within his party and outside. I like this one from The Atlantic, which offers up some good numbers through which to examine Mbeki's acheivements and failures:


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North America's other election | John MacFarlane
(Wed, 10/08/2008 - 09:42)
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Few people pay attention to Canadian politics at the best of times, so it should be no surprise that the U.S. Obama-McCain dustup has utterly overshadowed the October 14 Canadian federal election.


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Authoritarianism and democracy | John MacFarlane
(Wed, 08/27/2008 - 09:21)
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Berkeley economics professor Pradab Bardhan has an interesting piece about the recent rise of Russia's and China's economies, and how they affect the attitudes of developing countries toward democracy.


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Exit Musharraf | John MacFarlane
(Tue, 08/19/2008 - 13:44)
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Much has happened in the year or so since the Why Democracy film Dinner With The President, about democracy in Pakistan, was pronounced edited, titled and ready to screen. There have been riots, protests, standoffs, an assassination, an election, and, as of today, the president referred to in the film's title, Pervez Musharraf, has resigned, a move designed to help him avoid the ignominy of an impeachment.


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Russia and Georgia | John MacFarlane
(Tue, 08/12/2008 - 00:17)
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Blame Russia? Perhaps: Russian forces continue to pummel Georgia in spite of international pleas for restraint. But, as usual, the situation is far more complicated than what most media describe.


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On Karadzic | John MacFarlane
(Thu, 07/24/2008 - 08:38)

Journalist Roger Cohen's short, plaintive op-ed on Radovan Karadzic, finally arrested on war crimes charges, somehow captures the climate of fear during the war in Serbia and the remorse and regret that lingers more than a decade later.


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Sokwanele on the Zimbabwe Agreement | John MacFarlane
(Tue, 07/22/2008 - 09:59)
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It is reasonable to assume that Zimbabweans are greeting the deal between Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF and Morgan Tsvangirai's MDC with something less than hope and/or elation. As the Guardian wryly observes in an editorial, talk is about the only thing that's cheap in Zimbabwe these days.


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Power Shifts | John MacFarlane
(Thu, 07/17/2008 - 04:00)
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My post yesterday ruminated briefly on the United States's declining global image, and so I was interested to read Thomas L. Friedman's column in the New York Times that reflected upon the potential consequences of a less-influential US.


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Guantanamo Interrogations on Video | John MacFarlane
(Wed, 07/16/2008 - 11:59)

The just-released footage of an interrogation at the US prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba is quite compelling. It remains to be seen whether the video will have the same impact as the photos from Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, but its content certainly does nothing to heal the United States' wounded reputation around human rights.

Captured on cameras hidden in a vent, the footage shows Canadian Omar Khadr, then 16, weeping and in serious distress. The interrogation methods used on him included prolonged, multi-week sleep deprivation.


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Guantanamo's China connection | John MacFarlane
(Wed, 07/02/2008 - 02:46)
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Ongoing hearings in the US have revealed much about the interrogation techniques employed at various US-administered prisons in the world (the main focus of the Why Democracy film Taxi To The Dark Side). The latest information, which might have seemed shocking just five years ago, is that classes on Guantanamo interrogation methods were informed by Chinese Communist methods in the Korean War.

From the New York Times:


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