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"No matter how paranoid or conspiracy-minded you are, what the government is actually doing is worse than you imagine." - - -
William Blum

December 31, 2005

Holiday Snips

 
Ahmad Chalabi is appointed Iraq's acting oil minister just as Iraq's largest oil refinery shuts down, throwing Baghdad into a gasoline crisis.

How Groperzenegger turns $90K into $30M

The importance of the Jose Padilla case

Damned if you don't, damned if you do

Closing the prescription drug disconnect

Top censored news stories of 2005

Some of the odd news stories of 2005 (salute to Mustang Bobby)

Retailers upset at Jesus Christ as he fails to deliver expected number of shoppers to stores

Latest Administration pressures on news media, to withhold news stories, become latest news stories
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Political Humour from our friends across the pond
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December 30, 2005

FRIDAY FUN

 
What's a paper clip? (audio)

C&J reviews the most important months of 2005

More (2005 Oscar-nominated animated short)

10 Most Missed TV Shows (in UK)

Santa's identity leaked by Rove

25 best webcams of 2005
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December 24, 2005
 
Question for readers of LEFT is RIGHT: I've been closely following national politics only since 2002. Has corruption in Washington always been this horrible, or are we seeing the development of facism for the first time in the U.S.? Comments appreciated...
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FRIDAY FUN

 
Most popular toys of the past century

Latte Art

Odd USB Drives (my favorite: the Barbie drive)

Woomba: It cleans your noonie (video)

David Sedaris as Crumpet the Elf

Revenge of the Sith - Translated (scroll down a few pages)
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December 22, 2005

Midweek Bits

 
Wal*Mart shafts employees, pays penalty

Colin Powell may turn out to be the key informant in Fitzgerald's ever-expanding and ongoing investigation of the Plame leak.

2006's word of the year: IMPEACHMENT

Sunni leaders cry "foul" over last week's voting in Iraq.

A federal judge has resigned from a special court set up to oversee government surveillance to protest President Bush's secret authorization of a domestic spying program on people with suspected terrorist ties, The Washington Post reported.

Bush Administration is hiding the black boxes from the two 9/11 hijacked planes that hit the Twin Towers. Why??

Venezuela and ExxonMobil clash over control of oil fields

Ranking House Judiciary Democrat Rep. John Conyers (D-MI) has introduced a motion to censure President Bush and Vice President Cheney for providing misleading information to Congress in advance of the Iraq war, failing to respond to written questions and potential violations of international law

Still drinking tap water? You might want to read this.

Groperzenegger's Austrian hometown disses him for executing Tookie Williams, so he disowns town.
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December 21, 2005
 
"Mr. Speaker, freedom depends upon something. The rule of law. And that's why this solemn occasion is so important. For today we are here to defend the rule of law. According to the evidence presented by our fine Judiciary Committee, the president of the United States has committed serious transgressions.

Among other things, he took an oath to God, to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. And then he failed to do so. Not once, but several times. If we ignore this evidence, I believe we undermine the rule of law that is so important that all America is. Mr. Speaker, a nation of laws cannot be ruled by a person who breaks the law. Otherwise, it would be as if we had one set of rules for the leaders and another for the governed. We would have one standard for the powerful, the popular and the wealthy, and another for everyone else.

This would belie our ideal that we have equal justice under the law. That would weaken the rule of law and leave our children and grandchildren with a very poor legacy. I don't know what challenges they will face in their time, but I do know they need to face those challenges with the greatest constitutional security and the soundest rule of fair and equal law available in the history of the world. And I don't want us to risk their losing that...."

This quote from a Congressman is from a Democrat speaking about Bush's recent illegal wiretapping authorizations, right?

Wrong! (see Armey, about halfway down the source page)
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This holiday season, as we overstuff ourselves with food and drinks and shower our families with needless gifts, let's not forget all our fellow Americans who have been used and abused by our so-called government. Today was no exception.
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"If Bush started to sacrifice a dozen virgins in front of the Reflecting Pool each month to ward off the terrorits, would it still be reported as "Critics Are Saying" it may be bad idea?" - - - Larry
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W O W

 

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Having followed the Lakers since Hector was a pup, it's always a pleasure to see a talented player get a chance to exhibit his skills unfettered. One-man shows will not win championships in the NBA, but on an occasional basis it's damn entertaining.
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December 20, 2005
 
"The state has, in order to control us, introduced division into our thinking, so that we come to distrust others and look to the state for protection! But the roots of our individualism remind us that what we are is inseparable from the source from which all others derive; that coercive practices that threaten our neighbor also threaten us." - - - Butler Shaffer
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"What kind of moron are you to think that god takes sides?

The original church that arose from Jesus of Nazareth was usurped by the Romans. From it they created the Roman Catholic Church which they used as an extension of Roman Control....THEY HAD GOD ON THEIR SIDE and they used that god to murder, destory, commit inquisitions and control their ignorant peasantry.

I suggest you raise yourselves above that level and actually participate in your lives rather than waiting for permission from your rather self centered leaders.

They are leaders in the same way that a Ram is belled to lead the sheep to be made into mutton at the slaughter house.

Cheer up, you actually have a choice as long as you don't sell it to a mailorder master mind who sells you homophobia as family values.............ROVER the dawg of the landed....selling out his litter."

- - - It's interesting isn't it?
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Sheesh, after 3 years and hundreds of hours, this blog is still worthless? Or, maybe the best things in life are free? I can't decide...
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December 19, 2005
 
Knowledge News comes through again with a simple explanation about our right to privacy, in light of President Bush-war's recent and ongoing approval of illegal wiretapping:

Late last week, the New York Times reported that in 2002 President Bush issued an order that let the National Security Agency eavesdrop on Americans without getting a warrant. Today, the president went on TV and defended the classified program as "crucial to our national security."

According to President Bush, the program aims to "intercept the international communications of people with known links to al-Qaeda and related terrorist organizations." Prior to tapping someone's international calls or bugging their international email, "the government must have information that establishes a clear link to these terrorist networks." But, says the president, it doesn't need a warrant.

Civil libertarians vehemently disagree, as do some members of Congress. "There is no doubt that this is inappropriate," said Republican Senator Arlen Specter, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. He's already planning a congressional hearing on the matter. At issue: the government's powers--and the people's rights--under the Constitution's Fourth Amendment, which says. . . .

"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."

Like much of the Constitution, the Fourth Amendment has deep roots in English common law--especially in the idea that "every man's home is his castle." It has roots in the founders' anger over abuses of power by their old English rulers, too. But interpreting the amendment today requires you to have more than righteous indignation about a government invasion of your castle. You have to have reasonable expectations.

"Unwarranted" History:

During colonial days, the British crown regularly issued general warrants--good for the life of the king plus six months--that basically allowed government agents to search anyplace at anytime and to seize anything they found. Among the most hated of these warrants were the "writs of assistance," which empowered customs officials to search colonial homes and businesses for smuggled goods.

After King George II died in 1760, the existing writs expired, and a Boston lawyer named James Otis quit his job to fight the new ones. Otis lost his case, but his arguments inspired America's founders. So they got a new hearing when the framers drafted and debated the Fourth Amendment.

"Unreasonable" Definitions:

The Fourth Amendment clearly forbids general warrants. It's less clear about what makes a search "unreasonable." If you read the amendment's two clauses as linked, you might decide that searches are always unreasonable unless they're properly warranted. But if you read the two clauses independently, you might decide that questions about a search's reasonableness are separate from questions about warrants. (Incidentally, James Madison's first draft of the amendment explicitly linked the two clauses.)

The Supreme Court has gone back and forth on this issue--sometimes emphasizing the importance of warrants, sometimes suggesting that the real test is reasonableness, nearly always striving to strike a balance between law enforcement and civil liberties. During the 1970s, the Court leaned toward an "always-get-a-warrant" rule, with few exceptions. More recently, the exceptions have multiplied--though the Court still prefers properly warranted searches.

Exceptions include searching the area around a suspect who's just been arrested, searching a building during an emergency, searching a building while in hot pursuit, seizing evidence that's been left in plain view, searching passengers getting onto airplanes, and searching automobiles. Strangely enough, the automobile exception is key to understanding the Supreme Court's interpretation of the amendment.

Reasonable Expectations:

The Fourth Amendment promises to secure citizens against unreasonable searches and seizures "in their persons, houses, papers, and effects." It doesn't say anything about automobiles. That may seem a strange point to make, but it wasn't until the 20th century that the Supreme Court clearly stated that "the principal object of the Fourth Amendment is the protection of privacy rather than property."

The amendment grew out of an English common law tradition holding that, as William Pitt put it in 1763, "the poorest man may in his cottage bid defiance to all the force of the crown." Clearly, 18th-century Englishmen enjoyed protections on their own property that they didn't enjoy on the town square. In effect, the same is true for modern Americans--though the key question is no longer whether you own the property but whether you have a reasonable expectation of privacy.

The inside of your house is private. The inside of a car you drive on public roads and park in public lots is far less so. And, according to the Court, "what a person knowingly exposes to the public . . . is not a subject of Fourth Amendment protection." That's reserved for things you seek to "preserve as private." The trash you put out on the curb is not protected, but your conversation inside a public phone booth is--if you close the door and keep your voice down.

Basically, when courts consider whether searches and seizures are constitutionally valid, they ask whether the person searched had a reasonable expectation of privacy. If the answer is "no," the search was probably constitutional. If the answer is "yes," the court starts looking at other factors. A properly warranted search is probably reasonable. An unwarranted invasion of your home probably isn't. Outside your home, your right to be left alone is about what you'd expect it to be--and that's hardly black and white.

Steve Sampson
December 19, 2005

They also gave this link to Searches and Seizures FAQ.
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Apparently an MBA, obtained with a C-average to boot, gives anyone the authority to interpret the legality of government processes. For example, today President Bush-war, when asked if he had the legal authority to secretly wiretap American citizens without Congress's or the courts' approval, confidently answered:

"Do I have the legal authority to do this? The answer is 'absolutely'."
So, if that's the case, then what the hell do we need a Constitution for, especially the parts that define the Judiciary Branch? Just askin'...
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So, Bush can't break the law because he is the law?

 
As much as I detest the NY Times for towing the propaganda line of the Bush Adminstration over the past 4 years, at least they almost get it right on this one:

On Oct. 17, 2002, the head of the National Security Agency, Lt. Gen. Michael Hayden, made an eloquent plea to a joint House-Senate inquiry on intelligence for a sober national discussion about whether the line between liberty and security should be shifted after the 9/11 attacks, and if so, precisely how far. He reminded the lawmakers that the rules against his agency's spying on Americans, carefully written decades earlier, were based on protecting fundamental constitutional rights.

If they were to be changed, General Hayden said, "We need to get it right. We have to find the right balance between protecting our security and protecting our liberty." General Hayden spoke of having a "national dialogue" and added: "What I really need you to do is talk to your constituents and find out where the American people want that line between security and liberty to be."

General Hayden was right. The mass murders of 9/11 revealed deadly gaps in United States intelligence that needed to be closed. Most of those involved failure of performance, not legal barriers. Nevertheless, Americans expected some reasonable and carefully measured trade-offs between security and civil liberties. They trusted their elected leaders to follow long-established democratic and legal principles and to make any changes in the light of day. But President Bush had other ideas. He secretly and recklessly expanded the government's powers in dangerous and unnecessary ways that eroded civil liberties and may also have violated the law.

In Friday's Times, James Risen and Eric Lichtblau reported that sometime in 2002, President Bush signed a secret executive order scrapping a painfully reached, 25-year-old national consensus: spying on Americans by their government should generally be prohibited, and when it is allowed, it should be regulated and supervised by the courts. The laws and executive orders governing electronic eavesdropping by the intelligence agency were specifically devised to uphold the Fourth Amendment's prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures.

But Mr. Bush secretly decided that he was going to allow the agency to spy on American citizens without obtaining a warrant - just as he had earlier decided to scrap the Geneva Conventions, American law and Army regulations when it came to handling prisoners in the war on terror. Indeed, the same Justice Department lawyer, John Yoo, who helped write the twisted memo on legalizing torture, wrote briefs supporting the idea that the president could ignore the law once again when it came to the intelligence agency's eavesdropping on telephone calls and e-mail messages.

"The government may be justified in taking measures which in less troubled conditions could be seen as infringements of individual liberties," he wrote.

Let's be clear about this: illegal government spying on Americans is a violation of individual liberties, whether conditions are troubled or not. Nobody with a real regard for the rule of law and the Constitution would have difficulty seeing that. The law governing the National Security Agency was written after the Vietnam War because the government had made lists of people it considered national security threats and spied on them. All the same empty points about effective intelligence gathering were offered then, just as they are now, and the Congress, the courts and the American people rejected them.

This particular end run around civil liberties is also unnecessary. The intelligence agency already had the capacity to read your mail and your e-mail and listen to your telephone conversations. All it had to do was obtain a warrant from a special court created for this purpose. The burden of proof for obtaining a warrant was relaxed a bit after 9/11, but even before the attacks the court hardly ever rejected requests.

The special court can act in hours, but administration officials say that they sometimes need to start monitoring large batches of telephone numbers even faster than that, and that those numbers might include some of American citizens. That is supposed to justify Mr. Bush's order, and that is nonsense. The existing law already recognizes that American citizens' communications may be intercepted by chance. It says that those records may be retained and used if they amount to actual foreign intelligence or counterintelligence material. Otherwise, they must be thrown out.

President Bush defended the program yesterday, saying it was saving lives, hotly insisting that he was working within the Constitution and the law, and denouncing The Times for disclosing the program's existence. We don't know if he was right on the first count; this White House has cried wolf so many times on the urgency of national security threats that it has lost all credibility. But we have learned the hard way that Mr. Bush's team cannot be trusted to find the boundaries of the law, much less respect them.

Mr. Bush said he would not retract his secret directive or halt the illegal spying, so Congress should find a way to force him to do it. Perhaps the Congressional leaders who were told about the program could get the ball rolling.

The Times is not off the hook on this, since they're the ones who sat on this story for a year at Bush's insistence. But, that act of stupidity by the Times is an ant hill next to the mountain of problems Bush is going to encounter now that the NSA cat is out of the bag. This is not a grey area like the one about Democratic Senators and Representatives sharing the blame for Iraq because they voted for the resolutions in the context of incomplete intelligence data. These (NSA eavesdropping on citizens) are illegal acts partaken in secret by an administration hell-bent on doing whatever they deemed necessary in order to achieve their goals, laws or no laws, constitution or no constitution. It doesn't get any more blatantly illegal than this.
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December 16, 2005
 
"...if lying to a grand jury about blowjobs was grounds for impeachment, then what is violating your oath to uphold the Constitution worth?" - - - Steve Soto, regarding Bush's illegal authorization of domestic spying by the NSA.
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Another Republican Party Operative is off to the slammer!


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Just Do It

 
"Who cares about whether the Patriot Act gets renewed? Want to abuse our civil liberties? Just do it.

Who cares about the Geneva Conventions. Want to torture prisoners? Just do it.

Who cares about rules concerning the identity of CIA agents. Want to reveal the name of a covert operative? Just do it.

Who cares about whether the intelligence concerning WMDS is accurate. Want to invade Iraq? Just do it.

Who cares about qualifications to serve on the nation's highest court. Want to nominate a personal friend with no qualifications? Just do it.

And the latest outrage, which I read about in "The New York Times" this morning, who cares about needing a court order to eavesdrop on American citizens. Want to wiretap their phone conversations? Just do it. What a joke. A very cruel, very sad joke."

- - - Jack Cafferty, CNN Correspondent
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Weekend Snips

 
Faux journalist, fired from CNN, immediately hired by Fox "News"

Two sellout Democratic Senators who hate the idea of your having freedom: Tim Johnson of South Dakota and Ben Nelson of Nebraska

America: #1 in judicial corruption? Cigarette maker pays judge to rule in favor of $10B lawsuit reversal

Your health habits may affect the health of your yet-to-be-conceived offspring

Congress trying to get a "head start" in cutting badly needed funds, just in time for the holidays.
Merry Christmas, poor suckers!
All Our Love, Your Corporate-sponsored Congress

Union of Concerned Scientists has a nifty Environment-Friendly Holiday Shopping Guide.

Ever get that uneasy feeling that your private overseas phone call was actually a conference call? Well, now your suspicions might be confirmed.
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Feinstein still refuses to join the 21st century Democrats

 
So, about that claim by Bush-war that Congress had the same access to intelligence data in the lead-up to the vote on Iraq War appropriations (intro):

" ...Limitations on Congressional Access to Certain National Intelligence

By virtue of his constitutional role as commander-and-in-chief and head of the executive branch, the President has access to all national intelligence collected, analyzed and produced by the Intelligence Community. The President's position also affords him the authority - which, at certain times, has been aggressively asserted (1) - to restrict the flow of intelligence information to Congress and its two intelligence committees, which are charged with providing legislative oversight of the Intelligence Community. (2) As a result, the President, and a small number of presidentially-designated Cabinet-level officials, including the Vice President (3) - in contrast to Members of Congress (4) - have access to a far greater overall volume of intelligence and to more sensitive intelligence information, including information regarding intelligence sources and methods. They, unlike Members of Congress, also have the authority to more extensively task the Intelligence Community, and its extensive cadre of analysts, for follow-up information. As a result, the President and his most senior advisors arguably are better positioned to assess the quality of the Community's intelligence more accurately than is Congress. (5)

In addition to their greater access to intelligence, the President and his senior advisors also are better equipped than is Congress to assess intelligence information by virtue of the primacy of their roles in formulating U.S. foreign policy. Their foreign policy responsibilities often require active, sustained, and often personal interaction, with senior officials of many of the same countries targeted for intelligence collection by the Intelligence Community. Thus the President and his senior advisors are uniquely positioned to glean additional information and impressions - information that, like certain sensitive intelligence information, is generally unavailable to Congress - that can provide them with an important additional perspective with which to judge the quality of intelligence...."

Be sure to read the entire memo, which is posted at Senator Dianne Feinstein's official web site..

Is Ms. Feinstein laying the groundwork for upcoming excuses for voting in 2002 in favor of the war? Here's a portion of a (form) letter I received this morning from Feinstein (emphasis mine):

...The Senate vote on the resolution to authorize the use of force in Iraq was difficult and consequential based on hours of intelligence briefings from Administration and intelligence officials, as well as the classified and unclassified versions of an important National Intelligence Estimate that comprehensively assessed Iraqi's WMD program. It was based on trust that this intelligence was the best our Nation's intelligence services could offer, untainted by bias, and fairly presented. In this case it was not.

The bottom line is that Iraq did not possess nuclear, chemical or biological weapons in 2003 when the war began. Saddam Hussein did not have an active nuclear, chemical or biological weapons program. Considering the statements that were being made by the Administration, and the intelligence that was presented to Congress which said otherwise, this points once again to major failures in the analysis, collection and use of intelligence.

On top of these intelligence failures, the Administration's war planning was shortsighted and ill conceived. By failing to provide adequate troop levels to secure Iraq and its borders and ignoring requests from General Shinseki and others to increase troop levels, the Administration placed the entire mission in Iraq in jeopardy.

While the situation in Iraq causes all of us deep and growing concern, I recognize that setting a specific date for withdrawal of all American troops, without completing this mission, carries with it the particular hazard that Iraq would deteriorate into chaos, civil war, and a terrorist state would evolve thereby destabilizing the Middle East. Terrorists would be re-invigorated by America turning tail and running, and would increase their efforts to attack westerners and in particular, Americans.

However, I do believe with the election of permanent Iraqi leadership coming on December 15, 2005, there will be an opportunity to assess the stability and the results of American training of Iraqi police and military. It may well be that there will be a better opportunity to then begin a withdrawal....

So you can see that she is still spouting the Bush Administration's spin that leaving Iraq now will plunge the country into further chaos, rather than supporting the more intelligent analyses which show a likely reduction in insurgency activity and favorable placation to the wishes of 80% of Iraqis.

Unless she wakes up to the demands of the Democratic wing of the Democratic Party, I'll be damned if I vote for her in the primaries.
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FRIDAY FUN

 
Remember Cal Worthington and his dog Spot?

True cost of the 12 Days of Christmas

Operation Omega Pattern B (video)

The origin of Santa Claus

Wrestling Women Vs. The Aztec Mummy (video)

Baby Boomers: We've got your numbers.

For all you really, really old geezers, here's a link to Captain Video, Tom Corbett and Space Patrol (really old TV shows)

The Glaucoma Song

Paper Fight (animation)

iPod underwear

Creepy money
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December 15, 2005

Midweek Snips

 
2005 warmest ever in Northern Hemisphere (sent by Phil Loper)

In case you missed it: Physicians for Social Responsibility issued a detailed report in October about Depleted Uranium. View entire report HERE (pdf).

Wikipedia accuracy close to Encyclopedia Britannica when comparing science articles, even in spite of recent revelations

Norwegians, Dutch Mix Sea and River to Make Power and it's environment-friendly

Ford Motor Company wises up, puts gays before bigotry

Apparently the State of Ohio has a satellite office of its Elections Commissioner located in Iran

Starbucks' latest stunt

Our Pentagon is protecting us from.... ourselves
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This holiday season, why not take that $100 you were going to spend on that unappreciative cousin and, instead, buy a Katrina Rebuilding Kit in their name?
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December 14, 2005

The ownership you're-on-your-own society

 
A government's primary responsibility is to protect and serve the citizens. Let's see how well the self-proclamed war president is succeeding:

$300 million Pentagon psychological warfare operation includes plans for placing pro-American messages in foreign media outlets

Since 2001: half-trillion dollars for Afghanistan and Iraq wars

And yet, the Bush administration has denied requests from five states to increase food stamps for low-income families facing higher heating bills this winter

Wake up, Americans... your Republican-controlled government couldn't care less about you.
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December 13, 2005

Early Week Snips

 
Americans torturing Iraqis? As this BBC expose reveals, it's even worse here at home in the good old USA prison system. (Caution: very graphic video)

Breakthrough research on Hepatitis C

Oh, but it IS all about the oil.

West Coast residents: beware the Cascadia Subduction Zone

Why buy a hybrid car now plus, Honda's 2006 Hybrid Civic is looking darn good

How the U.S. Government duped Americans about Iraq
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"An Atheist Manifesto"

 
Sam Harris has written an intriguing piece (at TruthDig) about the conflict between religion and atheism in America. Here is just the intro:

Somewhere in the world a man has abducted a little girl. Soon he will rape, torture and kill her. If an atrocity of this kind is not occurring at precisely this moment, it will happen in a few hours, or days at most. Such is the confidence we can draw from the statistical laws that govern the lives of 6 billion human beings. The same statistics also suggest that this girl’s parents believe—at this very moment—that an all-powerful and all-loving God is watching over them and their family. Are they right to believe this? Is it good that they believe this?

No.

The entirety of atheism is contained in this response. Atheism is not a philosophy; it is not even a view of the world; it is simply a refusal to deny the obvious. Unfortunately, we live in a world in which the obvious is overlooked as a matter of principle. The obvious must be observed and re-observed and argued for. This is a thankless job. It carries with it an aura of petulance and insensitivity. It is, moreover, a job that the atheist does not want.

It is worth noting that no one ever needs to identify himself as a non-astrologer or a non-alchemist. Consequently, we do not have words for people who deny the validity of these pseudo-disciplines. Likewise, atheism is a term that should not even exist. Atheism is nothing more than the noises reasonable people make when in the presence of religious dogma. The atheist is merely a person who believes that the 260 million Americans (87% of the population) who claim to “never doubt the existence of God” should be obliged to present evidence for his existence—and, indeed, for his benevolence, given the relentless destruction of innocent human beings we witness in the world each day. Only the atheist appreciates just how uncanny our situation is: Most of us believe in a God that is every bit as specious as the gods of Mount Olympus; no person, whatever his or her qualifications, can seek public office in the United States without pretending to be certain that such a God exists; and much of what passes for public policy in our country conforms to religious taboos and superstitions appropriate to a medieval theocracy. Our circumstance is abject, indefensible and terrifying. It would be hilarious if the stakes were not so high....
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"As with the Jan. 30 elections, the Dec. 15 elections [in Iraq] are not being held in accordance with international standards of fairness, and cannot be. Proper elections would require that security be provided to voters and candidates. But there is no security. Several candidates have already been assassinated or attacked, and most of the 7000 or so cannot come out in public or they would be killed, too. In many parts of the center-north, voters will have no guarantee of coming home alive. The only way the vote will happen at all is that the US military has forbidden all vehicular traffic, so everyone has to walk for the next few days. This tactic prevents carbombings from disrupting the elections, but it is a desperate measure and not a sign of an election that could be certified as free and fair." - - - Juan Cole
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"How much does the rest of the world enjoy watching us destroy ourselves in Iraq? Enjoy watching us borrow and spend? Enjoy watching us being more concerned about Christ in Christmas, same sex marriage and abortion instead of -- sheesh -- another long list that is growing daily. How soon before we start crying, and the rest of the world breaks out into uncontrollable laughing?" - - - Marie
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B A R B A R I C
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December 12, 2005

Save your baby with a dummy

 
Since I've had extensive experience in pediatric sleep apnea diagnostic testing, I was intrigued with this latest medical finding regarding SIDS:

Pacifiers reduce risk of crib deaths - study

LONDON (Reuters) - Baby pacifiers can reduce the risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), the leading cause of death in babies under a year old, according to new research published on Friday.

Scientists in the United States found babies who used a pacifier, also known as a "dummy", while they slept had a 90 percent reduced risk of cot death compared to other babies.

Scientists from the health management organization (HMO) group Kaiser Permanente Northern California and the National Institutes of Health questioned the mothers or caregivers of 185 infants who died of SIDS and 312 other infants of a similar age and race.

"Use of a dummy during sleep was associated with a reduced risk of SIDS," Dr De-Kun Li, of Kaiser Permanente said in a report published online by the British Medical Journal.

"Our results also provide some evidence that use of a dummy may reduce the impact of other risk factors for SIDS, especially those related to adverse sleep conditions.

Most cot deaths occur between two to four months of age and are more prevalent in boys than girls. The cause is unknown but lying the baby down on its stomach, parental smoking and old mattresses that may harbor toxic bacteria, have been cited as possible culprits.

A campaign to encourage parents to put infants to sleep on their backs has led to a dramatic fall in crib deaths.

"The use of dummies may be an effective strategy for public health intervention," Li added.

The American Academy of Pediatrics, which issued revised guidelines in October, recommends that babies are put to sleep on their back only and said pacifiers could be used to help prevent SIDS.

Maybe we could put all those dummies in Congress to some good use after all...

*** UPDATE *** For all of you wannabe scientists, here's the supporting journal article about pacifiers. If you're interested in the latest general SIDS research, check out this journal article.
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An apology from a Canadian

 
From the diaries of BenGoshi:

On behalf of Canadians everywhere I'd like to offer an apology to the United States of America. We haven't been getting along very well recently and for that I am truly sorry.

I'm sorry we called George Bush a moron. He is a moron but it wasn't nice of us to point it out. If it's any consolation, the fact that he's a moron shouldn't reflect poorly on the people of America. After all it's not like you actually elected him.

I'm sorry about our softwood lumber. Just because we have more trees than you, doesn't give us the right to sell you lumber that's cheaper and better than your own.

I'm sorry about our waffling on Iraq. I mean, when you're going up against a crazed dictator, you wanna have your friends by your side. I realize it took more than two years before you guys pitched in against Hitler and three years against the Kaiser, but that was different. Everyone knew they had weapons.

And finally on behalf of all Canadians, I'm sorry that we're constantly apologizing for things in a passive-aggressive way which is really a thinly veiled criticism. I sincerely hope that you're not upset over this.

We've seen what you do to countries you get upset at.

Thank You.
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December 11, 2005

WEEKEND SNIPS

 
THIS is why we'll never leave Iraq. Get used to it. It's reality.

Electronic Frontier Foundation is suing North Carolina for certifying vote-stealing electronic voting systems

"Reversing just one-seventh of the tax cuts for the top 1 percent of taxpayers - those making more than $300,000 a year - would be enough to avoid" costly cuts in funding for the most needy in America.

How depressing is this? 61% of Americans approve of torture under certain circumstances. Welcome back to the Middle Ages.

Merck & Co. on the hot seat for falsifying Vioxx data, resulting in unknown number of deaths
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December 9, 2005

FRIDAY FUN

 
Daily Dancer does "Superstition" (video)

Funniest political pictures of 2005

Jerry's Landlord (very odd video)

Odd Street Signs

***Week's Best Video*** Worst job ever (caution: some STRONG profanity)

How to destabilize Nicaragua

Flexible Lady (video)

Go ahead, toss some Mentos into your soda (also HERE) (videos)

And finally, a simply awesome home christmas light show synchronized to "Wizards of Winter". It's becoming an internet hit this holiday season. Also check out the comments, some of which are hilarious.
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Hey, Cheney: The British get it

 
"This is a clear message that our governments must not be allowed to condone or encourage torture or subcontract torture to anyone else in the world. Torture, under any form, is morally repugnant and any association with it only weakens our efforts in the fight against terrorism. I welcome this ruling which is in line with the absolute prohibition of torture under the European Convention on Human Rights” - - - Terry Davis, Council of Europe Secretary General, on the British Law Lords decision against the use of evidence obtained by torture

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Part of the Problem

 
Steve Soto nicely and justifiably gives beltway Democrats their fair share of the blame (snippets):

....But Bush isn’t the problem. He’s never been the problem. The problem has always been the Vichy Democrats. The ones as incapable of speaking the truth as Bush is. The wimps, the ignoramuses and/or liberal war hawks. The same ones that voted for the IWR, Patriot Act and the bankruptcy bill. The ones that weren’t out front and center forewarning that Bush’s tax cuts would cause the National Debt to mushroom and never shut up as it did. They are still the problem (and I don’t mean DINO Lieberman who at least has been honest about loving this war from the beginning to this day).

....Remaining in Iraq is the only thing worse than moving our butts to Kuwait. What the hell would we be waiting in Kuwait for? To rush back in if a full blown civil war ensues? Why would we want to give Iraqis a common enemy again? Cooling our heels in Kuwait may be palatable to Americans but that’s only because we are in denial. Denial that we broke it, can’t fix it or buy it (at least not at a price we’re willing to pay). A denial that is encouraged by the Vichy Democrats like Kerry who only yesterday said, “I learned thirty years ago that we must ask the toughest questions of all when our troops are in harm’s way.” No, John, we must ask the toughest questions of all before our troops are in harm’s way. You, John, are part of the problem and therefore, not part of the solution. (And you still sound like a clueless pompous ass.)

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December 8, 2005

A Poem

 
I will seek and find you . . .

I shall take you to bed and have my way with you

I will make you ache, shake & sweat until you moan & groan

I will make you beg for mercy, beg for me to stop

I will exhaust you to the point that you will be relieved when I'm finished with you

And, when I am finished, you will be weak for days

All my love,

....The Flu
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December 7, 2005

Midweek Snips

 
Large portion of HDTV owners think they're watching in HDTV mode but actually aren't

Subverting Kyoto

Juan Cole explains how Howard Dean's strategy of "winning smart" will work in Iraq.

Good news and not-so-good news about nanotechnology.
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Groping for Compassion

 
Mike Farrell examines capital punishment in the light of the pending execution of Tookie Williams next week (snippet):

"....This, then, is the stark choice presented all of us Californians in the person of our elected leader, Gov. Schwarzenegger: Does he approve the killing of a man who has become a force for good in our society, a man to whom the young look for guidance? Thumb up or thumb down?

The governor says he is “dreading” the decision, but that’s the burden of leadership. And as the countdown continues, the pressure intensifies. Late in November, Virginia’s Gov. Mark Warner reawakened mercy in America by defying political wisdom and granting executive clemency to Robin Lovitt, who had been slated to be the 1,000th person executed in the United States since capital punishment resumed 28 years ago. (That milestone was reached last Friday when North Carolina executed double-murderer Kenneth Boyd.)

So once again the spotlight is on Schwarzenegger. Acting for us, does he play the status-quo politician, washing his hands like Pilate and letting the ax fall? Or does he affirm the human capacity for transformation, at once reinforcing the meaning of hope for young people and opening the door of possibility to Americans who hunger for a shaft of light in a bleak time?"

Here we have a chance for Groperzeneger to actually do something humane for the first time in his life: show others that, if you truly rehabilitate yourself in prison, society may supercede the sentence and give you a second chance rather than snuff you out.

Come on, Kindergarten Cop, show us that you do have a soul, rather than just trying to act like it.
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December 6, 2005

Exactly

 
"The lunacy here is that [John] McCain portrays himself as being more mature and a big thinker by aligning himself with a cabal and an administration that has blundered its way into one the country’s worst foreign policy debacles ever. And by belittling the 73 year-old Murtha for being too emotionally involved with the funerals and the families of those lost in the war, the 69 year-old McCain wants us to think he is a forward-looking, steady-as-we-go serious leader, yet I have still not heard where McCain differs at all from the Bush policy of stalling. Does McCain plan to denigrate Chuck Hagel as well? How many funerals has McCain attended, and how many families of the fallen in Arizona has McCain visited?

Or are the trips to the White House to service Bush getting in the way of such “too emotional” activities? Any man who sidles up to Ken Blackwell to kiss his ass for his support is a man who sells his soul to be elected, and is no better than any Democrat that any troll would criticize. See, the thing is, I have disliked Bush since 2001 because I was on to him early, and nothing he has done since has made me reconsider that borderline hatred of him and what he has done to this country. But I held out hope that McCain would be able to lead the GOP back from the brink, and would be someone of principle rather than a hack with better press.

Kiss my ass McCain. You will never, ever get my vote. I prefer my leaders to have some principles, not kneepads." - - - Steve Soto

Be sure to also read "Who You Talkin’ To, Bitch?" by Steve, regardnig Bush-war's speech yesterday about workers' pensions.
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Early Week Snips

 
Benjamin Netanyahu may attack Iran if elected Israeli Prime Minister

Since Saddam Hussein might be convicted for being responsible for the torture of Iraqi citizens while President, can the equivalent be done to Bush since he basically took over the same job?

Has Donald Rumsfeld gone mad?

Make Trade Fair! Add your name to The Big Noise.

Ford Motor Company embraces homophobia in order to appease religious right . Contrast this to what Wells Fargo did.

The highly predicted and highly dreaded environmental hazards resulting from Katrina are now front and center

Bill Moyers for President? (from Tim at Democratic Left Infoasis)
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December 5, 2005

Okay, but what have we done lately? Oh, wait...

 
"From 1945 to 2003, the United States attempted to overthrow more than 40 foreign governments, and to crush more than 30 populist-nationalist movements fighting against intolerable regimes. In the process, the US bombed some 25 countries, caused the end of life for several million people, and condemned many millions more to a life of agony and despair." - - - William Blum

*** UPDATE: Michael Miller left this comment:

"Once you've looked behind the curtain, there's no going back," a gentleman in the Atlanta airport told me three years ago.

You know, the worst thing for me wasn't the goddamned lies that launched the war - it was looking behind the curtain. I still have my ideals and I still want the America i grew up believing in, but now I know so much about what we've really done... You can love your country and detest it's actions but the truth is, we are what we do as individuals and as a nation. America does great things, but we do horrible, unacceptable, morally depraved things too.

We as citizens today have more information available to us than any previous generation. Perhaps that's why we - those of us who make the effort - can see behind the curtain so clearly. The long term implications of this are what keep me going.
For those of us (like Mr. Miller) watching from our stumps in blog-o-land, I would say that it's kind of like being nearsighted and leaving home without your glasses... you can see (and therefore know) what's going on, but it's just not clear enough to see all the details.
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"The only true fix to the problems of intelligence that manifested themselves in the Iraqi WMD debacle is to depoliticize the process. The position of national intelligence chief should be a 10-year appointment, like that of the director of the FBI, and subject to the consent of Congress. Likewise, all intelligence made available to the president to make national security policy should be shared with select members of Congress, from both parties, so that America will never again find itself at war based upon politically driven intelligence. Finally, and perhaps most important, the American people should start exercising effective accountability regarding their elected officials, so that those who voted yes for a war based on false and misleading information never again have the honor and privilege of serving in high office." - - - Scott Ritter
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December 3, 2005

"The day the country died"

 
Paradox looks back on the day it all started (snippet):

....It’s obvious five years later, Bush vs. Gore ushered in an unprecedented era of elected public servant lawlessness and felonies unknown in the country’s history. What a surprise—they were empirically shown the law means nothing to them, why should they have behaved any differently?

Most painful of all in this nightmare is the blanket denial that still surrounds theft of the election and trashing of the law itself. When that felon hag O’Connor announced her retirement I was appalled, but not surprised, to see that Bush vs. Gore was never mentioned in her legal career history. That little case that installed the worst president of our history and chucked the law in the trash bin? That’s nothing, nothing at all.

Little more can be expected of our corporate whoring press, one supposes, but here, in this space in time with the five year anniversary of Bush vs. Gore so close upon us, it will not be denied and the truth will not be hidden:

Bush vs. Gore was and is the greatest legal disaster in United States history. Not only did it steal the democracy, it set an appalling precedent of total disregard for the law itself, which can be aptly seen in the currently long felon list in the Republican administration and Congress."
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Weekend Snips

 
Robert Scheer has started a new, promising web site.

Vietnam redo? What happens when you substitute "Iraq" for "Vietnam" in one of Nixon's speeches.

Yet another example of Bush-war Administration corruption, this time in the Justice Department

Ann "Guttermouth" Coulter thinks John Murtha, Duke Cunningham and Oliver North should all receive the same praise.
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December 2, 2005
 
Thank god the rest of America has Bill O'Reilly to protect them from the secular progressive christmas haters. We Jesus haters have apparently started an anti-christmas war that is going to destroy our economy and all things good. I wish my local chapter of the christmas haters had notified me sooner because last week there was a sale on christmas-tree-dissolving ray guns at Libruls-R-Us down the street. Why oh why am I always the last to find out?
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"California Congressman Duke Cunningham resigned from office after admitting he broke the law by taking $2.4 million dollars in bribes. It's kind of ironic. The only time you can really be sure that a politician is telling the truth is when he's admitting that he's a crook."

"In his speech President Bush said we need to rebuild Iraq, provide the people with jobs, and give them hope. If it works there maybe we'll try it in New Orleans."

Jay Leno
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FRIDAY FUN

 
Pres. Bush's Special Announcement on Global Warming (video)

Top 10 Bushisms of 2005

Political Bloopers (video)

iPod Zepto

Hilarious Xbox 360 commercial (video)

Museum of African Diaspora (check out the interactive photography exhibit)

Top Ten Toys of 2005 (as determined by.... kids!)

Google Maps commercial (video)

Teenager Repellant

Star Wars auditions spoofs (video)
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December 1, 2005
 
Way back in March-April, 2003 I thought for sure that the Bush-war Administration would arrange for WMD to be planted within Iraq's borders in order to "discover" them, thus justifying the invasion. I'm still confounded that they did NOT do this, especially after seeing what they have done both before and after the invasion. However, after the revelations this week of the Pentagon paying Iraqi journalists to write favorable-to-U.S. articles in Iraqi newspapers, I have officially given up trying to think of new ways the Bush clan might fuck over everyone else (and using your and my income tax to boot!) What they have done, and will continue to do, far exceed my wildest conspiracy theories.

***UPDATE (12/2/05): Media Matters has a LOT MORE on this very serious matter.
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"What is the great American sin? Extravagance? Vice? Graft? No; it is a kind of half-humorous, good-natured indifference, a lack of "concentrated indignation" as my English friend calls it, which allows extravagance and vice to flourish. Trace most of our ills to their source, and it is found that they exist by virtue of an easy-going, fatalistic indifference which dislikes to have its comfort disturbed.... The most shameless greed, the most sickening industrial atrocities, the most appalling public scandals are exposed, but a half-cynical and wholly indifferent public passes them by with hardly a shrug of the shoulders; and they are lost in the medley of events. This is the great American sin." - - - Joseph Fort Newman, Atlantic Monthly, October 1922

This was written 83 years ago? Sounds like today.
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50 Years Ago Today

 

[CLICK IMAGE]
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Midweek Snips

 
'Tis The Season To Be Broke

While you were sleeping... (Mark Fiore cartoon)

Frontline has posted two home videos from residents of New Orleans, one showing the effects of the tidal surge during the storm and one of the flooding from the levee breaches. Gripping footage.

U.S. companies are not yet buying into the concerns over flu pandemic

U.S. taxpayers pay Republican propaganda machine to print Bush Cheney Administration lies in Iraq media.

Groperzenegger's choice for replacement Chief-of-Staff, Susan Kennedy, is no advocate for Californians

WTF?? Cart before the horse: Twenty-nine months ago Bush-war declared "Mission Accomplished". Today he revealed his plans on How He Will Accomplish The Mission.

Congratulations to LEFT is RIGHT for getting listed on THIS CLASSY SITE. (See my comment at 7:18 p.m. near the bottom.)
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Well the weight of the world is FALLING
And on my back I've been CRAWLING
The state of affairs is APPALLING
And the 6 o'clock news keeps CALLING

Well I've been trying to see the world through their eyes
Where black is white and day is night
Left is Right
Left is Right
Left is Right, For me

Well negotiations keep STALLING
The United Nations keeps CALLING
The Skeletons you're HAULING
Won't hold when you're FALLING

Put your head in the sand and you'll never know
What's waiting for you in the depths below (below)
Don't believe everything that you read
Take what you want and keep what you need

TWISTED NIXON



CHICK HEARN, THANKS SO MUCH FOR ALL THE MEMORIES.

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