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Saturday, August 11, 2007
Gee, I wonder why the US has no more allies?
Heh.
Alrighty then.
Friday, August 10, 2007
Federal reserve does a fancy dance
Oh whoops, my bad, here's the article
Thursday, August 09, 2007
Nope, more genius reporting in the San Diego newz wurld:
Today Media Matters confirms my diagnosis nationwide.
Numerous outlets publish misleading atacks on decision to limit electronic voting.
Thu, Aug 9, 2007 5:54pm ET
Summary: While reporting on California Secretary of State Debra Bowen's decision to decertify the state's electronic voting machines in light of a study that found the systems are vulnerable to security breaches, numerous media outlets attacked the study's "unrealistic" methodology or uncritically reported criticism of the study's premise, without noting the researchers' explanation for their methods.
Alrighty then.
Who says the Grey Lady isn't good for laugh?
Bridge Hero Gets Offer: Paid Tuition
New York Times
August 7, 2007
Among the dozens of wrenching accounts to come out of the collapse of the Interstate 35W bridge in Minneapolis, the actions of 20-year-old Jeremy Hernandez were a bright spot: Trapped in a tipping school bus with 50 children, he kicked open the back door and began helping them one by one to safety.
Within a day, news outlets across the country were repeating the story of the school bus, along with a sad footnote — that Mr. Hernandez had recently been forced to drop out of an automotive repair program because he could not afford the $15,000 tuition.
That has changed. On Saturday, Mr. Hernandez learned that Dunwoody College of Technology had offered him a full scholarship toward a degree in applied science. He has also received offers of help from dozens of strangers across the country, said Molly Schwartz, communications director for Pillsbury United Communities, which employed him as a gym coordinator for one of its summer programs.You're right, that's not funny, that is really a great thing. So where's the humor?
...When President Bush’s staff contacted him to request a photo opportunity, “He was just, like, ‘Nope,’ ” she said.
Wednesday, August 08, 2007
It is impossible to prevent voting machine hacking
by Woody Smith Page 1 of 1 page(s)
OpEdNews
...When I tell you the following you can take as the genuine truth: There is NO POSSIBLE WAY UNDER THE SUN to "fix" voting machines to ensure their accuracy or their immunity from penetration from a party seeking personal gain. They are ALL, regardless of what "generation" they are, past, present or future, utterly unfixable in this context, whether or not they contain paper trails, and whether they're used merely to mark ballots or cast votes or are used to tabulate votes cast by other means (as with optical scanners). Every computer ever built is vulnerable to attack, and there is no possible way to render any computer genuinely invulnerable. ...
Nope, more genius reporting in the San Diego newz wurld:
Decision comes after ban on touch-screen machines.
By Craig Gustafson
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
August 7, 2007
The county is planning an aggressive push to get as many voters as possible to cast absentee ballots instead of heading to their local polling place for the Feb. 5 presidential primary.
We use optical scanners to count the absentee votes in San Diego, Diebold optical scanners.
SD Electronic Voting Systems To Be Extensively Modified
POSTED: 11:45 am PDT August 4, 2007
UPDATED: 12:05 pm PDT August 4, 2007
...A review of the Diebold equipment showed it was vulnerable to malicious attack that could change the vote tallies, among other deficiencies.
Diebold Election Systems Inc. is headquartered in Allen, Texas. One of its product lines is equipment that scans paper ballots, circumventing some of the concerns that have been expressed about touch-screen systems...
The concerns were circumvented by whom, the pathetic excuse that passes for news reporting in this county?
Tuesday, August 07, 2007
US navy barred from using sonar
August 07, 2007 09:32am
THE US navy was today barred from using an ear-splitting sonar in upcoming wargames off the California coast alleged to be harmful to whales and other marine life.
alleged to be harmful to whales and other marine life. ?
Alleged?
Arrrrrgggggghhhh!
Good job, Captains of Industry.
Mmmm,m pr'haps I shouldn't be so hasty to blame Navy sonar for the demise of the whales, it could be a number of Navy pollutants, or it might be sound bombing . You know, for oil exploration.
Alrighty then.
Drugs, oil, wars
Another record poppy crop in Afghanistan
By MATTHEW LEE, Associated Press Writer
Sat Aug 4, 12:27 PM ET
A while back this post of mine on Dyncorp got quite a few hits from people who might have been looking for employment, but one that I wondered about was from Columbia. I don't get a lot of hits from Columbia.
A lot of our "black tar" heroin and cocaine begins it's journey here to the US as happy little poppies and coca in Columbia. We don't like that. We spray. There's oil in Columbia also.
Hmmmmm, remember this book?
And, yeah, what happened to this dude?
Yeah,this looks like an interesting book to me:
Drugs, Oil, and War: The United States in Afghanistan, Colombia, and Indochina
I'm reading this one now:
Opium Wars by William Travis Hanes, Frank Sanello
Oh well, at least the Dyncorp guys can afford heroin. The soldiers can't, but they're buying it anyway. Umm, so what happens when the marines bring their sorry overdeployed, drug addicted asses back to San Diego? Did they clean up downtown for nothing? I wonder if this is next? If so, Southern California is going to explode, and these fuckers will be right in there, and to top it off they will have a shitload more NAFTA refugees to recruit from.
Sunday, August 05, 2007
Cagle nails it
I don't know what Cagle calls it, but I would title it: Media focus on politics.
Never mind the latest US military Whoops, my bad, let's focus on the Clenis and his wife's cleavage
Oakland Post editor is victim of targeted killing possibly linked to his work
update: Police: Calif. handyman admits to shooting veteran journalist investigating Black Muslim group
By Michelle Locke
ASSOCIATED PRESS2:46 p.m. August 6, 2007
Israel's Jewish Problem in Tehran
by Jonathan Cook
August 4, 2007
...There is an interesting problem with selling the "Iran as Nazi Germany" line. If Ahmadinejad really is Hitler, ready to commit genocide against Israel's Jews as soon as he can get his hands on a nuclear weapon, why are some 25,000 Jews living peacefully in Iran and more than reluctant to leave despite repeated enticements from Israel and American Jews?...
...Despite the absence of any threat to Iran's Jews, the Israeli media recently reported that the Israeli government has been trying to find new ways to entice Iranian Jews to Israel. The Ma'ariv newspaper pointed out that previous schemes had found few takers. There was, noted the report, "a lack of desire on the part of thousands of Iranian Jews to leave." According to the New York-based Forward newspaper, a campaign to convince Iranian Jews to emigrate to Israel caused only 152 out of these 25,000 Jews to leave Iran between October 2005 and September 2006, and most of them were said to have emigrated for economic reasons, not political ones...
So I imagine that most Iranian Jews are basically telling the Israelis and American Jews...
Frankenforests: GE Trees Threaten Ecosystem Collapse
By Dara Colwell, AlterNet. Posted August 2, 2007.
Across the U.S. and the world, the timber industry is driving research behind genetically engineered forests. But environmentalists worry that it will open an ecological Pandora's Box.
In China over a million poplar trees have been planted since 2002 to combat deforestation. But the move has not been widely applauded by everyone. The poplars, which are genetically engineered, are China's first foray into the world of transgenic forestry -- or "frankenforests" -- and other countries are not far behind.
The Crash of 1929: Are We on the Verge of a Repeat?
By Scott Thill
AlterNet
Thursday 26 July 2007
Thursday, August 02, 2007
Clinton Guiliani widen their leads in poll
Listening to Thom Hartman's quick poll had Kucinich at the top last week.
Sunday, July 29, 2007
From the geniuses at the San Diego Union Tribune
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
July 28, 2007
In one of the broadest tests of electronic balloting to date, computer and election experts had no problem hacking into the same kind of touch-screen voting machines used by San Diego County....
No Fucking Shit, Sherlock.
How long have I been bitching about these voting machines?
The comments are entertaining also. I don't know why I'm still surprised at the idiocy of RepugnantThuglicans.
Saturday, July 28, 2007
More voting stuff
Researchers commissioned by California have found security issues in every electronic voting system they tested, California Secretary of State Debra Bowen said today.Part 1 of a special five-part series. -->
Robert McMillan, IDG News Service
Friday, July 27, 2007 4:00 PM PDT
Researchers commissioned by the State of California have found security issues in every electronic voting system they tested, California Secretary of State Debra Bowen said Friday.
The report was published Friday as part of a complete review of the state's e-voting systems initiated earlier this year by Bowen's office.
And last night on NOW Greg Palast.
Friday, July 27, 2007
Wednesday, July 25, 2007
House Panel Votes for Contempt Charges in Firings Case
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, July 25, 2007; 2:48 PM
The House Judiciary Committee voted today to issue contempt citations for two of President Bush's most trusted aides, taking its most dramatic step yet towards a constitutional showdown with the White House over the Justice Department's dismissal of nine U.S. attorneys.
The panel voted 22-17, along party lines, to issue citations to Joshua B. Bolten, White House chief of staff, and Harriet E. Miers, former White House counsel. Both refused to comply with committee subpoenas after Bush declared that documents and testimony related to the prosecutor firings were protected by executive privilege.
Because we are a nation of LAWS.
Tuesday, July 24, 2007
Chalmers Johnson from Tomdispatch
By Chalmers Johnson
This essay is a review of Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA by Tim Weiner (Doubleday, 702 pp., $27.95).
I waaaaaaant it. I want the book, dammnit.
Saturday, July 21, 2007
still reading
Possibly the most depressing book evah.
The most depressing sentence so far?
p. 132
"International developement agencies encourage destructive transport policies by their preference for financing roads rather than rails, as well as by encouraging the privatization of local transportation."
refers back to this one
Friday, July 20, 2007
Kings, Queens and dorkwads
I looked for a web page to see if I could find the exact quote that made me reach for the remote and click the OFF button in disgust, but I couldn't find one. Some smiling, chubby Canadian dude was going on about how much the Americans love the Monarchy and he was so proud that the Canadians actually had a Queen, and the Americans don't.
Huh?
First of all, I didn't even know that the Canadians considered the Queen of England their Queen, and secondly, I wondered if this guy had any clue about why the Revolutionary War in the American Colonies was fought?
(Hint: We need a new revolution to get rid of this dorkwad in the White House who tells us yet again that he thinks he is King George.
That and the snubbing of the Queen by this dude (um, not surprising that a woman would be snubbed in a predominantly Muslim country is it?) was about all I could stand to watch regarding royalty last night.
I must admit though, that this picture is priceless, the Queen sure has dudes number, don't she?
Speaking of PBS, I know where I'll be tonight.
I'll be plopped right in front of the teevee watching NOW (even thought this particular episode looks like it might be sad) and Bill Moyers Journal (because I must see The Yes Men ).
Completely unrelated, unless you consider Machiavellian machinations and the new cold war that has pulled in Britain and Russia :
Kissinger’s Secret Meeting With Putin
Thursday, July 19, 2007
By Richard B. Schmitt, Times Staff Writer1:26 PM PDT, July 19, 2007
...Melanie Sloan, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics, and one of the couple's lawyers, said Bates' decision recognized that the Wilsons' claims posed "important questions relating to the propriety of actions undertaken by our highest government officials."
But, she said, the judge dismissed their lawsuit on a threshold legal issue centered on the difficulty of suing a federal official.
"While we are obviously very disappointed by today's decision, we have always expected that this case would ultimately be decided by a higher court." Sloan said. "We disagree with the court's holding and intend to pursue this case vigorously to protect all Americans from vindictive government officials who abuse their power for their own political ends."
Democrats: Miers immunity claim may be illegitimate
By Elana Schor
July 19, 2007
Democrats Move Toward Holding Miers in Contempt
By Emma Schwartz
Posted 7/18/07
...The House could also vote to put Miers in "inherent contempt," which would mean holding her in the congressional jail, though that hasn't happened since the 1930s...
Democrats need to move a little faster, I've had enough, and the middle east is blowing up
Wednesday, July 18, 2007
You have no idea
I found Anna.
My crazy, sweet, light's up the room, artist friend, who's Grand-Uncle was David Alfaro Siqueiros.
I've missed her. I can't wait to see her .
Her paintings are wonderful.
Interested in her work?
Contact her here: annasiqueiros AT sbcglobal DOT net
Tuesday, July 17, 2007
Monday, July 16, 2007
As I imagine the dialogue
Sunday, July 15, 2007
Lovely
(AP) - RIYADH, Saudi Arabia-Sixteen Saudis transferred from the U.S. prison in Guantanamo Bay arrived home Monday and were immediately detained by authorities investigating possible terrorist connections, the official Saudi Press Agency reported.
A total of 77 Saudis have now been returned from Guantanamo, Maj. Gen. Mansour al-Turki told SPA. He said 53 remain incarcerated at the U.S. military facility in Cuba, a source of tension in U.S. relations with Saudi Arabia, a close ally of Washington. Al-Turki's figures correspond to those maintained independently by The Associated Press.
Arabs pile into Darfur to take land 'cleansed' by janjaweed
By Steve Bloomfield, Africa Correspondent Published: 14 July 2007
...Drought in parts of northern Africa has forced nomads to look further afield for fertile land. Although the spread of desert is rapidly reducing the amount of land available for farmers and nomads in Darfur, much of the area cleared by the janjaweed and government forces is fertile...
Egypt faces clean water crisis
By Farid Barsoum in the Nile Delta, Egypt
Timeline: The Frightening Future of Earth
By Andrea Thompson, and Ker Than
Republished from Live Science
In the next 200 years humans will face widespread water shortages, famine and disease; whilst Earth’s landscape transforms radically
Last Rites in the Holy Land?
The world's most ancient Christian communities are fleeing their birthplace.
By Rod Nordland
Newsweek
July 23, 2007 issue -
Saudi Arabia, Wahhabism and the spread of Sunni theofascism - Part 1
By Curtin Winsor
Are Muslims Under Siege?
Sunday, 15, July, 2007 (29, Jumada al-Thani, 1428)
M.J. Akbar, mjakbar@asianage.com
...Do we blame Hinduism or Hindus for the malevolence of those who killed and terrorized Muslims in Gujarat five years ago? We do not, and must not. Is there any reason why Muslims converge so easily into a category?...
Ummmm...
The Gujarat violence broke out in February 2002 when a Muslim mob torched a train carrying Hindu pilgrims and activists, killing nearly 60 Hindus . The incident sparked weeks of reprisals, including arson and murder by Hindu mobs that killed more than 1,000 people, most of them Muslims.
Saudis....
more balls than brains.
Lawmaker: Jail Women Who Wear Burqa
Friday July 13, 2007 4:01 AM
THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) - A right-wing Dutch lawmaker wants women jailed for wearing the head-to-toe Islamic robe known as a burqa, calling it a ``symbol of oppression.''
Ummmm, I think going to jail for wearing the niquab, or burka is a bit extreme, but I think they are a security hazard. On the other hand, it was a man who killed Theo Van Gogh for insulting Islam.
Conrad and His Media Comrades
by CommonDreams.org
They Are Not Just Stealing from Media Companies But Stealing the Media From Us
by Danny Schechter
Internet radio firms hear a sour note from appeals court
Federal panel rejects request to stay royalty rate increase for music webcasters
Linda Rosencrance
July 12, 2007 (Computerworld) -- A federal appeals court yesterday denied a petition from music webcaster associations for an emergency stay of new royalty rates that Internet radio companies have to start paying on Sunday. (Today)
Saturday, July 14, 2007
How timely was this?
Last night I watched Bill Moyers' Journal.
It was a fascinating discussion,mostly about this administration's acting as if they are all above the law. Impeachment was mentioned. The Constitution was mentioned. Moyers, Fein and Nichols carried on quite an interesting exchange. It was energizing.
This morning I picked up the book I've been reading and eventually came across this passage on page 360:
Many other "minor" innovations in the Constitution--the difficult yet workable procedure for amending it, impeachment, the the requirement that the Senate concur on presidential appointments, a narrow definition of treason, the power sharing by states that has allowed territories to organize a new states---help explain its success. It is now the world's oldest written constitutions still in effect. All this is the "what" of the Constitution, and Americans need to be reminded of it because many do not understand it. Diane Skvarla, curator for the Senate, says many visitors to the Capitol have no understanding even of the three branches of government and are forever asking "Where is the president's office?" and "What does Congress do?" Their visit to Independence Hall won't help.
After reading this book and two other books by Loewen, I have no desire to see (white) small town America (North and South) or to visit any of the glorified plantations that won't inform visitors that they (and this country) were built on slavery.
I do want to know more about the Constitution though.
Friday, July 13, 2007
Peak Oil vs. Industry Study
By Chris Baltimore
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Proponents of "peak oil" -- the theory that global crude oil production has hit its zenith and is headed for a steep decline -- are steamed with a U.S. oil industry group's findings that the world has plenty of oil.
Next week the U.S. National Petroleum Council -- a board of high-level U.S. oil industry executives -- releases its study titled "Facing the Hard Truths about Energy," conducted at the behest of Energy Secretary Sam Bodman.
According to the report's executive summary obtained by Reuters, the world is not running out of oil but there are "accumulating risks" to securing supply through 2030.
Peak oil theorists say such findings gloss over Bodman's request to study the issue in detail.
"They've labored mightily and come up with a mouse," said Randy Udall at the Association for the Study of Peak Oil and Gas, whose group dismisses the report as "petro Prozac."
"Give me four college students and two weeks, and I could do better," Udall said.
With crude oil futures prices in London at 11-month highs above $77 a barrel, the International Energy Agency, adviser to 26 industrialized countries, predicts a supply crunch in 2012.
The IEA now expects global demand to reach 95.8 million barrels per day (bpd) from 86.1 million bpd in 2007, assuming average global GDP growth of 4.5 percent annually.
In a draft letter to Bodman outlining its findings, the National Petroleum Council says, "The world is not running out of energy resources, but there are accumulating risks to continuing expansion of oil and natural gas production from the conventional sources relied upon historically."
Those risks include "political hurdles, infrastructure requirements and availability of trained work force," according to the findings of the panel, which includes executives of oil companies like ExxonMobil Corp. and Chevron Corp.
The council, chaired by former ExxonMobil Chief Executive Lee Raymond, could not be reached for comment.
CHICKEN LITTLE
There is no shortage of rhetoric in the debate.
One U.S. oil executive hires people to don chicken suits and hand out flyers at peak oil conferences, calling its advocates "Chicken Littles" - most recently in Italy in 2006.
"The abundance side of the debate needs something that grabs attention too," said Alex Cranberg, chairman of Denver-based Aspect Energy LLC, an independent oil company, referring to the chicken suits. "It is almost equal to, but not equal to, the power of fear."
Daniel Yergin, chairman of oil consultancy Cambridge Energy Research Associates and the panel's vice chairman of demand issues, has dismissed the idea of peak oil.
(That would be this Daniel Yergin )
Instead, Yergin's group has predicted an "undulating plateau" of crude oil production over several decades, followed by a slow decline.
Such findings irk Rep. Roscoe Bartlett, the Maryland Republican and co-chairman of the Congressional peak oil caucus, who has hounded the Bush administration on the peak oil issue.
"I don't think (the council) did what they asked them to do," Bartlett said in his office this week, brandishing a closet-full of charts and graphs that map out various world oil consumption scenarios. "We're disappointed."