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Wednesday, November 28, 2007

And so begins the silent scream...again


This is why I think of Republicans as lemmings .

Here are some words that come to mind when I think about the Republican Leadership.


Mach·i·a·vel·li·an

Hypocritical.

Authoritarian.

Vile

Pampered

Lying

Cheating

Thieving

Criminals

(I didn't need to see that last one because I knew most of it, but it sure needs to be updated before the '08 election, eh?)

Here's today's fishwrap & yesterday's
LA Times
Published Date: November 27, 2007
CAMPAIGN '08 Clinton the organized
By Stephen Braun
As first lady, the senator didn't win every battle. But she was known for showing up thoroughly, perhaps obsessively, prepared.

In Iran, a cadre of lawyers takes the case of justice By Borzou Daragahi
Of Iran's 27,000 attorneys, perhaps no more than 100 take politically charged cases. They brave insults, assaults and jail.

Colorado mayor's sympathy for immigrants costs him his job
By Nicholas Riccardi
Tom Selders spoke out against a raid at a meatpacking plant, and the town spoke in the voting booth by turning him out of office.

Viability of sex-offender law in doubt By Michael Rothfeld
The lifetime GPS monitoring ordered by Prop. 83 may be too costly and complex to ever fully implement.

Mideast peace conference opens By Paul Richter and Richard Boudreaux
Bush meets separately with Israeli and Palestinian leaders at the White House before the event today in Annapolis, Md.

Homeowners' big question: How low will prices go? By Peter Y. Hong
Eric S. Broida wants to trade up. He has been eyeing a multimillion-dollar house near his Pacific Palisades home and thinks it might be a bargain. Eventually, that is.

Monday, November 26, 2007

Monday Nov 26, 2007 NYT

Bitterest Rival of Musharraf Returns Home
November 26, 2007
By CARLOTTA GALL

Short of Funds, G.O.P. Recruits the Rich to Run
November 26, 2007
By RAYMOND HERNANDEZ

Rice’s Turnabout on Mideast Talks
November 26, 2007
By ELISABETH BUMILLER

In West Iowa, Obama’s Man Thinks Locally
November 26, 2007
By JEFF ZELENY



New York Manhole Covers, Forged Barefoot in India

November 26, 2007
By HEATHER TIMMONS and J. ADAM HUGGINS

Missouri, No. 1? College Football Surprises Again
November 26, 2007
By PETE THAMEL and THAYER EVANS

F.C.C. Chief Seeks Votes to Tighten Cable Rules
By STEPHEN LABATON
Published: November 26, 2007


Retail Sales Rise, but Stores Relied on Discounts

November 26, 2007
By MICHAEL BARBARO

Doling Out Other People’s Money
November 26, 2007
By ADAM LIPTAK

After Cyclone, Bangladesh Faces Political Storm
November 26, 2007
By SOMINI SENGUPTA

Saturday, November 24, 2007

The Lynching Tree

I watched this last night and frankly I was a bit irritated with it. Not because it's something that should be ignored, and not because I could not fathom the connection between the the lynching tree and the crucifixion of Jesus by the Romans but because James Cone has a seriously annoying voice. I also didn't appreciate that smug victim hood he appeared to be promoting, and wallowing in.

Why would that bug me?

Because wallowing in victim hood sure didn't promote spiritual growth in MY life. Then again, I didn't grow spiritually until I gave myself permission to chuck out the window some of the elitist bullshit involved with organized religion. People that take the part of their religion that the rich and powerful used to control them and remain rich and powerful and then wear it like a hair shirt make me sick. The hair shirters are not nearly as bothersome to me as the people who think that their shit doesn't stink, and everyone else is a lesser human being, or deserve to die because they subscribe to a different religion, or none at all.

I thought that what Bernice Johnson Reagon had to say was beautiful and eloquently delivered.

Moving on, I watched a show that had a team of scientists, historians and divers looking for evidence of the Battle of Lepanto (1571) during which the Christian Europeans used some new kind of battleship and kicked some Turkish Muslim butt right out of Europe. Which basically means that Christian pirates were free to plunder the world & bring it back to their royalty and not have the plunder snatched by Muslim pirates and taken to their royalty.

(my ITunes just played this:

Damned For All Time/Blood Money 5:09 Andrew Lloyd Webber Jesus Christ Superstar [Disc 1] Soundtrack )

Okay-bee

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Happy Thanksgiving.



Some people get up to go shopping the day after Thanksgiving at stores that open at 4:00 AM...




I'm not one of them....




Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Stuff this in your effin turkey

I should shopping for MY turkey, but I'm trying to finish this stupid assignment. I get it, I get it, teaching takes more time to do well than is humanly possible. The assignment is to make up questions for current events articles. This article was a particularly rough slog for me, because this is how I feel about Rumsfeld

In Sometimes-Brusque 'Snowflakes,' He Shared Worldview, Shaped Policy

By Robin Wright
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, November 1, 2007; A01

In a series of internal musings and memos to his staff, then-Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld argued that Muslims avoid "physical labor" and wrote of the need to "keep elevating the threat," "link Iraq to Iran" and develop "bumper sticker statements" to rally public support for an increasingly unpopular war.

The memos, often referred to as "snowflakes," shed light on Rumsfeld's brusque management style and on his efforts to address key challenges during his tenure as Pentagon chief. Spanning from 2002 to shortly after his resignation following the 2006 congressional elections, a sampling of his trademark missives obtained yesterday reveals a defense secretary disdainful of media criticism and driven to reshape public opinion of the Iraq war.

Rumsfeld, whose sometimes abrasive approach often alienated other Cabinet members and White House staff members, produced 20 to 60 snowflakes a day and regularly poured out his thoughts in writing as the basis for developing policy, aides said. The memos are not classified but are marked "for official use only."

In a 2004 memo on the deteriorating situation in Iraq, Rumsfeld concluded that the challenges there are "not unusual." Pessimistic news reports -- "our publics risk falling prey to the argument that all is lost" -- simply result from the wrong standards being applied, he wrote in one of the memos obtained by The Washington Post.

Under siege in April 2006, when a series of retired generals denounced him and called for his resignation in newspaper op-ed pieces, Rumsfeld produced a memo after a conference call with military analysts. "Talk about Somalia, the Philippines, etc. Make the American people realize they are surrounded in the world by violent extremists," he wrote.
People will "rally" to sacrifice, he noted after the meeting. "They are looking for leadership. Sacrifice = Victory."

The meeting also led Rumsfeld to write that he needed a team to help him "go out and push people back, rather than simply defending" Iraq policy and strategy. "I am always on the defense. They say I do it well, but you can't win on the defense," he wrote. "We can't just keep taking hits."

The only man to hold the top Pentagon job twice -- as both the youngest and the oldest defense secretary -- Rumsfeld suggested that the public should know that there will be no "terminal event" in the fight against terrorism like the signing ceremony on the USS Missouri when Japan surrendered to end World War II. "It is going to be a long war," he wrote. "Iraq is only one battleground."
Based on the discussion with military analysts, Rumsfeld tied Iran and Iraq. "Iran is the concern of the American people, and if we fail in Iraq, it will advantage Iran," he wrote in his April 2006 memo.

Rumsfeld declined to comment, but an aide said the points in that memo were Rumsfeld's distillation of the analysts' comments, though he added that the secretary is known for using the term "bumper stickers." "You are running a story based off of selective quotations and gross mischaracterizations from a handful of memos -- carefully picked from the some 20,000 written while Rumsfeld served as Secretary," Rumsfeld aide Keith Urbahn wrote in an e-mail. "After almost all meetings, he dictated his recollections of what was said for his own records."

In one of his longer ruminations, in May 2004, Rumsfeld considered whether to redefine the terrorism fight as a "worldwide insurgency." The goal of the enemy, he wrote, is to "end the state system, using terrorism, to drive the non-radicals from the world." He then advised aides "to test what the results could be" if the war on terrorism were renamed.

Neither Europe nor the United Nations understands the threat or the bigger picture, Rumsfeld complained in the same memo. He also lamented that oil wealth has at times detached Muslims "from the reality of the work, effort and investment that leads to wealth for the rest of the world. Too often Muslims are against physical labor, so they bring in Koreans and Pakistanis while their young people remain unemployed," he wrote. "An unemployed population is easy to recruit to radicalism."
If radicals "get a hold of" oil-rich Saudi Arabia, he added, the United States will have "an enormous national security problem."

The memos delve into issues beyond Iraq and terrorism. In a memo to national security adviser Stephen J. Hadley in July 2006, Rumsfeld warned that the United States is "getting run out of Central Asia" by the Russians, who are doing a "considerably better job at bullying" than Washington is doing to "counter their bullying."
As public discontent and congressional questioning grew in 2006, his final year at the Pentagon, a series of snowflakes revealed a man determined to counter the chorus of media criticism in one- or two-line zingers to staff members about specific articles.
"I think you ought to get a letter off about Ralph Peters' op-ed in the New York Post. It is terrible," he writes on Feb. 6, 2006. In a Feb. 2 New York Post column, Peters decried "chronic troop shortages in Iraq" while the Pentagon buys "high-tech toys that have no missions."

On March 10, he commanded J. Dorrance Smith, the assistant defense secretary for public affairs, to craft a "better presentation to respond to this business that the Department of Defense has no plan. This is just utter nonsense. We need to knock it down hard." A Washington Post-ABC News poll that month found that 65 percent of Americans thought that Bush had no plan for victory.
On March 20, Rumsfeld ordered a point-by-point analysis of the seven "mistakes" columnist Trudy Rubin wrote about in the Philadelphia Inquirer and a response to her essay -- which he wanted to see before it was sent out. Rubin wrote that the war had "gone sour."

"Please have someone find precisely when I said 'dead-enders' and what the context was," he ordered Smith in September 2006.
A November 2006 editorial in the New York Times that said the Army was ruined "is disgraceful," Rumsfeld wrote to Smith. The editorial said that "one welcome dividend" of Rumsfeld's departure was that the United States would "now have a chance to rebuild the Army he spent most of his tenure running down."

Rumsfeld later reprimanded his staff, writing, "I read the letter we sent in rebuttal. I thought it rather weak and not signed at the level it should have been." He then instructed staffers to prepare an article about the Army. "We need to get that story out," he wrote on Nov. 28, 2006, a Tuesday. He ordered a draft by Friday.


Which statement is the best one sentence summary of the article by Robin Wright?

A. Donald Rumsfeld's "snowflakes" memos were lovely holiday gifts for aides and Cabinet members.

B. Rumsfeld formulates policy on the fly with the icy bite of the "snowflake memos."

C. Donald Rumsfeld is the most ignorant, arrogant asshole on the planet, and he should have done Lynndie England's time in the Miramar Brig.


So read the following articles before Thanksgiving when you have to deal with that right-wing uncle that you have to smile at and be nice to when you want to throw that nasty giblet gravy, or that God-awful green barf-looking jello mold that nobody ever had the chutzpah to tell mom that everybody hates, in his stupid Fox newz spewing pie-hole.


Scottiebot spills the beans, Cheney leaked CIA agent's name

(smile in uncky dum-dum's face K?)


EXCLUSIVE: Daniel Ellsberg Says Sibel Edmonds Case 'Far More Explosive Than Pentagon Papers'
BLOGGED BY Brad Friedman ON 11/19/2007 4:46AM

Really big smile for uncky dum dum....

'cause we know better, eh?

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Monday, November 19, 2007

NYT Monday Nov 19, 2007

U.S. Hopes to Use Pakistani Tribes Against Al Qaeda
n the Swat region, a member of the Frontier Corps, a paramilitary force that has about 85,000 soldiers, stood guard at a bazaar.
By ERIC SCHMITT, MARK MAZZETTI and CARLOTTA GALL
Published: November 19, 2007

Goldman Sachs Rakes In Profit in Credit Crsis
By JENNY ANDERSON and LANDON THOMAS Jr.
Published: November 19, 2007

Chinese Dam Projects Criticized for Their Human Costs
The Three Gorges Dam is projected as an anchor in a string of hydropower “mega-bases” planned for the middle and upper reaches of the Yangtze River.
By JIM YARDLEY
Published: November 19, 2007


Keeping Witnesses Off Stand to Keep Them Safe
Scared Silent
Detective Sgt. Ronald Hampton of the State Police gang unit.
By DAVID KOCIENIEWSKI
Published: November 19, 2007

U.S. Says Attacks in Iraq Fell to Feb. 2006 Level
By CARA BUCKLEY and MICHAEL R. GORDON
Published: November 19, 2007

Child Matadors Draw Olés in Mexico’s Bullrings
Michelito Lagravere Peniche, 9, one of Mexico’s youngest bullfighters, confronts a calf in Mérida. More Photos >
By MARC LACEY
Published: November 19, 2007

Sunday, November 18, 2007

this is why people avoid the real news

The true Economic Cost of Iraq
Larry Johnson
November 18, 2007 at 7:51 PM


Preparing for Life After Oil
By Michael T. Klare
11/18/07 The Nation


Because it's baaaaaaaaaaad. Oy.

Republic vs. Democracy

November 17, 2007 at 17:55:30
by Mark E. Smith Page 1 of 1 page(s)
OpEdnews.com/
Republic vs. Democracy
by Mark E. Smith
Do you think we have a democratic form of government? Think again! When progressives call for democracy, the response from regressives is often that we do not have a democracy, we have a republic. A republic, we're told, is a representative form of democracy, so many people think that we do at least have a type of democracy. We do not. The republic we have in the USA is not only undemocratic, it is anti-democratic. The reason for this is that while we supposedly have the right to elect our representatives, in reality we do not, as I explain below, and we also lack the power to remove them for refusing to represent us, as many of us have already learned the hard way. Without the power to elect representatives who will protect our interests, and to remove them if they fail to do so, we cannot be said to have a democratic form of government.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

The Major Daily Sheds Its D.C. Eyes

Holy Crap, how did I miss this one?

Monday, Nov. 12, 2007

Marcus Stern is the author of the best article I’ve ever read in The San Diego Union-Tribune. His June 2005 article about Randy "Duke" Cunningham’s home sale was a classic example of what Bob Woodward of The Washington Post famously referred to as the "Holy Shit" story because that’s exactly what I said after reading it....

...The news service was established to serve the company’s chain of newspapers, but almost all of those papers have been sold off to pay owner David Copley’s estate taxes. The death of Copley’s mother, Helen, in 2004 left her only child with a staggering debt to the IRS. (Estate taxes are sometimes blamed for killing off family-owned newspapers in America.)

...Faced with insufficient resources to pay the bill, Copley probably had little choice but to sell off the company’s dailies in Ohio and Illinois this year with the goal of hanging on to the flagship Union-Tribune...

...No one would have missed Copley New Service had it perished in the first half of its 52-year existence. The news service that ended Cunningham’s career reportedly began life as a CIA front. James S. Copley, David’s father, offered President Eisenhower his fledgling news service to act as "the eyes and ears" of the U.S. intelligence community in Latin America, according to a 1977 expose by journalists Joe Trento and Dave Roman in Penthouse magazine. CIA operatives were placed on the payroll, the story goes, and the new service exchanged information for scoops. It was all furiously denied by the Copleys, but even the company’s own historian conceded that the news service had a "sad and thoroughly undistinguished" past.

Ummm hmmmm. You don't really wonder why I call the San Diego Uniion Tribune " the Fishwrap," do you?

Friday, November 16, 2007

Artsy fartsy



All this hanging around artists makes me think of my favorite painting by Adolphe-William Bouguereau


The art show was great.
More of the best work there can be seen if you click on the image below, and scroll down

US Senate blocks bill to pay for Iraq, Afghanistan without restrictions

ANNE FLAHERTY Associated Press Writer
(AP) - WASHINGTON-The U.S. Senate on Friday blocked a Republican proposal to pay $70 billion (€47.7 billion) for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan without strings attached.

.."There is a misperception that this department can continue funding our troops in the field for an indefinite period of time through accounting maneuvers, that we can shuffle money around the department. This is a serious misconception," Gates told reporters at the Pentagon.

As a result, he said he is faced with the undesirable task of preparing to cease operations at Army bases by mid-February, and lay off about 100,000 defense department employees and an equal number of civilian contractors. A month later, he said, similar moves would have to be made by the Marines.

Some members of Congress believe the Pentagon can switch enough money to cover the war accounts, Gates said. But he added that he only has the flexibility to transfer about $3.7 billion (€2.5 billion) which is just one week's worth of war expenses. Lawmakers, he said, may not understand how complicated and restrictive the situation is.

Completely unrelated, but more interesting than I can do this morning. President of Venezuela: The Venezuelan President says they will cut off oil exports to the US if it decides to attack Iran


What is economic growth?

Wed SDUT Nove 14, 2007

Bond funding delays put some plans on hold
By Ed Mendel
STAFF WRITER
November 14, 2007

Bhutto calls for her rivals to unite
She says Pakistan leader should quit, rules out deal
NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE AND THE WASHINGTON POST
November 14, 2007

Vaccine-preventable deaths mostly eliminated
It's first time CDC has done a review
NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE AND BLOOMBERG NEWS SERVICE
November 14, 2007


New laws spur run on land, turbines
By Ted Sickinger
NEWHOUSE NEWS SERVICE
November 14, 2007


Championship bridge players slammed over anti-Bush sign
By Stephanie Strom
NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE
November 14, 2007

Th WaPo Nov 15,2007

Turmoil replaces treatment at Coalinga hospital

Shades of gray in fiction

Randi Lynn Beach / For The Times
Elaine Petrocelli, owner of Book Passage stores in San Francisco and Corte Madera, says Alice Sebold's novel "The Almost Moon" is "bold" and "brilliant."
As the target audience ages, protagonists are dealing with the same unsettling issues as baby boomers -- IN LARGER PRINT.
By Maria L. La Ganga, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
November 15, 2007


Airport tests reveal major security flaws
Investigators smuggled parts for liquid bombs past screeners at 19 locations. Changes at TSA are expected.
By Nicole Gaouette, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
November 15, 2007

Evangelical flocks on their own at the polls

AT THE CORE: Concern over security could lead Christian conservatives to overlook disagreements with Rudolph Giuliani, above, at a campaign stop in a Kirkland, Wash., cafe last month.
Conservative Christian leaders are increasingly reluctant to get political, leaving a key Republican voting bloc divided. The trend may help Giuliani but hurt the GOP in the long term.
By Stephanie Simon and Mark Z. Barabak, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
November 15, 2007

Monkey embryos cloned for stem cells, scientists say

Work published online by the journal Nature, a US-led team said they had created cloned embryos from rhesus macaques using the same method that created Dolly the Sheep and other animals.
The breakthrough is said to be a step toward doing the same with humans.
By Karen Kaplan and Thomas H. Maugh II, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
November 15, 2007

LAPD's Muslim mapping plan killed
Carlos Chavez / Los Angeles Times
The reversal comes after a week of protests from Muslim groups and civil libertarians, who equated the mapping with religious profiling.
By Richard Winton and Teresa Watanabe, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers November 15, 2007

Saturday, November 10, 2007

still reading



Tedious slog so far, but lately I have the attention span of a ground squirrel.

I think I'll take a short break and watch the author speak

We're not buying Cheney's bullshit this time.

Cheney Tried to Stifle Dissent in Iran National Intelligence Estimate
By Gareth Porter
WASHINGTON, Nov 8 (IPS) - A National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iran has been held up for more than a year in an effort to force the intelligence community to remove dissenting judgments on the Iranian nuclear programme, and thus make the document more supportive of U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney's militarily aggressive policy toward Iran, according to accounts of the process provided by participants to two former Central Intelligence Agency officers....

Rep. Dennis Kucinich: Effort to Impeach Vice President Cheney Still Alive
Democracy Now! 11/09/07

(What a great listen, no wonder the msm does their best to marginalize Kucinich)

The question I have is whether or not this will ever make it out of the Judiciary committee? Any of these critters belong to you?

Friday, November 09, 2007

Lions for Lambs

Lions for Lambs

Hope I get to see it today.

10:08 AM 11/10/2007 nope, not yet

update 11:09 AM 11/12/2007 Saw it yesterday. My friend loved it. I walked out thinking "Eh, feh."

Unless you are

A) Apolitical or twelve years old

B) Uninformed or misinformed (read drooling right-wing Faux Newz watcher)

C) Have had your head up your ass for last 6 years

There are no surprises in this movie.

Thursday, November 08, 2007

WaPo Nov 8 2007

D.C. Tax Workers Charged In Scam
2 Accused of Taking $16 Million Worth Of Illegal Refunds

By Carol D. Leonnig, Clarence Williams and David Nakamura
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, November 8, 2007; Page A01



Clinton, in Particular, Draws Equal Parts Cash and Vitriol
By Jose Antonio Vargas For Candidates, Web Is Power And Poison
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, November 8, 2007; Page A01

How Blackwater Sniper Fire Felled 3 Iraqi Guards
Witnesses Call Shooting From Justice Ministry Unprovoked, But State Dept. Cleared Its Security Team After a Brief Probe
By Steve Fainaru
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, November 8, 2007; Page A01

Kaine Hails 'Balance' in New Political Landscape
By Tim Craig and Anita Kumar
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, November 8, 2007; Page A01


Bhutto Urges Protest Against Musharraf

By Griff Witte
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, November 8, 2007; Page A01
Read the whole article.

Women in Sri Lanka, South Africa, Cuba and Lesotho have it better than women in the US?

SRI LANKA HUMAN RIGHTS WOES CONTINUE -- United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour criticized Sri Lanka's human rights record this week, questioning whether the government has the political will to address concerns expressed by human rights groups and the international community."In the context of the armed conflict and the emergency measures taken against terrorism, the weakness of the rule of law and the prevalence of impunity is alarming," Arbour said Oct. 13 at the end of a visit to the country.Human rights groups estimate 1,100 people have disappeared or been killed since the government signed a 2002 truce with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelan. Reports of abuses increased after hostilities recommenced last year.Both sides in the civil war, which has raged on-and-off since 1983, leaving over 70,000 dead, have been repeatedly accused of human rights violations. Despite many public statements of support for upholding human rights, the government stands accused of extrajudicial killings, forced relocations and illegal detentions.Four human rights activists resigned from the government's human rights panel Oct. 15, citing a belief that the government is not serious about addressing problems."We were not achieving anything. . . . We served the committee for one and half years, the human rights situation is getting worse," Rohan Edrisinha, one of the four, told Reuters. "We began to realize that in a sense serving in an advisory committee wasn't really yielding any concrete results from the ground when it comes to human rights issues."

Rape in South Africa
Aired March 23, 2006 - 18:00:00 ET


Lesotho
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices - 2005Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor March 8, 2006
• allegations of torture by security forces
• excessive force against detainees
• impunity
• poor prison conditions
• lengthy pretrial detention and long delays in trials
• regular occurrence of domestic violence
• severe restrictions on women's rights
• societal discrimination against persons with disabilities and HIV/AIDS
• child labor in the agriculture and informal sectors


The IWMF also recognized Ethiopia's Serkalem Fasil, who was jailed and, under deplorable conditions, delivered a child prematurely. She was incarcerated because of articles her publications carried that were critical of the government during the May 2005 elections. According to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, only China and Cuba have a worse ranking than Ethiopia for their treatment of journalists.

Well, I guess it's all relative, eh?

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

What the Sam Hill

is going on in this world?

Georgia under state of emergency
The prime minister initially announced a state of emergency in the capital Tbilisi for 48 hours, but that was later extended to the whole country for 15 days.

At war with the law: Pakistan faces the consequences of a power grab
By Jo Johnson Published: November 7 2007 18:46 | Last updated: November 7 2007 18:46


I know I'm not the only one who's wondering if W is taking notes or calling the shots here?

Uh huh, that's what I thought:


Musharraf: Three Steps ahead of Bush in the Dictatorship Race
November 7, 2007 at 10:22:17
by Tumerica Page 1 of 1 page(s)
... San Diego households on average pay 34 percent more for consumer goods and services each year than the rest of the country, mostly for life's necessities: shelter, healthcare, food, and transportation. Thus, true poverty in San Diego is greater than what the federal threshold presents...


...In 2006, more than 330,000 residents of San Diego County lived below the federal poverty level, which last year stood at $20,614 for a family of four...

If that is their reported income, then obviously that family of four has at least the same amount coming in under the table in order to survive.

SDUT nov 7, 2007

Are retail clinics a healthy choice?
Outlets opening in county could fill niche; physicians warn of drawbacks
By Keith Darcé
STAFF WRITER

House overrides Bush's veto of water projects
Battle over spending bills intensifies
By Carl Hulse
NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE
November 7, 2007

Underequipped and overenrolled
New Lincoln High beset with problems
By Helen Gao
STAFF WRITER
November 7, 2007

Facebook ads may revive privacy issues
Friends can be used to endorse products
By Anick Jesdanun
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Being a bit chubby might not be so bad
It may help fend off some ills, study says
By Lindsey Tanner
ASSOCIATED PRESS
November 7, 2007

Cracks me up

This creative link title from Buzzflash made me laugh:

Brownback to Endorse McCain, Robertson for Giuliani; Being a Republican right now must be like shopping in a grocery store after a riot. Not much left on the shelf to pick through. 11/7

And now that I'm smiling, Here's Kucinich on the Cheney Impeachment via BlueGal at Crooks and Liars

Tuesday, November 06, 2007

LA times front page tuesday nov 6 2007

Writers work picket lines as TV shows shut down
The WGA strike hits late-night programs first. It will take longer to affect series and films.
By John Horn
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
November 6, 2007

Arrests mount in Pakistan crisis
Musharraf rounds up lawyers and other foes amid international condemnation of his
emergency rule.
By Laura King
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

Housing crisis tests GOP loyalties
The party could suffer in fast-growing exurban counties, where the real estate market is worst.
By Maura Reynolds
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
November 6, 2007


Sharing space, then lives
Aging homeowners find practical benefits in opening their doors to younger roommates. Sometimes, they forge strong bonds.
By Catherine Saillant
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

Drug traffickers dive in
Submersibles are used to ferry narcotics. Some in U.S. fear the tactic may inspire terrorists.
By Chris Kraul

Schwarzenegger orders plan for 10% budget cuts
The directive to all state agencies comes amid projections of a growing shortfall driven by the housing downturn.
By Evan Halper
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

November 6, 2007

Monday, November 05, 2007

Mon Nov 5 NYT

Pakistan Rounds Up Musharraf’s Political Foes
U.S. Is Likely to Continue Aid to Pakistan

Trial Near for Shiite Ex-Officials in Sunni Killings

Fixing Citigroup Will Test Rubin By ERIC DASH

A History of Neglect Foster Children at Risk, and an Opportunity Lost
By LESLIE KAUFMAN

Different Rules When a Rival Is a Woman? November 5, 2007
Political Memo
By ADAM NAGOURNEY and PATRICK HEALY

2007 Weblog Awards and thieving journalists

Go vote pleeeeeaaaaaaase!

(Unless you think the Little Green Fascists deserve to win)

PS, anybody that comes up with the term
"blogtopia" is number one in my book.


PSS, would somebody please whack Joel Stein over the head with a copy of the ten commandments, you know, like you do when the dog is bad.

Or in this case, when the dog is good.

Sunday, November 04, 2007

How politics really work in the USA

This is for you non Americans who would rather look down your nose at Americans for "electing" "representatives" who suck, than to actually figure out why that may be.

First of all this is a Republic, not a Democracy.

The electoral college sucks.

The pay to play system sucks.

The fact that worthwhile candidates never get media exposure sucks.

Quid pro quo sucks.

Campaign ads suck.

Our whole media system sucks, and you're next, bitches, those greedy media giants won't spare you, either.

Last, but certainly not least, our voting machines suck.

The voting machines really suck.

Saturday, November 03, 2007

Brand name spies and disaster capitalism

Blackwater's Owner Has Spies for Hire
Ex-U.S. Operatives Dot Firm's Roster
By Dana Hedgpeth
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, November 3, 2007; Page A01

First it became a brand name in security for its work in Iraq and Afghanistan. Now it's taking on intelligence.

Somehow I don't think these particular spies' investigatory talents will be utilized to discover the origins of the Harris fire.



Yeah, leave it to Cofer Black.

I'm so cynical that I think soon there will be shit going on in the border area that we residents of San Diego have NEVER seen before. Weird shit like, oh, how about suicide car bombers ramming Border Patrol vehicles? That's always a clue that the CIA is pulling shit in the neighborhood. Or drug runners using illegal Mexican mules except for maybe one of the mule's backpacks has explosives in it instead of drugs. These guys never stop coming up with reasons to create yet another underfunded law enforcement agency that will inevitably need to be supplemented with overpriced, overfed, overripe contractors who are accountable to no one. Double-dipping ain't near enough money for these greedy motherfuckers.

Hey, didn't the Roman Empire rot from the inside out?


People Burn Here

Rapture Rescue 911: Disaster Response for the Chosen Naomi Klein


Whoops, missed the CityBeat Blackwater article on the 30th, here 'tis

Friday, November 02, 2007

Who Really Set the California Fires?

By Mike Davis, Tomdispatch.com. Posted November 1, 2007.

Mmm hmm. Finally. A little light shined on San Diego politics.

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Blackwater, Potrero, Naomi Klein

(update) “Shock Doctrine” Author Naomi Klein on State-Sanctioned Torture and Disaster Response for the Chosen (click on pic)

Happy Halloween.

How about a ghoulish San Diego story?


Tiny Potrero Battles County and Blackwater USA
Published on February 22, 2007
By Don Bauder

...Last July, Blackwater hired as a lobbyist Nikki Clay, a longtime cheerleader for corporate welfare (Chargers, Padres) and former president of the San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce. Blackwater brought on the developer-friendly environmental firm of Mooney, Jones & Stokes, along with other companies to make up their project team. The team quickly snuggled up to the County, which was not playing hard to get...

( San Diego County is the largest urban county in the state without its own fire department.)

Massive security contractor faces growing protest in rural California town over 824-acre base
Miriam Raftery and Muriel Kane
Published: Tuesday April 3, 2007

Good neighbor?
Blackwater keeps its eye on a tiny East County enclave.
By Pat Sherman 10/09/2007

apparently the swamp things are ugly neighbors


11:53 a.m. October 21, 2007
Potrero fire causes evacuations around Julian
SIGNONSANDIEGO NEWS SERVICES

POTRERO – Santa Ana winds of 30 to 35 mph fueled a fast-moving brush fire that broke out Sunday in Potrero and resulted in evacuations of several rural communities, authorities said.

The fire started about 9:30 a.m. near Harris Ranch Road and Potrero Valley Road and was heading northwest as the noon hour approached, but no injuries were reported. The flames jumped Highway 94, according to Cal Fire officials.


Blackwater to California: Hire us to Put Out Your Fires
October 25, 2007 07:27 PM (EST)


Blackwater = Fire-Fighter?
By Noah Shachtman October 26, 2007 3:34:02 PM
Categories: Homeland Security, Mercs

...Local groups opposed to the complex said, before the latest conflagrations near San Diego, that Blackwater West's "regular detonation of firearms would be a risk both to the fire-prone landscape as well as to the wildlife that currently calls that area home, including the golden eagle and the California condor."

Au contraire, Blackwater execs answer. Brian Bonfiglio, vice president of Blackwater West, notes that the complex's proposal includes water tanks capable of holding 35,000 gallons. "I see a tactical operation center for East County fires," he says. "Can you imagine how much of a benefit it would be if we were operational now?"...

Injured California Firefighter Anticipated Dying
Updated: 10-29-2007 09:05:04 AM
TONY MANOLATOS, Staff Writer
The San Diego Union-Tribune

Rapue, 53, was in charge of Pikop and the two other firefighters, whose names have not been released. Both are in critical condition at UCSD.

...For Pikop, the day started like every other Sunday. The crew at the San Marcos station was mowing the lawn and trimming hedges.

Rapue, the captain, was normally based at Cal Fire's Rincon station, one of 18 in the county. He was covering the San Marcos station because the regular captain was off.

The four-member team heard about the fires on the radio, so they weren't surprised when they were dispatched to Potrero, 67 miles away.

The call came in shortly after 9:30 a.m., said Pikop, who started with Cal Fire less than five months ago....


Blackwater Provided Potrero with Relief Suplies During Fires
Oct 29, 2007
Amita Sharma

Blackwater's relief effort wins praise of project foe
By Anne Krueger
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
October 30, 2007

Fire facts

Why Aren't We Better Prepared for Inevitable Disasters?
...The GOP rivals parrot the same old, increasingly irrelevant and out of touch formula of cutting taxes and dismantling government....



Let's meet Naomi Klein

The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism



Today's Fishwrap