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Friday, April 16, 2010
BFD
Derisive snort.
Big fucking deal. This morning I opened some ridiculous legalese bullshit notice and all I got out of it was that some big corporation was having to pay court fees and lawyer fees of almost 3 million and the plaintiff would get 20 grand. Our legal system is seriously retarded. Goldman Sachs will get away with ruining millions of people's lives because important people schmooze it up on the fucking golf course and the taxpayers end up paying for it all.
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Drugged warriors and drug wars
Soldiers deployed in combat zones are taking quantities of psychiatric drugs -- and military suicides are on the rise.
I have questions after reading the 2nd article. Like why no mention of how many fucking deployments does it take to end up on something to make the head shut up? Or, whether they are using meth to get over the stupids. Whether this meth is in Iraq? I hate meth.
The True Inside Story of the Catastrophic Mexican Drug Wars
Why Ciudad Juárez has a murder rate nearly four times higher than Baghdad's.
April 8, 2010 |
"...Americans spent $62.9 billion on drugs in 2000. More than half ($36.1 billion), was spent on cocaine -- of which an estimated 90 percent transits through Mexico..."
And we wonder why China and India are educating their own people and eating our lunch in the technical arenas?
I haven't been to TJ in almost 10 years. I'm still watching the eBBC - Mexico's Drug War 2010 embed, but I have doubts that even the BBC will go into Juarez.
Update 12:27 PM 4/14/2010 Hmmm, she does go to Juarez.
10:33 AM 4/20/2010
Mock, Paper, Scissors offers up the perfect and hilarious update:
"A new poll is out saying that most Americans are against legalizing pot, only 33 percent favor legalization while 55 percent oppose it.
Given that in the Great Recession, pot sales is one of the few growth industries, I think we know why, hmmmmmmmm."
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Your Tax Dollars at War: More Than 53% of Your Tax Payment Goes to the Military
by Dave Lindorff
Frontline "Heat"
2008
NR 120 minutes
"Frontline" producer Martin Smith investigates the environmental impact of big business. For years, corporations fought against compliance. That all changed when investors, advocacy groups and governments pressured companies into responsibility. But going green isn't necessarily the norm in developing countries, as Smith reveals in his journey around the world to learn how businesses everywhere are dealing with the issue.
Cast: Martin Smith
Genres: Documentary, Science and Nature Documentaries, Political Documentaries, PBS Documentaries, TV Documentaries, PBS
This movie is: Dark
Yup. It's dark. Most people won't want to watch it. I'm not most people. I'd rather have the bad news than walk around with my head up my ass.
Saturday, April 10, 2010
Fed up
U.S. agency seeks applicants for census work
Workers from certain communities needed
By Leonel Sanchez, UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
Saturday, April 10, 2010 at 12:05 a.m.
"...The San Diego office is looking for applicants who live in La Jolla, Pacific Beach, Bird Rock, Mission Beach, University City, Coronado, The Strand, Ocean Beach, Point Loma and downtown San Diego.
Officials aren’t certain why they are short of applicants from these neighborhoods.
Applicants must pass a basic skills test. The local office is offering testing in these neighborhoods through April 17.
The federal agency also is looking for census takers who can visit rural parts of East County and migrant camps in North County, said local census spokesman Robert Borboa..."
I don't know why they can't find people from those neighborhoods either, but I can't help but wonder if it's because they are
A) Too busy partying
B) Wouldn't be caught dead working for $16.50 an hour
C)Don't speak Spanish or Indian dialects and don't want to venture into the homeless camps downtown or the migrant worker camps up north or know the government doesn't want them counted anyway.
Jeez, am I cynical these days or what?
Sunday, April 04, 2010
Trying to bake cookies here
Magnitude 6.9 quake in Baja California felt in Southern California and Arizona
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES April 4, 2010 (AP)
A strong earthquake south of the U.S.-Mexico border Sunday shook high-rises in downtown Los Angeles and San Diego and was felt across Southern California and Arizona, but there were no immediate reports of major damage.
The 6.9 magnitude quake struck at 3:40 p.m. in Baja California, Mexico, about 19 miles southeast of Mexicali, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The area was hit by magnitude 3.0 quakes all week.
Had to fish out the damn eggshells from the cookie dough. My sister was trying to finish watching Weeds on Netflix, because we had to restart it, before she heads off to the parent's house.
No worries, sis finished her show, off went some cookies to the folks, and I'm off to visit Drover's Run some more.
Happy Easter, All
10:47 PM 4/4/2010
My mum directed my attention to .this clip since I haven't been the best political junkie lately. Sometimes I'm proud to be an American. We did elect him, and if nothing else the man gives great speech.
Friday, April 02, 2010
Excuse me, but what century are we living in?
April 2, 2010
Lebanese TV host Ali Hussain Sibat faces execution in Saudi Arabia for sorcery
James Hider, Middle East Correspondent
Right, yeah, enough of that nonsense.
Thursday, April 1, 2010
Gay marriage issue affects Calif. GOP Senate race
By KEVIN FREKING Associated Press Writer
...poll found that for the first time more Californians support gay marriage than oppose it....
Yup.
Thursday, April 01, 2010
Wikipedia's featured article today
Top 10 April Fools' Day Fake News Items for 2010
Ian Paul PC World
Apr 1, 2010 6:57 am
It would be nice if this were a joke, but no such luck.
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Chechen rebel says he ordered Moscow Metro attacks
Chechen rebel says he ordered Moscow Metro attacks | |
Chechen rebel leader Doku Umarov has said his group was behind Monday's double suicide bombings on the Moscow Metro, which left 39 people dead. |
Monday, March 29, 2010
Suicide bombing in Moscow
Double suicide bombings kill 37 on Moscow subway
By DAVID NOWAK Associated Press Writer
MOSCOW (AP) - Two female suicide bombers blew themselves up on Moscow's subway system as it was jam-packed with rush-hour passengers Monday, killing at least 37 people and wounding 102, officials said.
The head of Russia's main security agency said preliminary investigation places the blame on rebels from the restive Caucasus region that includes Chechnya, where separatists have fought Russian forces since the mid-1990s.
The first explosion took place just before 8 a.m. at the Lubyanka station in central Moscow. The station is underneath the building that houses the main offices of the Federal Security Service, or FSB, the KGB's main successor agency.
A second explosion hit the Park Kultury station about 45 minutes later.
Emergency Minister Sergei Shoigu said the toll was 37 killed and 102 injured, but he did not give a breakdown of casualties at each station, according to Russian news agencies.
"I heard a bang, turned my head and smoke was everywhere. People ran for the exits screaming," said 24-year-old Alexander Vakulov, who said he was on a train on the platform opposite the targeted train at Park Kultury.
"I saw a dead person for the first time in my life," said 19-year-old Valentin Popov, who had just arrived at the station from the opposite direction.
In a televised meeting with President Dmitry Medvedev, Federal Security Service head Alexander Bortnikov said body fragments of the two bombers pointed to a Caucasus connection. He did not elaborate.
"We will continue the fight against terrorism unswervingly and to the end," Medvedev said. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, on an official trip to Siberia, was being kept informed of developments, news reports said.
The blasts practically paralyzed movement in the city center as emergency vehicles sped to the stations.
In the Park Kultury blast, the bomber was wearing a belt packed with plastic explosive and set it off as the train's doors opened, said Vladimir Markin, a spokesman for Russia's top investigative body. The woman has not been identified, he told reporters.
A woman who sells newspapers outside the Lubyanka station, Ludmila Famokatova, said there appeared to be no panic, but that many of the people who streamed out were distraught.
"One man was weeping, crossing himself, saying 'thank God I survived'," she said.
The last confirmed terrorist attack in Moscow was in August 2004, when a suicide bomber blew herself up outside a city subway station, killing 10 people. Responsibility for that blast was claimed by Chechen rebels.
Russian police have killed several Islamic militant leaders in the North Caucasus recently, including one last week in the Kabardino-Balkariya region. The killing of Anzor Astemirov was mourned by contributors to two al-Qaida-affiliated Web sites.
The killings have raised fears of retaliatory strikes by the militants.
In February, Chechen rebel leader Doku Umarov warned in an interview on a rebel-affiliated Website that "the zone of military operations will be extended to the territory of Russia ... the war is coming to their cities."
Umarov also claimed his fighters were responsible for the November bombing of the Nevsky Express passenger train that killed 26 people en route from Moscow to St. Petersburg.
The Moscow subway system is one of the world's busiest, carrying around 7 million passengers on an average workday, and is a key element in running the sprawling and traffic-choked city.
Helicopters hovered over the Park Kultury station area, which is near the renowned Gorky Park.
---
Associated Press Writers Jim Heintz, Lynn Berry and Mansur Mirovalev in Moscow contributed to this report.
2010-03-29 10:24:49 GMT
Copyright 2010. The Associated Press All Rights Reserved.
The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Sunday, March 28, 2010
Reading now
(click on book for review)
Cold Warrior in a Strange Land March 22, 2006
Tom Engelhardt interviews
Chalmers Johnson
According to this audio interview Johnson is writing a new book.
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Chalmers Johnson on Media Matters with Bob McChesney
Friday, March 26, 2010
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Evolution
By Paul Rincon
Science reporter, BBC News Page last updated at 18:09 GMT, Wednesday, 24 March 2010
Scientists have identified a previously unknown type of ancient human through analysis of DNA from a finger bone unearthed in a Siberian cave.
Russia and U.S. Report Breakthrough on Arms Pact
By PETER BAKER and ELLEN BARRY
Published: March 24, 2010
"...The treaty would require each side to reduce deployed strategic nuclear warheads to roughly 1,600, down from 2,200 now, officials have said. It would also oblige each side to reduce its arsenal of strategic bombers and land- and sea-based missiles to 800, half the old limit of 1,600..."
Saudi arrests over 'terror plot'
UPDATED ON:
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
22:06 Mecca time, 19:06 GMT
"...The large cell was discovered as the result of an investigation launched after suspected al-Qaeda fighters - two of them dressed as women - tried to infiltrate the country in October with explosives..."
(ha, dudes probably forgot to use a strong deodorant and didn't use women's perfume)
Sometimes I crack me up, the way I put things together.
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
More insurance questions
Ezra Klein WaPo March 22, 2010; 2:29 PM ET
...There's nothing the bill will do to roll back past rate increases. But a lot of people are concerned that private insurers will jack their rates up in anticipation of the exchanges. This is not a concern I fully understand, to be honest. The virtue of a competitive market -- that is to say, a market in which it's easy for a lot of people to compare products and prices -- is that this sort of behavior is actually very difficult..."
Free Market, health insurance? Nonsense.
I want to know if the practice of raising the premium rates if the insurance is used will continue? I can't prove that that is what happened to me, but that is what it looked like to me.
Will the newly eligible government subsidized patient's caregiver's be reimbursed enough to cover their costs? It's not happening now, so it's hard to find a doctor who will accept these patients.
Obama to sign health bill, celebrate with allies
After signing health care bill, Obama to celebrate historic overhaul effort with supporters
DARLENE SUPERVILLE
AP News
Mar 23, 2010 08:25 EDT
Monday, March 22, 2010
Guest post by Barbara from Mahablog
Would Health Care Reform Help You?
Many obstacles and stumbling blocks remain in the way of health care reform. The House and Senate bills will have to be merged, and then the House and Senate both will vote on the final bill. We don’t yet know what will be in the final bill, or if the final bill will be passed into law. Passage will be especially difficult in the Senate, where it will need 60 votes to pass. It is still possible that after all this angst, just one grandstanding senator could kill the whole thing.
But just for fun, let’s look at what conventional wisdom says will be in the final bill and see if there is anything in it that will be an immediate benefit to people with mesothelioma cancer and other asbestos-related disease.
It is likely that the final bill will provide additional funding for state high-risk insurance pools. Currently more than 30 states run such pools, which are nonprofit, state-sponsored health insurance plans for people who can’t buy insurance because of pre-existing conditions. The biggest problem with such pools is that, often, the insurance they offer is too expensive for many who might need it. Both the Senate and House bills provide $5 billion in subsidies for state high-risk pools to make the insurance more affordable.
Under the Senate bill, beginning in 2014, private companies would no longer be able to deny coverage to adults with pre-existing conditions, nor could they charge higher premiums for people with pre-existing conditions. Until then, the state high-risk pools could provide some help.
Closing the Medicare Part D coverage gap — also called the “doughnut hole” — is another potential provision that could help some patients with asbestos-related disease. The “doughnut hole” is the gap between the coverage for yearly out-of-pocket expenses provided by Medicare Part D and Medicare’s “catastrophic coverage” threshold.
For example, in 2009 Medicare Part D paid at least 75 percent of what patients paid for prescription drugs up to $2,700. After that, patients must pay for all of their prescription medications until what they have paid exceeds $6,154. At that point, the catastrophic coverage takes over, and Medicare pays for all but 5 percent of the patient’s drug bills. The final health care reform bill probably will provide for paying at least 50 percent of out-of-pocket costs in the doughnut hole.
You may have heard the bills include budget cuts to the Medicare program, and this has been a big concern to many people. Proponents of the bill insist that savings can be found to pay for the cuts, and that people who depend on Medicare won’t face reduced services. But this is a complex issue that I want to address in a later post.
The long-term provisions probably will include many other provisions that would benefit patients with asbestos-related disease, including increased funding for medical research. Although there are many complaints about the bill coming from all parts of the political spectrum, on the whole it would be a huge benefit to many people.
— Barbara O’Brien
March 22, 2010
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Republican hypocrisy is getting old
Friday, March 19, 2010
The Hurt Locker
Okee Dokee. I wanted to see this because Kathryn Bigelow is the first female director to win the Oscar , right, and then there's the best picture thing. I thought they would explain to the audience where the title came from:
The title is a colloquialism for being injured in an explosion, as in "they sent him to the hurt locker ",[6] or for "a place of ultimate pain".[7] It dates back to the Vietnam War, where it was one of several phrases meaning "in trouble or at a disadvantage; in bad shape."[8]
Response among veterans
Right, you don't have to be a vet to know that the three man team, split up and playing cowboy was ludicrous. I had to remind myself to suspend disbelief.
I thought they might incorporate this into the story but they didn't:
(USA Today 2005)
"One enterprising EOD soldier recently came up with the idea of using a remote-controlled toy car to deliver tiny blocks of C4 plastic explosive used to blow up IEDs. The tiny radio-controlled cars, which can be equipped with video cameras, are much less costly to replace or repair than remote-controlled robots."
Right, we didn't see the toy cars, or the $5,000 BomBots. in the movie. I'm tired of searching for a cost range for robots similar to what is seen in the movie. The spec ranges are wildly variant, but from what I could quickly find, pricing appears to begin at $100,000, a lot more than a toy car and a lot less than medical and psych treatment for a soldier injured in an IED explosion. I suppose today is as good a day as any to watch this movie, but today...
Today marks the seventh anniversary of the US-led invasion of Iraq. On March 19, 2003, the United States began dropping bombs on Baghdad as thousands of US forces poured across Iraq’s borders. Seven years later, the occupation continues. In that time, over 4,300 American soldiers have died. Many thousands more have been wounded. As many as 650,000 Iraqis have been killed, with the number of wounded unknown.
Meanwhile, Iraq is suffering the worst refugee crisis in the world today. According to the United Nations, more than 4.2 million Iraqis have fled the country, many of them to neighboring Jordan and Syria. Another 1.9 million are internally displaced.
And we're in the hurt locker and Iran is stronger in the region. Bitchin'
Friday squirrel blogging
I have nothing to say about the rodents today.
I watched Coco before Chanel last night. I didn't think I would like it since I have absolutely zero interest in fashion, but I did like it. "Coco" Chanel was a strong and independent woman. The movie is about her life before she became an instantly recognizable fashion icon.
The movie piqued my interest in more of her life, so I went here and here .
Here are some Coco Chanel quotes.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Tomgram: William Astore, You Have No Say About Your Military
"Here’s an American reality: the Pentagon is our true welfare state, the weapons makers our real “welfare queens,” and we never stop shoveling money their way."
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Still reading
Not one of them is holding my interest for more than 10 or 20 minutes straight, and one of them is simply a fun book to read.
This article caught my eye today:
The Truth About American and Israeli Interests Comes Out
Posted on Mar 17, 2010
By William Pfaff
In particular, this part of the article:
"The most important and dangerous pretense has been that American and Israeli interests in the Middle East coincide. They actually conflict in basic respects. The American interest in the region is permanent good relations with the oil-producing Arab states, which remain in doubt so long as the Palestine question is unresolved."
The violence will magically end if the "Palestine question is resolved?" Well, by all means, wave that magic wand.
Monday, March 15, 2010
Gah, hollyweird
If the point of this movie is to horrify, disgust and paint a picture of a truly reprehensible character then the movie is a success. Gael García Bernal can play some really creepy parts, and William Hurt can do anything you put in front of him, but come on, this would have the movie walked out on, or the DVD pulled out of the player in a LOT of homes. If not for the actors' and actresses' performances this piece of shit wouldn't be worth a fiddler's fart. I just hope that I don't ever come face to face that whoever wrote this sick piece of crap.
Shit, I missed Chuck watching this thing? Oy. Chuck is way over the top, but it doesn't take itself seriously.
ps, I wonder how many residents of that cutthroat, hamburger grinder-like county of LA are aware of how close to death they are on a weekly basis? I know I'm aware of it now, but it's not something my stupid parents chose to inform me of.
Gee, I wonder why the women protest?
Is Iran's mullah-backed system of temporary marriage a godsend for the sexually frustrated—or religious prostitution?
— By Nadya Labi
"...Iranian feminists ardently oppose sigheh. In the summer of 2008, they were infuriated by President Ahmadinejad's attempts to push through a new "family protection" law that would have made it easier for men to contract temporary marriages...
...Only a man has the right to renew a sigheh when it expires—for another mehr—or to terminate it early. While women may have only one husband at a time, men may have four wives and are permitted unlimited temporary wives..."
I'm still reading The Devil We Know by Robert Baer. Not that I didn't know already, but ,Shia rather than Sunni Islam dominates Iran. Most fascinating to me, Baer refers to taqiya .
After reading The Ayatollah Begs to Differ by Hooman Majd and Treacherous Alliance by Trita Parsi I feel like I'm back at square one as far as Iran goes. It has gained more power and influence in the Middle East since our disastrous wars there, and I believe that it is stupid to refuse to talk to those who really have power in Iran.
Talking helps. The sanctions against Iran don't work. They just force dealings on the black market.
Beyond Sanctions: How to Solve the Iranian Riddle
By Trita Parsi Monday, Mar. 15, 2010
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Death in the war on drugs
"Many experts have pointed out that militarizing the drug war is counterproductive. Shortly after his inauguration in 2006, President Felipe Calderon began assigning large numbers of troops to fighting the drug war. The National Human Rights Commission specifically cited the case of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico’s murder capital, when it concluded that “using the Mexican military against drug cartels has brought no improvement in public safety.” "
Mexico gunmen kill American consulate staff
They kill journalists don't they?
That's what this movie was about. Juarez and dead journalists and dead factory worker girls. It's about murders, not about the drug trade, but with journalism being so dangerous, how do we know those girls were not just collateral damage?
I've been reading this site for years. They are all over the Americas. I guess I missed this one:
Tijuana: Gringo, This Bullet Is For You
Posted by Bill Conroy - February 28, 2010 at 3:22 pm
Yeesh, the article doesn't make me want to run out and get a passport to go play tourist in Tijuana, that's for sure. Didn't used to have to have a passport to go to Tijuana.
'Hit teams' attack US consular staff, families in Mexico: US
(AFP) – 7 hours ago
"...Shortly after the killings were disclosed by the White House, the State Department issued a travel warning for Mexico.
It said Americans working in consulates in the northern cities of Tijuana, Nogales, Ciudad Juarez, Nuevo Laredo, Monterrey and Matamoros were authorized to send family members home until April 12 because of security concerns.
The departure authorization only affect relatives of US government personnel in those cities, the statement said..."
The travel warning said that due to the "recent violent attacks," US citizens were urged to "delay unnecessary travel to parts of Durango, Coahuila and Chihuahua states."
Full State Dept (Mexico) warning
17 killed as Acapulco tourist idyll shattered by growing drug violence
March 15, 2010
Fucking idiot drugs gangs are shitting in their own nests by killing people on the outskirts of Acapulco.
Saturday, March 13, 2010
Think the US govt works for you?
Healthcare vs Pork
hat tips to
Danny
Do you really think congress cares more about your health than they do the campaign contributions they get from Big Ag? Allooooo? Watch King Corn on Netflix. You really think health insurance companies and Big Ag want to fight over subsidies? Fuck no they don't. They're gonna take your money to make you sick and they're gonna take your money to send your ass to the hospital and they're gonna be subsidized by your taxes for the whole sick cycle. The whole fucking time. My suspicion is that that is why we ain't getting a public option if THEIR congresswhores have anything to say about it. There. I said it.
Oversight in who's pocket this time?
Raymond J. Learsy
Scholar and author, "Over a Barrel: Breaking Oil's Grip on Our Future"
Posted: March 13, 2010 12:14 PM
Gary Gensler of the CFTC: Reformer or Wolf in Moth Eaten Sheep's Clothing?
CFTC has been defanged before:
Interview: Brooksley Born
Think again.
Friday, March 12, 2010
Be a big, white collar criminal
24 Corporate Crime Reporter 10, March 5, 2010
Ninety-five percent of criminologists study blue collar crime. Five percent study white collar crime.
Friday, March 12, 2010
UBS says IRS has 20 Swiss banks in its sights Copyright 2010. The Associated Press
Dirt Diggers Digest
chronicling corporate misbehavior (and how to research it)
Attacking the Wrong Earmarks
March 11th, 2010 by Phil Mattera
"...It’s amusing to watch the posturing about these small amounts at a time when Congress may be about to endorse what can be seen as perhaps the largest earmark ever: the healthcare subsidies that will pass from lower-income Americans to private insurers in a public-option-less system..."
Tomgram: Andy Kroll, Welcome to America, Sucker
Posted by Andy Kroll at 8:30am, March 12, 2010.
Expert Names Top Five Prisons for White-Collar Criminals
Hand caught in the corporate cookie jar?
Guilty on all counts?
Judge sentences you to the slammer?
Fear not, dear corporate CEO.
There is a guide for your post-conviction life.
It’s called the Federal Prison Handbook 2005.
And it’s co-author – Alan Ellis – wants you know – there is prison, and there is prison.
While the guidebook profiles each of the nation’s 178 federal prisons, only about a third of them are minimum security prisons – or federal prison camps – suitable for your average CEO.
And Ellis says – this is what you want – a federal prison camp.
Choose Your White-Collar Criminal Pen Pal HERE >
(I wouldn't recommend Dookie Cunningham, my ex-congressman, he's not the sharpest tool in the shed)
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Harry Reid Slams Supreme Court Justices John Roberts, Anthony Kennedy For Campaign Finance Decision
Good for Reid, glad he grew a pair. I can't even describe the loathing I have for the Roberts Court.
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost
Tuesday, March 09, 2010
Such a pretty song
by Leonel Garcia (Léon Polar)
Yo luche por tu amor por la buena y por la mala
Yo renuncie a volar cuando cortaste tus alas
Si se que hay cosas que nunca se deben perder
Pero entiende que yo te amaba
Si yo luche la guerra a veces hasta por los dos
Y como perdí y como sangre las batallas
Y hoy te puedo ver partir con mucho dolor
Pero sin cargo de conciencia
Sin cargo de conciencia no,
No lo puedo fingir siento mucho temor
Pero sin cargos de conciencia
Sin cargos de conciencia no
Di lo mejor de mi nunca me he guardado nada
Di todo lo que soy creo que a ti no te gustaba
Si se que hay veces que ya nada se puede hacer
Pero hasta hoy murió la esperanza
Si se que todo el equilibrio siempre lo mantuve yo
El que se mato por equilibrar la balanza
Y hoy te puedo ver partir con mucho dolor
Pero sin cargo de conciencia
Sin cargo de conciencia no
No lo puedo fingir siento mucho temor
Pero sin cargos de conciencia
Sin cargos de conciencia no
Hoy te puedo ver partir con mucho dolor
Pero sin cargo de conciencia
Sin cargo de conciencia no,
No lo puedo fingir siento mucho temor
Pero sin cargos de conciencia
Sin cargos de conciencia no
(Google translation)
This made me think
I have been critical of some of our military personnel here. Some of that was personal, you guys know you're hard on the local girls, especially when your girl back home dumped you. "Young and dumb and full of cum" ring a bell?
However, those of us who have waited for a phone call or a letter knowing that our loved ones might have had to make this leg of the trip know. We know the world is ungrateful for what our guys do. Of course, not all of the world is disinterested in what happens there, so our guys don't do it all alone.
It's the corruption, greed, waste and mismanagement of the big shots who tell our guys what to do that pisses me off to no end.
I was listening to this report on KPBS this morning on the power of surfing to heal ex-service members with serious injuries and I wondered if they have any problems with surfer turf. They didn't mention specific beaches, so I'm thinking the recovering service members are not using the same beaches. The surf's probably too rough and the competition gets ugly.
5:14 PM 3/9/2010
See if you can watch Body of War without tearing up. I couldn't, I cried. I got mad and wanted to pound W's face. I don't even want to know how many times Nathan has been deployed or what happened to him.
Monday, March 08, 2010
Reading now -- The Devil We Know by Robert Baer
I know Baer had something to do with Syriana and I love that movie, I threw a fit till my husband bought me a copy and I only own about a dozen movies. I don't beg my husband any more, I buy what I want. Between Neflix and the public library systems in this county, I don't need much.
Review: 'The Devil We Know'
Reviewed by Elaine Sciolino (NYT)
Published: Tuesday, October 28, 2008
I haven't read the book yet, so I don't know if I agree with the review, but I do know that we don't know shit about Iranian culture, my neighbor has been there for years and I'm still baffled, even after reading . this book , but reading it helped. The Ayatollah Begs to Differ by Hooman Majd is definitely worth reading if you are curious about Iranians, and easier to read than some Iranian authors because dude is Iranian-American who has lived here most of his life.
I came across this this morning while I was trying to remember the name of the book and author who helped me understand Iranians.
Sunday, March 07, 2010
2 Missing Teen Cases, 2 Different Police Responses
re: Amber "The news media showed little interest."
Not true. Escondido PD is busier than the Poway sheriff's dept, though, the population is larger and there are more lower income people in Escondido.
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost