Ranting and Venting

You'll see links to news articles, snippets from interviews and other web paraphenalia. This will also be a dumping ground for various stuff that I might need to get off my chest. Hence the Ranting and Venting title.


Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Bush to Say 'America Addicted to Oil'

Bush, in what he thinks is a stroke of pure genius that no one has thought of before, is going to tell Americans that we're addicted to oil.

Now what could possibly cure this dependence? IS there some kind of ethanol methadone that could ween us off this?

Hell no! The answer to our addiction? More drilling in our National Parks and Preserves! It's the "feed a cold, starve a chipmunk" method of a 12 step addiction recovery.

From the AP via Yahoo! News:
President Bush, in a push to take charge of the election-year agenda, is expected to say Tuesday that "America is addicted to oil" and must break its dependence on foreign suppliers in unstable parts of the world. In his State of the Union address, Bush also is expected to renew his commitment to the central pledge of his inaugural address. "Our nation is committed to an historic, long-term goal � we seek the end of tyranny in our world," he plans to say. "The future security of America depends on it."
While you all are probably looking forward to playing the State of the Union Drinking Game, I have something much more important to do.

That's right folks, I got a date. I'm going out with my fiancee to see a movie. I'll tell you all about it as soon as I can figure out how Underworld: Evolution relates to politics; or good movies for that matter.

The article can be found here:
Bush to Say 'America Addicted to Oil'

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The George W Bush 2006 State of the Union drinking game

You feel as trapped as I do that the State of the Union address is on tonight? Although if you can handle it, you can watch the last hour and a half of Ocean's Twelve on HBO.

Or, you can do this! The George W. Bush State of the Union Drinking game! (Dubbya's favorite national pastime)

Here's how you play! From Workingforchange.com

1. Whenever George W uses the phrases: "national security," "tax relief," "activist judges," or "affordable health care," drink two shots of beer.

2. Whenever George W mentions the tragic events of 9/11, the last person to grab a toothpick, stand, and salute must drink three shots of beer. If you stab yourself in forehead with the toothpick, drink two more shots.

3. If George W actually says, "If Al Qaeda is calling you, we want to know why." first person to finish a whole beer gets to toss Li'l Smokies at any of the others until they finish their beer. Use the toothpicks.

4. If George W makes up a word like "strategerie" or "deteriorize," drink four shots of beer.

5. If George W speaks of Hamas and repeats his earlier statement that "it's good to see people are demanding honest leadership," the first person to stop laughing gets to drink one shot of beer then pummel Suit with empty shot glass. No head shots.

6. Whenever George W talks about bi-partisanship, the last person to grab his throat in a choking motion has to eat 4 Li'l Smokies.

7. If either the Vice President Dick Cheney or First Lady Laura Bush are caught napping, last person to sing "Wake Up Little Susie, Wake Up," has to drink three shots of beer.

8. Predict the number of applause breaks. Person closest to correct number may then force the other three to drink that number of shots of beer in whatever ratio they wish.

9. Three shots of beer if he mentions New Orleans. Five shots of beer if he mentions Brownie. Two full beers if he mentions Abramoff.

10. Every time Tom DeLay is shown in the audience, take turns throwing Li'l Smokies at the TV. Suit sits out. First face hit doesn't have to drink two shots of beer. Every time Hillary Clinton is shown in the audience, Suit throws Li'l Smokies at the TV. If he hits her face, everyone else drinks two shots of beer. Use the toothpicks.

11. Whenever George W quotes the Bible, last person to fall to their knees and cry "Hallelujah!" drinks two shots of beer.

12. Whenever George W smirks during a standing ovation, take turns drinking shots of beer until the audience sits down. Do it double time if his shoulders shake with silent laughter.

The newspapers are important, no thinking person can hold anything down when Bush Speaks.

The George W Bush 2006 State of the Union drinking game

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Coretta Scott King dies

This is very sad. First we lose Rosa Parks, now we lose Coretta Scott King. She was described as a "matriarch of the movement, a patriot of all that America stands for." by The Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth, a family friend.

From CNN.com
Coretta Scott King, the widow of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., died Monday night in California, according to a former aide and a public relations firm representing the family.

Coretta King, 78, suffered a stroke and a mild heart attack last August. She was receiving further medical treatment in California in her rehabilitation.

"This is a very sad hour," U.S. Rep. John Lewis, the Democrat from Georgia, told CNN on Tuesday.

"She was the glue. Long before she met and married Martin Luther King Jr. she was an activist," he said.

On January 14, King made a surprise appearance in Atlanta at a Salute to Greatness dinner as part of the Martin Luther King Day celebrations, receiving a standing ovation as she waved at the crowd.

She did not speak at the event and was in a wheelchair.

Born in Marion, Alabama, on April 27, 1927, Coretta Scott graduated as valedictorian of her high school class and attended Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio. She received a B.A. in music and education and then studied concert singing at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, Massachusetts. She got a degree in voice and violin, according to her official biography.

While there, she met a theology student at Boston University, Martin Luther King Jr. They married on June 18, 1953, in her hometown of Marion.

As the young pastor began his civil rights work in Montgomery, Alabama, Coretta Scott King worked closely with him, organizing marches and sit-ins at segregated restaurants while raising their four children: Yolanda Denise, Martin Luther III, Dexter Scott and Bernice Albertine.

She also performed in "Freedom Concerts," singing and reading poetry to raise money for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the organization which Dr. King led as its first president.

The family endured the beating, stabbing and jailing of the civil rights leader, and their house was bombed.

After an assassin's bullet killed her husband in Memphis in 1968, Coretta Scott King turned her grief into the nurturing of her husband's legacy. She founded the King Center for Nonviolent Social Change in Atlanta, a memorial to her husband's work and dream.

She spoke out "on behalf of racial and economic justice, women's and children's rights, gay and lesbian dignity, religious freedom, the needs of the poor and homeless, full-employment, health care, educational opportunities, nuclear disarmament and ecological sanity," her biography on The King Center's Web site said.

"She wore her grief with dignity," said the Rev. Joseph Lowery, a civil rights leader. "She moved quietly but forcefully into the fray. She stood for peace in the midst of turmoil."

Coretta Scott King dies

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Monday, January 30, 2006

Spies, Lies and Wiretaps

This is a damn good op/ed that I found to hit it right on the head. Warrantless wiretaps are not legal. get over it.

From New Yourk Times:

A bit over a week ago, President Bush and his men promised to provide the legal, constitutional and moral justifications for the sort of warrantless spying on Americans that has been illegal for nearly 30 years. Instead, we got the familiar mix of political spin, clumsy historical misinformation, contemptuous dismissals of civil liberties concerns, cynical attempts to paint dissents as anti-American and pro-terrorist, and a couple of big, dangerous lies.

The first was that the domestic spying program is carefully aimed only at people who are actively working with Al Qaeda, when actually it has violated the rights of countless innocent Americans. And the second was that the Bush team could have prevented the 9/11 attacks if only they had thought of eavesdropping without a warrant.

Sept. 11 could have been prevented. This is breathtakingly cynical. The nation's guardians did not miss the 9/11 plot because it takes a few hours to get a warrant to eavesdrop on phone calls and e-mail messages. They missed the plot because they were not looking. The same officials who now say 9/11 could have been prevented said at the time that no one could possibly have foreseen the attacks. We keep hoping that Mr. Bush will finally lay down the bloody banner of 9/11, but Karl Rove, who emerged from hiding recently to talk about domestic spying, made it clear that will not happen — because the White House thinks it can make Democrats look as though they do not want to defend America. "President Bush believes if Al Qaeda is calling somebody in America, it is in our national security interest to know who they're calling and why," he told Republican officials. "Some important Democrats clearly disagree."

Mr. Rove knows perfectly well that no Democrat has ever said any such thing — and that nothing prevented American intelligence from listening to a call from Al Qaeda to the United States, or a call from the United States to Al Qaeda, before Sept. 11, 2001, or since. The 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act simply required the government to obey the Constitution in doing so. And FISA was amended after 9/11 to make the job much easier.

Only bad guys are spied on. Bush officials have said the surveillance is tightly focused only on contacts between people in this country and Al Qaeda and other terrorist groups. Vice President Dick Cheney claimed it saved thousands of lives by preventing attacks. But reporting in this paper has shown that the National Security Agency swept up vast quantities of e-mail messages and telephone calls and used computer searches to generate thousands of leads. F.B.I. officials said virtually all of these led to dead ends or to innocent Americans. The biggest fish the administration has claimed so far has been a crackpot who wanted to destroy the Brooklyn Bridge with a blowtorch — a case that F.B.I. officials said was not connected to the spying operation anyway.

The spying is legal. The secret program violates the law as currently written. It's that simple. In fact, FISA was enacted in 1978 to avoid just this sort of abuse. It said that the government could not spy on Americans by reading their mail (or now their e-mail) or listening to their telephone conversations without obtaining a warrant from a special court created for this purpose. The court has approved tens of thousands of warrants over the years and rejected a handful.

As amended after 9/11, the law says the government needs probable cause, the constitutional gold standard, to believe the subject of the surveillance works for a foreign power or a terrorist group, or is a lone-wolf terrorist. The attorney general can authorize electronic snooping on his own for 72 hours and seek a warrant later. But that was not good enough for Mr. Bush, who lowered the standard for spying on Americans from "probable cause" to "reasonable belief" and then cast aside the bedrock democratic principle of judicial review.

Just trust us. Mr. Bush made himself the judge of the proper balance between national security and Americans' rights, between the law and presidential power. He wants Americans to accept, on faith, that he is doing it right. But even if the United States had a government based on the good character of elected officials rather than law, Mr. Bush would not have earned that kind of trust. The domestic spying program is part of a well-established pattern: when Mr. Bush doesn't like the rules, he just changes them, as he has done for the detention and treatment of prisoners and has threatened to do in other areas, like the confirmation of his judicial nominees. He has consistently shown a lack of regard for privacy, civil liberties and judicial due process in claiming his sweeping powers. The founders of our country created the system of checks and balances to avert just this sort of imperial arrogance.

The rules needed to be changed. In 2002, a Republican senator — Mike DeWine of Ohio — introduced a bill that would have done just that, by lowering the standard for issuing a warrant from probable cause to "reasonable suspicion" for a "non-United States person." But the Justice Department opposed it, saying the change raised "both significant legal and practical issues" and may have been unconstitutional. Now, the president and Attorney General Alberto Gonzales are telling Americans that reasonable suspicion is a perfectly fine standard for spying on Americans as well as non-Americans — and they are the sole judges of what is reasonable.

So why oppose the DeWine bill? Perhaps because Mr. Bush had already secretly lowered the standard of proof — and dispensed with judges and warrants — for Americans and non-Americans alike, and did not want anyone to know.

War changes everything. Mr. Bush says Congress gave him the authority to do anything he wanted when it authorized the invasion of Afghanistan. There is simply nothing in the record to support this ridiculous argument.

The administration also says that the vote was the start of a war against terrorism and that the spying operation is what Mr. Cheney calls a "wartime measure." That just doesn't hold up. The Constitution does suggest expanded presidential powers in a time of war. But the men who wrote it had in mind wars with a beginning and an end. The war Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney keep trying to sell to Americans goes on forever and excuses everything.

Other presidents did it. Mr. Gonzales, who had the incredible bad taste to begin his defense of the spying operation by talking of those who plunged to their deaths from the flaming twin towers, claimed historic precedent for a president to authorize warrantless surveillance. He mentioned George Washington, Woodrow Wilson and Franklin D. Roosevelt. These precedents have no bearing on the current situation, and Mr. Gonzales's timeline conveniently ended with F.D.R., rather than including Richard Nixon, whose surveillance of antiwar groups and other political opponents inspired FISA in the first place. Like Mr. Nixon, Mr. Bush is waging an unpopular war, and his administration has abused its powers against antiwar groups and even those that are just anti-Republican.

The Senate Judiciary Committee is about to start hearings on the domestic spying. Congress has failed, tragically, on several occasions in the last five years to rein in Mr. Bush and restore the checks and balances that are the genius of American constitutional democracy. It is critical that it not betray the public once again on this score.



You can read the entire article here: (registration req'd)
Spies, Lies and Wiretaps

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How George W. Bush creates Socialism

This will steam up some right wingers. Check the comments frequently for swearing.

How George W. Bush creates Socialism:
Mexico's leftist candidate for President vows to help the poor and elderly, to clean up corruption and to not be a puppet of George W. Bush. Newly elected Presidents of Bolivia, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Brazil, Venezuela, Spain and Norway elect likewise. All these countries have participated in free and open democratic elections.

The Palestinian Territories have within the last few days elected an avowed terrorist organization to lead their people, all through the democratic process. Meanwhile, the world's largest Communist State finds its standard of living rising faster than an Atlas Rocket due in large measure to cheap Chinese Exports touted by The Bush Administration as benefiting the American Consumer.

Despite their loss, liberals still hold a fighting position in Canada's Parliament as well as in Germany. Why this tilt toward the state and away from the individual. It has to do with the pit bull on the block or what is perceived as America's King Tut Syndrome.

Teddy Roosevelt may have been right by living up to the moniker of "the twentieth century belonging to America." President Roosevelt was consumed by an expansionist view of world affairs. But a century later, the rhetoric inside the beltway with respect to world opinion is akin to a " Tail bites dog " philosophy.

The George W. Bush Doctrine of personal empowerment, preemtive strike and free market excess overlooks the moral and ethical implications upon both the state and world itself. Additionally, while America touts the evil doers of September 11 as enemies of freedom, the rest of the planet asks a very wise question. That is, why would anyone commit such an horrendous crime? Expressions of nationalism are to be expected when a nation's security is under siege.

The American Experience in Iraq is much similar to The Vichy Regime in France during 1940-44. That is, the United States -- much like the German Occupation of France during the Second World War -- is considered an unwelcome force.

Wise men understand however, the need to cultivate one's own garden. Our Federal Government's response to the horrors and ravages of Hurricane Katrina was a call to arms by leftist candidates throughout the world. We are in essense, the poster child for everything the world seeks to abolish including corporate and government corruption, lack of affordable healthcare, raping of the enviroment, cultural insensitivity and decreasing civil liberties.

The recent election of so-called socialist leaders throughout the world is ironically a backlash to a foreign policy meant to protect and preserve our Republic. Furthermore, countries such as Spain, Poland and Italy are now gradually withdrawing their troops from Iraq. These countries were prostituted by America's Foreign Policy blunders and now see our government for it's true colors and it is not pretty folks.

If charity begins at home then let us protect America from within by reason, lessons from the past, a collaboration of ideas presentated by the world body politic together with America's wise men. It was not long ago that our great beloved nation aspired and attained greatness throughout the world. The horrifying events of 9-11 have propelled these great United States into a moral, ethical and legal free fall that can only be reconciled at the ballot box. See you in November.
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Sunday, January 29, 2006

INFORMATIVE HUB: NASA Supporters Fear Bush May Cut Space Plan

Hello everyone,

This will be my first of many posts which are of a political nature. So without further delay...

After reading this article I was.. *ACK!* ***pause*** What the... My apologies, I seem to have some type of horrble taste in my mouth... ***pause*** Well what'a ya know... Another taste of Bush's blacklashes which I'm sure of more to come in our future days.

President Bush has finally won endorsement of his "Vision for Space Exploration" from a once-skeptical Congress, but supporters now fear the administration is backing away from its own initiative to send humans back to the moon and then on to Mars.

For at least three months, the White House Office of Management and Budget and NASA have struggled to find a way to make up a budget shortfall of between $3 billion and $5 billion and perhaps more, in the troubled space shuttle program -- and to do so without inflating overall space spending well beyond the $16.5 billion that NASA has this year.

Congress last month unanimously passed a bipartisan bill -- which Bush signed -- endorsing the vision for the first time and urging the president to fund NASA for $17.9 billion in 2007 and $18.7 billion in 2008.

Lawmakers gave several reasons for embracing a program they had widely criticized after Bush announced it in early 2004, but all cited as a contributing factor the arrival last year of new NASA Administrator Michael D. Griffin, a blunt-spoken space scientist and engineer.

"He is very, very competent and knows how these things work," said Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Tex.), who heads the Senate Commerce subcommittee on science and space and is a key player in the space debate. "If he comes back to us and says there's a need for more money, I think he can get it."

But the question now being asked on Capitol Hill is whether Bush will ask for enough money to keep the vision on track when the administration rolls out its 2007 budget Feb. 6, or whether he will shortchange the shuttle program or cripple the new exploration initiative or both. Bush has said he intends to freeze discretionary spending unrelated to national security for the next five years.

Shortchanging the space budget, lawmakers said, should not be an option. "This is a period of transformation," said Rep. Ken Calvert (R-Calif.), chairman of the House Science subcommittee on space and aeronautics. "We are at the dawn of a new space age, and we have to do it right."

Industry and congressional sources said the administration has abandoned an early OMB proposal to slash the number of planned shuttle flights by more than half, but hemmed in by other budget priorities, especially the war in Iraq, it still appears unwilling to fund a full slate of 19 flights.

Continued...

Saturday, January 28, 2006

Republicans are liars (again)

How many times do we have to say this? Abramoff did not give any money to Democrats! Nor did he direct any of his clients to give money to Democrats. Money the Tribes donated to Democrat went down after Abramoff started working for them. Quit trying to lie to the American public any more than you usually do!

Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo writes:

Oops. New study by non-partisan research firm says no dice to claims Jack Abramoff was steering tribal money to Dems like he was to Republicans. In fact, the study suggests opposite.

Some nuggets ...

The analysis shows that when Abramoff took on his tribal clients, the majority of them dramatically ratcheted up donations to Republicans. Meanwhile, donations to Democrats from the same clients either dropped, remained largely static or, in two cases, rose by a far smaller percentage than the ones to Republicans did. This pattern suggests that whatever money went to Democrats, rather than having been steered by Abramoff, may have largely been money the tribes would have given anyway.

and this ...

The analysis shows:

in total, the donations of Abramoff'’s tribal clients to Democrats dropped by nine percent after they hired him, while their donations to Republicans more than doubled, increasing by 135 percent after they signed him up;

five out of seven of Abramoff'’s tribal clients vastly favored Republican candidates over Democratic ones;

four of the seven began giving substantially more to Republicans than Democrats after he took them on;

Abramoff'’s clients gave well over twice as much to Republicans than Democrats, while tribes not affiliated with Abramoff gave well over twice as much to Democrats than the GOP -- exactly the reverse pattern.

The truth is that only idiots and liars (actually, I guess the liars 'say' but don't 'believe') think the Abramoff operation was really bipartisan in any meaningful sense. But here's at least some more data points to add to the mix.

The American Prospect commissioned the analysis and it was carried out by Dwight L. Morris and Associates, a for-profit firm specializing in campaign finance and has done research for many media outlets.

Greg Sargent of The American Prospect writes:

[F]our out of seven tribes -- Saginaw, Chitimacha, Coushatta and Mississippi --– saw their contributions to Republicans increase significantly, even vastly, after they became Abramoff'’s clients.

At the same time, two of those four tribes -- Saginaw and Chitimacha -- saw their giving to Democrats drop or remain static. The other two -- tribes Coushatta and Mississippi -- did see their giving to Dems rise under Abramoff, but by amounts that were dwarfed by the increases in giving to the GOP.

These patterns strongly suggest that Abramoff'’s representation of the tribes manifested itself largely in a dramatic rise in contributions to the GOP. And it also suggests it's likely that Abramoff had little impact on giving to Democrats.

Nor does it appear likely that Abramoff steered contributions to Dems from the remaining three tribes who didn'’t see their giving to the GOP climb. Of those three tribes, one tribe -- Pueblo of Sandia -- saw a negligible shift in donations to both parties. The second -- Agua Caliente -- slashed its contributions to both parties, but even so, the percentage of that tribe'’s giving that went to Republicans still rose dramatically. The third -- Cherokee Nation -- simply stopped giving altogether.

The big picture is also compelling. Taken together, Abramoff's tribal clients gave $868,890 to Dems before hiring him; afterwards, they gave $794,483 -- a decrease of nine percent. By contrast, the tribes'’ donations to Republicans went from $786,560 pre-Abramoff to $1,845,975 after he became their lobbyist -- an increase of 135 percent. In other words, when Abramoff entered the picture, contributions to Dems dropped, while donations to Republicans more than doubled.

Are they that obsessed with power that they need to lie to the American people in their feeble attempt to retain control of Congress?

The entire article can be read here:
New proof Republicans are liars

The American Prospect article can be found here:
Dems Don'’t Know Jack

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Know Your Creationists: Know Your Friends

OK people, this guy is on our side. This is the guy you turn to when idiots in your area want Intelligent Design. Bookmark his site, remember his name. Have his phone number tattooed on your favorite Christian Ultra-Conservative.

DarkSyde of DailyKos writes:

Do you feel that Separation of Church and State is integral to the health of the nation and to the integrity of religious freedom for every American? Are you worried your community may become the next national embarrassment, solely because of a few knuckle dragging anti-science demagogues dominating your local school board? Or maybe you're an atheist, an agnostic, or progressive Christian, who is sick and tired of religion being hijacked to fill the coffers of political opportunists and right-wing ideologues? Perhaps you're a science teacher? If so, I have a friend I'd like you to meet: His job is to help you, and with a little help from his friends, it's a job he's exceedingly good at it.

Dr. Wesley Elsberry works for the National Center for Science Education, which means he works for anyone who values science and science ed. Wesley and the NCSE were a driving force behind the recent win in the Dover, Pa. Intelligent Design Creationism case. And he is something else: Living proof that not only can you be a Christian and embrace science, you can actively work to expose and defeat those who would happily cast you or your religious friends as ignorant dopes in order advance the most un-American policies in living memory. I had a chance to chat with Wesley and ask him about the recent victory, future battles, his religious beliefs, and related issues. His answers below are illuminating; his critique of purveyors of anti-science who misuse his own Christian faith, is sharp.
The entire article can be found here:
Know Your Creationists: Know Your Friends

His website is here:
National Center for Science Education

Post-Katrina Promises Unfulfilled

Post-Katrina Promises Unfulfilled:
Nearly five months after Hurricane Katrina swamped New Orleans, President Bush's lofty promises to rebuild the Gulf Coast have been frustrated by bureaucratic failures and competing priorities, a review of events since the hurricane shows.

While the administration can claim some clear progress, Bush's ringing call from New Orleans's Jackson Square on Sept. 15 to "do what it takes" to make the city rise from the waters has not been matched by action, critics at multiple levels of government say, resulting in a record that is largely incomplete as Bush heads into next week's State of the Union address.

The problems include the slow federal cleanup of debris in Mississippi and Louisiana; a lack of authority for Bush's handpicked recovery coordinator, Donald E. Powell; the shortage and poor quality of housing for evacuees; and federal restrictions on reconstruction money and where coastal communities can rebuild.

With the onset of the hurricane season just four months away, there is no agreement on how to rebuild New Orleans, how to pay for that effort or even who is leading the cross-governmental partnership, according to elected leaders. While there is money to restore the city's flood defenses to protect against another Category 3 hurricane, it remains unclear whether merely reinforcing the levees will be enough to draw residents back.

New strains emerged this week when Bush aides rejected a plan by Rep. Richard H. Baker (R-La.) to set up a government corporation that would buy back the mortgages of storm-damaged homes around New Orleans. Instead, the government limited the use of $6.2 billion in grants to the rebuilding of 20,000 homes destroyed outside federally insured flood zones.
He's too busy getting people killed in the middle east.

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Friday, January 27, 2006

US Psyops revealed and affecting Americans

The BBC has an article about a recently declassified document written in 2003 about the U.S. Military's "Information Operations". For instance, psychlolgical operations to propaganda to attacks on computer networks.

Adam Brooks of the BBC writes:
Bloggers beware.

As the world turns networked, the Pentagon is calculating the military opportunities that computer networks, wireless technologies and the modern media offer.

From influencing public opinion through new media to designing "computer network attack" weapons, the US military is learning to fight an electronic war.

The declassified document is called "Information Operations Roadmap". It was obtained by the National Security Archive at George Washington University using the Freedom of Information Act.

Officials in the Pentagon wrote it in 2003. The Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld, signed it.
I'm reading the 'roadmap' PDF right now. It's a little strange... They want to control "all of the electromagnetic spectrum"
The operations described in the document include a surprising range of military activities: public affairs officers who brief journalists, psychological operations troops who try to manipulate the thoughts and beliefs of an enemy, computer network attack specialists who seek to destroy enemy networks.

Perhaps the most startling aspect of the roadmap is its acknowledgement that information put out as part of the military's psychological operations, or Psyops, is finding its way onto the computer and television screens of ordinary Americans.

"Information intended for foreign audiences, including public diplomacy and Psyops, is increasingly consumed by our domestic audience," it reads.

"Psyops messages will often be replayed by the news media for much larger audiences, including the American public," it goes on.

The document's authors acknowledge that American news media should not unwittingly broadcast military propaganda. "Specific boundaries should be established," they write. But they don't seem to explain how.
It starts to get creepy, talking about the internet as an enemy
When it describes plans for electronic warfare, or EW, the document takes on an extraordinary tone.

It seems to see the internet as being equivalent to an enemy weapons system.

"Strategy should be based on the premise that the Department [of Defense] will 'fight the net' as it would an enemy weapons system," it reads.

The slogan "fight the net" appears several times throughout the roadmap.
Here's where they want the entire spectrum:
And, in a grand finale, the document recommends that the United States should seek the ability to "provide maximum control of the entire electromagnetic spectrum".

US forces should be able to "disrupt or destroy the full spectrum of globally emerging communications systems, sensors, and weapons systems dependent on the electromagnetic spectrum".

Consider that for a moment.

The US military seeks the capability to knock out every telephone, every networked computer, every radar system on the planet.

Are these plans the pipe dreams of self-aggrandising bureaucrats? Or are they real?

The fact that the "Information Operations Roadmap" is approved by the Secretary of Defense suggests that these plans are taken very seriously indeed in the Pentagon.
The next step, to be able to push propaganda directly into our brains. The ultimate goal, the make up our minds for us.

the full article is here:
US plans to 'fight the net' revealed

The 'roadmap' is here: As always, thanks to the National Security Archive for keeping us informed.
Information Operations Roadmap

Documents Show Army Seized Wives As Tactic

Anyone wonder why we're hated by Muslims, especially Iraqis? Well, here's one reason...

Charles J. Hanley of the A.P. writes:
The U.S. Army in Iraq has at least twice seized and jailed the wives of suspected insurgents in hopes of "leveraging" their husbands into surrender, U.S. military documents show.

In one case, a secretive task force locked up the young mother of a nursing baby, a U.S. intelligence officer reported. In the case of a second detainee, one American colonel suggested to another that they catch her husband by tacking a note to the family's door telling him "to come get his wife."
This is reprehensible.

In one memo, a civilian Pentagon intelligence officer described what happened when he took part in a raid on an Iraqi suspect's house in Tarmiya, northwest of Baghdad, on May 9, 2004. The raid involved Task Force (TF) 6-26, a secretive military unit formed to handle high-profile targets.

"During the pre-operation brief it was recommended by TF personnel that if the wife were present, she be detained and held in order to leverage the primary target's surrender," wrote the 14-year veteran officer.

He said he objected, but when they raided the house the team leader, a senior sergeant, seized her anyway.

"The 28-year-old woman had three young children at the house, one being as young as six months and still nursing," the intelligence officer wrote. She was held for two days and was released after he complained, he said.

Like most names in the released documents, the officer's signature is blacked out on this for-the-record memorandum about his complaint.

So that's why Emperor Bush refused to take part in the war crimes tribunal at the Hague. He didn't want to end up there.

The unethical, illegal, unconstitutional acts that bush is authorizing/ordering are getting worse by the hour.

The entire article can be found here:
Documents Show Army Seized Wives As Tactic

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You've Got Jail

In case someone in the Justice Department is reading this, let me hasten to explain why I just clicked on the Victoria's Secret online catalog photo featuring a certain "Very Sexy Lace & Mesh Garter Belt."” AOL made me do it.

Yes, the very same AOL that, like Yahoo and MSN, but not Google, has readily agreed to let you government snoops scrutinize the search words and results from its online search engine data archives. If AOL is going to let the government know where I'’ve been, it should admit it entrapped me!

(Honestly, officer, I heard that perky voice say "“You've got mail,"” and then this ad popped up, and there was this lady in her undergarments, and anyway it was just research.) (from Truthdig)

This raises an interesting point. Why are we afraid of our search engines giving our searches to the Feds? I think the answer is pretty easy, look who we're giving it too! Yahoo!, AOL and MSN have given their search data (with potentially personally identifying information) to the Federal Government that is led by a guy that (besides having conversations with God) has claimed Czarhood over this country. His cronies are yesmen that will do anything he, or a corporation says. He has lied to us on more than one occasion (and that was just today).

Our President, Emperor Bush, is known for spying on out Emails and phone conversations. Why in Hell would we want to give anything else to poke around in?!?!?!?!

Bottom line is these guys in the Bush administration are obsessed voyeurs, poking their noses into everyone's business, whether the excuse is squelching pornography or preventing terrorism. They simply do not believe civil liberties and privacy are important. It is an executive branch power trip, and completely anti-democratic.

Corporations, of course, are not built to think about such lofty ideas as democracy, however, focusing instead on profits. In the world of high-tech privacy, companies like AOL are also two-timers, collecting data on us users of their services so they can better feed us advertising and other revenue-generating products, even as they try to protect that data from identity thieves.

In acquiescing to the unwarranted demand of the Justice Department to pore over the companies'’ records, AOL, Yahoo and Microsoft are sliding down a slippery slope, unconvincingly claiming that the data dump to the feds has no implications for online privacy. Does anybody think they won'’t cooperate if the government comes back and asks for IP addresses - your computer's unique signature on the Web - for everybody who dared type in a questionable search like '“growing marijuana' or '“fertilizer bombs'?

The fact is, until Google made its demur public, these companies didn'’t even tell us about the deals they were cutting with the feds, and they are still not being forthcoming with what exactly they've given up to date. We only have their word that they are protecting our privacy.

This anti-porn law was struck down in 1998. Why are they fighting to reinstate it NOW? Could this be another of Bush's stupid falsehoods so they can root around even deeper in our personal lives?

Come on, people. How many times are we going to have to go through this?

Click here for the entire article:
You've Got Jail

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Bush Support Weak, Americans Favor New Direction

I love this:
Three Out Of Five Say The Country Is Seriously Off Course...
70% Do Not Support Spying On Ordinary Americans…
61% Unfavorably View GOP Congress, Highest Number In 10 Years...
76% Say Bush Should Disclose His Ties To Indicted GOP Lobbyist Abramoff...

That's what 3 months of PR gets you... (from HuffPo)

The entire article can be found here:
Bush Support Weak, Americans Favor New Direction

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Kerry returning to D.C. to lead fight against Alito

Here comes John Kerry to save the day! If we can keep Alito out until after the elections, and if we get a Democratic majority, we can stop this!

Sounds bad doesn't it? Even Kerry thinks it's an uphill battle. And Bush hasn't even started talking about attacking Iran yet.

From CNN.com:
Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry was heading back to Washington Friday after launching an overseas effort to rally his Democratic colleagues behind a filibuster of Judge Samuel Alito's nomination to the Supreme Court.

But senators from both parties -- including Kerry's fellow Massachusetts Democrat and chief ally, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy -- described Kerry's efforts as an uphill battle.

Kerry was in Davos, Switzerland, attending the World Economic Forum when he called for the filibuster. Democratic sources tell CNN that Kerry called fellow Democratic senators Thursday to rally support.

A potential showdown could come early next week. On Thursday, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist filed a motion to cut off debate on the Alito nomination after his Democratic counterpart, Minority Leader Harry Reid, objected to a move by GOP leaders to schedule a final vote on his confirmation Monday afternoon.

Frist's motion, which requires 60 votes under Senate rules, will come up for a vote at 4:30 p.m. Monday. If successful, senators will then vote on Alito's nomination at 11 a.m. Tuesday, with a simple majority of 51 votes needed for approval. Democrats can block the final vote if 41 senators vote against Frist's motion.

This next year is going to be very tense for Democrats, for all leftists in general. We need to get rid of Emperor Bush and we can't do that until we have a Democrat majority in Congress.
[A] Kerry aide told CNN the senator is not concerned about the gossip on Capitol Hill and is standing on principle in backing the filibuster.

"Judge Alito's confirmation would be an ideological coup on the Supreme Court," Kerry said in a written statement.

"We can't afford to see the court's swing vote, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, replaced with a far-right ideologue like Samuel Alito."
The entire article can be found here:
Kerry returning to D.C. to lead fight against Alito

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Thursday, January 26, 2006

White House Caught in Lie Over Wiretaps

For days the Bush Administration and their Cronies have been saying that the illegal and the unconstitutional wiretapping is perfectly legal. When in fact we, and THEY knew that was a lie.

Dan Eggen of The Washington Post writes:

The Bush administration rejected a 2002 Senate proposal that would have made it easier for FBI agents to obtain surveillance warrants in terrorism cases, concluding that the system was working well and that it would likely be unconstitutional to lower the legal standard.

The proposed legislation by Sen. Mike DeWine (R-Ohio) would have allowed the FBI to obtain surveillance warrants for non-U.S. citizens if they had a "reasonable suspicion" they were connected to terrorism -- a lower standard than the "probable cause" requirement in the statute that governs the warrants.

The administration has contended that it launched a secret program of warrantless domestic eavesdropping by the National Security Agency in part because of the time it takes to obtain such secret warrants from federal judges under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA).

The implications are immense; and simple to understand. Emperor Bush and his cronies knew their wiretapping was illegal. They didn't care. They were probably doing a vacuum cleaner approach and recording everything they can.

According to this. The Bush Administration turned down a measure to legalize his illegal wiretaps. He stated that it was unconstitutional.

Democrats and national security law experts who oppose the NSA program say the Justice Department's opposition to the DeWine legislation seriously undermines arguments by Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales and others, who have said the NSA spying is constitutional and that surveillance warrants are often too cumbersome to obtain.

"It's entirely inconsistent with their current position," said Philip B. Heymann, a deputy attorney general in the Clinton administration who teaches law at Harvard University. "The only reason to do what they've been doing is because they wanted a lower standard than 'probable cause.' A member of Congress offered that to them, but they turned it down."


This is from Unclaimed Territory by Glenn Greenwald
So, in June, 2002, the Administration refused to support elimination of the very barrier ("probable cause") which Gen. Hayden claimed yesterday necessitated the circumvention of FISA. In doing so, the Administration identified two independent reasons for opposing this amendment. One reason was that the Justice Department was not aware of any problems which the Administration was having in getting the warrants it needed under FISA:

The practical concern involves an assessment of whether the current "probable cause" standard has hamstrung our ability to use FISA surveillance to protect our nation. We have been aggressive in seeking FISA warrants and, thanks to Congress's passage of the USA PATRIOT Act, we have been able to use our expanded FISA tools more effectively to combat terrorist activities. It may not be the case that the probable cause standard has caused any difficulties in our ability to seek the FISA warrants we require, and we will need to engage in a significant review to determine the effect a change in the standard would have on our ongoing operations. If the current standard has not posed an obstacle, then there may be little to gain from the lower standard and, as I previously stated, perhaps much to lose.

So as of June, 2002 -- many months after the FISA bypass program was ordered -- the DoJ official who was responsible for overseeing the FISA warrant program was not aware (at least when he submitted this Statement) of any difficulties in obtaining warrants under the FISA "probable cause" standard, and for that reason, the Administration would not even support DeWine's amendment. If - as the Administration is now claiming - they had such significant difficulties obtaining the warrants they wanted for eavesdropping that they had to go outside of FISA, surely Baker - who was in charge of obtaining those warrants - would have been aware of them. And, if the Administration was really having the problems under FISA, they would have supported DeWine's Amendment. But they didn't.
How much more evidence do we need to impeach him? The Republicans in office are looking more and more like yes-men that will do anything to protect their God-Emperor George W. Bush.

All I can say is, vote Democrat!

The entire article can be found here:
White House Dismissed '02 Surveillance Proposal

the Unclaimed Territory article can be found here:
The Administration's new FISA defense is factually false

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Congress catching on to the value of blogs

I found this article through Slashdot and thought you' d like to read it.

From Slashdot:
Jason Jardine wrote to mention a C|Net report on an increase in the use of blogs by politicians in the U.S. capitol. From the article: "Just a year ago, a DailyKos posting from someone like John Kerry would have been all but unheard of, and blogging of any kind by members of Congress was almost nonexistent. But now that dynamic is starting to change, and slowly, members of the House of Representatives and the Senate are beginning to appreciate the value of blogs. 'When I reach out to the blog community, it gives me an opportunity to begin a dialogue with an extremely politically sophisticated and active community that I otherwise might not be able to reach,' Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., wrote in an e-mail to CNET News.com."
It seems that John Kerry posted to DailyKos (yes, I'm jealous), there was a bit of doubt btu it turned out to be Sen. Kerry.

From C|Net:

Obama and Kerry are two of about 11 members of Congress who are blogging today, either on their own blogs or as guests on others' sites. Republicans like Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert of Illinois, Rep. Mark Kirk of Illinois and Rep. Mike Conaway of Texas have joined the fray, along with Democrats like Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, Rep. John Conyers of Michigan and Rep. Louise Slaughter of New York.

That's still a small percentage of Congress, but some observers of politics and blogs think a greater number of Washington's elected officials will soon come around.

Now these blogs do not have comments on them because of a rule restricting comments on federal websites, and sometimes they are just using them as press releases.

And to some, the lack of comments on the official blogs of those like Kirk, Hastert, Obama and others actually calls into question their use of the term "blog."

Without comments, a blog is "just a glorified press release," said Mike Cornfield, an adjunct professor in political management at George Washington University.

I'll reserve comment on that for a while. I believe a blog should be a two way communication, Poster and Commenter. But we'll see how that goes. What's to stop them from opening up a blog on Blogger or Livejournal?

And Sen. Kerry, us little blogs could use the attention too :)

The entire article can be found here:
Congress catching on to the value of blogs

The Slashdot discussion is here:
Politics: Politicians Catch on to Blogging

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Army stretched too thin, may reach breaking point

Two reports were were issued in the past few days. The first was commissioned by the Pentagon and the second was prepared by former Defense Secretary William Perry and former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.

The Army is breaking down. It's fairly obvious. We're stretched WAY too thin. Incompetent leadership from the generals on up have dragged this war out for years. We're gonna be forced to either start a draft, or abandon Iraq. Either way it's gonna be bad. We destroyed that country, all because Emperor Bush had to make up lies so he could get Saddam.

Drew brown of The Mercury News writes:
A pair of reports by outside experts in the past two days warn that the Army has been stretched thin by repeated combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan and could soon reach the breaking point.

The first, a report on the Iraq war that was commissioned by the Pentagon and made public Tuesday, said defense officials risk ``breaking the force'' if current troop levels are maintained in both countries without increasing the size of the Army or slowing the pace of deployments.

The second, issued Wednesday by Democrats on Capitol Hill, warned that unless the strain on the Army and Marine Corps is relieved soon, ``it will have highly corrosive and potentially long-term effects on the force.'' Over time, it argued, the services would be weakened and the country would be more vulnerable to potential enemies.

And, of course, Rummy counters...
`it's clear that those comments do not reflect the current situation. They are either out of date or just misdirected.''

Rumsfeld said he hadn't read either report. Recounting the quick initial victories in Afghanistan and Iraq, he said the Army wasn't broken, ``but enormously capable.''

``It is a force that has been deployed, functioned effectively and, as I say, battle-hardened,'' Rumsfeld said. He dismissed the Democrats' suggestion that Iraq and Afghanistan had left the United States with inadequate ground forces to counter potential enemies elsewhere.

It's not in the article, but he also tried to blame Clinton for the state of the Armed Forces. It's strange but I don't remember him killing thousands and crippling tens of thousands of our troops.

Battle-hardened? Yeah. How about War Torn? Tired, Ravaged, Used, Thrown Away?

There are 138,000 U.S. military personnel in Iraq and 19,000 in Afghanistan. Those numbers could drop in the coming year if security conditions improve. Almost all of the combat forces from the Army, National Guard and Marine Corps have served at least one tour in either Iraq or Afghanistan, and some units are on their second or third deployments.

Both reports warned that current troop levels and the pace of operations can't be sustained without risking significant recruiting and retention problems. They blamed the situation in part on the Bush administration for not sending enough troops to secure Iraq after the defeat of Saddam Hussein, allowing the country to descend into chaos. They also suggested that the future of the all-volunteer Army could be threatened unless the problems are addressed.

``Solving these problems will be costly, but unless they are fully addressed soon, our nation is at risk of not having a military sufficiently capable of responding to future threats,'' said House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco.

The Democrats' report, prepared by former Defense Secretary William Perry and former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, called for increasing the size of the Army by 30,000 soldiers, reorganizing the National Guard and Army Reserve, filling equipment shortages caused by the wars and reorganizing the active-duty Army to fight terrorists and insurgencies and rebuild war-ravaged countries.

When they come home what will there be for them? The Veteran Crisis Report Put out by Vietnam veterans Against the War states:
In early January, President George W. Bush released his disappointing FY 2006 budget detailing that:
  • Funding for veteran'’s medical programs would receive only less than half of one percent budget increase, far below the necessary 13 to 14 percent increase that Veteran'’s Administration noted that it would need just to keep up with the current level of services and accommodate growing enrollment numbers;
  • Monthly co-pay for veterans'’ prescription drugs would increase from $7 to $15;
  • Many veterans would be forced to pay a $250 enrollment fee, ensuring that some would be unable to access the VA healthcare system at all.
On March 17, House Republicans voted that the House Veterans'’ Affairs (VA) Committee must cut benefits or increase the fees veterans must pay. For fiscal year 2006, the VA Committee must identify $155 million in benefits cuts or increased fees; and $798 million over the next five years.
Now note that that the budget increase doesn't even support the existing Veterans. When the tens of thousands of wounded need care, who is going to pay for them? They'll be left without care. Something strange coming from the Bush Administration that claims to be "pro-military"

The entire article can be found here:
Army stretched too thin, may reach breaking point

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A Few Changes 'round These Parts

You've probably noticed some minor changes to the blog. The reason is I've welcomed my friend Demetrios Michael as a second poster to my blog. Demetrios runs Informative Hub, a science blog. He has also added me as a second poster to his site, so go over there frequently for some excellent science reporting. You might not know this, but science is one of my two major hobbies (the other being swearing at Conservatives).

So, please join me in welcoming Demetrios to Ranting and Venting! You'll be hearing from him shortly within the next day or two.

Go on, bookmark this!
INFORMATIVE HUB

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Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Daily Kos: Cheers and Jeers

Just a little fun from Daily Kos' Cheers and Jeers section:

"In a disturbing development this week, Iran broke open the seal on three of its nuclear facilities...which means even if they don't like them they won't be able to return them."
---Amy Poehler

"Vice President Cheney is on an extended tour of the Middle East. They love him over there. He's known as Lawrence of Arrhythmia."
---David Letterman

"Osama bin Laden released his first new audiotaped message in over a year. While there is some new material in the message, insiders say it's mostly a Greatest Threats collection. A White House spokesman says they plan to check out the message in its entirety, but they're too busy listening to your phone calls."
---Tina Fey

"According to a study at the University of Colorado, researchers say morning grogginess can give you a feeling of being legally drunk and unable to think straight. They say this condition can last anywhere from a few minutes in some people to as long as two entire terms in office."
---Jay Leno

"A Texas paper is reporting that lobbyist Jack Abramoff charged a client $25,000 to have lunch with President Bush. Not surprisingly, this is the most anyone has ever paid for lunch at Chuck E. Cheese."
---Conan O'Brien

Here's the link to Daily Kos:
Daily Kos: Cheers and Jeers

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Web users say Google should keep data private

A whopping 56% of people polled believe Google should not give the information to the government. 77% did not know that search engines collect private data like IP addresses which can be traced to individual computers.

Verne Kopytoff of the San Fran. Chronicle writes:
Most Internet users believe that Google Inc. should refuse the federal government's demands that it turn over search-engine data, and more than a quarter of them say they will stop using the Web site if the company complies with the order, according to a poll released today.

The poll, conducted over the weekend by the Ponemon Institute, a privacy research group in Elk Rapids, Mich., found that Internet users are highly concerned about personal search data getting into the hands of the government.

The results directly address the concerns Internet users have because of revelations that the federal government has subpoenaed Google for a list of millions of search queries entered by its users. Google has vowed to fight the order, which the government hopes to use to collect information to resuscitate a law to protect children from online pornography.

As part of the findings, 56 percent of respondents said they do not want Google to turn over any information to the government.

Who do you feel safer having your private information? Bush, or Google?

The entire article can be found here:
Most Web users say Google should keep data private

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Lieberman: White House hindering Katrina probe

Lieberman is switching sides again? He's acting like a Democrat now. Although I have to hand it to him. He doesn't always follow the party line. He strikes out on his own when he feels like it, Which I like. Although I don't agree with some, ok most, of his points, I respect him.

CNN.com writes:
The White House is dodging questions about Hurricane Katrina response and has instructed other agencies to join it in fending off investigators, Sen. Joseph Lieberman said on Tuesday. The White House denies the allegations.

Lieberman went so far as to suggest that the Department of Homeland Security is trying to kill the investigation.

"My staff believes that DHS has engaged in a conscious strategy of slow-walking our investigation in the hope that we would run out of time to follow the investigation's natural progression to where it leads," Lieberman said. "At this point, I cannot disagree."

The Connecticut senator, who is the ranking Democrat on the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, further said no real reason is being given for the administration's reticence.
The White has come out recently and stated Executive privilege for just about everything. Which suprises no one.

The Entire article can be found here:
Lieberman: White House hindering Katrina probe

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Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Bush Plans Visit to Pakistan in March, Perhaps Bomb Something

IT seems Bush is going to visit Pakistan. I suppose he wanted to go to the smoking crater personally, maybe count body parts.

Let's change the locks while he's out. Come on, let's at least short-sheet the Lincoln Bedroom!

Christine Hauser of the N.Y. Times writes:
The Pakistani prime minister, Shaukat Aziz, today underscored the importance of Pakistan's coalition with the United States in fighting terrorism, a relationship that has recently stirred protests in his country after an American airstrike there killed 18 civilians.

President Bush, also affirming the relationship, said he would visit Pakistan and India in March.

Mr. Aziz, in his remarks during a White House appearance with Mr. Bush, made no mention of the Jan. 13 missile attack that had been aimed at members of the Al Qaeda network but has so far not conclusively yielded evidence any were killed.

Mr. Aziz said that Pakistan's and Washington's interests converged in the region.

Wait, interests? What interests do we have in common besides blowing up things? Do they have oil?

"We are pursuing peace with all our neighbors," said Mr. Aziz, sitting next to Mr. Bush, in remarks that were televised. "We want a solution of all disputes including the Kashmir dispute. We want to see a strong stable Afghanistan. We are against proliferations of nuclear weapons by anybody, and we want to fight terrorism in all its forms and manifestations."

"Our coalition with the United States in fighting terrorism is very important to all of the world and all of civil society," Mr. Aziz said.

Mr. Aziz said Pakistan was also eager for American investment.

Oh, there it is, investment! That's what we have in common. We need places to put factories close to cheap, underskilled, child laborers, and they want money. It's a match made in heaven. Maybe we could put a free trade zone there? We'll call it: PSAFTA! (shafta?) The Pakistan Screwing Americans Free Trade Agreement!

Eh, Bush will probably take credit for it anyways.

The entire article can be found here:
Bush Plans Visit to Pakistan in March

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IMPEACHING GEORGE W. BUSH: IT DOESN'T HAVE TO BE A FANTASY ANYMORE!

Everyone! Listen to this guy! If we can get a Democrat majority in congress this upcoming election, we will have the power to impeach Emperor Bush!

We have work to do people!

John Ervin of Elitestv.com writes:
Come on, ye who loath King George with as much bile and passion as yours truly, you know you want it to happen. Just like you want to date that movie star you see so many alluring shots of on your favorite media outlets, just like you want to win that lottery you scratch untold tickets for at the bullet-proof counter of your favorite convenience store, just like you want to kill that boss whose Dick-Cheney-like visage you see far too many times at your (least) favorite place of employment, so you want to see George W. Bush impeached by the House for his multiyear assault on all we hold dear as a nation. Well, as far off as this fantasy may appear to be, it isn’t completely out of the question. While the chances of Bush being the subject of impeachment, or even investigation by the members of the House and Senate, are, as of this writing - I emphasize, as of this writing - not terribly likely, certain very accessible factors could very well increase that likelihood for the future. For this to happen, though, I, you, and the rest of the Impeachment Army need to get off our liberal butts, and start grabbing the hearts, minds and short-and-curlies of those who saw a knight in shining armor in 2004 and are beginning to see a drunk in a tank in 2006:

*The biggest hurdle to overcome - and, I assure you, it'll be no mean feat - is to have one or both houses of government taken back by the Democrats this election year. To ease the hurdle, it falls to the House to initially consider impeachment proceedings, and Congress people are easier to replace than Senators. Sure, Representative Tom "“Knuckles" DeLay, despite his many legal battles and his decision not to reclaim his post as majority leader, will most likely get reelected by his loyal base, but most members of the House do not hold their constituents in as convulsive a spell as those in the Senate. And should the House decide to try Bush, the Senate, Republican-dominated or not, are required to conduct a trial based on the House'’s ruling. If the Democrats do regain the House, or even just the Senate, their majority, of course, will be slim, but with nearly unanimous support for impeachment among the Dems - should they have the cajones to pursue the idea, and should a muzzle be placed on Republican-wannabe Joseph Lieberman - sprinkled with an expected teaspoon of support for a sprinkling of brave Pubs , it is within the realm of possibility that George and Laura may wake up in their silk pajamas to find a most unwelcome document slipped under their door by an underling making a fast track for the freeway. So, gang, your first order of business is to get back to that rotting warehouse you worked for the Kerry Presidential Campaign in - whose walls should be made a little more inviting by the fact that Big John, himself, recently said that, should the Dems take back the House, there was a "solid case"” to bring proceedings against Little George- and get behind your Democratic Congressmen and Senator’s 2006 campaign.
[snip]

In fact, the impeachment of George W. Bush, unlike that which temporarily stumbled his polar opposite predecessor Bill Clinton, and that which caused his eerily similar predecessor Richard Nixon to do the resignation shuffle, could very well be something that unites the country, red, blue and purple alike. So hark, ye who loath Bush, put away thine handkerchiefs and get back on yon phones, email trams and door-knocking trails and become Town Criers for Impeachment. It'’s possible - remote, but possible - that so very many voters, Congress people, Senators, lobbyists and, especially, casino owners, no matter what their political stripe, may be so fed up with George that the sight of him being kicked out of office - even if it means having to put up with the equally loathsome Dick Cheney for the remainder of the term - might be a "where were you when"” moment that everyone will remember. Except that this moment will be less like 9-11 and more like VJ Day (with two sailors kissing each other this time)!

For more information on how you can help pave the way for the impeachment of (twice) illegally elected President George W. Bush, check out these sites (just remember that somebody in a Brooks Brothers suit may be watching):
http://www.impeachbush.tv/
http://www.impeachpac.com
http://impeachbush.meetup.com/
http://impeachbushcoalition.blogspot.com/
I am a member of the Impeach Bush Coalition (click on the corner banner, upper right). Check these places out. do your homework. You know he's breaking the law. Even Republicans do. The only way that we'll have a change to get Bush is to elect Democrats. It's time to start campaigning!

The entire article can be found here:
IMPEACHING GEORGE W. BUSH: IT DOESN'T HAVE TO BE A FANTASY ANYMORE!

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The United States of George W. Bush

Op Ed News has this good piece aboutBush's power grabs and his incompetence to act as a president.

Missy Comley Beattie of OpEdNews.com writes:
George W. Bush isn't just above the law. He apparently is the law. And that's been his plan all along--to be the Unitary Almighty.

Last week, Karl Rove set us up for what's ahead. His basic "Frightening Americans Course" is popular with neocons, especially when he says that the president wants to know who in America al-Qaeda is calling. This week the president will be touching down to state his case for illegally listening to conversations and intercepting e-mails. Over and over in front of staged audiences containing brown-nosers who will nod and clap, suck up and lick you know what, Bush will tell the public that it's his job to keep us safe. His assurances should fall on disbelieving ears as he sputters, "That's what the people expect of me."

And this is why: Bush has done little to secure our safety. Remember the recent finding of the 9/11 Commission that gave the government lots of big fat FAILURES. The December 5, 2005 report handed down a C+ for "Foreign Policy" in Pakistan. That's got to have sunk to an F after last week when we bombed a house where our intelligence, the Keystone Cops, insisted al-Qaeda's number two was staying. It doesn't matter if we take out the heads; the body will regenerate since every act perpetrated by Americans kills civilians and inspires hatred. Just think "Whack a Mole."
So we have a power loving, incomeptent, fear monger of a president. Jeesh it's worse than Nixon.

The entire acticle can be found here:
The United States of George W. Bush

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Sunday, January 22, 2006

Hispanic Leaders Speak out Against Alito

The Hispanic community spoke out against Alito today. Voicing that while no one was speaking against his ability, but that he has been hostile against labor and voting rights, not to mention abortion:

IBLNEWS Wire Services writes:
During a press conference, the leaders said their opposition to Alito was due to analysis of his 15-year record as a federal judge, and to the fact that, in their opinion, he has been hostile to the interests of minorities.

Alito "is not the best person" for the Hispanic community and his judicial record shows that, said Gabriela Lemus, director of policy and legislation for the League of United Latin American Citizens.
No, he is not the best person. He is the worst person. The conservatives are stacking the Supreme Court with ultra right wingers that will squash personal rights in favor of corporate rights.
The Hispanic leaders said Alito's presence would signify a rightward shift on the nation's highest court and that his views would put laws that protect individual rights in the United States in jeopardy.

Most of the Hispanic organizations also expressed concern over the fact that Alito, as a member of the Philadelphia-based 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals since 1990, has ruled in several cases against foreigners seeking political asylum.

Alito, while working in President Ronald Reagan's Justice Department, also wrote in a 1986 memorandum that the Constitution granted illegal immigrants just minimal protections against discrimination.

According to Peter Zamora, an attorney with the Mexican-American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Alito has established a record showing he puts the interests of large corporations ahead of individual rights.
The entire article can be found here:
Hispanic Leaders Speak out Against Alito


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Hackers Break into Diebold Voting Machines

The Washington Post has a story About how easy it is to hack Diebold's electronic voting machines. Are we looking at another "narrow win" for the Republicans next election? Unfortunately, without a paper record as proof of how you voted, there can be no recount.

Zachary Goldfarb of The Washington Post writes:
Four times over the past year Sancho told computer specialists to break in to his voting system. And on all four occasions they did, changing results with what the specialists described as relatively unsophisticated hacking techniques. To Sancho, the results showed the vulnerability of voting equipment manufactured by Ohio-based Diebold Election Systems, which is used by Leon County and many other jurisdictions around the country.

Sancho's most recent demonstration was last month. Harri Hursti, a computer security expert from Finland, manipulated the "memory card" that records the votes of ballots run through an optical scanning machine.

Then, in a warehouse a few blocks from his office in downtown Tallahassee, Sancho and seven other people held a referendum. The question on the ballot:

"Can the votes of this Diebold system be hacked using the memory card?"

Two people marked yes on their ballots, and six no. The optical scan machine read the ballots, and the data were transmitted to a final tabulator. The result? Seven yes, one no.

Have a nice day and thank you for voting DeLay.

The entire article can be found here:
Hackers Break into Diebold Voting Machines

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Response to a Comment

A commenter from a previous posting brought up an interesting point and I wanted to expand on it.
allan said...

I have a different take on the debate:

http://jrpm.org/trouble.php#1 (clickable link here)

I don't care for ID [Intelligent Design], it is like a political compromise that satisfies no one.

There are other approaches, but some folks like confrontaion so much they take baseball bats to a gun fight.

I read your link (the first part, I didn't have time for the rest of it) and I partially agree with you. ID is a corruption of your beliefs and my science. I wholeheartedly support a person's right to believe what they wish. That's what I love about this country, we do have to right to believe what we want. Now, I don't believe in Genesis, I think it's a Creation Myth and deserves as much respect as our other belief systems whether they are believed in still or not. It's also beautiful imagery, especially when compared with some others. (I'm sorry Scientologists, but the Thetan thing bugs the hell out of me.) I do like that baseball bat line though.

I respect your views but I must point out a flaw in your reasoning. It's a big one but it occurs frequently. It'’s the idea that Evolution is "just a theory". This is from Scientific American:
Many people learned in elementary school that a theory falls in the middle of a hierarchy of certainty--above a mere hypothesis but below a law. Scientists do not use the terms that way, however. According to the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), a scientific theory is "a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world that can incorporate facts, laws, inferences, and tested hypotheses." No amount of validation changes a theory into a law, which is a descriptive generalization about nature. So when scientists talk about the theory of evolution--or the atomic theory or the theory of relativity, for that matter--they are not expressing reservations about its truth.

In addition to the theory of evolution, meaning the idea of descent with modification, one may also speak of the fact of evolution. The NAS defines a fact as "an observation that has been repeatedly confirmed and for all practical purposes is accepted as 'true.'" The fossil record and abundant other evidence testify that organisms have evolved through time. Although no one observed those transformations, the indirect evidence is clear, unambiguous and compelling.

All sciences frequently rely on indirect evidence. Physicists cannot see subatomic particles directly, for instance, so they verify their existence by watching for telltale tracks that the particles leave in cloud chambers. The absence of direct observation does not make physicists' conclusions less certain.
Well I thought this was going to be a short post, but I ranted again. I guess I chose the right title for this blog.

The entire post can be found here:
Ranting and Venting: Vatican newspaper backs judge's support of evolution

The Scientific American article can be found here:
15 Answers to Creationist Nonsense

Saturday, January 21, 2006

Vatican newspaper backs judge's support of evolution

I know I was a little slow in posting this suprising turn of events in the fight for Evolution and Science but, I thought it wasn't true. I thought it was a hoax. It doesn't exactly that the Vatican supports Evolution. But it does say that this intelligent design crap is, well, crap. It even praised the Judge's decision in Pennsylvania that intelligent design is not science nor should it be taught as it.

Ian Fisher and Cornelia Dean for The New York Times writes:

The Vatican newspaper has published an article labeling as "correct" the decision by a judge in Pennsylvania that intelligent design should not be taught as a scientific alternative to evolution.

"If the model proposed by Darwin is not considered sufficient, one should search for another," Fiorenzo Facchini, a professor of evolutionary biology at the University of Bologna, wrote in this week's edition of L'Osservatore Romano.

"But it is not correct from a methodological point of view to stray from the field of science while pretending to do science," he wrote, calling intelligent design unscientific.

"It only creates confusion between the scientific plane and those that are philosophical or religious."

The article was not presented as an official church position, but in the subtle and purposely ambiguous world of the Vatican, the comments seemed notable, given their strength on a delicate question much debated under the new pope, Benedict XVI.

Advocates for teaching evolution hailed the article.

"He is emphasizing that there is no need to see a contradiction between Catholic teachings and evolution," said Dr Francisco Ayala, professor of biology at the University of California, Irvine, and a former Dominican priest. "Good for him."

But Robert Crowther, spokesman for the Centre for Science and Culture at the Discovery Institute, a Seattle organization where researchers study and advocate intelligent design, dismissed the article and other recent statements from leading Catholics defending evolution. Drawing attention to them was little more than trying "to put words in the Vatican's mouth," he said.

Trying to put words in the Vatican's mouth? L'Osservatore Romano (The Rome Observer) is the Vatican's official newspaper. Isn't that words coming from the Vatican's mouth?
While not all its articles represent official church policy, it would not be expected to present an article that dissented deeply from that policy.
I don't see the Vatican embracing Evolution, but I do see them condemning intelligent design as the lie that it is. What I don't understand is, why do these I.D. proponents feel that lying to their kids and telling them this is true is a good religious upbringing?

The entire article can be found here:
Vatican newspaper backs judge's support of evolution

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The George W. Bush Guide to Secret Government

Here's an article that pretty much says what I'm thinking. So I won't type down what I'm thinking and instead get right to the article.

Scott C. Smith of Counterbias.org writes:
You know, I get the impression that George W. Bush really doesn't understand the concept of checks and balances as it relates to government. I think he really believes his government is an autocracy, and has used the attacks of 9/11 to justify an alarming abuse of power by the executive branch. Bush believes that, since we are at war, the Constitution essentially grants him unlimited power to protect America. But we're not at war -- Congress hasn't declared war -- and what we're supposedly at war with is a noun. Terrorism. Ostensibly to prevent another 9/11 attack from happening. However, the Bush administration does not strike me as a bunch of people with their act together, and they are power-mad. Secret military courts, holding suspects indefinitely without benefit of counsel, suspending the Fourth Amendment in the hunt for Al-Qaeda terrorists -- all this and more to present the illusion of safety, the illusion of security.

Despite all of our efforts, Osama Bin Laden remains at large, and the Bush administration would rather just put their collective heads in the sand and pretend the man doesn't exist anymore. For all we know, he is regrouping with his operatives in planning another attack. And what we do know about Al-Qaeda is that they are patient, willing to wait years before carrying out an attack, and the 9/11 Commission recently gave the Bush administration poor marks in homeland security preparedness. The report, issued on Dec. 5, 2005, gave the administration "more F's than A's," 41 grades in all to measure the progress of the Administration in implementing security proposals by the 9/11 Commission.
And one more snippet...

Bush claims his authority as President of the United States gives him the legal and constitutional authority, because, well, darn it, we're at war with a noun, and if we have to shove the Fourth Amendment aside in the hopes that someone in the United States is sending IMs to Osama Bin Laden and we catch them, isn't that a good thing?

Not so much, according to the Congressional Research Service, which issued a report on Jan. 6, concluding that the Bush administration's justification for wiretapping without a warrant conflicts with existing law and hinges on weak legal arguments.

No big surprise there, eh?

The report stated that Bush probably could not claim the broad presidential powers he did after 9/11, as Congress had not expressly intended those powers. The Congress authorized Bush the use of military force to combat terrorism after 9/11.

"It appears unlikely that a court would hold that Congress has expressly or impliedly authorized the NSA electronic surveillance operations here," the authors of the CRS report wrote, also concluding that the Bush administration's legal justification for the wiretaps "does not seem to be . . . well-grounded (in law)."

I have my doubts that any report concluding that what the Bush administration's wiretapping program was illegal would result in any change in the program. Bush will do what he wants, for as long as he wants, while there is a Republican majority in Congress, not to mention right-wing cheerleaders like Sean Hannity and Rush Limbaugh, whom I suspect would find a way to defend Bush if the man was secretly volunteering time at Planned Parenthood or scamming tribal casinos of millions of dollars. There seems to be only a handful of Republicans who have openly criticized Bush and his administration's programs. Benjamin Franklin quite possibly had predicted the state of U.S. politics, circa 2006, when he said, "Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." And thanks to the sheep of the "red" states, which blindly support Bush as if he were royalty, our government is moving slowly but surely down that path. Welcome to the Bush autocracy. Ironic how we’re working so hard on establishing a democracy in the Middle East when we cannot seem to get it right here in the United States.

The entire article is here:
The George W. Bush Guide to Secret Government

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Where is the Accountability?

MediaChannel.org posted an article from HuffPo about the lies of the Bush Administration. I gotta admit, I'm as tired of it as the writer is.

Eric Alterman writes:
I’m getting more than a little tired of writing this, as I’m sure you are of reading it. But I persist, boring even myself, because I feel strongly that deliberately misleading a democratic nation into war is not just wrong, but a crime—an act of evil that taints everyone whom it touches.

You may convince yourself that you “know better” than the people’s representatives because of how dangerous the world is, and how smart you are, but if you have to lie to them to convince them of the rectitude of your cause, well then, you’re a despot, not a democrat. And you’ve no right to turn this nation into a despotism simply because 3000 people were killed on September 11, 2001. Take a look at this story buried in the Times today:

A high-level intelligence assessment by the Bush administration concluded in early 2002 that the sale of uranium from Niger to Iraq was "unlikely" because of a host of economic, diplomatic and logistical obstacles, according to a secret memo that was recently declassified by the State Department.

Among other problems that made such a sale improbable, the assessment by the State Department's intelligence analysts concluded, was that it would have required Niger to send "25 hard-to-conceal 10-ton tractor-trailers" filled with uranium across 1,000 miles and at least one international border.

The analysts' doubts were registered nearly a year before President Bush, in what became known as the infamous "16 words" in his 2003 State of the Union address, said that Saddam Hussein had sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.

The story by itself is only one piece of the puzzle, but really, when you add it all up: the various memos that have since been revealed, the reliance on Chalabi and “Curveball,” that drunk, lying Czech spy who made up the “Prague” meeting, the blackballing and smearing of all internal critics who raised questions, the Downing Street Memo and the deliberate BS-ing of Powell and his people, the illegal wiretaps, the refusal to release the content of the transcripts demanded by Bolton, etc., the refusal to acknowledge the many, many ambiguities in the intelligence on WMDs, the refusal to plan for an insurgency or even the maintenance of law and order, the decision not to go after Zarqawri, I could go on and on and on, and I do, all the go__amn time, as I said, earlier, boring even myself. But what drives me the craziest is that the very people who are supposed to protect us from irresponsible leadership don’t seem to give a damn. Look at the placement of the above story in the alleged ground zero of the so-called liberal media. Look at the fact that this is the newspaper that, more than any other, stands guilty of passing along the lies discussed above under the byline of its “run-amuck” reporter Judy Miller. Ask yourself where is the accountability in this system of ours? And how can you call us a democracy when it is literally nowhere to be found?

I'm tired of constantly being lies to by the conservatives in this country. I'm tired of the cowards that think the CIA hiding in your rosebush is a good thing. I'm tired of being told that it's OK to be spied on "if you have nothing to hide" I'm so very tired of this conservative bullshit in this country pretending that everything is someone elses fault.

Here's the truth. The conservatives are in power. The conservatives made all these choices. They are lying to you when they say it's the liberal's fault. They are lying to you when they say that Jack Abramoff gave Democrats money. They are doing all this for two simple reasons; money and power. They don't care about the people of this country or any other country for that matter. They do what ever they want to as long as it gets them more money or power.

Look at the power trip Bush is on right now. The idiot actually believes he has the power to ignore the Constitution. And because of the Republican controlled Congress there is nothing we can do about it.

The article can be found here:
Where is the Accountability?

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