firehand

Prometheus 6   

Do not make the mistake of thinking that because my conclusion is the same as another person's that my reasoning is the same

April 12, 2003

sigh

Well, I wanted to post a comment on a blog that I knew had a comment system installed, but I didn't see a link for it on the page. Which meant it was a HaloScan commenting system. Even though I can . . . and did . . . get around the block placed on my ability to see Haloscan comments, I found it vaguely annoying since it wasn't even a political comment I was making this time.

While being annoyed, it occurred to me to go to their support site. Now, I'm actually being blocked from accessing that as well, but the same method I use to post gets around that as well. So I got the email address for their support folk and asked about the problem. See, I've always found the folks who run systems a lot more reasonable and rational than those who use them.

The administrator, Jeevan, told me they NEVER do site-wide blocks, hadn't participated in the discussion and hadn't acted for anyone who was in it. Seemed a little annoyed at the suggestion. And, you know, I believe him. I believe he and HaloScan.com have nothing directly to do with this. But the reality is, when I try to connect to their server via HTTP, the connection is refused. Pings work, tracert works. That REALLY limits the possibilities on how it was done. Sadly, I'm not going to be able to get more specific than that.

I got stuff set up so it takes me about a minute an a half to work around the block, so I guess it's not that critical. The really suckful part is, I have to go to the three sites where I complained about it and un-bitch about HaloScan.com specifically. I hate when that happens.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/12/2003 02:50:13 PM |

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An absurdity

I can't stand it.

Because digital music is one of my side interests, I'm on the flac-dev mailing list out of Sourceforge. FLAC is a lossless audio compression format that's making a few inroads. Right after the last update I checked my email, and I get this spam . . . a rarity for this rather focused list. It's for China Conference 2003, a conference in Edinburgh about entering the commerical software market in China. Out of curiousity, I read the thing and at the bottom is this little gem:


We do really respect your privacy and work within a strict code of ethical standards relating to your data protection rights. If you no longer wish to receive future mailings from China Conferences please compose a new email message addressed to [email protected] ensuring that the word UNSUBSCRIBE appears in the subject line, or simply click here and we will remove you from the list automatically.


Why don't I believe this?

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/12/2003 08:01:21 AM |

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Livin' for the weekend

Believe it or not, political discussion is NOT the only purpose of this weblog.

I'm working on software that I can hand out to other folks to support their political discussions. Weblogging will be a big part of that. So though I'll still be on the Wide Word Web reading rants, screeds and information (in the rough order these types of posts appear out there), I'll be working this weekend on Project One, desktop weblogging software.

Blogger will remain prominent in my efforts for a while yet. I remain pretty impressed with it, especially since I started using Internet Explorer to post. The user interface is just better under IE. Of particular importance is the little buttons that wrap highlighted text in anchor tags for you, thereby helping avoid the debacle of ill-formed anchors swallowing your text. (I'm still using Netscape 7.02 for my primary browsing platform. The tabbed user interface is just way too full of efficient browsing yumminess to bypass. I may check out Scope, which would let me have my Netscape cake and eat my IE pie, too. )

But I have some very specific functionality I want to add . . . community calendar and web site review blogging. This will require tables and templates specific unto the cause. And I have a cool concept or two for the community part of the calendaring, basically designed to let folks who only have dial-up collaborate on the calendar.

So when I get this basically working, this site will grow a couple of new sections. Blogger will still be used for the entry page, to wit, this one. And my new software will be used to publish the other one(s).

All this work and today's other posts will begin shortly after I'm done watching Yu-Gi-Oh!

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/12/2003 07:35:43 AM |

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April 11, 2003

And on a lighter note

I was going to post the conversation about UMich and the Supremes I had in the comments of Is That Legal? but I think I've had enough for the week. Instead I've decided to talk about Winamp.

I'm one of those guys who ripped about 150 (legally purchased) CDs to mp3 and Ogg Vorbis (since the format reached version 1). I've tried a number of diferent players and settled on Winamp 2.81 because it's a damn fine piece of software and has broad support in the aftermarket--just about every digital media format in existance is supported thru a widely documented API. This was enough to overcome the annoying habit they had of putting AOL subscription icons all over the place. The skinning thing was kinda cool too, but I always fell back to a basic VCR-like layout so I can find all the damn controls.

Then comes Winamp 3. Bigger, slower to load, more resource hungry, plug-in API barely documented at all and buggy enough that many plug-in writers decided to wait for the new API--which is actually intended to be an multimedia program development platform--to settle down. But it shipped with Ogg Vorbis support, enough plugins to satisfy me showed up, in particular a means of looking up Shoutcast audio streams. Plus it has a great media library. The only better ones I'd have had to pay for. And as for slow loading, it's not like I get to take the 3 seconds I'd save using Winamp 2.81 and put it in the bottle I save my daylight in every time the clocks move forward. The media library and Shoutcast list did it for me. Made a bunch of playlists to match my varying moods. The list let me find and experiment with music genres I'd have never considered and artists I'd never heard of. Life was good.

Until the Shoutcast list stopped working.

Little did I realize the Winamp version 2 guys weren't done. They just released version 2.90, with all the speed and plug-in compatibility of version 2.81 plus it has the Shoutcast List functionality!

Life is good once more. But the saga doesn't end there.

I post on a discussion board where we talks so much shit our teefs turn brown. I use an avatar of my own creation:


. . . which I mention because the other day I saw a skin on the Winamp site that found to be too cool for words. The damn thing opens up to expose some really rationally placed controls, closed into a faceless metalic head, and even the mini-mode is usable.

I have no idea who Godsmack is. I don't care.

So now I'm using WInamp 3 for ripped CD tracks, and 2.90 for Shoutcast streams. And the moral of the story is, well, nonexistant. I just like to play sometimes.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/11/2003 08:38:22 PM |

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Conversations Elsewhere

I've been having conversations about the Supreme Court case involving the University of Michigan here and there. A combination of laziness, disgust over Republican behavior on the Beltway and war exhaustion (and I'm neither a soldier nor an Iraqi, so I don't even want to think about how they feel) made me decide to share one or two of them.

On a mailing list I frequent, I posted a link to a Village Voice article by Nat Hentoff, the core of which is:

But this term, the Supreme Court will finally deal with�among other issues�whether the "equal protection of the laws" clause of the Fourteenth Amendment forbids collective preferences as violating individual rights.

The late Justice William O. Douglas�a fierce opponent of discrimination in any form�wrote: "There is no superior person by constitutional standards. [An applicant] who is white is entitled to no advantage by reason of that fact, nor is he subject to any disability, no matter what his race or color. Whatever his race, [an applicant] has a constitutional right to have his application considered on its individual merits."

And there is a different way to affirmatively take into consideration all individuals who have shown the ability to overcome discrimination, poverty, disability, dysfunctional families, and other obstacles that have resulted in lower grade point averages and SAT scores. These achievers, whatever their color, or mixture of colors, have proved they have the determination and the grit to take on college and graduate school work. Accordingly, admissions committees should give them credit for their ability to overcome obstacles when considering their applications.

This actual multicultural approach is working now. In California, the voters enacted Proposition 209 in 1996, ending affirmative action in college admissions; and in Texas, the 1996 ruling by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ended affirmative action.

As a result, because college admissions directors in those states could no longer give racial and ethnic preferences, they�along with administrators and professors�left their offices and actually went into middle and high schools in low-income areas.

They worked with the teachers to raise their expectations of the students, and they helped make the curriculum more challenging. More of those students are now being admitted to colleges without affirmative action. And, as National Public Radio reported on February 11, "Top universities [are continuing to target] high-poverty schools with outreach, recruitment, and scholarships."


Now, the list is chock full of professors, professionals and just interested parties like me, so I knew they'd read it and find it if interested. But I also quoted and interesting thing Mr. Hentoff came across in his research:

Having been researching affirmative action for years, I came across this epiphany of diversity turned upside down:

In 1996, the University of Washington Law School in Seattle�in a report to the Association of American Law Schools�admitted it had denied admission to a white welfare mother with otherwise acceptable credentials because she was not someone who would contribute "significantly" to the diversity of the class since she was not "a member of a racial or ethnic group subject to discrimination."

Harvard Law School admitted her because of the diversity she added to all those classmates who didn't know any welfare mothers.



One of the angrier members of the list replied:
That is one of the reasons the civil rights has gotten bogged down to the point where it is virtually nonexistent today. The white supremacist government diluted the movement by slowly but steadily allowing gays, welfare mothers, women, abortion, and every other cause to have the same
weight as the problem of white supremacy.

So we have gotten pushed into the background where we will most likely remain until we decide to empower our race.

She made a choice to be a mother, and to go on welfare. Being white she can still change her life conditions much easier than can most black people can
theirs.

So I think the Seattle Law school made the right decision without question.


. . . to which a professional in community development felt compelled to reply:
I'm sorry but am I missing something...I have to de-lurk on this one and respectfully disagree...

There are Black gay folks...there are Black folks on welfare...there are Black women who are well...WOMEN who should have choices in their reproductive healthcare...and those struggles are directly related to our civil rights...Civil Rights = "The rights belonging to an individual by virtue of citizenship, especially the fundamental freedoms and privileges guaranteed by the 13th and 14th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution and by subsequent acts of Congress, including civil liberties, due process, equal protection of the laws, and freedom from discrimination." Okay so if you don't care for the dictionary version written by said white supremacists how
bout this quote from Dr. King....

"I have the audacity to believe that peoples everywhere can have three meals a day for their bodies, education and culture for their minds, and dignity, equality and freedom for their spirits."

or "Liberation is not the private province of one particular group" Audre Lorde.

I am not a woman one day and Black the next...a feminist one day and a socialist the next...(I wish I had a bell hooks quote to throw in here but it escapes me.) Just as a brother is not just a Black man....he may be a working class Black man...an exoffender...a Republican (unfortunately)...a socialist...Our struggle for liberation/civil rights has to involve a holistic approach rather than single issue politics...because we are more than just our skin color...

Also, White supremacy does not exist in a vacuum...we live in a capitalist country where white supremacy serves a means to an end...

And why are we to trust or hold responsible said White supremacist government with our liberation? From where I'm sitting our government isn't in a rush to liberate anyone...gay, straight, on welfare, whatever...so making a the statement that "That is one of the reasons the civil rights has gotten bogged down to the point where it is virtually nonexistent today. The white supremacist government diluted the movement by slowly but steadily allowing gays, welfare mothers, women, abortion, and every other cause to have the same weight as the problem of white supremacy."

what?


Well. Having started stuff, I had to say something.

A group doesn't have to be defined racially or ethnically to be discriminated against. It just has to be defined. "Welfare mothers" is
about as non-homogenous a group as you can get. The only thing they have in common is they are on welfare, and they are mothers. Oh, and that they are discriminated against.

Now, I'm finding Harvard Law School's belief that she will add diversity amusing. The fact that she want to go to Harvard Law School is a STRONG indicator that she hold the same fundamental values as Mainstream America. More, being white it will not be assumed she is or was on welfare. I don't know if she will tell anyone, but given the snooty nature of the "elite" schools, I doubt it.

On the other hand, I'm kind of pleased for her she got in there. It would be good if she let people know that "welfare mothers" are not limited by the definitions inflicted on them.

See, I don't believe that establishing the rights of someone else has to come at the expense of mine. That's the logical error too many people in this nation makes. And I don't believe we have to line up defined groups and prioritize them, decide whose issues get addressed first. That IS what is being done, frankly--Xxxxx is right in saying the government is consiously moving to obscure Black issues with issues of all other defined groups. By conflating them, Black issues--the existance of which I
am unfortunately convinced are necessary to hold the shape of the national culture together--are diluted. In fact, the issues of all groups are blurred, made more ill-defined. It's the only way "reverse discrimination" could have even been raised as a concept, much less hold any pretense to reality.

That said, everyone has to pick a windmill to tilt at. And being human, we're going to pick the things we feel we are personally affected by. In my case, the issues of the Black middle class community are first, with those of the disenfranchised, "urban," Black "underclass" a near inseperable second.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/11/2003 07:55:35 PM |

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Just being clear

This is not about anti-Black prejudice. Yet (although certain people CongresOfRacialEquality have contacted the Justice Dept offering to investigate links between terrorists and Black folks). This is about being an asshole.

Threat left on poster at Af-Am House

Message follows alleged March 27 break-in

BY JESSICA FEINSTEIN
Staff Reporter

Students discovered a threatening message written in front of the Afro-American Cultural Center Wednesday night, prompting outrage at the incident and frustration with the Yale administration's response to recent allegations of intimidation.

The message, scrawled in black ink on the front of a crumpled anti-war flier, read: "I hope you protesters and your children are killed in the next terrorist attack. Signed F--- You." The threat comes two weeks after several male students allegedly broke into a Calhoun College suite on March 27 and left a hateful message on the whiteboard of anti-war activist Katherine Lo '05.

"It's very clear this is the same tactic of using hate speech or hate crime to try to silence people," Afro-American Cultural Center staff member Christopher Jordan '04 said. "It's targeting a specific group based on their race, ethnicity and religion."

Jordan said the cultural center was probably targeted because many students at the center are opposed to war and the Muslim Student Association often holds meetings there. But Jordan said there have been no officially organized anti-war efforts through the cultural center.

In response to the incident, a large number of concerned students from several campus organizations, including the Afro-American Cultural Center, the Muslim Students' Association, the Students for Justice in Palestine and the Pan-Ethnic Coalition, gathered in the cultural center Thursday night to discuss possible plans for a response to the recent incidents.

The meeting was organized by Concerned Black Students at Yale, a new student coalition that was created partially in response to the flier. Shelita Stewart '04, a member of the new group, said the organization aims to end the "hostilities suffered by students of color on Yale campus."

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/11/2003 04:19:05 PM |

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Satire is all that's keeping me sane nowadays

Iraq Liberated from Oppressive Statue Regime

Iraqi expatriate Abbas Al-Emeri wept as he watched from his living room in Los Angeles as another statue in Kirkuk fell today.

"That statue killed my brother, and three uncles. Praise Allah and praise Bush for liberating my family from the statue."

Iraqi Information Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahhaf released a statement claiming that the statue regime was still in power and "driving the infidel invaders from our beloved Iraq."

"Do not believe the Americans' lies," the Minister said. "Our statues, murals, and icons are protecting the people even as we speak. By the will of Allah, they will be triumphant over the crusaders. We will finish them soon."

CentCom released a statement that the details of a second sub-operation, Operation Office-furniture Freedom, will be discussed later today.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/11/2003 11:45:47 AM |

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The problem is, this is ceasing to be the exception

The thoughtful debate on the war continues


On April 2, Larson was reading "Great Expectations" after school in the high school commons when he was surrounded by a different group of students. They got in his face.

"This time, their position was I hate America, and I should get out," Larson said. "One of them started strangling me. He had his hands pretty firmly around my neck. I couldn't breathe for a minute or so. Then he hit me with his belt, twice on the legs.

"The only thing he said was, 'George Bush is your daddy,' which seemed delightfully random."

Only one student, a friend of Larson's, tried to intervene. Two more groups of kids swung by to badger him before he escaped the commons, but no one else touched him. While all this happened 40 feet from the school office, no administrators were on the scene.

They've since gotten involved. "There was an altercation. It was unfortunate. There was an immediate suspension," Musser said. Confidentiality laws, he added, prevented further comment.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/11/2003 10:56:26 AM |

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Isn't that special?

Where's the Outrage?

For fear that some may think they are taken out of context, we reprint the offending part here in its entirety: "My sons are 25 and 30. They are blond-haired and blue-eyed. One amendment today said we could not sell guns to anybody under drug treatment. So does that mean if you go into a black community, you cannot sell a gun to any black person, or does that mean because my -- " . . .

for context

Instead, she told Mr. Watt, who is African American, that she wanted "to apologize to my colleague for his sensitivities." . . .

That's right, my imaginary audience. Not for her words, but for his sensitivities. Like, "I'm sorry you're sensitive about this issue."

Yet more astonishing than Mrs. Cubin's obtuseness was that when the full House considered whether to have Mrs. Cubin's words "taken down" as offensive -- a move that would have stricken them from the record and kept her from speaking for the rest of the day -- it voted in her favor, 227 to 195. Not a single Republican lawmaker voted against the remarks. Afterward, not a word of criticism from House Republican leaders. Upon being asked for comment, House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) yesterday ventured (through a spokesman) to say that the remarks "clearly left the wrong impression." He also described Mrs. Cubin as a "sensitive and at heart a very good person." Maybe so; but shrugging off the offensiveness of her statement is no more appropriate now than when Republican leaders tried the same tactic immediately after Mr. Lott made his remark.

The reason the Republicans refuse to speak out against the obviously racist sentiments Mrs. Cubin expressed, perhaps accidentally, is that the public seems to only absorb and react to things presented in the press, and any response here is newsworthy. It's better from their viewpoint to simply say nothing.

Unfortunately, that too is a response.

If all the bloggers out there hadn't kept discussing Trent Lott's gaffe until so many people knew about it the press no longer could ignore it, it would have faded away. The clumsiness of his "apologies" were just more grist for the mill. This deserves equal, if not more, exposure. Not because she's in a leadership position, but because the entire party refuses to address the issue.

During the Trent Lott flap, Black Republicans staunchly supported their party while calling for Lott to step down. He stepped down, but not out--stepped into another, slightly less influential leadership position, in fact. At the time, recognizing ethics in the Beltway are based on power relationship rather than moral ones, I found the Republican Party's decision to be rational because Lott was threatening to resign entirely, leaving a slot that was almost certain to be filled by a Democrat. And afterward Black Republicans wrote several editorials about how they hoped this opened the eyes of the party, how Lott's stepping down was a bellweather of greater racial sentivity on the part of the party, yadita, yadita. I'm now waiting to see how many of them can do the right thing and, like Glen C. Loury, admit their error.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/11/2003 10:38:29 AM |

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The discussion that I'm talking about below

http://www.talkleft.com/archives/002879.html
Tuesday :: April 08, 2003

Guardian Reports Details of Strike On Saddam

The Guardian provides details on why it is likely Saddam was killed in yesterday's blast:
Accordings to the reports President Saddam and his sons Qusay and Uday were seen walking into a restaurant in the al-Mansour district of Baghdad early yesterday afternoon. The meeting, with up to 50 members of the top Ba'ath leadership is thought to have taken place in a bunker either below the restaurant or in an adjacent building.
A voice sounding like President Saddam's had been overheard discussing escape routes out of the city. According to one report, his voice was intercepted because he was using an encrypted communication system sold to him by a British company in the 1980s, which British intelligence has since been able to decode.

The belief that the Iraqi leader was at the meeting was reinforced by US intelligence sources within the Iraqi leadership. The intelligence was relayed almost immediately to central command headquarters in Qatar, who sent the co-ordinates to one of its B-1 stealth bombers, which are constantly patrolling the skies over Iraq in search of such targets of opportunity.
Posted Tuesday :: April 08, 2003 | TrackBack

Comments

I call bullshit for 2 reasons:

1. they made the same foolish claim on the first day.

2. franks and beans are perpetual liars. it's all part of their jobs.
Posted by: John Q Public on April 8, 2003 05:50 AM


Let's hope he's dead, already. The baseball season has started and no one seems to be paying enough attention.
Posted by: goblue on April 8, 2003 06:07 AM


Ah, I've heard this Yankee chest thumping b.s. before. Though I've no real love for Mr. Hussein, I hope he's out foxed the imperial ambitions of the U.S. once again, just to piss them off. The problem with this kind of criminality, not the first time for U.S. strategists in many parts of the world, is it invites a like response. (Anyone remember 911?)
Corporate America is not opposed to demoracy, at least at home, so long as it can buy it and control it. It keeps the masses, their gun fodder onside.For the rest of the world, especially the small and defenceless, it's guns, bombs and bullets in their New World Order.
Of note though, the restaurant they hit with their "smart" bomb, from which has only been dragged thus far, a small child, a decapitated young woman and an old man, will hardly go to winning the hearts and minds of the Iraqi street.
Which will serve its purpose too, no doubt, to arouse the world and hasten the defeat of Imperial U.S.A.
Posted by: Jerry on April 8, 2003 09:37 AM


Boy I have heard it all, and I keep on hearing it all again and again. You would think that people can only reach some high level of ignorance. Once again, I have guessed wrong. There obviously is no limit. There is no reason for trying to justify anything that has, and will be destroyed during the "War" in Iraq. For one, there lucky that we give a a rats ass about what we target in Iraq. Are they supposed to go around everything to hit targets when you know that low life piece of cow dung is hiddin right in the middle of his own people. And you dont need anyone to confirm this. For two, I believe that this is not a war to Iraqi freedom. It is in retaliation against "911" So there is your answer to the question of regarding remembering "911" We do, and he is paying at this very moment. We had to justify it somehow. hehehehe
Posted by: Rick on April 8, 2003 10:21 AM


Rick, have you ever made the slightest effort to imagine what your life would be like if you were unfortunate to be born an Iraqi citizen? Or are you just that shallow and burnt out of a human being?

There are some reasons to actually support this war. For you to believe the killing of Iraqi civilians is one of them says a lot about you.
Posted by: Double B on April 8, 2003 11:10 AM


So, Rick . . .

I take it you have proof of Iraqi involvement in the attacks on 9/11?

Impressive. Even the CIA was unable to come up with any.

You know what this is? It's the "Kick the Dog" war. It's like, the division head yells at your boss, who yells at you. So you go home in a bad mood and yell at your wife, She, in turn runsout of patience with your kid and spanks him. Then he goes outside and kicks the dog.
Posted by: Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2003 12:33 PM


Prometheus, you're playing with fire again. Zeus will have to bind your ass again.
Posted by: Steve Plonk on April 8, 2003 02:51 PM


Steve:

Good luck, homie. Prometheus 6 is the new, upgraded model of titan.
Posted by: Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2003 04:34 PM


Bunch of Joe-six-packs in here. I thought this was an intelligent intelligence information dispersal area. NOT, just personal vendetta. Look over here, I have my hand up I have the answer. Just wait till the anti-dude stands up and has the answers for everything and everybody, then we'll all be in deep guano.
Posted by: Bleeb on April 8, 2003 05:07 PM


Well, "Bleeb" certainly does sound like the, "...intelligent intelligence" info gathering type of intellectual, to be sure. To the extent one measures that by complete "unintelligibility".
You must work for U.S. military intelligence Bleeb. They're not really very intelligent.
Posted by: Coyote on April 8, 2003 07:06 PM


To my mind, Bleeb has a point on the personal vendetta thing. I much prefer reason and good metaphors. You'll notice I responded to the veiled threat with a metaphor, or simile or some such.

Continued threats will force me to talk about somebody's mamma.
Posted by: Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2003 07:31 PM


"...who sent the co-ordinates to one of its B-1 stealth bombers..."

The B-1 IS a 1980's era supersonic bomber, designed originally to penetrate soviet airspace and deliver nuclear weapons.

The B-1 is NOT a stealth aircraft, however.
Posted by: not the real one on April 9, 2003 09:53 AM


Wake up people, the strugle for freedom is never free of bloodshed. The world is governed by the powerful, the Arab world only respects and understands strength and power. Look at the news today, Iraqi people cheering in the streets, thanking us for liberating them from the opression and tyranny they have suffered under for 20 years, American is great, if you don't like it, leave.....!
Posted by: America Rules on April 9, 2003 10:41 AM


But if the people to be freed don't WANT to shed their blood, is it up to us to force them to?

And are we supposed to bleed for someone else?

You have not thought this through.
Posted by: Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2003 02:31 PM


So now we're bombing people into democracy? We seem to be all for democratic goverments until they actually listen to their citizens (Turkey, France, Germany). Nobody really thought we would lose this "war". The real problem is going to start showing up when we want Iraq to fit into our definition of a democracy. When we try to satisfy the three major and other minor religous/cultural groups that make up Iraq. When we try to recover our costs from Iraqi oil. When we impose our chosen leaders on the Iraqi people. Basically, when the Iraqis start wanting some of what we're selling, and find out that the neocons are full of it.
Posted by: Winston Smith on April 9, 2003 03:51 PM

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/11/2003 12:59:17 AM |

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April 10, 2003

Steve Plonk:

"Prometheus, you're playing with fire again. Zeus will have to bind your ass again."

Interestingly enough, the two blogs I read regularly that use Haloscan.com commentting (Atrios and Hesiod) don't show comment links to me anymore. As I've seen them reference comments made since the 8th when your threat was made, I know the system still works. More, when I tried to go to www.haloscan.com to read the support board, wanting to see if there was a system level problem, the connection is refused.

It seems someone at haloscan has done an evil thing to my IP address.

This is unfortunate on many levels. Given haloscan's popularity it does disrupt a part of my intent--to show how the ranting of the right can be addressed on a purely rational level. That the small number of comments I've made could invoke fear in so short a time shows that irrationality in the agora is desired by some, and that some involved seem to have influence on a significant part of blogging's infrastructure (an infrastructure that I recognize the growing importance of) is one of the worst possibilites I can conceive of for the medium.

However, it also demonstrates the need for control of one's one methods of communication. I will adjust.

Everyone should remember why Zeus acted against the original Prometheus, and what he did to mortals in response: he acted against Prometheus for bringing fire and light (knowledge and power) to the humans, cutting into the gods' monopoly thereon. And sent pandora's box to afflict all mortals with chaos, pain, illness and hatreds. Significantly, true worshipers of the gods were not exempted from this punishment.

I am not so arrogant as to see my role, mere days old in the "blogosphere," as very significant. But I rarely respond to aggression in a manner that makes the aggressor happy with the results.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/10/2003 09:28:15 PM |

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How . . . nice . . .

I had a comment, but never mind. Too predictable.

North Utah Faces Influx of Racists
By NICK MADIGAN

ROY, Utah � In the cold months, the stark tattoos of white supremacy are concealed beneath layers of clothing, but the ex-convicts and parolees who wear them are becoming known by their faces.

Law enforcement officials here and in other towns in northern Utah say they are grappling with a marked increase in crimes committed by men who joined white supremacist gangs while in prison and who, once released and bound by ideology and kinship, have settled in the area to pursue lives of crime.

"They're connecting with people of like mind," said Greg Whinham, the police chief here in Roy, an Ogden suburb of about 35,000 residents between the Wasatch Mountains and the Great Salt Lake. "The mentality of white supremacy is rampant in the prison system, and now we're seeing it in the streets."

In response, the Roy Police Department joined forces with nine other law enforcement agencies in Weber County to track gangs and individuals who espouse white supremacist credos as well as other fringe philosophies, many of them promoted and learned in the Utah State Prison and other penal institutions.

"We're just getting flooded with these guys," said Lt. Loring L. Draper, a gang task force leader in Ogden, who recalled first noticing the white supremacists in late summer 2001. Since that time, Lieutenant Draper said, about 65 parolees identified as white supremacists have been arrested in the area, mostly for drug offenses, and 35 were returned to prison for parole violations.

On March 6, the police in Ogden made nine arrests in a sweep aimed at a white supremacist ring that specialized in vehicle and residential burglaries and strong-arm robberies, the police said. At least one of the arrested men was carrying a handgun and methamphetamine, a drug that the police say many white gang members produce and sell.

Altogether, the task force is tracking about 132 known white supremacists in Weber County, and there are more who have not been identified, Lieutenant Draper said. About 2,000 parolees and probationers, 31 percent more than in any other region in Utah, live among the approximately 200,000 residents of Weber County and adjacent Morgan County.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/10/2003 11:27:02 AM |

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National Urban League Update

National Urban League Names Milton J. Little, Jr. Interim President and CEO

New York -- The National Urban League announced the appointment of Milton J. Little, Jr., the organization's current executive vice president and chief operating officer, as its interim president and CEO effective April 14.

Little will replace Hugh B. Price, who resigned from the current position last fall and officially leaves office on April 11. The executive committee of the National Urban League board of trustees made the appointment.

Note: You will NEVER see a Congress of Racial Equality Update on this site. My mother taught me, if you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all--advice I generally disregard but will apply to CORE out of respect for its (old, ancient, reduced to mummy dust) history.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/10/2003 11:14:38 AM |

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Al Sharpton speaks out

This is tomorrow.

Also, I have to note I'm a little annoyed that the city this is taking place in isn't mentioned. Since the site I got it from BlackVoices.com is affiliated with the LA Times, I assume it's in Los Angeles.

Al Sharpton discusses race, national policy with journalists group

WASHINGTON, -- On Friday, April 11, the UNITY: Journalists of Color Mentor Program will partner with the National Press Club to hold a luncheon as well as an interview with the Reverend Al Sharpton, president of the National Action Network.

The forum, which will begin with lunch at 12:30 pm and conclude with an interview from 1:00 to 2:00 p.m., is entitled, "American Dream or American Dilemma? A Discussion on Race, Ethnicity & Federal Policy in the 21st Century."

Both the luncheon and the interview will take place in the ballroom of the National Press Club (located on the 13th floor of the National Press Building - 529 14th Street, NW at the corner of 14th and F Street, next to the J.W. Marriott Hotel). Advance reservations should be made by telephoning (202) 662-7501. The cost of this luncheon event is $16 for National Press Club members, $28 for their guests and $35 for general admission.

During the interview, Reverend Sharpton will be asked to answer specific questions regarding his views on domestic federal policies (e.g., health, education, housing, economics / employment, civil rights) as they relate to people of color throughout the United States. The forum will be led by three young journalists from the UNITY Mentor Program: Glenn Jones, weekend anchor, WBBH-TV, Fort Meyers, Florida (who will serve as moderator); Royale Da, general assignment reporter and fill-in anchor, KBJR-News 6, Duluth, Minnesota; and Elisa Ung, staff writer, Philadelphia Inquirer.

Sharpton, who has been highly critical of both the Republican and Democratic Parties for failing to address issues that negatively affect working-class Americans, has made the reasoning behind his presidential campaign clear: "I am running for president to finally put the issues concerning most Americans on to the front burner."

While not necessarily endorsing the Reverend's candidacy, many Americans agree with Sharpton in regard to the importance of the issues on which he has chosen to focus.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/10/2003 11:08:35 AM |

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Why "Prometheus"? Why "6"?

Well, I made this cool animated graphic of the hand holding the fire, and thehand.blogspot.com was taken. Apparently a demo account.

And prometheus.blogspot.com was taken. The six just popped up

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/10/2003 11:01:44 AM |

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Technical note

Never, ever forget to close the quotes around the URL in an anchor when using Blogger. It apparently eats the text.

More accurately, all the text following it is subsumed into the anchor (which makes sense, actually). The result is the second "A truly sad day" you run into when you scroll down the page a little--the byline is a link to the story instead of nice simple text.

Worse, the error is absolutely unreachable by Blogger's built-in editor. In normal mode the edit link that reloads a post for update or deletion load the subject page into the frame that lists your recent posts. In safe mode it runs into the next post, and the edit link only loads the second one. There's another bizarreness that would take too long to write up if you're not familiar with the user interface. Fortunately Blogger's tech support will be VERY familiar with it (when you use someone's free tools and run into a problem, it's required of you (in my opinion) to write detailed, non-hysterical bug reports).

I could probably futz with the template to fix it, but I don't think it's worth it. But it's another reason I want a desktop-based Blogging tool, even if I use it to publish through Blogger.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/10/2003 10:41:42 AM |

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A truly sad day
Accreditation board rejects Morris Brown bid
Associated Press

ATLANTA -- Morris Brown College lost its bid to get its accreditation back.

The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools on Monday released a letter denying the historically Black College's appeal.

The association's decision means Morris Brown students will no longer qualify for federal financial aid. Nearly 90 percent of the private school's students rely on that aid.

Morris Brown's membership in the United Negro College Fund also will be removed as result of the decision.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/10/2003 10:34:33 AM |

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When I heard it, I knew she was Republican

Cubin comment brings accusations of racial insensitivity in House

Rep. Barbara Cubin, R-Wyo., was accused of being racially insensitive by Rep. Melvin Watt, D-N.C., during debate over whether to prohibit lawsuits from being brought against gun and ammunition manufacturers, dealers and importers for damage resulting from misuse of their products.

Cubin, who supports the bill, was complaining about a failed Democratic amendment that would have banned gun sales to drug addicts or people undergoing drug treatment.

"So does that mean that if you go into a black community, you can't sell any guns to any black person?" she asked.

Watt immediately interrupted Cubin, calling for her words to be stricken from the House record.

Cubin apologized for offending Watt's "sensitivities," saying she was sorry if her words offended anyone, but she refused to have her words removed from the debate.

The Republican-dominated House voted 227-195 mostly along party lines to keep Cubin's words in the official House record. After the vote, Cubin apologized again and said she didn't mean to be offensive.

"If I had been able to finish my sentence and my thought, it would have stated that I don't believe in stereotyping anyone, anytime, ever, for anything," Cubin said. "That's what I believe and I believe that from the bottom of my heart."

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/10/2003 10:23:37 AM |

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A truly sad day

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April 09, 2003

Iraq? What about the USofA?

It would be the height of irony if some decision-maker takes this seriously for Iraq after ignoring its obvious truth in the USofA for all these decades.

Government Is the Solution
By Arnold Kling 04/09/2003

Once the fighting dies down in Iraq, new sets of challenges will appear. These involve putting together a new government and a new economy. In order for Iraq to be successful as a democracy, its economy will have to be successful, also.

In What Causes Prosperity?, I wrote that economic success requires three ethics: a work ethic; a public service ethic; and a learning ethic. As Ralph Peters has pointed out, these ethics have been missing in many Arab societies, so that cultivating them will require some effort.

Focus on Jobs, Not Oil

Often, when pundits look at the Iraqi economy, the focus is on oil. For example, Morris Adelman wrote an op-ed piece for the Wall Street Journal about the importance of selling Iraq's oil assets to the highest bidder.

Instead, the issue of privatizing Iraq's oil can wait. Oil should remain government property at least until oil production is stabilized, and perhaps longer - until the economy and an Iraqi government have gotten on their feet.

In the short run, the most important focus of economic policy should be to develop the work ethic. Nothing is more dangerous and destabilizing than large contingents of unemployed men with guns. Iraq is saturated with guns. We need to focus on eliminating the unemployment.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/9/2003 02:41:51 PM |

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Cartoon of the day

I doubt I can keep this up.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/9/2003 09:12:46 AM |

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Well, duh . . .

No New Tax Cuts
By BOB KERREY, SAM NUNN, PETER G. PETERSON, ROBERT E. RUBIN, WARREN B. RUDMAN and PAUL A. VOLCKER


The fiscal outlook is much worse than official projections indicate. These projections assume that the tax cuts enacted in 2001 will expire at the end of 2010. They also assume that discretionary spending, the part of the budget that pays for national defense, domestic security, education and transportation, will shrink continuously as a share of the economy. Neither of these assumptions is realistic.


Under more realistic assumptions, the deficit projections are cause for alarm. A recent study by Goldman Sachs includes this forecast: if the president's proposed new tax cuts are enacted, a Medicare prescription drug benefit is approved, the A.M.T. is adjusted and appropriations grow modestly, the deficits over the next 10 years will total $4.2 trillion � even if the Social Security surplus is included. If it is not included, the deficit would be $6.7 trillion. Under these circumstances, the ratio of publicly held debt to gross domestic product climbs within 10 years to nearly 50 percent, from 33 percent just two years ago.

And all of this happens before the fiscal going gets tough.
The president has proposed a cut of $726 billion, which the House has already approved. The Senate has reduced the cut to $350 billion.

Given the rapidly deteriorating long-term fiscal outlook, neither proposal is fiscally responsible. It is illogical to begin the journey back toward balanced budgets by enacting a tax cut that will only make the long-term outlook worse. Furthermore, the proposed tax cuts are not useful for short-term fiscal stimulus, since only a small portion would take effect this year. Nor would they spur long-term economic growth. In fact, tax cuts financed by perpetual deficits will eventually slow the economy.

The tax cuts now before Congress do not pay for themselves. No plausible array of matching spending cuts or offsetting revenue increases has been, or will be, proposed to close the gap resulting from a large new tax cut.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/9/2003 08:51:53 AM |

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The real reason Muslims don't consume pork

Because it makes you lie, and God don't approve of lies.

Senate Rolls a Pork Barrel Into War Bill

In fact, there were dozens of pork-barrel projects and special interest provisions that were inserted at the last minute Thursday night into the bill to pay for the war in Iraq, and the lawmakers were not particularly shy about acknowledging what they did.

Senator Lisa Murkowski, Republican of Alaska, for example, sent out a news release to reporters in her home state, boasting of helping the Alaska seafood industry with a provision allowing wild salmon to be labeled as organic.

But members of the Appropriations Committee, who brought up most of the extraneous provisions after 10 p.m. on Thursday, about 40 minutes before the bill would be passed, said many of the expenditures were vital and needed to be attached to a bill that was guaranteed approval. Although the president calls the measure a war bill, they said, it is really a wide-ranging appropriations bill that may be the only vehicle for months to enact important provisions.

So, we're saying the President deliberately misnamed the bill, right? That "war bill" is a term of art?


"The administration itself has asked for funds in this bill that have nothing to do with Iraq, such as their request for aid to Colombia," said David Carle, a spokesman for Senator Patrick J. Leahy, Democrat of Vermont, who inserted several additions to the bill. "Each year there is a midyear course-correction bill like this to address issues like these that cannot or should not wait another year." Mr. Carle was referring to the $104 million in the bill the president requested for antinarcotics efforts in Colombia.


Okay, lets see what's so damn "vital":
�An increase from $320 million to $330 million for a science research station at the South Pole. 1

�A communications system for the metropolitan government of Louisville-Jefferson County in Kentucky, which will cost $5 million. A spokesman for Senator Jim Bunning, Republican of Kentucky, said he asked for the money as part of the domestic security section of the bill, because police radios in the area work on different frequencies and need to be upgraded.2

�A provision that would make it easier for senators to send out postcards to constituents to notify them of town meetings. The amendment, sponsored by Senator Arlen Specter, Republican of Pennsylvania, would eliminate wording that limited the taxpayer-financed postcards to counties of fewer than 250,000 people.

"This is directly related to the war effort," said Mr. Specter, who is preparing for a tough re-election battle. "Meeting with the people of Pennsylvania is an important part of our job, including informing them of the war effort. It's really laughable to suggest this is anything but a minuscule change." 3

�An amendment that would prohibit the German-owned DHL Worldwide Express delivery company from carrying American military cargo. The provision, sponsored by several senators, came after lobbying by Federal Express and United Parcel Service, according to Senate officials, and could hinder a proposed merger between DHL and Airborne Express.4

�A provision to shift $3.3 million to repair a leaking dam in Waterbury, Vt. A spokesman for Mr. Leahy said the need to rebuild the dam was urgent and could not wait until the next appropriations bill.5

�A provision to allow the Border Patrol to accept donations of body armor for patrol dogs, also inserted by Mr. Leahy. An 11-year-old girl in Vermont has been raising money to buy a bulletproof vest for a patrol dog, but the current legislation does not allow the patrol to accept gifts.6

1 War effort. Ooookay.
2 Hm. Maybe reasonable.
3 This is nonsense. Spector has el toro cojones. But we knew that.
4 Obviously economic warfare counts.
5 Okay, you have to do this. But it shouldn't have to be buried in a war appropriations bill. Oh, yeah, it's not really a war bill. I forgot--soldier on.
6 Well, at least this won't cost anything. But, body armor for ONE DOG??

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/9/2003 08:32:43 AM |

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I really needed to read this before breakfast

Republicans Want Terror Law Made Permanent

WASHINGTON, April 8 � Working with the Bush administration, Congressional Republicans are maneuvering to make permanent the sweeping antiterrorism powers granted to federal law enforcement agents after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, officials said today.

The move is likely to touch off strong objections from many Democrats and even some Republicans in Congress who believe that the Patriot Act, as the legislation that grew out of the attacks is known, has already given the government too much power to spy on Americans.

The landmark legislation expanded the government's power to use eavesdropping, surveillance, access to financial and computer records and other tools to track terrorist suspects.

When it passed in October 2001, moderates and civil libertarians in Congress agreed to support it only by making many critical provisions temporary. Those provisions will expire, or "sunset," at the end of 2005 unless Congress re-authorizes them.

But Republicans in the Senate in recent days have discussed a proposal, written by Senator Orrin G. Hatch, Republican of Utah, that would repeal the sunset provisions and make the law's new powers permanent, officials said. Republicans may seek to move on the proposal this week by trying to attaching it to another antiterrorism bill that would make it easier for the government to use secret surveillance warrants against "lone wolf" terrorism suspects.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/9/2003 08:07:18 AM |

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Technology is a beautiful thing,
or,
Hitting the links II


Well, now I have a little lefty blogroll. I set it up last night real quick because I could, and because I'm backing away for at least today. I need to work some code and change a few plans.

Among the changes will be setting up another blog, most likely private, to think out loud about the blogging tools I'm writing. No offense to Blogger, because it works well. But the free version doesn't work exactly the way I want it to. I really want a desktop-based tool. Blog and its sibling BlogMan is real close (including being free), as is CityDesk, (which full version is not free buit cheap enough). I'd have no problem recommending either, or Blogger for that matter. I just have a good idea what I want and know I can make it myself.

Other free blogging stuff that's cool enough to mention, and even pay for:
Sitemeter page counter
Squawkbox commenting
Blogrolling.com link management (though I can probably make some desktop-based equivalent thing, it may be better/faster/easier to just open an account there)

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/9/2003 07:14:10 AM |

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Random thoughts while walking the web

So I�m on Warblogs:cc to see what�s new. An article on TalkLeft catches my eye.

When I read the articles I generally check out the comments, at least briefly�sometimes there are hundreds and I tend to skip those, but there were fewer than ten attached to this particular one, so I hit the link. In the comments a �warrior� says something about attacking Hussein in retribution for 911.

Now this bugs me.

Of all the reasons given by Bush and Co. for attacking Iraq, this is the one I simply can�t credit. I can see someone feeling he�d have to be punished for lying about disarming, if that�s what one believe he�s done. I can see pulling him into line with international law (although I�m going to have to ask how you�ll handle Israel�s flouting the UN authority, if that�s your reason). I can actually see someone believing and acting on the idea that conquering the Middle East is in the country�s best interest (though you�ll never convince me of it). These are decisions made based on the values one holds. If I held Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Rove�s values, reason would make me just as dangerous as they. In a perverse way, I can relate.

But when you tell me there�s an objectively supportable reason for invading another country and killing bags of people, you�d bloody well better support it objectively.

Here�s a big difference between convincing folks something is true and proving it. A serious effort was made to convince people but not to prove it. It seems like everyone was expected to just accept that the papers being waved about had valid information�my GOD, they didn�t expect anyone to actually check the validity of that stuff.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/9/2003 01:07:08 AM |

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April 08, 2003

Hitting the links

Having to do with a blogroll, not golf. I'm supposed to have one, right?

Well, I don't, not yet. "Dropping knowledge" is more important. Make what you will of that.

I guess I'll sign up for blogrolling.com tomorrow to add blogs. Liberal and leftist blogs, thank you very indeed. When I find rational conservatives to talk to, I'll likely add a section for them. Until then, Glen Reynolds doesn't even need my symbolic support. He got all the traffic he can handle.

I sorted my Netscape bookmarks the other day. Between that and organizing my morning news run as a set of saved tabs I spend a lot less time on said news run, so I don't need a blogroll personally. But one must respect the rituals. When in Rome, donchaknow . . .

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/8/2003 07:21:17 PM |

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Meanwhile, back in my skull

At this point, the blog is just kinda talking to myself.

While wandering the Wide Word Web, I keep seeing folks commenting on other people's comments. That's how the public blogging thing works. It's a big part of why it works. And I keep seeing things I'd really like to rip apart.

Right now, though, there's no point to it. I know what I think, my knowledge is a great (or small) as any other intelligent writer out there. But unless/until I get readers, the major function of this site will be helping me shape my own thoughts.

Writing has always been highly beneficial to me. It's not so much the communication aspect of it that makes it a Good Thing; it's that casting inchoate thoughts into form makes you shape them up. Making sure what you write is tight, clear and communicative forces you to deal with the assumptions that underlie the gut reactions.

That is, if you're intent on being tight and clear. A lot of folks just ain't, because (assumption fueling speculations that I'm arrogant as hell coming up) most people simply aren't interested in following a reasoned debate. Most people seem to me to be satisfied hearing something--ANYthing--that supports their gut reaction so they can say "Yeah! Yeah! YEAH!" Best example I can think of in this regard was when one of them "Bell Curve" assholes was touring the college campuses to "debate" some leftist who seemed from the email I was getting at the time to believe she had a shot at changing someone's mind.

Racist anthopoids are incapable of following subtle debate. They are more than capable of recognizing bombast that agrees with (not supports, mind you) their racism.

Anyway, it's even worse now. Now you have intelligent people actively parroting arguments to get a goddamn folding chair.

I don't want to talk to them in detail, believe me. The comments are here more because blogs have comment mechanisms than anything else.

Oh, yeah. Writing.

I'm going to try writing one coherant thing per day. The rest will be drive-bys of stuff I personally feel it's important to remember.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/8/2003 04:40:51 PM |

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How fukkin' absurd

Boy howdy, we're your friends
Jon Carroll
Monday, April 7, 2003
�2003 San Francisco Chronicle

URL:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2003/04/07/DD296366.DTL


It appears that after this pesky war is over, the State Department will start publishing a magazine about American culture to be distributed in Arab countries. The name of the magazine is Hi.

I dunno. I've traveled in Egypt and Dubai and Oman and Muslim northern Nigeria, and they just weren't "hi" kinds of places. They were "you are very welcome in my home" kinds of places, and "you must pay the double because-it- is-Wednesday fee" kinds of places, and even "once again you have misunderstood everything, but please have some flat bread" kinds of places.

But not "Hi!"

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/8/2003 05:52:17 AM |

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Intellectual Speaks of the Arab World's Despair


For him the United States was a "dream," a paragon of liberal values to be emulated by Arabs and Muslims seeking to have a voice in the modern world.

Yet these days, in his opinion, something has gone terribly wrong.

"Under the present situation, I cannot think of defending the United States," said Mr. Aboulmagd, a small man with thinning white hair who juggles a constant stream of phone calls and invitations to speak about modernizing the Arab world.

"I would not be listened to," he added. "To most people in this area, the United States is the source of evil on planet earth. And whether we like it or not, it is the Bush administration that is to blame."

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/8/2003 05:30:26 AM |

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Cartoon of the day

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/8/2003 05:26:06 AM |

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Stolen from the NY Times

The Last Refuge
By PAUL KRUGMAN

In 1944, millions of Americans were engaged in desperate battles across the world. Nonetheless, a normal presidential election was held, and the opposition didn't pull its punches: Thomas Dewey, the Republican candidate, campaigned on the theme that Franklin Roosevelt was a "tired old man." As far as I've been able to ascertain, the Roosevelt administration didn't accuse Dewey of hurting morale by questioning the president's competence. After all, democracy � including the right to criticize � was what we were fighting for.

It's not a slur on the courage of our troops, or a belittling of the risks they face, to say that our current war is a mere skirmish by comparison. Yet self-styled patriots are trying to impose constraints on political speech never contemplated during World War II, accusing anyone who criticizes the president of undermining the war effort.

Last week John Kerry told an audience that "what we need now is not just a regime change in Saddam Hussein and Iraq, but we need a regime change in the United States." Republicans immediately sought to portray this remark as little short of treason. "Senator Kerry crossed a grave line when he dared to suggest the replacement of America's commander in chief at a time when America is at war," declared Marc Racicot, chairman of the Republican National Committee.

Notice that Mr. Racicot wasn't criticizing Mr. Kerry's choice of words. Instead, he denounced Mr. Kerry because he "dared to suggest the replacement of America's commander in chief" � knowing full well that Mr. Kerry was simply talking about the next election. Mr. Racicot, not Mr. Kerry, is the one who crossed a grave line; never in our nation's history has it been considered unpatriotic to oppose an incumbent's re-election.

Anyway, what defines patriotism? Talk is cheap; so is putting a flag in your lapel. Citizens prove their patriotism when they make sacrifices for the sake of their country. Mr. Kerry, a decorated veteran, has met that test. Most of his critics haven't.

I'm not just talking about military service � though it's striking how few of our biggest hawks have served. Nor am I talking only about financial sacrifice � though profiting from public office seems to be the norm, not the exception, among those who wrap themselves in the flag. (Mr. Racicot himself accepted the job as R.N.C. chairman only on the condition that he remain on the payroll of Bracewell and Patterson, a law firm that specializes in lobbying.)

The biggest test of a politician's patriotism is whether he is willing to sacrifice some of his political agenda for the sake of the nation. And that's a test our current leaders have failed with flying colors.

Consider the case of Tom DeLay, the House majority leader, who also piled on Mr. Kerry last week. As it happens, during the war in Kosovo Mr. DeLay was a defeatist, and blamed his own country for provoking Serbian atrocities; any Democrat who said similar things now would be accused of giving aid and comfort to the enemy.

Mr. DeLay's political agenda hasn't shifted a bit now that we're at war again. He's still pushing for huge, divisive tax cuts that go mainly to the rich: "Nothing is more important in the face of a war than cutting taxes," he says. And he's still eager to slash any and all domestic spending. In the midst of war he pushed through a budget that included sharp cuts in, yes, veterans' benefits.

You can see why Mr. Kerry blasted back, "I'm not going to be questioned in my patriotism by the likes of Tom DeLay."

Some timid souls will suggest that critics of the Bush administration hold off until the war is over. But that's not the American tradition � and anyway, when will this war be over? Baghdad will fall, but during the occupation that follows American soldiers will still be in harm's way. Also, a strong faction within the administration wants to go on to Syria, to Iran and beyond. And Al Qaeda is still out there.

For years to come, then, this country may be, in some sense, at war. And all that time, if Mr. Racicot and his party are allowed to set the ground rules, nobody will be allowed to criticize the president or call for his electoral defeat. You know what? If that happens, we will have lost the war, whatever happens on the battlefield.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/8/2003 05:20:29 AM |

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April 07, 2003

Second day of "Blogging"

In quotes because I playing with it, really.

This could become an obsession for someone (like me) with too much goddamn time on their hands. Especially if you've been reading blogs for a while.

Blogs have me online so much I can't talk shit about the "web surfers" of olden days, the people who clicked random links for entertainment. I've been berserk recently, following the war discussions, and it hasn't been pleasant (more on that later).

Anyway, I'm getting the feel for what a successful blogging tool is like. I get to modify XREBlogger/XREBloggregator/Whatever I'm gonna call it accordingly . . . just a bit is all that's necessary. But of course that's not the only reason I'm interested in this.

Truthfully, I've wanted a public speaking platform ever since Intersection days. And in those days I was looking at a specific set of goals and ideas. Those goals are still good but there's a bag of other stuff that has me concerned, not least of which is the way the RIME Current Events/Debate conference seems to have risen to devour the public debate space (man, you got to be old as hell to remember that!). The bag is getting too big, too full. I need to develop some kind of focus.

Crushing asshole comments and rhetoric feeblely disguised as logic is easy. Getting heard is hard and getting individuals to change their behavior is harder. Influencing the public debate alone is probably a sisyphean task. Finding and linking up with the right folks is only slightly less difficult.

A single blog is insufficient unto the task. A network though, properly used . . .

And "properly used" is the problem. It is my experience that too many grass-roots types (and I could name names) are as concerned with recognition as correctness. A lot can't seem to think of a solution that doesn't require themselves at the top of the pyramid. Human nature, I suppose. A number of folks are just pissed da fuck off and their idea of activism is ragging on people . . . more human nature. And a lot of the discussion takes place in self-reinforcing groups of people who don't know how the system operates. As such, those discussions have self-reinforcing errors.

Lotta lotta problems, lotta lotta issues. Notta lotta answers, because I feel like I've lost touch with folks on the ground. Alll this down-time has let me know that.

I have a couple of ideas, though. Primary among them is finding some way to facilitate the communication and exchange of ideas among the grass-roots. A lot of the discussion is done on the cheap, Yahoo mailing lists and such. Good looking web sites and/or blogs that folks will want EVERYONE to know about would help. A method of letting people know about new information would help as well--something like www.weblogs.com, maybe, or better, like www.syndic8.com specializing in syndicating Black interest/leftist/activist weblogs.

I'm feeling, though truthfully the public platform thing is more appealing to me (damn that human nature!), the networking thing is more important.

If I'm serious . . . and I think I am . . . I got work to do.

(Note to self: the application MUST HAVE A SPELL-CHECKER)
(Second note: a grammar checker would be nice too, but I don't know how! sob!

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/7/2003 10:33:39 PM |

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Be afraid . . . be very afraid

Small Bomb Damages Ald. Solis' Office

(Chicago) -- The West Side office of Ald. Danny Solis (25th) was bombed early Monday morning.

A "small explosive device" was thrown through the window of the office, at 2439 S. Oakley Av., and blew a small hole in the floor when it exploded, according to Marquette District Capt. Fred Konet.

Solis shares the office with State Representative Edward Acevedo. Both are Democrats.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/7/2003 03:22:32 PM |

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A capitalist should appreciate this line of thought, but . . .

The Bottom Line, a blog hosted by Corante has this to say about the costs of doing or not doing Bush's Total Information Awareness program:



Filtering and Errors

Here is an example of poor use of mathematics.

Heather MacDonald, defending Total Information Awareness, called us all Luddites for not being thrilled by the capabilities of this new technology. She would, she said emotionally, be happy for her daughter to answer a few questions if it meant she wouldn't be blown up at her college. Patrick Ball, who does statistics and relational databases for a living in human rights work, challenged her with some numbers. We are, he said forcibly, talking about hundreds of millions of suspects and a few dozen terrorists. Even the tiniest error rate, he pointed out, means hundreds of thousands of false positives and therefore investigations.

It is MacDonald who is right and Ball who is wrong. Think of it this way: what do we do without a database? Then we will have a larger error rate and even more investigations.

Or, implicitly, we will not have any terrorist investigations. In that case we save the cost of the investigations (both to the government and to the people who would have been investigated). That's wonderful. Except that now we pay the price of more terrorist incidents, which might be $100 billion each (look at 9-11).

In order to know whether an error rate is costly or not, we need to know what the alternative would be. If the alternative is a higher error rate and/or more terrorism, that puts the error rate of a database in perspective.


You know, if you don't want to pay the price of more terrorist events, you might consider not empowering extremists for your own benefit.

See, the thing about extremists is if you don't agree with them point-for-point, they're going to do something extreme.

But, I suppose it's too late to think along those lines now. Oh, well . . .

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/7/2003 09:06:51 AM |

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Workers Who Feel Discarded

Bob Herbert, NY Times

Among the many things overshadowed by the war is the substantial human toll that is quietly being taken by the faltering U.S. economy. Putting Americans to work is not part of the agenda of the Bush administration, and the fallout from this lack of interest is spreading big time.

The U.S. is hemorrhaging jobs. On Friday the government reported that 108,000 more jobs were lost in March. Some 2.4 million jobs have vanished since the nation's payrolls peaked two years ago.

The jobless rate held steady at 5.8 percent last month, but that is extremely deceptive. People who have become discouraged and stopped looking for work are not counted when the unemployment rate is calculated. This keeps the official rate artificially low. There are five million people in the discouraged category and their ranks are growing.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/7/2003 08:29:49 AM |

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Ted Rall is Eeeeevil!

I love that in a man.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/7/2003 08:03:00 AM |

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April 06, 2003

The Nazis: Warning from History - The Condensed Version


When Democracy Failed: The Warnings of History

Published on Sunday, March 16, 2003 by CommonDreams.org
When Democracy Failed: The Warnings of History
by Thom Hartmann


The 70th anniversary wasn't noticed in the United States, and was barely reported in the corporate media. But the Germans remembered well that fateful day seventy years ago - February 27, 1933. They commemorated the anniversary by joining in demonstrations for peace that mobilized citizens all across the world.

It started when the government, in the midst of a worldwide economic crisis, received reports of an imminent terrorist attack. A foreign ideologue had launched feeble attacks on a few famous buildings, but the media largely ignored his relatively small efforts. The intelligence services knew, however, that the odds were he would eventually succeed. (Historians are still arguing whether or not rogue elements in the intelligence service helped the terrorist; the most recent research implies they did not.)

But the warnings of investigators were ignored at the highest levels, in part because the government was distracted; the man who claimed to be the nation's leader had not been elected by a majority vote and the majority of citizens claimed he had no right to the powers he coveted. He was a simpleton, some said, a cartoon character of a man who saw things in black-and-white terms and didn't have the intellect to understand the subtleties of running a nation in a complex and internationalist world. His coarse use of language - reflecting his political roots in a southernmost state - and his simplistic and often-inflammatory nationalistic rhetoric offended the aristocrats, foreign leaders, and the well-educated elite in the government and media. And, as a young man, he'd joined a secret society with an occult-sounding name and bizarre initiation rituals that involved skulls and human bones.

Nonetheless, he knew the terrorist was going to strike (although he didn't know where or when), and he had already considered his response. When an aide brought him word that the nation's most prestigious building was ablaze, he verified it was the terrorist who had struck and then rushed to the scene and called a press conference.

"You are now witnessing the beginning of a great epoch in history," he proclaimed, standing in front of the burned-out building, surrounded by national media. "This fire," he said, his voice trembling with emotion, "is the beginning." He used the occasion - "a sign from God," he called it - to declare an all-out war on terrorism and its ideological sponsors, a people, he said, who traced their origins to the Middle East and found motivation for their evil deeds in their religion.

Two weeks later, the first detention center for terrorists was built in Oranianberg to hold the first suspected allies of the infamous terrorist. In a national outburst of patriotism, the leader's flag was everywhere, even printed large in newspapers suitable for window display.

Within four weeks of the terrorist attack, the nation's now-popular leader had pushed through legislation - in the name of combating terrorism and fighting the philosophy he said spawned it - that suspended constitutional guarantees of free speech, privacy, and habeas corpus. Police could now intercept mail and wiretap phones; suspected terrorists could be imprisoned without specific charges and without access to their lawyers; police could sneak into people's homes without warrants if the cases involved terrorism.

To get his patriotic "Decree on the Protection of People and State" passed over the objections of concerned legislators and civil libertarians, he agreed to put a 4-year sunset provision on it: if the national emergency provoked by the terrorist attack was over by then, the freedoms and rights would be returned to the people, and the police agencies would be re-restrained. Legislators would later say they hadn't had time to read the bill before voting on it.

Immediately after passage of the anti-terrorism act, his federal police agencies stepped up their program of arresting suspicious persons and holding them without access to lawyers or courts. In the first year only a few hundred were interred, and those who objected were largely ignored by the mainstream press, which was afraid to offend and thus lose access to a leader with such high popularity ratings. Citizens who protested the leader in public - and there were many - quickly found themselves confronting the newly empowered police's batons, gas, and jail cells, or fenced off in protest zones safely out of earshot of the leader's public speeches. (In the meantime, he was taking almost daily lessons in public speaking, learning to control his tonality, gestures, and facial expressions. He became a very competent orator.)

Within the first months after that terrorist attack, at the suggestion of a political advisor, he brought a formerly obscure word into common usage. He wanted to stir a "racial pride" among his countrymen, so, instead of referring to the nation by its name, he began to refer to it as "The Homeland," a phrase publicly promoted in the introduction to a 1934 speech recorded in Leni Riefenstahl's famous propaganda movie "Triumph Of The Will." As hoped, people's hearts swelled with pride, and the beginning of an us-versus-them mentality was sewn. Our land was "the" homeland, citizens thought: all others were simply foreign lands. We are the "true people," he suggested, the only ones worthy of our nation's concern; if bombs fall on others, or human rights are violated in other nations and it makes our lives better, it's of little concern to us.

Playing on this new nationalism, and exploiting a disagreement with the French over his increasing militarism, he argued that any international body that didn't act first and foremost in the best interest of his own nation was neither relevant nor useful. He thus withdrew his country from the League Of Nations in October, 1933, and then negotiated a separate naval armaments agreement with Anthony Eden of The United Kingdom to create a worldwide military ruling elite.

His propaganda minister orchestrated a campaign to ensure the people that he was a deeply religious man and that his motivations were rooted in Christianity. He even proclaimed the need for a revival of the Christian faith across his nation, what he called a "New Christianity." Every man in his rapidly growing army wore a belt buckle that declared "Gott Mit Uns" - God Is With Us - and most of them fervently believed it was true.

Within a year of the terrorist attack, the nation's leader determined that the various local police and federal agencies around the nation were lacking the clear communication and overall coordinated administration necessary to deal with the terrorist threat facing the nation, particularly those citizens who were of Middle Eastern ancestry and thus probably terrorist and communist sympathizers, and various troublesome "intellectuals" and "liberals." He proposed a single new national agency to protect the security of the homeland, consolidating the actions of dozens of previously independent police, border, and investigative agencies under a single leader.

He appointed one of his most trusted associates to be leader of this new agency, the Central Security Office for the homeland, and gave it a role in the government equal to the other major departments.

His assistant who dealt with the press noted that, since the terrorist attack, "Radio and press are at out disposal." Those voices questioning the legitimacy of their nation's leader, or raising questions about his checkered past, had by now faded from the public's recollection as his central security office began advertising a program encouraging people to phone in tips about suspicious neighbors. This program was so successful that the names of some of the people "denounced" were soon being broadcast on radio stations. Those denounced often included opposition politicians and celebrities who dared speak out - a favorite target of his regime and the media he now controlled through intimidation and ownership by corporate allies.

To consolidate his power, he concluded that government alone wasn't enough. He reached out to industry and forged an alliance, bringing former executives of the nation's largest corporations into high government positions. A flood of government money poured into corporate coffers to fight the war against the Middle Eastern ancestry terrorists lurking within the homeland, and to prepare for wars overseas. He encouraged large corporations friendly to him to acquire media outlets and other industrial concerns across the nation, particularly those previously owned by suspicious people of Middle Eastern ancestry. He built powerful alliances with industry; one corporate ally got the lucrative contract worth millions to build the first large-scale detention center for enemies of the state. Soon more would follow. Industry flourished.

But after an interval of peace following the terrorist attack, voices of dissent again arose within and without the government. Students had started an active program opposing him (later known as the White Rose Society), and leaders of nearby nations were speaking out against his bellicose rhetoric. He needed a diversion, something to direct people away from the corporate cronyism being exposed in his own government, questions of his possibly illegitimate rise to power, and the oft-voiced concerns of civil libertarians about the people being held in detention without due process or access to attorneys or family.

With his number two man - a master at manipulating the media - he began a campaign to convince the people of the nation that a small, limited war was necessary. Another nation was harboring many of the suspicious Middle Eastern people, and even though its connection with the terrorist who had set afire the nation's most important building was tenuous at best, it held resources their nation badly needed if they were to have room to live and maintain their prosperity. He called a press conference and publicly delivered an ultimatum to the leader of the other nation, provoking an international uproar. He claimed the right to strike preemptively in self-defense, and nations across Europe - at first - denounced him for it, pointing out that it was a doctrine only claimed in the past by nations seeking worldwide empire, like Caesar's Rome or Alexander's Greece.

It took a few months, and intense international debate and lobbying with European nations, but, after he personally met with the leader of the United Kingdom, finally a deal was struck. After the military action began, Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain told the nervous British people that giving in to this leader's new first-strike doctrine would bring "peace for our time." Thus Hitler annexed Austria in a lightning move, riding a wave of popular support as leaders so often do in times of war. The Austrian government was unseated and replaced by a new leadership friendly to Germany, and German corporations began to take over Austrian resources.

In a speech responding to critics of the invasion, Hitler said, "Certain foreign newspapers have said that we fell on Austria with brutal methods. I can only say; even in death they cannot stop lying. I have in the course of my political struggle won much love from my people, but when I crossed the former frontier [into Austria] there met me such a stream of love as I have never experienced. Not as tyrants have we come, but as liberators."

To deal with those who dissented from his policies, at the advice of his politically savvy advisors, he and his handmaidens in the press began a campaign to equate him and his policies with patriotism and the nation itself. National unity was essential, they said, to ensure that the terrorists or their sponsors didn't think they'd succeeded in splitting the nation or weakening its will. In times of war, they said, there could be only "one people, one nation, and one commander-in-chief" ("Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Fuhrer"), and so his advocates in the media began a nationwide campaign charging that critics of his policies were attacking the nation itself. Those questioning him were labeled "anti-German" or "not good Germans," and it was suggested they were aiding the enemies of the state by failing in the patriotic necessity of supporting the nation's valiant men in uniform. It was one of his most effective ways to stifle dissent and pit wage-earning people (from whom most of the army came) against the "intellectuals and liberals" who were critical of his policies.

Nonetheless, once the "small war" annexation of Austria was successfully and quickly completed, and peace returned, voices of opposition were again raised in the Homeland. The almost-daily release of news bulletins about the dangers of terrorist communist cells wasn't enough to rouse the populace and totally suppress dissent. A full-out war was necessary to divert public attention from the growing rumbles within the country about disappearing dissidents; violence against liberals, Jews, and union leaders; and the epidemic of crony capitalism that was producing empires of wealth in the corporate sector but threatening the middle class's way of life.

A year later, to the week, Hitler invaded Czechoslovakia; the nation was now fully at war, and all internal dissent was suppressed in the name of national security. It was the end of Germany's first experiment with democracy.

As we conclude this review of history, there are a few milestones worth remembering.

February 27, 2003, was the 70th anniversary of Dutch terrorist Marinus van der Lubbe's successful firebombing of the German Parliament (Reichstag) building, the terrorist act that catapulted Hitler to legitimacy and reshaped the German constitution. By the time of his successful and brief action to seize Austria, in which almost no German blood was shed, Hitler was the most beloved and popular leader in the history of his nation. Hailed around the world, he was later Time magazine's "Man Of The Year."

Most Americans remember his office for the security of the homeland, known as the Reichssicherheitshauptamt and its SchutzStaffel, simply by its most famous agency's initials: the SS.

We also remember that the Germans developed a new form of highly violent warfare they named "lightning war" or blitzkrieg, which, while generating devastating civilian losses, also produced a highly desirable "shock and awe" among the nation's leadership according to the authors of the 1996 book "Shock And Awe" published by the National Defense University Press.

Reflecting on that time, The American Heritage Dictionary (Houghton Mifflin Company, 1983) left us this definition of the form of government the German democracy had become through Hitler's close alliance with the largest German corporations and his policy of using war as a tool to keep power: "fas-cism (fbsh'iz'em) n. A system of government that exercises a dictatorship of the extreme right, typically through the merging of state and business leadership, together with belligerent nationalism."

Today, as we face financial and political crises, it's useful to remember that the ravages of the Great Depression hit Germany and the United States alike. Through the 1930s, however, Hitler and Roosevelt chose very different courses to bring their nations back to power and prosperity.

Germany's response was to use government to empower corporations and reward the society's richest individuals, privatize much of the commons, stifle dissent, strip people of constitutional rights, and create an illusion of prosperity through continual and ever-expanding war. America passed minimum wage laws to raise the middle class, enforced anti-trust laws to diminish the power of corporations, increased taxes on corporations and the wealthiest individuals, created Social Security, and became the employer of last resort through programs to build national infrastructure, promote the arts, and replant forests.

To the extent that our Constitution is still intact, the choice is again ours.

Thom Hartmann lived and worked in Germany during the 1980s, and is the author of over a dozen books, including "Unequal Protection" and "The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight." This article is copyright by Thom Hartmann, but permission is granted for reprint in print, email, blog, or web media so long as this credit is attached.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/6/2003 03:59:51 PM |

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Promethian Principles 1

In no particular order:


  • ya damn skippy, I'm a liberal

  • I'm a Capitalist because I can't see Bell Laboratory scientists creating the transistor in exchange for a couple of loaves of bread, a bag of salt and a hunting knife each

  • people aren't so much stupid or lazy as comfortable

  • Nazis is as Nazis does. Look up the history on how they manipulated public opinion and came to power. Too lazy . . . um, comfortable to read? Check out The Nazis: Warning from History set from The History Channel. Do the math--draw a conclusion.

  • Good Germans is as Good Germans does. See the previous point.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/6/2003 02:36:38 PM |

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If not for IP issues, I'd post this weekly

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/6/2003 02:21:28 PM |

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ASS-u-me

Of course, all this presupposes someone is listening to poor l'il me. Which means trying to get into marketing on some level--simply being serious and making sense (another assumption I make is that I do that) hasn't been enough to be heard in a long time.

After all, there's a lot of competition out there.

So I set up my little shop, right? And I put all amnner of truth, goodness and wisdom on display. Then I set out a sign with directions to my shop, a 200 watt spotlight above it so it can be read in the middle of all the darkness.

But right next to me . . . hell, 100 miles away . . . there's a big display room full of all manner of googaws, making pretty tinkling noises and flashing colored lights. They serve cotton candy, whipped cream, all these yummy, empty calories. And they put up a sign the size of a billboard with ten searchlights sweeping the skies and play funky music that can be heard blocks away.

Is anyone gonna even see my sign?

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/6/2003 12:49:06 PM |

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Why I'm Here

Because I have to say something about all of this.

"This"?

What "this" is, is the threat that I, personally, feel because of the way national affairs are playing out in the USofA. I find the political process is currently driven by inuendo and character assasination. I find the participants on all sides less than honorable. I see the goals currently pursued and the actions taken to pursue them . . . distasteful.

I shouldn't be surprised, and in fact I'm not really. Methods of shaping public opinion are well known. They depend on people being asleep and wanting to remain so. They depend on people assuming their trusted sources of information are both trustworthy and complete . . . assumptions people need to make if they are to have enough confidence to live day to day.

The problem with that is, our information sources nowadays have no connection to us and therefore no real interest in our best interests. They are so alien to our nature--wire services as opposed to town criers--that their interests literally cannot coincide with ours.

What I want to do here is talk to the town criers. And I'll be talking more about people than politics.

There are other problems, other issues, more than I can handily drop into this off-the-cuff first post. I'll get to them eventually.

posted by Prometheus 6 at 4/6/2003 11:18:34 AM |

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