Ted Rall
I knew that solar flare would cause problems
Where's the Justice?
By DAVID JOHNSTON and ERIC LICHTBLAU WASHINGTON, Oct. 30 ? An internal report that harshly criticized the Justice Department's diversity efforts was edited so heavily when it was posted on the department's Web site two weeks ago that half of its 186 pages, including the summary, were blacked out. The deleted passages, electronically recovered by a self-described "information archaeologist" in Tucson, portrayed the department's record on diversity as seriously flawed, specifically in the hiring, promotion and retention of minority lawyers. The unedited report, completed in June 2002 by the consulting firm KPMG, found that minority employees at the department, which is responsible for enforcing the country's civil rights laws, perceive their own workplace as biased and unfair.
Paranoia
Oh, yeah
Please forward
Why I said I'll do it once
CAP Daily Briefing
IRAQ Corporations Gone Wild Using the deteriorating security situation in Iraq as cover, the Bush Administration today announced it was extending Halliburton's $2 billion no-bid contract - while indefinitely postponing two competitively bid contracts. The Administration also shockingly claimed that rebuilding "will cost twice as much as the government has anticipated." The move highlights just how much of a feeding frenzy Iraq has become for private corporations with close ties to the White House. The latest Harper's magazine writes that, although "as much as one third of the rapidly expanding cost of the Iraq war is going into private U.S. bank accounts," there is virtually no accountability or oversight. Newsweek calls Iraq the "$87 Billion Money Pit" and reports the U.S. government gave these private corporations contracts on a "limited-bid or no-bid basis. It bypassed the Iraqis and didn't worry much about accountability to Congress." (Click HERE for American Progress fellow Gayle Smith's analysis of transparency issues in Iraq). There isn't even coordination between the corporations, as efforts devolve into a moebius strip of ineffectuality. Power stations, like those controlled by Bechtel, need gas and oil to run. The fuel refineries, run by Halliburton, need that power to run in order to supply that fuel, yet, Newsweek reports, there is little coordination between the corporations. One of the few things that can be detected is price gouging. As Reuters reports the U.S. government is paying Vice President Dick Cheney's former firm Halliburton "enormous sums'' - $2.65 a gallon - for gasoline imported into Iraq from Kuwait, according to Reps. Henry Waxman and John Dingell. The "gross overpayment" was made worse by the fact that the "U.S. government was turning around and reselling the gasoline in Iraq for four to 15 cents a gallon." NEW REPORT - 'THE WINDFALLS OF WAR': The Center for Public Integrity releases a new report today showing that "more than 70 American companies and individuals have won up to $8 billion in contracts for work in postwar Iraq and Afghanistan over the last two years." Those companies "donated more money to the presidential campaigns of George W. Bush—a little over $500,000—than to any other politician over the last dozen years." For example, "Kellogg, Brown & Root, the subsidiary of Halliburton—which Vice President Dick Cheney led prior to being chosen as Bush's running mate in August 2000—was the top recipient of federal contracts for the two countries, with more than $2.3 billion awarded to the company. Bechtel Group, a major government contractor with similarly high-ranking ties, was second at around $1.03 billion." HAZARD PAY FOR CORPORATE CONTRACTORS, NOT FOR U.S. TROOPS: Why are the price tags for outside contractors so outrageously expensive? This week's Newsweek magazine reports, "One reason U.S. taxpayers are forking over top dollar to have [private U.S. contractors in Iraq]...Much of what companies are charging is for hazardous duty (at major engineering companies, that means 45% extra, taking engineers up to nearly $900 for a 10-hour day)." While private contractors soak up tax dollars in hazard pay, however, the White House has tried to cut hazard pay for American soldiers actually in harm's way, fighting the war. The Army Times wrote in June that, "The Bush administration announced that on Oct. 1 it wants to roll back recent modest increases in monthly imminent-danger pay (from $225 to $150) and family-separation allowance (from $250 to $100) for troops getting shot at in combat zones." (For more on the Administration's mistreatment of U.S. troops, click HERE . IRAQ SPENDING BILL GETS CLOSER TO PASSAGE: Congress is about to approve President Bush's $87 billion package, even though criticism over lack of transparency and hesitation over the use of the money still swirls. AP reports, "Lawmakers have been increasingly uneasy about the rising human toll and financial costs of U.S. involvement in Iraq. They have questioned whether the Bush administration has done enough to win international assistance and how long U.S. troops will have to remain there." Republicans defeated a Democratic proposal to require "confirmation for Bush's civilian administrator in Iraq, the position held by L. Paul Bremer," which would have required the Administration to become more accountable in Iraq. And while the House approved legislation yesterday authorizing an increase in the paltry, Vietnam-era $6,000 death benefit for families of servicemen killed in action, there is no funding to make it a reality in the spending bill. THIS IS GETTING EMBARRASSING: The WSJ's Al Hunt writes, "the Bush administration's mistakes and misrepresentations since May 1 (http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/05/iraq/20030501-15.html) are continuing unabated. There's the pretense the war is over, that the press is hiding all the good stuff, and the region and the world are safer and more secure. The president's rare Tuesday news conference was embarrassing. Administration insiders privately talk about a downward 'glide' of U.S. forces in Iraq next year, but when asked if there will be lower troop levels next year Mr. Bush declared that's 'a trick question.' More troops now, given the increasing violence? That's Gen. Abizaid's task, not mine."
Stupid teacher tricks
Rumsfeld writes for the Onion
Yeah, but you know what?
You ever have on of those days
I been outclassed
The artifacts referenced in the quote from Orcinus
WMU News Office of University Relations Western Michigan University 1903 W Michigan Ave Kalamazoo MI 49008-5433 USA 269 387-8400
You know why Lieberman won't drop out?
Names
Indeed
I changed my mind
Solar flares
More lies
Doubt Is Cast on Accounts About Crash of Ferry By WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM Two witnesses to the Staten Island ferry crash this month said they saw the ferry's assistant captain erect and alone at the controls about a minute before the vessel slammed into a pier, killing 10 people, an official briefed on the investigation said yesterday. The witnesses ? a crew member and a man on a nearby tugboat ? also said that the ferry's captain, Michael J. Gansas, was not in the Staten Island pilothouse of the Andrew J. Barberi, as he told investigators, the official said. The witness on the tugboat saw Captain Gansas running across the top of the ferry ? from the Manhattan pilothouse to the Staten Island pilothouse ? after the accident, and the crew member, who was in the Staten Island pilothouse, said Captain Gansas was not there roughly a minute before the boat crashed, the official said. The two accounts throw into question some of the earlier versions of events that led up to the Oct. 15 crash. Those include one provided by the assistant captain, Richard J. Smith, who suggested to the police in a brief initial statement that he had lost consciousness, and another by Captain Gansas, who said on the day of the crash that he was in the pilothouse and tried to stop the boat from ramming into the pier.
And while I'm reading Orcinus
Maybe I'm just in a bad mood
Advice for Progressives
A tiny hack
Another one gnawing on the back of my forehead
President Bush is a liar
By ELISABETH BUMILLER, NYT, May 15, 2003. ...The most elaborate - and criticized - White House event so far was Mr. Bush's speech aboard the Abraham Lincoln announcing the end of major combat in Iraq. White House officials say that a variety of people, including the president, came up with the idea, and that Mr. [Scott] Sforza embedded himself on the carrier to make preparations days before Mr. Bush's landing in a flight suit and his early evening speech. Media strategists noted afterward that Mr. Sforza and his aides had choreographed every aspect of the event, even down to the members of the Lincoln crew arrayed in coordinated shirt colors over Mr. Bush's right shoulder and the "Mission Accomplished" banner placed to perfectly capture the president and the celebratory two words in a single shot. The speech was specifically timed for what image makers call "magic hour light," which cast a golden glow on Mr. Bush. "If you looked at the TV picture, you saw there was flattering light on his left cheek and slight shadowing on his right," Mr. King said. "It looked great."
A. Phillip Randolph Institute
- Civil rights, strong anti-discrimination measures and affirmative action
- Policies to promote a decent wage, high growth, full employment economy
- Labor law reform and worker health and safety protections
- Decent minimum living standards for all, including anti-poverty programs, a fair minimum wage and a comprehensive "safety net"
- Universal, affordable health care
- Family leave and child care
- Progressive and fair tax policies
- International workers' rights and fair trade Education and training programs
- Education and training programs
The Center for American Progress
And now for something a bit different
Did you know
What's next, a poll tax?
NAACP Ridicules Republican Election Day Intimidation Urges voters of color to go to the polls and defend their rights The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) today ridiculed the Republican Party for planning to place Election Day challengers at 59 voting precincts in predominantly Black neighborhoods in Kentucky. Voters there will cast ballots in the hotly contested race for governor on Tuesday, November 4, 2003. Kweisi Mfume, NAACP President and CEO said: "The use of challengers at majority African American precincts amounts to nothing but blatant voter intimidation by the Republican Party. All Kentucky voters deserve to cast their ballots without the presence of this type of threat or harassment. The GOP must not be allowed to frighten voters of color away from exercising their constitutional rights in Kentucky or any other jurisdiction in the nation." William E. Cofield, NAACP National Board of Directors, who represents Kentucky, said: "It is reprehensible. Anytime the GOP can target just Black precincts and not place challengers at all of the polling places is racist. We are going to fight it." Kentucky law allows each political party to place one challenger at any precinct on Election Day to question the credentials of any voter who they have "a reason to believe" is not registered, not who they claim to be or not a resident in the precinct. Challenged voters must sign an oath asserting their legitimacy before receiving a ballot. Those who refuse to sign would not be allowed to vote unless an election officer intervenes on their behalf. The Democratic Party does not plan to use challengers. Mfume encouraged African American voters to carry a picture ID with a current address to their voting precincts "go to the polls prepared to defend your right to vote and armed with your photo identification," he said. The NAACP, a non-partisan organization, has conducted voter registration drives and get-out-the vote campaigns for 94 years. It is a prominent and active leader in guaranteeing voting rights across the country. Founded in 1909, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is the nation?s oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its half-million adult and youth members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, conducting voter registration drives and monitoring equal opportunity in the public and private sectors.
How long would it take to raise $4G with a tip button?
Let's just take all the foster kids out of New Jersey
New Jersey Couple Held in Abuse; One Son, 19, Weighed 45 Pounds By LYDIA POLGREEN and ROBERT F. WORTH COLLINGSWOOD, N.J., Oct. 26 ? The parents of four boys adopted from New Jersey's troubled foster care system were arrested Friday, two weeks after the police found that the children, ages 9 to 19, had been starved to the point that none of them weighed more than 50 pounds, according to the Camden County prosecutor. The boys were so badly malnourished that their shriveled bodies gave no hint of their ages, investigators said. At 19, the oldest was 4 feet tall and weighed 45 pounds. The police initially thought he was just 10 years old. The boys' condition was discovered when a neighbor called the police because the 19-year-old, Bruce, was looking for food in the neighbor's trash at 2:30 a.m. on Oct. 10, according to the county prosecutor, Vincent P. Sarubbi. The boys were removed from the home later that day. The boys had been locked out of the kitchen of the house in this blue-collar Philadelphia suburb and were fed a diet of pancake batter, peanut butter and breakfast cereal. They ate wallboard and insulation to sate their hunger, investigators said. A caseworker from the Division of Youth and Family Services, the state agency that oversees the foster care system, had visited the house at 318 White Horse Pike 38 times in the past 2 years, investigators said. The parents, Raymond Jackson, 50, and his wife, Vanessa, 48, rented the house, which passed a safety assessment by the caseworker and her supervisor in June.
Keeping it real
Israel May Give Utility Services to Settlements Built Recently By GREG MYRE JERUSALEM, Oct. 27 ? Eight recently erected Jewish settlement outposts in the West Bank could soon receive government services like electricity and phones lines, a Defense Ministry official said Monday. Palestinians denounced the proposal as a violation of the stalled Middle East peace plan. The plan calls for Israel to dismantle all settlements built since Prime Minister Ariel Sharon came to power in March 2001. Since it was formally introduced in June, only a handful have been removed, and about 60 remain, according to Peace Now, an Israeli monitoring group. The Israeli official, Ron Shechner, who advises the defense minister on settlements, said it was not his position to determine whether the recently built settlements should remain or be torn down. But as long as Israelis "are there on the ground, you have to give them the basic security means," Mr. Shechner said on Israeli radio. He cited electricity, phones, fences and schools as services the government could soon deliver. Most settlement outposts consist of only a few mobile homes on desolate hilltops.
In point of fact, if the building of new settlements is against the current national policy, the new settlers are criminals, and as such you are WRONG to provide them with "basic security means." If the building of new settlements is against the current national policy. BUt, of course, I'm sure the situation is too complex for me to judge from such a remove.
Yup. Str8 Ignant
Let's see if he lied again
Bush Weighing Decision on Release of Documents to Sept. 11 Panel By PHILIP SHENON WASHINGTON, Oct. 27 ? President Bush declined on Monday to commit the White House to turning over highly classified intelligence reports to the federal commission investigating the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, despite public threats of a subpoena from the bipartisan panel. The president said in a brief meeting with reporters that the documents were "very sensitive" and that the White House was still discussing the issue with the panel's chairman, Thomas H. Kean, the former Republican governor of New Jersey. Mr. Bush's remarks and subsequent comments from his press secretary suggested that the White House might ultimately refuse the commission's demand for access to the documents, setting up a possible showdown between the White House and the independent investigators. Last week, Mr. Kean said for the first time that he was prepared to issue a subpoena and risk a courtroom battle with the White House if the documents were not turned over within weeks. Officials for the commission say the documents include copies of the so-called Presidential Daily Briefing ? the summary prepared each morning by the Central Intelligence Agency for the Oval Office ? that Mr. Bush received in the weeks before the attacks. The White House refused to provide the reports to House and Senate investigators last year for their investigation of the attacks, citing executive privilege.
One more time, with feeling
Colorado Luis has a twofer
Accept no substitutes
Brad DeLong's kids are great
Republican Rules of Acquisition
Arnold Kling is shrill
Interesting
Incidentally
Aaron is definitely the evil twin
Don't even think about it here
Black Conservatives make my head hurt
Walter Washington Dies at 88
Applying Rumsfeldian tactics to health care
- Spending on direct-to-consumer advertising rose 35 percent - from $1.8 billion to $2.5 billion - between 1999 and 2001.
- Some of these ads do not even make clear what problem the drugs treat. But all of the ads encourage patients to go to a doctor and ask about the brand name drug they heard advertised.
- Drug companies spend billions of dollars promoting newer, more expensive drugs, such as Nexium® and Prevacid® to doctors and consumers - but do not advertise older, less expensive medicines that may be just as effective.
- When you need a prescription medication, ask your doctor to prescribe the medication that is most effective in treating your condition.
Need I say more?
I'm alive!
This way we can get them all with one grenade
Let's say not all the people interviewed for this article are as rational as they think they are.
U.S. Case for Helping Iraq Suffers a Setback
A speech I'd rather not see completed
- any speech that,
- intentionally or not,
- makes it easier for some listeners or readers to (a) commit crimes or (b) other harmful acts (such as torts, hostile acts of foreign nations, or suicide), or (c) to get away with committing crimes or harmful acts.
This is here because the idea of criminalizing speech that is recognized as not inciting crime is disturbing to me. That "intentionally or not" part is particularly bad.