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Week of July 18, 2004 to July 24, 2004And only if you're eavesdroppingby Prometheus 6
July 25, 2004 - 1:00am. on Race and Identity From the comments:
Check the whole statement:
I hardly think saying your condition is equivalent to mine is an assumption of moral high ground, warranted or not. In fact, were I inclined to JUDGE I would begin by asking what your starting assumption was that let you read an assumption of moral supreriority in my simple few words. Especially since I remember your comments on Cobb in what turned into the Identity Blogging thead I followed last year. But I'm not inclined to judge right now.
Only if the misread what I say. I actually know what the gentleman assumed. He was assumed I was talking to him, or for his consumption. See, this is what make public race discussions hard. You're supposed to pretend everything you say is going to be equally applicable to everyone, color-blind rhetoric…and as my childhood hero was known to say, "that trick never works." It's like we're on opposite side of a platform, each standing right up on the edge. If we both turn 90 degrees to the right and take one large step, one goes closer to the center of the platform while the other falls off the edge. Frankly, dude, one thing a lot of Black folk needs to understand is that race does make y'all as nuts as we are, just a different kind of nuts…one would think you'd prefer "confused" to "hateful." And you read that, turned and damn near walked off the edge. First part of my reaction to the NUL addressby Prometheus 6
July 25, 2004 - 12:26am. on Politics Hey, it's long. That means I get to milk it for a couple of posts. President Emphasizes Minority Entrepreneurship at Urban League Remarks by the President to the 2004 National Urban League Conference Detroit Marriot Renaissance Hotel Detroit, Michigan The speech starts with the typical glad-handing. This is the first thing worth commenting on.
You can't mistake motion for progress, and that's what we're being invited to do here.
Okay, I really didn't expect the truth about who benefitted from those tax breaks.
Since the last 20 years includes the dotcom bubble, the claim doesn't make sense.
Let's look at what the SBA calles a small business:
Is that what you thought of when you read "small business"? The "frivolous lawsuit" thing would be a total non-sequitor, except it's the only "obstacle" mentioned. You want to know the truth, I'm a lot more concerned about a fair legal system for humans than for corporations, partnerships, whatever, because they already have one and we don't. Third part of my reaction to the NUL addressby Prometheus 6
July 25, 2004 - 12:20am. on Politics
Again, specific claims I haven't verified.
But we haven't done that, have we? What we have done is accrue 25% of the world's prison population by passing laws preventing them from getting out under any circumstances. This is the least cost effective way of dealing with crime. The Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services found that: "[T]reatment appears to be cost effective, particularly when compared to incarceration, which is often the alternative. Treatment costs ranged from a low of $1,800 per client to a high of approximately $6,800 per client." In Maryland, incarceration costs $20,000 per year per person.
The RAND Corporation found that every dollar spent on treatment to control cocaine saves $7.48 on reduced crime and regained productivity, a far greater return per dollar than any other interdiction strategy. The Washington State Institute for Public Policy (WSIPP) found that drug treatment in prison yields a benefit of between $1.91 and $2.69 for every dollar spent. Drug courts yielded a benefit of $2.83 for every dollar spent. The biggest success was drug treatment outside of prison — typically work release facilities. Such programs yielded $8.87 of benefit for every dollar spent. The Drug Treatment Alternative to Prison (DTAP) program in Brooklyn, New York, reduced recidivism and drug use and increased the likelihood of finding legal employment. The cost of the two year community based treatment program was half the cost of a two year prison term – $32,974 for treatment and job training compared to $64,338 for prison. DTAP participants had arrest rates that were 26% lower two years after leaving the program than those of a matched comparison group two years after leaving prison. DTAP participants are 67% less likely to return to prison than the comparison group leaving prison.
…by declaring your opposition to every plan intended to address the legacy of slavery.
I'm already on record as considering this a symbolic gesture of little importance.
In light of several posts I've seen at Foreign Dispatches and Minority Report, this is pretty laughable.
Okay. Now if you pay attention, you'll see all this:
…as set-up for this:
… was rendered meaningless by this:
…which means this:
should put you on your guard. What's changed? The distribution of a shrinking pie to organizations that once were ineligible because they would have run afoul of federal regulations that forbade religious discrimination.
The Associated Black Charities started in 1985. The Black Ministerial Alliance began in the 1960s. The Metro Denver Black Church started in 1992. Obviously none of these organizations needed the freedom to discriminate Bush's "faith-based" friends want Election season interferes with possible discussion pointsby Prometheus 6
July 24, 2004 - 3:21pm. on Race and Identity This is at Cobb's joint.
A little later in the post he looks at ghettos another way and makes a simple observation that is rarely taken into account. Correction re: Al Bargerby Prometheus 6
July 24, 2004 - 2:00pm. on Seen online Having seen via Technorati that his email does indeed contain what I expected I'm satisfied with having not read it. However, after having checked I must admit I was wrong when I said in the comments he applied a rather foul term to Mac Diva. I don't feel the need to correctly attribute the insult beyond saying Mr. Barger is innocent of that particular misdeed. That's the only correction, though. Second part of my reaction to the NUL addressby Prometheus 6
July 24, 2004 - 1:52pm. on Politics LATER: What I'm doing here is giving enough of Bush's address to provide context to my reactions, which are in the blockquotes.
Which playing field? For who?
I think you should look at this. It documents exactly where the 2001 tax cuts will go if made permanent as Bush would like. You'll see it simply doesn't do that much for those businesses he discusses in this paragraph.
To whom?
There is, of course, the implication in all this that the owners and beneficiaries of this economic development will be the locals. Not likely. It's a matter of financing. Very few people in the Black community have the capital and experience to take advantage of this new property…the repercussions of being excluded from "The Greatest Generation."
Not a lot to say about brownfields…it's not like this cleanup is done to benefit Black folks and it's not like you really have the option to ignore them forever.
This is actually a good thing. It could be an element in the wealth-building education and subsidization effort the USofA owes Black folks, and Kerry should honor the commitment when he wins. It's also interesting because it could (as the Republicans obviously intend) greatly enhance the NUL's position in the upscale Black communities. I can definitely see an NAACP/NUL turf war, or at least a turf jockeying-for-position.
That 49 percent statistic doesn't sound right either. I need to check that.
So do you believe they can read or that they graduate illiterate?
The several paragraphs were redacted because it's all noise beyond the two claims made
I spent a while googling for this "scholarship program" until a light went on. Vouchers. Okay, move along, nothing to see here…
Sounds like he's got an advisor that reads P6. If so… You don't get to say "we" are making progress when your cohort resisted and continues to resist every systemic effort to correct the damage caused by racism. You don't get to say "we" are making progress when your cohort's most successful campaigns are based on fear or hatred or jealousy. Isn't she the chick from blackpeopleloveus.com?by Prometheus 6
July 24, 2004 - 1:10pm. on Seen online I'm not racist, says princess, I even pretended to be 'half-caste' It was a curious way to bury allegations of racism, but then there is much about Princess Michael of Kent that is curious. Ignoring the first rule for dealing with any gaffe - stop digging - she has revealed she once pretended to be "half-caste" and has declared her love for "adorable" Africans. Dubbed Princess Pushy thanks to a reputation for demanding behaviour and an unduly privileged lifestyle, she got into difficulty two months ago when she allegedly told a group of African American diners in New York to "go back to the colonies". She said there had been a misunderstanding. In a bizarre interview to be broadcast on ITV1 on Sunday, she has enlarged on the injustice of the accusations. No one could consider her racist, she said, were they to know of her past. "I even pretended years ago to be an African, a half-caste African, but because of my light eyes I did not get away with it, but I dyed my hair black," Princess Michael said. Then she digs some more: "I travelled on African buses. I wanted to be a writer. I wanted experiences from Cape Town to right up in northern Mozambique. I had this adventure with these absolutely adorable, special people and to call me racist: it's a knife through the heart because I really love these people." Whether the sentiment is reciprocated is unclear. At some point I may have to try actually explaining stuff to white folksby Prometheus 6
July 24, 2004 - 12:48pm. on Race and Identity You'll notice I don't actually do much of that around here. Part of the reason is my understanding that there are white folks who already got a grip (and let me tell you I had one hell of a difficult time choosing which of Ampersand's cartoons to link there), and they're really the ones most white folks hear best. Part of the reason is it kind of gets repetitious…one must always establish the validity of one's starting point; one must establish that the problem is as one sees it. I don't have to backtrack as far with Black folks, because of certain commonalities of experience. But when white folks think like this:
and this:
…it's more evidence that the they are as crazy as we are. Incidentally, it's becoming more obvious since it was brought to my attention that folks are really, really troubled by the fact that Black people feel so free to use a term no one else can use. Not quite, but almostby Prometheus 6
July 24, 2004 - 11:51am. on Seen online T-Steel misrepresents me a bit but not enough for me to get tense over. Interesting thought:
Calling this "racism" may be just choosing the most…energizing term available, but look: if you not going to be able to solve white people's concerns over being held responsible for racism and Black people's concerns over experiencing racism without recognizing them as separate issues, you're DAMN sure not going to do any good by tossing Black self-image problems on the same pile. But keep looking for the synthesis. Let's see what I've missed this past week - Political bloggingby Prometheus 6
July 24, 2004 - 8:42am. on Seen online Steve Gilliard's reaction to (in his words) Toastmaster Bush yukking it up with negroes:
[P6: Steve does occasionally surprise with his directness.] Avery at Stereo Describes My Scenario needs to recognize that Black politics is the bastard child of mainstream politics, and the apple doesn't fall far from the tree.
Let's see what I've missed this past week - Political newsby Prometheus 6
July 24, 2004 - 8:19am. on Seen online Cynthia McKinney Gets A Big Win The big story is the return of Cynthia McKinney to the U.S. Congress. Voters of the 4th District gave her the nod with 51 per cent of the vote. McKinney bested a field of five other candidates in a bid for the seat she lost two years ago to Denise Majette. Democrats blast GOP lawmaker's 'suppress the Detroit vote' remark Wednesday, July 21, 2004 ASSOCIATED PRESS Democrats on Wednesday denounced a Republican lawmaker quoted in a newspaper as saying the GOP would fare poorly in this year's elections if it failed to "suppress the Detroit vote." State Rep. John Pappageorge, R-Troy, acknowledged using "a bad choice of words" but said his remark shouldn't be construed as racist. Pappageorge, 73, was quoted in July 16 editions of the Detroit Free Press as saying, "If we do not suppress the Detroit vote, we're going to have a tough time in this election." "I'm extremely disappointed in my colleague," state Sen. Buzz Thomas, D-Detroit, told reporters Wednesday during a conference call. "That's quite clearly code that they don't want black people to vote in this election." Blacks comprise 83 percent of Detroit's population, and the city routinely gives Democratic candidates a substantial majority of its votes. DNC coverageby Prometheus 6
July 24, 2004 - 7:54am. on Politics Okay, I'll be reading Mike at TopDog04 (who is a NY State delegate as well as a regular here), Christopher at Afro-Netizen (because he's definitely putting a Black spin on the coverage), Matt at The Blogging of the President (not at the official Democratic convention blog) becase the site in general makes me think. That's the daily stuff. A nice, complete summary of the Sandy Berger affairby Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 11:13pm. on Politics Mr. Berger's Incredible Misadventure Exactly why Samuel Berger removed copies of classified documents from the National Archives last October is not clear. Mr. Berger, the former national security adviser to President Clinton who was a Kerry adviser until Tuesday, wasn't going to be able to alter the records or give John Kerry an edge. The missing documents were copies of memos, which Mr. Kerry would have had access to anyway. If, as Mr. Berger says, the removal was simply a blunder, it was inexcusably careless legally and daft politically. Senator Kerry can't be too happy that Mr. Berger compounded his initial sin by not informing him of the Justice Department's inquiry when it began in January. Mr. Berger and his lawyers may be indignant about the investigation being leaked, but they must have known it would get out. Meanwhile, the Republican hyperventilating is overdone. The same Congressional leaders who shrugged at the leaking of a C.I.A. agent's identity to punish her husband, a critic of administration policy, demand hearings on Mr. Berger. The politicians should all let the Justice Department do its job. Of real concern is that bleeding, yet again, of politics into criminal justice. After initially claiming it knew nothing of the case, the White House has had to admit it was informed. That sort of heads-up taints both sides. It leaves the White House open to questions about whether it timed a leak to the release of the 9/11 panel's report, and it feeds cynicism about the independence of federal prosecutors. Mr. Kerry, by the way, ought to stop stoking that cynicism with groundless claims that the prosecution of Kenneth Lay was improperly delayed. For its part, the White House's denials about this leak would sound more credible if it assigned some urgency to solving the C.I.A. leak case. Well, well, well, look what the Pentagon foundby Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 11:09pm. on Politics Pentagon Releases Bush's 1972 Military Records Filed at 10:29 p.m. ET WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Pentagon on Friday released newly discovered payroll records from President Bush's 1972 service in the Alabama National Guard, though the records shed no new light on the future president's activities during that summer. A Pentagon official said the earlier contention that the records were destroyed was an ''inadvertent oversight.'' Like records released earlier by the White House, these computerized payroll records show no indication Bush drilled with the Alabama unit during July, August and September of 1972. Pay records covering all of 1972, released previously, also indicated no guard service for Bush during those three months. The records do not give any new information about Bush's National Guard training during 1972, when he transferred to the Alabama National Guard unit so he could work on the U.S. Senate campaign of a family friend. The payroll records do not say definitively whether Bush attended training that summer because they are maintained separately from attendance records. I don't know how attractive they are to employees thoughby Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 11:07pm. on Economics United Airlines Ends Pension Plan Contributions United Airlines said today it would not contribute to employee pension plans while it remains in Chapter 11, a move likely to save it billions of dollars in cash and make it more attractive to the investors it needs to emerge from bankruptcy protection. United also said it was considering its options on the plans' future, which union leaders interpreted as a signal that it will move to terminate the plans. The action came a week after United skipped a $72.4 million pension payment that it owed to three of its four pension plans. United also faced making hundreds of millions more in pension payments in September and October. The plans have enough assets to keep paying benefits to retirees for now, but none of the four plans has enough to assure that employees will receive future benefits they have already earned. If the airline abandons the plans, billions of dollars in liabilities for those future benefits will fall on the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, a government-sponsored agency whose finances have already been ravaged by the collapse of pension plans at other bankrupt companies in the airline, steel and other industries. Another Black Republican spokesman for Bushby Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 8:39pm. on Politics I just saw an interview on Paula Zahn's show with a Rev. Joe Wilson talking up Bush and the Republican platform. Smooth, good delivery, but since he's saying the same thing Bush is, he'll not likely have any more success. One fundamental error the Republicans make is assuming Black people don't know what Bush's message is. One fundamental error we're going to make is to assume a message means anything at all in the face of the repercussions of acts. Public call for a transcript of Bush's address to the National Urban Leagueby Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 12:06pm. on Politics I saw part of the address, most of it I think. And if you trust him he had a statement or two that would give one pause. If you believe him. So far, the comparison of implied promise (because no promise has been given by the current incarnation of the Republican party to Black folks) to outcome isn't pretty. Add to that the administration's tendency to pick the particular words that can be shaded particular ways and denied in particular other ways, and I feel the desire to have the specific words I'm responding to in front of me. I suspect I'll want the transcript of Kerry address as well. If the same money had been spent on mortgage subsidies this might not be a problemby Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 11:21am. on Economics Quote of note:
Of course. That's what it always means. HUD cuts trickle down Lemika Early, a single mother living with two children near downtown Elgin in a first-floor apartment that accommodates her wheelchair, is about to become a casualty of the battle over rising federal budget deficits. In an effort to curtail costs, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development made funding changes this spring that have forced cutbacks in the nation's largest housing-assistance program for low-income people. In turn, there's been a tightening of the financial screws on public housing authorities throughout the U.S. One result is that Early, 23, and her young sons could be forced to leave their home at the end of the month because the Housing Authority of Elgin does not have enough money to help pay her $1,050-a-month rent. Like dozens of other agencies across the country, the Elgin housing authority is scrambling to patch its budget after Congress and HUD opted to change the way the housing choice voucher program, formerly known as Section 8, is funded. The change could cost Elgin nearly $2 million this year, said Sandra Freeman, the authority's executive director. Other Illinois housing authorities say they could lose hundreds of thousands of dollars, and some are considering cutoffs or reductions in rental assistance for hundreds of families. I'll listen to political repartee when I develop an interest in itby Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 10:23am. on War What We Know Now As horrifying and deadly as it was, Sept. 11 apparently just might have been even worse. That was only one of the revelations about both the plot and the U.S. response to it that the independent commission investigating the attacks made public last week. Some of the information released by the commission had already been reported — or at least hinted at — in books and memoirs published since the attacks, but its extensive review of classified materials — including unprecedented access to interrogations of high-level al-Qaeda detainees — gives its findings greater sweep and credibility. So what new details have we learned? The most eye-opening nuggets can be divided into three main categories: So what? The U.S. criticizes Sudanese Genocide!by Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 10:12am. on Africa and the African Diaspora Quote of note:
Sudanese Criticize U.S. Genocide Resolution KHARTOUM (Reuters) - Sudanese Arabs Friday slammed a U.S. congressional resolution declaring genocide in the western region of Darfur, while Darfuris asked what Washington would do now to make it safe for them to go back home. "Is Iraq not enough? Do they want to destroy us too? ... America wants everyone who is Arab (in Sudan) to pay. They do not understand anything," said Ismail Gasmalseed, a 34-year-old driver in Khartoum.[P6: Sorry, dawg, but in Iraq we had no proof. With you, we do. On the other hand, this shows the loss of moral standing the neocon's handling of Iraq has caused the USofA.] The U.S. Congress approved the resolution Thursday and its supporters hope it will help mobilize the international community to protect Africans in Darfur from Arab militias. But the accusation of genocide is highly controversial and has not been formally adopted by the U.S. administration, the United Nations, Darfuri rebels or most of the humanitarian organizations working on the ground in the remote region. The Arab militias, known as the Janjaweed, have been driving non-Arab villagers off their land in Darfur in an extension of a long conflict over farmland and grazing. The conflict has displaced more than one million people in the region. Chimpanzees have mailboxes?by Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 10:03am. on Health Anthrax Kills Wild Apes in Ivory Coast -Scientists By Patricia Reaney Scientists had known from experiments that the acute infectious disease caused by spore-forming bacteria could kill monkeys but until now they had never come across evidence of it in wild populations. "Anthrax has never been found killing chimpanzees in the wild before," Heinz Ellerbrok, a virologist at the Robert Koch-Institut in Berlin, said in an interview. "It could pose a danger to humans because in this part of Africa it is quite common for bushmeat to be consumed and there is also illegal poaching going on," he added. Conservationists have warned that Africa's lucrative bushmeat industry, which is a key source of food and income for poor people, is threatening species such as gorillas and chimpanzees with extinction. Scientists are also concerned that people who hunt and eat the wild animals are being infected with animal illnesses that could pose a public health threat to humans. Israel was set up by the interventionists tactics of its strongest allyby Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 9:57am. on War EU Vows to Play Peace Role Despite Israeli Rebuke By Matt Spetalnick The pledge by EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana followed talks on Thursday in which Prime Minister Ariel Sharon warned him there would be little chance of EU involvement in the peace process without a drastic change in the European position. Rocky relations between Israel and the EU have hit a new low after the 25-nation bloc voted for a Palestinian-sponsored General Assembly resolution demanding that the Jewish state heed a World Court ruling calling on it to tear down the barrier. Israel says it needs the network of razor-tipped wire and concrete walls to keep out Palestinian suicide bombers. Palestinians call it a land grab that will deny them the state they seek to establish on land captured by Israel in a 1967 war. After failing to resolve the row in meetings with Israeli leaders, Solana wrapped up his visit telling reporters: "Europe ...is a very important international power and is going to play a role, (whether) you like it or not." He said the EU had a right to participate because of its important interests in the region. The House of Representative wastes more time on a hateful issueby Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 9:56am. on Race and Identity Quote of note:
You sure you want to compare the E.P.A.'s protection of the environment to Constitutional protection of the rights of all citizenry? Especially the E.P.A. under G.W.B? Trees are not citizens.
House Votes to Curb Same-Sex Marriage By Thomas Ferraro On a vote of 233-194, the House sent the proposal to the Senate where members of both parties said it will likely die. But it could help rev up an election-year issue. Last week, on a related front, the Senate easily blocked a bid pushed by President Bush to amend the Constitution to define marriage as a union strictly between a man and a woman. The House measure, also supported by the administration, offers a different approach. It would forbid federal judges from requiring one state to recognize a same-sex marriage licensed in another. Democrats accused Bush and fellow Republicans of pushing the proposals merely to rally their conservative base for the November congressional and presidential contests. "This debate is about a national election," Rep. Jerrold Nadler, a New York Democrat, said in opposing the bill. "We are playing with fire with this bill, and that fire could destroy the nation we love." "I rise in defense of the Constitution, in defense of the separation of powers," said House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, a Maryland Democrat. "What's next? No judicial review of laws that restrict freedom of speech or religion?" We still don't understand genetics and inheritanceby Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 9:44am. on Health New Genome Test Finds Big Differences Among People By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent The researchers found -- by accident -- that some people are missing large chunks of DNA, while others have extra copies of stretches of DNA. Writing in the journal Science, the researchers have dubbed these differences "copy number polymorphisms." They are found in genes linked with cancer risk, with how much people eat and with reactions to drugs. "Thus, a relationship between CNPs and susceptibility to health problems such as neurological disease, cancer, and obesity is an intriguing possibility," the researchers wrote in their report. The team at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York, the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden and elsewhere used a new kind of DNA test called Representational Oligonucleotide Microarray Analysis or ROMA. "It can detect differences in DNA from any two sources," said Cold Spring Harbor spokesman Peter Sherwood. The researchers were looking for genetic differences linked with cancer. "As a control in the cancer experiment they compared normal to normal DNA, expecting it to be pretty much the same," Sherwood said in a telephone interview. "They detected more than 70 of these large chunks of DNA that were altered in normal human cells." These were large differences that have not been reported before -- involving much more DNA than so-called single nucleotide polymorphisms, which are well-known single-letter changes in the A, C, T, G nucleotide code that makes up DNA. Bags of Money IIby Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 5:50am. on News Quotes of note:
and
Why are they notable? Because they imply that criminality in the mainstream is a widespread problem, suppressed only by fear of punishment. Incredibly significant, if true. Today's Bank Robber Might Look Like a Neighbor The case of J. L. Rountree seemed at first an aberration, something from "News of the Weird." Last August, Mr. Rountree, 91 years old, walked into the First American Bank in Abilene, Tex., and handed the teller a note reading "Robbery." "You're kidding," the teller said. "Hurry up," snapped Mr. Rountree, who was unarmed. "Or you'll get hurt." Mr. Rountree — no sprinter — left with $1,999 and was soon arrested by the local police, who gave him the perfect headline-grabbing nickname: the Grandpa Bandit. He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 12 years in prison. Then in December, Sally Ann Smith, 56 and described by a neighbor as "a wonderful, caring and loving person, and a devoted grandmother," was arrested at her home in Peoria, Ariz., on charges of robbing two banks at gunpoint. Ms. Smith, too, got a nickname: the Grandma Bandit. Then there were Robert Day, an armed 68-year-old bank robber in Texas, and Brenda Bishop, the Granny Bandit of Macomb County, Mich., who was unarmed; both are now in prison. And on Thursday, the police said, an unarmed 70-year-old man named Gordon Bryant tried to rob the Farmers State Bank in Versailles, Ill. The police said they had found Mr. Bryant outside the bank with a stocking over his head. While it may be tempting to view these bank-robbing grandparents as evidence of a moral collapse among older Americans, more likely they say something about the changing nature of bank robbery. Once the pursuit of hardened, shoot-'em-up bandits like Bonnie and Clyde, and later of violent street gangs packing 9-millimeter guns, bank robbery has become a kind of everyman's felony. While about half of bank robberies in the United States are still committed by drug addicts desperate for money and a third by veteran bank thieves, law enforcement officials and criminologists say an increasing number are being pulled off by thieves who have a lot more in common with Willy Loman than Willie Sutton. They are teenagers and senior citizens, stay-at-home parents and established career types — in short, anyone with an acute need for cash. …The number of bank robberies nationwide has fluctuated for 15 years, spiking during tough economic times and falling during good years. Although violent bank robberies are still a problem — banks in Washington D.C., for example, have recently been terrorized by a gang of masked, heavily armed robbers — the majority of the 7,412 robberies last year were so-called "note jobs," heists committed by pen and paper rather than a weapon. Twenty-five years ago, according to the F.B.I., only about a third of robberies were note jobs — the preferred method of the Average Joe and Jane bank robber with no criminal past, experts say. "Most of these are people who have no record at all. They start off as virgins to crime and they jump into this as a first option," said William J. Rehder, a former bank robbery expert for the F.B.I. New York City experienced a kind of note-passing epidemic last year. Bank robberies surged 64 percent, and though 84 percent of the robberies involved no weapons, Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly admonished bank executives for not paying enough attention to the problem. Last year, 16 of Commerce Bank's 17 branches in New York were robbed. In 2003, North Fork Bank, which has 78 branches in New York City, experienced 36 robbery attempts. The people pulling off some of those heists hardly fit the profile of seasoned crooks. Last September, the police said, a 12-year-old boy made away with $30,000 from an East Village branch of Citibank after passing the teller a note that read, "Give me the money or I'll shoot you" (He was later arrested and his mother charged for putting him up to it.) In January, Pamela Kaichen, 44, a riding instructor known as the "soccer mom bandit," pleaded guilty to the unarmed robbery of six banks in Connecticut and Westchester County and received a four-year sentence. (Ms. Kaichen, who wore a blond wig during the holdups, blamed her crimes on stress from the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. She had volunteered at Ground Zero.) Outside New York, the story is much the same. Last June, for example, Tighue Shields, 53, the greenskeeper of the Weston Hills Country Club in South Florida and well-known in the golf world for his greens work on the P.G.A. Tour, was arrested in connection with three armed bank robberies in Scottsdale, Ariz. The authorities said Mr. Shields flew to Scottsdale to rob banks on his days off. And just eight days ago, a 15-year-old Michigan girl pleaded no contest to bank robbery; though she was unarmed, the girl passed the teller a note saying there was an AK-47 pointed at his head. Bags of Money Iby Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 5:23am. on Politics Congress Clears Final $416 Billion Defense Bill By Vicki Allen WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Congress on Thursday sent President Bush a $416.2 billion defense spending bill that includes $25 billion in emergency funds for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, giving the measure overwhelming backing after little debate. The Senate unanimously approved the huge bill to finance the Pentagon 96-0, its last major act before breaking for a six-week recess to campaign for Nov. 2 congressional and presidential elections. Also scrambling to complete business before the recess, the House of Representatives passed the measure 410-12. The Pentagon can tap the $25 billion emergency funds for Iraq and Afghanistan -- provided as a down payment until the administration seeks a much bigger emergency spending bill next year -- once Bush signs the bill. The $391 billion core of the Pentagon's budget, up $22 billion from current levels, becomes available with the Oct. 1 start of the next fiscal year. …The Pentagon acknowledged it may have to start using the emergency money before next fiscal year after the Government Accountability Office, Congress' auditing agency, in a report on Wednesday said the administration had underestimated this year's costs for the wars by $12.3 billion. The Pentagon said it hoped to get through September by shifting funds in various accounts, but Democrats said the GAO report highlighted administration bungling. "This is the most astounding evidence to date that the administration has fundamentally mismanaged the financing for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan," said Sen. Robert Byrd, a West Virginia Democrat. The defense bill also funds an authorized increase of 20,000 Army troops, despite the Pentagon's objections that its need for more forces is temporary and should not be built into the budget. The Pentagon instead wanted to fund the increase of about 30,000 troops it says it needs for Iraq and Afghanistan from emergency spending bills. Also tucked into the final measure was $500 million in emergency funds for fighting U.S. wildfires, $95 million for humanitarian aid in the Darfur region of Sudan and $25 million each for Boston and New York to tighten security at the upcoming Democratic and Republican national conventions. Asia could be as big an issue as the Middle Eastby Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 5:05am. on News China Tells U.S. Not to Sell Arms to Taiwan BEIJING (Reuters) - China told the top U.S. military officer in Asia Friday that it resolutely opposed U.S. arms sales to Taiwan and that it would not allow the island to become independent under any circumstances. After meeting visiting Pacific Commander Admiral Thomas Fargo, Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing told state television that China was willing to advance Sino-U.S. relations but its "biggest concern" was Taiwan. "We resolutely oppose the United States violating the Three Joint Communiques and violating the 'one China' principle to sell advanced weapons to Taiwan because this does not benefit our efforts to peacefully resolve the Taiwan issue," Li said. The communiques date back to 1979, when Washington switched diplomatic recognition to Beijing from Taipei. One of the communiques pledged to gradually reduce arms sales to Taiwan in qualitative and quantitative terms. But Washington is also obliged to defend Taiwan from attack and has close unofficial relations with the island. Taiwan is considering weapons purchases of $18 billion from the United States, including Patriot anti-missile systems, submarines and anti-submarine aircraft. Li told Fargo the United States should "clearly understand the seriousness and sensitiveness of the Taiwan situation, halt its arms sales to Taiwan and stop its relevant military exchanges aiming to upgrade substantial relationship with Taiwan," Xinhua news agency reported. "We are prepared with the greatest sincerity to make the greatest efforts to realize the peaceful reunification of the motherland. But we certainly will not allow Taiwan to become independent," Li said. "We certainly will not allow anyone, using any excuse, to cut Taiwan from our great motherland, to split it from the great motherland. Everyone should be clear on this piece of information." Complain about me and you'll likely get ignoredby Prometheus 6
July 23, 2004 - 4:55am. on Random rant Complain about the legibility of site and you'll likely get a pretty quick positive response. Outfoxedby Prometheus 6
July 22, 2004 - 11:07am. on Seen online I have not ordered the DVD because I didn't feel the need for the education. But I'm rethinking. See, I just came from the page of trailers and excerpts from the documentary. You need to check the page. Interview clips in low, medium and high bandwidth versions. To me it's still not an education but's one whole hell of a lot of ammunition. Chrissy there's no need for you to do that research nowby Prometheus 6
July 22, 2004 - 9:25am. on Race and Identity The Black Commentator has handled it for you. Acting White: African American Students and Education I have heard a lot of static concerning African Americans and their supposed disregard for education. “Our black kids look down on education” say many of the black pundits, “they tease the black kids who are doing well school and say they are acting white.” I’ve heard this repeated over and over again by African-American personalities and celebrities (none of which, by the way, have any extensive, classroom teaching experience). Let me also add, that in all my years as an educator and youth program specialist, I have never heard any student equating scholastic achievement with whiteness. Nevertheless, this assertion is usually made without challenge, rebuttal or explanation. This is yet another sign of the reactionary times that we now live in, here in America – with a pit bull-like tenacity we lock on to what is being said without examining why it’s being said. I, in the course of this writing, will endeavor to unmask this widely-held misconception. I'm done being serious for the nightby Prometheus 6
July 21, 2004 - 11:05pm. on Seen online I got a bag of new comic books to read. Meanwhile, I just got this by email. I don't know if it's true, but I'd like it to be. THIS IS THE BEST LAWYER STORY OF THE YEAR, DECADE AND PROBABLY THE CENTURY. A Charlotte, NC lawyer purchased a box of very rare and expensive cigars, then insured them against fire, among other things. Within a month, having smoked his entire stockpile of these great cigars and without yet having made even his first premium payment on the policy, the lawyer filed claim against the insurance company. In his claim, the lawyer stated the cigars were lost "in a series of small fires." The insurance company refused to pay, citing the obvious reason that the man had consumed the cigars in the normal fashion. The lawyer sued.. and WON! (Stay with me.) In delivering the ruling, the judge agreed with the insurance company that the claim was frivolous. The judge stated nevertheless, that the lawyer "held a policy from the company in which it had warranted that the cigars were insurable and also guaranteed that it would insure them against fire, without defining what is considered to be unacceptable fire" and was obligated to pay the claim. Rather than endure lengthy and costly appeal process, the insurance company accepted the ruling and paid $15,000 to the lawyer for his loss of the rare cigars lost in the "fires". NOW FOR THE BEST PART. After the lawyer cashed the check, the insurance company had him arrested on 24 counts of ARSON!!! With Hey, I can raise my own comment to the front page because it's my blogby Prometheus 6
July 21, 2004 - 8:21pm. on Race and Identity
Not a lot more could be asked of you. Some, but not a lot. Because your realm of influence may be greater than you think.
Okay, this particular thread is officially taking a break from The Big Picture. But understand that talking race issues on the personal level is as different from doing it on the social level as quantum mechanics is from ballistics. I've moved in several different circles in my life, so I've developed several different sets of expectations. What I do with those expectations depends on the situation. The more I deal with you the more I whittle away at the pretty formless block of general expectations we assign first impressions. Okay, that's a fancy way of describing what we all do. Thing is, sometimes you get folks in the wrong bucket and you've got to be willing to move them where they belong (this is most easily done before the relationship develops roots but you can't always tell a relationship will be significant). And you've got to identify where your categorization went wrong and stop doing that. I did not say do the opposite. Because what can happen is, you put someone in a bucket, they do something "unbucketed" and you try to figure out why a guy who belongs in that bucket would do that rather than saying, oh, wrong bucket, or only one foot in the bucket, or he goes in the bucket when he needs to or any of the other likelihoods. I don't think you want me to change that approach. It's what lets me have conversations like this sanely, why I don't call Thomas Jefferson a racist (though one or two of his descendants&hellip:). It's what lets me know you don't mean to be presumptuous by suggesting you have a better way for me to think about my life than I do. It's seen me through several career changes and several life changes. That's the quantum mechanics. On the personal level, I have no problems with rapproachments, new friends, any of that. But I'm clear that it's taking aspirin to prevent a heart attack, know what I mean? It keeps the patient alive, but he still needs to stop smoking so damn much. By the end of the next five years you will know if they did this rightby Prometheus 6
July 21, 2004 - 11:34am. on Economics Memorandum To:All Interested Parties Current Perkins Bills: NOT GOOD ENOUGH As Congress considers reauthorizing federal assistance for vocational and technical education, Members need to place the interests of students front and center. Unfortunately, bills currently moving through the House and Senate essentially reauthorize the status quo - extending a system that works well for some, but stifling the opportunities of far too many participants with skills in reading and math that are inadequate for 21st Century jobs. A bad reauthorization is worse than no reauthorization at all -- if Members do not have the time (or the will) to seriously reform Perkins, then they should defer to the next session. As it reauthorizes Perkins for the next five years, Congress should be unequivocal: federally supported programs need to complement vocational and technical skills with rigorous academic preparation. My only questionby Prometheus 6
July 21, 2004 - 10:12am. on Politics If Sandy Berger removing this document has been under investigation for months, why has it come to light so coincidentally timed with the 9/11 report? The reason for the question: this administration is so secretive and tight-lipped, all leaks are vetted. This is the administration that told Afghanistan to get some terrorists, but time it so the announcement fell on the days the Democratic Convention took place. This, obviously, did not happen…and this smells suspiciously like a back-up plan. You can't just say stuff like thatby Prometheus 6
July 21, 2004 - 9:47am. on Race and Identity Even if you're anonymous, I still have to bring this one up from the comments. There are a couple of things I want to get off my chest about this Bill Cosby stuff and I guess here is an OK place for that. First, doing well in school is supposedly "acting white". That was not the case in any of the mostly white high school and college I went to and it was not the case in the all black elementary or junior high schools I went to. Being a nerd is being a nerd, acting white is acting white. Two different things. It was real easy in the 80s and 90s and probably still. If you listened to hip-hop you acted black, otherwise you acted white. More directly, if you hung out with other black kids you act black. If you hang out with white kids you act white. How complex can that be? The single smartest black person in the school in my experiences has always acted black. Maybe that's just luck. I can imagine a circumstance where there are schools that are nearly all white in the "top classes" and nearly all black in the "bottom classes". In that situation, the smartest black kids mostly hang out with their white classmates, listen to rock and roll like their friends and are accused of "acting white". I've never seen this but I imagine that is the case in some places. In that case doing well in school happens to align well enough with acting white that there are black children complaining to adults that they are accused of "acting white" just because they do well. Those complaints seem to have reached Bill Cosby. But the fact is the kids accused of "acting white" really do "act white". So enough of that. I think this stuff about doing well is acting white is a myth produced by distorted perceptions. Cosby and other critics of black people latched onto it just because it fits their theories that the culture of black children is to blame for everything. The next issue is that supposedly moral standards have degraded since when Bill Cosby was a child. How is this supposed to have happened? Did the culture fairy sprinkle dust on a whole generation of black children? Cosby points to a school in Brooklyn with a 50% drop out rate. Seems to me that between older siblings and older friends, people who attend that school have a clear picture of what happens to the people who graduate and what happens to the people who do not graduate. Do the 50% who graduate get better jobs than the 50% who do not graduate? It is possible that graduating is in some cases rationally not worth the aggravation. Something has to have changed if drop out rates increased. It was not the culture fairy. Instead of blaming the children Cosby should be asking has the amount of stress involved in going to school increased for some people? Have the benefits of finishing decreased for some people? These are issues that can and should be addressed. When cultures change, they usually change for a reason. Next. Black leaders. Bill Cosby is not one. You may not like Farrakhan or Sharpton or Jackson, but they have devoted their working lives to trying to improve the status of the Black community. Bill Cosby has spent his working life trying to make people laugh, and mostly white people at that. That does not mean its not possible that as a fluke, the comedian might have some insight that those who dedicate their lives have missed, but we don't expect that to happen. That sure hasn't happened here. Whew. Let's get back to the work ethic for a second. My grandmother moved from Mississippi to New York City at the beginning of the 20th century to work. My grandfather moved from Barbados to New York City to work. My other grandparents moved from Georgia to Detroit to work. Every black person in every major US city has the same story. At one point I believe the Black participation in the labor force was higher than the white participation. So what happened to the work ethic? Its not the culture fairy. If employers are prejudiced against Black people, that lowers the expected return from a given amount of job seeking effort. The problem is not backwards pants. Any rational actor will expend less effort seeking a job if there is a lower expected reward. Instead of fixing the backwards pants, let's fix the expected reward from a given amount of effort looking for a job. OK. I'm done. Thanks P6 for providing a forum where I can spit this out. Does everyone know about Geoffrey Canada? I read his autobiography recently Fists Sticks Knives Guns. Its real good. Geoffrey runs a major program in Harlem to improve the outcomes of at-risk children. Bill Cosby should give him a call. Yes, this was DEFINITELY an okay place to get that off. I suspect a number of you feel like you're visiting Bizarro Worldby Prometheus 6
July 21, 2004 - 9:40am. on Race and Identity This is short, but because I've answered everyone else on the front page, I'll answer Wes here too. P6
If you do not, or will not, acknowledge the majority of whites that hold no animus toward blacks, (indeed we want the number of succesful blacks to grow, big time), how do you expect our numbers to increase? What am I to think when I look in a black man's face and see that I am disliked, distrusted, and disrespected because I am white? This has been sitting on my monitor for, oh, a half hour or so. It is so neat a reversal of the Black position…and I strongly suspect there's no animus or trickery involved on Wes' part so I'm not trying to jack him. But let's try this for a moment: If you do not, or will not, acknowledge the majority of Blacks that hold no animus toward white, (indeed we want the number of succesful interactions to grow, big time), how do you expect our numbers to increase?
What am I to think when I look in a black man's face and see that I am disliked, distrusted, and disrespected because I am Black? We got half the problem. You got half the problem. If I were into quotas I's say we got 12.5% of the problem. And in response to the particular hypothetical ("If you do not, or will not, acknowledge the majority of whites that hold no animus toward blacks"), I quote from my post which started this really interesting discussion:
Do I have to say "emphasis added" when I'm quoting myself? First thing in the damn morningby Prometheus 6
July 21, 2004 - 8:40am. on Seen online I got email overnight from Mr. Barger. I have not read it. I have not deleted it, either. I may read it, though I know pretty much what's in it. One of the vast, cosmic powers that are my inheritance as a reification of a Chaos Deity is the ability to perceive the form of negative spaces…which is to say I read between the line well. I expect it says I misinterpreted his "swinging from the trees" reference to my grandparent's generation. Juliette, in her comments, said she read it as a reference to lynching. I'm not sure I give a good god damn. You see, my great-grandfather WAS lynched. My grandfather was brought along by the lynchers to cut him down from the tree. My father, as a child, was there. Whether he meant as anthropoids or strange fruit, it was stupid, insensitive and totally unacceptable. And he let me know right up front, via a link to an old post on his site he keeps around for JUST such an occasion and dumping those hoary old chestnuts into the conversation, exactly what type of discussion he wants to have. And I ain't havin' it. Nominated for British Idiot of the Weekby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 9:35pm. on Race and Identity Ukip MEP: Pregnant women should resign Sarah Left Tuesday July 20, 2004 The UK Independence party today named a man who would like to overturn maternity leave rights as its representative for the European parliament's committee on women's rights and gender equality. Ukip MEP Godfrey Bloom told Guardian Unlimited that maternity policy should be: "If you want to have a baby, you hand in your resignation and free up a job for another young lady." Mr Bloom was selected by the party's chairman to "represent men's rights" on the influential committee. He still needed to be voted in by the European parliament in order to take his seat as a member of the committee. Okay Ms. Tucker, you get props for thatby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 9:30pm. on Race and Identity CULTURAL CHANGE IS AT THE HEART OF MARRIAGE'S DECLINE It wasn't even close. The U.S. Senate easily shut down debate last week over a proposed constitutional amendment banning gay marriage. Democrats were joined by a handful of Republicans -- including Arizona's John McCain -- who remember the cornerstone of conservatism: Government has no business regulating citizens' private lives. As McCain put it, the amendment "strikes me as antithetical in every way to the core philosophy of Republicans." With that ugly business behind us, perhaps it will be possible now to have a legitimate discussion about the dire state of heterosexual marriage. People of goodwill -- those of all faiths and those with none -- ought to be able to dispense with the lies and illogic that have poisoned the debate so that we can concentrate on the changed cultural expectations that bedevil modern marriage. The two-career couple; the wife who earns more than her husband; disagreements over religion, money and child-rearing; old-fashioned adultery and betrayal -- those are the challenges that confront contemporary couples. Not to mention a destabilizing factor embedded in 21st-century romance -- the idealized Hollywood marriage, which gives young couples a false premise on which to base a lifetime pledge. (As a divorcee, I know something about the dilemmas that doom so many heterosexual marriages.) As commonplace as those problems are, you haven't heard much about them in the debate over "saving" traditional unions. Instead, narrow-minded preachers and pandering politicians have propagated a lot of foolish notions; among the most foolish is the idea of a connection between the faltering state of traditional marriage and the growing movement for gay rights. Jennifer Lopez, Britney Spears and Trista and Ryan -- who married in a televised ceremony after she spent a few weeks culling him from a herd of unattached males on a so-called reality show -- have contributed to the decline of heterosexual marriage. Gays and lesbians have had nothing to do with it. Now this article is scarier than Aliens vs Predatorby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 9:25pm. on Politics What liberal infidels will never understand about the president Here are some things that Christopher Nunneley, a conservative activist in Birmingham, Alabama, believes. That some time in June, apparently unnoticed by the world media, George Bush negotiated an end to the civil war in Sudan. That Bill Clinton is "lazy" and Teresa Heinz Kerry is an "African colonialist." That "we don't do torture," and that the School of the Americas manuals showing we do were "just ancient U.S. disinformation designed to make the Soviets think that we didn't know how to do real interrogations." Chris Nunneley also believes something crazy: that George W. Bush is a nice guy. Good questionby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 9:16pm. on War How has the US been spending other people's billions? Henry Waxman is an awkward customer. For 30 years, this California congressman has probed, badgered and embarrassed US administrations of every hue. As the senior Democrat on the House of Representatives' government reform committee, Congress's principal standing investigative panel, he is a difficult man to ignore. Right now, Mr Waxman has a question on Iraq. In fact, he has several - and in typically robust fashion, he is demanding answers. What he wants to know is whether the Bush administration has been fiddling with Iraq's oil revenues. He wrote to the Republican chairman of the reform committee on July 9, suggesting there was a serious case to answer. Subpoenas should be issued, he said, "to investigate potential mismanagement of the Development Fund for Iraq (DFI) by the United States". The DFI was set up after last year's invasion as the depository for Iraq's multi-billion-dollar oil revenues and was administered, until June 28, by the US-led Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) - with notional UN oversight. In particular, Mr Waxman is curious about "the [Bush] administration's last-minute 'draw-down' of billions of dollars from the DFI for unspecified expenses" prior to last month's transfer of sovereignty. "For example, $1bn [about £550m] was withdrawn from the DFI during the last month of the CPA's existence for unspecified 'security' purposes." The administration provided no information about how these funds would be spent, Mr Waxman says, and has yet to do so. Realists vs Neocons - that sounds about rightby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 9:11pm. on War Realists and Neo-Cons Renew Battle on Iran WASHINGTON, Jul 20 (IPS) - A new round in the ongoing battle between realists and neo-conservative and other hawks over Iran policy got underway here Monday as a task force of the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) published a new report urging Washington to engage Tehran on a selected range of issues of mutual concern. The task force, co-chaired by Zbigniew Brzezinski, national security adviser under former President Jimmy Carter (1977-81) and including the head of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) under past President George H W Bush (1989-93) argues that neo-conservative and other analysts who are urging that Washington pursue ''regime change'' in Iran underestimate the staying power of the current government there. ''Despite considerable political flux and popular dissatisfaction'', the 79-page report said, ''Iran is not on the verge of another revolution. Those forces that are committed to preserving Iran's current system remain firmly in control.'' The report, 'Iran: Time for a New Approach', also argues that Washington's invasion of Iraq, as well as Iran's rapid progress in developing possible nuclear-weapons capability, makes it more urgent than ever to resume and broaden bilateral talks that broke off 14 months ago. But it stresses that a ''grand bargain'' to settle all outstanding conflicts between Washington and Tehran is unrealistic and that talks should focus instead on making ''incremental progress'' on a variety of key issues, including regional stability and Iran's nuclear ambitions. You damn skippy I back the use of forceby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 9:06pm. on Africa and the African Diaspora U.S. Public Backs Force Against Sudan 'Genocide' WASHINGTON, Jul 20 (IPS) - Amid reports that senior officials in Sudan have directed recruitment, arming and other support to Arab militias waging a ”scorched-earth” campaign against African tribes in the province of Darfur, a new poll shows U.S. citizens feel Washington should back a future United Nations declaration of ”genocide” with armed force. The poll comes one day after international human rights groups released reports that detailed atrocities that have forced more than one million black Africans from their homes, and linked Khartoum to the Arab 'Janjaweed' (”men on horseback”). According to Amnesty International, the Janjaweed are using rape ”as a weapon of war” against their female victims. Human Rights Watch (HRW) released government documents it said came from civilian authorities in Darfur, and show the government and Janjaweed working hand in hand to expel the area's African tribes. ”It's absurd to distinguish between the Sudanese government forces and the militias -- they are one,” said Peter Takirambudde, executive director of HRW's Africa division. ”These documents show that militia activity has not just been condoned, it's been specifically supported by Sudan government officials.” On debateby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 9:00pm. on Seen online Conversational Cheap Shots is a simple explanation of invalid argument techniques. Not a single damn one of them works in here. Let s/he who has ears hear. One moreby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 8:29pm. on Race and Identity Keith left an email address rather than a web site. I'm a pretty regular visitor to Juliette's site and followed her link here. I thought it was an interesting conversation, but ultimately frustrating because P6 couldn't see J's point. As a "white guy", "member of the White Race" (P6's definition) or "a guy who can't jump" (Hollywood's definition), I do have a couple of takes to add to the ones already put forth.
a. The problem with black perception of racism is that it's about achieving perfection--something that will *never* be attained. If 1 in every 1000 white people is a racist, a black person who encounters whites regularly is going to hit that 1:1000 ratio every few weeks. If 1 in every 100,000 is racist, the black community will hear about a racist incident every few weeks and a black individual is probably going to encounter racism a few times in their lives. If that 1 in 100,000 runs a blog or a hate website, it is that much more public. As a member of the 99,999, I cannot own the problem of that 1. And you need to focus on those 99,999--as hard as that may be at the time. b. The part that was most interesting in the thread above was how P6's problem with Juliette wasn't with what she said, per se, but with the fact that she was publicly criticizing blacks in a way where white people might see it and might misinterpret it. I had a good friend in college who was black (a black activist no less) and we once had a huge talk about this exact subject. My argument to her was that it hurt the black community's credibility to be depending on people like Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton as their public mouthpieces and advocates, and I didn't understand why the black community couldn't see that. After many late night hours of debating this, she finally admitted that in reality, a lot (if not most) blacks don't really like or respect those mouthpieces either, and criticize them in private. But *to the outside world* they don't criticize them because "they are all we have!" and they didn't want their mouthpieces marginalized or undercut by their criticisms. That was back in the late 80's when Jesse was a bigger deal, I guess. But now I see the same argument again. Only what has changed is that those dudes aren't all you have anymore to be your advocates in the public realm. Condolezza Rice takes a lot of crap--more from blacks than whites--for what? Colin Powell could be the next VP. Bill Cosby is loved and respected by millions and millions of people. It is time for blacks to realize that their self-censorship of criticism for their own has got to stop. It is only hurting them to cling to the relics and rhetoric of the past. Whites see it, whether blacks criticize or not. Start sticking to the people going places instead of clinging to the people you had no choice about before. Technically, my terminology isn't "member of the White Race" but is "people who self-identify as white." One can't get my full position form a single post though so I understand the misapprehension. You say
and I wonder what brought you to that conclusion. One racist out of a thousand humans would be TOTALLY acceptable to every Black person I know. More importantly we are nowhere near that point.
You have misinterpreted me. My problem is that Juliette posts for the benefit of those she KNOWS are racist. She herself siad:
and my follow-up is, why do you accept it when you know it's bad? And my explanation of WHY it is bad is that it justifies white people abandoning their half of the problem. You DO know half the problem belongs collectively to white folks, don't you?
It is time for white people to realize they are just as responsible for the situation we all must adjust to as Black people are. The denial has to stop. Black people see their denial whether white people do or not. Denying it keeps you stuck in the past And I'm not just going to flip it like that. I'm going to take a market based approach to all this. Just like the drug war, I want to attack America's social problems on the demand side rather than just the supply side. Raise your children right. There must be something desperately wrong with white culture that makes your children abandon it for Black culture. What happened to them that makes them idolize 50 cent, Eminem and the like? Raise your children right and the demand dies.Demand dies, no more of those hip-hop thangs that bother Cos so much. See? It's all a matter of perception. White folks, being the mainstream and all, tend to get away with dealing strictly from their own viewpoint. So, for example, when the first affirmative action programs were created to change the behavior of white folks, white folks put conditions on Black folks in order to participate/slow it down. That tactic continues to this day. So if you want Black folks to take responsibility, white folks must too. Being poor sucksby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 7:37pm. on News Quote of note:
Wrongly Convicted? Briggs, from a small town outside Houston, was just 17 years old when her son, Daniel Lemmons, was born. During his short life, Daniel was in and out of hospitals, suffering from kidney problems and urinary tract infections. Daniel was transferred to another hospital, where the breathing tube mistake was corrected, and he was put on life support. He died in his mother's arms on May 9, 1999 — Mother's Day. Briggs' nightmare only got worse. A Harris County assistant medical examiner ruled Daniel had died from "shaken baby syndrome," and his young mother was charged with murder. I wouldn't have been repremandedby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 3:41pm. on News But that's because I'd never stoop so low. A Vote of No Confidence THOMAS M. DIBIAGIO, the U.S. attorney for Maryland, has embarrassed his office and discredited himself by instructing his staff to produce at least three "front-page" indictments for public corruption or white-collar crimes by Nov. 6. His astonishingly inappropriate directives, contained in internal office memos disclosed by the Baltimore Sun, earned him an unusual and deserved public reprimand from his superiors in the Justice Department. In a letter released by the department, Deputy Attorney General James B. Comey ordered Mr. DiBiagio to submit "to me for review any proposed indictment in a public corruption matter." In case Mr. DiBiagio missed the point, Mr. Comey added, "You may not bring such a case without my personal approval." Pharmaceutical companies take economic-based affirmative actionby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 3:37pm. on Economics Florida Subpoenas Generic Drug Makers on Medicaid CHICAGO (Reuters) - Florida's attorney general on Tuesday said he subpoenaed six drug makers on suspicion the companies overcharged the state's Medicaid health insurance program for the poor by $100 million. Attorney General Charlie Crist joins officials in about a dozen other states probing the pricing and marketing of pharmaceuticals in public health programs, as state governments grapple with double-digit health inflation and red ink. Mylan Laboratories Inc., Novartis AG's Geneva Pharmaceuticals unit, Ivax Corp., Teva Pharmaceuticals Industries Ltd., Watson Pharmaceuticals Inc. and PurePac Pharmaceuticals, a unit of Alpharma Inc., are the companies targeted. Officials at Watson and Ivax both confirmed they received the subpoena and said they will cooperate. Ivax said it believes it is in compliance with all laws. Calls to the other drug makers were not immediately returned. "Pharmaceutical pricing is a priority for attorneys general," Crist told Reuters. "We've noticed some spreads in the pricing that seemed inappropriate." In general, drug companies must give government programs the best deal on pharmaceuticals. The subpoenas request material to determine if the companies violated the state's false claims act. Of Florida's $58 billion budget, about $15 billion is spent on Medicaid, Crist added. Dear UN: Come back, please. All is forgivenby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 3:34pm. on War Iraq Requests Return of UN Nuclear Inspectors By Amil Khan Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said inspectors charged with the task of verifying the status of Iraq's nuclear material would return to Baghdad soon. "We received an official request from (Iraqi Foreign Minister) Hoshiyar Zebari for the return of international inspectors in the coming days," ElBaradei told reporters after arriving at Cairo airport. Unlike their pre-war counterparts, these inspectors will not be searching for signs of a nuclear weapons program in Iraq. Instead, they will be performing a routine task that even Iraq's ousted President Saddam Hussein allowed the U.N. agency to carry out after barring U.N. weapons inspectors from Iraq in the wake of U.S. and British bombing raids in December 1998. The IAEA said it hoped it would be a step toward a resumption of full inspections. A matter of prioritiesby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 3:31pm. on Politics Democratic priorities By Tom Doggett With time running out for Congress to pass a comprehensive energy bill, Democrats are demanding a vote on stand-alone legislation that would impose and enforce electric transmission reliability standards on U.S. utilities. The Bush administration and Republican lawmakers insist that electricity issues can be addressed only in a larger energy legislation package that also includes billions of dollars in tax breaks for oil, natural gas and coal firms. Republican priorities By Thomas Ferraro Raised by some Republicans as a mark of patriotism this election year, the measure passed on a 11-7 vote and was sent to the full Senate for final congressional approval. While the Senate has repeatedly rejected such measures in the past, both sides predict a razor-close vote this time. The Judiciary Committee's vote came a week after a divided Senate blocked a White House-backed bid to amend the Constitution to ban same-sex marriage, another issue Democrats have accused Republicans of pushing merely to rally their conservative base for the November elections. Al Barger is bannedby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 2:45pm. on Race and Identity
Is an unacceptable comment from a racist pig. An unacceptable racist pig that's running for the US Senate as a Libertarian. Tell me again how racism isn't a problem. LATER: I added a link to the post in which this foulness appeared. And I edited out Barger's URL. But I kept his IP. He's right! He's right!by Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 12:46pm. on Cartoons Black English Month lives!by Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 12:07pm. on Seen online via Ezra at Pandagon …As a quick-thinking senatorial aide switched on the Senate’s public-address system and cued up the infamous “Seven Minutes of Funk” break, Mr. Leahy and Mr. Cheney went head-to-head in what can only be described as a “take no prisoners” freestyle rap battle. Most of the rhymes kicked therein cannot be quoted in a family publication, but observers gave Mr. Cheney credit for his deceptively laid-back flow. Mr. Leahy was applauded for managing to rhyme the phrases “unethical for certain,” “crude oil spurtin’,” and “like Halliburton.” Despite the fact that both participants brought their A-game and succeeded in dropping mad scientifics, the bout seemed to end in a draw. Unfortunately, as other senators (along with assorted aides and support-staff members) were casting their votes to decide the winner, using the admittedly subjective but generally accepted “Make some noise up in here!” protocols, Mr. Cheney and Mr. Leahy took the proceedings to what one aide accurately described as “the next level.” Edward M. Kennedy (D.-Mass.) was the first to notice that the two men were circling each other, Mr. Cheney brandishing a switchblade and Mr. Leahy the jagged neck of a broken bottle. Greg Palast is working it againby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 11:55am. on Politics Black Americans discovered by Democratic party 07.20.04 - Like Christopher Columbus blinking in shock at first seeing an American Indian, John Kerry has just discovered African-American voters. On Thursday afternoon, Kerry landed at the NAACP convention, stepped off his slow-moving campaign boat and announced that he was exploring for one million missing Black voters. Let me explain -- because the New York Times won't. In the 2000 elections, 1.9 million ballots were cast which were never counted -- "spoiled" is the technical term. Ballots don't spoil because they are left out of the fridge. There's always a technical reason: a stray mark, or my favorite, from Gadsden County, Florida, writing in Al Gore's name instead of checking a box. According to data from the US Civil Rights Commission and the Harvard University Law School Civil Rights Project, about half the nation's spoiled ballots -- one million -- were cast by Black folk. Just as African American communities get the worst schools, the worst hospitals, they also get dumped with the worst voting machines, which eat, mismark, mangle and void ballots. [P6: emphasis added] Poof! A million Black votes gone, zapped, vanished. …Senator Kerry is no Corrine Brown. The man who would be President is first trying out the 'D' word in front of the friendly natives at the NAACP. But still, it's a first step: mentioning out loud the massive, systematic Disenfranchisement of the Black vote. But the real change won't come until Kerry can say the 'D' word in front of say, a gathering of the members of his wife's country club. And until he confronts the boys holding the electoral lynching ropes in both parties. I have a dream. I imagine John Kerry taking this message to the floor of the convention next week and proclaiming, "Three decades after Martin Luther King's murder, one million African-Americans cast ballots never counted. This will not stand!" Imagine it: At that moment, for the first time in a generation, the Democratic Party will have nominated a Democrat. This is fiscal prudence, mind you, not racismby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 11:32am. on Race and Identity Mike at TopDog04 spotted this one Understand what has happened. And do it with no further comment from me because the comments would not be pleasant.
Broadening my baseby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 10:19am. on Race and Identity As of this writing I have three right interesting comments from (I assume) regulars at Baldilocks. I don't want them all conflated with the original discussion I'm going to present and respond to them in separate posts. King of Foolsby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 10:17am. on Race and Identity
Al Barger of Culpepper Logby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 10:05am. on Race and Identity
People, people can't we all just get along? P6, I suspect that I'm merely volunteering for some abuse here, but you seem to be a dozen kinds of twisted up in determination to find reasons to be crappy with whitey. "white folks' race issue is they don't want to be held responsible for racism." It's not that I don't want to be held responsible, but that I am not and will not be held liable for the crimes or perceived crimes of other people's ancestors. Sarah from trying to grokby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 9:36am. on Race and Identity Sarah from trying to grok
Yes, there IS a life lesson you can drawby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 8:41am. on Economics Quote of note:
Microsoft's Online Unit Shows Signs of Life At an October 2002 gala to introduce Microsoft's MSN 8 Internet service, Bill Gates showed a video of himself wearing a butterfly costume and handing out software for the service. His point was that after seven years of floundering in the Internet access market, Microsoft would do whatever it took to beat its longtime rival America Online. That included pouring $500 million into MSN to match AOL's most popular features and another $300 million into marketing, featuring MSN's butterfly mascot and a concert highlighted by rocker Lenny Kravitz singing "Fly Away." But all that flew away was the better part of a billion dollars. Microsoft's share of the Internet access market has declined steadily since. In the years since the start of what was first called the Microsoft Network, Mr. Gates has tried dozens of different business models, from Internet access to Web sites to monthly software subscriptions. They all had one thing in common: they lost money. Over the last year, however, MSN has finally started to see some profits. The unit began making money last fall and is expected to post an operating profit of about $200 million for the fiscal year that ended June 30, compared with a loss of about $531 million last year. The reason has little to do with any of Microsoft's more ambitious Internet strategies. Instead, it was one of the businesses that it had put on the back burner - Internet advertising - that really started to take off. Even without a lot of new investment, MSN's Web site has long been the third most popular destination on the Internet, bringing together its Hotmail e-mail service, the MSNBC news operation and a variety of other channels. Recently, it has worked to repair a frayed relationship with Madison Avenue, putting the company in a good position to gain as the ad market rebounded. Over the last year, MSN has ranked second in online advertising revenue, behind Yahoo and ahead of the longtime leader AOL, a unit of Time Warner. I wonder whose idea this wasby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 8:37am. on Politics Governors Join as 'Big Four' to Pool Clout WASHINGTON, July 19 - It is a lobbying dream team that calls itself The Big Four: a Hollywood star turned politician, a formidable East Coast fund-raiser, a close friend of the president and the president's little brother. They are among the nation's most prominent Republican governors - Arnold Schwarzenegger of California, George E. Pataki of New York, Rick Perry of Texas and Jeb Bush of Florida - and they are increasingly concerned that smaller states are gobbling up more than their fair share of federal aid, particularly because of the disproportionate clout those states have in Congress. So these governors are pooling their considerable political influence to advance the interests of their states, in a move that has caught the attention of politicians and power brokers along K Street in Washington. "Very impressive," said Bill Paxon, an influential Washington lobbyist who was thought of as a potential speaker of the House before he left Congress in 1999. "In the lobbying world, it just doesn't get any better than that." The alliance represents the first time in recent memory that the governors of the nation's four most populous states have entered into a formal agreement to jointly lobby members of Congress, according to political historians and analysts. But more than that, it brings together some of the biggest names in the Republican Party: Mr. Schwarzenegger, who provides star power to the party; Mr. Pataki, who offers a Rolodex of wealthy Wall Street donors and is the longest-serving governor in the nation; Mr. Perry, who was George W. Bush's trusted lieutenant governor before Mr. Bush handed the job of governor to him; and Mr. Bush, who is, well, a Bush. The men brought their combined weight to bear last week in a letter adorned with the seals of their states - informing Republican Congressional leaders, by way of introduction, that there was a new political force to be reckoned with here in the nation's capital. "As governors of the four most populous states, we represent over one-third of the nation's gross domestic product," the July 15 letter said pointedly. "Our states employ over 43 million people and represent the largest agricultural, manufacturing, technology, tourism and service-based economies in the country." Let the internecine strife wax bountifully! Do you realize what massive population shifts would take place if the states received benefits exactly proportional to their contributions like corporations do? It would hollow out the center of the country. That sound you just heard was several thousand Republican bloggers' heads explodingby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 8:26am. on Politics The Arabian Candidate In the original version of "The Manchurian Candidate," Senator John Iselin, whom Chinese agents are plotting to put in the White House, is a right-wing demagogue modeled on Senator Joseph McCarthy. As Roger Ebert wrote, the plan is to "use anticommunist hysteria as a cover for a communist takeover." The movie doesn't say what Iselin would have done if the plot had succeeded. Presumably, however, he wouldn't have openly turned traitor. Instead, he would have used his position to undermine national security, while posing as America's staunchest defender against communist evil. So let's imagine an update - not the remake with Denzel Washington, which I haven't seen, but my own version. This time the enemies would be Islamic fanatics, who install as their puppet president a demagogue who poses as the nation's defender against terrorist evildoers. I disagree with the minorityby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 8:23am. on News (That headline sorta reminds you of "I agree with Clarence," don't it?) Ban on Printing Information on Kobe Bryant Accuser Is Upheld Colorado's highest court ruled yesterday that the judge in the rape trial of the basketball star Kobe Bryant was justified in barring the news media from publishing court documents detailing the sex life of Mr. Bryant's accuser even though the trial court itself had accidentally released the information to the public. But the State Supreme Court panel, ruling 4 to 3, was deeply divided, reflecting the issues at the center of the pretrial hearings in the case: how much protection does Colorado's rape victim law afford Mr. Bryant's accuser? And can the legal system in the Internet age even provide those protections in a case where the news media's coverage - and the resulting opportunities for lawyers to make their case in public - has been so pervasive? The appellate panel's narrow majority said that the obligations to protect were ironclad and irrevocable and that so-called prior restraint on publication and its resulting abridgement of the First Amendment of the United States Constitution was justified by the damage that could be done to the woman if the material were published or broadcast. The minority, in sometimes blistering language, said the court and the state had already failed in their duty to protect the woman and that barring publication now would make little difference. "Prior restraints are not meant to mitigate harms that have already occurred," the dissenting judges said. The trial court, they continued, cannot "require the media to do what the state failed to - give the alleged victim the protections afforded by the statute." See, here's the thing: once one of these protections is breeched, shoring it up legally is the right thing to do. Not doing so before now is not a failing of the court because it all exploded too fast for the legal system to react to; how long did it take for a picture of the girl to start circulating on the net? THAT may be the flaw, if there even is one. This is excellentby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 8:13am. on Health Drug Approved for Heart Failure in Black Patients A drug aimed at treating heart failure specifically in black patients has proved so effective that the clinical trial in which it was being tested has been halted early, the company sponsoring the trial said yesterday. The results are expected to lead to approval of the first drug specifically for a single ethnic group. They seem to validate the gamble by the company, NitroMed, to take a drug that had failed to win approval for general use and test it only on African-Americans, an approach that ignited controversy on the relevance of race to medicine. The company's stock soared on yesterday's announcement. Michael D. Loberg, the president and chief executive, said the company had been expecting the drug to be approved in early 2006 but would now be ready to introduce the drug in early 2005, if the Food and Drug Administration approves it that soon for use by blacks. NitroMed has argued that blacks have a higher rate of heart failure than the American population as a whole and that they tend not to respond to some existing heart failure drugs as well as other groups. For NitroMed executives, those factors, and some earlier evidence that blacks respond better to the drug, which is called BiDil, justified a test of the drug just in that ethnic group. Yesterday, NitroMed said that an independent committee of medical researchers overseeing patient safety in the trial decided it would be unethical to continue giving some patients a placebo because those getting the drug were living significantly longer. The trial, which began in 2001 and had enrolled about 1,050 of the 1,100 patients eventually intended to take part, was halted immediately and all the participating patients will be offered BiDil. "It is a spectacular result," said Anne L. Taylor, a professor of medicine at the University of Minnesota and the chairwoman of the study. "It offers an additional treatment for a group of patients who traditionally, with standard medications, have not done as well." Not smartby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 7:50am. on Politics The original source of this is CQ Today, which requires a subscription that I don't have so this is an extract from an abstract on civilrights.org
Democrats should just quietly prepare the statistics. The number of judges submitted by both Bush and Clinton, as well as the number accepted and the length of time each took. Make nice, pretty charts and wait for Republicans to raise the issue of obstructionism. The points to make in the response:
Greasing the slippery slopeby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 7:23am. on News Two things to notice: first, the title of this Department of Labor news release. Notice we are no longer talking only about "faith based" community service programs. Now we've added "faith based" training and contracting. What the hell is "faith based" contracting? Christianist construction workers praying the building doesn't fall down? I know what faith based training is, though. They're saying DOL funds can be used for things like attending a seminary, training to qualify for the ministry. I'm not sure about my position on this in particular. I mean, if you think of the ministry as just another job… The second thing I want you to notice is the straw man on which this is all based:
I wonder how a referendum would turn outby Prometheus 6
July 20, 2004 - 6:39am. on Health I suspect pro-choice groups would favor a referendum. Not that it's any stranger's business what a woman chooses to do in such situations Abortion Advocates Bash President Bush in Wake of New Campaign Ad by Steven Ertelt LifeNews.com Editor July 19, 2004 Washington, DC (LifeNews.com) -- A leading abortion advocacy group is coming to the aid of Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry in the wake of television and radio ads from the Bush campaign that criticize Kerry's pro-abortion voting record. President Bush's re-election campaign has been running ads that take Kerry to task for voting against parental notification legislation and a bill to protect pregnant women from violent assaults. They imply that Kerry voting record is out of the mainstream. But NARAL, a leading pro-abortion group, says it is Bush, not Kerry, whose position is at odds with most voters. "George Bush is making a desperate attempt to distract Americans from his radical record and dangerous views on reproductive rights issues," NARAL's interim president Elizabeth Cavendish said. "Bush's real position is clear -- he has never backed away from his vow to 'do everything in my power' to take away a woman's right to choose." NARAL cites a July 2004 Catholics for a Free Choice poll and a June 2003 NARAL survey that claim 60 percent of Catholic voters favor legal abortion and 80 percent of voters believe abortion should be a decision made between a woman and her doctor. However, those surveys are anomalies and contradict most polls that show a majority of Americans -- including women and Catholics -- are pro-life. Personal archeology IIIby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 8:56pm. on Random rant Today I ran through some of the old magazines. The link in the post below is a direct result. I found my very first deck of tarot cards. They are older than a LOT of you. I got a voice modifier that goes with the full head rubber alien mask. The battery had just enough charge to show it still works. And notebooks, GHOD, I always knew I was a fool for jotting down notes and crap, but I think I'm up to eight now. Prometheus 6 presents: The Deep Shit of the Dayby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 8:48pm. on Politics Every so often The Atlantic Monthly publishes something that you remember because you want to be able to say "I told you so" to everyone that missed it. This, from 1995, is one of them. The Diversity Myth The hortatory version of our history, in which America has long been a land of ethnic tolerance and multicultural harmony, leaves us with nothing useful to say to the failed states and riven polities of the post-Cold War world by Benjamin Schwarz SOLIPSISM is a perennial American temptation. In a grotesquely comic muddle of causes and cultures, Lyndon Johnson once sought to buy off the North Vietnamese with promises of a Great Society--style project along the Mekong. Variants of the cry "Why can't they be more like us?" have long served as a staple of American tourists and foreign-policy mandarins alike. We have made ourselves at home in the world, characteristically, by regarding it as America in the making. And they didn't even have to hire Johnny Cochranby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 6:14pm. on Tech $20 Million? I'd be ready to retire. Microsoft pays to end Lindows suits By David Becker CNET News.com July 19, 2004, 10:02 AM PT URL: http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1104-5274944.html Microsoft will pay upstart Linux seller Lindows $20 million to settle a long-running trademark dispute, according to a regulatory document filed Monday. In exchange for the payment, Lindows--which recently renamed most of its products "Linspire" to work around European trademark suits--will give up the Lindows name and assign related Web domains to Microsoft, according to the registration statement Lindows filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. That was amusing in a vile, obnoxious wayby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 6:05pm. on Cartoons Oliver is promoting his bosses' work again. TOTALLY on another topic, the down side of full-text RSS feeds is a guy can do a bunch of work switching stuff up and you may never notice. believe it or not, it was the URL in that link up there that made me look to see what system Oliver is using, and he's moved to Drupal. Dude. Get rid of the ugly default theme. Check out Cyberdash for a quick fix. Or work the phptemplate theme like I'm doing. Note that the two test accounts, Prometheus 6 and The Ultramarine, have different titles and avatars in in the header. A minor hack of blog.module and phptemplate.theme. And if you're interested you can have the fortune cookie/random quote module I wrote. You can't have the weekly archive pages yet, though. Does Murdock own The Sun?by Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 5:46pm. on Race and Identity How to heat up racism The Sun was unequivocal about the British National Party. Its front page boomed: "Bloody Nasty People". Its leading article spoke of the party as "a collection of evil, hate-filled moronic thugs ... wicked men ... criminals who should be locked up." The following day, after the BBC's documentary had been screened, the Sun punched home its message in another leader urging the authorities to arrest BNP members who were secretly filmed spouting "racist bile". Good stuff, eh? Britain's best-selling daily newspaper laying into the BNP in terms which any liberal could not but applaud. Hang on, though. This is the same Sun that is also responsible for publishing material, day after day, which feeds the prejudices of people who are recruited by, and increasingly vote for, the BNP. In the past couple of years the Sun has run stories, some of them false, some far-fetched, many full of distortions, which are guaranteed to stimulate its readers' latent - and, all too often, manifest - racism. How else can the paper explain its extraordinary three-page "exclusive" a year ago about "callous" east European asylum seekers alleged to be stealing, killing and eating swans? This story, which was sure to provide fodder for the bigots of the BNP, was founded on an unsubstantiated rumour started by an anonymous phone call to a swan sanctuary which appears to have been passed on to a police wildlife crime unit. There was not an iota of proof to back it up. It had not resulted, as the Sun claimed, in a police swoop, nor in "east Europeans" being caught "red-handed about to cook a pair of royal swans". In almost every respect a story likely to inflame passions about a very sensitive issue was wholly wrong. Yet the Sun refused to apologise, eventually carrying a nonsensical "clarification" six months later, tucked away at the back of the paper. By then it had already published another unprovable, unsourced story claiming that asylum seekers were poaching "our fish". Sound like any blogs we're familiar with? Sorry, I can't think of a thingby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 5:34pm. on Race and Identity "Terror" in the Skies - A Question
Oh, yeahby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 5:23pm. on Seen online Wandering about three links out from Culture Kitchen's sidebar, I spotted this posted on Upcoming.org:
All I can say is, they better be funny because I'm going. Thank goodness for Technoratiby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 5:19pm. on Seen online When it's working... I saw a link to P6…the index page, not a particular post, so I didn't get notice of it by email… that had text in the extract that was nowhere to be seen on the page. All that was in the linking post, in fact, was:
The blog in question is Culture Kitchen and though I don't like them big blocky fonts It's easy enough to overlook because the content is working. "If you just stop reminding me you're gay all the time, I won't hate you!"by Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 4:58pm. on Economics Cabin Fever Patrick Guerriero, executive director of conservative gay rights group Log Cabin Republicans, has been getting asked one particularly humorous question a lot these days: "So who are you going to vote for? John Kerry or Ralph Nader?" After all, he and his group of gay Republicans have seemingly been hung out to dry by the Bush administration and its backers in Congress. This week Republican leaders in the U.S. Senate pushed for but failed to pass a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage. A procedural vote on the proposal needed 60 votes to pass but went down on Wednesday by a vote of 48 votes backing the amendment to 50 against. Still, Guerriero and his fellow gay conservatives have been left feeling beleaguered by all the antigay rhetoric that surrounded the Senate debate. "I do a lot of soul-searching," Guerriero admitted. "Our membership is ticked off." Mind you, that does not mean Guerriero is going to leave his Log Cabin post or the Republican Party. Growing up in a middle-class Boston suburb, he feared that his sexual orientation would thwart his political ambitions, especially as a budding young Republican. But unlike generations of gay and lesbian conservatives before him, he has refused to stay in the closet and has been successful. However, he is furious that the GOP – of which he and others have remained loyal to for so long – seems to be completely shunning gay men and lesbians while catering to a far-right agenda in which advocating the opposition of gay rights has become a favored means for raising campaign funds. Preach!by Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 4:54pm. on Race and Identity Commentary: Wanted: More Soldiers for Civil Rights It’s a pity that, outside of academia, the political arena and a few churches, there has been no real celebration of the Brown v. Board school desegregation ruling of 1954 and the Civil Rights Act of 1964 – two landmark events for which the country is inarguably much better off. Maybe we were too busy planning for the Fourth of July. Or perhaps we were dumbstruck by Bill Cosby’s scathing indictment of black irresponsibility which, at best, only told part of the story by focusing on the effect while shrugging off the cause and thus was a metaphysical failure. Sure got a lot of media attention, though, didn’t it? But, of course. How they love it when the fault is not with the stalker but with the stalkee for not taking proper precautions. Or it could be that we’ve just gotten complacent and that after the modern movement made its biggest scores, we did as the Rev. Jeffrey I. Johnson alleges, and let our guard down. Johnson, the youth pastor at Baltimore’s Empowerment Temple A.M.E. church, took it to the choir last week when congressional Democrats convened its second annual African American Leadership Summit. Although he came to praise civil rights efforts, activists and achievements, Johnson also came to eulogize the old-school movement, trumpeting a new approach, or at least the need for one. “When we got post-1970,” he said, “we chilled. There was a group of individuals who said, ‘I don’t want my baby to have to fight the way I fought. So just go to school, get a job, baby; move to the suburbs and enjoy your life.’ There was another group of individuals that said, ‘Don’t even worry about being black; if you don’t mention it, maybe they won’t notice. Don’t say that you’re black, don’t be proud of being black, but just be black in whiteface. And so you can go to a college campus and pretend like you don’t have a heritage that you’ve been given; you can pretend like you don’t have issues that frustrate you.’” Ouch. And he was just getting started. Another false accusation flushed.by Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 4:51pm. on Politics No Manipulation in 'Memogate,' Says Civil Rights Commission Lawyer (CNSNews.com) - The deputy general counsel for the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights has concluded there was "no delay or actual manipulation" of the Senate's judicial confirmation process pertaining to the "Memogate" controversy. Deborah Carr said she found no evidence of wrongdoing by liberal interest groups who asked Democrat senators to delay or reject President Bush's judicial nominees. "The parties that are mentioned are allowed by law to lobby, and based on the information that has been discussed and talked about, I believe there was no delay of a process or actual manipulation of a process that occurred," Carr said at Friday's commission meeting. The advantage of liberals being ivory tower types is, we're smartby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 4:48pm. on War from Kairosnews; and I must say I think it rocks that someone who signs him or herself "blogalvillageidiot" deconstructs this noise so completely. THE Quote of note:
The vast right-wing conspiracy is buzzing today with the claim that Joseph Wilson's report to the CIA on uranium from Niger may actually have bolstered the infamous "16 words" in the 2002 State of the Union address. It seems to me that these exercises in advanced hermeneutics turn on a rather sophisticated interpretation of one of those 16 words: "recently." The administration and its allies are playing a semantic game with "recently" comparable to Bill Clinton's lawyerly parsing of the terms "sex" and "sexual relations." Wilson had reported vague feelers from the Iraqis about uranium in 1999. The National Intelligence Estimate of October 2002 reported possible Iraqi attempts to procure uranium in 2001, but subsequent investigation along other lines led American intelligence to reject or heavily qualify that conclusion, partly because documents supporting that hypothesis proved to have been forged. Since Bush did not specify a precise time frame, they can now claim to have been referring to Wilson's report on the 1999 contact with the Iraqi trade delegation, not to the forged documents. Likewise, the Butler Report found that the British intelligence assertion about those contacts was not discredited by the forged documents because it was arrived at independently before the discovery of the forged documents. In that case, isn't the implication of this version of the story that President Bush and his speechwriters "cherry-picked" a piece of anecdotal evidence that was not subsequently corroborated? Their justification is — and here I proudly dust off my rhetorical vocabulary — a kind of inverted post hoc ergo proper hoc. Yes, the forged letter was not discovered until after the British finding, but this does not mean that it does not play a role in a process of inductive reasoning that is logically prior to that claim. If informants are reporting on Iraqi attempts to acquire uranium and an attempt to falsify records that support that claim are subsequently discovered, it is reasonable to ask whether the sources consulted earlier might also have had an interest in falsifying such reports. The real problem here, however, lies in the epistemological claim implicit in the five words "the British government has learned ..." Although the Butler Review concluded that the claim, made prior to the discovery of the forged documents, could not have been based on those documents, the British white paper subsequently relied upon by the President provided no other sources for that claim, and may have ignored or overlooked evidence to the contrary. Those damn Fren…wait, they're Britishby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 12:58pm. on News If US media were held to the standard British media must meet, Rupert Murdock would be deported. In fact, maybe that explains his presence here. MEDIA – FOX CITED FOR ITS DISHONESTY: The British Government's Office of Communications (Ofcom) – the official regulator of the UK's communications industries - recently chastised Fox News and found it in violation of various regulations in that country aimed at preventing the media from deliberately spreading misinformation. Ofcom found that Fox News anchor John Gibson made "false statements by undermining facts." Its report stated, "Fox News was unable to provide any substantial evidence to support the overall allegation that the BBC management had lied and the BBC had an anti-American obsession…Even taking into account that this was a 'personal view' item, the strength and number of allegations that John Gibson made against the BBC meant that Fox News should have offered the BBC an opportunity to respond." Ofcom concluded, "Fox News was therefore in breach of Sections 2.1 (respect for truth), 2.7 (opportunity to take part), and 3.5(b) (personal view programmes - opinions expressed must not rest upon false evidence) of the [British] Programme Code." The text of the decision is below the fold. Take note, that's allby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 10:17am. on Health We're all multi-tasking, but what's the cost? July 19, 2004 Executives revel in it. Parents with jobs and children rely on it. And circus jugglers make it art. Multi-tasking, for most Americans, has become a way of life. Doing many things at once is the way we manage demands bearing down on us at warp speed, tame a plague of helpful technological devices and play enough roles — parent, coach, social secretary, executive — to stage a Broadway show. But researchers peering into the brains of those engaged in several tasks at once are concluding what some overworked Americans had begun to suspect: that multi-tasking, which many have embraced as the key to success, is instead a formula for shoddy work, mismanaged time, rote solutions, stress and forgetfulness. Not to mention car crashes, kitchen fires, forgotten children, near misses in the skies and other dangers of inattention. So turn off the music, hang up the phone, pull over to the side of the road and take note: When it comes to using your brain to conduct several tasks at one time, "there is no free lunch," says University of Michigan psychologist David E. Meyer. For all but the most routine tasks — and few mental undertakings are truly routine — it will take more time for the brain to switch among tasks than it would have to complete one and then turn to the other. When the two get squished together, each will be shortchanged, resulting in errors. Speaking of pictures of l'il Georgieby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 10:04am. on Seen online Someone at Howard Stern's joint got mad Photoshopping skillz. It sends the messageby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 9:52am. on Politics I'm sure Conservatives actually see the problem here because they seem more concerned with the message an action sends than the action itself. For three years Bush has sent the Black civil rights community the message that their issues aren't important to him. That's an accurate representation of the Conservative position as far as I can see; they would like to separate the issues from the community and redefine them. This election is critical to Democrats but important to Republicans as well. It's less of a crisis to Republicans because if repudiated by the real-world results of their decisions they will be able to blame the combination of "the war" and the collapse of the dot-com bubble. But it would still represent a tremendous setback for the neocon agenda…and we all know how tight the race is. So l'il Georgie can't afford to alienate a single one of his core constituents. And a big part of Bush's appeal to his core is his unshakeable faith in what he's doing. Faith, the evidence of things unseen. Like success. I digress. Anyway, shots like this: and in case you haven't noticed, Bush really sucks at unscripted interactions. So he gonna stay hella far from hostile crowds. What do you expect? He's never spoken in front of a hostile crowd since taking the chair in the Oval Office. Still, it sends the message that even speaking to Black folks will endanger his standing with his core. Long term, he just made any rapproachment between Republicans and Black folks in general a lot less likely. Short term, forget about it. THE RACE TO THE WHITE HOUSE Kerry Vows Not to Divide Nation by Race The Democrat receives a rousing reception at the NAACP convention Bush decided to skip. By Michael Finnegan Times Staff Writer July 16, 2004 PHILADELPHIA — Sen. John F. Kerry sought to capitalize Thursday on President Bush's refusal to speak to the NAACP, telling a national gathering of African Americans that he would "talk to all of the people" and not "divide our nation by race." "The president may be too busy to speak to you now, but I've got news for you: He's going to have plenty of time after Nov. 2," Kerry told 3,000 cheering members of the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People at the organization's 95th annual convention. Since his election as president, Bush has rejected all speaking invitations from the NAACP, America's oldest civil rights group. White House officials this week cited "hostile" remarks about Bush by NAACP leaders as the reason, a rationale Kerry mocked in his remarks. "As a campaigner," Kerry told the crowd, "I know something about scheduling conflicts and hostile environments. But you know what? When you're president of the United States, you can pretty much say where you want to be and when. When you're president, you need to talk to all of the people, and that's exactly what I intend to do." From the moment he entered the convention hall, with the disco hit "We Are Family" booming from loudspeakers, the Massachusetts Democrat was greeted with cheers and standing ovations. The NAACP stop was part of a concerted push by Kerry this week to build support among African Americans. A strong turnout of black voters is crucial to his prospects for carrying some of the nation's most closely divided states, among them Pennsylvania and Michigan. An array of black Democrats has complained that Kerry has fallen short in appealing to minority voters, in part by putting too few blacks in the top ranks of his campaign. The enthusiasm in the convention hall suggested at least some measure of success in Kerry's dual effort to bolster his support among blacks and to use Bush's absence to damage his already dismal standing among African Americans. (Nine out of 10 black voters sided against Bush in the 2000 election.) That said, to my mind Kerry's statements aren't sufficient. Not dividing isn't enough. Facilitating healing must be the goal. It's why Bush's "I'm a uniter not a divider" worked so well, and why he will suffer a backlash for failing to even make a gesture in that direction. They were sure they'd have Iraq as a forward platform from which to deal with Iran by nowby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 8:47am. on War U.S. Faces a Crossroads on Iran Policy …The Bush administration is under mounting pressure to take action to deal with Iran -- and end the drift that has characterized U.S. policy for more than three years. In contrast, two of the most prominent foreign policy groups in Washington are calling for the United States to end a quarter-century of hostile relations and begin new diplomatic overtures to Iran, despite disagreements on a vast range of issues. Because the "solidly entrenched" government provides the only "authoritative" interlocutors, Washington should "deal with the current regime rather than wait for it to fall," says a Council on Foreign Relations report released today. The disparate range of proposals underscores the near void in U.S. policy toward Iran -- in stark contrast to the two other countries in what President Bush calls the "axis of evil." The administration launched a war to oust Saddam Hussein in Iraq and is now engaged in delicate talks over nuclear issues with North Korea. But six months before its first term ends, the administration has still not formally signed off on a strategy for Iran since a review of U.S. policy was begun in 2001, U.S. officials say. Pressed to define U.S. policy on Iran, one frustrated senior U.S. official cracked, "Oh, do we have one?" Bush administration policy has generally been piecemeal and reactive to broader or tangential issues, rather than to Iran itself, U.S. officials say. "What we have is a summation of various pieces -- one piece on nuclear weapons, one on human rights, another on terrorism, other pieces on drugs, Iraq and Afghanistan," a senior State Department official said. White House officials point to a three-paragraph presidential statement two years ago this month as the core policy. It notes local and national elections when voters supported reformers; it then calls on Tehran to "listen to their hopes." This is richby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 8:42am. on Politics Schwarzenegger Assails Opponents as 'Girlie-Men' LOS ANGELES -- Democrats aren't amused by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's use of the mocking term "girlie men" to describe some lawmakers, although a spokesman for the governor said no apology would be forthcoming. Schwarzenegger dished out the insult at a rally Saturday as he claimed Democrats were delaying the budget by catering to special interests. Democrats protested that the remark was sexist and homophobic. "If they don't have the guts to come up here in front of you and say, 'I don't want to represent you, I want to represent those special interests, the unions, the trial lawyers ... if they don't have the guts, I call them girlie men," Schwarzenegger said to the cheering crowd at a mall food court in Ontario. The governor lifted the term from a long-running "Saturday Night Live" skit in which two pompous, Schwarzenegger-worshipping weightlifters repeatedly use it to mock those who don't meet their standards of physical perfection. Lies and the lying liars that tell themby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 8:38am. on Politics Republicans Helping Nader to Help Themselves Monday, July 19, 2004; Page A04 The Michigan Republican Party submitted more than 40,000 signatures last week in a bid to get independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader on the state's November ballot. Of course, this is not really about helping Nader. It is all about helping President Bush and hurting Democratic presidential candidate John F. Kerry's campaign in a closely contested state. The Michigan GOP denies that, of course. Matt Davis, a spokesman for the group, said it was merely concerned about third-party candidates being left off the ballot. He could not name, however, another third-party or independent candidate his party has helped. NO ONE actually wants competition. In fact, that's a good way to recognize a scam—anyone that claims to support a something because it increases competition is lying, both about their reasons for supporting that something and the effect they expect it to have. It seems letting events speak for themselves isn't working as well as Bush hopedby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 8:32am. on Politics Quote of note:
GOP Urged to Sharpen Message on Economy SEATTLE, July 18 -- Republicans risk losing the economic debate in this year's election unless they shift their focus from trying to convince voters that the economy is improving and engage Democrats directly over how to create jobs and expand growth in the future, Republican governors were told here this weekend. GOP pollster Bill McInturff, in a Saturday briefing for the Republican Governors Association, presented survey results showing that voters are far more responsive to Sen. John F. Kerry's economic message that talks about a middle-class squeeze than to President Bush's efforts to change public perceptions by talking up recent economic statistics. Republicans have been hoping that, with improving economic statistics, Bush will gain politically, but GOP governors agreed with McInturff's conclusion that voters are not ready for such a message. Colorado Gov. Bill Owens (R) said economies in many battleground states are improving but acknowledged that voters are not convinced the recovery is real. "People are still skeptical" about the economy, Owens said. "There's a long-term lag between perception and reality. . . . You can't run against that prevailing wisdom yourself." Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle (D) said that economic conditions in his state have improved but that voters were reluctant to give Bush credit for the changes, saying they do not believe his tax cuts have helped them directly. "It's a very, very hard issue for the president to come into Wisconsin and explain what he has done to help us," he said. What? You would have him defy the Illuminati?by Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 8:25am. on Africa and the African Diaspora AS THE BUSH administration pours billions into reconstruction in Iraq and Afghanistan, a third nation-building effort is precariously proceeding on a shoestring 600 miles from Florida. Early this year Haiti lived through a revolution that resulted in elected president Jean-Bertrand Aristide being transported into exile on a U.S. military aircraft; a day later, 1,800 U.S. Marines belatedly arrived as part of a U.N.-sponsored effort to restore order. Now the Marines have left, replaced by an untested force of Brazilians and other South Americans. Meanwhile, an interim government is struggling to gain control over the country. This week at a Washington conference the United Nations and other organizations will seek $900 million in new funding to jump-start the economy and rebuild shattered institutions. Success might open a modest window of opportunity for the hemisphere's poorest country -- which is why the Bush administration and Congress ought to be doing more to help. That would set a bad precidentby Prometheus 6
July 19, 2004 - 8:23am. on Economics Daimler Bosses May Give Up Pay if Workers Agree to Cuts BERLIN, July 18 -- DaimlerChrysler's management is ready to give up some of its pay if employees make concessions in the automaker's drive to cut $620 million in costs, a company spokesman said Sunday. DaimlerChrysler workers have staged walkouts and rallies in recent days, halting production of some Mercedes-Benz cars as recently as Saturday to protest company demands to work more for the same pay. More walkouts are reportedly planned next week. "I can confirm that the board is willing to make a contribution if there is an overall agreement," DaimlerChrysler spokesman Thomas Froehlich said Sunday. He refused to comment in detail on a Bild am Sonntag newspaper report that chief executive Juergen Schrempp and other top managers were willing to relinquish 10 percent of their salaries if workers agree to a deal. The report cited no sources. Here, have a little fear before you go to bedby Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 11:21pm. on War Quote of note:
Why America Is Still An Easy Target Since Sept. 11, 2001, the U.S. has spent more than $500 million to make America's seaports more secure. Sound like a lot? It isn't. That's about what the U.S. spends in Iraq in four days, notes Stephen Flynn, whose new book on homeland security, America the Vulnerable, concludes that the U.S. is scandalously unprepared for the next terrorist attack. Why? Because it still doesn't see protecting the homeland as a priority. Flynn, a retired U.S. Coast Guard commander and a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, says our leaders harbor the delusion that the real fight against terrorism is overseas. In the meantime, the U.S. has made scant progress in protecting its own infrastructure. Having spent years visiting America's high-risk targets, Flynn offers a damning assessment and some solutions as well. Interesting things from today's talk showsby Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 11:14pm. on Economics My daughter has the laptop, so I'm working from notes, but the McLaughlin Report noted that 75% of Bush's campaign donations and 43% of Kerry's come from Corporate America. We're talking dollar amount. Eleanor Clift broke it out a bit, saying that the biggest contributors to Bush are in the oil, military supply and pharmaceuticals industries. Why am I not surprised? Still, Mort Zuckerman groaned about the 30% increase in discretionary spending and the absolute absence of any vetoes at all. And interestingly enough, he said business would be better off short-term with Bush, but long-term Kerry's greater fiscal responsibility (his term) would be better for business. They also touched on the American prison population.The United States, at a cost of $49 billion per year, houses 25% of all the prisoners in the entire world. And in the conversation, McLaughlin took Buchanan to the edge of a blatantly racist statement by asking him why he thought there were so many prisoners in the USofA. It is, of course, because so many non-Europeans (his term) are committing crimes. But he was let off the hook by being allowed a non-answer to the follow up question, would reducing the wealth and income disparities help resolve that issue. I have a chunk of an online transcript from The Capital Gang I want to share too.
Isn't that nice? I have no word for thisby Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 8:55pm. on Economics Trying to pay off one of those I.O.U.s, I find that James' distaste for the term "cultural imperialism"
…requires a clearer statement than this (mine):
I think the best approach to take is to explain what I see that I'm calling cultural imperialism. It's very possible I'm not using the term the way it's generally used. When a nation joins the world-wide free market, it is on the terms set by developed nations. That's because developed nations own and control the market, as well as flex all the enforcement power.
Because NO ONE actually wants competition (in fact, that's a good way to recognize the whole deregulation scam is a scam—any business claims to support a law because it increases competition is lying, both about its reasons for supporting the law and the effect they expect it to have), those terms will be offered to those the owners of the market feel will be of benefit to themselves. Sometimes that's raw material. Sometimes that people to buy their stuff. In either case, left up to the IMF and World Bank all the emerging economies will emerge just enough to provide service for the developed nations of the world. Archer Daniels Midland says they see a future where everything grows where it grows best…and they sell it, of course. They envision a world where everyone else's growth depends on exports…which will put them in a situation similar to Japan's sooner or later. In fact, I suspect Japan has taken this long to become unbalanced because they joined the game while Europe was rebuilding. As I wrote this, I realize "cultural imperialism" isn't the right term. Economic sphere of influence is better; economic gravity well is almost exact. Coolest animation everby Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 2:41pm. on Seen online Scroll down to the fourth animation on this page. Save one of the two (1.5 megs or 4.7 megs) on your hard drive and play it. Hmby Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 1:50pm. on Politics
I agree with Clarenceby Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 1:23pm. on Race and Identity Page, not Thomas. Just wanted to see if you're paying attention. Quote of note:
NAACP vs. GOP: Preaching to the choir WASHINGTON -- Leaders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People sounded outraged that President Bush stiffed their invitation to speak at their annual convention, which runs through Thursday in Philadelphia. But I am guessing that they were secretly delighted. After all, as long as Bush didn't show, they didn't have to pretend that they wanted to hear him. That's just one of several good reasons why the president should have shown up. Politically, it was a no-lose proposition for him in an election year. If the delegates had applauded politely, which they did after his 2000 speech before the body, he would have looked like a winner. If anybody had jeered, which was highly unlikely, he would have looked courageous for making an attempt at peacemaking. Instead, the president flip-flopped on his 2000 pledge to be "a uniter, not a divider" by slamming the leaders of the nation's oldest and largest civil rights group. In an interview with three Pennsylvania newspapers, Bush said he "admired some" NAACP leaders around the country but not its officers, who include President Kweisi Mfume, a former Democratic congressman from Baltimore, and Chairman Julian Bond, who has denounced Bush's judicial appointees as coming from "the Taliban wing" of the GOP. Look out!by Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 12:59pm. on Seen online Fortunately, not all the way back. Remember when I said every time I go by PBS I find something cool and unexpected?by Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 11:57am. on Race and Identity Comedian Bill Cosby created controversy recently with pointed public criticism of parenting practices in certain African-American communities. Ray Suarez discusses Cosby's controversial comments with Dr. Alvin Poussaint, a psychiatrist at Harvard Medical School, and Ta-Nehisi Coates, a writer for the Village Voice. The rare occasion where I can't use the headline I want toby Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 11:18am. on Africa and the African Diaspora When I saw the title of the linked article in my RSS reader my first, rather sardonic, thought was "Did Mugabe learn it from Bush, or did Bush learn it from Mugabe?" Well, of course, Bush is Bush-league compared to the intensity of Mugabe's crew. Or maybe it's the techniques…I don't think the neocon approach would work in Zimbabwe any more than Mugabe's approach (which involves more than brutality; it involves letting everyone know the source of it as well) would work here. I'm fairly convinced there a difference of degree rather than kind between the two administrations. But you can't just say stuff like that, you know? So I couldn't use the headline I had in mind. Anyway… Mugabe Said to Use Law as Political Tool BULAWAYO, Zimbabwe -- Remember Moyo, a burly man with sad, withdrawn eyes, was arrested on Nov. 11, 2001, and beaten repeatedly and savagely over the next several days. He was charged with murder. The day after the arrest, Moyo said, police pummeled and stomped him by the side of a road. At a police station outside this southern city, he was stripped, his hands were tied behind his back and his feet were shackled to a metal ring hooked to a wet cell floor, he said. Several times, he said, thugs let themselves in at night and beat him bloody and mute. "This thing, you cannot forget," said Moyo, who had been an intelligence official and bodyguard for Zimbabwe's main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change. "You can try, but it just sticks." The main reason the "Kerry has no platform" meme diedby Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 11:08am. on Politics President Is Still Mum on Agenda For Second Term As he campaigned around the country last week, President Bush asked voters to give him another four years to make the nation "safer and stronger and better." But with the election less than four months away, one of the biggest mysteries surrounding the president's campaign is what he would actually do if he wins a second term. Bush's failure to detail a second-term agenda -- beyond his pledge to keep waging an aggressive war on terrorism -- represents a stark contrast to his previous campaigns, in which he set out a handful of priorities almost from the opening day and rarely deviated from them. You see where this is going, don't you?by Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 11:05am. on Race and Identity Using Threats, N.Y. Landlords Feed Immigrants' Fear NEW YORK -- They sat there, three diminutive and worried Mexican women, in the shadows in the back pews of St. Jerome's Church in the Bronx. Father John O. Grange noticed and motioned them forward. The women handed Grange a letter. They had asked for apartment repairs, and this letter contained what appeared to be the landlord's response. "Dear Tenants," the letter stated, "As you know the United States Government and specifically the Homeland Security Administration is investigating illegal aliens . . . I have given them all the information that I know about my tenants (age, names, work, cars, marriage, country of origin, telephone numbers, children)…You should expect a visit in the near future." Grange, 64, forms a fist and frowns. "Their hands were shaking as I read the letter -- they were scared stiff," said the priest, who is a founding member of South Bronx Churches, an ecumenical organizing group that is helping the women. "Evil has reared its head and threatens to ruin their hardworking lives." Much has changed in the post-Sept. 11, 2001, world of New York. There are subway announcements advising riders to watch for suspicious people and unattended packages. There is the shared memory of attacks past and the fear of more to come. And for some of the hundreds of thousands of immigrants in the city, especially those whose visa papers are not in order, the fear is doubled. They worry about more attacks and about those who might take advantage of them in these troubled times. "This case in the Bronx is a particularly flagrant example of what our constituency faces with some frequency," said Andrew Friedman, co-director of Make the Road by Walking, an immigrant advocacy group that has worked with tenants in Brooklyn who have received similar verbal threats from landlords. "People put up with absolutely ghastly living conditions and feel they can't complain in this security-conscious world." The Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund handled several cases in the past year in which landlords tried to intimidate Muslim tenants by threatening to call the FBI. An organizer who works with nannies said that such threats are common -- and that they recently won a court case for back wages against a tennis instructor who warned he would call the Department of Homeland Security. "We hear about this quite often -- it's our main challenge, because employers know everyone is so scared now," said Ai-jen Poo, who works for Domestic Workers United in the Bronx. "Even people with legal green cards are afraid of deportation post-9/11. It's a double whammy because the economy isn't great." Hastert shows he's Republican Presidential candidate materialby Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 11:02am. on Politics Boeing Has a Powerful Ally With Hastert By Jeffrey H. Birnbaum Congress is poised to appropriate $100 million to keep one of the federal government's most scandal-ridden and contentious programs -- the Air Force's plan to replace its aging aerial-refueling tankers with new Boeing 767s. Insiders say that the primary reason for the payout is that House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) has made Boeing Co.'s cause his own. Hastert has worked aggressively behind the scenes to keep the tanker contract in Boeing's hands at least in part, his spokesman said, because Boeing is headquartered in Chicago, not far from his congressional district. Boeing also has needed the help. Questions about the cost of the program, among other worries, have prompted the Pentagon to put off deciding its fate until year-end at the earliest. A Carter G Woodson momentby Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 10:57am. on Politics "When you control a man's thinking, you do not have to worry about his actions. You do not have to tell him to stand here or go yonder. He will find his 'proper place' and stay in it. You do not need to send him to the back door. He will go without being told. In fact, if there is no back door, he will cut one for his special benefit. His education makes it necessary." You will read this only here (unfortunately) By Joan Chittister,OSB You are not supposed to be allowed to read this column. It was solicited by another publisher and then returned to sender, me, because it says things that some people are allowed to say but others, apparently, are not. The story is this. A magazine in the United States, no names mentioned, planned to publish a "roundtable" feature on the upcoming election. The question posed to each of the writers seemed at first blush to be basically simple, essentially straightforward: "What," the editor wanted to know from each of us, "do you think is the major issue in the upcoming November presidential election?" "Interesting question," I thought. "I can't wait to see the answers to this one." Then this magazine that is incorporated as a 501c3 organization, or not-for-profit entity, got a ruling from its lawyer saying that if this particular feature were printed they stood in danger of losing their tax-exempt status. Since all of the writers, it seems, had criticized the Bush administration for some failure in regard to the area of interest being treated, the company lawyer feared IRS reprisals against the group on the grounds of "political endorsement." The magazine withdrew the opinion pieces that formed the basis for the roundtable. That happened in the face of Catholic bishops who will refuse Communion to candidates who vote for pro-choice legislation and Bush campaign strategists who have targeted 1,600 "friendly" churches in Pennsylvania to hand over their list of members to the local Republican party. As a result, I have decided to publish those previous comments of mine here, not as a political endorsement of any kind, but simply because I still believe in two things: First, I believe in freedom of speech. And secondly, I still believe in the United States as "land of the free and home of the brave." When either of those qualities goes, the country won't be worth living in anyway, taxes or no taxes. So, I repeat here what was meant to be published there: I don't remember if I mentioned this site beforeby Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 10:50am. on Politics Don't matter. It's a nice idea anyway.
Their pattern is one topic per day, three reasons supporting the progressive position and at least one counter to the conservative position. How do you handle write-in candidates on touch-screen voting machines?by Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 10:10am. on Politics A thought. Because I know anyone who wants to vote for Nader is taking a principled position. I do respect principle, but after this I'm sure there's better ways of supporting them. I'm not implying I think his run is a bad idea because of that article. It's more that I hope people see the Usenet quality to his explanations. Now, I understand y'all do not want to reward the Democratic party with a vote. I hope you don't want to reward Nader's obvious mendacity. And you may feel Nader is himself unconnected with the Conservative financial shenanigans underpinning his campaign (and I hope you gave Sharpton the same slack…I didn't, but given my position on Nader I shouldn't have), but if he receives anything more than a humiliation it will encourage that sort of interferance in the future. So I suggest the principled progressive response would be to write in your own name. But I don't know if touch-screen voting machines handle write-in candidates. Then again, I do believe stupidity is at least a little evilby Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 9:49am. on Economics James at Hobson's Choice gives a little thought to a story about GE shaping tax policy. In the process he says something that, when generalized, is a fundamental truth: Few firms are as well positioned. No company spends more on lobbying than GE, according to PoliticalMoneyLine.com -- $7.54 million last year alone. Its political action committee, through which it donates to congressional candidates, ranks in total donations among the top 10 of all corporations this year. Does this sound like a good idea to you?by Prometheus 6
July 18, 2004 - 9:40am. on War the Agonist, via Digby at Hullabaloo Moscow and Washington are quietly negotiating a request by the Bush administration to send Russian troops to Iraq or Afghanistan this fall, Russian government sources tell Stratfor. The talks are intense, our contacts close to the U.S. State Department say, and the timing is not insignificant. A Russian troop lift to either country before the U.S. presidential election would give U.S. President George W. Bush a powerful boost in the campaign. Digby says it best: "The U.S. inviting the Russians into Afghanistan to help us fight the Mujahadeen is so incredibly ironic I can't even go there. A KGB agent rescuing the neocons is simply hysterical. " |