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Week of August 15, 2004 to August 21, 2004This is what happens when you start paying attention to the news againSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 21, 2004 - 11:11pm.
on Politics I should stay away from this slow veteran boat thing. I didn't pay much attention to it when it started up because I thought it ridiculous. Goes to show you, I guess… Even not having gone into it too deeply before today, it's easy to see the Bushistas have come up with quite the paradox: bullshit that is thick yet transparent. Like in tomorrow's NY Times it says:
Upcoming plans IISubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 21, 2004 - 10:50pm.
on Politics I've pretty much decided I'll be on the street with a camera. I've been reading around sites like www.a31.org, RNC Not Welcome and Counter Convention, which last two have extensive calendars of events and counter-events. Some of them are just free advertising, like when a club "welcomes" the RNC with a rave in the Village four days beforehand. But there's a lot of training going on, first aid, legal rights, even self defense. There's a couple of days of civil disobedience planned and it seems like it should all come off reasonably well. Then again, I remember the white collar riot in Florida. I put nothing beyond Republican operatives. Upcoming plans ISubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 21, 2004 - 10:23pm.
on Random rant Reasonable progress being made settling the site down. There's still some hinky stuff to straighten out. That's largely my fault because when learning something I tend to run parallel experiments and I sort of lost track which version of which module goes with which version of the site software. And things can look right yet be all wrong. The Recent Comments box was a perfect example of that. That's fixed now, and the full text search isn't perfect but it finds stuff. It just isn't very nice about telling you where the word or phrase you searched for is. CSS tweaks are proceeding apace. But further hackery here must wait because tomorrow it's time to tune the Niggerati Network. I need that site finished because there's some things I want to get into that really needs to be handled seperately from news, politics and all that rot, things I think are important as opposed to things I think people should be aware of. If people had the slightest sense of history none of this would be possibleSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 21, 2004 - 7:55pm.
on Politics Bush Promises to Offer Detailed Plans at Convention WASHINGTON, Aug. 21 - President Bush will present what aides say will be a detailed second-term agenda when he is nominated in New York in 10 days, part of an ambitious convention program built on invocations of Sept. 11 and efforts to paint Senator John Kerry as untrustworthy and out of the mainstream. Mr. Bush's advisers said they were girding for the most extensive street demonstrations at any political convention since the Democrats nominated Hubert H. Humphrey in Chicago in 1968. But in contrast to that convention, which was severely undermined by televised displays of street rioting, Republicans said they would seek to turn any disruptions to their advantage, by portraying protests by even independent activists as Democratic-sanctioned displays of disrespect for a sitting president. You KNOW these slow-boat veterans need to shut up nowSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 21, 2004 - 7:18pm.
on Politics via Steve Gilliard Feb. 28, 1969: ON THE DONG CUNG RIVER Anti-Kerry vets not there that day August 21, 2004 There were three swift boats on the river that day in Vietnam more than 35 years agoâthree officers and 15 crew members. Only two of those officers remain to talk about what happened on February 28, 1969. One is John Kerry, the Democratic presidential candidate who won a Silver Star for what happened on that date. I am the other. For years, no one asked about those events. But now they are the focus of skirmishing in a presidential election with a group of swift boat veterans and others contending that Kerry didn't deserve the Silver Star for what he did on that day, or the Bronze Star and three Purple Hearts he was awarded for other actions. While you're entertaining yourself with political horror storiesSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 21, 2004 - 6:50pm.
on Politics MoveOn.org's latest ad contest has the winners up. And they certainly are winners. Republicans all. Well, one ex-Republican (though she's still a Baptist). Each explaining rather sanely why they are voting for John Kerry. And the deadliest are the ones who proclaim they are not changing parties, just voting against a candidate that doesn't represent their values. We interrupt this site tweaking session to bring you this Internet ad from John KerrySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 21, 2004 - 6:41pm.
on War The ad features a discussion between Senator McCain and Mr. Bush. It's hosted at Kerry's campaign site. You should watch it, it's brief. They're still having the concert for the RNC thoughSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 21, 2004 - 9:45am.
on Politics NYC lawyers: permit rejection about lawn NEW YORK --The city's decision to deny a permit to protesters for a rally on Central Park's Great Lawn on the weekend before the Republican National Convention is about preserving the lawn, not suppressing speech, lawyers for the city said in federal court Friday. The lawn would be ruined if 75,000 people gathered there for a rally on Aug. 28 and then 250,000 people used the lawn for another rally the next day, said Gail Donoghue, representing the city. "I think two is too many back to back. The lawn would have no time to recover," Donoghue told U.S. District Judge William H. Pauley III in Manhattan. "The damage would be really substantial." A somewhat misleading headline on a nevertheless interesting storySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 21, 2004 - 9:35am.
on Race and Identity Apparently there was a review of thin museum in the NY Times last week that I missed entirely. Anyway… New Ohio Slavery Museum Generates Friction By Bob Weston The differences over the $110 million National Underground Railroad Freedom Center are embodied in the stark positions taken by two of the city's leading black religious leaders, who also happen to be father and son. While the Rev. Damon Lynch Jr. will be deeply involved as co-chairman of Monday's dedication, featuring such luminaries as first lady Laura Bush and television personality Oprah Winfrey, his son, the Rev. Damon Lynch III, will be leading a demonstration outside seeking to upstage the event. This is THE program created to fight redlining, you knowEndangering Community Development The Bush administration, which has already hobbled programs that provide housing subsidies for the poor, is undermining the Community Reinvestment Act, the most successful community revitalization program in the nation's history. The act requires banks to lend, invest and provide banking services to poor communities. So far, it has made more than $1.5 trillion available, much of it to developers and nonprofit groups that build affordable housing for the elderly and disabled people, as well as to medical clinics and other projects that would never get built if they were left to the private sector. Thoughtful critics in the banking community have a point when they argue that the program needs updating and simplification, so that investments are targeted more effectively and banks have less difficulty complying with the act. But two of the federal agencies that oversee the banking industry have proposed a drastic change that could allow more than a thousand banks to back away from their community development obligations, leaving consumers in many states with worse banking services, and the communities themselves devoid of badly needed development projects. What changed?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 21, 2004 - 9:30am.
on War U.S. Now Said to Support Growth for Some West Bank Settlements WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 - The Bush administration, moving to lend political support to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon at a time of political turmoil, has modified its policy and signaled approval of growth in at least some Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, American and Israeli officials say. In the latest modification of American policy, the administration now supports construction of new apartments in areas already built up in some settlements, as long as the expansion does not extend outward to undeveloped parts of the West Bank, according to the officials. The Prison-Industrial system affects you directlySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 21, 2004 - 8:56am.
on Economics I mentioned a little while ago that the Census counts prisoners as residents of the locality in which th eprison is located for purposes of laying out political districts and such. I thought I'd share my source for that information, and because the site is so good I'm going to cite it exactly as the owner requests. Wagner, Peter. (2004) Prisoners of the Census. Available: http://www.prisonersofthecensus.org/, (Aug. 2004). Like DAT, y'all. Much good information, including summaries of how politics in Arizona, California, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, Ohio ,Pennsylvania are impacted by the redistribution of the population…New York is linked because they have a particularly good (as in clear) explanation on my home state. So what was the reason for this no-fly list?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 21, 2004 - 8:39am.
on War How absurd is it that just adding a middle initial can get you past the dread no-fly list? As an aside, Rep. Lewis needs to sit down with Senator Kennedy and get schooled on how Kennedy got himself off that list. There's obviously some insider stuff Lewis ain't down with. Anyway… Hundreds Report Watch-List Trials By Sara Kehaulani Goo For more than a year and a half, Rep. John Lewis has endured lengthy delays at the ticket counter, intense questioning by airline employees and suspicious glances by fellow passengers. The Swift Boat Veterans is not a veterans group, it is a group of veterans.Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 21, 2004 - 8:09am.
on Politics Group to Air Ad Attacking Kerry's 1971 Testimony The fight over Vietnam and valor consumed the presidential campaign yesterday, as a group of veterans accused John F. Kerry of betraying fellow soldiers and dishonoring the country when he became a leader of the antiwar movement upon his return, and Democrats launched a new counteroffensive. A new ad by the anti-Kerry group Swift Boat Veterans for Truth condemns the Democratic nominee for making allegations of war crimes and atrocities committed by American soldiers. "It hurt me more than any physical wounds I had," a Vietnam veteran says in the ad about Kerry's highly publicized testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in 1971. Keyes continues to be a credit to his partySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 20, 2004 - 5:07pm.
on Politics Keyes changes stance on Agriculture Dept. SPRINGFIELD, Ill. --On his first campaign trip into Illinois farm country, Republican Senate candidate Alan Keyes said Thursday he no longer favors abolishing the U.S. Agriculture Department. Keyes in 1996 had called the department an "expensive top-heavy bureaucracy that was not actually contributing to the good of the farmers." But he said Thursday things had changed under Republican leadership in Washington and he now favors keeping the department. Democratic rival state Sen. Barack Obama's campaign called Keyes' statement "a dramatic flip-flop." Isn't that the same amount Enron stole from California?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 20, 2004 - 5:03pm.
on War I think it's some kind of contest Skull and Bones members are playing. $8.8b in Iraq unaccounted for US audit cites lax 'stewardship' By Sue Pleming, Reuters | August 20, 2004 WASHINGTON -- At least $8.8 billion in Iraqi funds given to Iraqi ministries by the former US-led authority there cannot be accounted for, according to a draft US audit set for release soon. The audit by the Coalition Provisional Authority's inspector general blasts the authority for "not providing adequate stewardship" of at least $8.8 billion from the Development Fund for Iraq given to Iraqi ministries. The audit was first reported earlier this month on a website run by retired Army Colonel David Hackworth, a journalist. A US official confirmed that the contents of the leaked audit cited by Hackworth were accurate. You can do better than that, Condi. Oh, you can't? Well, never mind then…Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 20, 2004 - 3:16pm.
on War
Oh? Aight, I'm going to help her out. I got a twist that you don't have to be critical of at all. Poor pouty little wimpsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 20, 2004 - 2:51pm.
on Politics There's a reason so many more student favor Kerry over Bush. Bush's plans are a direct threat to their physical existance. Can't get much more fundamental motivation than that, nahmsayin? Anyway… College Republicans skip nonpartisan voter registration WASHINGTON -- With Senator John F. Kerry enjoying a sizable lead among college students, College Republicans on several liberal campuses in Massachusetts and other states say they will not work with Democrats on voter registration drives this fall because the efforts lock in more youth votes for President Bush's opponent. You know you want toSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 20, 2004 - 12:53pm.
on Economics Find out if the regulatory changes affecting overtime affect you. Hardball lives up to its nameSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 20, 2004 - 12:31pm.
on Politics I went looking for a little more on the Malkin Meltdown. Found a transcript of the show and before I found Milady's words Igot pulled up short by this. And just to inspire you to read the whole extract I'll give you the punch line…the whole thing is amusing enough that there's still enough to justify the read.
There are two things I would like to make clearSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 20, 2004 - 12:21pm.
on Politics 1- Michelle Malkin is hot. Not at all like The CoulterThing, who is known to make penises retract. I agreeSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 20, 2004 - 12:03pm.
on Politics Kerry's Even Keel IN 2000, MANY OF US THOUGHT THAT THE OUTCOME of the election would determine the composition of the Supreme Court. It turned out to be the other way around. The court decided the election, and President Bush has had no chance to affect the court. Whoever is elected in 2004, though, can confidently expect to make three or even four Supreme Court appointments in his first term. It would be much better, for the law and for the country, if John Kerry, and not George W. Bush, made those appointments. The reason lies in a dynamic that has shaped the two parties' attitudes toward the courts for a generation, and which has been responsible for the intense unpleasantness that has come to dominate the appointments process for the federal judiciary. The Republicans have an agenda for the federal courts, including the Supreme Court. The Democrats do not. Editorials like this always give me mixed feelingsWhenever I see editorials and such promoting ideas for implementation overseas that would be really useful here, I'm like: Anyway… I have no sympathy for California if they let him get away with thisThe Quote of Note does not come from the linked editorial. The Quote of Note is, in fact, a couple of links:
As a side note, Magic Johnson's crew was represented too. How useful was it ever?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 20, 2004 - 9:19am.
on Education Quote of note:
Dubious 'Stings' at Schools August 20, 2004 Student 0350405 seems precisely the kind of student the Los Angeles Police Department was trying to protect when it launched its undercover "School Buy" program 30 years ago to rid Los Angeles Unified School District campuses of drugs. She has good grades and an unblemished disciplinary record and is a star on her school's softball team and a role model in her neighborhood. Or at least she was, until she was arrested last spring for selling marijuana to an LAPD officer posing as a student. Now she's been ordered to spend her senior year in an off-campus program for gangbangers, truants, kids on probation and other troublemakers. The Los Angeles Times lies!Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 20, 2004 - 9:09am.
on Politics Look at this lying snake-in-the-grass of a headline.
First smart thing Bush has done was to keep his cards in this hand close to the breastWhat do you call someone who announces they have grand plans that will benefit everyone yet not only gives you no idea what he's talking about but actively evades being nailed down? Quote of note:
This is what Republicans call trying to get enough details to make sense of a proposition: "demagogu[ing] the hell out of it." Anyway… CIA Study to warn of invasions from parallel dimensionsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 20, 2004 - 8:44am.
on War I so totally understand their concern. Why I just bought a bunch of comic books where these aliens invaded the Earth and just fucked things up entirely. And I know aliens are different then humans from another dimension, but there are circumstances where those humans can be just as bad or worse than creatures from another world entirely! As a matter of fact, Kang the Conquerer came back from six centuries in the future to hand the Avengers their heads! Imagine: if a comic book character from the future can do all that damage, imagine what a real person from the future could do! News at 11. Okay, we really have an Atrocity of the DaySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 20, 2004 - 12:16am.
on Race and Identity Ben Greenburg at Hungry Blues found this evil thing on a Civil Rights mailing list he belongs to.
The atrocity of the daySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 19, 2004 - 11:31pm.
on Race and Identity I don't normally do the Atrocity of the Day thing, but I got a piece of email that I need to check out. Unfortunately Typepad isn't responding so I can't see what that's all about yet. But now I'm all anticipating an Atrocity. What's a bruvva to do? Find an Atrocity, of course. And alongcomes Avery at Stereo Describes My Scenario with a good candidate.
Jesus, why am I quoting Kurtz?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 19, 2004 - 10:52pm.
on Politics
I guess other folks are looking at it differently than ISubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 19, 2004 - 6:58pm.
on Race and Identity No big surprise there. I wrote a little tiny bit about Phil Agre's essay the other day. I'm just making the blog rounds again and I see George and Lester are still thinking about it. George is going to comment on Prof. Agre's seventeen suggestions (all seventeen?) and Lester was inspired a bit.
Here a way to know who to get mad atSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 19, 2004 - 6:35pm.
on Politics | Race and Identity In 2003 the NAACP took positions on 27 Senate bills and 20 bills in the House of Representatives. They's compiled a report on how each of our federal representaves voted on each bill. A nice 34 page PDF, it's useful both to proponents of justice and their adversaries. Let's start by pissing off the LibertariansTed Halstead of the New America Foundation has a few ideas he'd like considered. My jaded perceptions follow. Last bit of whining about the softwareSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 19, 2004 - 4:10pm.
on Tech I could post as much stuff as I have because I had a particular rhythm going. Said rhythm is pretty well busted at this point. I REALLY got used to the MTClient thing. Here I have the bare-bones editor like your standard comment input box. Good thing I kept up on HTML… In theory there's a module that installs a WYSIWYG editor but it REALLY LOOKS BAD in Firefox, and since installing this web developer plugin it really makes no sense to use another browser. Interestingly enough, this has helped me realize I'm a writer that programs much more than a programmer who writes. So looks like it's back to Delphi for a little while. I have a couple of promises as regards MTClient to keep anyway. You'll notice no one brought in because they fit the profile has been found to have done anythingSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 19, 2004 - 12:33pm.
on Education For Post-9/11 Material Witness, It Is a Terror of a Different Kind LAS VEGAS - Abdullah al Kidd was on his way to Saudi Arabia to work on his doctorate in Islamic studies in March 2003 when he was arrested as a material witness in a terrorism investigation. An F.B.I. agent marched him across Dulles Airport in Washington in handcuffs. "It was the most horrible, disgraceful, degrading moment in my life," said Mr. Kidd, an American citizen who was known as Lavoni T. Kidd when he led his college football team, the Vandals of the University of Idaho, in rushing in 1995. The two weeks that followed his arrest, he said, were a terrifying and humiliating ordeal. The repercussions of NCLB set inSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 19, 2004 - 12:15pm.
on Education Top suburb schools hit by `No Child' sanctions By Jodi S. Cohen and Stephanie Banchero, Tribune staff reporters. Tribune staff reporters Darnell Little and Grace Aduroja contributed to this report August 18, 2004 Students at a number of well-regarded suburban schools will have the right to transfer out, as the number of Illinois public schools facing federal sanctions ballooned again this year. Just days before the beginning of school, the Illinois State Board of Education on Tuesday released a preliminary list of 694 schools around the state that will have to offer students the choice to move to better performing schools, and in some cases, receive tutoring and other services. It took a little longer than I thought it wouldSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 19, 2004 - 10:28am.
Looks like we're live. The whole process made me feel like a newbie with MS-DOS 3.0 again. I'd been playing with source code and crap for a month or more and forgot all about the OPERATING SYSTEM. I am a Microsoft baby. I've dealt with Unix-like systems before but never in detail. And it's all similar enough to make you feel comfortable but different enough to let you screw up without having a clue as to what happened. And the frustrating thing for me is, I KNOW what can be done but didn't have tome to work out how. And the goddamn .htaccess file Drupal supplied played hob with my access to other stuff, and I'm editing online again (I've REALLY gotten used to my blogging client with spell checking etc.). And I took the time to set up the group site too. I should be able to run both sites off the same source tree, but I haven't worked out the glitches in that yet. Plus the two sites will have somewhat different purposes and therefore functionality, so it's likely no loss. Well, here it isNew set up, crash installation, massive importation of entries…guaranteed something is screwed. If you find something other than my opinions really annoying, please leave a comment here. I just got the STOOPIDIST emailSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 17, 2004 - 4:06pm.
on Race and Identity I'm still busy but I can't just not react to this. Look at the BLATANTLY RACIST APPEAL being made here. This is what Republicans call a serious outreach to the Black community?
This is complete. The headers are that non-existant so it's some asshole who cobbled together a script. How does someone read this site…especially over the last few days…and send me some stupid shit like this? I'll bet this closed-minded idiot doesn't even live where he'd suffer Robinson's rule. And it don't write Black. It had to write "and I'm black too" because it knows no one will believe it. System updateSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 17, 2004 - 9:33am.
on Tech I've decided to do it and be done with it. That's why you haven't seen anything. It's going to be a bit more of a hack than I'd like, but it's nicely hacked. I didn't mess with the data or change any of the core modules. But you know, it's interesting on this side of the keyboard. After using Blogger, looking around the "new" Blogger, running MT, writing MTClient (verion 1.6 which has just had its 200th download) and now working with this software erector set called Drupal, one starts forming contrarian opinions. Your Attention PleaseSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 5:43pm.
on Tech We may lose it for a day or so here. It seems warding of a blast of comment spam with a huge MT-Blacklist file is a significant load on the server. My web host has been patient, but it's getting ridiculous. So: Comments are going away within the hour. It will not look like it though because I'm not going to rebuild the whole site; that would be the last straw. Prometheus 6 will be Drupalized very, very shortly. Now, that's not the Network site because I said I needed to keep stuff separated. And you should probably be ready to reset whatever RSS feed you've got set up; we'll see. grumblegrumblegrumblegrumblegrumblegrumblegrumblegrumble Did you ever read something you really wanted to like?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 3:52pm.
on Random rant
You know, I read this and found it constructs a viewpoint with enough predictive power to be useful. I'm just having trouble picturing the person that would be convinced by it if they didn't already basically hold the same position. It's more deconstructing Conservative rhetoric than Conservatism. There is a category of people who will read it all the way through…I'm one of them, obviously…but I feel like most folks will stop reading before they get the whole picture. Drug insurance isn't supposed to be for the pharmaceutical companiesSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 2:32pm.
on Economics Drug companies dodge ban from Medicare, Medicaid The government has yet to use its power to bar major drug companies that commit fraud from doing business with federal programs such as Medicaid and Medicare. • In July, the government reached a $345 million settlement with Schering-Plough over charges that private insurers were charged much lower prices on Claritin than the government was. The guilty plea was entered by an inactive Schering-Plough sales subsidiary with no employees where the fraud occurred. It's excluded from federal programs, but the parent company's products are not. • In May, Pfizer's Warner-Lambert division agreed to $430 million in fines and pleaded guilty to illegally marketing the drug Neurontin "through at least August 20, 1996" — one day shy of the law's trigger date for mandatory exclusion. Prosecutors alleged the misconduct occurred later, too. • TAP Pharmaceuticals in 2001 and Bayer in 2003 pleaded guilty to illegal acts before August 1996, although prosecutors also alleged later misconduct. If the pleas had covered that, the companies "likely would" have been subject to exclusion, the Department of Health and Human Services says. "The settlements are structured very carefully to avoid mandatory exclusion," says John Bentivoglio, a former Justice Department lawyer who represents health care companies. If you're smart you'll be honest about which side of the divide you're onSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 2:22pm.
on Economics Income Gap Up Over Two Decades, Data Show WASHINGTON - Over two decades, the income gap has steadily increased between the richest Americans, who own homes and stocks and got big tax breaks, and those at the middle and bottom of the pay scale, whose paychecks buy less. The growing disparity is even more pronounced in this recovering economy. Wages are stagnant and the middle class is shouldering a larger tax burden. Prices for health care, housing, tuition, gas and food have soared. The wealthiest 20 percent of households in 1973 accounted for 44 percent of total U.S. income, according to the Census Bureau. Their share jumped to 50 percent in 2002, while everyone else's fell. For the bottom fifth, the share dropped from 4.2 percent to 3.5 percent. Jobs and the economy top the list of voter concerns this election year. President Bush touts a strong economy that is growing, but polls find that Americans have doubts and think jobs are scarce. John Kerry is trusted more on the economy, with Democrats talking regularly of "two Americas," divided between the rich and everyone else. That argument has merit, some private economists say. "For those working in the bottom half of the pay scale, they're under an enormous amount of pressure," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Economy.com. New government data also shows that President Bush's tax cuts have shifted the overall tax burden to the middle class from the wealthiest Americans. Let's go deep for a minuteSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 1:15pm.
on Race and Identity Al-Muhajabah showed me this from the San Francisco Chronicle
Interesting article. You can check here to hear for yourself if "it's really there." Diouf has written a book, "Servants of Allah: African Muslims Enslaved in the Americas", which Al-M reviewed a while back:
He's doing no harm so forget about himSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 10:06am.
on Seen online Ex-Chess Champion Fischer to Marry Japanese Woman By George Nishiyama But it is far from certain that his move will pay off. In the latest twist to a bizarre tale, former world chess champion Fischer, 61, has decided to marry Miyoko Watai, acting head of the Japan Chess Association, his lawyer, Masako Suzuki, said Monday. However, it was not clear that the move would allow him to avert deportation. The grandmaster has been wanted in the United States since 1992 when he violated U.S. economic sanctions by going to Yugoslavia, beating his old rival, Boris Spassky, and winning a $3 million prize. "Fischer and Watai had been living together since 2000 ... but decided to go through with legal procedures to get married," Suzuki said in a statement. The problem is you can't help but credit the possibilitySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 9:58am.
on War Americans in Afghan Trial Ask FBI for Documents KABUL (Reuters) - Three Americans standing trial in Afghanistan Monday for imprisoning and torturing Afghans were given a week to provide evidence, which they say was withheld by U.S. authorities, proving that they had official clearance. The leader of the group, ex-soldier Jonathan "Jack" Idema, said his group hunted "terrorists," but was disowned by the U.S. government after their arrest because their case followed in the wake of the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal in Iraq. Wearing khaki fatigues, combat boots and dark glasses, and speaking through an interpreter, the bearded Idema told Judge Abdul Basit Bakhtyari that "political motives" were at play. He accused the FBI and U.S. embassy of withholding documents, videotapes and photographs which showed the group had worked with Afghan and U.S. authorities as well as the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) peacekeeping mission. "I have this document between the Department of Defense and me. It clearly proves the ISAF is lying ... the army is lying when it says we were not working for them, and the Department of Defense is lying when they say they didn't know we were here." His co-accused are Edward Caraballo, a cameraman who was making a documentary, and Brett Bennett, another former soldier. Four Afghans employed by Idema were also on trial. Coincidence?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 8:36am.
on News The Quote of Note is actually a reminder of something I posted yesterday:
Anyway… Polluted Sites Could Face Shortage of Cleanup Money ASHINGTON, Aug. 15 - With about six weeks left in the federal government's fiscal year, dozens of Superfund sites that are eligible for cleanup money are likely to be granted nothing or a fraction of what their managers say is needed because of a budget shortfall that could exceed $250 million, according to a survey by the Democratic staff of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. The list of sites was compiled from information provided privately by officials at the Environmental Protection Agency, according to a letter sent on Friday to Michael O. Leavitt, the agency's administrator, from Representative John D. Dingell of Michigan, the ranking Democrat on the committee. The letter and an attached list indicate that at sites like Atlas Tack, a company that made tacks and nails in Fairhaven, Mass., Omaha Lead in Omaha and Woolfolk Chemical Works, in Fort Valley, Ga., cleanup managers are likely to fall behind in clearing toxic residue like lead particles, cyanide and arsenic in soil or groundwater. The original cleanup fund, built on industry taxes, has dwindled to negligible levels in the nine years since Congress abolished those taxes, so the money is now almost entirely drawn from general tax revenue. Too important to excerptSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 8:16am.
on Politics Suppress the Vote? The big story out of Florida over the weekend was the tragic devastation caused by Hurricane Charley. But there's another story from Florida that deserves our attention. State police officers have gone into the homes of elderly black voters in Orlando and interrogated them as part of an odd "investigation" that has frightened many voters, intimidated elderly volunteers and thrown a chill over efforts to get out the black vote in November. If your response to this is complicated it's a sign something is wrong with youSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 5:12am.
on Africa and the African Diaspora Crisis in Sudan: Thorny Issues Underlying Carnage in Darfur Complicate World's Response NDJAMENA, Chad, Aug. 15 - There is no disagreement about the consequences of the war under way in Sudan, Africa's largest country: tens of thousands killed, cholera outbreaks, severe malnutrition, more than a million people forced to flee their homes, many into neighboring countries like Chad. Yet there is deep disagreement among world leaders over how to respond. The stalemate comes from issues underlying the conflict in Darfur, a region in western Sudan: questions of racial identity, competition for natural resources and the imperatives of a powerful sovereign state. Unfortunately for the victims of the war, the international response is also complicated by issues that reach beyond this conflict. First, in pitting Arab herders against black African farmers, the civil war in western Sudan underscores a larger struggle for power, land and water that cuts across borders in this arid part of Africa. Second, efforts to address the Darfur crisis have become entangled in the larger grievances of the Arab world - not least, the United States-dominated war in Iraq. The result? The Arab Islamist government of Sudan, joined by its allies in the Arab League, has angrily accused Western countries of ganging up against an Arab-led government to exploit its oil and gold reserves. The Bush administration has dismissed that contention, and the United States Congress has accused the Arab militias, backed by Sudan and known as the Janjaweed, of genocide against Darfur's black Africans. Nearly 150,000 black Africans have fled to seek refuge on the barren eastern frontiers of Chad. Well, that was a waste of timeSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 4:41am.
on News Chavez Appears to Survive Referendum CARACAS, Venezuela -- President Hugo Chavez survived a popular referendum to oust him, according to results Monday, while Venezuela's opposition swiftly claimed fraud. Backers of the leftist populist president set off fireworks and began celebrating in the streets of the capital in the pre-dawn darkness upon hearing the news from Francisco Carrasquero, president of the National Elections Council. Carrasquero stopped short of declaring Chavez the outright winner. But vote counts he released showed the firebrand former army paratrooper had a virtually insurmountable 58-42 percent lead, with 94 percent of the vote counted. Carrasquero said 4,991,483 votes had been cast against Chavez's recall, with 3,576,517 in favor. And a good time was had by allSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 4:40am.
on Politics How to Sweep an Accusation Under the Rug And now, the winners in the In the Loop Carpetbagger Deflector contest. This was to help our Gaithersburg neighbor and new Illinois GOP Senate candidate, Alan Keyes, come up with a deft sound bite to overcome allegations that he is a carpetbagger. He also needed a hand parrying churlish critics who dredged up his old criticism of carpetbagging Illinoisan Hillary Rodham Clinton when she ran for the Senate from New York. It was a "destruction of federalism," he said, that he certainly would not "imitate." The hundreds of e-mail entries -- including several dozen from Illinoisans -- generally grouped around a few themes: Polish sausage vs. crab cakes; Abraham Lincoln's being from Kentucky; Clinton; Osama and Obama; locks and "Keyes"; and spending time at O'Hare. Our judges, Metropolitan Editor Robert Barnes and Reliable Source star Anne Schroeder, helped cull the entries, all certain to put this hypocrisy silliness to rest, down to the following winners in no particular order: The Washington Post is trying to make up for 3.5 years of ass-kissingSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 4:36am.
on Economics They seem to be pointing out that we had a once-in-a-generation-or-more opportunity to change things drastically with the economic conditions of the 90's
…and Bush's policies have wasted and dissipated the resources generated atthat time. …If the Bush administration knew how to create the conditions for another growth spurt, critics might have to rethink their opposition to tax cuts. According to the Berkeley-Brookings projections we cited yesterday, the deficit is likely to register at around 3.5 percent of gross domestic product in 2014. But if the economy grows by just under 4 percent a year, rather than just under 3 percent as assumed in the projection, the deficit in 2014 would come to a far less alarming 0.5 percent of GDP. What could President Bush do to boost growth? His officials argue that tax cuts will contribute, but this seems unlikely. Lower tax rates on wages do boost the labor supply; lower tax rates on investment may boost savings; more labor and more capital mean more economic output. But Mr. Bush's tax cuts also have an offsetting consequence. Because they have not been accompanied by spending cuts, government borrowing has gone up, nudging everybody's cost of borrowing higher than it would be otherwise. A range of econo- metric studies suggest that these opposing impacts -- more labor and capital on the one hand, higher interest rates on the other -- roughly cancel one another out. Therefore, to boost growth, the Bush administration will have to look elsewhere. …The government's options are limited. The experience of the late 1990s shows that higher growth, unlike Social Security reform, has the potential to transform the fiscal outlook. But it's equally true that we don't know how to repeat the 1990s miracle, and the government's policy options -- a trade deal, tort reform, deregulation -- aren't powerful enough to do it. The productivity revolution inside American companies seems to have reflected technological and organizational changes that had been percolating inside corporations for at least a decade, none of which had much to do with government policy. It would be nice to believe that a second productivity revolution will fix the looming fiscal crisis. But it seems unwise to count on it. Balancing the interests of consumers and business, Part 2Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 4:22am.
on Politics Quote of note:
'Data Quality' Law Is Nemesis Of Regulation Things were not looking good a few years ago for the makers of atrazine, America's second-leading weedkiller. The company was seeking approval from the Environmental Protection Agency to keep the highly profitable product on the market. But scientists were finding it was disrupting hormones in wildlife -- in some cases turning frogs into bizarre creatures bearing both male and female sex organs. Last October, concerns about the herbicide led the European Union to ban atrazine, starting in 2005. Yet that same month, after 10 years of contentious scientific review, the EPA decided to permit ongoing use in the United States with no new restrictions. Herbicide approvals are complicated, and there is no one reason that atrazine passed regulatory muster in this country. But close observers give significant credit to a single sentence that was added to the EPA's final scientific assessment last year. Hormone disruption, it read, cannot be considered a "legitimate regulatory endpoint at this time" -- that is, it is not an acceptable reason to restrict a chemical's use -- because the government had not settled on an officially accepted test for measuring such disruption. Those words, which effectively rendered moot hundreds of pages of scientific evidence, were adopted by the EPA as a result of a petition filed by a Washington consultant working with atrazine's primary manufacturer, Syngenta Crop Protection. The petition was filed under the Data Quality Act, a little-known piece of legislation that, under President Bush's Office of Management and Budget, has become a potent tool for companies seeking to beat back regulation. Balancing the interests of consumers and business, Part 1Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 4:19am.
on Politics Quote of note:
Bush Forces a Shift In Regulatory Thrust Tuberculosis had sneaked up again, reappearing with alarming frequency across the United States. The government began writing rules to protect 5 million people whose jobs put them in special danger. Hospitals and homeless shelters, prisons and drug treatment centers -- all would be required to test their employees for TB, hand out breathing masks and quarantine those with the disease. These steps, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration predicted, could prevent 25,000 infections a year and 135 deaths. By the time President Bush moved into the White House, the tuberculosis rules, first envisioned in 1993, were nearly complete. But the new administration did nothing on the issue for the next three years. Then, on the last day of 2003, in an action so obscure it was not mentioned in any major newspaper in the country, the administration canceled the rules. Voluntary measures, federal officials said, were effective enough to make regulation unnecessary. The demise of the decade-old plan of defense against tuberculosis reflects the way OSHA has altered its regulatory mission to embrace a more business-friendly posture. In the past 3 1/2 years, OSHA, the branch of the Labor Department in charge of workers' well-being, has eliminated nearly five times as many pending standards as it has completed. It has not started any major new health or safety rules, setting Bush apart from the previous three presidents, including Ronald Reagan . Man, I got a new theme songSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 16, 2004 - 3:50am.
on Seen online Couldn't sleep last night. I have the Mp3 stream from SwissGroove.ch playing and they come up with The Novel Sound by Ludovic Llorca (mp3). If you're into jazz or Ibiza, just download the thing, play it locally. Once you hear it you're going to want to keep it anyway. I'm going to spend a little time at Epitonic's page on Llorca's stuff today. Consider shooting up the Vatican to catch terroristsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 5:25pm.
on War That might give you an idea ofth eposition US forces are in. U.S. Keeps Winning Battles, Losing Wars Jim Lobe WASHINGTON, Aug 12 (IPS) - Once again, U.S. armed forces appear on the verge of winning a decisive military victory in Iraq -- this time in the holy city of Najaf. And once again, they appear closer to losing the larger wars for a stable and friendly Iraq and for an Islamic world that will cease producing anti-U.S. terrorism. That is the rapidly growing concern of Middle East and Islamic specialists as U.S. Marines, after a week of fighting, captured virtually all of central Najaf on Thursday, including the home of Mahdi Army leader Moqtada al-Sadr, and launched a final siege of the Imam Ali mosque, which is considered the world's holiest shrine by some 120 million Shiite Muslims. Even as the military commanders and Iraq's interim president, Iyad Allawi, debate whether to wait out Sadr and his armed followers, who are believed to be inside the shrine, or to invade its precincts -- preferably with Iraqi troops -- the end result is not likely to work in Washington's favour, according to most experts here. If they work, who cares what WHO says?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 5:23pm.
on Health Quote of note:
WHO Hurting Cheap AIDS Drugs Industry - Experts NEW DELHI, Aug 14 (IPS) - Indian medical experts see the hand of powerful Western drug manufacturers in the World Health Organisation's withdrawals of its recommendations, this month and earlier in May, for some of India's cheap and popular combination drugs against HIV/AIDS using generic 'copycats.' Generic 'copycats' are alternatives to brand name drugs and according to WHO requirements they must show pharmaceutical equivalents -- which means that the amount of active ingredient, the dosage form, and the strength are identical to those of a comparable brand. The generic must also be bio-equivalent, meaning the drug must be absorbed into the blood stream at roughly the same rate and extent as the pharmaceutically equivalent brand. Amit Sengupta, a medical expert with the Delhi Science Forum , a leading policy watch group told IPS that while WHO's stated concern for quality was ''unexceptionable'' it did have the effect of putting generic combination antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) into disrepute in a highly competitive global market. ''It needs to be asked why WHO decided to open speculation on quality and, going by past record, it is quite possible that the world body has come under pressure from the Western pharmaceutical giants,'' said Sengupta. All you that ridicule tree-huggers, take noteSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 5:15pm.
on Health Quote of note:
Pollutants cause huge rise in brain diseases Juliette Jowit, environment editor The Observer The numbers of sufferers of brain diseases, including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and motor neurone disease, have soared across the West in less than 20 years, scientists have discovered. The alarming rise, which includes figures showing rates of dementia have trebled in men, has been linked to rises in levels of pesticides, industrial effluents, domestic waste, car exhausts and other pollutants, says a report in the journal Public Health. In the late 1970s, there were around 3,000 deaths a year from these conditions in England and Wales. By the late 1990s, there were 10,000. 'This has really scared me,' said Professor Colin Pritchard of Bournemouth University, one of the report's authors. 'These are nasty diseases: people are getting more of them and they are starting earlier. We have to look at the environment and ask ourselves what we are doing.' The report, which Pritchard wrote with colleagues at Southampton University, covered the incidence of brain diseases in the UK, US, Japan, Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands and Spain in 1979-1997. The researchers then compared death rates for the first three years of the study period with the last three, and discovered that dementias - mainly Alzheimer's, but including other forms of senility - more than trebled for men and rose nearly 90 per cent among women in England and Wales. All the other countries were also affected. For other ailments, such as Parkinson's and motor neurone disease, the group found there had been a rise of about 50 per cent in cases for both men and women in every country except Japan. The increases in neurological deaths mirror rises in cancer rates in the West. The team stresses that its figures take account of the fact that people are living longer and it has also made allowances for the fact that diagnoses of such ailments have improved. It is comparing death rates, not numbers of cases, it says. As to the cause of this disturbing rise, Pritchard said genetic causes could be ruled out because any changes to DNA would take hundreds of years to take effect. 'It must be the environment,' he said. The causes were most likely to be chemicals, from car pollution to pesticides on crops and industrial chemicals used in almost every aspect of modern life, from processed food to packaging, from electrical goods to sofa covers, Pritchard said. Food is also a major concern because it provides the most obvious explanation for the exclusion of Japan from many of these trends. Only when Japanese people move to the other countries do their disease rates increase. It would do that, yesSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 4:57pm.
on War Dispute Over Najaf Disrupts Iraqi Political Conference BAGHDAD, Aug. 15 -- More than 1,100 Iraqis convened here on Sunday for the start of a conference aimed at selecting a national assembly, a key milestone in the country's transition to democracy, but the high-security meeting was roiled by a dispute over the use of military force to confront militiamen loyal to a rebellious Shiite cleric. In a remarkable scene of political activism that would have been unimaginable under Baath Party rule, dozens of Shiite delegates jumped to their feet in a loud protest over the interim government's decision to mount military operations to evict followers of cleric Moqtada Sadr from a Shiite shrine in the holy city of Najaf. Chanting "Yes to Najaf!" and raising their fists, the Shiite dissenters demanded that the participants call upon the interim prime minister and Sadr's followers to refrain from violence and for a special committee of delegates to negotiate a solution to the crisis. The outburst triggered a hectic succession of events that proceeded to reshape government policy toward Najaf in less than five hours and instill the first measure of checks-and-balances in Iraq's nascent political system. The Shiite protesters, along with several non-Shiite participants, caucused and drafted a letter to interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi and his cabinet that called for a dialogue with Sadr and "an immediate cease-fire and cessation of all military activities in Najaf and other Iraqi cities." After the letter was drafted, a four-person delegation from the conference met with Allawi. When the meeting was over, the government announced that its moves to use force to expel Sadr from the shrine were on hold. In a reversal from its position a day earlier, Allawi's cabinet pledged to refrain from military action against Sadr's militiamen and keep an "open door" to a negotiated settlement. "This is democracy in action," said Ibrahim Nawar, a U.N. adviser who helped organize the conference. "For now, at least, they have succeeded in changing the government's approach toward the situation in Najaf." Now, let's see how long that decision stands, as well as al Sadr's reaction to it. Setting the stage for The RaptureSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 12:47pm.
on War This is not the sort of thing that I like reading. Quote of note:
Iran Warns Its Missiles Can Hit Anywhere in Israel TEHRAN (Reuters) - A senior Iranian military official said Sunday Israel and the United States would not dare attack Iran since it could strike back anywhere in Israel with its latest missiles, news agencies reported. Iranian officials have made a point of highlighting the Islamic state's military capabilities in recent weeks in response to some media reports that Israeli or U.S. warplanes could try to destroy Iranian nuclear facilities in air strikes. Iran last week said it carried out a successful test firing of an upgraded version of its Shahab-3 medium-range ballistic missile. Military experts said the unmodified Shahab-3 was already capable of striking Israel or U.S. bases in the Gulf. "The entire Zionist territory, including its nuclear facilities and atomic arsenal, are currently within range of Iran's advanced missiles," the ISNA students news agency quoted Yadollah Javani, head of the Revolutionary Guards political bureau, as saying. "Therefore, neither the Zionist regime nor America will carry out its threats" against Iran, he said. An attack on Iran "could only be carried out by angry or stupid people. For that reason, officials of the Islamic Republic must always be prepared to counter possible military threats," Javani said in a statement, ISNA reported. I want to know where is Novak's subpoena?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 12:36pm.
on Politics New York Times Says Reporter Subpoenaed Over Leak NEW YORK (Reuters) - A New York Times reporter has been subpoenaed by a grand jury investigating the disclosure of a CIA undercover officer's identity to syndicated columnist Robert Novak and other journalists, the newspaper reported on Friday. Arthur Sulzberger Jr., the Times' publisher, said the paper would move to quash the subpoena, issued at the behest of special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald. He said the subpoena seeks to compel Miller to reveal confidential sources. "Journalists should not have to face the prospect of imprisonment for doing nothing more than aggressively seeking to report on the government's actions," he said. Lawyers for the Times said the paper expects to receive a separate subpoena for its records, and would fight it. A federal judge on Monday rejected requests to quash subpoenas issued to Tim Russert of NBC's "Meet the Press" and Matthew Cooper of Time magazine on the grounds they violate the reporters' privilege under the Constitution's First Amendment. Time magazine was fined $1,000 a day, and Cooper was ordered "confined at a suitable place," but the judge suspended both penalties pending appeal. Novak identified the CIA officer, Valerie Plame, in a July 2003 column. American values with a Continental flairSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 12:02pm.
on News For E.U. Critics, a Cautionary Tale BRUSSELS -- The bell rang three times early on a cold Friday morning before a sleepy Hans-Martin Tillack, an investigative reporter for the German newsweekly Stern, answered the door in his T-shirt and boxers. Six Belgian policemen politely filed in, he recalled, handed him a search warrant and went to work. For the next 10 hours, they combed through his apartment and his separate office, seizing his computer hard drives, his bank records, his Filofax organizer, four cell phones, 18 boxes of files and a copy of "Spaceship Brussels," his exposé of fraud and waste inside the European Union. When Tillack complained, he recalled, one of the officers shrugged. In Burma, the policeman told him, "journalists get treated much worse." The police were looking for evidence that Tillack had bribed an E.U. official to obtain a confidential memo from the union's anti-fraud unit, known by its French acronym OLAF. But what they were really doing that March morning, he and other critics allege, was retaliating against a reporter whose stories had embarrassed the E.U. by focusing public attention on corruption and secrecy. "They think it's more important to find out the leakers than to protect freedom of the press," said Tillack, who says the bribery allegation is false and absurd. DAMN, I'm smartSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 10:08am.
on Tech When I posted about Service Pack 2 for Windows XP I said I was going to wait until someone else verified it doesn't screw up the development tools I use. Well Nick Bradbury, who wrote FeedDemon (the best RSS reader that exists)and TopStyle Pro (the best CSS editor that exists PLUS one of the best HTML editors around), programs in Delphi as do I. And he says:
Log Cabin Republicans are STILL idiotsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 9:52am.
on Politics Caught this at Oliver's just now
duh No, they DON'T have to make room for you. Yeah, you're giving him a chance for a "Sister Soulja moment." But YOU are playing the role of Sister Soulja, dunce. You COULD support it by dropping out of the race...Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 9:45am.
on Politics Keyes Would Like to End Election of U.S. Senators August 14, 2004 CHICAGO — Alan Keyes said Friday he would like to end the system under which the people elect U.S. senators and return to the pre-1913 practice in which senators were chosen by state legislatures. The Republican Senate candidate in Illinois, asked about past comments on the election process, said the constitutional amendment that provided for popular election of senators upset the balance between the people and the states. "The balance is utterly destroyed when the senators are directly elected, because the state government as such no longer plays any role in the deliberations at the federal level," Keyes said at a taping of WBBM Newsradio's "At Issue" program. He said it was one of the reasons for "a steady, deleterious erosion of the sovereign role of the states." Keyes' Democratic rival, state Sen. Barack Obama of Chicago, issued a statement saying he supported the popular election of U.S. senators. "I certainly trust the people of Illinois to choose who they want to represent them in the U.S. Senate," he said. "That is the very basis of our democracy." Keyes said he did not consider repealing the 17th Amendment a high priority. "But if I ever see an opportunity in politics to promote it, I will," he said. Not THAT CobbSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 9:25am.
on Seen online I know I've been on the prison thing the last few days, but I had nothing to do with this, I swear. Cobb Calls For an End to THE RACIST DRUG WAR AND THE PRISON-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX The Green Party's presidential candidate, David Cobb, today said that "the racist war on drugs and the prison-industrial complex which it has spawned must come to an end." (PRWEB) August 15, 2004 -- "The war on drugs is racist and hypocritical," said Cobb. "The drug war disproportionately targets the African American and Latino communities: One third of African American males between the ages of eighteen and thirty are in the prison system or on probation or parole and over two thirds of the prison population is Black and Latino." "Alcohol and tobacco are two of the most deadly drugs and they are legal and widely available. These dangerous substances remain available for two reasons. One, these drug industries contribute heavily to both of the old parties and two, the same lawmakers who accept these 'contributions' are themselves users of these drugs. Drug users making other people’s drugs illegal and sending them to prison for it is the height of hypocrisy," Cobb added. "This has created a situation where prisons are overflowing with non-violent and otherwise law-abiding individuals." The U.S. imprisons more people than any other country. Since 1971, U.S. prisons and jails have grown ten-fold, from less then 200,000 inmates to 2.1 million. With only five percent of the world's people, the U.S. accounts for 25 percent of the planet's prisoners -- fully half of them African American. One out of eight prisoners on Earth is African American. Cobb stressed that drug addiction, of any kind, should be treated as a health concern and not a matter for the criminal justice system. "With adequately funded schools, social programs and full employment the prison population would be significantly reduced," said Cobb. "We must change our priorities from building prisons to building schools. The racist effect of the drug war, and the connection between schools and prisons, isn't just rhetoric." Diane F. White, corresponding secretary of the national Green Party's Black Caucus, said that "in some places like Pennsylvania, the government will actually build a brand new state-of-the art prison for juveniles in a rural area before they build a new school in the black community." This title is MUCH betterSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 7:38am.
on Race and Identity So I have this post with a stupid title because I screwed up and let MT just grab the first five words of the post...real brief comment on an article by Darryl Cox on BlackElectorate.com. The article basically advises Black Conservatives that they have to come to the party if they want to dance and in the process gives up a lot of evidence that they've been wallflowers. I'll link it one more time because it's a fine analysis and a damn good read. Can't remember a thing in it I disagree with. His purpose wasn't to point the finger at Black Conservatives (as I freely admit is often mine) but to advise them. He feels they can be involved in the Black communities and again I agree…but they won't, in my opinion. Nice Lines!Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 5:47am.
on Politics Alternating interviews by Stephanopolis: Keyes said he being Black takes race out of the campaign. Obama says he never raised the issue, maybe THEY were looking at it through a racial lens. Keyes said his HERITAGE is that of the descendant of ex-slaves. Obama said his grandfather was a servant to the British, maybe Keyes is saying on some scale of victimhood he's more qualified. Keyes broke into religious song on camera. Obama said, um, catch me in church if you want to hear me sing. Damn LateSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 5:32am.
on Politics This Week on ABC. Chuck Hagel is stoopit. "We can't lose in Iraq because if we do we will open up a generation of problems we can't envision." Too damn late. On the amnesty offer that the US screwed by insisting it can't be extended to those who killed Americans: Fareed Zakaria: Now the amnesty become become freedom for bank robbers and car-jackers. George Will: Kerry said knowing what we know know he'd still vote for the war…that's insane, no one would invade knowing what we know And they're going to show Keyes singing again. Ja-HEE-zuz, why don't the boy just break into buck-dancing and get it over with? Reason? REASON? We don' need no steenking reason!Submitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 5:05am.
on Seen online I keep meaning to link Bare and Bitter Sleep for quite a while…Cinque Hicks does the art thing seriously well totally apart from his blog. And if you want to start an exploration of modern Black artists and such, a more than decent start can be had by branching out from his blogroll. But I keep getting tied up in politics and shit. So I decided to just link it. Civil war in Iraq is not the worst possibilitySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 4:41am.
on War As I said before, the worst possibility is an Iraq unified against the occupation. There has always been concern about the possibility, and now it seems to be coming to pass.
Last July Citizen/Ex-Lt. Smash wrote an impassioned little piece while in Iraq about staying the course. The quote that brought the post to my attention was this:
We are seeing the result of continued war in support of the national ego:
The Lieutenant-Citizen was right to this degree: I am not willing to accept that scenario. You shouldn’t be, either. And as I said at the time:
An incomplete understanding of the nature of powerSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 3:32am.
on War Why the Najaf Offensive is on Hold …If anything, Sadr's decision to confront Allawi and the Americans from inside the holy city reflects a canny, and often underestimated political instinct on the part of the populist cleric. Ever since Baghdad fell to U.S. forces in April 2003, Sadr has parlayed his strong following among the Shiite urban poor and the growing resentment toward the U.S. to his own advantage. And his previous showdown with the U.S. — last April, when they tried to arrest him in connection with a warrant issued by an Iraqi judge — had showed that tangling with the Americans actually boosted, rather than undermined his political standing in Iraq. The problem facing Allawi and the U.S. in waging war in Najaf has been that while Sadr may be unpopular among many of the townsfolk and viewed somewhat ambiguously by a wider Shiite audience, the U.S. is considerably more unpopular, a trend that the fact of handing authority to the new government last June does not yet appear to have reversed. That one has vast physical power is no proof one understands its nature and therefore its most effective use. Aikido is a demonstration that the one who exerts the force is not necessarily the one that directs it. In fact, the one who exerts the force may be the one who receives its impact. Aikido teaches one to interact with attacks. To redirect them. This requires the use of some degree of force on the part of the warrior of course, but here's the key: it does not require superior force…it needs merely sufficient force. This is something the USofA, which for various reasons doesn't deal in the concept of "enough," can't seem to understand. Scream journalism and BlabocratsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 3:10am.
on Politics This is Joe Klein, writing at Time Magazine:
He's got a good point. It's been a long time since America's fat lazy collective ass has had to deal with issues of significance and we weren't ready. Reversionary JudgesSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2004 - 2:51am.
on Politics Nice try, Dahlia. Your concept is flawless but the word you invented for it sucks. Mine is much better. You DEFINITELY get the Quote of the Day, though:
In the case of the Black ones like Owens and Thomas it's not just activism but blatant stupidity.
Come on Clarence. Such a position would have you picking cotton. Such a position would have gotten your neck stretched when you got married. The framers of the Constitution did not have anything remotely resembling the Voting Rights Act in mind when they wrote that thing. Yeah, noble stuff in the Declaration of Independence…but you better keep in mind that the Declaration of Independence is not and never has been the law of the land. Anyway… Activist, Schmactivist …Let's invent a new term right here, today, for judges or judicial nominees on the right, who claim to be merely "interpreting" the Constitution, even when they are refusing to impose settled law; law they deem unsettled because it was invented by "liberal activist judges." And while I am open to better suggestions, here's a tentative offering: "Re-activist judges." Re-activist judges are the ones trying to roll back time to the 19th century. Re-activists are the judges who have reactivated federalism by rediscovering the "dignity" of states. Re-activists view Lawrence v. Texas - last year's gay sodomy case - as having all the jurisprudential force of a Post-it note. When the United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit upheld an Alabama ban on the sale of sex toys last month, it did so by sidestepping the logic animating Justice Anthony Kennedy's opinion in Lawrence. Ignoring Kennedy's lofty promises of sexual privacy - his assurance that "there is a realm of personal liberty which the government may not enter" - the 11th Circuit framed the case as a dust-up over the constitutional right to a vibrator. Re-activists like Priscilla Owen, President Bush's nominee to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, rewrite the Texas parental notification statute in abortion cases, to make it vastly harder for young women to bypass parental consent. Re-activists like another Bush nominee, Janice Rogers Brown, have called the Supreme Court's shift toward defending New Deal legislation in 1937 the start of "the triumph of our socialist revolution." Re-activist judges have increasingly adopted the view that their personal religious convictions somehow obviate the constitutional divide between church and state. President Bush's recess appointment to the 11th Circuit, Bill Pryor, expended energy as attorney general of Alabama to support Judge Roy Moore in his quest to chisel the Ten Commandments directly into the wall between church and state. Pryor is entitled to be offended by case law barring government from establishing sectarian religion. But what re-activist judges may not do is use their government office to chip away at that doctrine. Re-activist judges are able to present themselves as "strict constructionists" or "originalists" by arguing, as does Justice Clarence Thomas, that any case decided wrongly (i.e., not in accordance with the framers of the Constitution) should simply be erased, as though erasure is somehow a passive act. And while there is an urgent normative debate underlying this issue - over whether the Constitution should evolve or stay static - no one ought to be allowed to claim that the act of clubbing a live Constitution to death isn't activism. So, judicial re-activism. It doesn't exactly trip off the tongue, I know. But let's put it out there anyhow, and attempt to level the rhetorical playing field before November. |