Week of March 05, 2006 to March 11, 2006
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 11, 2006 - 8:05pm. on Open thread
I'm curious to know whether you consider Tierney and Brooks to be intentional obfuscators and wicked propagandists, or, do you consider them true believers of what they're peddling?
I don't know. Don't much care either. Either way their actions are what they are, and since I know nothing of them but what they write I'm not using a lot of energy to figure it out.
Steve Harvey was interviewed on PBS' weekly show, Now. And you can download it..20 minutes of MP3... here. You should do it.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 11, 2006 - 5:10pm. on Politics
Ex-White House aide arrested in alleged refund scam
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- A former adviser to President Bush was arrested this week in Maryland and charged with swindling two department stores out of more than $5,000 in a refund scam.
Montgomery County police said Claude Allen, 45, was arrested Thursday and charged with carrying out a felony theft scheme at Target and Hecht's stores. He was released on his own recognizance.
Conviction on the charges can result in a 15-year prison sentence.
Authorities accuse Allen of going to stores on more than 25 occasions and buying items, taking them to his car and then returning to the store with his receipt where he would carry out the alleged scam.
Future lobbyist:
Norton won plaudits from business leaders but earned the enmity of many environmentalists during her often contentious five-year tenure. She said she has no immediate plans but expects to work in the private sector and spend more time in the West.
...Rodger Schlickeisen, president of the advocacy group Defenders of Wildlife, issued a terse news release on learning of Norton's departure: "Good riddance."
Norton to End 5-Year Tenure at Interior Secretary Says Resignation Is Unrelated to Probe of Abramoff's Ties to Department
By Juliet Eilperin Washington Post Staff Writer Saturday, March 11, 2006; A02
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 11, 2006 - 11:30am. on Tech
My laptop runs hot enough as it is...
Fuels cells to change laptop use By Mark Ward Technology Correspondent, BBC News website, in Hanover
Soon you could be running your laptop computer all day without a recharge as commercial versions of fuel cells go on sale. At the Cebit technology fair in Hanover, Taiwanese hi-tech firm Antig said its fuel cells should be on the shelves of computer shops by early 2007.
The first versions of the methanol-using units should keep a laptop going for up to nine hours.
Fuel cell technology got a boost recently when international air flight regulators changed rules that banned passengers from carrying flammable methanol onto aircraft.
The article is interesting in and of itself...but I have follow-up in mind for later (I got drafted for manual labor today...).
Atlanta's upward shift in its white population is atypical, Mr. Frey said. Although many other cities have embarked on revitalization programs, only Washington is seeing a similar, if less stark, racial trend as Atlanta. More often, blacks and whites both are losing ground to a surging Latino population. Even in Atlanta, the Latino population rose to 26,100 in 2004 from 18,700 in 2000.
Gentrification Changing Face of New Atlanta
By SHAILA DEWAN
ATLANTA, March 8 — In-town living. Live-work-play. Mixed income. The buzzwords of soft-core urbanism are everywhere these days in this eternally optimistic city, used in real estate advertisements and mayoral boasts to lure money from the suburbs and to keep young people from leaving.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 11, 2006 - 9:47am. on Politics | Tech
Not that all problems would be solved, but at least it wouldn't make stealing elections so damn easy.
If the bill becomes law, the state’s Diebold systems will be placed in “abeyance” and the vendor will be required to equip them to provide the requisite paper trail, she said.
Healey said the law would require the vendor to provide a paper trail before the 2008 elections or risk losing its contract to supply machines in the state.
Maryland House votes to oust Diebold machines It would replace $90M worth of e-voting machines with systems offering a paper trail News Story by Marc L. Songini
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 11, 2006 - 9:15am. on Tech
I may have to start booting from a USB thumb drive.
VM Rootkits: The Next Big Threat? March 10, 2006 By Ryan Naraine
Lab rats at Microsoft Research and the University of Michigan have teamed up to create prototypes for virtual machine-based rootkits that significantly push the envelope for hiding malware and that can maintain control of a target operating system.
The proof-of-concept rootkit, called SubVirt, exploits known security flaws and drops a VMM (virtual machine monitor) underneath a Windows or Linux installation.
Once the target operating system is hoisted into a virtual machine, the rootkit becomes impossible to detect because its state cannot be accessed by security software running in the target system, according to documentation seen by eWEEK.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 10, 2006 - 9:54pm. on Politics
CIA must give Libby intel summaries, judge rules Fri Mar 10, 2006 06:46 PM ET By Andy Sullivan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The CIA must provide summaries of its top-secret intelligence briefings to a former vice presidential aide so he can defend himself against perjury charges, a U.S. judge ruled on Friday.
The ruling is a surprise victory for Lewis "Scooter" Libby, who is charged with lying to the FBI and a federal grand jury during an investigation into who disclosed the identity of a CIA operative in 2003 after her husband criticized the Bush administration.
Libby's attorneys have sought access to his daily CIA security briefings to bolster his defense that he was too preoccupied with national-security matters to accurately remember conversations with news reporters about the operative, Valerie Plame.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 10, 2006 - 9:31pm. on Education
By Nahal Toosi, Associated Press Writer | March 10, 2006
NEW YORK --Harvard is great, but it's no Riverdale Country School.
The Bronx private school will charge tuition of $31,200 next school year for sixth- through 12th-graders, more than $3,300 higher than this year's rate at the esteemed university. Bus rides not included.
Riverdale is among several elite New York City high schools that have surpassed or are approaching the $30,000 mark. But if anyone thinks a "tuition bubble" is about to burst, experts say think again.
by Prometheus 6 Fri, 2006-03-10 11:01
via Pambazuka News Comments and Analysis
Biopiracy: The new resource robbery
Anti-suppressants, treatment for diabetes, antibiotics, anti-fungals, infection fighters and vaccines - all of these are naturally occurring in Africa, and have been used for centuries, but these practices are being threatened as Western laboratories pilfer both knowledge and resources. With the release of "Out of Africa: Mysteries of Access and Benefit Sharing [pdf]," some light has been shed on the increasing trend of biopiracy across the African continent. Beth Burrows of the Edmonds Institute, a non-profit public interest group which focuses on environmental education, answered some questions from Pambazuka News about this report.
Many Black Students Put Off Spring Break Partying to Help Rebuild Gulf Date: Thursday, March 09, 2006 By: Monica Lewis, BlackAmericaWeb.com
Each year when the calendar turns to March, it’s tradition for college students across the country to ditch the rigors of school for the rest, relaxation and often raucous rite known as Spring Break.
However, this year many students are choosing not to indulge in the week of fun and sun, but are instead looking to roll up their sleeves and work to repair the Gulf Coast region still reeling from Hurricane Katrina. It’s been over six months since the devastating storm took its toll on parts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, and some coeds have determined have their Spring Break could be better spent there than on a sandy beach.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 10, 2006 - 8:35am. on Economics
Quote of note:
One of the less well-conceived actions of William H. Donaldson, Mr. Cox's predecessor, was to appoint an advisory committee on smaller public companies, stocked in significant part with people who profited from selling such shares to the public. There were investor advocates, but they were outnumbered.
The commission is seeking public comment on the advisory committee's recommendations, which are stunning. Managers of most public companies would no longer be required to assess the state of the company's internal controls, as is required by Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley law. For another quarter of the companies, management would have to assess the controls, but auditors would not be involved.
Why Not Let Companies Ignore a Law? By FLOYD NORRIS
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 10, 2006 - 7:45am. on Economics
Quote of note:
The Comptroller of the Currency, another unit of the Treasury Department, has repeatedly moved at the urging of large banks to block enforcement of tougher lending laws in New York, California and elsewhere.
'Silent Tort Reform' Is Overriding States' Powers By STEPHEN LABATON WASHINGTON
SUPPORTERS and detractors call it the "silent tort reform" movement, and it has quietly and quickly been gaining ground.
Across Washington, federal agencies that supervise everything from auto safety to medicine labeling have waged a powerful counterattack against active state prosecutors and trial lawyers. In the last three decades, the state courts and legislatures have been vital avenues for critics of Washington deregulation. Federal policy makers, having caught onto the game, are now striking back.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 10, 2006 - 7:28am. on Economics
I need to link this book at Amazon
Gangs of America : The Rise of Corporate Power and the Disabling of Democracy (Bk Currents)
...even though it's downloadable as a pdf because I may have to buy it anyway. It seems to precisely encapsulate some research I needed to do...how the anti-slavery amendments were used to give corporations greater rights than human beings.
A key revelation of the book is the wariness of the Founding Fathers toward corporations. That wariness was shaped by rampant abuses on the part of British corporations such as the Virginia Company, whose ill-treatment killed thousands of women and children on forced-labor tobacco plantations, and the East India Company, whose attempt to monopolize American commodities led to the merchant-led rebellion known as the Boston Tea Party.
Bwah-hah-ha! Minority populations leaving large cities Other metropolitan areas more diversified - Leslie Fulbright, Chronicle Staff Writer Tuesday, March 7, 2006
Minority populations shifted dramatically within the United States between 1990 and 2004 as Latinos and Asians moved away from large metropolitan areas and African Americans moved to the South, according to a study to be released today.
The Diversity Spreads Out report by the Brookings Institution think tank in Washington, D.C., shows that although older large cities still house the majority of Latinos and nonwhites in the United States, Latinos, Asians and African Americans increasingly are moving to smaller metropolitan areas that historically have been largely white.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 9, 2006 - 10:18pm. on Politics
$25,000 to Lobby Group Is Tied to Access to Bush By PHILIP SHENON
WASHINGTON, March 9 — The chief of an Indian tribe represented by the lobbyist Jack Abramoff was admitted to a meeting with President Bush in 2001 days after the tribe paid a prominent conservative lobbying group $25,000 at Mr. Abramoff's direction, according to documents and interviews.
The payment was made to Americans for Tax Reform, a group run by Grover G. Norquist, one of the Republican Party's most influential policy strategists. Mr. Norquist was a friend and longtime associate of Mr. Abramoff.
The meeting with Mr. Bush took place on May 9, 2001, at a reception organized by Mr. Norquist to marshal support for the president's 2001 tax cuts, which were pending before Congress. About two dozen state legislators attended the session in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House grounds. The meeting was called to thank legislators for support of the tax-cut plan, an issue on which the tribal leader had no direct involvement.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 9, 2006 - 4:20pm. on Tech
Man, the only questions I have is about battery life. {LATER: Three hours. Oh, well...]
Origami is the code name for Microsoft's Ultra-Mobile PC project. Partnering with hardware manufacturers, our goal is to create a small touch-screen PC that people can use in more places for more things. In our first release, we are launching with three of our OEM partners who are offering Ultra-Mobile PCs with the Microsoft Touch Pack. For the Touch Pack, we focused on making it easier to interact with a small touch-screen computer running Windows XP.
Ultra-Mobile PCs are a new class of computer that is optimized for mobility. With a screen size of 7 inches or less, Ultra-Mobile PCs can be slipped into a purse or a small bag for ultimate portability. A touch-screen, a tablet pen, and a D-pad give you a variety of input options while you are on the move. Built-in Bluetooth gives you the option of staying connected wherever you go. Running Windows XP Tablet PC Edition, Ultra-Mobile PCs have the full capabilities of the Windows operating system in the smallest package yet.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 9, 2006 - 11:21am. on War
Nevermind that when you translate from English to American the two words mean the same thing...
How Abu Ghraib Lives On A new human rights report says detainees in Iraq are still being abused By DOUGLAS WALLER/WASHINGTON
The Pentagon says it has instituted reforms to prevent the detainee abuse that occurred in the 2004 Abu Ghraib prison scandal from ever happening again. But in a scathing 48-page report released on Monday, Amnesty International concludes that whatever reforms have been put into effect are clearly not doing the job: Mistreatment of detainees in Iraq, particularly by Iraqi security forces, is still widespread, Amnesty argues.
Need to vote they asses out.
It's breathtakingly cynical. Faced with a president who is almost certainly breaking the law, the Senate sets up a panel to watch him do it and calls that control.
...The Republicans' idea of supervision involves saying the White House should get a warrant for spying whenever possible. Currently a warrant is needed, period. And that's the right law. The White House has not offered a scrap of evidence that it interferes with antiterrorist operations. Mr. Bush simply decided the law did not apply to him.
It was no surprise that Mr. Roberts led this retreat. He's been blocking an investigation into the domestic spying operation for weeks, just as he has been stonewalling a promised investigation into how the White House hyped the intelligence on Iraq.
David Brooks's entire editorial today is a dodge.
[TS] Op-Ed Columnist: Both Sides of Inequality
It's wrong to say good parents raise successful kids and bad parents raise unsuccessful ones. The story is more complicated than that.
Sounds nice, doesn't it? But parenting is not the point of his editorial. He doesn't get to the point until the very last sentence. He even says it's the core issue.
But the core issue is that today's rich don't exploit the poor; they just outcompete them.
Given that all they guys passing laws (such as free dividends, privileging unearned income in the tax code, tax cuts that go almost exclusively to the wealthy ) shifting the tax burden off the wealthy are, themselves, wealthy, that is easily debatable.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 9, 2006 - 7:39am. on News
Quote of note:
it is partly a byproduct of a closed political system that ensures Communist Party rule but is without any national elections to force the party to whip itself into shape.
China Attacks Its Woes With an Old Party Ritual By JIM YARDLEY
BEIJING, March 8 — Like a giant company concerned with organizational disarray and a sinking public image, the Chinese Communist Party is trying to remake itself into an efficient, modern machine. But to do so, it has chosen one of its oldest political tools — a Maoist-style ideological campaign, complete with required study groups.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 9, 2006 - 7:27am. on Politics
Quote of no note at all:
"People who make far less than we do. People who can't afford their medical bills or their mortgages or their kids' tuition. You ask them if they think that the people they send to Congress should be able to rack up a $50 meal on a lobbyist's dime."
Spare me. And the worst thing is, this may be the most substantive change made.
Senators Vote to Prohibit Dining on Lobbyists' Dime By Maura Reynolds Times Staff Writer March 9, 2006
WASHINGTON — Senators would have to go Dutch when wining and dining with lobbyists under a provision approved Wednesday as part of a pending ethics reform bill.
It was a pain in the ass but I got a copy that clip of Bush discussing preparations for Hurricane Katrina I could edit. I needed to isolate a bit that explains one whole hell of a lot. Notice: we will move in assets to deal with loss of property. Humans just get prayers.
Seems a little ass-backward to me...but I'm not a Republican.
Filmmaker Gordon Parks dies Tue Mar 7, 2006 09:35 PM ET By Bob Tourtellotte
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Gordon Parks, the pioneering black photographer and filmmaker who explored the African-American experience in his work, including landmark movies "The Learning Tree" and "Shaft," died on Tuesday in New York, a relative said.
Parks, 93, had been in failing health, said the nephew, Charles Parks, who lives in Lawrence, Kansas.
Born in Fort Scott, Kansas, Parks was orphaned by age 15 and grew up homeless. He worked a variety of menial jobs before taking up photography in the late 1930s. He joined "Life" magazine in the late 1940s and became its first black staff photographer, remaining with the publication until 1968.
He worked at several government jobs as a photographer and was a correspondent for the U.S. Office of War Information during World War Two. After the war, he served for a stint as a fashion photographer for Vogue magazine.
But it was at "Life" where he made his mark documenting the human consequences of intolerance and crime. He was equally at ease with gangsters as with cops, and he won the trust of the fiery Malcolm X, the militant Black Panthers and ordinary black Americans who lived in big cities and small, rural towns.
His photo of a black cleaning lady, standing in front of a huge American flag, mop in one hand, broom in the other and a resigned look on her face, became one of his best known shots.
"I suffered first as a child from discrimination, and poverty to a certain extent, bigotry in my hometown in Kansas," Parks told Reuters in a 2000 interview. "So I think it was a natural follow from that that I should use my camera to speak for people who are unable to speak for themselves."
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 8, 2006 - 9:46am. on Politics
DeLay Beats 3 Rivals in Texas G.O.P. Primary By RALPH BLUMENTHAL
HOUSTON, March 7 — Representative Tom DeLay survived a challenge to his renomination for Congress Tuesday night, outpacing three Republican primary rivals seeking to capitalize on the criminal charges and ethics citations against him.
Mr. DeLay, 58, an 11-term incumbent, turned out a disciplined army of poll workers and pledged his Washington influence on behalf of NASA's Johnson Space Center and other big constituencies.
With nearly 88 percent of precincts reporting, Mr. Delay had 19,684, or 61 percent of the vote, far ahead of his closest opponent, Tom Campbell, at 9,595, or 30 percent.
Ex post facto blowjob of note:
The agreement would reinforce the authority of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which was created in 1978 to issue special warrants for spying but was sidestepped by the administration. The measure would require the administration to seek a warrant from the court with all deliberate speed whenever possible.
If the administration elects not to do so after 45 days, the attorney general must certify that the surveillance is necessary to protect the country and explain to the subcommittee why the administration has not sought a warrant. The attorney general would be required to give an update to the subcommittee every 45 days.
Democrats called the deal an abdication of the special bipartisan committee's role as a watchdog, saying the Republicans had in effect blessed the program before learning how it worked or what it entailed.
G.O.P. Senators Say Accord Is Set on Wiretapping By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK and SCOTT SHANE
WASHINGTON, March 7 — Moving to tamp down Democratic calls for an investigation of the administration's domestic eavesdropping program, Republicans on the Senate Intelligence Committee said Tuesday that they had reached agreement with the White House on proposed bills to impose new oversight but allow wiretapping without warrants for up to 45 days.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on March 8, 2006 - 8:40am. on Culture wars
You know, if it's really about the morality they profess, some half-steps are offensive.
In a country where two thirds of the public does not want to see Roe vs. Wade overturned, but nearly as many favor stricter limits on abortion, pragmatic abortion opponents have pushed for parental notification laws, waiting periods, restrictions on late-term abortions: The strategy was to chip away at Roe to try to shrink it, change its shape, and over time promote a “culture of life” that would view abortion less as a right than a tragedy, perhaps eventually a crime. That gradual approach requires a certain level of hypocrisy—or at least a willing suspension of moral belief—because if you truly equate abortion with murder, it’s hard to settle for slowing it down rather than stopping it altogether, right away: the Purist approach.
Beauty and the Geek was interesting enough when I stumbled onto it that I watched the all-day recap of the first series.
Black. White. I'll be watching as it develops.
TV's Crash Course in Race In a provocative new reality show, two families change their skin color to see how the other half lives By JAMES PONIEWOZIK
From The Jazz Singer to White Chicks, the history of black- and whiteface in entertainment has generally not been one of high social purpose. But starting March 8, an FX reality show is betting that the same magic that made Marlon Wayans look like Paris Hilton can be used to start a dialogue about what race means. In Black. White. (Wednesdays, 10 p.m. E.T.), a provocative and valuable reality-TV experiment, two families of different races live life in each other's skin.
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