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Week of May 07, 2006 to May 13, 2006Since I blew up in public, I have to clean it up in public.Submitted by Prometheus 6 on May 13, 2006 - 10:48pm.
on Mia culpa I am currently angry at the DLC for downplaying my history and interests in favor of seeking the racist vote. I read this, and said this. Then Darkstar came around and made me check it. Each and every member of the Congressional Black Caucus is a co-sponsor of the extension bill. Normally I check before posting about something so incredibly stupid. And I still think the DLC's approach to pacifying angry white males is an error. But this time, this series of posts, the error is mine because I can't validate it. No, because I didn't even try. I can link such stuff but I'm not supposed to let my anger push me. Here's a press release for General HaydenQuote of note:
Cheney Pushed U.S. to Widen Eavesdropping WASHINGTON, May 13 — In the weeks after the Sept. 11 attacks, Vice President Dick Cheney and his top legal adviser argued that the National Security Agency should intercept purely domestic telephone calls and e-mail messages without warrants in the hunt for terrorists, according to two senior intelligence officials. Frogmarch!I knew he was guilty by how happy he was not to be indicted with Scooter (the only grown man with a nickname more embarrassing than "Skip)". Karl Rove Indicted on Charges of Perjury, Lying to Investigators Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald spent more than half a day Friday at the offices of Patton Boggs, the law firm representing Karl Rove. During the course of that meeting, Fitzgerald served attorneys for former Deputy White House Chief of Staff Karl Rove with an indictment charging the embattled White House official with perjury and lying to investigators related to his role in the CIA leak case, and instructed one of the attorneys to tell Rove that he has 24 hours to get his affairs in order, high level sources with direct knowledge of the meeting said Saturday morning. This is a ringer, not a DemocratSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 13, 2006 - 9:30pm.
on Politics | Race and Identity Not that there aren't straight racists in the party...they're just not stupid enough to say that sort of crap outright. Code words would be the order of the day. Just saying... Darby said he will speak Saturday near Newark, N.J., at a meeting of National Vanguard, which bills itself as an advocate for the white race. Some of his campaign materials are posted on the group's Internet site. Alabama candidate for AG disputes Holocaust, is coming to NJ BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- A Democratic candidate for Alabama attorney general denies the Holocaust occurred and said Friday he will speak this weekend in New Jersey to a "pro-white" organization that is widely viewed as being racist. Larry Darby concedes his views are radical, but he said they should help him win wide support among Alabama voters as he tries to "reawaken white racial awareness" with his campaign against Mobile County District Attorney John Tyson. [P6: This, at least, is true.] Washington Post, meet NewsweekSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 13, 2006 - 4:54pm.
on Impeachable offenses The Quote of note, courtesy Editor and Publisher:
Newsweek Poll: Americans Wary of NSA Spying Nancy Pelosi's gift to Black RepublicansSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 13, 2006 - 3:45pm.
on Politics | Race and Identity Me, in the comments , in response to why it's a problem that CBC members were scrubbed from the Voting Rights Act co-sponsor list.
Then there's the AIDS epidemic...Submitted by Prometheus 6 on May 13, 2006 - 12:41pm.
on Culture wars
The childbirth divide IT'S NOT JUST NATURE THAT abhors a vacuum; man does too. That sucking sound you hear is the noise made by thousands of young immigrants as they travel from the overpopulated Southern Hemisphere to the more prosperous Northern Hemisphere in pursuit of employment. The phenomenon is putting pressure on economies from Oslo to Okinawa, and it is fueling raucous worldwide debates about immigration and motherhood. But amid all the hand-wringing, an important fact is getting lost: Globally, the greater concern is too many babies, not too few. Really great grandmothersSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 13, 2006 - 12:35pm.
on Open thread ALMOST MOTHER'S DAY But rather than canonize either of those Marys as Founding Mother, we suggest bestowing that honor on a more ancient ancestress: Eve. No, not the archetypal woman fashioned out of Adam's rib in Genesis but her scientific namesake, Mitochondrial Eve. Mito-what? Mitochondria are structures in the human cell that have their own DNA, which is passed intact (with occasional mutations) from mother to child. Studies of mitochondria taken from people around the world have led many scientists to conclude that everyone alive today has among his or her ancestors a woman who lived in Africa about 140,000 years ago. Sounds like it's time for a new editionSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 13, 2006 - 10:16am.
on Culture wars Sound familiar?
The Deciders "The powers of ordinary men are circumscribed by the everyday worlds in which they live, yet even in these rounds of job, family and neighborhood they often seem driven by forces they can neither understand nor govern." Maybe we can hire them to clean up the JanjaweedSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 13, 2006 - 10:02am.
on Africa and the African Diaspora | War Quote of note:
Alliance of Somali Warlords Battles Islamists in Capital
Jim Gilchrist, founder of The Minuteman ProjectSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 13, 2006 - 9:53am.
on Culture wars | Race and Identity Jim Gilchrist, founder of The Minuteman Project was on Washington Journal. I recorded some really interesting bits. First, his response to a man from Florida who said they were being "invaded by boat people" from Cuba and Haiti every day, who complained that because he himself is well-tanned everyone keeps trying to talk to him in Spanish and "I don't speak Spanish, I will not speak Spanish." I don't think you'll hear this one on Crooks and Liars. You wanna keep this in mind while you're thinking about Bush's electronic surveilanceSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 12, 2006 - 7:03pm.
on News New Fears of Security Risks in Electronic Voting Systems CHICAGO, May 11 — With primary election dates fast approaching in many states, officials in Pennsylvania and California issued urgent directives in recent days about a potential security risk in their Diebold Election Systems touch-screen voting machines, while other states with similar equipment hurried to assess the seriousness of the problem. "It's the most severe security flaw ever discovered in a voting system," said Michael I. Shamos, a professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon University who is an examiner of electronic voting systems for Pennsylvania, where the primary is to take place on Tuesday. Brought to you by Fox NewsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 12, 2006 - 2:01pm.
on Culture wars | Race and Identity Procreation Not Recreation Make more babies. That's the lesson drawn out of two interesting stories over the last couple days. First, a story Wednesday that half the kids under 5 years old in this country are minorities. By far, the greatest number are Hispanic. Know what that means? Twenty-five years and the majority population is Hispanic. I want you to carefully consider what this says about mainstream AmericaSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 12, 2006 - 12:33pm.
on Culture wars | Politics | Race and Identity
You know what? I'm about to stop giving a lot of you muhfuggers credit for having ethicsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 12, 2006 - 12:25pm.
on Economics | Race and Identity Quote of note (but my reaction is below the fold):
HUD chief: Right list leads to government cash
Good pointSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 12, 2006 - 8:55am.
on Impeachable offenses
I feel you, JimiSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 12, 2006 - 8:42am.
on Media
I can't complain though. You wrote a long, detailed thing...my examples tend to be too terse for mainstream media, i.e Income Averaging
.vs Basics, Not Luxuries, Blamed for High Debt in the Washington Post (which frankly is a better piece than mine for public comsumption). What comes out of reconciling the House and Senate bills will determine if a third party arises to displace one of the other twoSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 12, 2006 - 7:52am.
on Culture wars | Politics | Race and Identity Senate Leaders Break a Stalemate Over an Immigration Bill WASHINGTON, May 11 — Senate leaders said Thursday that they had broken a political stalemate and would bring to the floor next week an immigration bill that could put millions of illegal immigrants on the road to eventual American citizenship. An agreement reached Thursday by Senators Bill Frist of Tennessee and Harry Reid of Nevada, the Republican majority and Democratic minority leaders, ends an impasse that has stalled action in the Senate for weeks while immigrants and their advocates have held huge demonstrations across the country. Are you really surprised?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on May 12, 2006 - 7:40am.
on Impeachable offenses I'm not. In fact, I warned you all.
This ought to be the death blow for creationism in the USofASubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 12, 2006 - 7:13am.
on Culture wars | Education | Onward the Theocracy! | Religion | Tech Evolution's Bottom Line
My mind just boggledSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 12, 2006 - 6:57am.
on Tech Slashdot finds some weird shit... Light's Most Exotic Trick Yet: So Fast it Goes ... Backwards? In the past few years, scientists have found ways to make light go both faster and slower than its usual speed limit, but now researchers at the University of Rochester have published a paper today in Science on how they've gone one step further: pushing light into reverse. As if to defy common sense, the backward-moving pulse of light travels faster than light. Confused? You're not alone. "I've had some of the world's experts scratching their heads over this one," says Robert Boyd, the M. Parker Givens Professor of Optics at the University of Rochester. "Theory predicted that we could send light backwards, but nobody knew if the theory would hold up or even if it could be observed in laboratory conditions." So true, so true...Submitted by Prometheus 6 on May 12, 2006 - 6:42am.
on Race and Identity Progress as a term of artSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 12, 2006 - 6:40am.
on People of the Word I thought you'd like to know how the Bush regime can keep talking about the progress in Iraq with a straight face. Have you ever run a mid-sized to major corporate project, or participated in scheduling one? You'll have these gantt charts running your damn life for a while. You'll have these progress meetings where you talk about which tasks are on schedule, which are falling behind, which are on hold untill two parallel tasks are completed. And every bullet point you hit is progress. And when you have to revert a step because some other process won't be ready, bringing that reverted step back to its earlier condition is also progress. It's not progress when the copying machines you need to distribute the plans break down (yes, success depends on copying machines too). That's not a problem with the plan, though. You know why I haven't mentioned the NSA phone database yet?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on May 11, 2006 - 3:19pm.
on Impeachable offenses I've already said I want the bastard impeached and the regime dismantled. And I can't add anything that's not already somewhere in the massive response already working going on. This being the Year of the Black Republican I suppose I should provide links to some nuanced commentarySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 11, 2006 - 11:38am.
This is as close as it gets.
I found a new toySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 11, 2006 - 10:05am.
on Open thread Not really a toy, but a collection of really interesting short videos at Neural Surfer. Also I have finally taken possession of Dynamics: The Geometry of Behavior
Hey, I LIVE in New York...I could have told you this any time you askedSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 11, 2006 - 8:09am.
Quote of note:
Housing Costs Change List of Top Areas for Poverty Power doesn't corrupt, it lets 'you' be 'you'F.B.I.'s Focus on Public Corruption Includes 2,000 Investigations WASHINGTON, May 10 — A post-9/11 effort by the F.B.I. to concentrate on public corruption now includes more than 2,000 investigations under way, highlighted by the Jack Abramoff lobbying inquiry, the racketeering and fraud conviction of former Gov. George Ryan of Illinois, and the multipronged corruption probes after the guilty plea by Randy Cunningham, a former Republican House member from San Diego, bureau officials said. As one of the Bush administration's least known anticrime efforts, the F.B.I. initiative has yielded an unexpectedly rich array of cases. The results suggest that wrongdoing by public officials at all levels of government is deeply rooted and widespread. Several of the highest profile cases in which the F.B.I. played an active role involve Republicans. Somebody got a Medal of FreedomSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 11, 2006 - 7:27am.
on Politics ...and all I got was a Distinguished Service Award. Another preemptive pardon. |
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