Week of June 04, 2006 to June 10, 2006
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 10, 2006 - 5:43pm. on Politics
Politically, Murtha is the best of both worlds for Democrats. One theory is that Murtha's candidacy could provide midterm voters with a tougher, more conservative contrast to the liberal minority leader, Nancy Pelosi (Calif.). A decorated Marine combat veteran, Murtha is strongly pro-military. But his call last year for a withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq was a pivotal moment in the war debate, emboldening many Democrats to speak out forcefully against the conflict.
Iraq War Critic Surprises Democrats Murtha Says He Will Run for Majority Leader if Party Wins By Shailagh Murray Washington Post Staff Writer Saturday, June 10, 2006; A06
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 10, 2006 - 9:46am. on Politics
It's obvious from the conservative reaction to Ann Coulter's screed that I've underestimated her importance to their opinion machine. Apparently her job is to throw out an idea that's so far out of bounds that the "compromise" between it and reality happens to fall somewhere near what conservatives really want to say. In [TS] Mourning in America, John Tierney says what conservatives really wanted to say. The widows and widowers of the victims of Sept. 11 are not urban planners who should get veto power over the rebuilding at Ground Zero. The parents of Americans killed in Iraq do not have special expertise in foreign policy. Whether they support the war or not, they are expressing their personal views, and not necessarily even their slain children's. Cindy Sheehan camped outside President Bush's ranch in Texas to protest the war, but her son voluntarily re-enlisted before his death.
I only do that when the editorial perfectly covers what need be said. Our Heritage, to the Highest Bidder Americans would be rightly outraged to learn that the newly discovered papers of, say, Washington, Jefferson or Lincoln were being sold at auction to someone who might bar the general public from using them for research purposes, or even eventually sell them off piece by piece as curiosities. They should be just as worried about the impending auction of thousands of documents from the personal papers of Martin Luther King Jr. Dr. King was perhaps the most important American of the last half of the 20th century, the figure who played a pivotal role in the movement for social justice that transformed the nation. He was also the symbol of the great moral challenge of American history — the heritage of slavery and the issue of race. It is astonishing that the United States celebrates Dr. King's birthday with a national holiday but has failed to make sure his papers were placed at a research institution where they would have remained open to public use. But the King family — which has too often placed profit and family control above the national interests — is said to have discouraged such a university sale by imposing undue restrictions on the papers that would have remained in effect even after the documents were sold. This unfortunate chain of events has led to the auction block at Sotheby's in New York, which has scheduled a sale of more 7,000 items from the King papers, including the manuscript of his Nobel Prize acceptance speech, on June 30. The King children owe it to their father's legacy to change their minds. Failing that, we can only hope that whoever buys the collection recognizes its immense historical value and preserves unfettered public access in perpetuity. If not, an important window into Dr. King's life during his most active years could well be closed forever.
"The Franklins" here are Dr. John Hope Franklin's people. And this op-ed, worthy as it is on a free-standing basis, introduces Dr. Franklin's Mirror to America : The Autobiography of John Hope Franklin. His older brother, Buck Franklin Jr., had a different, and even worse, experience. He was drafted, despite being married, over 30 and a high school principal, by a bigoted draft board that seemed determined to bring an "uppity" black man down. Assigned to a white officer who appeared to have hated him from the start, he fell into a depression from which he never recovered. He died in 1947, after he either fell or jumped from a hotel window. Dr. Franklin, known throughout his career for his evenness of temper, still refers to his brother's death as murder. The forces of nostalgia see Jim Crow segregation as a minor blemish on the otherwise noble effort that was the great war. But government-enforced racism was actually at the very heart of the enterprise. It undermined the war effort, further poisoned an already racially troubled society and took a savage toll on families like the Franklins. It would be a crime in itself for the country ever to forget that.
One Man's Memory of What the Nation Wants to Forget By BRENT STAPLES Nations tend to write their histories by forgetting the shameful parts. In America, once-buried issues associated with slavery and the genocide against Native Americans have resurfaced and been incorporated into the national memory. But World War II has thus far been held apart as an era that is almost beyond reproach. Indeed, the people who led the country in the 40's and fought the war have been transformed from mere mortals — with faults like the rest of us — into sudden secular saints. They were dubbed "the greatest generation" and made out to be peerless in bravery and moral rectitude. But when it comes to racial justice, any claim of moral superiority is false on its face. Franklin Roosevelt and the national political leadership failed when tested on the great moral issue of the 20th century. It was within Roosevelt's power to strike Jim Crow segregation from the military — which is precisely what Harry Truman would do three years after the war ended. Roosevelt, however, embraced apartheid segregation, actually spreading it from the Army, where it had been long established, into other major branches of the military.
F.D.A. Imposes Long-Delayed Rule to Require Tracking of Prescription Drugs By BARNABY J. FEDER Long-delayed federal rules requiring most wholesalers to be able to track prescription drugs from factory floor to pharmacy door will finally take effect in December, the Food and Drug Administration said yesterday. The regulations, stemming from a 1988 law intended to combat counterfeiting by verifying a drug's pedigree, were originally drafted in 1999. But the F.D.A. had repeatedly put a stay on the rules because the drug industry said it lacked practical methods for tracking and tracing all of its products. Now, though, the agency said further delay of the "pedigree" rules as they are known was no longer justified because of the development of electronic tracking technology, particularly digital identification tags that can be scanned with radio waves.
Looks like that NY Times article didn't help. My head heart bleeds for him.
Mr. Minucci was found not guilty of a top charge — first-degree assault as a hate crime — but was convicted of first- and second-degree robbery as a hate crime. He used the bat to rob Mr. Moore of his Air Jordan sneakers, a pair of Prada shoes and a blue polo shirt on June 29, 2005. Mr. Moore was carrying them in a bag while walking with two black friends in Howard Beach at 3 a.m. that day.
Batsman Convicted of Howard Beach Hate Crimes By COREY KILGANNON
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 9, 2006 - 11:45am. on Politics | War
Specter Offers Compromise on NSA Surveillance By Walter Pincus Washington Post Staff Writer Friday, June 9, 2006; A04 The chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee has proposed legislation that would give President Bush the option of seeking a warrant from a special court for an electronic surveillance program such as the one being conducted by the National Security Agency. Sen. Arlen Specter's approach modifies his earlier position that the NSA eavesdropping program, which targets international telephone calls and e-mails in which one party is suspected of links to terrorists, must be subject to supervision by the secret court set up under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA).
TheThink: The third installation of “Being a Black Man” was released today, this time focusing on a 9-year-old boy named Marcus Jerome Yarboro (read: “The Young Apprentice“). I might as well admit it from the get: my initial interest in this project has led me to more frustrations and questions about the state of black America than I would have hoped for. Less are the stories of attainability for most black men in America; more are the anecdotes proving that with perseverance, a tough “work twice as hard as you” ethic, and so much luck the Texas Lotto feels insecure, that you too can be America’s Next Top black Model of success. But I did ask for a diversity of experiences, and this is what I got, so I can’t complain too much.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 9, 2006 - 9:19am. on Economics
I've long been concerned about the disconnect between the statistics we use to make social and political decisions, and the effect those decisions have on people. So this gets my attention right away. [TS] What Happens if Inflation Is Overstated? By FLOYD NORRIS AMONG some Americans, it is almost an article of faith that the Consumer Price Index understates inflation — there are conspiracy theories about why that happens. After all, holding down the C.P.I. saves the government money in a variety of ways and hurts those with pension or Social Security benefits linked to the index. But you don't have to be a conspiracy theorist to conclude that in the last decade, an important part of the index has been understated. That is the housing component. Since 1983, the government has measured the price of homes not by looking at house prices but by computing what it calls "owner's imputed rent." That is the rental value of the house you own. It accounts for nearly a quarter of the entire Consumer Price Index.
[TS] The DeLay Principle By PAUL KRUGMAN On one side, a measure that would have increased scrutiny of containers entering U.S. ports, at a cost of $648 million, has been dropped from a national security package being negotiated in Congress. Now, President Bush says that we're fighting a global war on terrorism. Even if you think that's a bad metaphor, we do face a terrifying terrorist threat, and experts warn that ports make a particularly tempting target. So some people might wonder why, almost five years after 9/11, only about 5 percent of containers entering the U.S. are inspected. But our Congressional leaders, in their wisdom, decided that improving port security was too expensive. On the other side, Bill Frist, the Senate majority leader, tried yesterday to push through elimination of the estate tax, which the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center estimates would reduce federal revenue by $355 billion over the next 10 years. He fell three votes short of the 60 needed to end debate, but promised to keep pushing. "Getting rid of the death tax," he said, "is just too important an issue to give up so easily." So there you have it. Some people might wonder whether it makes sense to balk at spending a few hundred million dollars — that's million with an "m" — to secure our ports against a possible terrorist attack, while sacrificing several hundred billion dollars — that's billion with a "b" — in federal revenue to give wealthy heirs a tax break. But nothing is more important in the face of a war than cutting taxes.
Health Insurer Is Told by State Not to Enroll New Customers By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA New York State has banned United Healthcare's managed care plan, an arm of the nation's second-largest health insurer, from signing up most types of new customers. State regulators say they took the rare action because the company has persistently defied state rules. For at least three years, United Healthcare has repeatedly filed late, incomplete or inaccurate reports to the state about its finances and subcontracting, and has wrongly denied payment to doctors and other providers, along with a range of other violations, said officials at the State Health Department.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 9, 2006 - 7:06am. on News
The only way to "counter the influence of...Chavez" is to do more for the hoardes of poor folks in Latin America than he does.
Mexico conservative to counter Chavez influence Fri Jun 9, 2006 01:59 AM ET By Alistair Bell AGUASCALIENTES, Mexico (Reuters) - The conservative tied for first place in Mexico's presidential race said on Thursday he would counter the influence of U.S. foe Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez in Latin America if elected. Felipe Calderon told Reuters he wanted Mexico, which has close trade ties with the United States, to play a more active role in the region. "It is going to be a factor of deliberation, balance and good sense compared to the leadership and active policies, to give them their polite name, of Hugo Chavez," Calderon said.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 9, 2006 - 6:58am. on News
Ms. Winfrey, Mr. Cosby...couldn't you guys buy this stuff for one of the HBCUs? Martin Luther King papers, books to be auctioned Thu Jun 8, 2006 04:04 PM ET
By Gary Hill NEW YORK (Reuters) - More than 10,000 manuscripts and books from the estate of Martin Luther King, Jr., many in the hand of the crusader for justice and nonviolence, will be sold on June 30, Sotheby's auction house said on Thursday. The collection, to be auctioned 38 years after the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize winner's assassination, will be sold in a single lot and is expected to fetch $15 million to $30 million, Sotheby's said. The auction will be preceded by a nine-day exhibition June 21-29 of items ranging from drafts of some of King's most famous speeches and essays to his blue test booklets from college. More than 7,000 items offered are in King's own hand.
Quote of note: Rep. Katherine Harris, R-Fla., who is desperately breathing life into her bid for a Senate seat, brashly declared, “We will not allow our courts to redesign society into some politically correct utopia.” “That’s right,” one of the African-American ministers on the podium declared as the crowd applauded and cheered. It was as if for a moment the ghosts of George Wallace and his segregationist sycophants had possessed the crowd in a bizarre recreation of his infamous standoffs. We can only hope that the emptiness and hypocrisy of their arguments will be their undoing.
Used To Sell A Mirage Isaiah J. Poole June 06, 2006 Few things hurt more deeply than the sight of passionate, and often compassionate, African-American pastors selling themselves for an illusion, with their followers applauding as if the rhetorical points their spiritual leaders scored had any meaning.
Farmers know you're not supposed to eat the corn you need to plant next year's crop. We need more farmers in Congress.
"We've got to keep our priorities straight," said Representative Ralph Regula , an Ohio Republican who is chairman of the appropriations panel that approved the cut. "You're going to choose between giving a little more money to handicapped children versus providing appropriations for public broadcasting."
Priorities my ass. You're the same guys that want to cancel the estate tax. PBS is the one universally beneficial thing to come out of television technology in this country. Trust me, you don't want to lose the Sesame Street Effect. Seriously, how many folks have the time and skill to teach their kids all Sesame Street taught them? How many of those left have the money to hire a tutor? GOP takes aim at PBS funding House panel backs budget reductions By Rick Klein, Globe Staff | June 8, 2006
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 8, 2006 - 1:51pm. on War
I get the email notification of new articles from The New Republic. Today I see this: Death Penalty by Spencer Ackerman The downside of Abu Musab Al Zarqawi's death. ...and I'm like, please...why you want to feed the animals? Turns out Mr. Ackerman has a point, if you're a Bushite. At every stage during the occupation of Iraq, the United States and the ruling Iraqi faction have portrayed each large-scale bombing, murder of civilians, and politically deleterious act of violence as the work of Zarqawi. The U.S. military put together a propaganda campaign to inflate Zarqawi's importance within the Iraqi insurgency. (This was complemented by a campaign of ridicule after the military discovered an outtakes reel of Zarqawi's most recent videotape.) Similarly, after most sectarian massacres, Shia or Kurdish officials frequently mention how "Zarqawi's strategy" of instigating a civil war is bound to fail. In general, such campaigns have a clear logic: to portray the widespread phenomenon of sectarian violence in Iraq as attributable to one person. And Zarqawi fit the caricature perfectly: His missives called for the extermination of the Shia, the Kurds, and those Sunnis who collaborated with the United States--defined, in effect, as any Sunni insufficiently loyal to Zarqawi.
FEMA now requiring doctor's note for free generators Freebie generators after hurricanes are now a thing of the past. You'll need proof that a generator is a necessity in order to get FEMA reimbursement. BY AMY SHERMAN [email protected] Only people who can prove a medical need will qualify for free generators after a power-cutting hurricane, according to a new federal policy. Last year, Florida residents -- rich or poor -- who suffered through major power outages could buy generators for up to $836 and then be reimbursed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The bill was huge: about $118 million in 2005. But a taxpayer watchdog group decried the policy as a waste of money.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 8, 2006 - 10:36am. on News
SAN FRANCISCO Police fatally shoot man in friend's attic Officers thought glasses case was gun and opened fire - Jaxon Van Derbeken, Chronicle Staff Writer Thursday, June 8, 2006
Two San Francisco police officers who shot and killed an unarmed man in the darkened attic of an apartment mistook him for a trespasser with a gun, police officials said Wednesday. Asa B. Sullivan, 25, had his arms outstretched and was holding a "cylindrical object" when the officers confronted him Tuesday night in the apartment near Lake Merced, prompting them to open fire, said Police Chief Heather Fong. The object turned out to be an eyeglasses case. Police refused to release the officers' names, saying only that one was a male officer with four years' experience on the force and the other was a female officer with the department for three years. A department spokesman initially told reporters that Sullivan had fired at the officers through the attic floor, a version of events that police did not officially correct for more than 16 hours. Fong said the earlier story was based on a preliminary account.
Fired through the attic floor. Remember that.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 8, 2006 - 9:42am. on Tech
Microsoft plans better disclosures of tool By ALLISON LINN, AP Business Writer Wed Jun 7, 7:52 PM ET Microsoft Corp. acknowledged Wednesday that it needs to better inform users that its tool for determining whether a computer is running a pirated copy of Windows also quietly checks in daily with the software maker. The company said the undisclosed daily check is a safety measure designed to allow the tool, called Windows Genuine Advantage, to quickly shut down in case of a malfunction. For example, if the company suddenly started seeing a rash of reports that Windows copies were pirated, it might want to shut down the program to make sure it wasn't delivering false results.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 8, 2006 - 9:16am. on Politics
Quote of note:
“It’s not a question of guilt or innocence, it’s a question of precedent,” said the CBC member. “Never has an unindicted member been removed.”
CBC-Pelosi rift simmers By Josephine Hearn Tensions remained raw between the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) and Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) as the House minority leader continues her effort to oust Rep. William Jefferson (D-La.) from the Ways and Means Committee while he is the focus of a government bribery investigation.
Quote of note: Mr. Minucci insists that Mr. Moore was about to commit a robbery and that he used the word as a form of benign address before subduing him with a few swats to the side and legs. Mr. Minucci's lawyer, Albert Gaudelli, said he hoped Professor Kennedy's testimony would convince the jury that the mere use of the epithet did not constitute racism. On the stand yesterday, Professor Kennedy's explanation of the modern usage of the word seemed to support Mr. Gaudelli's claim.
Epithet 'Has Many Meanings,' a Harvard Professor Testifies By COREY KILGANNON The witnesses in the trial of a white man accused of a racially motivated beating of a black man in Howard Beach last summer had been typical for an assault case in Queens. Until yesterday. All of the previous witnesses — the hardened detective, the newsstand owner, the pizza maker, the career criminal and other assorted neighborhood characters — had offered plain-spoken testimony about Nicholas Minucci, 20, who is charged with using a racial epithet while attacking Glenn Moore with a baseball bat on June 29, 2005. But the final witness for Mr. Minucci was a stranger to him, to Howard Beach and to the State Supreme Court in Kew Gardens, Queens. The defense got the Harvard Law School professor Randall Kennedy to travel from Boston to testify about the current usage of the racial epithet, sometimes referred to in court as the "n" word.
Quote of note: the task force is largely symbolic — there is no new money for it
Bush Suggests Immigrants Learn English By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG OMAHA, June 7 — President Bush urged immigrants on Wednesday to learn English and history and civics with the goal of "helping us remain one nation under God." On the second day of a campaign-style trip to sell his immigration bill to the public and to skeptical conservatives in Congress, Mr. Bush also directed his homeland security secretary, Michael Chertoff, to create a "task force on new Americans" to expand local initiatives to help immigrants integrate into American society. "One aspect of making sure we have an immigration system that works, that's orderly and fair, is to actively reach out and help people assimilate into our country," Mr. Bush said in a speech at a community college here. "That means learn the values and history and language of America."
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 8, 2006 - 7:36am. on War
Mr. Brooks fairly breaks my heart with [TS] Savagery's Stronghold.
We have all been raised on stories in which good triumphs over evil, and in these stories good does not triumph by chance. It triumphs because honesty, virtue and decency pay off in the long run. Evil, meanwhile, contains the seeds of its own destruction. Those who lie, torture and kill eventually become entrapped by their own sins.
After recovering from a war hawk writing that last sentence, I figured his intent is to support greater savagery in execution by our military without invoking White Guilt like y'all boy Shelby do. ...they are winning precisely because they are savage, and are proud to do things their enemies are ashamed to do. In Iraq right now, virtue seems to be a handicap and barbarism an empowering force.
'Support" is one of those words I've had to see as an undefined term...a word whose meaning is entirely determined by the circumstances in which it is used. I think I have a working definition now. I think it means "act to increase the supported entity's self esteem." Okay. The next word to work out is "leadership." I thought I had that one down until I started watching Congress live on C-Span.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 8, 2006 - 5:47am. on Economics | Tech
"Emerging technologies and the Internet represent a sea of opportunity for business but also for sophisticated criminals," Christopher J. Christie, the United States attorney in New Jersey, whose office is prosecuting the case, said in a statement. "The challenge, which we and the F.B.I. continue to meet with investigations and prosecutions like this one, is to stay ahead of the cyber-criminal and protect legitimate commerce."
EVERYTHING presents a sea of opportunity for sophisticated criminals. The whole flipping Nevada telephone network was hacked around the turn of the century. All this means is people have to lock down their network security. 2 Charged in Scheme Said to Defraud Internet Phone Providers By KEN BELSON and TOM ZELLER Jr. Federal authorities yesterday arrested a Miami man who they said made more than $1 million in a hacking scheme involving the resale of Internet telephone service. The suspect is accused of surreptitiously routing calls through the lines of legitimate Internet phone companies, saddling them with the expense of carrying the traffic while he pocketed the connection fees from customers. A second man was arrested in Washington State, and charged with aiding in the scheme. The case, representing an elaborate new form of Internet hacking, raises fresh questions about the security of phone traffic over largely unregulated networks.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 7, 2006 - 11:16pm. on Seen online
As a totally unrelated sidenote, I would like to say All Hail The Wayback Machine. by Prometheus 6 Wed, 06/07/2006 - 11:12pm That mathematical training needs to be improved in our public school systems is a commonly accepted idea. The usual reason given is the increasingly technical underpinnings of our daily lives, but that’s not actually correct. A small fraction of the population needs a familiarity with mathematical practices, and these people set up the technical supports for the rest of us…it’s the difference between being a mechanic and being a driver.
Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 7, 2006 - 8:12pm. on Politics
But there is one clear way that Ohio's election system is corrupt. Decisions about who can vote are being made by a candidate for governor.
Block the Vote, Ohio Remix If there was ever a sign of a ruling party in trouble, it is a game plan that calls for trying to win by discouraging voting. The latest sign that Republicans have an election-year strategy to shut down voter registration drives comes from Ohio. As the state gears up for a very competitive election season this fall, its secretary of state, J. Kenneth Blackwell, has put in place "emergency" regulations that could hit voter registration workers with criminal penalties for perfectly legitimate registration practices. The rules are so draconian they could shut down registration drives in Ohio.
One of the authors here is a friend of ptcruiser, so I read and link, but I must comment as well.
Same-Sex Marriage: Hijacking the Civil Rights Legacy The indiscriminate promotion of various social groups' desires and preferences as "rights" has drained the moral authority from the civil rights industry. by Eugene F. Rivers & Kenneth D. Johnson 06/01/2006 12:00:00 AM
THE MOVEMENT TO REDEFINE MARRIAGE to include same-sex unions has packaged its demands in the rhetoric and images of the civil rights movement. This strategy, though cynical, has enormous strategic utility. For what reasonable, fair-minded American could object to a movement that conjures up images of Martin Luther King Jr. and his fellows campaigners for racial justice facing down dogs and fire hoses? Who is prepared to risk being labeled a bigot for opposing same-sex marriage? As an exercise in marketing and merchandising, this strategy is the most brilliant playing of the race card in recent memory. Not since the "poverty pimps" of 35 years ago, who leveraged the guilt and sense of fair play of the American public to hustle affirmative action set-asides, have we witnessed so brazen a misuse of African-American history for partisan purposes. But the partisans of homosexual marriage have a problem. There is no evidence in the history and literature of the civil rights movement, or in its genesis in the struggle against slavery, to support the claim that the "gay rights" movement is in the tradition of the African-American struggle for civil rights. As the eminent historian Eugene D. Genovese observed more than 30 years ago, the black American experience as a function of slavery is unique and without analogue in the history of the United States. While other ethnic and social groups have experienced discrimination and hardship, none of their experiences compare with the physical and cultural brutality of slavery. It was in the crucible of the unique experience of slavery that the civil rights movement was born.
Why White People Are Afraid By Robert Jensen, AlterNet Posted on June 7, 2006, Printed on June 7, 2006
It may seem self-indulgent to talk about the fears of white people in a white-supremacist society. After all, what do white people really have to be afraid of in a world structured on white privilege? It may be self-indulgent, but it's critical to understand because these fears are part of what keeps many white people from confronting ourselves and the system. The first, and perhaps most crucial, fear is that of facing the fact that some of what we white people have is unearned... A second fear is crasser: White people's fear of losing what we have -- literally the fear of losing things we own if at some point the economic, political, and social systems in which we live become more just and equitable...in a world in which people have become used to affluence and material comfort, that possibility can be scary.
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