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Week of July 16, 2006 to July 22, 2006Interestingly enough, Israel is using the same plan the USofA drew up to invade IraqSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 22, 2006 - 10:00pm.
on War
US to give Israel another week for attacks: paper
Sat Jul 22, 2006 10:34 PM ET JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli officials believe they have approval from the United States to keep up attacks on Hizbollah guerrillas in Lebanon for at least another week, an Israeli newspaper said on Sunday. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is due to leave for the Middle East on Sunday for talks on resolving the crisis, but Israel's main ally has resisted growing calls for a ceasefire. "Senior officials believe Israel has an American nod to continue operations against Hizbollah at least until next Sunday," the Haaretz newspaper said on its Web site. Something I just rememberedSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 22, 2006 - 7:06pm.
on War The date: October 17, 2000
Who do you think they'll decide to trust?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on July 22, 2006 - 1:56pm.
on Africa and the African Diaspora Between colonialists and China: Africa needs to forge a new path Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem (2006-07-20)
Who is Afraid of China? It is difficult to read western papers these days or watch their televisions and listen to their radios without some Chinese feature, news, information, disinformation and mis information. Western policy makers are training future generations to learn Mandarin. Chinese studies is booming. Intelligence services are in a frenzy recruiting anyone who can help decipher the Chinese mind. Even retired old China hands are being recalled from their retirement back into active service. China is being discussed in the West as a threat. A threat to Western hegemony across the world mostly in economic terms. Nowhere is this threat more orchestrated than in Africa. If China is a threat to the West, should we worry when the West has always been a threat to our very existence for centuries? This is goodSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 22, 2006 - 1:09pm.
on Media You mean that Nigerian email scam wasn't a scam this time?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on July 22, 2006 - 12:54pm.
on News Nigerian Entangled In Jefferson Investigation The corruption investigation of Rep. William J. Jefferson (D-La.) has taken many strange twists: an FBI sting that caught the lawmaker on videotape accepting a large payoff; a subsequent raid that turned up $90,000 of that cash in his apartment freezer; and a weekend FBI search of his congressional office that triggered a constitutional uproar. But one of the most puzzling and intriguing facets of the case is Jefferson's ties to Atiku Abubakar, the vice president of Nigeria. Abubakar, a wealthy businessman and one of the leading candidates in next year's race for president of Nigeria, divides his time between his homeland and Potomac, Md., where he and one of his four wives maintain a $2.2 million mansion. That's because they never went there to learn themSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 22, 2006 - 12:49pm.
on War "They" being our the members of our proto-fascist administration. Military didn't forget a damn thing...I remember the suggestions that were made before people started getting reassigned and retired behind making them.
In Iraq, Military Forgot the Lessons of Vietnam Not that George Will needs defendingSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 22, 2006 - 12:36pm.
on Politics ...and not that's I'll ever do it. But RedState.org's Swannblog thinks he unfairly jacks Lynn Swann's gubernatorial campaign. Reminds me of girl-fights in junior high school. Civil war. End of storySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 22, 2006 - 11:39am.
on War More Iraqis Fleeing Strife and Segregating by Sect BAGHDAD, Iraq, July 20 — Relentless sectarian violence is forcing Iraqi families to flee their homes in ever larger numbers, according to figures released Thursday by the Iraqi government. Sattar Nowruz, a spokesman for the Ministry of Displacement and Migration, said 1,117 families abandoned mixed areas for Shiite or Sunni strongholds in the last week alone, an increase since March that analysts described as a conservative snapshot of internal migration. In all, he said, nearly 27,000 families, about 162,000 people, had registered for relocation aid since the bombing of a Shiite shrine in Samarra on Feb. 22, which set off waves of killings, kidnappings and reprisals. This is one of those posts I don't expect folks to agree withSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 22, 2006 - 11:02am.
on Culture wars | Race and Identity Carl Jung had an interesting approach to studying spirituality. He recognized he couldn't approach the supernatural stuff directly but he could study the impact people's beliefs had on their personal psychology and behavior. I've tried to take a similar approach in my observations of folks and I've developed a number of ways to model people's behavior. In one of the models I use, a person's world/self view is a narrative. The narrative is 'run' like a program, with current or speculative data as 'inputs,' to make decisions. The narrative develops from each person's interaction with their environment. This model is as bare-bones as a weather model consisting of nothing but the daily temperature plotted on an X-Y grid...but that bare-bones model does display broad but useful patterns. In particular, it models my understanding of Black folks' reaction to Dr. Cosby well. Thank you for your sacrifice...now give me anotherSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 22, 2006 - 10:00am.
on War More Troops to Be Deployed in Baghdad, General Says CAMP FALLUJA, Iraq, July 21 — The top American commander for the Middle East said Friday that the escalating sectarian violence in Baghdad had become a greater worry than the insurgency and that plans were being drawn up to move additional forces to the Iraqi capital. “The situation with sectarian violence in Baghdad is very serious,” Gen. John P. Abizaid of the Army, the head of the United States Central Command, said in an interview on Friday. “The country can deal with the insurgency better than it can with the sectarian violence, and it needs to move decisively against the sectarian violence now.” Read this and ignore the showSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 22, 2006 - 9:52am.
on Media In ‘Separate and Unequal,’ Tom Brokaw Presents a Sadly Familiar Picture of Life in the Deep South
That's the whole show right there. Read my lipsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 22, 2006 - 9:01am.
on Culture wars
Soldiers’ Words May Test PBS Language Rules The PBS documentarian Ken Burns has been working for six years on “The War,” a soldier’s-eye view of World War II, and those who have seen parts of the 14-plus hours say they are replete with salty language appropriate to discussions of the horrors of war. What viewers will see and hear when the series is broadcast in September 2007 is an open question. You don't know, and you don't want to know
Sources: Negroponte Blocks CIA Analysis of Iraq “Civil War” I reported in May that despite the deteriorating situation in Iraq, no National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) has been produced on that country since the summer of 2004. The last NIE, a classified document that the CIA describes as “the most authoritative written judgment concerning a national security issue,” was rejected by the Bush Administration (after being leaked to the New York Times) as being too negative, though its grim assessment subsequently proved to be highly accurate. The Reparations Discussion: Day 5Submitted by Prometheus 6 on July 21, 2006 - 8:02am.
What happened to day 4? It's the day I lifted for a previous post. Since there were no comments left the first time around I decided to just post up the last day of the series. This has actually been a pretty productive series of posts as far as I'm concerned. See, I've been in reparations discussions before, and they've never been pretty. This is the first time I've seen the discussion proceed rationally. I don't know if people are just respecting that it's my blog and therefore giving me that last word at times, or if they genuinely see the overwhelming superiority of my analysis. It's my house We play by my rulez The first rule is "I never lose in my house" I was going to sum up the week in this post, but figured, nah. Maybe I'll post links to all the Startin' Stuff posts at the end of this one. I'll figure that out by the time I get to the bottom of the page. I started typing up what "we" have learned from the discussion, then said to myself, nah. The fact is most folks who've visited P6 this week haven't expressed an opinion at all. That's the norm in online discussions, and to talk about what "we" have learned under those circumstances is one of the more hubristic gestures I can think of, especially since the discussion took place in the comments and a significant fraction of readers in the BlogNet don't click links. So I started thinking about what I saw. I mean, since that's all I could write in any summary anyway. And I'm not limiting it to what happened here on P6…I'm including the couple few things I linked to in the process of writing the series. I'm also slipping in a few thoughts that sort of hang over the edges of the discussion. The victimology defense
Soldiers Plan to Argue Rape Tied to Distress That's not just Black folks in NOLASubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 21, 2006 - 7:27am.
on Hurricane season In fact, after the Katrina experience, I venture to say the percentage of Black folks willing to defy those evacuation orders is considerably less than 25% 1 in 4 surveyed would defy evacuation orders ATLANTA -- One in 4 people in Southern coastal states said they would ignore government hurricane evacuation orders, according to a Harvard University survey conducted earlier this month. The most common reasons respondents gave for not evacuating were confidence that their houses are well built, belief that roads would be too crowded, and concern that evacuating would be dangerous. Nature, nurture or reality?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on July 21, 2006 - 7:06am.
on News Excellent article. In fact, I have to send a link to my daughter...she's always found those twins studies more convincing than I have. And don't think this quote is all the good stuff on the other side of the link. After the Bell Curve
What was that you were saying about genetics?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on July 21, 2006 - 6:58am.
on Race and Identity 'Apartheid' slashed Celtic genes in early England A system of racial segregation imposed by early Anglo-Saxon invaders in England may have massively boosted the breeding of the Germanic interlopers, much to the detriment of the native Celtic race, researchers claim in a new study. Genetic analysis of men in modern-day central England shows that more than half of them possess a Y-chromosome that can be traced to a Germanic region – what is now Germany, Holland and Denmark. Historians argue that fewer than 200,000 Anglo-Saxons invaded the population of about 2 million Celtic Britons during the 5th century. All things being equal, this number should account for just 10% of the gene pool being Anglo-Saxon. Why does it look like another proxy war to me?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on July 21, 2006 - 6:38am.
on Africa and the African Diaspora Ethiopian Troops Enter Somali Government Base MOGADISHU, Somalia, July 20 (Reuters) — Ethiopian soldiers entered the Somali town of Baidoa on Thursday, witnesses said, a day after an Islamist militia advanced within 22 miles of the government’s temporary base there. The Ethiopian government threatened to “crush” any attack on the Somali government, while the Islamists vowed a “holy war’’ against the Ethiopian forces. The exchange of threats, with the military moves this week, has raised fears of a new war in Somalia, which has not had a fully functioning government since the ouster of the dictator Gen. Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991. Prejudging the President based solely on what he's doneSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 20, 2006 - 10:32pm.
Stephen Colbert on Bush speaking to the N.A.A.C.P. has more credibility than Bush speaking to the N.A.A.C.P.
Ooh, look what happened while I wasn't paying attentionSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 20, 2006 - 9:51pm.
on Impeachable offenses Huge news - Judge refuses to dismiss NSA lawsuit The Bush adminstration suffered an enormous defeat today, as a federal district court denied its motion to dismiss the lawsuit brought by the Electronic Frontier Foundation against AT&T, which alleges that the administration's NSA warrantless eavesdropping program (and AT&T's cooperation with it) is illegal. Most significantly, the district court, which is in the Northern District of California, rejected the administration's claim that allowing the litigation to proceed would jeopardize the disclosure of "state secrets," a doctrine which the administration has repeatedly exploited to prevent judicial review of its conduct. Traditionally, courts almost always defer to the executive's invocation of that claim and accept the President's claim that national security requires dismissal of the case. But this time, the court rejected that claim. The court's decision is 72 pages long and is online here (.pdf). Yes!Submitted by Prometheus 6 on July 20, 2006 - 9:26pm.
on Justice | Media | Politics | Race and Identity EYES ON THE PRIZE, PRODUCED BY BLACKSIDE, RETURNS TO PBS ON AMERICAN EXPERIENCEFirst airing of acclaimed civil rights documentary series since 1993PBS Press Tour, Pasadena, CA, January 14, 2006 – PBS, AMERICAN EXPERIENCE, and Blackside today announced the return of the award-winning "Eyes on the Prize," a landmark series documenting the history of the civil rights movement. Originally broadcast on PBS in 1987, "Eyes on the Prize" will air on AMERICAN EXPERIENCE in fall 2006 as part of the series' 19th season. Three, two-hour programs will be presented this fall, with an additional eight hours made available at a later date. Yes, sports has history tooSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 20, 2006 - 9:22pm.
on Race and Identity
'Forty Million Dollar Slaves: The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of the Black Athlete' In a way it's quite funnySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 20, 2006 - 8:57pm.
on Race and Identity So did you check out Dr. Cosby's appearance at The Kaiser Family Foundation's Paths to Success forum? You should...most of the good stuff happens in the first half hour. See, it's hard to get a real reading of things if all you do is read...though Richard Prince does a good job here.
The Reparations Discussion: Day 3Submitted by Prometheus 6 on July 20, 2006 - 12:05pm.
on Race and Identity I generally don't address straw men, but this is from that ridiculousness I pointed to yesterday: We all know there is so much white guilt floating around that if you could only transform it into electrical power, America would be freed of its dependence on fossil fuels. But, come on now. Reparations?! Every time someone talks about white guilt over the past, I have to wonder: just who's making them feel guilty? It's not like anyone is lying about what happened… And I also wonder, is guilt the only possible response? See, I don't want white guilt. Guilt and gratitude are both like shirts. Fine and comfy while new, but wear them too long and they get all stank. But I'm not letting anyone forget the realities of what brought us all to this pass. Especially since I can think of an alternative to guilt. The N.A.A.C.P. should ask Bush about thisSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 20, 2006 - 9:41am.
on Economics | Justice | Race and Identity
Bush's Poverty Talk Is Now All but Silent I'm sure you've heardSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 20, 2006 - 8:39am.
on Justice | Race and Identity I don't feel like thinking too much about this one, so this is the sidebar from the Chicago Sun-Times.
Your orders for the weekend are to sit on your ass and watch TVSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 20, 2006 - 8:10am.
on Media | Race and Identity C-SPAN2, alias BookTV, is covering the Harlem Book Fair
...panels out da yin-yang. Hey, just because mainstream America ignores history is no reason WE shouldSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 20, 2006 - 8:00am.
on Race and Identity
Narrative shifts on civil rights chapter WASHINGTON -- Years before desegregation sit-ins made national headlines in 1960, college students in Wichita, Kan., and Oklahoma City refused to leave whites-only lunch counters. They were threatened with beatings, but held fast and won their battles, laying the groundwork for a movement that would spread across the country. The often overlooked demonstrators, all former NAACP youth members, were honored yesterday -- nearly 50 years later -- at the annual convention of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. |
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