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Prometheus 6

All respect and no restraint

Week of Mar 22 2008 - 8:00pm to Mar 29 2008 - 7:59pm

I may be asking for trouble, but I have to say this is about the most fucked up "joke" I've heard of in years

Hackers Assault Epilepsy Patients via Computer
By Kevin Poulsen

03.28.08 | 8:00 PM

Internet griefers descended on an epilepsy support message board last weekend and used JavaScript code and flashing computer animation to trigger migraine headaches and seizures in some users.

The nonprofit Epilepsy Foundation, which runs the forum, briefly closed the site Sunday to purge the offending messages and to boost security.

"We are seeing people affected," says Ken Lowenberg, senior director of web and print publishing at the Epilepsy Foundation. "It's fortunately only a handful. It's possible that people are just not reporting yet -- people affected by it may not be coming back to the forum so fast."

This doesn't count because I was supposed to post it yesterday

A discussion between two theologians, an academic and a conservative hack.



See ya

Taking the day off for no reason at all.

The blogosphere is catching up to my stubborn ass

shystee at Corrente

In the 2008 election cycle, rather than making the candidates earn their support by insisting on specific policy pledges, the blogosphere and other activist groups volunteered to become cheerleaders for one candidate or the other.

Cheerleaders are more willing to forgive their chosen politician’s failure to fully and specifically embrace necessary policies because cheerleaders have bought into the idea that the primary objective is “victory” and all other goals are secondary.

By doing this, activists have forfeited the only leverage they have: their vote and their ability to influence other citizens’ votes.

Players understand that the real contest is for leverage over politicians. The other team is composed of corporations and super-rich individuals. The prize is enacted, enforced US government policy.

Policy translates into dollars, life and death.

Did you miss Unnatural Causes on PBS last night?

Maybe it didn't come on in your locality yet. Or maybe it will get multiple plays, like in New York City...we have WNET and WLIW, and WNET at least is presenting each segment like three times.

If you are serious about health care and health issues you need to see this series. Go to the PBS web site and find out when it plays in your area. Set up an email reminder so you don't miss it.

They had all those other side effects we list at the end of the commercial, though

Merck officials stressed that the agency’s inquiry was based on reports, not clinical studies, which are the standard tool for evaluating drug safety. The company said none of the 11,000 patients enrolled in 40 Singulair trials had committed suicide.

U.S. to Study Drug for Suicide Links
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Food and Drug Administration said Thursday that it was investigating a possible link between Merck’s best-selling drug Singulair and suicide.

The agency said it was reviewing a handful of reports involving mood changes, suicidal behavior and suicide in patients who had taken Singulair, the popular allergy and asthma drug.

Merck has updated the drug’s labeling four times in the last year to include information on a range of reported side effects, including tremors, anxiousness, depression and suicidal behavior.

"Normalcy," President Bush said, "is returning back to Iraq."

Despite the Fighting in Basra, Bush Emphasizes Progress
By Peter Baker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, March 28, 2008; A15

DAYTON, Ohio, March 27 -- The images from Baghdad and Basra bristled with explosions, burning buildings, angry street protests, rocket smoke wafting from the Green Zone. The words from Dayton were "remarkable" and "victory" and "rebirth."

Whose victory? Whose rebirth? Maybe Bush is right. Maybe perpetual war is the new normal.

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Remember that banned Bookdocks episode?

Go watch it. Around 22 minutes. 

It's an Uncle Ruckus show more than a BET show...and it's a keeper. 

This has been going on as long as ther occupation has, what are you complaining about?

Iraqi police in Basra shed their uniforms, kept their rifles and switched sides

Abu Iman barely flinched when the Iraqi Government ordered his unit of special police to move against al-Mahdi Army fighters in Basra.

His response, while swift, was not what British and US military trainers who have spent the past five years schooling the Iraqi security forces would have hoped for. He and 15 of his comrades took off their uniforms, kept their government-issued rifles and went over to the other side without a second thought.

Such turncoats are the thread that could unravel the British Army’s policy in southern Iraq. The military hoped that local forces would be able to combat extremists and allow the Army to withdraw gradually from the battle-scarred and untamed oil city that has fallen under the sway of Islamic fundamentalists, oil smugglers and petty tribal warlords. But if the British taught the police to shoot straight, they failed to instil a sense of unwavering loyalty to the State.

Interesting that they chose Shelby Steele to speak for concerned whites

Whether voters buy into Mr. Obama’s analysis and take up his invitation to move on may become apparent in the coming primaries in places like Pennsylvania. It remains to be seen whether he has nudged whites and African-Americans any closer to mutual understanding or simply stoked the anxieties and suspicions that helped close down the conversation before. Shelby Steele, a senior research fellow at the Hoover Institution and author of “A Bound Man: Why We Are Excited About Obama and Why He Can’t Win,” called the speech “shallow, beautifully delivered and just disingenuous” — coming from Mr. Obama “who has been blessed with every manner of opportunity in this society.” Mr. Wright’s anger is demagoguery, said Mr. Steele, who like Mr. Obama is biracial. Racism “no longer remotely accounts for the difficulties in black America,” Mr. Steele said. As for the lack of discourse about race, it is a product of political correctness, “the language of white guilt.”

Asked what is needed to break the stalemate, he said, “White bravery.”

What Politicians Say When They Talk About Race
By JANNY SCOTT

Americans and their political leaders have been tongue-tied on the subject of race. We were reminded of that last week when Senator Barack Obama, the front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination, took the almost unimaginable step of going before a national audience at a precarious juncture in a close campaign and speaking explicitly about what race means to blacks and whites. He spoke of black anger and white resentment and the significance of race in American history; his purpose was political but he spoke with seriousness and gravity and at length. Whether the speech helped or hurt him remains to be seen. But the moment was unlike virtually any in the more than 40 years since the triumphs of the civil rights struggle tore up party alignments of the past and tamped down explicit discussion of race by presidents and major-party candidates addressing the American people.

The dynamic had been different once — when African-Americans had begun to vote Democratic as well as Republican and presidential candidates of both parties competed for their votes; in 1948, Harry Truman, courting swing voters in a close election, became the first presidential candidate from a major party to campaign in Harlem (and ordered an end to segregation in the armed services right after he won the Democratic nomination). In the early 1960s, opinion polls found that a majority of Americans saw civil rights as the dominant issue facing the country. And President Lyndon B. Johnson, in one of several memorable 1965 speeches on race, said, speaking before a joint session of Congress after the “Bloody Sunday” voting-rights march from Selma, Ala.: “Their cause must be our cause too. Because it is not just Negroes, but really it is all of us, who must overcome the crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice. And we shall overcome.”

Republicans have angrily denied the accusations of politics, but they angrily deny everything and everyone

Ex-Governor of Alabama Is Ordered Released
By ADAM NOSSITER

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Donald Siegelman, former governor of Alabama, was ordered released from prison on Thursday by a federal appeals court, pending his appeal of a bribery conviction that Democrats say resulted from a politically driven prosecution.

In its order, the United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, in Atlanta, said Mr. Siegelman had raised “substantial questions” in his appeal of the case and could be released on bond from the federal prison in Oakdale, La., where he has served nine months of a seven-year sentence. The order did not say what those questions were, but his lawyers have argued for months that the bribery charge on which he was mainly convicted revolved around a transaction that differed little, if at all, from a standard political contribution.

Keep trying, David

Having harangued over a carefully selected 30 seconds of someone else's 30 year career, David Brooks tries to use similar logic to support John McCain.

Barack Obama says: “John McCain is determined to carry out four more years of George Bush’s failed policies.”...But before people buy that argument, I’d ask them to read three speeches.

The first was delivered by McCain on Sept. 28, 1983....The second speech was delivered on Nov. 5, 2003....The third McCain speech was delivered on Wednesday.

Problem is, he also said this:

As a Black man I can guarantee you will regret electing such a sellout

I do find it odd, though, that she would answer any kind of question from the editorial board of a Pittsburgh area newspaper, the Tribune-Review, that promoted the vile and untrue allegation that she had something to do with the death of Vince Foster, the deputy White House counsel in her husband's administration who committed suicide. The Tribune-Review is owned by Richard Mellon Scaife, who is considered by Clintonistas to have been puppet master and chief financier of the "vast, right-wing conspiracy" that Hillary Clinton famously perceived.

Collateral Damage
By Eugene Robinson
Friday, March 28, 2008; A19

Talk about not being able to catch a break. To pummel a boxing metaphor, it was Barack Obama who got tagged with a roundhouse right, flush on the chin -- but it was Hillary Clinton, from early indications, who ended up nursing a sore jaw and wondering what hit her.

Reasons to keep gutting the middle class

The most popular cuts -- those known as "middle-class" tax cuts -- are more likely to slow economic growth than promote it, Viard and others said.

"Those are the provisions that detract from long-term growth even if you finance them with a reduction in government spending," said Robert Carroll, a former Bush Treasury official who teaches at American University. "If you pay for them with future tax increases, I think that would be awful." 

So let's recap. Bush and the Republicans want to cut taxes...just not YOURS. Cutting YOUR taxes would damage the economy. Cutting taxes on the wealthy will not.

Makes perfect sense. 

As Candidates Warm to Bush Tax Cuts, Economists Warn of Long-Term Effect
By Lori Montgomery
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, March 28, 2008; D01

When President Bush pushed big tax breaks through Congress in 2001 and 2003, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) joined Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) and other Democrats in opposing them as fiscally reckless. But now that McCain and Clinton are running for president, neither is looking to get rid of the cuts. Instead, they are arguing over which ones to keep.

I wonder what that guy from ATLAH will make of this

I got this from Jack and Jill Politics. I'm not sure they wanted me to tell you that...


 

Every so often PBS' The Newshour is tremendous

Andrew Kohut of the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press was on, giving the results of their polling on the economy and Sen. Obama's recent "ordeal". I got it on video but the transcript and audio links are up now.

On the economy: people are worried about the exact items that were removed from the inflation figures to create the "core inflation rate"...a statistic specifically created to allow policy makers to ignore the inflation that is most painful to the working class.

ANDREW KOHUT: It's pretty lopsided, as that chart shows. It's prices. It's inflation, 49 percent rising prices, and 20 percent jobs. Relatively few are talking about the financial markets.

Unless you talk to people who earn more than $100,000 a year, you don't get a registration very much on anything other than rising prices, fuel, food, that sort of thing.

JUDY WOODRUFF: So it's inflation that remains what people -- the things that they buy.

ANDREW KOHUT: It's inflation. Sure, absolutely.

But that's not what you're interested in, is it?

Tonight's episode is titled "In Sickness and in Wealth." Watch it.

This is from the "About the Series" page.

Unnatural Causes...is inequality making us sick?  

This is a story about health, but it’s not about doctors or drugs. It’s about why some of us get sicker more often and die sooner and what causes us to fall ill in the first place.

UNNATURAL CAUSES criss-crosses the country investigating the stories and findings that are shaking up conventional notions about what makes us healthy or sick. It turns out there’s much more to our well-being than genes, behaviors and medical care. The social, economic, and physical environments in which we are born, live and work profoundly affect our longevity and health – as much as smoking, diet and exercise.

Thought I forgot you, didn't you Alphonso?

Stonewall Jackson
The HUD secretary gives Congress the silent treatment.
Tuesday, March 25, 2008; A14

HOUSING AND Urban Development Secretary Alphonso Jackson is the subject of four (yes, four) investigations into allegations that he used his position to reward those who were friends and punish those who weren't. Yet, when he appeared at two Senate oversight committee hearings this month, Mr. Jackson refused to answer questions about the matters. He used the convenient clam-up excuse that he could not comment because of ongoing investigations. That's a tried-and-true legal and political strategy. But it's troubling that the head of a taxpayer-funded federal agency would employ it to dodge legitimate questions from Congress.

We gonna be a whole nation of crazy muhfuggas

in

The research is the latest evidence that fat in the abdomen is the most dangerous kind. Previous studies have linked an apple-shaped physique to a greater propensity for diabetes, heart disease and stroke. Researchers suspect that belly fat cells are the worst because of their proximity to major organs. They ooze noxious chemicals, stoking inflammation, constricting blood vessels and triggering other processes that may also damage brain cells.

"There is a lot of work out there that suggests that the fat wrapped around your inner organs is much more metabolically active than other types of fat right under the skin," Whitmer said. "It's pumping out toxic substances. It's very potent toxic fat."

Study Links Middle-Age Belly Fat to Dementia
By Rob Stein
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, March 27, 2008; A02

belly

People who have big bellies in their 40s are much more likely to get Alzheimer's and other forms of dementia in their 70s, according to new research that links the middle-aged spread to a fading mind for the first time.

The study of more than 6,000 people found that the more fat they had in their guts in their early to mid-40s, the greater their chances of becoming forgetful and confused and showing other signs of senility as they aged. Those who had the most expansive midsections faced more than twice the risk of the leanest.

How dumb can you get?

Hillary chooses the original naked economist? Really?

All-stars

OK, this is pretty dumb. Hillary Clinton wants a high-level commission to analyze ways to resolve the mortgage crisis — including Alan Greenspan.

Yes, I know people still listen when Greenspan speaks — and John McCain once joked about taking Greenspan’s advice even if he’s dead. But for those in the know, AG is a key villain in the whole affair.

I mean, why not add Charles Prince, Stanley O’Neal, and Angelo Mozilo to the commission?

Yeah, Nixon was crazy enough to send his wife into a combat zone

I must say, reading "Just because something has appeared in a newspaper does not mean that is entirely accurate" here is hilarious.

Further Debunking the 'War Zone' Myth
Thursday, March 27, 2008; A08

The Clinton campaign has cited newspaper accounts, including one in The Washington Post, to bolster the senator's claim that her now-famous March 1996 trip to Bosnia was the first visit to a "war zone" by a first lady since World War II. She is overlooking a trip to Saigon by Pat Nixon at the height of the Vietnam War as well as a trip by Barbara Bush to Saudi Arabia two months before the Persian Gulf War began.

McCain is NOT part of the reality-based community


McCain declares himself to be a "realistic idealist," presumably to separate himself from the Wilsonian idealism associated with Bush, which suggests that freedom will naturally emerge in societies under U.S. tutelage. (Lately, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has asserted that the administration's foreign policy is best described as "American realism.") But then McCain restates Bush's argument that an "axis of evil" of terrorists and rogue states is working against the United States -- but avoids the words so clearly linked to the president.

The Contrarian Loyalist
Thursday, March 27, 2008; A08

Sen. John McCain's foreign policy speech yesterday was designed to both embrace the overall direction set by President Bush and subtly distance McCain from the elements that have turned off moderate voters.


Yeah, right.

We yield the floor to Scientific American

Normally I would excerpt this but I don't want to risk losing it to linkrot.  

Getting Duped: How the Media Messes with Your Mind
Statements made in the media can surreptitiously plant distortions in the minds of millions. Learning to recognize two commonly used fallacies can help you separate fact from fiction
By Yvonne Raley and Robert Talisse

In 2003 nearly half of all Americans falsely assumed that the U.S. government had found solid evidence for a link between Iraq and al Qaeda. What is more, almost a quarter of us believed that investigators had all but confirmed the existence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, according to a 2003 report by the University of Maryland’s Program on International Policy Attitudes and Knowledge Networks, a polling and market research firm. How did the true situation in Iraq become so grossly distorted in American minds?

This site best viewed with a jaundiced eye