Embedded reporters on the front lines of war. The search for weapons of mass destruction. An attack on civil liberties. Sounds like a job for ... Spider-Man?
User loginLive Discussions
Most popular threads
Weekly Archives02/19/06 - 02/25/06
02/12/06 - 02/18/06 02/05/06 - 02/11/06 01/29/06 - 02/04/06 01/22/06 - 01/28/06 01/15/06 - 01/21/06 01/08/06 - 01/14/06 01/01/06 - 01/07/06 12/25/05 - 12/31/05 12/18/05 - 12/24/05 12/11/05 - 12/17/05 12/04/05 - 12/10/05 11/27/05 - 12/03/05 11/20/05 - 11/26/05 11/13/05 - 11/19/05 11/06/05 - 11/12/05 10/30/05 - 11/05/05 10/23/05 - 10/29/05 10/16/05 - 10/22/05 10/09/05 - 10/15/05 10/02/05 - 10/08/05 09/25/05 - 10/01/05 09/18/05 - 09/24/05 09/11/05 - 09/17/05 09/04/05 - 09/10/05 08/28/05 - 09/03/05 more... Blog linksA Skeptical Blog NathanNewman.org Tech Notes |
We recommendTip jarFor entertainment onlyDropping KnowledgeLibrary of Congress African American Odyssey Link CollectionsNews sourcesReality checksThe Public LibraryWho's new
Who's onlineThere are currently 0 users and 70 guests online.
...Syndicate |
Talk about disruptive technologySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 20, 2006 - 11:31am.
on Economics Quote of note:
Microsoft free internet voice service challenges Vodafone More lies, more damned lies...
Most People Bush Administration Claims To Have Medicare Drug Benefit Already Had Drug Coverage
19 Feb 2006 An analysis of the Medicare drug benefit enrollment numbers being touted by the Bush Administration reveals that only 3.2 million older and disabled Americans have drug coverage for the first time. As many as 19 million people have yet to sign up for the drug benefit available through private drug plans, and at least 7.5 million of these older and disabled Americans have no drug coverage at all, according to an analysis by the Medicare Rights, a national consumer service group. Is that a threat?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on February 20, 2006 - 10:48am.
on Africa and the African Diaspora Yeah, I think so. Mr. Preval could make a start at overcoming the country's polarization by reaching out to the opposition in forming his cabinet, and perhaps in his choice of a prime minister. He must also keep his distance from exiled former president Jean-Bertrand Aristide, his former mentor, whose return to the country would probably trigger another rebellion of the sort that forced his departure two years ago. Aristede doesn't have to come back for the well-armed gangs to return. All that has to happen is for those who opposed his to the degree of bringing down his government to remain unhappy... Haiti's deep divide remains: Mr. Preval's two leading opponents, who won 11 and 8 percent of the recorded vote to his 51, refused to admit defeat. ...and they do not seem easy to satisfy. I suspect the only place there is some question about whether the USofA tortures people is in the USofASubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 20, 2006 - 9:19am.
on War THE MEMO
by JANE MAYER
Issue of 2006-02-27Posted 2006-02-20 ...Back in Haynes’s office, on the third floor of the Pentagon, there was a stack of papers chronicling a private battle that Mora had waged against Haynes and other top Administration officials, challenging their tactics in fighting terrorism. Some of the documents are classified and, despite repeated requests from members of the Senate Armed Services Committee and the Senate Judiciary Committee, have not been released. One document, which is marked “secret” but is not classified, is a twenty-two-page memo written by Mora. It shows that three years ago Mora tried to halt what he saw as a disastrous and unlawful policy of authorizing cruelty toward terror suspects. The memo is a chronological account, submitted on July 7, 2004, to Vice Admiral Albert Church, who led a Pentagon investigation into abuses at the U.S. detention facility at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. It reveals that Mora’s criticisms of Administration policy were unequivocal, wide-ranging, and persistent. Well before the exposure of prisoner abuse in Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison, in April, 2004, Mora warned his superiors at the Pentagon about the consequences of President Bush’s decision, in February, 2002, to circumvent the Geneva conventions, which prohibit both torture and “outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment.” He argued that a refusal to outlaw cruelty toward U.S.-held terrorist suspects was an implicit invitation to abuse. Mora also challenged the legal framework that the Bush Administration has constructed to justify an expansion of executive power, in matters ranging from interrogations to wiretapping. He described as “unlawful,” “dangerous,” and “erroneous” novel legal theories granting the President the right to authorize abuse. Mora warned that these precepts could leave U.S. personnel open to criminal prosecution. Typical Republican shortsightedness
George Pataki is a classic Republican.
A message from my Chaos Lord personaSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 20, 2006 - 8:50am.
on The Environment
We haven't stopped your human foolishness for a simple reason: the Earth, the planet, is a giant ball of iron and you, collectively are a thin film of hydrocarbon chemistry that accrued on its surface as it travelled through the infinite. You can do no lasting damage to the planet.
You can hurt yourselves pretty bad, but we really don't care about that. Quote of note:
Reach of Clean Water Act Is at Issue in 2 Supreme Court Cases Much like in the real worldSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 20, 2006 - 8:40am.
on Culture wars | Media Quote of note:
The Battle Outside Raging, Superheroes Dive In By GEORGE GENE GUSTINES
Embedded reporters on the front lines of war. The search for weapons of mass destruction. An attack on civil liberties. Sounds like a job for ... Spider-Man? By now you have to add in some major fraction of the missingSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 19, 2006 - 9:06am.
on Katrina aftermath New Orleans Locals Think Katrina's Toll Is Still Rising NEW ORLEANS -- The official death toll of Hurricane Katrina is more than 1,300. The unofficial toll of the storm may take that a lot higher. Though not quantifiable in the orthodox fashion, because so many area health agencies are still in disarray, a belief exists among many here that the natural mortality rate of New Orleanians -- whether still in the city or relocated -- has increased dramatically since, and perhaps because of, Katrina. The daily newspaper has seen a rise in reported deaths. Local funeral homes are burying just as many people as they did last year, though the population has decreased. Families say that their kin who had been in good health are dying, and attribute that to the stress brought on by the hurricane, flooding and relocations. They finally realized the boy is crackedRobertson Cancels Speech at Convention NORFOLK, Feb. 18 -- Fellow conservative religious leaders have expressed concern over and open criticism of Pat Robertson's habit of shooting from the lip on his daily religious news-and-talk television program, "The 700 Club." The Christian Coalition founder and former GOP presidential candidate has said U.S. agents should assassinate Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and suggested that Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's stroke was divine retribution for the Israeli pullout from the Gaza Strip. CollusionSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 19, 2006 - 8:14am.
on Impeachable offenses Quote of note: Roberts justified his committee's cave by saying the White House had committed itself to working with senators to pursue legislation on the matter. Translation: Bush won't accept any curbs on his power whatsoever, but he'd be happy to see a bill legalizing his wiretaps. Advise and assent THAT THE UNITED STATES Senate has a body called the Intelligence Committee is an irony George Orwell would have truly appreciated. In a world without Doublespeak, the panel, chaired by GOP Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas, would be known by a more appropriate name — the Senate Coverup Committee. Although the committee is officially charged with overseeing the nation's intelligence-gathering operations, its real function in recent years has been to prevent the public from getting hold of any meaningful information about the Bush administration. Hence its never-ending delays of the probe into the bogus weapons intelligence used to justify the invasion of Iraq. And its squelching, on Thursday, of an expected investigation into the administration's warrantless spying program. Poor folks ain't the real burden on the systemSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 19, 2006 - 8:09am.
on Education
Extra-special education at public expense
- Nanette Asimov, Chronicle Staff Writer Sunday, February 19, 2006 At Woodside High in San Mateo County, college-prep classes awaited a 15-year-old boy with learning disabilities and anxiety. He would blend in with other college-bound students, but also receive daily help from a special education expert. He would get a laptop computer, extra time for tests -- and an advocate to smooth any ripples with teachers. If an anxiety attack came on, he could step out of class. But Woodside High wasn't what his parents had in mind. Instead, they enrolled him in a $30,000-a-year prep school in Maine -- then sent the bill to their local public school district. Race and racing in the OlympicsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 19, 2006 - 7:49am.
on Race and Identity There goes another sport..:
Breakthrough Win Tainted by Bitterness Bill Plaschke TURIN, Italy — One of a handful of black faces in the crowd was screaming for only one on the ice. "He's gotta smoke it on that last lap!" shouted Reginald Shuck. "He's gotta smoke it!" Shani Davis rounded the corner in front of his father, head down, giant blue Lycra legs pumping, smoking it, smoking it. And, then, with one final ice-squeaking stride, he set these Olympics ablaze. Yellow Black: The First Twenty-One Years of a Poet's Life, a MemoirSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 18, 2006 - 8:40pm.
on Race and Identity
I got a heads-up about this interview a couple of days ago...it took a while to find a linkable copy. I think it came up because I mentioned how my mom is as color-concious as Dr. Price Cobb's mom. An Interview With Haki Madhubuti Haki R. Madhubuti is a poet and director of the MFA program in creative writing at Chicago State University, the founder and publisher of Third World Press and the co-founder of four schools in Chicago. He is the author of 27 books, most recently "Yellow Black: The First Twenty-One Years of a Poet's Life: A Memoir," about his growing up in Detroit's Blackbottom and Chicago's West Side, and has just published "The Covenant With Black America," a project with broadcaster Tavis Smiley. Justice Scalia calls defenders of warrantless wiretapping "Idiots"Submitted by Prometheus 6 on February 18, 2006 - 3:58pm.
on Impeachable offenses Quote of note: "That's the argument of flexibility and it goes something like this: The Constitution is over 200 years old and societies change. It has to change with society, like a living organism, or it will become brittle and break."...and FISA isn't even THAT old. Scalia: People who believe the Constitution would break if it didn't change with society are 'idiots' 6:58 a.m. February 14, 2006 Leon Wieseltier is PISSED at Daniel C. DennettSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 18, 2006 - 12:45pm.
on Culture wars | Religion
Thus begins the savaging of Breaking the Spell : Religion as a Natural Phenomenon. Wieseltier is so relentless it's an amusing sight. ![]() Whoa. Serious statement. Calling Comedy CentralSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 18, 2006 - 12:38pm.
on Seen online Totally disingenuous. Totally dishonest. Totally premeditated.By giving this report some visibility, David Broder has just earned the benefit of the doubt as to his honesty. Cutting to the chase:
So as not to further damage Mr. Broder's standing as a conservative, further discussion will reference the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities's report he was kind enough to highlight. George Will presents The Great Black HopeSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 18, 2006 - 9:34am.
on Politics You know the GOP in Ohio is in bad shape when, after decades of Republican race baiting their fortunes depend on a really big Black guy. Mr. Will's column is as much about the decreptude of the Republican Party in Ohio as an introduction to Ken Blackwell. In 1998 party elders pressured Blackwell into stepping aside to clear the path to the governorship for Bob Taft -- great-great-grandson of a U.S. attorney general, great-grandson of a president, grandson and son of U.S. senators. Today, Taft's job approval rating has plunged to 18 percent among Republican voters . The rest of the electorate is more hostile. Republicans hold 12 of 18 U.S. House seats and both Senate seats. Unfortunately for Ohio Republicans, they also control both elected branches of the state government, and their record of scandals and un-Republican governance -- substantial tax and spending increases -- have Blackwell, a 6-foot-5, 255-pound former college football player (Xavier University in Cincinnati), running against his party's record. Also noticed something can use to make a useful point; Mr. Will says it's a "conservative axiom": Hm.Submitted by Prometheus 6 on February 18, 2006 - 8:54am.
on War Why Congress Has Not Declared War Since World War II February 16, 2006: The current war on terror often raises the issue of why war has not officially been declared against the enemy. Most people don't realize that the United States has not declared war since World War II (when a number of countries, not just Japan and Germany, were so named.) And there's a reason for that, one that is rarely discussed. Seems that after World War II, Congress wrote into law a lot of the wartime measures used during World War II. These included price controls, censorship and greater police powers. This was done with the possibility of nuclear war in mind, where there would be massive damage done to the U.S. in a short period of time. To deal with this, a lot of these regulations would kick in the minute Congress votes to declare war. No one wants to be the first to suggest repealing these laws and regulations, and no one wants to see them go into action. So whenever anyone in Congress starts talking about declaring war, they are pulled aside by some senior staffers and filled in on the consequences. When ten Yale candidates do it, I'll concede it's a good ideaSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 17, 2006 - 3:18pm.
on Education
Good to know OpinionJournal has a sense of humor.
Higher Learning, a Tutorial |
||