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Week of April 04, 2004 to April 10, 2004I'm rated PG-13Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 7:34pm.
on Seen online Maybe the G was supposed to be a 6.
Decide for yourselfSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 7:00pm.
on News Declassified and Approved for Release, 10 April 2004 Bin Ladin Determined To Strike in US Clandestine, foreign government, and media reports indicate Bin Ladin since 1997 has wanted to conduct terrorist attacks in the US. Bin Ladin implied in US television interviews in 1997 and 1998 that his followers would follow the example of World Trade Center bomber Ramzi Yousef and "bring the fighting to America." After US missile strikes on his base in Afghanistan in 1998, Bin Ladin told followers he wanted to retaliate in Washington, according to a ...(redacted portion) ... service. An Egyptian Islamic Jihad (EIJ) operative told an ... (redacted portion) ... service at the same time that Bin Ladin was planning to exploit the operative's access to the US to mount a terrorist strike. The millennium plotting in Canada in 1999 may have been part of Bin Ladin's first serious attempt to implement a terrorist strike in the US. Convicted plotter Ahmed Ressam has told the FBI that he conceived the idea to attack Los Angeles International Airport himself, but that Bin Ladin lieutenant Abu Zubaydah encouraged him and helped facilitate the operation. Ressam also said that in 1998 Abu Zubaydah was planning his own US attack. Ressam says Bin Ladin was aware of the Los Angeles operation. Although Bin Ladin has not succeeded, his attacks against the US Embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998 demonstrate that he prepares operations years in advance and is not deterred by setbacks. Bin Ladin associates surveilled our Embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam as early as 1993, and some members of the Nairobi cell planning the bombings were arrested and deported in 1997. Al-Qa'ida members -- including some who are US citizens -- have resided in or traveled to the US for years, and the group apparently maintains a support structure that could aid attacks. Two al-Qa'ida members found guilty in the conspiracy to bomb our Embassies in East Africa were US citizens, and a senior EIJ member lived in California in the mid-1990s. A clandestine source said in 1998 that a Bin Ladin cell in New York was recruiting Muslim-American youth for attacks. We have not been able to corroborate some of the more sensational threat reporting, such as that from a ... (redacted portion) ... service in 1998 saying that Bin Ladin wanted to hijack a US aircraft to gain the release of "Blind Shaykh" 'Umar 'Abd al-Rahman and other US-held extremists. Nevertheless, FBI information since that time indicates patterns of suspicious activity in this country consistent with preparations for hijackings or other types of attacks, including recent surveillance of federal buildings in New York. The FBI is conducting approximately 70 full field investigations throughout the US that it considers Bin Ladin-related. CIA and the FBI are investigating a call to our Embassy in the UAE in May saying that a group of Bin Ladin supporters was in the US planning attacks with explosives. It's not my fault. I was forcedSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 5:48pm.
on Seen online I read Wonkette. I am proud to state that I've never considered Matt Drudge's sexual orientation one way or the other. Having now been forced to do so, I have to say the idiot that started the conversation Wonkette posted has probably lost a hero. And I'll be chuckling off and on for the rest of the evening. EasterSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 5:38pm.
on Tech Well, tomorrow is the high holy day of Christiandom. This means I'm expecting everyone to be offline so (barring something momentous or my finding out where to get a copy of the 8/6/01 PDB) blogging will be light. I'll be wrapping up the official production MTClient 1.5 release and deciding if my next immediate project will be practical or educational. This is actually pretty coolSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 2:30pm.
on Seen online The World As Blog. And the code that it's build with is free for non-commercial use. Of course, if every blog had geocoding (like P6 does) the poor boy's system would likely explode. Just because the phenomenon is familiar to me as wellSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 1:37pm.
on Race and Identity
PredictionSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 1:03pm.
on Politics Thus begins my education about Republican politics in the real world. You'll dump it within three years. Unlike newspapers I always let you know when a post is just a press releaseSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 12:23pm.
on Economics Press Release from United for a Fair Economy Bush Tax Cuts = Tax Shifts DOWNLOAD THE REPORT HERE: Shifty Tax Cuts (PDF) BOSTON — A new report, entitled “Shifty Tax Cuts: How They Move the Tax Burden off the Rich and onto Everyone Else,” from United for a Fair Economy (UFE) indicates that between 2002 and 2004, the Bush tax cuts to the top 1% of US income earners redirected billions of dollars in revenue that could have eliminated virtually all of the budget shortfalls in the states. “Congress had the option to send aid to the states to prevent $200 billion worth of service cuts and regressive tax increases,” said Chris Hartman, UFE’s research director. “Instead, they gave tax breaks totaling roughly the same amount to multi-millionaires and the rest of the top 1%.” The report identifies five main areas of shifting tax burden: FEDERAL TO STATE — a 15% shift in tax burden between 2000 and 2003 PROGRESSIVE TO REGRESSIVE — at the federal level, a 17% decline in the share of revenue from progressive taxes and a 135% increase in the share of revenue from regressive taxes since 1962 WEALTH TO WORK — A tax cut on unearned income — such as inheritance or investment — of between 31% and 79%, but a tax hike on work income of 25% since 1980 CORPORATIONS TO INDIVIDUALS — a 67% drop in the share of federal revenues contributed by corporations and a 17% rise in individuals’ share CURRENT TAXPAYERS TO FUTURE GENERATIONS — record deficits that shift the tax burden to our children and grandchildren “When President Bush and Congress trumpet, ‘Here’s a tax cut', we say, ‘Taxpayer beware!’ said Chuck Collins, United for a Fair Economy co-founder. “Unless you are super-rich, it’s a tax SHIFT, not a cut. Non-wealthy taxpayers will pay for these tax cuts with increased state and local taxes or cuts in public services.” “Between 2002 and 2004, a full $197 billion in new tax breaks went to the top 1% of American taxpayers,” Hartman commented. “This is money that has disappeared into the pockets of the very wealthy, making it unavailable to solve ongoing budget crises at the state and local levels.” “I got a rebate check last summer for $400,” said Collins. “Then my eight-year-old’s public school asked me to contribute money to replace worn-out chairs for the students. At the same time, I found out they laid off the librarian because of budget cuts. What good is a $400 tax cut when parents have to cough up additional money for chairs and books or else see their children go without?” The report concludes that the total federal, state and local tax burden has become increasingly the responsibility of middle-and low-income families in recent decades, and that revenues being generated by taxes are not sufficient to pay for existing public services. Work in particular is being taxed at a higher rate than investment. “I do a lot of work in predominantly Latino areas of Boston,” said UFE Education Specialist Gloribell Mota. “Residents there are the working poor — they have jobs and pay taxes — yet are getting pennies in tax cuts and seeing health care services they depend on slashed.” “The Bush administration has followed a strategy of starving public services by pulling tax money away from education and housing and giving it away to multi-millionaires,” said Karen Kraut, UFE’s State Tax Partnership director. “States are suffering as a result, and people are going without essential services in order to fund the lifestyles of the rich.” The report calls for tax reforms to improve the fairness of tax distribution and ensure adequate revenues. Concerned Americans are urged to pass resolutions in their cities and towns to stop the tax cuts and restore local services that have been affected, to call and write their congressional representatives to take action to stop the cuts, and to sign the Tax Fairness Pledge at www.ResponsibleWealth.org/taxpledge. The co-authors of the report are Chuck Collins, UFE Co-founder; Chris Hartman, UFE Research Director; Karen Kraut, Director of UFE’s State Tax Partnerships; and Gloribell Mota, UFE Education Specialist. United for a Fair Economy is an independent national non-profit that raises awareness of growing economic inequality. Kind of obviousSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 12:17pm.
on Seen online For Welfare Reform to Work, Jobs Must be Available As Congress debates significant changes to the Personal Responsibility and Work Reconciliation Act, commonly known as welfare reform, they should take into account the hardships that higher unemployment has caused for low-income women and their families. Wanting to be off welfare is not enough; the labor market must provide employment opportunities. Although the recession was relatively brief, from March to November 2001, the labor market continued to shed jobs until late summer 2003. Since then, job growth has been paltry at best and the unemployment rate of less educated women and single female heads of households remains high. I'd love to hear Scalia explainSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 12:00pm.
on News Antonin Scalia apparently is afraid to have his soul captured.
This isn't a new thing, and it doesn't bother me so much that Scalia is subject to this particular neurosis. What bothers me is the U.S. Marshall took what I feel is an illegal action independently. Her job was to guard Scalia. She needs to stick to that. Though if you ask me it's just white flightSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 11:46am.
on Seen online I read Pedantry because is is, for the most part, an intellectual and cultural discussion. A break from the news and politics. So when Scott Martens decides an article is worth a high-level fisking, I read. Never mind that David Brooks is always an easy target. What would you think of someone who said that their debts weren't a problem, because they were sure to win the lottery before their debts caught up with them? The illusion Brooks is praising is no different in nature. So...RepublicanSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 11:44am.
on News Schwarzenegger to Keep Workers' Comp $100G April 10, 2004, 12:53 AM EDT SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has decided to keep a $100,000 contribution from a workers' compensation insurance company as he negotiates workers' comp legislation. The Republican governor had pledged not to take money from workers' comp insurers because doing so might suggest he was beholden to them while he seeks a compromise with lawmakers on curbing the rising costs of work-related injuries. Marty Wilson, who oversees a Schwarzenegger campaign committee that raises money for ballot initiatives, said donations received from workers' comp insurers after the March 2 primary election would be "promptly returned." But he said a $100,000 contribution from the American Financial Group was an exception because it was pledged before the primary. The campaign committee received the donation on March 4. Schwarzenegger suggested last month that there was no starting date for the donation policy. "We don't put a date on it, March 2 or before or after or anything like that," he said. Most appropriateSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 11:40am.
on Seen online Diane Warth at Karmalized has posted a most appropriate poem for these days and times: Let America Be America Again
Check Karmalized for the whole poem. Ask a stupid questionSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 11:31am.
on Economics Yesterday I said I know this is important. I don't know if it's good or bad. Well, I got my answer.
Come on. How stupid can you be?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 8:57am.
on Seen online Strip-search hoax plagues fast-food outlets By Mitch Stacy, Associated Press, 4/10/2004 The caller to the Phoenix-area Taco Bell said he was a police officer and informed the manager there was a thief on the premises. Someone's pocketbook was missing, the caller said, ordering that a female customer be detained and strip-searched in a back office. But there was no theft. Investigators believe the caller was an impersonator, possibly from north Florida, who has pulled the same stunt dozens of times nationwide since 1999 with alarming success. The caller, who sometimes poses as a company official, has persuaded managers at restaurants and other stores to detain and search employees for drugs or money. Targets have included Taco Bell, McDonald's, Wendy's, Burger King, Ruby Tuesday, Applebee's, Perkins, and others. On Feb. 20, a male caller convinced managers at four Wendy's restaurants in Massachusetts to strip-search employees. The caller's motive is unknown. Because his targets are mostly restaurants, one theory is that he is a disgruntled former fast-food worker. Some investigators believe he may be a sexual deviant who enjoys exercising power over people. The searches have included male and female victims. Some businesses have been sued, and some managers have faced criminal charges. I need to find these thingsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 8:36am.
on Politics Maybe it's time to read some of the major leftie blogs again. I been slopping off. Tax Message in Treasury News Releases Assailed Democrats see the statement as political propaganda and say it violates the law. From Associated Press April 10, 2004 WASHINGTON — The Treasury Department issued a batch of tax-related news releases Friday saying America has a choice between growing the economy and raising taxes, which could hurt the recovery. Democrats immediately denounced the action as an improper use of government resources to subsidize political propaganda. Although the message is a long-held position of the Bush administration, it was the first time the department had included it at the bottom of its news releases, said Treasury Department spokesman Rob Nichols. "America has a choice: It can continue to grow the economy and create new jobs as the president's policies are doing; or it can raise taxes on American families and small businesses, hurting economic recovery and future job creation," the releases said. The message, on four different releases issued by the department, does not mention presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Sen. John F. Kerry, a critic of President Bush's tax policies, or anyone else by name. Asked whether the message was referring to Kerry, Nichols said: "No. It is a reference to anyone who suggests that raising taxes is the right thing to do. There have been many who suggest that taxes should be raised. We don't share that view." Kerry spokesman David Wade said the language appears to be an improper use of official government resources for political purposes. "Once again, there are questions to be asked about American taxpayers subsidizing political propaganda to distort the debate in our country and to whitewash President Bush's failed economic policies," Wade said. Nichols said there was nothing improper about including the message on the tax releases. "That is nonsense, baseless and groundless," he said. Democratic National Committee spokeswoman Debra DeShong said there should be an investigation to determine whether the language violates the Hatch Act, which restricts the political activities of government employees. "For them to say it's not political, you know — it looks like a duck, walks like a duck. It's not a goose," DeShong said. Growing upSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 8:29am.
on Race and Identity Stigma Against Gays Fading, Survey Finds April 11, 2004 Gays and lesbians have experienced a dramatic rise in acceptance over the last two decades, according to a new Los Angeles Times Poll. Almost seven in 10 Americans know someone who is gay or lesbian and say they would not be troubled if their elementary school-age child had a homosexual teacher. Six in 10 say they are sympathetic to the gay community, displaying an increasing inclination to view same-sex issues through a prism of societal accommodation rather than moral condemnation. On questions ranging from job discrimination to adoption to whether homosexuality is morally wrong, responses indicate that as gays and lesbians have become more open, heterosexuals in return have become more open toward them. The change has come within one generation. In two Times Polls in the mid-1980s and other data from the same era, the level of sympathy toward gays and lesbians was half what it is today. "The stigma of being gay is disappearing," said Gary Gates, a demographer at the Urban Institute in Washington. "This is a huge change. Gay people in general are feeling more comfortable in society — and society is feeling more comfortable with gay people." The fact that 69% of those polled by The Times said they know a gay or lesbian — up from 46% in 1985 — is particularly significant, Gates said. "Being gay is no longer an abstraction. It's my friend, my neighbor, my brother, my office-mate." The Times Poll showed that women tended to be slightly more sympathetic toward gays and lesbians than men, and the survey affirmed a polarization that puts liberals and conservatives at opposite ends of a broad spectrum. The poll also found a profound gulf in attitudes between older and younger Americans. Compared to those over 65, respondents between 18 and 29 were so much more favorably disposed toward gays and lesbians that, Gates said, over time, "many of these issues are simply not going to be issues any longer." Losing it 2Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 8:26am.
on News U.S. Losing Support of Key Iraqis April 10, 2004 BAGHDAD — Tough U.S. tactics in Fallouja and Shiite Muslim cities of southern Iraq are driving a wedge between the Americans and their key supporter — the 25-member Governing Council that puts an Iraqi face on the occupation and is expected to serve as the basis of a new government. One council member, angered by this week's heavy fighting in Fallouja and the prospect of a U.S. move against the militia of an anti-American Shiite cleric, suspended his membership Friday. Four others say they are ready to follow suit. A sixth council member, Adnan Pachachi, a respected former diplomat who less than three months ago had accompanied First Lady Laura Bush to the president's State of the Union address, harshly criticized U.S. actions as "illegal and totally unacceptable." From the beginning of the occupation, one of the biggest questions for U.S. authorities was how to create an indigenous leadership that would be acceptable to both the United States and the Iraqi people. The Governing Council was a tenuous solution; many Iraqis accused its members of being little more than America's puppets. But now even that backing seems on the verge of crumbling, undermining U.S. insistence that it has Iraqi support for its policies and leaving no one to hand power to, as the Bush administration insists it will, on June 30. Losing it 1Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 10, 2004 - 8:14am.
on News Thousands in Fallouja Flee; Council Totters By Tony Perry and Nicholas Riccardi April 10, 2004 FALLOUJA, Iraq — A cease-fire between U.S. Marines and insurgents collapsed less than two hours after it took effect Friday as tens of thousands of women and children fled this besieged city and occupation officials scrambled to stave off a revolt from their handpicked Governing Council. On the anniversary of the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime, authorities reported that five more U.S. troops had been killed in the last two days, bringing to 49 the number of American deaths since Sunday. As the deadliest week for U.S. troops since Hussein's ouster neared its end, Marines launched a major ground offensive this morning in Fallouja, bolstered by a third battalion that boosted troop strength from 2,500 to 3,750. Iraqi insurgents said they had taken six more hostages — two Americans and four Italians — a day after militants showed footage of three Japanese captives whom they threatened to burn unless Tokyo withdrew its troops, which are noncombat. By most accounts, the Iraqi dead numbered in the hundreds. In Fallouja, residents took advantage of a lull in the fighting to bury dozens of their dead in makeshift graves in the city's soccer stadium. As today's offensive began, at least 18 more were killed. A week of intense clashes between coalition troops and a variety of Sunni and Shiite Muslim fighters triggered concern that the coalition had lost control of the country. "The lid of the pressure cooker has come off," British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw told BBC Radio. "There is no doubt that the current situation is very serious and it is the most serious that we have faced. "It is plainly the fact today that there are larger numbers of people, and they are people on the ground, Iraqis, not foreign fighters, who are engaged in this insurgency," Straw said. No Child Not On LineSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 6:20pm.
on Cartoons Thinking inside the boxSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 6:14pm.
on Cartoons Dr. Rice testifies before the 9/11 CommissionSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 6:01pm.
on Cartoons Have a nice weekendSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 5:57pm.
on News You know, I'm almost prepared to stop talking about the Middle East. You see, the die is already cast. One makes a decision then deals with the repercussions. Decision = free will, repercussions = destiny. And we are definitely in the destiny phase…the next decision is about how to deal with the new world, not how to shape it. N Korea on 'brink of nuclear war' with US North Korea has issued its latest pronouncement in its diplomatic stoush with the United States, saying it is on the brink of nuclear war with the US. Pyongyang has dismissed the recent multilateral talks on the region as fruitless. The Korean Central News Agency says Washington is "driving the Korean peninsula to the brink of a nuclear war". It argues Pyongyang has no choice but to step up its push for nuclear weapons. In February, six nations, including North Korea and the United States, held talks in Beijing. Pyongyang is describing the negotiations as "fruitless" and blaming Washington for the lack of progress. US Vice-President Dick Cheney is about to begin a tour of the region. The nuclear crisis will be high on his agenda. The rest of the article is typical bad newsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 10:51am.
on News U.S. forces retaking Kut; gunfire undercuts halt in fighting in Fallujah (04-09) 09:44 PDT FALLUJAH, Iraq (AP) -- U.S. forces Friday said they had retaken most of a key southern city from a rebellious Shiite militia, and an American-declared halt to fighting in the embattled city of Fallujah was undercut by bursts of gunfire on the first anniversary of the fall of Baghdad. One shibboleth shot to hellSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 9:14am.
on Race and Identity Can we now stop calling on Black folks to recognize the progress we've made in civil rights while still understanding we have quite a way to go?
Okay, that's itSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 8:23am.
on Economics I been tolerant of you corporate muthafukkas so far… Most Corporations Don't Pay Over the next week, millions of individual Americans will settle up with Uncle Sam – and most corporations will skip out. A new GAO report reveals that from 1996-2000 more than 60% of U.S. corporations paid no taxes whatsoever. During the Bush Administration, things have gone from bad to worse as "corporate tax receipts have shrunk markedly as a share of overall federal revenue." Last year "they had fallen to just 7.4% of overall federal receipts, the lowest rate since 1983, and the second-lowest rate since 1934." Even corporations which do pay taxes don't pay much. Although the corporate tax rate is theoretically 35%, in 2000 "94% of U.S. corporations reported tax liabilities amounting to less than 5% of their total income." According to Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-ND) the discrepancy can be explained by "massive tax avoidance, and perhaps in many cases tax evasion." Keynote Message Presented at the 375th Annual Convocation of Quantum Griots of 2096Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 8:20am.
on Random rant Welcome to the first day of the 375th Annual Convocation of
Music reviewSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 6:52am.
on Random rant Aight by Montell Jordan is excellent. A trip down memory laneSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 6:12am.
on Politics You know, if someone really wanted to twist Condi's nipple, they might remind her that as of October 6, 2003 (or thereabouts) she has been the responsible party in the Iraq Stabilization Group.
A sudden realizationSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 5:50am.
on Random rant I've been thinking about the whole Bushista approach to communicating with the public. Assume all the standard left/progressive complaints about distortions and evasions, but beyond that the absolute refusal to acknowledge error kept striking me as awfully familiar. This morning I realized what it reminds me of: Usenet. Bush & Co. argue their position like they're in a Usenet political newsgroup. So, in an effort to assist my cohort I decided to do some research on how to deal with that type of argument. It turns out there are many styles of Usenet argumentation and it's critical to identify which particular type of asshole you're dealing with. With the assistance of Mike Reed's Flame Warrior database I have determined the archetypes of several major players in the Bush administration.
Feel free to add to the list. Final opinion on Dr. Rice's testimonySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 4:51am.
on News
Maintaining appearances without changing anyone's viewSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 4:48am.
on News Same Room, Different Views for Relatives of 9/11 Victims Published: April 9, 2004 WASHINGTON, April 8 — They sat several seats apart on Thursday, listening to President Bush's national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, testify before the Sept. 11 commission. What they had in common was suffering. But John Owens of Mineola, N.Y., whose brother, Peter, died in the World Trade Center, and April Gallop of Woodbridge, Va., an executive assistant for the Army who was injured at the Pentagon, might as well have been watching from Venus and Mars. Three hours of long questions and longer answers could not have struck them more differently. Mr. Owens nodded his head in agreement and several times applauded, while Ms. Gallop shook her head disapprovingly and often appeared skeptical. "I came here to show support for President Bush," Mr. Owens said. Ms. Gallop came looking for accountability. "I heard her responses," she said. "There was a failure to mention that mistakes were made. I didn't hear that." Together, they seemed to reflect parallel universes for a rare public accounting by an administration witness responsible for helping keep the country safe and secure. But as such, Ms. Rice was a reminder, too, of a nation still searching for someone, anyone, to blame for failures before the Sept. 11 attacks. "She is someone who can be trusted," said Ernest Strada, the mayor of Westbury, N.Y., for the last 23 years, as he left the hearing room. His son, Thomas, was killed at the trade center. "She answered candidly," Mr. Strada said. "She didn't try to dodge the questions. She serves our country well. She serves the administration well." Beverly Eckert of Stamford, Conn., whose husband, Sean Rooney, died in the trade center, was near tears in frustration and disappointment. She could not have disagreed with Mr. Strada more. "I don't think this resolved anything," Ms. Eckert said. "She didn't acknowledge the fact that this administration wasn't addressing issues and problems the right way. They asked her what she did, and she said she didn't do anything. To me, that's a lack of responsibility, a lack of accountability, and it's very troubling." Rebellion in AfghanistanSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 4:42am.
on News Quote of note:
Provincial Capital in Afghanistan Is Seized by a Warlord's Forces By CARLOTTA GALL Published: April 9, 2004 KABUL, Afghanistan, April 8 - Forces loyal to Gen. Abdul Rashid Dostum seized control of the capital of Faryab Province in northern Afghanistan on Thursday, forcing the governor to flee and drawing a sharp rebuke from President Hamid Karzai and his ministers in Kabul. The central government ordered in troops of the Afghan National Army, along with their American trainers, but they arrived too late to prevent the takeover of power. It was more a political coup than a military clash, with just some shooting in the air in the city, witnesses said. But militia loyal to General Dostum had seized control in four districts throughout the province, they said. Word on the streetSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 4:37am.
on News Quote of note:
Arabs Worry Over Extremism While Evoking Vindication By NEIL MacFARQUHAR CAIRO, April 8 — Some Arabs watching the escalating violence in Iraq expressed fear Thursday that the United States, rather than helping to stamp out extremism, might have created a new, toxic incubator for it, while others expressed satisfaction that the Americans were getting their nose bloodied. There is an almost universal sense in the Arab world that Washington is paying the price for entering Iraq with no coherent plan beyond toppling Saddam Hussein, and that the anarchy they allowed to run unchecked in the first days of occupation a year ago has never really been tamed. "Iraq appears to be disintegrating, and the Iraqis are not better off today than they were before the collapse of Saddam Hussein's regime," said Mohammed Kamal, a professor of political science at Cairo University. "The Americans don't have a plan on how to get out of this mess that they put themselves in." Why you think I've been harping on Rwanda?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 4:33am.
on Africa and the African Diaspora Because it's happening again. Maybe not (yet) on the scale of the disaster 10 years ago, but… Sudan and Rebels Agree to New Cease-Fire By REUTERS EL FASHER, Sudan, April 8 — The Sudanese government and two rebel groups agreed Thursday to a 45-day cease-fire and to allow relief groups access to war-torn Darfur Province. Foreign Minister Mustafa Osman Ismail said the three sides also agreed at a meeting in Chad to hold more talks in two weeks on the conflict, which has displaced hundreds of thousands of people in Darfur, a region in western Sudan along the Chad border. Arab militias have been driving African villagers off their land in Darfur in what international organizations have described as an ethnic cleansing campaign. Secretary General Kofi Annan of the United Nations said Wednesday that international military intervention might be needed to stop the conflict. Inevitable as gravitySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 4:29am.
on News Iraq Insurgency Spreads, U.S. Finds More Foes and Fewer Friends WASHINGTON, April 8 — The spreading insurgency in Iraq has drastically altered the strategic equation for the United States military. One year after United States forces fought their way into Baghdad, Americans now find themselves facing more enemies, with fewer effective allies, than they had counted on. And the military also has two new and demanding missions: subduing a restive Sunni city of about 250,000 people, and the subtle and complex job of neutralizing the militia of a radical Shiite cleric without alienating the rest of the Shiite population. Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, the commander of the American-led force in Iraq, today bluntly committed his forces to a sustained campaign to do both. The victory that seemed to be sealed when American armor rolled into Baghdad a year ago now appears to hang in the balance as American forces do battle with a diverse array of insurgents and militias. I know this is important. I don't know if it's good or badSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 4:24am.
on Economics $80 Billion Pension Bill Is Approved by the Senate WASHINGTON, April 8 - The Senate delivered American companies more than $80 billion in pension savings Thursday, sending President Bush legislation that provides additional relief to steel companies and some airlines that had clamored for the help. …The legislation, a top priority of business groups, saves companies substantial amounts on their pension plans by changing the way their required contributions are calculated. The legislation ends a requirement that contributions be tied to interest rates on 30-year Treasury bonds; it substitutes a rate based on a composite of long-term corporate bonds for 2004 and 2005. A separate provision grants an estimated $1.6 billion in savings to airlines and steel companies with weak pension plans by allowing them to pay only 20 percent of what they would have to provide under requirements to bolster their pension funds. Some of the nation's largest airlines were the beneficiaries of the bulk of those savings, with United Airlines the primary winner. All the companies were pressing for the bill to become law before new quarterly payments come due April 15. The changes would have no effect on the amount of pensions that individual retirees receive. Opponents of the legislation said they were not contesting the aid to the company pension funds; their complaint was that the Bush administration and Republican Congressional leaders had given short shrift to so-called multiemployer pension plans that are having problems of their own because of stock market losses and a weak economy. Democrats led by Senator Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts said the union pension plans were largely denied government help at the behest of White House and Republican lawmakers controlling negotiations to reconcile the House and Senate bills. The Senate had previously voted overwhelmingly to extend the relief to multiemployer plans. This should mean California gets released from all those usurous contractsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 4:20am.
on Economics Reliant and 4 Officers Indicted in California Energy Shortage WASHINGTON, April 8 (Reuters) - A federal grand jury returned an indictment on Thursday charging a unit of the energy company Reliant Resources and four of its officers with driving up electricity prices in California by creating a false shortage. The indictment charged Reliant Energy Services and Jackie Thomas, a former vice president of Reliant's power trading division; Reggie Howard, a former director of the trading division; Lisa Flowers, a term trader for the trading division, and Kevin Frankeny, Reliant's manager for Western operations. The company and executives were charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and commodities manipulation, wire fraud and manipulation and attempted manipulation of the price of a commodity in interstate commerce. According to the indictment, Reliant Energy Services and its officers and employees intentionally drove up the price of electricity in California during June of 2000 by shutting off its power generation to create the false appearance of a shortage. The indictment said the plan worked and Reliant Energy Services reaped millions in illegal profits. The Justice Department said the charges were the first ever brought against a corporate entity for engaging in fraudulent and manipulative trading practices during the California energy crisis of 2000-2001. The indictment says that Reliant was faced with a potential multimillion dollar loss in June 2000 when prices in the electricity markets fell sharply. In order to reverse its losing position, the defendants devised a scheme to force the price of electricity up by shutting off most of the company's power plants, thus creating the appearance of an electricity shortage, the indictment contends. Reliant then disseminated false and misleading information to the market that wrongly attributed the shutdowns to environmental limitations and maintenance problems, according to the indictment. I am among the criticsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 4:18am.
on Africa and the African Diaspora A Decade After Massacres, Rwanda Outlaws Ethnicity KIGALI, Rwanda, April 8 — Although he is not a government spokesman, Ernest Twahrwa can recite Rwanda's official view toward ethnicity with great precision: "There is no ethnicity here. We are all Rwandan." Mr. Twahrwa, a Hutu, is halfway through a six-week government re-education camp set up to purge him and other former fighters of any ethnic ideologies that they may still harbor from 1994, when extremist Hutu massacred 800,000 Tutsi and moderate Hutu. "They're trying to change what we think," Mr. Twahrwa said. "There have been many changes in this country. I need to change too. I need to be a new person." This country, where ethnic tensions were whipped up into a frenzy of killing, is now trying to make ethnicity a thing of the past. There are no Hutu in the new Rwanda. There are no Tutsi either. The government, dominated by the minority Tutsi, has wiped out the distinctions by decree. The re-education camp is one way of driving the point home to people who once lived by the motto "Hutu power." As Hutu fighters who fled to Congo after 1994 return to Rwanda they are sent to the camp. Along with civics they are taught some hands-on skills like carpentry. They leave with $75 and, at least in theory, a whole new way of thinking. That new thinking has its critics — those who say that denying that ethnicity exists merely suppresses the painful ethnic dialogue that Rwanda requires. A civil war in Iraq is not the worst possibilitySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 9, 2004 - 4:17am.
on News The worst possibility is an Iraq unified against the occupation. Signs That Shiites and Sunnis Are Joining to Fight Americans Officials fear that the growing uprising against the occupation is forging a new level of cooperation between Shiite and Sunni Muslims. The definition of threat reportingSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 3:51pm.
on News If you want to know what it would take to move the Bushstas into action, check the end of the post. They want to have their hand held as they walk up to the threat. RICE: Once again, on the August 6th memorandum to the president, this was not threat-reporting about what was about to happen. This was an analytic piece that stood back and answered questions from the president. But as to the principals meetings... ROEMER: It has six or seven things in it, Dr. Rice, including the Ressam case when he attacked the United States in the millennium. RICE: Yes, these are his... ROEMER: Has the FBI saying that they think that there are conditions. RICE: No, it does not have the FBI saying that they think that there are conditions. It has the FBI saying that they observed some suspicious activity. That was checked out with the FBI. ROEMER: That is equal to what might be... RICE: No. ROEMER: ... conditions for an attack. RICE: Mr. Roemer, Mr. Roemer, threat reporting... ROEMER: Would you say, Dr. Rice, that we should make that PDB a public document... RICE: Mr. Roemer... ROEMER: ... so we can have this conversation? RICE: Mr. Roemer, threat reporting is: We believe that something is going to happen here and at this time, under these circumstances. This was not threat reporting. WowSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 12:15pm.
on Seen online I was just a The American Leftist where I picked up this quote from Raed Jarrar, an Iraqi in Jordan: I wanted to read it in context; thought it might be amusing. It ain't, not really. I have to admit Jesse is pretty cleverSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 11:01am.
on Politics Not like you didn't know.
Everyone's got an opinionSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 10:58am.
on News Maybe Its Time to Go... May be this is not my business, and in fact there was a time when I taught it was indeed not my business, but the more I hear and see pictures of the quagmire into which the Americans and their allies in the Coalition have found themselves in Iraq, I can not help but get involved. …May be its time for George Bush Junior to bite the dust and say its all over, for how many more body bags does he have to receive at the White House to make him believe that he is not going to achieve anything out of that venture? Yes there may be talk of a democracy, but it remains to be seen what kind of democracy it will be. Waiting until the end of June is like waiting for the number of casualties in Iraq to reach a certain figure before he call it quits, which they are nevertheless determined to do. What will become of Iraq after their departure is everyones guess, and we can only pray that all goes well for the poor and innocent people. Playing dumbSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 10:56am.
on Africa and the African Diaspora
Around 8 PM local time on the evening of April 6th, 1994 the plane carrying President Juvenal Habyarimana of Rwanda and Cyprien Ntaryamira of Burundi was shot down over Kigali, Rwanda as the presidents returned from a summit of regional leaders in Tanzania. Both men died, as did their senior aides and the French aircrew. Within hours, the Presidential Guard was out on the streets setting up roadblocks in Kigali and going house-to-house to find and attack prominent Rwandan opposition leaders and Tutsi civilians. As Lt. Gen. Dallaire, the UN commander in Rwanda, recalls "In just a few hours, the Presidential Guard had conducted an obviously well-organized and well-executed plan--by noon on April 7 the moderate political leadership of Rwanda was dead or in hiding, the potential for a future moderate government utterly lost." The genocide in Rwanda had begun. I was going to rag on Condi's testimontSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 10:27am.
on Politics But of course the Center for American Progress beat me to it. Only today the Progress Report is a bit late to the web. That's why you need to get it by email, like me. Anyway, check today's coverage for links to the fact-checking they applied, for instance: CLAIM: "While we were developing this new strategy to deal with al-Qaida, we also made decisions on a number of specific anti-al-Qaida initiatives that had been proposed by Dick Clarke." FACT: Rice's statement finally confirms what she previously – and inaccurately – denied. She falsely claimed on 3/22/04 that "No al-Qaida plan was turned over to the new administration." [Washington Post, 3/22/04] CLAIM: "When threat reporting increased during the Spring and Summer of 2001, we moved the U.S. Government at all levels to a high state of alert and activity." FACT: Documents indicate that before Sept. 11, 2001, the Bush Administration "did not give terrorism top billing in their strategic plans for the Justice Department, which includes the FBI." Gen. Henry H. Shelton, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff until Oct. 1, 2001, said during the summer, terrorism had moved "farther to the back burner" and recounted how the Bush Administration's top two Pentagon appointees, Donald Rumsfeld and Paul Wolfowitz, "shut down" a plan to weaken the Taliban. Similarly, Gen. Don Kerrick, who served in the Bush White House, sent a memo to the new Administration saying "We are going to be struck again" by al Qaeda, but he never heard back. He said terrorism was not "above the waterline. They were gambling nothing would happen." [Sources: Washington Post, 3/22/04; LA Times, 3/30/04] Shit for brainsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 9:49am.
on Race and Identity Self-proclaimed 'black Confederate' walking 'path to peace, racial reconciliation' By RICHARD WALKER, T&D Staff Writer and DONNA L. HOLMAN, T&D Correspondent Carrying his Confederate flag, one North Carolinian who passed through Orangeburg Tuesday says he has a vision that some day all Americans will be enlightened to the truth. Having made marches across many sections of the country previously during his "March to the Sea" that has a dual purpose, H.K. Edgerton said he is proud to be a black Confederate American. "On this particular trip, I am on my way to the burial (Hunley funeral) in Charleston," Edgerton said. "We are raising funds for heritage defense for the Southern Legal Resource Center, a non-profit civil rights law firm that fights heritage violations against the Christian Cross of St. Andrew." Well. Isn't this special?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 8:50am.
on Race and Identity Donna, the obnoxious fuck that's selling the things, has three stores in North Carolina selling them. eBay, to their credit, pulled the shirt from their site. Donna says "Once again our First Amendment Right to free speech has been trodden upon," which means it has no clue what those first amendment rights are or mean. IMMEDIATELY AFTER POSTING: I delinked the picture from the site. No sense inciting the lurking racist bastards. But here's some history on its creation:
And Yow's response is what you'd expect:
The "silent majority" responds as well:
Keep Alan Stockard in mind the next time someone says the Confederate battle flag is about "persuhvin ouah hur-tige." Like I said, time to get started peopleSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 8:44am.
on Politics You want progress? Time ta git hard. Make them scared of your vote. What Will Drive Black Voters to Polls? One expert says voters have to ask themselves whether they are better off now than they were four years ago By Joyce Jones …For Republicans and Democrats, the votes of African American voters, who have been Democratic Party faithful for years, will count more than ever. “I think turnout is going to be extraordinary,” says Hilary Shelton, who heads the NAACP’s Washington office. “Blacks turned out in record numbers in 2000, and I think they see this election as much more crucial.” If primary results are any indication, Shelton is right. While lamenting that Kerry is not more “Clintonesque,” African Americans gave him strong support. He is not warm and fuzzy, but does claim to feel black America’s pain, and that pain will drive them to the polls this fall. “There’s a perception that Bush and the Republican Party back policy and policy changes that are not positive for African Americans,” says Robert Brown, a political scientist and assistant dean at Emory College at Emory University. “I can’t think of an issue that would be so compelling it would cause large numbers of blacks to support Bush.” It is said that all politics are local, but blacks from coast-to-coast are confronting the same crises, with jobs topping the list. In a poll conducted by brilliant corners Research & Strategies, 47% of college-educated African American men cited jobs as the most important election issue. “It’s an amazing number that denotes a great deal of angst around jobs and job security from a group of voters who you would think should be more secure economically,” says the firm’s president, Cornell Belcher. “If you look at exit polling from the last two cycles, African American men are the ones dropping out of the electorate at a fairly fast rate, so the ability to speak to them honestly will be important,” particularly in such states as Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Florida. “[Black votes] could very well turn the tide in those states alone,” adds Belcher. Time to get started, peopleSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 8:40am.
on Politics Registered to vote? No? Take you lazy butt to BlackEnterprise.com and register online.
Come on. You're online now, or you couldn't read this. And you don't even have to get out of your chair Political Tourette SyndromeSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 7:10am.
on Politics Condi got it. Not as bad as The Coulter Thing or The Ingraham Clone, but she got it. We now know, btw, that "threat reporting" must have a specificity of time, place and players that means there has never been a threat report issued in the hsutory of the USofA. Naaaaaasty questionSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 6:59am.
Kerry: The president said he was "tired of swatting flies." Can you tell me one fly he swatted in reference to Al Qaida?…Why didn't we respond to the Cole? Why didn't we swat that fly? But I will pause and say Dr. Rice is handling herself as well as I expected. MAD long answers to Kerry (who just asked her not to filibuster him because he only has 10 minutes and she's DEFINITELY staying on message. The more she drags out her answers, the fewer questions can be asked. Sometime in the last few days I heard a commentator suggest that had Dr. Rice testified the same day as Mr. Clarke did it would have been entirely difference, Said commentator was right. She's good, and the truth is less incompetence in responding to criticism and there'd have been much less criticism. You can tell the political party of the questioner from Condi's answersSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 6:52am.
on Politics Somehow, Dr. Rice's answers to Democratic commission members are so long they only got to ask three questions, while Republican commission members get six or seven. Yes or no, dammit!Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 5:51am.
on Politics The crowd applauded when Richard Ben-Veniste tried to shortcut Condi's overextended answer to a yes-no question. She ain't having it, but neither is he. He's leaning on the Aug 6 PDB, and I'm feeling exactly why they didn't want that thing declassified. The title alone (which they couldn't even speak aloud until today) is damning. Condi: 9:37Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 5:24am.
on Politics She says Rummy and Wolfowitz were the ones that raised the issue of invading Iraq while planning the Afghanistan war. 9: 40 - Lee Hamilton is asking about foot-dragging on developing terrorism policy, quoting all the testimony about the apparent low priority terrorism by Al Qaida was given. Part of her answer, as regards that Bob Woodward quote (didn't see them as a high priority) was an attempt to put that quote into context. She said the full quote was about pre-9/11 attempts to kill bin Laden, something like "I didn't see it as a priority, my blood wasn't as boiling." Think Howard Dean. You want a president that needs boiling blood? 9:46 - She says they only showed 33 principles meetings, not the 100 that everyone else says took place. Condi's prepared statementsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 5:15am.
on Politics At 9:25 I haven't heard her mention Iraq yet. It's all Pakistan, Afghanistan, Taliban and Al Qaida. I can't wait for the transcript for this one. So far the big dispute is going to be who initiated what. Clarke says he told Condi this or that needs be done, and Condi says she told Clarke to do this or that. Roy Blunt need to put down that blunt before writing.Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 4:07am.
on Economics Rep. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., is House majority whip, the third-ranking House Republican. Tax cuts are not 'spending' With deficits rising as a result of the war on terror and a faltering economy, the House has passed a budget for 2005 that will cut the deficit in half in four years and continue pro-growth tax-relief policies to make our economic recovery last. One important component of the debate on spending is budget reform, and House Republicans are pushing for greater efforts to rein in spending by rooting out waste, fraud and abuse in federal programs. In fact, this budget mandates that five House committees must find $13.2 billion in wasteful federal spending in their areas of oversight over five years. We also want to see all new federal spending paid for. In other words, if you want to propose a new program, you also need to propose a way to pay for it. House Republicans believe in this pay-as-you-go approach, known in Congress as PAYGO, as a realistic way to slash the deficit. What we don't want to see, however, is PAYGO for tax relief. House Republicans don't believe that tax relief is "spending." To spend money, it must first be yours. To us, tax relief is simply returning a family's hard-earned money. So...when you take out a mortgage you haven't actually spent the money on the house. Boy, an adjustment like that would do wonders for the GNP figures. But you know what? I'll take it...IF you admit that voting against tax cuts isn't voting for a tax increase. Youcan't have it both ways. And seriously. Lay off the chronic. Statistics vs quality of lifeSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 4:04am.
on Economics Been a while since I used that title. TOTALLY appropriate, though. Mondo Washington by James Ridgeway Bush’s Unemployment Line Newest labor statistics show that at least snow jobs are on the rise April 6th, 2004 11:57 AM In his weekend radio broadcast, Bush spoke of "powerful confirmation" that his prized economic recovery is turning out to be a godsend across-the-board, with the Labor Department reporting 308,000 new jobs in March, the highest monthly job growth number since spring 2000. Added Bush: "And since August, we've added over three-quarters of a million new jobs in America. The unemployment rate has fallen from 6.3 percent last June to 5.7 percent last month." But the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a respected liberal think tank in Washington, was quick to point out, "Americans are working less, not more, due to shorter average work weeks. The rise in the number of payroll jobs was more than canceled out by a decline in the number of hours worked in the average payroll job." Citing the Labor Department as its source, the think tank noted, "The total number of hours worked by all Americans in payroll jobs declined in March." In addition, the think tank said, "The gain of 308,000 new jobs was canceled out by equally large losses in self-employment . . . and the percentage of Americans at work is the lowest for any March in 10 years." It also pointed out that the ranks of the long-term unemployed—those who have been out of work for more than 26 weeks and are still looking for a job—rose by 117,000 in March. A little from the other sideSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 3:59am.
on Africa and the African Diaspora Rwanda's Latest Ethnic Cleansing~ Today marks the 10th anniversary of the beginning of the Rwandan genocide. While the world looked on unashamed, the Hutu Power movement went on a 100-day killing spree to exterminate the minority Tutsi population and any political opposition by moderate Hutus. It took a Tutsi-led rebel force called the Rwandan Patriotic Front to put an end to the killing and start the long, slow process of rebuilding this small African nation. Over the past 10 years, the RPF—now the democratically elected government—has made incredible progress in Rwanda. It has established a government dedicated to "unity and reconciliation" whose rhetoric is high-minded and enlightened. Women make up a greater percentage of the Rwandan parliament then anywhere else in the world (they are required by law to fill 30 percent of all government positions). And security in Rwanda is impressive; I feel safer walking around the streets of Kigali at night than I do in my Brooklyn neighborhood. …If such social engineering could ever work, Rwanda—a country where insensate respect for authority has often been cited as a main reason why so many people could suddenly turn around and kill neighbors, friends, even family members—is the place. But in fact, ethnicity is as present as ever in Rwanda. If Rwandans don't use the words "Tutsi" and "Hutu," it's because they've found other ways of saying them. Take, for example, rescapé—roughly, "survivor"—the widely used term for those who escaped the genocide. Rescapé is reserved solely for Tutsis. In a recent interview in Kigali, my translator—without prompting—told a Hutu woman who had suggested that she herself was a rescapé that such a thing was impossible because she wasn't Tutsi. She looked at him, and then at me, with a mixture of confusion and pain. She'd done time in the refugee camps, lost family members, fought off rape attempts, and was now dirt-poor after 10 years of supporting her husband in jail. In her mind, she was a survivor. "But maman, survivors are only Tutsis," my translator explained once more—again without prompting. Reflecting on Rwandan lessonsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 3:54am.
on Africa and the African Diaspora Reflecting on Rwandan lessons CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. - Ten years ago this week in Rwanda, thousands of hate-filled Hutu extremists launched a well organized, 100-day campaign of killing that left more than 800,000 of their countrymen dead. Most of those killed, raped, and mutilated were Tutsis - the rest were pro-coexistence Hutus. The features of that genocide should cause everyone, in Rwanda and internationally, to reflect on the terrifying capacity of humans to perpetrate acts of great cruelty, or to turn a callous, deliberately blind eye when such acts are committed against others. Just to put the horror in stark statistical context, Rwanda's daily murder rate was several times greater than at the height of the Holocaust in Europe. But in Rwanda, unlike the Holocaust, the killing was low-tech and personal. The Hutu killers "worked" close up with machetes and nail-studded clubs, and only sometimes at an impersonal distance with guns or grenades. Hundreds of thousands of Hutu Rwandans participated in what seemed to many of them to be a somehow "necessary" activity. Alcohol and peer pressure both played a part in egging them on. Leading institutions in society, including many government and local church leaders, either participated directly or condoned the killings. In those circumstances, it is noteworthy that many Hutus stood aside from the pressure to participate: More than 150,000 of them lost their lives for that act of courage. Today, Rwanda has a Tutsi-dominated government that is dedicated to rebuilding the links between the country's main communities: the Hutu majority (84 percent), the Tutsis (15 percent), and Twa Pygmies (1 percent). This project faces many obstacles, including the legacies left by the genocide, the minority nature of the government, Rwanda's chronic poverty, and its location in a very unstable part of Africa. Now this is an extraordinarily talented apologistSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 3:47am.
on Politics He says nothing I haven't heard before but he says that nothing SO smoothly... Learning to Expect the Unexpected By NASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB The 9/11 commission has drawn more attention for the testimony it has gathered than for the purpose it has set for itself. Today the commission will hear from Condoleezza Rice, national security adviser to President Bush, and her account of the administration's policies before Sept. 11 is likely to differ from that of Richard Clarke, the president's former counterterrorism chief, in most particulars except one: it will be disputed. There is more than politics at work here, although politics explains a lot. The commission itself, with its mandate, may have compromised its report before it is even delivered. That mandate is "to provide a `full and complete accounting' of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 and recommendations as to how to prevent such attacks in the future." It sounds uncontroversial, reasonable, even admirable, yet it contains at least three flaws that are common to most such inquiries into past events. To recognize those flaws, it is necessary to understand the concept of the "black swan." A black swan is an outlier, an event that lies beyond the realm of normal expectations. Most people expect all swans to be white because that's what their experience tells them; a black swan is by definition a surprise. Nevertheless, people tend to concoct explanations for them after the fact, which makes them appear more predictable, and less random, than they are. Our minds are designed to retain, for efficient storage, past information that fits into a compressed narrative. This distortion, called the hindsight bias, prevents us from adequately learning from the past. Well, I never!Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 3:40am.
on News 18 Arrested in Lucrative Prostitution Ring Out of Staten Island Eighteen men and women were arrested yesterday on charges that they helped run a sophisticated prostitution ring that masked its operation behind a series of corporate fronts and escort services with names like Gentlemen's Delight, Day Dreams and Personal Touch, officials said. Records that were seized in a search at the home of one of the ring leaders indicated that the operation brought in $1.6 million in nine months, a law enforcement official said. Prosecutors from the State Organized Crime Task Force, working with the New York Police Department and the F.B.I., charged 16 people with enterprise corruption and two others with falsifying business records and promoting prostitution and money laundering. About eight midlevel managers ran the ring, which operated 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, using about 15 to 20 drivers to dispatch 30 to 40 prostitutes each day, officials said. In most instances, customers paid $250 for sex, sometimes using credit cards. The transactions, officials said, were processed through merchant accounts held by escort services or limousine companies, and in one instance a company that hired musical bands for weddings. "This was a sophisticated and lucrative operation with a multitiered management structure," the state attorney general, Eliot Spitzer, who oversees the task force, said in a statement. "It was, however, nothing more than a prostitution ring, and now its owners and operators will be held accountable." They'll claim the questioning is partisan anywaySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 3:37am.
on News Panel May Avoid Partisanship in Public Questioning of Rice WASHINGTON, April 7 — The leaders of the commission investigating the Sept. 11 attacks urged the panel's members on Wednesday to try to avoid partisanship in their public questioning of Condoleezza Rice, President Bush's national security adviser, whose long-awaited sworn testimony could alter the public's view of her, the Bush administration and the commission itself, panel officials said. They said that at a final strategy session before the hearing on Thursday, the panel's chairman, Thomas H. Kean, the former Republican governor of New Jersey, and Lee H. Hamilton, a former Democratic House member from Indiana, asked the other eight members of the panel to try to avoid questions that suggested partisanship and that could undermine the public perceptions of the commission's work. Both men have said they are concerned about the appearance of a partisan split created at last month's testimony by Richard A. Clarke, President Bush's former counterterrorism director, who was harshly questioned by Republicans on the panel after he said that the Bush administration — and Ms. Rice, in particular — had largely ignored terrorist threats before Sept. 11, 2001. "In a very difficult atmosphere, in a town that is the most polarized I've ever seen, the commission is trying to do a job for the American people that is, to the best of our ability, nonpolitical," Mr. Kean said in an interview with The Associated Press. In a statement after its meeting on Wednesday, the panel also disclosed that it had identified 69 documents from the Clinton White House that needed to be turned over the commission by the Bush administration, which acknowledged last week that it had not turned over 10,800 pages of Clinton administration files gathered by the National Archives. A two-ferSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 3:33am.
on News 7 file class-action suit challenging `no-fly' list WASHINGTON, D.C. Seven American citizens filed a class-action lawsuit yesterday to challenge the US government's "no-fly" list, which is meant to stop suspected terrorists from boarding planes. All seven say that they have been wrongly placed on the US Transportation Security Administration's "no-fly" list because their names are similar or identical to names on the list. The lawsuit, filed by the American Civil Liberties Union, demands that the government remove their names so that they can travel on planes without being interrogated and searched. The seven plaintiffs, who range from a college student to a woman in the military to a retired minister, joined in the lawsuit filed against the US Department of Homeland Security and the Transportation Security Administration. (Reuters) Another snippet from the same page: Policy proposal widens drug testing methods The hair, saliva, and sweat of federal workers could be tested for drug use under a government policy proposed yesterday that could set screening standards for millions of private employers. The proposal will expand the methods to detect drug use among 1.6 million federal workers beyond urine samples. It is being implemented with an eye toward the private sector, however, because it would signal the government's approval for such testing, which many companies are awaiting before adopting their own screening programs. (AP) Just a LITTLE upward pressure on the price of oilSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 3:28am.
on News Although I have to tell you, people who buy gold as a hedge don't REALLY think things are going to collapse. The value of an inert lump of shiny metal is purely a social phenomenon and pretty low in my personal estimate. Dollar Under Pressure on Iraq Violence By Vidya Ranganathan, 4/7/2004 TOKYO (Reuters) - The dollar came under pressure on Thursday as escalating violence in Iraq and the fear of further militant attacks drove investors into safe-haven currencies and pushed up the price of gold. The euro was at $1.2188 up nearly two cents from Tuesday's lows amid reports that three days of fighting in Iraq had claimed the lives of 35 American and allied soldiers and at least 200 Iraqis. It was around $1.2175 in late U.S trade. Markets feared repercussions after the U.S. military bombed a mosque compound in the Iraqi town of Falluja and following a recent audio tape from an al Qaeda supporter exhorting followers to attack U.S. forces in Iraq. "I can only see rising violence in the Middle East. That is one of my reasons for believing that it is not a question of if but when something will happen in the U.S. or U.K.," said Lee Boon Keng, economist with DBS Bank in Singapore. "Certainly Iraq has gone out of control." We wouldn't have no problems if it wasn't for outside aggitatorsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 3:23am.
on News This ought to sound REAL familiar to those who saw the civil rights struggle. And don't ass up on me and claim I'm equating the Iraq insurgency to the civil rights movement because it's the government rhetoric I'm comparing not the motivation of the government's opponents. White House Blames Minority Extremists in Iraq By Steve Holland, 4/7/2004 CRAWFORD, Texas (Reuters) - The White House on Wednesday blamed "minority extremist elements" in Iraq for a deadly upsurge in fighting that pits U.S. forces against Sunnis and Shi'ites and said a militant Shi'ite cleric could help end the violence by surrendering. President Bush got two updates on the fighting in videoconference calls with top advisers who make up the National Security Council. These included the U.S. civilian leader in Iraq, Paul Bremer, and Gen. John Abizaid, chief of U.S.-led military forces there. Bremer had canceled a trip to Washington to brief U.S. lawmakers. U.S. officials said Bush wanted to make sure military commanders have the resources they need and discussed troop levels with the commanders. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld announced in Washington afterward that the imminent departure of some U.S. troops from Iraq may be delayed beyond their promised one-year tours. It's the prosecutor's mental health history that concerns meSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 3:21am.
on News Plea bargain for mom in C-section case SALT LAKE CITY -- A woman charged with murder for allegedly delaying a Caesarean section that could have saved one of her twins pleaded guilty Wednesday to child endangerment in a deal with prosecutors. Under the plea bargain, prosecutors are recommending no prison time for Melissa Ann Rowland, 28. They said they dropped the murder charge based on her "mental health history." "We don't think two felony convictions is a slap on the hand," District Attorney David Yocom said. "We felt this was a reasonable and just result." Sentencing was set for April 29. Yocom would not disclose details about Rowland's mental health. Rowland has said she never intended to kill her baby and was not informed she needed immediate surgery to save the babies' lives. She disputed prosecutors' allegations she was worried about a scar from the surgery, saying she delivered two previous children through C-sections. In court Wednesday, she admitted using cocaine in the weeks before she finally underwent the C-section that produced a stillborn boy. The second child, a girl who survived and has been adopted, had cocaine and alcohol in her system. Legal experts said they do not know of any other instance in the United States in which a woman was charged with murder for refusing or delaying a C-section. I'm not impressedSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 3:18am.
on News When they stop lying to Africans about AIDS and condoms, I might consider listening. O'Malley confronts 'culture of death' Describing the United States as a "hostile, alien environment" for Catholics, Archbishop Sean P. O'Malley yesterday exhorted Boston priests to do a better job preaching to a society he described as characterized by "a culture of death . . . consumerism, hedonism, [and] individualism." O'Malley, at one of the signal moments of his first Holy Week in Boston, told hundreds of priests at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross that they must speak out clearly about "public issues" and "social causes" because "no one will follow an uncertain trumpet blast." He did not refer directly to the church's current public policy battle -- its effort to prevent the legalization of same-sex marriage -- but said the church's teachings about life and family are "essential for civilization in the long run." He quoted the apostle Paul as saying "the word of God cannot be changed." It's about damn timeSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 8, 2004 - 2:41am.
on Race and Identity It only took since, what, 1964. US to review state records on minority contractors The Federal Highway Administration will begin poring over records and procedures at the state's minority business certification office this month amid allegations that politically connected companies have been improperly certified and later obtained lucrative subcontracts on the Big Dig and other projects, state and federal officials said yesterday. The first federal review of the State Office of Women and Minority Business Assistance will occur as federal authorities step up criminal probes in Boston and nationally to root out fraud in the Disadvantaged Business Enterprise Program, which ensures minority participation in federally funded construction work. Last week, more than two dozen agents from three US agencies searched and removed records from two North Shore demolition companies. One was Testa Corp., one of the nation's largest demolition companies; the other was PT Corp., owned by Pamela J. O'Brien, sister of Testa Corp.'s chief executive, Steven Testa. Just curiousSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 8:47pm.
on Economics Has anyone ever compared the ratio of income to disposable income for humans, to the ratio of pre-expense to post-expense income for corporations? How about the aggregate salaries paid to all employees to the aggregate pre-expense income generated by all corporations? More from The News Hour on PBSSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 8:16pm.
on Seen online From the roundtable run by Jim Lehrer: So, Colonel Lang, is there a way for U.S. forces to quickly end this violence? COL. W. PATRICK LANG: No, I don't think there is. In fact, it's understandable that the Defense Department doesn't want to build this up to look bigger than it really is. But in fact what you have around Fallujah and Ramadi is you have quite substantial numbers of Sunni Arab fighters using reasonably sophisticated weapons to try to get us to back away from them out of that town so they can declare it to be a liberated area. This would have a tremendous political effect in Iraq and across the Arab world. And now have you the Shiia starting to say well, we don't want to be excluded from this process of fighting the occupier because it might damage our political prospects. So you have that going on. This is a serious matter. Your introduction said ten cities. My information says more like 14 cities were engaged today. This is a large scale thing and it will go on for a while.
The News Hour on PBSSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 7:52pm.
on Seen online Today Gwen Ifill interviewed Tony Perry of the L.A. Times, who is embedded with the troops in Fallujah. It is available via a RealAudio stream. It is not as happy sounding as the last set of embedded reports. For instance 1:55 into the stream they discuss that mosque that was bombed, killing some 40 people…but it turns out they cratered the ground in front of the mosque and when the gunfire stopped there were no dead or wounded Iraqis around. Perry says either they took all their dead and wounded with them or no one was killed at all. The most irrelevant post ever to appear hereSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 5:47pm.
on Seen online Old heads only. The other day I got a link to www.rime.org, the inheritor of the BBS network I used to hang on. Several free associations later I decided to google "bbs tagline." See, we used to use these offline readers like Qwkmail and EZ-Reader, that has like 60 characters available for a sig and as a result produced some of the tightest humor I've seen to this day. My favorite remains: closely followed by Foolproofing assumes a finite number of fools. I found a site that has all of them. Yes, all the taglines you saw back in the day. Ten or more cities are in the mix nowSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 3:49pm.
on News Growing GOP Dissent on Iraq President Bush is facing increasing dissent among leading conservative politicians and pundits in the face of mounting U.S. casualties in Iraq. The war has become the long slog that some Republicans feared. Since Sunday, 32 Americans have been killed in fighting across Iraq. American body bags are on the front page of major U.S. newspapers. The Washington Post and The New York Times brandished images of charred U.S. civilian remains last week. The networks are leading their nightly news broadcasts with stories of dead Americans. "If we have two or three more weeks of this you are going to start to see Republican members of Congress who have never been critical of President Bush and the Iraq policy starting to get that way," said Charles Cook, editor of the nonpartisan Cook Political Report. Republican Party ranks are beginning to break and the White House is worried. Longtime GOP critics on Iraq are growing progressively more vocal in their condemnation. Regardless of what they call it, a troop increase is comingSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 3:43pm.
on News U.S. Troops May Face Extended Iraq Tours -Pentagon WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Some U.S. troops due to return home soon from battle-torn Iraq may have to stay beyond their promised one-year tours of duty, Pentagon leaders said on Wednesday. But they denied the military situation was out of control. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Air Force Gen. Richard Myers said fierce new fighting in Iraq that has left 35 U.S. and allied troops dead in three days was expected ahead of the June 30 turnover of power to an interim Iraqi government. "The answer is no," Rumsfeld said when pressed at a news conference on whether a sudden two-front war that U.S.-led forces are fighting with Sunni and Shi'ite Muslim militants meant that the military situation was out of control. "Relatively small numbers of people" are causing the violence in Iraq, he said. "You have a mixture of a small number of terrorists, a small number of militias, coupled with some demonstrations and some lawlessness. And it's a serious problem. And the problem's being worked." But Rumsfeld and Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, indicated that some of the 135,000 U.S. troops now in Iraq may be kept there beyond their planned one-year tours of duty scheduled to end soon. The Pentagon is near the end of a massive rotation of weary troops home from Iraq and fresh ones into the country under a plan that originally was designed to leave about 115,000 in Iraq beginning this summer. "Because we're in the midst of a major troop rotation, we have a planned increase in the number of U.S. troops in the Centcom (Central Command) area of responsibility and, indeed, in Iraq," Rumsfeld said. "We're taking advantage of that increase, and we will likely be managing the pace of the redeployments to allow those seasoned troops with experience and relationships with the local populations to see the current situation through," he said. Rummy said there were "only" a couple of thousand insurgents out of a population of 25 million. Haiti had "only" a couple of hundred insurgents out of a population of 7,100,000. The News HourSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 3:32pm.
on News Today's News Hour on PBS is very interesting. The topics are, of course, the latest Iraq insurgency and Dr. Rice's testimony tomorrow. I'll be pulling the transcripts, which will be available within 24 hours. A word to the wise is sufficientSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 1:53pm.
on Cartoons Trust me Scott, considerably more than five people want to hear what she has to saySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 11:03am.
on News White House criticism disputed (USATODAY.com) USATODAY.com - Dealing with criticism that national security adviser Condoleezza Rice wouldn't testify in public before the 10-member commission investigating the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, White House spokesman Scott McClellan complained last month that when she testified in private, "only five members showed up" to hear what she had to say. I would advise close consideration of your opinion on this one.Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 10:52am.
on News Quote of note:
Supreme Court's ruling marks blow to public's right to know Wed Apr 7, 6:40 AM ET By Tony Mauro The U.S. Supreme Court (news - web sites) last week struck a blow for privacy at the expense of the public's right to know. Few people will disagree with how it ruled in the awful case before it, but the public should be very concerned about what the ruling could mean for the future. The justices unanimously agreed with the Bush administration and with the family of Clinton White House aide Vince Foster that the government's graphic suicide-scene photographs of Foster should not be made public under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). The family has suffered enough, the court suggested. Five investigations have concluded that Foster died by his own hand in 1993, the court said as it dismissed the claims of conspiracy theorists who sought the release of the photos to prove that the probes were incomplete. All true enough, and yet the Supreme Court's decision is still troubling because it ultimately could poke a major hole in the FOIA, which was enacted in 1966 to open government files to the public. Hey, we made the big leaguesSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 10:51am.
on News Oakland cops under U.N.'s watchful eye Tuesday, April 06, 2004 - THERE'S NOTHING like making the list of the world's worst government violence against activists. The Oakland Police Department earned that distinction for its assault on peaceful anti-war demonstrators at the port last year. The action, in which police fired wooden dowels and shot-filled bean bags at protesters, was noted in the recent report of an investigator for the United Nations Commission on Human Rights. "This alleged incident was the subject of a letter of allegation by the Special Rapporteur on the question of torture and the Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression ..." reads the report. The question of torture, that's pretty scary. For the protesters who were hit, the unprovoked attack was a form of torture. The more seriously injured went to the hospital. One woman needed surgery. Even the less-seriously injured suffered enduring physical pain. Another woman who was hit in the back of the leg and the back of her upper arm limped for a couple of weeks and suffered pain for several months. You may have noticed I unequivocally called the action an assault on peaceful demonstrators and an unprovoked attack. While the department claimed protesters threw rocks and objects at the officers, a police video of the demonstration did not show protesters throwing anything at officers. Department spokesmen continued to claim a video shot by a television news station showed objects being thrown, but no video was ever produced. Maybe we should call the Haiti FriesSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 10:29am.
on Africa and the African Diaspora France Fails to Accept Responsibility over Rwanda PARIS, Apr 7 (IPS) - In the face of overwhelming evidence that France backed the Hutu-dominated Rwandan army responsible for the massacre of some 800,000 people ten years ago, it continues to deny its responsibility in the tragedy. On the contrary, former minister for foreign affairs Dominique de Villepin claimed three weeks ago that ”French intervention in Rwanda saved hundreds of thousands of lives.” New Rwandan leader Paul Kagamé, a Tutsi, corrected De Villepin. ”Yes, the French saved many lives -- of those who committed the genocide.” De Villepin was referring to Operation Turquoise, a peacekeeping mission launched by the French government with UN authorisation on June 23, 1994 -- when the genocide was mostly over. Experts who have studied the events say Kagamé is right. Operation Turquoise protected Hutu authorities who had led the massacres since April 1994, partly to flee Rwanda and to seek refuge in neighbouring Zaire, then controlled by another Francophile dictator, Mobutu Sese Seko. Onward the Crusade!Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 10:24am.
on Race and Identity Conservatives used a VERY effective tactic to weaken the civil rights establishment: falsely naming organizations such that they would be perceived by the unknowing as supporting civil rights. It seems a similar tack is the next wave in the neocon culture wars on Islam. From Nation-Building to Religion-Building Jim Lobe WASHINGTON, Apr 7 (IPS) - One thing that can be said about U.S. neo-conservatives is they do not lack for ambition. ''We need an Islamic reformation'', Deputy Defence Secretary Paul Wolfowitz confided on the eve of the U.S. invasion of Iraq last year, ''and I think there is real hope for one''. Echoing those views one year later, another prominent neo-conservative, Daniel Pipes of the Philadelphia-based Middle East Forum (MEF), recently declared that the ''ultimate goal'' of the war on terrorism had to be Islam's modernisation, or, as he put it, ''religion-building''. Such an effort needs to be waged not only in the Islamic world, geographically speaking, added Pipes, who last year was appointed by President George W. Bush to the board of directors of the U.S. Institute for Peace (USIP), but also among Muslims in the West, where, in his view, they are too often represented by ''Islamist (or militant Islamic)'' organisations. Pipes is currently seeking funding for a new organisation, tentatively named the ''Islamic Progress Institute'' (IPI), which ''can articulate a moderate, modern and pro-American viewpoint'' on behalf of U.S. Muslims and that, according to a grant proposal by Pipes and two New York-based foundations obtained by IPS, can ''go head-to-head with the established Islamist institutions''. Watch your mouth, nowSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 9:42am.
on Tech Arrests key win for NSA hackers POSTED AT 8:03 AM EDT Tuesday, Apr. 6, 2004 …Citing anonymous sources in the British intelligence community, The Sunday Times reported that an e-mail message intercepted by NSA spies precipitated a massive investigation by intelligence officials in several countries that culminated in the arrest of nine men in Britain and one in suburban Orleans, Ont. -- 24-year-old software developer Mohammed Momin Khawaja, who has since been charged with facilitating a terrorist act and being part of a terrorist group. The Orleans arrest is considered an operational milestone for this vast electronic eavesdropping network and its operators. But Dave Farber, an Internet pioneer and computer-science professor at Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh, said the circumstances are also notable because it will be the first time that routine U.S. monitoring of e-mail traffic has led to an arrest. "That's the first admission I've actually seen that they actually monitor Internet traffic. I assumed they did, but no one ever admitted it," Mr. Farber said. This sort of thing is actually the little guy's best hopeSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 9:33am.
on Economics Wal-Mart and the like actually has more economic power than most of the communities it negotiates with. Unchecked it can starve out unions and workers and worse: they change the environment such that everyone else is inspired to starve out unions as well. And if you think they will deal with individuals (whose efforts would bounce off them as doth the spring rain with falleth gently from above) more generously than with collectives that at least have a chance of affecting them, you must be a corporate executive. At this point, only governments are powerful enough to protect the interests of humans in the necessarily adversarial relationships that are marketing and employment. 2 Bills Target 'Big Box' Benefits, Impacts Democrats hope the legislation will force companies to improve healthcare for workers. By Robert Salladay Times Staff Writer April 7, 2004 SACRAMENTO — As Wal-Mart battles to expand in California, Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante and other Democrats are pressuring the world's largest retailer through proposed legislation to improve health benefits for its employees — or pay a steep price. The effort is part of a five-year push by Democrats to target Wal-Mart and large warehouse stores that do not hire unionized workers. The attack is coming on two fronts. One bill would require "big-box" stores to reimburse government for the cost of providing public healthcare to workers. Another would require the stores to pay for expensive studies on whether they harm local economies by crushing competition and offering inadequate benefits to workers. To retailers, the legislation is a special favor for unions battling Wal-Mart as the company moves vigorously into California. The retailer has said it wants to open 40 Supercenters, which carry everything from cheese to chairs in stores that are at least 200,000 square feet. "When the unions say jump, the lawmakers jump," said Bill Dombrowski, president of the California Retailers Assn., which represents grocery stores and other large retailers such as Target but not non-member Wal-Mart. "I think the unions are introducing [the] bills as a platform to continue their fight with Wal-Mart." Although most of the recent skirmishes over Wal-Mart have occurred at the local level — most notably Tuesday night's vote against the mega-store's expansion into Inglewood — Democratic officials are continuing a long-standing fight with the firm at the state level. Well, I guess that's thatSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 9:28am.
on News Inglewood Voters Reject Walmart 9:55 AM PDT, April 7, 2004 A bid by the world's largest corporation to bypass uncooperative elected officials and take its aggressive expansion plans to voters failed Tuesday, as Inglewood residents overwhelmingly rejected Wal-Mart's proposal to build a colossal retail and grocery center without an environmental review or public hearings. With all votes counted Tuesday evening, 4,575 Inglewood residents had voted in favor of Wal-Mart's plan, while 7,049 had voted against it. Wal-Mart hopes to break into California's grocery business by opening 40 such Supercenters statewide. The one in Inglewood would have been Los Angeles County's first. "It is a shame that a small number of voters have determined that more than 100,000 Inglewood residents will have to leave their community to enjoy the shopping opportunities that others have close to home," Wal-Mart officials said in a statement. I can't help but wonder what their announcement would have been if the numbers were reversed and "a small number of voters" had approved the thing. Even George Will recognizes at this pointSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 9:25am.
on News A War President's Job … Not much else having gone as planned since the fall of Baghdad, a delay in the transfer of sovereignty, scheduled for June 30, should not be unthinkable. A delay would trigger violence. But, then, the transfer on schedule probably would be preceded by an offensive by the insurgents. The transfer is to be from the Coalition Provisional Authority, whose authority does not extend throughout the country. A U.S. official in Baghdad says Sadr will be arrested if he appears "any place that we control." The transfer is to be to an institutional apparatus that is still unformed. This is approaching at a moment when U.S. forces in Iraq, never adequate for postwar responsibilities, are fewer than they were. U.S. forces in Iraq are insufficient for that mission; unless the civil war is quickly contained, no practicable U.S. deployment will suffice. U.S. forces worldwide cannot continue to cope with Iraq as it is, plus their other duties -- peacekeeping, deterrence, training -- without stresses that will manifest themselves in severe retention problems in the reserves and regular forces. The Napster IllusionSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 8:31am.
on Random rant
Mr. Meyerson is half right. The opportunity has gone, but it was never really here to begin with. Remember Napster? Not that poseur that's running around under that name but the original one. The anarchistic, libertarian, cyberspace-is-the-true-reality philosophy that made Shawn Fanning and Sean Parker feel they could discuss design decisions to help folks get away with trading copyrighted works: Boies has argued that Napster bears no responsibility for its customers' downloads, and that, as far as the company is concerned, the service should be used only to swap songs that its customers already own or that are in the public domain. Some jurists seem sympathetic to that point of view. During the oral argument before the Ninth Circuit on Oct. 2, Judge Robert Beezer asked, "How in the world are [Napster's executives] expected to have knowledge of what's coming off some kid's computer in Hackensack, N.J., for transmission to Guam?"ran into a real-world snag: "cyber-space" may be a virtual place where meatspace laws don't apply, but it exists in servers which are quite subject to real world influences. The Bush administration is trapped in a similar illusion. They acted with full belief in the real physical dominance of American military power. They acted to consolidate that power. They've been caught up by two meatspace realities, though:
The Iraq II, from the American people's viewpoint, was the Kick-The-Dog war. A lashing out as SOMEbody in response to 9/11. Most of the antiwar people were antiwar because the outcome was so damn predictable. Now that every foul prediction made about the war has come about, everyone will be forced to realize the obvious—there are physical constraints on even the mightiest of nations. Fire the reporters, hire the commediansSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 8:29am.
on Politics Via Reuters, this from NBC's "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno": "Yesterday, President Bush got a little upset with a reporter for calling him 'sir' instead of Mr. President. Man, how upset is he going to be after the election when they start calling him 'George' again." Also, while we're at it: "Yesterday, Vice President Cheney threw out the first pitch at the Cincinnati Reds opening game. President Bush, he threw out the first pitch at the Cardinals game. It's nice to see they've got time for that kind of stuff now that everything in Iraq is under control." And from CBS's "The Late Show with David Letterman": "President Bush says he is looking forward to the testimony from Condoleezza Rice before Congress. Well it makes perfect sense you know, he wants to know what was going on too." Programs! Get yer programs!Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 7, 2004 - 8:23am.
on Politics The Washington Post has summarized and collected links to newspaper articles about Dr. Rice's appearance tomorrow. And that's all I got to say about the sister today. A really cool hit counter serviceSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 6, 2004 - 8:08pm.
on Tech StatCounter is a nice thing. If it had Sitemeter's graphs and seven day moving averages it would be perfect. Comment spam techniquesSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 6, 2004 - 6:37pm.
on Tech When I see crap like this in my logs: 2004.04.06 21:39:26 152.163.252.6 Search: query for 'how the main character is like at the beginning of prometheus' I know it's a spammer looking for something to connect to. I've notice they look at blog services, most likely Technorati, and search for popular headlines. It's one reason comment spam has had a minimal impact on me…you rarely see the most popular articles being blogged here. Trying to catch the rhythm at the new sitesSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 6, 2004 - 5:12pm.
on Tech The link forum is initially seeded. It should be pretty obvious it's Rwanda week around here, so I started by searching out some good-looking sites on Africa and African issues. I'd have added more sites but, well, I didn't. I did get enough in there to get something of a feel for my design decisions. For instance, 1000 characters of description is a lot or a little depending on if you're displaying or writing the description. Maybe I'll cut back on the description that shows in the link listing, let a fuller description be the first comment. As for Ya Heard? I figure I can update it twice per day., and I'm thinking of posting directly to it rather than linking back to P6 when I want to aggregate a particular article over there. And I think I need a template tweak here and there. I've got things set to whip up a intro line based on category (which I assign manually) and whether or not the feed includes an author name. It's working. But ultimately I want to impress folks enough that they send me the articles rather than making me go get them. Automation is a Good Thing™. Well, isn't this...just what I expected?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 6, 2004 - 5:04pm.
on Seen online Now that some of our lefties have once again decided someone had to be Just guess where I found this oneSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 6, 2004 - 3:11pm.
on Seen online Yahoo Launches Soul-Search Engine SUNNYVALE, CA—Hoping it will push them to the top of an increasingly competitive market, Internet portal Yahoo has added soul-search capabilities to its expanding line of search tools, company executives announced Monday. "Capable of navigating the billions of thoughts, experiences, and emotions that make up the human psyche, the new Yahoo soul-search engine helps users find what's deep inside them quickly and easily," Yahoo CEO Terry Semel said. "All those long, difficult nights of pondering your place in this world are a thing of the past." Yahoo's main competitor recently introduced two new advanced search functions: Google Local, which highlights search results from a specific geographic area, and Google Personalized Search, which allows users to create a profile of their interests to influence search results. But Semel called Yahoo's new search function "vastly more precise." "As the amount of information on the web increases, individuals want a search engine to provide them with results that are personally meaningful," Semel said. "Enter the Yahoo Soul Search—a powerful new tool that reveals what's deep inside your heart, using the user-friendly interface already familiar to Yahoo fans." In the past, a soul search was a labor-intensive and time-consuming process, Semel said. "A soul search often required backpacking trips across Europe, disastrous long-term relationships with incompatible lovers, and years of expensive therapy," Semel said. "Worse, the search process often included depression, lowered self-worth, and intense doubt." Semel called the old way of seeking clarity "a logistical nightmare." "Each question you asked yourself seemed to have a thousand possible answers," Semel said. "That's why we designed a way to order returns by relevance and separate them into categories like 'religion' and 'sexuality.' After using the Yahoo soul-search engine, conducting the self-examination process without a computer will seem as ridiculous as doing accounting in old-fashioned ledger books." They must be watching the US economySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 6, 2004 - 1:53pm.
on Africa and the African Diaspora Regional Agreements May Increase Poverty BRUSSELS, Mar 31 (IPS) - Regional trade negotiations between the EU and the African, Caribbean and Pacific countries could undermine poverty reduction programmes, says a report released here. The report by the Brussels-based non-governmental organisation (NGO) Eurostep and five partners from the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) group of countries says such negotiations cannot be considered ”synonymous with reciprocal free trade” because WTO rules are currently under negotiation and could be redefined. Eurostep criticises ”the predominant focus” in the negotiations on removal of tariff barriers and a move towards reciprocity between the ACP and EU. The study says that the negotiations will result in increased access for EU exports to the 77 ACP countries, but ”pay little attention to non-tariff barriers that are the principal obstacle for ACP imports into the EU.” Eurostep fears that an influx of EU products will ”overwhelm” ACP economies. ”The promotion of trade liberalisation will lead to significant job losses in ACP countries, particularly in agricultural sectors where people, predominantly women, are already living on low incomes,” the report says. The study released Wednesday (Mar. 31) looks at the potential implications for people in ACP countries of the proposed Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) for defining trade rules between the EU and ACP countries that would replace existing agreements. The study draws on the experiences of people in Benin, Cameroon, the Dominican Republic, Ghana and Jamaica. How sad is this?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 6, 2004 - 1:05pm.
on Africa and the African Diaspora Not “just” the the brutality going on in the Sudan, but the “Arab Muslim” designation being repeatedly applied. This is so obviously not a religious identity issue because it's a government not a church or temple, that's arming the raiders. So no one should tell me how this is an Arab thing or a Muslim thing…I got many more Biblical quotes I could whip out. This is a human horror. Remember Rwanda, but Take Action in Sudan By SAMANTHA POWER Ten years ago this week, Rwandan Hutu extremists embarked on a genocidal campaign in which they murdered some 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus — a genocide more efficient than that of the Nazis. On this anniversary, Western and United Nations leaders are expressing their remorse and pledging their resolve to prevent future humanitarian catastrophes. But as they do so, the Sudanese government is teaming up with Arab Muslim militias in a campaign of ethnic slaughter and deportation that has already left nearly a million Africans displaced and more than 30,000 dead. Again, the United States and its allies are bystanders to slaughter, seemingly no more prepared to prevent genocide than they were a decade ago. The horrors in the Darfur region of Sudan are not "like" Rwanda, any more than those in Rwanda were "like" those ordered by Hitler. The Arab-dominated government in Khartoum has armed nomadic Arab herdsmen, or Janjaweed, against rival African tribes. The government is using aerial bombardment to strafe villages and terrorize civilians into flight. And it is denying humanitarian access to some 700,000 people who are trapped in Darfur. The Arab Muslim marauders and their government sponsors do not yet seem intent on exterminating every last African Muslim in their midst. But they do seem determined to wipe out black life in the region. The only difference between Rwanda and Darfur, said Mukesh Kapila, the former United Nations' humanitarian coordinator for Sudan, "is the numbers of dead, murdered, tortured, raped." Damn againSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 6, 2004 - 12:58pm.
on News CNN is reporting another “uptick” in the violence in Iraq. 8,000 people per daySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 6, 2004 - 12:28pm.
on Africa and the African Diaspora The Genocide Next Door GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — It wasn't surprising that the 20th century ended with Africa having a genocide of its own. The accumulation of myriad little things going adrift was destined to result in a tragedy of such a magnitude. When militia from the majority Hutu population began their killing spree against the Tutsi minority 10 years ago, I was living in Brazzaville, the capital of Congo Republic, in central Africa. It's a cliché now to talk about the global village, but there we were, following what was happening in real time on television broadcasts. For 100 days, from April to July 1994, the massacre continued unimpeded for the world to see, and left more than 800,000 people dead. Neighbors who did not have a television huddled in my living room to watch, just like they did for sports events. Only this time we were not watching African soccer teams compete in the Cup of Nations, we were witnessing the first televised genocide in the history of humankind. We could see, caught through the long-distance lenses of the cameras, shadowy figures hacking to death defenseless people along the roadways. There, in caricature, was a demonstration of the schizophrenic state in which Africa still finds itself today, that of a continent where different periods of history coexist: the contemporary state-of-the art communications satellite beaming the brutal work of a primitive weapon. In carrying out their genocide, the Nazis used technology to kill in an anonymous way; for them, the victims were only numbers. In Rwanda, in a perversion of the legendary African conviviality and solidarity, people killed one by one, among those they knew. Some murdered neighbors. Women pushed men to rape other women. And instead of protecting their flock, some church leaders delivered the Tutsis among them to the killers. Since the brutalities unfolded in full view, we could not pretend, as some had during the Nazi genocide, that we did not know. Yet most of us in Africa did not grasp the gravity of what was going on. It is only when the killing spree ended and we started counting the bodies that we realized there had been a genocide — and a well-planned one, as we later learned. Months before, the Rwandan government had imported thousands of dollars worth of machetes from China. During those vicious 100 days, though, Western countries, including the United States, refused to call it a genocide. Using the term would have meant moral and legal obligations. Yet many Africans believed the reason for the denial was that genocide is historically linked to "civilized" people. In Africa, where barbarism was the norm, the Hutu killing spree was just another tribal war. After all, how can one commit a genocide with machetes? Colin, Condi, there's hope for you yetSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 6, 2004 - 12:25pm.
on Race and Identity Jackson Goes Home to the Black Community "Home is the place where, when you have to go there, they have to take you in." Robert Frost made those lines famous in his poem "The Death of the Hired Man," and Michael Jackson, radiating scandal from his second charge of child molestation, has taken these lines to heart. The boyish man who is best friends with Elizabeth Taylor, married Elvis' only daughter and was accompanied to galas by a chimp named Bubbles, has added new friends to the retinue — the Nation of Islam and Al Sharpton. And some in the black community find that timing awfully interesting. "Well, you didn't see him with a lot of black people before all this happened," noted one woman, a banker. "But now here he is, showing up, wanting to connect with black folks. And we let him, because we are forgiving people." Another once-popular black man would have to agree with that. O.J. Simpson's criminal trial split much of Los Angeles — and the country — along racial fault lines. After he was accused of murdering his former wife, Nicole, and her friend, Ron Goldman, the genial Simpson became persona non grata in many of the white circles in which he had happily traveled. Once considered "colorless" by virtue of his fame and wealth, Simpson quickly found that the support from whites whose admiration he craved had eroded to virtually nothing. But he had not run out of communities entirely. Some of the black venues in which Simpson had been noticeably scarce greeted him with open arms. Media reports covering his movements during his criminal trial showed how diners applauded when he showed up at the Boulevard Café, a now-defunct restaurant on Martin Luther King Boulevard that served as a nerve center for buzz in the largely black Crenshaw community. He got hugs when he visited black churches — also places that, pre-crisis, he was not known to frequent. Now Jackson, noticeably paler of skin, thinner of nose and straighter of hair than back in the day when his music lived at the top of the charts, seems to be considering where "home" is. We at P6 do give air time to others in particularly egregious casesSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 6, 2004 - 12:21pm.
on Race and Identity Quote of note:
William Hung: Racism, Or Magic? Emil Guillermo, Special to SF Gate Tuesday, April 6, 2004 ©2004 SF Gate He banged. I resisted. And still do. When I first saw Hong Kong-born UC Berkeley engineering student William Hung sing that Ricky Martin song on Fox's "American Idol" last January, I tried to ignore it. But, after Hung's humiliation, there came a nice outpouring of sympathy for the rejected puppy dog. Here was an accented Asian American with bad hair, bad teeth, bad moves and a bad accent. And even though he can't sing, America still loved him. OK. The glorification of bad is a nice twist. But I figured the joke would die off soon enough. It hasn't. And now I'm wondering why America is extending the joke. Is there more than just the glorification of bad, something driven by racism? As a Chaos Deity I probably shouldn't get involvedSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 6, 2004 - 11:58am.
on Seen online …because Baldilocks already thinks I don't like her. But I've been reading Julliette's discussion with Lester at Vision Circle. Sister. It's obvious you don't like Arabs. Probably a military thing. Just go ahead and hate them. Don't try to justify it with out of context quotes from the Qu'ran. Announcing The Nina Simone FoundationSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 6, 2004 - 7:45am.
on Seen online FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE (*New York, New York*) The Nina Simone Foundation, a non-profit organization established by, Lisa Simone Kelly, for the preservation and celebration of the music, socio-political contributions and overall legacy of the late Dr. Nina Simone, and Corporate Performance Artists, leading provider of Web Art and Technology, announce the launch of The Nina Simone Foundation website located at http://www.theninasimonefoundation.org. The Nina Simone Foundation is about to open The Nina Simone Cultural Village in Jukwa, Ghana, near Cape Coast. It is to be officially inducted on April 21st, 2004. The Cultural Village is the result of an award to The Nina Simone Foundation by the Ghanaian Council in honor of the outstanding artistic contributions, support and human interest Nina Simone has demonstrated towards the region over the decades. As a result, the now international organization needed a new web site and online management system to coordinate its activities worldwide. Corporate Performance Artists said it sought to bring a richness and textured style to the design of the website, to best represent the legacy of Dr. Simone and not to make it a historical monument, but a living facility to help promote the mission of the new foundation. ”We tried to address the immediate needs of the community, with a newsletter and calendar integrated into the site. These were implemented using all Open Source technology, which is not only affordable and reliable, but represents the freedom that Dr Simone spent much of her life promoting,” said Donna McElroy, CEO of Corporate Performance Artists. “By integrating back-end Open Source technology to provide content management, The Nina Simone Foundation will be able to keep information current and fresh without any knowledge of programming, thereby serving their constituents in a more efficient fashion” said Joseph McElroy, President of Corporate Performance Artists. “We look forward to meeting the technical needs of both the physical and virtual communities growing up around The Nina Simone Foundation.” "The launch of The Nina Simone Foundation has been a first important step in codifying my mother's memory," states Simone. "With an online presence, the Foundation will be able to reach fans of my mother's music from all over the world, and also provide the convenience of being able to make donations online. The website's design and lay-out provide a *About The Nina Simone Foundation* Nina Simone is a legendary artist-- one of the most important voices of her time-- whose artistic, civic and civil rights contributions have set a standard for musicians the world over. The Nina Simone Foundation will assist in developing music, written and media materials that help codify the memory of the late Dr. Nina Simone amongst future generations so that her contributions do not go unnoticed. NSF will also champion the causes that meant the most to Nina, one of which is the education of impoverished children, particularly African children. Nina recognized that children represent the future of any society, and therefore, their education is key for them to successfully contribute to and address the needs of their society. Nina Simone believed that access to adequate education and cross-cultural learning were the most important means for African children and children of The establishment of The Nina Simone Foundation will serve to commemorate the legacy and advance the causes of the late Dr. Nina Simone, so that others can see how one woman’s courageous fight and vanguard life can make an impact that will continue long after her death. Information about The Nina Simone Foundation can be found at the website http://www.theninasimonefoundation.org or by calling C. Zwadi Morris at 212-244-4280 *About Corporate Performance Artists* Corporate Performance Artists Corp is both a performance practice and a business/technology practice. In the past, it was rare that art knowledge was shared other than in a museum space or theater. Corporate Performance Artists bring this creative knowledge to the work environment through shared technical and cultural exchanges with businesses (and employees of the businesses) and community organizations for which it consults and produces. Corporate Performance Artists services include web site development, creative technology such as data visioning, technical installation and support of computer systems, and wireless servers. Corporate Performance Artists works closely with Community Development Corporations to develop technology centers that provide education and outreach to small businesses and teens, in the hopes of stimulating economic growth. Corporate Performance Artists intentions are to propagate the wealth created through the creative and business process, both financially and spiritually, to everyone involved. Information about Corporate Performance Artists can be found at its website http://www.corporatepa.com or by calling Joseph McElroy at 646-279-2309 Found while rooting through the digital atticSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 6, 2004 - 6:12am.
on Random rant How To Understand the News Once upon a time, all we needed to know we could learn from what we directly experienced. But no more. Now things that happen half way around the planet can directly impact us. And since we have no way (and in most cases, no desire) to directly experience all that impacts our lives, we have come to depend on the news media more than we ever have in our history… the town crier is the TV and you can't really afford to ignore him. The news media, however, is an integral part of American society, and as such has certain typically American characteristics… primary of which is that it's intended to make money for someone. And as you know, the news media doesn't directly make money on your paltry couple of bucks at the newsstand, or even your subscription. It's the advertisements that make publishing magazines and newspapers, and broadcast journalism, profitable. Therefore, marketing is also intimately involved in the news media, in that the stories chosen and the spin chosen for them are supposed to maximize drawing power in order to showcase the products being sold by the advertisers. Since advertisers sell products that are suitable for some but not for others, they like to advertise in places that are seen by those their product is suitable for and don't care at all if it is never seen by those for whom it is not suitable. They will pay more for an ad that reaches 100,000 people of which 80% are prospects than for an ad that reaches 200,000 people, 25% of which are prospects. The advertiser doesn't see it as 100,000 vs. 200,000, but as 80,000 vs. 50,000. As businessmen, the media moguls want to make the most money for the least expenditure. That's why newspapers select a spin and maintain it in the face of all fact. They feel the spin is appealing to some market segment, which will allow them to charge higher ad rates to advertisers marketing to that segment. This is the reason for specialty magazines with different flavors as well. Each tries to zero in most precisely on the mix that will either draw the greatest number of people or lock in a permanently loyal cadre of consumers. I've gone into some detail here, because in order to use the media to find out the state of affairs you must remember that every newspaper, wire service, radio station, TV network, is a business. You cannot think of them as neutral providers of information when their reports can exacerbate or dampen certain situations. They can't be so foolish as to not notice their impact, and I don't want to think they are evil enough to actively seek such an impact. They must simply feel that what they're doing is more important than understanding, and the whole truth. Therefore the first thing you must understand is that there are no unbiased views in the news media. Editorials are a special case. They are designed to shape people's thinking, convince them, on some topic. There are magazines which are entirely editorials… the Nation, the National Review, Commentary, such as that. When reading them, keep in mind that when people make a statement, a report or an assertion, there's very little you can be sure of in it. They may be telling the truth, or not (did you ever have the experience where someone thought they were lying to you, but what they said turned out to be true?). They may know the whole situation, or not. You may truly understand what they are saying, or you may not. Through all this, there is one bit of certainty in any assertion: the person speaking/writing wants the person listening/reading to believe the assertion. Always keep in mind the goal of an editorial is not to inform, but to convince. Next you must understand the people the news is being reported to. Know who the target market of the story is because that will determine the probable spin. More, you'll know that, as of the presentation of the story under consideration, a significant percentage of the target population believes the story to be true. That is one fact the media can't avoid providing. Happy New Year!Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 8:00pm.
on Tech VISITS Total 64,573 PAGE VIEWS Total 93,319 About a half hour early. But I specifically set the date-time. Okay, this is what we're gonna doSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 7:38pm.
on Tech This being the first day of the new year around here, I'm going to share a couple of resolutions with you. Afterward I'll be asking for opinions and such. Bracing for the ripple effectSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 3:15pm.
on Tech I notice The Girlie Matters added my MTClient release candidate announcement to her recent bookmarks list. Just being there is a pretty major endorsement (and I suspect Al-Muhajabah, another official Movable Type Deity, of having a hand in that listing). War taxSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 12:29pm.
on Seen online I thought that would get your attention. Now give it to this article on people who are resisting the war effort by refusing to pay their federal income tax, by Mark W. Anderson at The American Sentimentalist.
Now, on the one hand I can't endorse this because I know the Borrow and Spend Republicans just going to take the money for the military anyway and shortchange domestic programs. On the other hand, because of other decisions the Bushistas have made, they actually have a chance at getting away with it. This is the kind of comment one can makeSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 12:27pm.
on Race and Identity Prime answered:
Thank you, Prime. This is nonsenseSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 8:04am.
on Economics Job training programs are not job creation programs. Especially when there are plenty of unemployed folks who already have those skills. And when are we going to admit there's a limit to how much "unnecessary" bureaucracy exists, beyond which you're cutting into actual functionality? Bush to Announce Plan to Double Job Training By Mike Allen Washington Post Staff Writer Monday, April 5, 2004; Page A04 With his opponent making job creation the centerpiece of his campaign, President Bush will announce plans today to double the number of workers who complete federal training each year from the current 200,000 to 400,000 -- but is putting no new money into the effort. A White House fact sheet said Bush's plan, to be announced in Charlotte, calls for saving $300 million through the reduction of "unnecessary bureaucracy." Bush also will consolidate four training and grant programs, administered by states with $4 billion in federal funds, into a single grant to governors to give them more flexibility and cut "federal red tape," the sheet said. A seriously interesting turn of eventsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 8:02am.
on Politics Lightning Rod Puts Spark in Georgia Race April 5, 2004 ATLANTA — The most interesting new candidate to watch in Georgia's congressional race this summer may in fact be an old candidate. Two years ago, political observers pointed to Rep. Cynthia McKinney's defeat in the Democratic primary for Georgia's 4th Congressional District as the signal of a new moderation in Southern politics. An outspoken liberal, McKinney built a reputation in Washington as a bull with her own portable china shop, particularly when she addressed the Arab-Israeli conflict. That tone seemed to hurt her in 2002, when the five-term incumbent was beaten by another liberal black woman — a political neophyte and former state court judge, Denise L. Majette, who promised voters, "I won't embarrass you." But with Majette's recent announcement that she intends to seek the Senate seat of retiring Democrat Zell Miller, McKinney may be able to get her job back. Her reemergence was met with a range of emotions: Plenty of voters in her district rejoiced, and so did Republican strategists who said her presence would be a tonic to conservative voters across Georgia. Democratic insiders fretted about the ripple effect of McKinney's return. Her old political allies celebrated, saying her critique of Bush's foreign policy — seen as radioactive two years ago — has proved to be prophetic. "Any time, you pay a price for being a pioneer," said state Sen. Ed Harbison, chairman of the state Legislative Black Caucus. In the immediate aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks, "we were all poised to defend ourselves" and hesitated to criticize the president, he said. "Now, in hindsight, it looks like she was right." To all those folks who are sure God is on Bush's sideSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 8:00am.
on Cartoons Cool techSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 5:01am.
on Tech Data with go-faster stripes Monday April 5, 2004 Over the next 12 months, Vodafone and its rivals will have their work cut out to try and convince customers that they need to upgrade their mobile phones to 3G handsets. It's a tough task, because there does not seem to be a great deal of evidence to demonstrate that consumers have much enthusiasm for 3G's supposed "killer applications", such as football videos and person-to-person video calling. Not surprisingly, then, Vodafone has taken the easy route first, developing a product that it hopes will claw back some of the £13bn invested in 3G networks across Europe. The Mobile Connect 3G/GPRS data card for laptops was launched to both consumers and businesses on Friday (it is available with a secure VPN - or virtual private network - often used by businesses to give their workers remote access). The card, which fits in a laptop's PCMCIA slot, is essentially a version of the company's existing Mobile Connect GPRS card, but with go-faster stripes. Instead of accessing the web at GPRS speeds of around 50kbps, Vodafone promises that the 3G card can download data at up to 384kbps. "The shift from 2G to 3G is like that from dial-up to broadband", Vodafone's new UK CEO, Bill Morrow, told a press conference on Friday. On RwandaSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 4:52am.
on Africa and the African Diaspora What would you have done? ask the prisoners accused of participation in the Rwandan genocide. Rory Carroll reports Monday April 5, 2004 Believe some of those who answered genocide's call and there is no such thing as guilt or innocence, just a grey area in between. Even their minimal involvement was coerced, they say. The country was at war. It was either help the killers, or at least pretend to help, or be killed yourself. What would you have done? Interviews with four genocide suspects in the jail yielded much the same story: claims of at least partial innocence followed by a look of defiance and a challenge - what would you have done? Not an easy question to answer given the often grim choices ordinary Hutus faced when an extremist Hutu regime decided to eliminate Tutsis and their sympathisers. The way Esperance Nyirandegeya, 43, tells it she was a very minor player who aided the interahamwe militia solely to avert retribution for having a Tutsi husband. "I wanted to show cooperation so I carried uniforms for them to help my family to hide," the former accountant for Air Rwanda says in a low voice. Dressed in vivid pink prison garb with a headscarf and spectacles she does not look like a mass murderer but prosecutors say she directed the militia in Kigali's sector 43. "I didn't kill anybody," says Nyirandegeya. "But ..." The voice trails off. She did lead a mob to the hiding place of four Tutsi men who were promptly butchered. "It was a mistake, I didn't know they were there." The milita had been looking for different Tutsis, a family, and Nyirandegeya said she led the mob away from the house where they were hiding to another hiding place which she thought was unoccupied. That it was not will remain on her conscience, she says. Familiar sounding debateSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 4:45am.
on Race and Identity Debate call on 'multicultural' UK A senior Tory has called for a "grown-up" debate on immigration after a race equality campaigner said the pursuit of 'multiculturalism' should be ditched. Alan Duncan said diversity should be welcomed but argued past assumptions about the UK's need for immigration should now be debated. The Commission for Racial Equality's chairman has also said it is time to stress common strands of Britishness. Lord Falconer meanwhile highlighted the financial benefits of immigration. Because Iraq and politics are all fucked up today, I decided this will be Cool Science DaySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 4:42am.
on Seen online Rat's 'life code' read by science Scientists have decoded the rat genome, the biochemical instructions in the rodent's cells that guide the building and maintenance of the animal's body. It is the third mammalian DNA sequence to be deciphered - humans and mice came first - and will be used by researchers to understand the causes of disease. It should also give valuable insights into the evolution of all mammals. More cool scienceSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 4:32am.
on Seen online New light shed on chimp genome A comparison of the chimp and human genomes casts new light on why the two species are so different despite having very similar genetic code. Scientists have long speculated over what makes humans so different from their closest relatives, the apes. One of the leading scientists on the project says the answer lies in the process that orchestrates the genes as the chimpanzee is developing. The human and chimpanzee genomes differ by just 1.2% between the coding genes. Professor Svante Paabo, from the Max Planck Institute, Leipzig, Germany, is investigating which genes are present and the manner in which they are expressed. Brain scan "It's about the extent to which genes are turned on, where and when in the brain. "What we have now done is systematically looked at gene activity in the brain of chimpanzees, humans, orang-utans and macaques and when we compare them the surprising finding is that we actually find quite a lot of differences. "And in any particular part of the brain about 10% of our gene activity differs from those of chimpanzees," said Dr Paabo. The key to the distinction between the two species could lie in the functional importance of different levels of gene expression. By mathematically modelling the changes seen in gene expression between the two species, Paabo hopes to identify those genes which could have been acted on by natural selection more strongly than others. Skip this post entirelySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 4:24am.
on Seen online This is just a way for me to keep something I want to read later handy. It's long and you'll most likely find it boring as hell. The National InterestSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 3:43am.
on News The National Interest is one of those weird quarterly magazines you always see in the meganewstands of Manhattan but never see anyone buy. I buy one every year or so when something catches my attention, and this spring's ussue was broght to my attention by The McLaughlin Group this weekend. They, actually McLaughlin himself, referenced an article described in the table of contents thus:
Why I wrote "Still Economics on the Brain" last nightSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 3:31am.
on News Several quotes of note here:
and
and
and
Stymied by Politicians, Wal-Mart Turns to Voters By JOHN M. BRODER INGLEWOOD, Calif., April 2 — As Wal-Mart continues its march across the American landscape, this Los Angeles suburb of 112,000 people is the latest testing ground for the company's exercise of political and marketing muscle. Inglewood voters go to the polls on Tuesday to decide whether to turn over 60 acres of barren concrete adjacent to the Hollywood Park racetrack to Wal-Mart to create a megastore and a collection of chain shops and restaurants. The ballot initiative is sponsored by Wal-Mart, which collected more than 10,000 signatures to put the question to voters after the Inglewood City Council blocked the proposed development last year, citing environmental, traffic, labor, public safety and economic concerns. While Wal-Mart has turned to the ballot in a number of cities and towns to win the right to build its giant emporiums, the Inglewood initiative is significantly different. The proposal would essentially exempt Wal-Mart from all of Inglewood's planning, zoning and environmental regulations, creating a city-within-a-city subject only to its own rules. Wal-Mart has hired an advertising and public relations firm to market the initiative and is spending more than $1 million to support the measure, known as initiative 04-A. The company is blanketing the community, which is roughly half African-American and half Latino, with mailers and telephone calls and is broadcasting advertisements on television stations with black and Latino audiences. What kind of comment can one make?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 2:58am.
on News AIDS Fears Grow for Black Women HOUSTON — Once a week, the five friends, all members of the Abundant Life Cathedral here, get together to eat sushi, sip wine and talk. But one recent afternoon, the women chose a different activity: They went to see "Not a Day Goes By," a musical about black men on the "down low" who, while not calling themselves gay or bisexual, have sex with other men, often behind the backs of their wives and girlfriends. To these women, it was a subject of increasing urgency. "Once I found out how prevalent the down low was in our community, I was very afraid," said one of the women, Tracy Scott, a 37-year-old government relations consultant. Her friend Misha King, 35, said she needed to get as much information as she could, as quickly as she could. "I've been on field trips to the gay bars and have seen guys that look like men you would date," Ms. King said. "I treat every man as a bisexual because I don't want to end up as the sister with H.I.V." In the past, concern about black women and AIDS was mainly focused on those who had used drugs or had had sex with users. But increasingly, women like Ms. Scott and her friends have begun to worry, too. In government studies of 29 states, a black woman was 23 times more likely to be infected with AIDS than was a white woman, and black women accounted for 71.8 percent of new H.I.V. cases in women from 1999 to 2002. Though new cases of H.I.V. among black women have been stable in the past few years, the number of those who have been infected through heterosexual sex has risen. In 2001, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit group focusing on health issues, an estimated 67 percent of black women with AIDS contracted the virus through heterosexual sex, compared with 58 percent four years earlier. Black women accounted for half of all H.I.V. infections acquired through heterosexual sex, in men or women, from 1999 to 2002, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. Oh. Shit.Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 2:55am.
on News 7 U.S. Soldiers Die in Iraq as a Shiite Militia Rises Up BAGHDAD, Iraq, April 4 — A coordinated Shiite militia uprising against the American-led occupation rippled across Iraq on Sunday, reaching into Baghdad and the sprawling Shiite slum of Sadr City on the capital's outskirts and roiling the holy city of Najaf and at least two other cities in southern Iraq. Seven American soldiers were killed in Sadr City, one of the worst single losses for the American forces in any firefight since Baghdad was captured a year ago. An Iraqi health official in Najaf said 24 people had been killed and about 200 wounded in clashes that ensued when armed militiamen loyal to Moktada al-Sadr, a 31-year-old firebrand Shiite cleric, besieged a garrison commanded by Spanish troops on the road leading into Najaf from neighboring Kufa. An American military spokesman said one Salvadoran soldier had been killed in Kufa and 13 soldiers wounded, including an American. All the other casualties were said to be Iraqis. Within hours of a call by Mr. Sadr to his followers to "terrorize your enemy," his militiamen, said to number tens of thousands across Iraq, emerged into the streets of Baghdad, Najaf, Kufa and Amara, a city 250 miles south of Baghdad where four Iraqis were reported killed in clashes with British troops. Forbidden to bear arms under a decree issued last year by the American occupation authority, the Sadr militiamen bristled with a wide array of weapons, including rocket-propelled grenades that were fired at American tanks in Sadr City. Taking advantage of an American policy that has largely kept American and other occupation troops out of volatile Shiite population centers like Sadr City, Najaf and Kufa, the militiamen succeeded in taking control of checkpoints and police stations in all three cities that had been staffed by the new Iraqi-trained police and civil defense force. Residents in the three centers said the Iraqis had abandoned their posts almost as soon as the militiamen appeared with their weapons, leaving the militiamen in unchallenged control — and punching a huge hole in American hopes that American-trained Iraqis can be relied on increasingly to take over from American troops in providing security in Iraq's major cities. Still economics on the brainSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 4, 2004 - 7:14pm.
on Economics
Efficiencies aren't what they are searching for - effects are what they are searching for. Business isn't sought for the sake of business but as part of the necessary support for a community, and the community effects are what they seek to optimize/ The problem is that community effects aren't free. Put bluntly, it's less expensive to run a business without doing charitable work on the side. That expense can be the difference between survival and bankruptcy, especially if you're talking about owner/operators with little experience navigating the paperwork and legal issues. Also, though yeah, there should be more Black entrepreneurs…would be if it weren't for racism…I don't think business is a useful tool in holding a community together. Let's face it, if you can run a self-sustaining Ujamaa network it's because you had a community already. Using business as community development and support puts those businesses at an economic disadvantage relative to mainstream business-which does not do community development and support (voluntarily) because the mainstream gets that support through other channels. Man, turn your back on the blogosphere for a minute...Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 4, 2004 - 1:43pm.
on Seen online I saw a reference at Steve Gilliard's News Blog about Instapundit suggestion/approving/whatever a boycott of DKos advertisers, over Kos' lack of sympathy for mercenaries killed on the job. I'm like, "Whoa!" and loking around to find out WTF that's all about. These quizes are getting predictableSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 4, 2004 - 1:41pm.
on Seen online
via Body and Soul I almost wish I could wish her luck. Almost.Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 4, 2004 - 9:13am.
on Politics Quote of note:
The reason it is to be noted:
Bush's Credibility Now Rests on Her Shoulders WASHINGTON — It has become a political cliché of Washington to say that Condoleezza Rice's upbringing at the hands of ambitious parents who pushed her to excel - as a concert pianist, a competitive ice skater and a young girl tutored in Spanish and French - created a woman who has lived on stage for most of her life. It is not a cliché to say that on Thursday, when Ms. Rice publicly testifies to the commission investigating the Sept. 11 attacks, she will have to turn in a show-stopping performance as the woman on whose shoulders the credibility of the Bush administration now rests. Ms. Rice, President Bush's national security adviser, was last week's media-figure-on-the-hot-seat, her scowling face glaring out from the front pages of newspapers and the cover of Time. Her celebrity came not just from her boss's initial refusal to allow her to testify, but from the reality that emerged from the statements to the commission of other senior Bush officials: Ms. Rice is the gatekeeper between the president and the entire counterterrorism policy of his administration. Tough questions!Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 4, 2004 - 9:02am.
on Politics Questions for Dr. Rice 2. Both Bob Woodward's book "Bush at War" and Richard Clarke's "Against All Enemies" show that shortly after 9/11 there was considerable focus by the Bush cabinet on Iraq's possibly being the perpetrator of the attacks. Why was Iraq considered a suspect when there was no evidence that it was involved in any act of anti-American terrorism for a decade — other than a failed attempt to assassinate former President George H. W. Bush in 1993 — while there was overwhelming evidence that it was the Al Qaeda network that attacked the World Trade Center in 1993, tried to blow up Los Angeles International Airport in 1999, blew up American embassies in Africa in 1998 and attacked the destroyer Cole in Yemen in 2000? After all, the cabinet did not discuss the possibility that the attacks were the work of Iran, Libya or Syria, all countries that have a history of terrorism directed at Americans.[P6: emphasis added] 4. The Bush administration's position, and your own, has been that it would not have been possible to conceive that planes might be used as missiles against the United States. Yet during the 1996 Olympics countermeasures were taken for just that eventuality. How do you reconcile this discrepancy? Questions for Dr. Rice By SCOTT ARMSTRONG 4. What was the accumulated evidence on Sept. 11 that Iraq was a direct and imminent threat to the United States? How much reliance did our government put on human sources, Iraqi defectors and former Iraqi officials for this intelligence? In retrospect, do you consider these sources to have been credible? [P6: being three questions, the first of which is the tough one, the second now known and the third a silly shot at extracting a self-incriminating response that Dr. Rice is still too smooth to fall for] This could inspire some effective retaliatory fire in the class warSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 4, 2004 - 8:55am.
on Economics Option Pie: Overeating Is a Health Hazard THE escalating excess that passes for everyday pay among corporate executives in America has long been justified this way: If they are not paid huge amounts, they will go to greener pastures. Investors will lose. But a new and comprehensive academic study shows, once and for all, that increases in executive pay, on average, do not translate into later gains for shareholders. Not in the next year, not in three years, not in five. Joseph R. Blasi and Douglas L. Kruse, professors at the Rutgers University School of Management and Labor Relations, analyzed executive compensation at more than 1,500 American companies from 1992 to 2002. They wanted to determine whether increases in executive compensation, particularly stock options, predicted share returns. Using company filings, the professors analyzed some 16,500 corporate board decisions on pay over those years. Compensation of 7,500 top executives over the last decade totaled $177 billion; almost $100 billion of that came from options and restricted stock grants. The study found that a 1 percent increase in total compensation for each of the top five executives at companies predicted a 0.22 percent decrease in average shareholder return over the next year and a 0.12 percent decline over three years. The effect over five years was statistically insignificant. Is C.E.O. Pay Up or Down? Both. By PATRICK McGEEHAN Published: April 4, 2004 THE message from corporate directors to shareholders who are fuming about elephantine executive pay is: We're working on it. The response they get back may very well be: Thanks, but this is not quite what we had in mind. On paper, the days of rapidly rising executive compensation appear to be ending. Many excesses of the 1990's have been wrung out, and the chances that chief executives will reap hundreds of millions of dollars from cashing in stock options have diminished. For Directors, Great Expectations (and More Pay) By ERIC DASH GOODBYE to golf games and clubby cocktail parties - or many of them, anyway. Hello to weekend work sessions, piles of paperwork and parsing of arcane accounting rules. That is the new reality for corporate directors like Betsy S. Atkins, chief executive and owner of Baja L.L.C., a venture capital firm in Miami and a board member of three technology companies. These days, she says, board strategy sessions run into early evening. Her workload as a director has tripled, and the time she spends in audit and compensation committee meetings has increased even more. She needs four of her employees - including two accountants and a market researcher - to help manage the burden. "This is not your grandfather's board, where people just showed up and voted," she said. Board-related business, she added, typically fills about four workdays a month per company, but in a crisis one company can take more than half her time. Demands on directors have intensified in the post- Enron era, and a new risk-reward calculus has emerged, specialists in corporate governance say. A directorship still carries a handsome paycheck and the cachet to help an executive's career. But since the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 set new requirements for directors, the work also entails more time and effort - not to mention the risk of litigation and a besmirched reputation if something goes wrong. Far fewer people are willing to assume all this. Largely in recognition of the extra time, compensation specialists say, pay packages for directors are rising. Last year, total compensation for the average director ranged from $43,000 at small companies to $155,000 at the largest 200 concerns - and it is expected to rise at least 15 percent in 2004, said Edward Archer, a compensation consultant at Pearl Meyer & Partners. What do you do when a whistle-blower was never a part of YOUR team?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 4, 2004 - 8:44am.
on News Blair told US was targeting Saddam 'just days after 9/11' George Bush asked for Tony Blair's backing to remove Saddam Hussein from power just nine days after the 11 September attacks, over a private dinner at the White House, a US magazine reported last night. Sir Christopher Meyer, the former British ambassador to Washington, was at the dinner table as Mr Blair replied that he would rather concentrate on ousting the Taliban and restoring peace in Afghanistan. In a 25,000-word article in this month's American edition of Vanity Fair, Sir Christopher recounts Mr Bush as responding: "I agree with you Tony. We must deal with this first. But when we have dealt with Afghanistan, we must come back to Iraq." Mr Blair, Sir Christopher writes, "said nothing to demur" at the prospect. Sir Christopher's account presents a new challenge to Mr Blair's assertion that no decision was taken on the invasion of Iraq until just days before operations began, in March 2003. It implies regime change in Iraq was US policy immediately after 11 September. Not REALLY trying to be offensiveSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 4, 2004 - 4:59am.
on Race and Identity …but I'm a hair's breadth away from saying STFU to the entire Holy See. Speaking out against gay marriage Two bishops lead Catholics marching in North Beach Steve Rubenstein, Chronicle Staff Writer Sunday, April 4, 2004 ©2004 San Francisco Chronicle Two bishops led about 1,000 devout, sign-carrying Roman Catholics on a five-block march through North Beach on Saturday to protest same-sex marriages in San Francisco. "We need to speak out, with civility," Archbishop William Levada said on the steps of SS Peter and Paul Church before leading the procession of the faithful. "We must keep society on the right track.'' Levada called same-sex marriages a "regression in society" and urged passage of a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriages in order to "stand up for the bedrock of society -- marriage and family. ... The only possible resolution of this is a constitutional amendment." Pretty simple when you think about itSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 4, 2004 - 4:58am.
on News Playing Into Their Hands April 4, 2004 The Bush administration is in the habit of waging personal vendettas against those who criticize its policies, but bit by bit the evidence is accumulating that the invasion of Iraq was among the worst blunders in U.S. history. If the administration cannot recognize and admit its mistakes, it cannot correct its policies. On RwandaSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 4, 2004 - 4:50am.
on Africa and the African Diaspora Man, you want to get disgusted, go to the article and read.It opens with a story of murder that I want to think exaggerated, but I can't. Remember the Blood Frenzy of Rwanda Genocide prevention must become a foreign policy priority to avoid a repetition of those hideous crimes. By Samantha Power Samantha Power is the author of "A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide," which won the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for general nonfiction, and a lecturer in human rights policy at Harvard University April 4, 2004 …The Clinton administration's response was best captured by a State Department press conference two days into the slaughter. Prudence Bushnell, the midlevel official who had been put in charge of managing the evacuation of Americans — and only Americans — from Rwanda, spoke with journalists about the Rwandan horrors. After she left the podium, State Department spokesman Michael McCurry took her place and seamlessly turned to the next item on the day's agenda: U.S. criticism of foreign governments that were preventing the screening of the Steven Spielberg film "Schindler's List." "This film movingly portrays the 20th century's most horrible catastrophe," McCurry said. "And it shows that even in the midst of genocide, one individual can make a difference." McCurry urged that the film be shown worldwide. "The most effective way to avoid the recurrence of genocidal tragedy," he declared, "is to ensure that past acts of genocide are never forgotten." No one made any connection between Bushnell's remarks and McCurry's, between Rwanda and the Holocaust. Neither journalists nor officials in the United States were focused then — or in the ensuing three months — on the fate of Rwanda's Tutsis. By July 1994, when Tutsi rebels took control of the country, the killers had accomplished much of what they set out to achieve. At least 800,000 people — half of the Tutsis who had lived in Rwanda three months earlier — had been eliminated. The Rwandan genocide revealed, more than any other event in the 20th century, the shallowness of the pledge of "never again." Again, a dozen key plotters managed to organize a society around mass murder. Again, an inconvenient minority found itself targeted for extermination. And again, the world watched. Indeed, the U.S. and its allies on the U.N. Security Council didn't simply watch. They voted to withdraw the U.N. peacekeepers who were in Rwanda, abandoning Rwandans who had relied upon the blue helmets for their protection. Man, I been waiting years for y'all to get hip to electronic musicSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 4, 2004 - 4:45am.
on Seen online For DJs, a global spin There's a brick building at the end of Jamieson Street, past the auto repair shops, past the blood red duplex and the squatters who have claimed it as their own, behind a set of overbearing wrought-iron gates. At one time, it was a printing factory; before that, a brothel; and before that, an Asian seaman's club. But on this warm Southern Hemisphere night, there's music blasting out of the windows — beats and raps, blips and samples; high-pitched, oscillating wails. Tonight, 32 Jamieson St. is home to the Red Bull Music Academy, and the squatters down the street watch the third-floor window where a young man screams along with the guttural hip-hop while another dances, seemingly randomly flailing around to the beat. A third twentysomething manipulates the music, slows the rhythm down, and brings it to a halt. It's 9 p.m., and for these students at this international academy for DJs, the night's just begun. "Being a DJ in America, you get a little bit jaded," says Vivian Host from San Francisco, one of three American DJ students in this year's academy. "But when you come here, you realize how little access people have to new records, to new sounds, to DJs from other places. You can help expose people to something they might not otherwise get." That attitude of discovery runs rampant throughout the program, which brings together students and lecturers from all over the world to discuss and perform electronic music in all its guises. The music the students make ranges from loose, spacey jams to hard-thumping beat symphonies. But it has one thing in common — it's music that can be made with synthesizers and computers, with instruments often taking a back seat to electronic sounds. That chance may already be goneSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 4, 2004 - 4:17am.
on Politics Last Chance for an Alliance …While we must end the appearance of occupation, it is equally clear that Iraq will need a neutral referee, and tens of thousands of foreign troops for many years to keep these growing political tensions from ripping the country apart. Instead, the Bush administration's current plan is to have a new U.S. ambassador call all the shots, at the risk that Iraqis will think the occupation has not really ended on June 30.[P6: Hey, AMERICANS won't think the occupation is ended.] Indeed, we will be going from the CPA -- which at least has some international flavor -- to an exclusively American operation with a "Super-Embassy." Our goal should be to take the "American face" off the occupation so that we are not blamed for everything that doesn't go right in Iraq. Without a strategy to broaden the coalition, the American people will question a policy that requires them to continue to pay nearly 90 percent of the costs in blood and treasure for Iraq's security and reconstruction. Of course, I'm not the one that has to know, but I can't think of a single nation in a position to be of real assistance that has motivation to help. I can think of a few politicians… Good morning America, this is your wakeup callSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 4, 2004 - 4:06am.
on Politics Fewer Say Bush Is Serving Middle Class As he approaches the November election, President Bush has shed a good part of the "compassionate conservative" image he cultivated during the 2000 election, a Washington Post poll has found. Bush came to office three years ago with a message that he was different from traditional Republican conservatives because he was promoting programs for the poor and disadvantaged. But with his presidency dominated by foreign policy issues and such traditional conservative favorites as tax cuts, he has dropped from his speeches the compassionate conservative moniker that was his trademark in 2000. The Post poll found Americans split over whether Bush has governed in a compassionate way, with 49 percent saying he has and 45 percent saying he has not. That is down sharply from February 2003, when a CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll found that 64 percent of Americans thought he had governed compassionately. While a majority of Americans (58 percent) say Bush has governed as expected [P6: because Republican insiders didn't expect him to be compassionate in the first place], the Post poll showed that the rest are about twice as likely to say the president has been less compassionate (25 percent) than to say he has been more compassionate (13 percent). Forty-four percent now believe Bush cares most about serving upper-income people, an increase from 31 percent in September 1999 and 39 percent in July 2000. Forty-one percent believe Bush cares equally about all people[P6: Logically, a different statement than saying he cares about people.], with small numbers saying he favors the poor or the middle class. [P6: I'll bet those "small numbers" of people are rich as Croesus and angry they pay any taxes at all.] Whether this loss of compassion credentials is a problem for Bush depends on which voters prove to be the decisive bloc in November. Political strategists say the Bush campaign is gambling that it can win largely by mobilizing core GOP voters in large numbers -- a departure from recent elections, in which many moderate "swing" voters were the key. Republican pollster Bill McInturff has determined that both Democratic- and GOP-leaning voters have made up their minds early this year. With fewer voters crossing between parties in recent elections, "there's not much flexibility on either side," he said. "Bush folks have been preparing for this type of election for a long time. There's a handful of groups up for grabs." The classified stuff I won't let you see proves him wrong. Truuuuuust me.Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 4, 2004 - 4:00am.
on News Framework of Clarke's Book Is Bolstered By Walter Pincus and Dana Milbank … The most sweeping challenge to Clarke's account has come from two Bush allies, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) and Fred F. Fielding, a member of the investigative panel. They have suggested that sworn testimony Clarke gave in 2002 to a joint congressional committee that probed intelligence failures was at odds with his sworn testimony last month. Frist said Clarke may have "lied under oath to the United States Congress." But the broad outline of Clarke's criticism has been corroborated by a number of other former officials, congressional and commission investigators, and by Bush's admission in the 2003 Bob Woodward book "Bush at War" that he "didn't feel that sense of urgency" about Osama bin Laden before the attacks occurred. In addition, a review of dozens of declassified citations from Clarke's 2002 testimony provides no evidence of contradiction, and White House officials familiar with the testimony agree that any differences are matters of emphasis, not fact. Indeed, the declassified 838-page report of the 2002 congressional inquiry includes many passages that appear to bolster the arguments Clarke has made. Starting to miss that reservoir of good will the USofA used to haveSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on April 4, 2004 - 3:59am.
on News Brazil Shielding Uranium Facility By Peter Slevin The Brazilian government has refused to allow U.N. nuclear inspectors to examine a facility for enriching uranium under construction near Rio de Janeiro, according to Brazilian officials and diplomats in Vienna, home of the International Atomic Energy Agency. The IAEA and Brazil are at an impasse over the inspections, the diplomats said. Brazil maintains that the facility will produce low-enriched uranium for use in power plants, not the highly enriched material used in nuclear weapons. Nonetheless, Brazil refuses to let IAEA inspectors see equipment in the plant, citing a need to protect proprietary information. The diplomatic standoff plays into fears that a new type of nuclear race is underway, marked not by the bold pursuit of atomic weapons but by the quiet and lawful development of sophisticated technology for nuclear energy production, which can be quickly converted into a weapons program. Brazil's project also poses a conundrum for President Bush, who has called for tighter restrictions on the enrichment of uranium, even for nuclear power, as part of a new strategy to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons. Nonproliferation specialists say that if the United States and the United Nations do not act to curtail Brazil's program, or at least insist on inspections, the lack of action could undermine White House calls for Iran and North Korea to halt their efforts to enrich uranium. "If we don't want these kinds of facilities in Iran or North Korea, we shouldn't want them in Brazil," said former U.S. nuclear negotiator James E. Goodby. "You have to apply the same rules to adversaries as you do to friends. I do not see that happening in Brazil." |
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