Archive for January 15th, 2003


Jan 18 peace rally

Jan 18 peace rally


ANSWER S.F. reports the upcoming peace rally this Saturday is looking to be larger than the Oct 26, 2002 rally which drew 80,000 to S.F. and 200,000 to D.C.


The three phone lines in the ANSWER L.A. office are ringing non-stop with people signing up for a chartered bus to S.F.


The mass media, all of a sudden, has started covering the peace movement. I’ve noticed this pattern before. The media will ignore or downplay a story for a while, then, once the story reaches critical mass, the media jumps in big time.


The Washington Post ran an article Monday, “Antiwar Activists From Across U.S. Preparing for Weekend of Protests”.  A few weeks back they were (deeply) downplaying the peace movement. Now they are running stories in advance of a demonstration. This is, obviously, a huge shift.

And once the media pick up on a story, they often really hype it. So, people get ready!

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Vials of plague ‘missing in…

Vials of plague ‘missing in Texas’



Samples of deadly bubonic plague are thought to be missing from a university laboratory in the United States.
 
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) was called in after the discovery that between 30 and 35 vials held at TexasTech University Health Center in Lubbock were unaccounted for.


 A law enforcement official told Reuters news agency that the vials could possibly kill one person but not a large group of people.


Uh huh, 30 vials could maybe kill one person eh? And this from a law enforcement official, not a bubonic plague expert.  Right…


Update: Texas professor arrested after plague scare. Scholar reported vials missing after destroying them, police allege”., which appears to just confuses things  even more.

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Israel Labor Party — No…

Israel Labor Party — No to a Sharon Government



“TEL AVIV, Jan 14, 2003 — The Labor Party is today expected to announce what is being called its “doomsday decision” - it will not join any coalition led by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon under any circumstances.”

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Palestinians & the Peace Movement

Palestinians & the Peace Movement


I was talking today with someone from Workmen’s Circle, a progressive Jewish organization. 

They support “A stable two-state solution: a universally recognized State of Israel and a similarly recognized Palestinian State. Towards this end, there should be public promulgation and public acceptance by the Palestinian National Authority by Israel, and by all Arab states of the formula: ’full normalization of Arab-Israeli relations and full peace in return for final agreement on territorial issues.’


Seems straightforward enough. Yet some tag them as Zionist, while they may look with suspicion upon those, say, with pro-Palestinian banners at a protest - as happened last night in L.A. Henry Kissinger and Shimon Peres were speaking in Universal City. Workmen’s Circle called the protest. However they only wanted to protest Kissinger, while others, notably ANSWER, also protested Peres and the plight of Palestinians. Some sharp words were exchanged. (These sharp words, by the way, were exchanged over the din of bullhorns from hard Right Christians who were happily informing us we were all going to Hell).


Some ask; why can’t the Left come together on the Palestinian issue? As if this is an issue that just splits the Left. It’s not. Rather, it is an issue that crosses all manner of political, religious, and ethnic boundaries. There are multitudes of players here, all with their own agendas. Some may be nations, others may be underground cells. More than a few on all sides want to obliterate the opposition. So, it seems myopic to blame the Left for not being able to solve this when no one else can either.

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Pete Townshend

Pete Townshend


Pete Townshend, leader of The Who, has been arrested and “was questioned at a police station in southwest London on suspicion of possessing and making indecent images of children and of incitement to distribute such images, a Scotland Yard spokesperson told the BBC.”


Serious charges, and I’m particularly bothered by the “making” and “incitement to distribute”, as this implies something considerably more than passively viewing pictures. Methinks Townshend also needs to get and listen to a good lawyer because every time he attempts to explain things he gets in deeper.



“Over the weekend, Townshend admitted that he used a credit card to access an Internet child porn site, but claimed he did so only to conduct research for an autobiography that will address his own abusive childhood. Townshend… said he thinks he might have been molested between the ages of five and six. He insisted that he viewed the Internet child porn strictly to see if he could conjure up blocked memories.”


The translation here I’m guessing is, The police found child porn images on his computer. Another point, the websites in question are way hard core, are illegal, and thus, not easy to find.



“The sites contained hard-core pornographic images and would have been impossible to stumble upon by chance, said Jackie Bennett, a spokeswoman for the National Crime Squad, which investigates serious crime in Britain. “You would have to make a decision to subscribe to the Web site and purchase the images,” she said.”


Thomas Reedy, head of the portal website that sent subscribers to the child porn sites, was sentenced to 1335 years to life in Texas.
 
The breakthrough in the case came when the encryption of the credit cards was broken.



“But the fatal weakness in the system was that all the subscribers had to provide a credit card number so that Reedy’s gateway could verify who they were before charging them for access to the 5,700 sites within the network. Once the authorities cracked the code scrambling the credit card numbers they were able to track down the owners of the cards.”

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Bush: even his allies don’t…

Bush: even his allies don’t like him



GOP senators on the warpath

By Robert Novak


“Republican senators gathering last Wednesday for their session-opening ‘retreat’ should have been happy, blessed with a regained majority and a popular president. They were not. Instead, they complained bitterly of arrogance by the Bush administration, especially the Pentagon, in treatment of Congress along the road to war.


Two years of growing discontent boiled over during the closed-door meeting at the Library of Congress. White House chief of staff Andrew Card was there to hear grievances from President Bush’s Senate base that it is ignored and insulted by the administration, particularly by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, in preparing for war against Iraq. Recital of complaints began with Sen. John Warner, a pillar of the Senate GOP establishment.”

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