Archive for February 2nd, 2003


Vaclav Havel steps down as…

Vaclav Havel steps down as Czech President


Vaclav Havel and Nelson Mandela are my political heros. Both led that rarest of all political events; a non-violent revolution - Mandela in South Africa, Havel in Czechoslovakia. These were the people who led mass movements that toppled repressive regimes without firing a shot.


Yesterday Havel retired, and his nation, now the Czech Republic, honored him.



“Nearly 100 of the country’s most popular singers and actors took part in a goodbye spectacular Thursday at Prague’s National Theater.


Among the musicians was the Czech rock band the Plastic People of the Universe, which Havel stood with against official persecution in the 1970s in one of the period’s great cultural — and political — clashes between dissidents and Communist authorities. As the group sang, the outgoing president was visibly moved.”


The Plastic People were the now legendary rock band who, with Havel, sparked the stuggle that eventually collapsed a government. They were joined at the hip, comrades in the struggle.


From The Boston Globe



“When Czechoslovakia’s Communist rulers decided to put rock `n’ roll on trial in 1976, they arrested, tried, and convicted Zajicek and three members of the experimental band The Plastic People of the Universe. The men were jailed for “organized disturbance of the peace” and “corrupting the youth.”


It was a classic show trial and bizarre confrontation between a nascent hippie movement and the Communist state. Havel, a playwright already out of favor with the regime, sided with the hippies.


After witnessing the ”Plastic People trial,” Havel established Charter 77, a human rights organization that gained worldwide renown. The group eventually would land Havel in jail, as well. But it also set the stage for the 1989 Velvet Revolution that ended Communism in Czechoslovakia and catapulted Havel into the presidency.”


This history of the Plastic People contains the fascinating info that poet Allen Ginsberg may have lit the original match. 



“It was the height of the Big Beat era when American hipster poet Allen Ginsberg made his celebrated visit to Czechoslovakia. After accepting an invitation by students at Prague’s Charles University, Ginsberg arrived in Prague in March of 1965 and gave several poetry readings in small theaters in Prague and Bratislava. The young people embraced the long-haired revolutionary and crowned him King of their May Day Festival. Antonin Novotny’s hard-line Communist government, who Ginsberg had publicly denounced and insulted, appreciated Ginsberg less. After arresting him for alleged drug abuse and public drunkenness, the Secret Police broke into his hotel room and confiscated his writings, which they found to be lewd and morally dangerous. The government used these writings as an excuse to expel Ginsberg from the country on May 7, 1965.


The influence of Ginsberg’s visit on Czech culture should not be underestimated. Suddenly, the streets of Prague were filled with long-haired hippies wearing blue jeans and staging “happenings”. The Communist way of life began to seem more and more foreign to a new generation of Czechoslovaks. An underground club scene formed and grew with each passing year, spawning hundreds of new bands”.

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Space shuttle

Space shuttle


The L.A. Times reports the space shuttles are so old that replacement parts are difficult to find, that engineers sometimes use eBay to find them, and that the computer processors used is the Intel 8086.


The 8086 is the processor used in the original PC back in 1981. I believe it is 4.7 megahertz. Contrast that with today’s chips which are approaching 3 gigahertz.


I find it upsetting and bizarre that such obsolete equipment is still being used.

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Feb 15. Worldwide peace rallies

Feb 15. Worldwide peace rallies


So far the Feb 15 peace rallies will be in dozens of cities worldwide.

The biggest rally in the US will unquestionably be in NYC, and was called by United For Peace.


Hey, NYC hasn’t had a peace rally for a while, and you think they’ll let DC keep their record of a measly half million people (set on Jan 18). I think not!


The SF rally has been moved to Feb 16 to avoid conflicting with Chinese New Year.

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Feb 4. No War for…


Feb 4. No War for Oil day


On Feb 4 “hundreds of gas stations across the country and around the world will be targeted as we send a clear message that access to oil is not worth war.”


“Leafleting, vigils, street theater, and other forms of nonviolent direct action are all encouraged. Our intent is to communicate through education and peaceful confrontation that clean energy alternatives to oil exist, and that they can increase our security and give us true energy independence.”


In L.A. meet at Olympic & Bundy in West L.A. 4-7 pm.


 

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Blix bashes Bush bullshit

Blix bashes Bush bullshit


1) Hans Blix says his UN report has no evidence for Iraq war.



“Days after delivering a broadly negative report on Iraq’s cooperation with international inspectors, Hans Blix on Wednesday challenged several of the Bush administration’s assertions about Iraqi cheating and the notion that time was running out for disarming Iraq through peaceful means.


Mr. Blix took issue with what he said were Secretary of State Colin L. Powell’s claims that the inspectors had found that Iraqi officials were hiding and moving illicit materials within and outside of Iraq to prevent their discovery. He said that the inspectors had reported no such incidents.”


Translation: Blix says Washington grossly distorted and lied about his report.


2) Europe loses advocate With Powell’s Iraq shift

Colin Powell will be revealing “secret evidence” soon about all the bad nasty things Saddam is doing. Well pardon my cycnicism, but if they had real evidence, wouldn’t it have been released long ago?


So, we have a newly warlike Colin Powell. Tell me, is he a born-again hawk or simply finally showing his true colors? Many have thought he was a genuine voice of moderation, I wonder. Hard cop, soft cop is a time honored ploy, y’know. This may have been his real role all along.


3) As for Powell’s “secret evidence”



FBI & CIA skeptical of Iraq - Al-Qaeda links

“At the Federal Bureau of Investigation, some investigators said they were baffled by the Bush administration’s insistence on a solid link between Iraq and Osama bin Laden’s network. “We’ve been looking at this hard for more than a year and you know what, we just don’t think it’s there,” a government official said.


Mr. Bush asserted in his State of the Union address this week that Iraq was protecting and aiding Qaeda operatives, but American intelligence and law enforcement officials said the evidence was fragmentary and inconclusive.


“It’s more than just skepticism,” said one official, describing the feelings of some analysts in the intelligence agencies. “I think there is also a sense of disappointment with the community’s leadership that they are not standing up for them at a time when the intelligence is obviously being politicized.”


Translation: Bush & Powell saying that links exist between Iraq and al-Qaeda is not supported by any evidence.

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War ‘would mean biggest oil…

War ‘would mean biggest oil shock ever’



“The world will suffer a bigger oil crisis than that during the Arab-Israeli conflict of 1973 if the US declares war on Iraq, according to leading US investment bank Goldman Sachs.


“A war could drive crude oil prices up by an additional $10-$15, or 30 to 50 per cent [to $46],’ says Goldman’s report, ‘More Perfect Storm than Desert Storm’”.


Need I add that Goldman Sachs are not exactly wild-eyed radicals…

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MS Linux: Shipping in November…

MS Linux: Shipping in November 2003



“We are now offering the MS Linux Introductory CD at a special introductory price of only $249.99 (plus shipping and handling), if you order before it ships.


MS Linux is released under the provisions of the Gates Private License, which means you can freely use this Software on a single machine without warranty after having paid the purchase price and annual renewal fees.”

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How it works

How it works


Excerpts from an interview with BBC reporter Greg Palast.



LLOYD HART: Is it really truly a failure when a country implodes like Argentina just did or is it an opportunity or seen as an opportunity to go in and grab resources dirt cheap?


GREGORY PALAST: Well this is one of the problems. Actually [former World Bank economist Joe Stilitz] brought this up. In the IMF explosions like in Argentina, in Brazil and in Indonesia where there are riots in the streets. He calls them the IMF riots. They’re virtually written into the plan.


In fact I have been able to obtain inside documents from the IMF and World Bank which go through the steps. You actually see it in there where their squeezing and squeezing a country until the point where they know it will create an explosion as in Ecuador. They know it.


And so they use such polite terms as “We understand that these policies may create social unrest” what they mean is a riot, that means troops move into the street and they say “It will require firm resolve.”


LLOYD HART: Why does the US Treasury have a 51% stake in the World Bank.


GREGORY PALAST: If the US were to use it for good, that’s a hell of a lot of power. That’s not such a bad idea. The problem is that it has been pushing an agenda, which is very very, helpful to a few corporations in corporate America. . . . Not necessarily America but corporate America which are two quite different things. . .


Every single nation, every single nation that borrows from the IMF and the World Bank is given the conditionality of selling off their water systems, selling off their electric utilities. Golly, who does that benefit? Well a big subsidiary of Enron’s was Azurex, which was a company created to absorb these newly privatized water systems. So some one wins in this game and some one loses. And of course we’re beginning to see the big loser is now Argentina.

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