Archive for November 30th, 2003


Kill! Kill! Kill!

Kill! Kill! Kill!



The Soldiers At My Front Door.


“I looked out the front window of the house where I live, next door to the church, and there they were–all 75 of them, standing yards away from my front door, in the street right in front of my house and our church, shouting and screaming to the top of their lungs, ‘Kill! Kill! Kill!’

Their commanders had planted them there and were egging them on.”

Rev. John Dear, a Jesuit priest and peace activist, describes an encounter with his local National Guard unit.


Via MetaFilter

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Greatest German

Greatest German


As voted by three million Germans -


1) Konrad Adenauer
2) Martin Luther
3) Karl Marx



Winner Konrad Adenauer served from 1949 to 1963 and helped re-establish German democracy after the Nazi era. Reformation Monk Martin Luther came second, with communist philosopher Karl Marx third.


(Interestingly, formerly communist East Germany voted Marx #1.)


Adenauer certainly altered Germany. However, Martin Luther and Karl Marx altered the planet.


It is a common misconception to say Marx was a philosopher. He was also an organizer, activist, and did way more than sit home and write manifestos. Marx was out there in the tumult practicing what he preached, and got expelled from several countries for doing so - something which appeared to faze him not at all.


Understanding Marxism, I think, helps understand world events, as the ideas in the Communist Manifesto are still in play today. Internationalism. Self-determination. Equality. Women’s rights. Opposition to racism and homophobia. Such ideas have been in the sectarian Left for 150 years now.  These ideas resonate with people. That’s why they spread. Not because some evil commie is out there subverting the populace, but because the populace, at least in part, finds the ideas have merit.


In virtually all countries but the U.S., Marxist thought is accepted and is at least somewhat mainstream. Many European parliaments have Communist and Socialist members. It’s just not a big deal. Like, oh you mean Socialists organize for social change. Wow, tell me something I don’t already know.


It’s only in the U.S. where rigidity against Marxism is so pronounced it becomes almost comical. Why is this?


As you might have guessed, I’ve been exploring these ideas, and, in fact, will attend a socialism conference in NYC next weekend. Hey, we already have public roads, public schools, public libraries, and they seem to work well. So why not also have public healthcare and guaranteed retirement plans that people can actually live on?

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New and novel use of…

New and novel use of the Internet


War-driving pornster arrested



After pulling the man over, Sgt. Don Woods discovered the man was naked from the waist down as he downloaded images on a laptop computer of a young girl involved in a sex act with an adult.


Investigation showed the man had hooked into a wireless computer network at a nearby house to gain access to a resident’s Internet connection and download images from child pornography websites.


The scheme, known as “war driving,” allows a computer with wireless Internet capability to tap into a wireless home network and access the World Wide Web, usually without fear of discovery.

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Soros, Buffett bet against the…

Soros, Buffett bet against the dollar



Smart money players Warren Buffett and George Soros are making huge bets the dollar will continue its slide to new lows all next year.


The greenback hit its lowest level ever against the euro yesterday, dropped to a five-year low against the British pound and fell to a 10-year bottom against the Canadian dollar.


A falling dollar means expensive imports and cheap exports for the US. It also means our financial position in the world is getting a bit wobbly.

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Troop families go to Iraq…

Troop families go to Iraq on peace mission



The leader of the 10-member group, Fernando Suarez del Solar, said it is important for Iraqis to realize that not all Americans support the U.S. military presence in Iraq. His son, Marine Lance Cpl. Jesus Suarez del Solar, 20, was killed in Iraq eight months ago when he stepped on an unexploded American cluster bomb.


Suarez spoke at an ANSWER rally on Sep 28 in LA and said the military lied to him at first about the cause of his son’s death, something he understandably found to be contemptible.

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Nirvana bassist may run for…

Nirvana bassist may run for Lt. Gov. of Washington



Grunge-rock pioneer Krist Novoselic says he may run for lieutenant governor in what would be the next step of a transition from rock star to politician.


I suspect he may be asked if he inhaled…

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Public suicides attests to labor…

Public suicides attests to labor unrest in South Korea



Four South Korean labor activists have killed themselves since late September, and a fifth is lying near death in the burn unit of a hospital. Four foreign workers also have committed suicide this month in protest of South Korean labor policies.


In September, a South Korean farmer stabbed himself to death at a World Trade Organization conference in Cancun, Mexico.


These spectacularly public suicides, along with increasingly disruptive protests on the streets, are an unmistakable sign of growing labor unrest in South Korea.

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Boycott Borders

Boycott Borders



On December 6, 2002, workers at Borders Bookstore store #1 in Downtown Ann Arbor, Michigan, voted for union representation with UFCW Local  876 by a margin of 93%. Border’s management has responded by employing union-busting tactics and failing to negotiate in good faith. On November 8, 2003, workers began an unfair labor practice strike — and now they are asking for your solidarity!

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