Archive for June, 2004


This is pathetic

This is pathetic


Green Party VP nominee says she may vote for Kerry



Green Party vice presidential nominee Pat LaMarche is “so determined to see Bush lose that she would not commit to voting for herself” and running mate David Cobb, the Portland Press Herald reports.


Tell me Pat, why you are running? You claim to want to build the Green Party, but your actions are now making it an absurdity and a laughingstock.



Says political scientist Larry Sabato: “It’s a rare thing, even for a splinter party, to have a nominee for vice president indicate she is not sure for whom she is going to vote.”


Other phrases besides “rare” come to mind - like “unheard of” and ”gaspingly stupid.” How can anyone take a political party seriously when a major candidate says she may not even vote for herself?

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Well that’s just great, PoliZeros,…

Well that’s just great, PoliZeros, you’ve bashed Greens and slapped Nader upside the head. Now what?


This does become a possibility, doesn’t it. Sigh…


The DemoGreens have taken over the Green Party, and if David Cobb, as expected, polls less than 1%, then the more radical Greens may be able to take back control of the party after November. By “more radical”, I mean those who genuinely want a third party, and not just be a daring trendy adjunct to the Democratic Party, however astoundingly thrilling this might be to some.


Among the many problems with Cobb is that there now will be no outside media coverage for Greens and the already miniscule fundraising will slow even more, especially considering that Greens are notoriously cheap, and that little to none outside money will be coming in. Did I mention Cobb has the charisma of week old leftovers? 


Pro-Nader Greens will try to get Ralph on the ballot wherever they can, including California, and will take the signatures wherever they get them, including Republicans. This approach, of course, leaves them wide open to the “spoiler” charge. However they view building a third party as worth the risk. I see using the extreme right to get Nader on the ballot as a tactic almost guaranteed to turn on them and bite them badly. We shall see.


Third parties do need to be built, now more than ever. Yet neither Nader or the Green Party appear to have had any contingency plan for their respective current dilemmas. Maybe it’s time to think of building other parties, parties that plan ahead more, do lots of outreach, and build coalitions.  


We are in a turbulent pre-election season, the turbulence and uncertainty will increase as the election nears, and with it all sorts of fractures and fissures will occur. These can be opportunities too, y’know.

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Bush meets actual journalist. Becomes…

Bush meets actual journalist. Becomes upset



On the eve of his recent sojourn in Europe, President Bush had an unpleasant run-in with a species of creature he had not previously encountered often: a journalist.


He did not react well to the experience.


Meanwhile two noted theologians have announced that God, who apparently addresses them directly, has informed them Dubya is the annointed one in 2004.



Sean Hannity: God is “no Democrat”; Dennis Miller: Jesus “prefers Bush to Kerry”

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Abducted Marine had reportedly deserted

Abducted Marine had reportedly deserted



The officer said Corporal Hassoun, a 24-year-old Marine linguist who was born in Lebanon, was shaken up after he saw one of his sergeants blown apart by a mortar shell.


“It was very disturbing to him,” the officer said. “He wanted to go home and quit the game, but since he was relatively early in his deployment, that was not going to happen anytime soon. So he talked to some folks on base he befriended, because they were all fellow Muslims, and they helped sneak him off. Once off, instead of helping him get home, they turned him over to the bad guys.”


“It’s all we know right now,” the officer added.

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Founding fathers were among first…

Founding fathers were among first auditors



The Pilgrims’ story from a business history side had an accounting scandal that was the ancestor of Enron and Tyco. Pilgrims sought financing and a charter to settle in America that were supplied by a group of early venture capitalists. The details of the agreement were unclear and no bookkeeper accompanied the group to America. A business manager sent to America by the financiers to run the business returned to England and borrowed money on behalf of the Pilgrims, and then spent it on travel, gifts and a London pub.


Sort of like the Adelphia folks building golf courses for themselves.



Colonization efforts—Sir Walter Raleigh’s “lost” colony in North Carolina, the Jamestown colony, the Pilgrims’ colony and the Puritans’ colony in Massachusetts—were all done as “joint-stock” ventures with wealthy capitalists in London financing the colonial efforts.


Hmm, a grumpy Socialist might opine that the American colonies were then just an investment scheme, and all the hoopla about “freedom from taxation” which justified the Revolutionary War was just a cover for the American ruling class grabbing the spoils from the British ruling class.

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Perhaps they should consider exorcism…

Perhaps they should consider exorcism too



Protesters ‘drive’ Bush from Ireland


Irish protesters used Shakespeare to blitz George W. Bush on Saturday, invoking Macbeth, a ghost and a witch to cast a spell on the U.S. president and drive him, symbolically at least, from Irish soil.


Somewhere, Allen Ginsberg is smiling. In 1965 at an antiwar demo at the Pentagon, he led the “Out demon out” chant as protesters attempted to exorcise the Pentagon as a “grope-in” took place on the grass in front of them. (Or maybe they wanted to levitate it, I forget which!)

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David Cobb and the coming…

David Cobb and the coming decline of the Green Party



By nominating Cobb, the Greens have a candidate “with zero name recognition,” said Dean Spiliotes, a fellow at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics. “It may be a good exercise in building up the party on the local level, but it means the party will drop off the radar. It’s a shock, but it is great news for Kerry.”


However, it is terrible news for the Green Party. Cobb’s avowed goal is to build the party from the grassroots, yet it’s difficult to see how his candidacy, which caused a serious rupture in the party, will do much but sink it into obscurity. Cobb is a bland, unexciting candidate; hardly someone who will inspire local organizing.


Moreover, and there isn’t much doubt about this, the Cobb forces prevailed by stacking the nominating committees who made convention rules with their people, thus insuring the rules would favor them - a time-honored tactic to be sure - but also a tactic that resulted in bruised feelings, serious polarization, and destroyed any chance of party unity.



After Cobb was officially nominated, many Nader supporters stormed out. Some sobbed. Others cursed and threw their Green Party posters to the ground.


“This is a dark day,” said Robert Nanninga, a delegate from Encinitas, Calif. “We’ve just nominated a white lawyer with a car salesman’s smile. It might as well be a Republican. This is going to be remembered for years to come.”


Progressives who might have voted for Nader, but now can’t because he won’t be on the ballot in their state, will be unlikely to vote for a nonentity like Cobb. Green Party registration nationwide is way less than 1% of the electorate. You probably thought it was more than that, right? It’s not. Even in California, barely 1% of voters are Green.


Thus, Cobb needs to draw votes from non-Greens if he wants any appreciable vote - and given the rupture he’s caused within the Green Party, there’s no way even the Green vote is his - so, really, there’s no way he can poll anywhere close to what Nader did in 2000. A dismal Green Party result of 1-2% in 2004 will have serious consequences. The Green Party would then drop from national attention. More ominously, if Cobb only polls 1-2%, the Green Party will lose ballot access in many states. (And saying he could reach 2% is probably overly optimistic…)


The Cobb forces won a battle but will lose the war - as Democrats rejoice.


As sf-frontlines so indelicately puts it:



Green Party convention to the real world: Drop dead!

Cobb is a paunchy, balding, middle-aged white lawyer with absolutely no claimed connection to social or protest movements. He says he discovered the evils of the two-party system in 1996, which doesn’t prevent him from back handedly supporting Kerry today.


Over the past few months Cobb ran a stealth campaign in which he held virtually no public meetings or rallies — not that he could draw any sort of crowd had he tried.


A playpen parody of the rules the Democrats and Republicans use for nominating delegates, including allocating representation to states with absolutely NO functioning green party units –facilitated the coup by the anti-Nader faction.


This is not a party that will mend quickly. The Green Party - and this generally stuns outsiders who thought the opposite - has always been riven by endless infighting and internal squabbles. This fight differs from the rest only in that it was unusually nasty and much more public.


Paradoxically, the Green Party belief in consensus and decentralization, ideas implemented for the best of motives, leads to these endless fights, because there’s never really closure; conflicts just keep getting recycled and rehashed endlessly. Plus, in a consensus system, the minority can always block the majority from acting - a result which is directly counter to the original intent. And in this case, a minority grabbed the controls while others snoozed.


“The Tyranny of Structurelessness” is the seminal piece on this. Written in 1970 by Jo Freeman, she describes how the women’s movement, which until then had been meeting in living rooms and operating on a loose consensus basis, found that consensus was no longer useful, and was in fact counter-productive, once they decided to organize for political change - a lesson the Green Party has yet to learn.


So now Greens have David Cobb, who will not campaign in states which he deems to be close between Kerry and Bush - a huge gift for Kerry - and a decidedly odd strategy for someone who says his goal is to build the Green Party. Instead, this will hasten its coming irrelevance and decline. I mean, why would you vote for a candidate who doesn’t even believe in his own candidacy? Rather, you will vote for Kerry - which appears to be the entire point of the Cobb candidacy anyway.


The Democrats couldn’t have blown up the Green Party better if they’d planned it themselves.

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Supremes whack Dubya upside the…

Supremes whack Dubya upside the head



In a matter of a few minutes Monday, the Supreme Court unraveled a major component of the Bush administration’s legal strategy for fighting the war on terror.


The administration argued that because the nation is at war, it could label terrorist suspects as enemy combatants and allow interrogators unfettered access to try to wring security information from them without interference by lawyers or courts.


The Supreme Court disagreed. It ruled that even enemy combatants deserve at the least a chance to prove in court they are innocent.


Wow, the Supreme Court affirmed the Consitution is still valid! (Sigh…)

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Nader’s increasing ties with the…

Nader’s increasing ties with the right


Michael Moore on Nader: “He doesn’t give a shit about anyone but himself. He’s let himself be taken over by his own anger towards the Democrats. He’s gone crazy.”

First, some background on Nader from Doug Henwood, radical economist and author, writing in his highly regarded Left Business Observer newsletter (which is print-only.) He endorsed Nader in 2000, but not this time.



Nader has a long history of operating alone, scornful of coalitions, a characteristic visible in his on-again, off-again relations with the Green Party. He’s got a deep conservative streak, he prefers litigation to regulation, which amounts to an individualist adversarial approach rather than collective political action.


One of his first published articles was a 1962 piece in a libertarian journal, The Freeman, supporting the residents of his hometown in their resistance against federally funded public housing. In the 1970’s, his Raiders often included unions among the monopolists that benefited from transport regulation, providing intellectual fuel for the deregulation movement. In the 1980’s he resisted unionization efforts in his own shop, red baiting one of the organizers in the process.


In the 2000 campaign, he wooed David Brooks, then of The Weekly Standard, naming the many rightwingers he’s worked with well in the past, among them such creeps as William Bennett, Paul Weyrich, Gary Bauer, and Grover Norquist, and still talks dreamily of drawing votes from the right.


He shares the austere morality of Bennett and Co.; he seems to lack a libido, and hold in contempt those who like theirs and consider them politically  important. His dislike of trade flirts with xenophobia; his people have discreetly worked with Pat Buchanan, although they don’t like to talk about that. And he still talks delusionally about peeling off votes from the Republicans by appealing to to “true” conservatives, who are distressed by Bush’s alleged impurities; in a letter to disgruntled reactionaries, he actually praises the Texas GOP, one of the more frightening political formations in the hemisphere.


Henwood concludes with, “The best we can hope for is a Kerry victory and that disillusionment sets in quickly.”


The American Prospect and Eric Alterman are long-time vicious bashers of both the Green Party and Nader. They’ve been attacking Nader for attempting to get on various state ballots by using rightwing Republican support. Are these charges accurate? After reading them, even considering the source, I would say - Yes.


The American Prospect details how the rightwing petition drive company that Nader hired in Arizona has piggybacked the petition for Nader with other, decidedly neandertal, petitions; one “would restrict access to public services by undocumented immigrants”, the other would “”block public funding from political campaigns in the state.” Why is Nader, who claims to be progressive, letting rightwing zealots run his petition drive using such scumbag tactics? Especially considering their intent in getting the Nader petition signed clearly is to defeat Kerry, not aid Nader.



The Arizona ballot drive was never the grassroots effort that Nader characterizes his campaign as.


This petition piggybacking helped Nader get more than the amount of signatures he needed to qualify for the ballot — most of them from Republicans. In fact, according to a volunteer for the Arizona Democratic Party who has reviewed Nader’s signatures, of the more than 21,000 signatures Nader garnered, a whopping 65 percent percent came from Republicans, compared to 18 percent from Democrats.


It is clear Nader has no credible base in Arizona.


Eric Alterman, once you get past his nasty tone (Hey Eric, you catch more flies with honey than you do with vinegar!), has more info on Nader’s current alliances with the right, including the following useful links.


Ralph and the Newmanites. This details a Nader attempt to get on the NY ballot by using the fringe, anti-Semitic New Alliance Party.


Ralph Nader, Suicide Bomber. The Village Voice. Strongly implies Nader’s reason for running in 2000 was in fact to defeat Gore, and backs this with reasonable enough fact and inference.


June 21, 2004 American Conversative magaine
Ralph Nader: Conservatively Speaking, interviewed by Pat Buchanan. “The long-time progressive makes a pitch for the disenfranchised Right.”


Ralph Nader’s skeleton closet. Lots of links and documentation.


From a widely circulated email, dated June 24, 2004, about Nader attempts to get on the Oregon ballot.



Ralph Nader himself appeared on Lars Larson’s right-wing talk radio show this afternoon to urge Lars’ listeners to come to his nominating convention this Saturday.  Guest host Victor Bok directly told the audience that they should help Ralph make the ballot to siphon liberal votes and allow George Bush to win Oregon.


My life as Ralph Nader’s flunkie. A former leftie writing for the partisan right Frontpage Magazine says he worked for Nader, and that Nader staffers are treated in a less than progressive manner - more like serfs, actually.


There’s at least three states now, Arizona, Oregon, and New York, where Nader is using extreme rightwing support to get on the ballot, as well as using the reactionary Reform Party in seven other states. Not only is this sleazy and manipulative, it gives lie to Nader’s claim to be championing a progressive agenda and should cause anyone to question his motives and stability.

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“Bush declares peace with Europe”

“Bush declares peace with Europe”
 
Odd, I didn’t even know we were at war with them!


However I do applaud Ireland for showing remarkable good sense upon Bush’s arrival to their country.



President George Bush has the dubious distinction of being the only U.S. president in memory to get a poor reception in Ireland.

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And Dubya will return to

And Dubya will return to


Audiences roar for Moore as US right declares war.



The American right has declared “war on Michael Moore” as his incendiary documentary Fahrenheit 9/11 opened to record-breaking audiences and standing ovations across the US.


Moore’s film, which tramples over the George W Bush presidency and attacks its conduct in pursuing the war on terror and the war against Iraq, broke single-day records on its opening in New York.


Rittenhouse Review blogs they were unable to see the 2:00 show on Friday because when they arrived, it and and the remaining eight shows that day were sold out.


And here’s more confirmation, Fahrenheit 9/11 looks to be #1 nationwide at the box office this weekend - extraordinary indeed for a documentary, especially one attacking a sitting president.


Suddenly, after years of domination of the media by the lunatic fringe right wing, there’s been a sea change. The left is now in ascendance. Not only is Fahrenheit 9/11, which was made with the deliberate intent of toppling Bush, making huge box office and getting worldwide attention, there’s several other like-minded /leftie/subversive documentaries in or nearing release. This of course is most excellent indeed!


The Control Room. I saw this tonight, it’s about Qatar news network al-Jazeera, the network the Bushies hate so much they bombed al-Jazreera headquarters in Baghdad, killing a reporter - on the same day they bombed another Arab news building.


If US media has a spin, then al-Jazeera can, does, and is quite entitled to have their spin too - even if Rumsfeld and the rest of his merry Orwellian gang try their best - and fail - to censor and eliminate viewpoints opposing their steady stream of propaganga.


The Hunting of the President. “The 10 year campaign to destroy Bill Clinton.” I’ve seen the trailer twice. Looks to be hard hitting in exposing the sleazy right wing vendetta against Clinton.


The Corporation. Finally opening in the US after being a huge hit in Canada, this documentary is based on the book “The Corporation. The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power.”

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Consider it an opportunity to…

Consider it an opportunity to explore cooking with tofu


US government calls for calm about the mad cow case


Dunno about you, but when our government implores us to be calm about something, well, that just makes me nervous!

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Well, duh

Well, duh


Iraqi insurgents are surprisingly cohesive, Armitage says



Admitting that U.S. officials have underestimated the insurgency, Deputy Secretary of State Richard L. Armitage told the Senate Armed Services Committee that a series of attacks across Iraq in recent days indicate that the attackers have a “central nervous system” that is showing increased coordination and effectiveness.


But what was previously envisioned as a faltering insurgency has evolved into a significant security problem and a largely unknown quantity.


Translation: They haven’t a clue what to do about this insurgency that steadily gets bigger and better organized.


Baqouba sealed off as US forces lose control of city



Insurgents appeared to have taken control of the Al-Mufraq district in western Baqouba. Residents here said occupation forces had retreated from the area after being ambushed.


“This morning the mujahideen defeated the occupying forces in Al-Mufraq,” said Amer Alwhan, a 29 year-old engineer who lives near the area.

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Green Party decides not to…

Green Party decides not to back Nader



David Cobb fended off the ghost of Ralph Nader Saturday to become the Green Party’s nominee for president.


The selection of Cobb thwarted Nader’s opportunity to gain immediate access to the ballot in 22 states and Washington, D.C.


Nader with Peter Camejo as VP are running as independents.

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Your Baghdad weather forecast

Your Baghdad weather forecast


For the next ten days: Highs: 108-110. Lows: 80


From Baghdad Burning



I have had neither the time, nor the inclination, to blog lately. The weather is, quite literally, hellish. The heat begins very early in the morning with a blazing sun that seems unfairly close to our part of the earth. You’d think, after the sun has set, that the weather would be drastically cooler. This is not the case in Baghdad. After the sun has set, the hot sidewalks and streets emanate waves of heat for several hours, as if sighing in relief.


The electricity has been particularly bad these last two weeks in many areas. For every four hours of no electricity, we get two hours of electricity.

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Experts study developing Internet attack

Experts study developing Internet attack



Government and industry experts warned late Thursday of a mysterious, large-scale Internet attack against thousands of popular Web sites. The virus-like infection tries to implant hacker software onto the computers of all Web site visitors.


There’s been a number of such mysterious attacks recently. My guess is they are probes. Someone, and I don’t mean script kiddies, is testing attacks, with the real assault yet to come.

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Mark Twain

Mark Twain


While in Hartford, CT last weekend, I toured the Mark Twain House again. He built it, lived there seventeen years, and wrote most of his books, including Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn, in the third floor billiards room. He was arguably the most famous American of his day, quite possibly our greatest writer, and contrary to what some believe, he was a political progressive, anti-imperialist, and distinctly anti-racist.


Is Huck Finn racist?



For Twain’s critics, the novel is racist on the face of it, and for the most obvious reason: many characters use the word “nigger” throughout. But since the action of the book takes place in the south twenty years before the Civil War, it would be amazing if they didn’t use that word.


A closer reading also reveals Twain’s serious satiric intent. In one scene, for instance, Aunt Sally hears of a steamboat explosion.


    “Good gracious! anybody hurt?” she asks.


    “No’m,” comes the answer. “Killed a nigger.”


But anyone who imagines that Mark Twain meant this literally is missing the point. Rather, Twain is using this casual dialogue ironically, as a way to underscore the chilling truth about the old south, that it was a society where perfectly “nice” people didn’t consider the death of a black person worth their notice.


Twain,in fact, was an early and vocal champion of civil rights. He sponsored and paid full tuition for the first black to attend Yale Law School, Warren McGuinn. His letter recommending McGuinn for entrance into Yale Law is on display at the Mark Twain House.


From an interview with filmmaker Ken Burns



When Twain visited New Haven in 1885, noted the filmmaker, he met and befriended Warren McGuinn, an African-American student who was struggling to stay in Yale despite grinding poverty. Twain ended up paying the young man’s entire expenses at Yale, said Burns, adding that McGuinn went on to become a respected lawyer and later in his career a mentor to future Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall <the first black member of that court.>


Twain also founded an Anti-Imperialist League in opposition to the stomach-turning US invasion of the Phillipines.


From Norman Solomon



At the turn of the century, as the Philippines came under the wing of the US government, Mark Twain suggested a new flag for the Philippine province–”just our usual flag, with the white stripes painted black and the stars replaced by the skull and cross-bones.”


While the United States followed up on its victory in the Spanish-American War by slaughtering thousands of Filipino people, Twain spoke at anti-war rallies. He also flooded newspapers with letters and wrote brilliant, unrelenting articles.


Twain followed up in early 1901 with an essay titled “To the Person Sitting in Darkness.” Each of the world’s strongest nations, he wrote, was proceeding “with its banner of the Prince of Peace in one hand and its loot-basket and its butcher-knife in the other.” Many readers and some newspapers praised Twain’s polemic. But his essay angered others, including the American Missionary Board and the New York Times.


“Particularly in his later years,” scholar Tom Quirk has noted, “the fierceness of Twain’s anti-imperialist convictions disturbed and dismayed those who regarded him as the archetypal American citizen who had somehow turned upon Americanism itself.”


Sound familiar? Those who oppose the insane wars of imperialism get accused of being anti-American…


Mark Twain was born as Halley’s Comet streaked through the heavens and said



I came in with Halley’s Comet in 1835. It is coming again next year (1910), and I expect to go out with it. It will be the greatest disappointment of my life if I don’t go out with Halley’s Comet. The Almighty has said, no doubt: “Now here are these two unaccountable freaks; they came in together, they must go out together.”


And yes, they did go out together. He died in 1910.


And of course, there were his many witty, now-famous quotes.



“It could probably be shown by facts and figures that there is no distinctly American criminal class except Congress.


Most people are bothered by those passages of Scripture they do not understand, but the passages that bother me are those I do understand.


Be careful about reading health books. You may die of a misprint.


Don’t go around saying the world owes you a living. The world owes you nothing. It was here first.


Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress. But I repeat myself.


I didn’t attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying that I approved of it.


The man who doesn’t read good books has no advantage over the man who can’t read them.


When we remember we are all mad, the mysteries disappear and life stands explained.


The radical of one century is the conservative of the next. The radical invents the views. When he has worn them out the conservative adopts them.


The rule is perfect: in all matters of opinion our adversaries are insane.


Sacred cows make the best hamburger.”

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LAPD: We treat you like…

LAPD: We treat you like a King


Another black motorist got the shit beaten out of him in LA after holding his hands in the air and not resisting arrest. And it was videotaped



Los Angeles Mayor James K. Hahn said today that after viewing the televised beating of a suspected car thief, it appeared to him that police used “excessive force” and he reiterated his demand for a full inquiry.


Update: From Steve Lopez in the LA Times



Here’s a tip to cops:


It’s always best to conduct beatings indoors, particularly if you hear a helicopter, notice a bright light, and see a shadow of yourself poised to strike again. Sure, that’s your own team up there in a police chopper. But it’s likely there are TV news crews nearby.


Although this thing looked bad, <LAPD Police Chief> Bratton said from 3,000 miles away, “There should be no rush to judgment before the investigations are completed.”


Guess what, Chief. My investigation is complete.


Any cop who’d whack a captured suspect 11 times, on live TV no less, is too dumb to keep past lunch.

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Fahrenheit 9/11

Fahrenheit 9/11


Today is the opening of the much-awaited Fahrenheit 9/11. I have a ticket for the first show at a nearby theatre and will blog immediately upon return!


Update:


I’ve just returned from the movie. It’s outrageous, funny, poignant, and is aimed at toppling Dubya from power. While there’s nothing here activists don’t already know, Moore’s well-documented attacks on Bush family ties to the bin Laden family and the Saudi royal family may shock many. In addition, he focuses on the endless lies Bush used to justify invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq showing that the real reason was oil, as well as a desire for unchallenged American empire with the invasions not so coincidentally also being a financial windfall for the Bush Family and allies.


Most of all, this is a great movie. It’s fast-paced, fun to watch, informative - and depicts Dubya and the neocons as greedy manipulative liars. Expect the Right to attack Moore with everything they can. Expect also, I think, that this movie will have a huge opening weekend.


Everything progressives have been saying about Bush for years, often howling in the wilderness back then, is now in a movie getting major media attention. This in and of itself, is huge progress and shows how the Bushies are losing it.


 US Poll: 54% of Americans say Iraq War a mistake

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Ministry of Silly Logic

Ministry of Silly Logic


Dibgy, a progressive Democrats, is utterly befuddled as to why Greens aren’t Democrats. Surely, he shrieks, Greens must see what the neocons are doing, yet these foolish children STILL refuse to return to the Democratic Party.



Therefore, for electoral purposes, they <Greens> must be considered part of the realm of non-voters who don’t participate. And because, for political reasons, they have consciously decided to stay outside the system as it exists, they are actually less persuadable than the apathetic many.


What a heap of hooey! Nader is actively running a Presidential campaign and the Green Party is meeting now in Minnesota to vote on a candidate. So how could this possibly be “outside the system” with Greens being “non-voters?”


Oddly, it’s progressive Democrats who foam at the mouth the most at Nader. They oppose the war, agree with much of Nader’s platform, yet attack him for having the effrontery, the unmitigated gall, to run against a candidate, Kerry, who they disagree with on many issues yet support anyway!


Most illogical. I think they’re conflicted.


It’s the war, stupid! Many American now oppose it, but Kerry and Bush sure don’t. We need candidates who actively oppose the war and work for genuine progressive change. Sure, Kerry tilts leftward on social issues, and that’s good, but on foreign policy he’s as hawkish as Bush. He wants 40,000 more troops in the Army, wants to send them everywhere, and  believes in American Exceptionalism, that White Man’s Burden delusion that the US can and should “intervene” anywhere and anytime it chooses and screw you if you don’t like it. This is not a recipe for peace. Nor is it working.


Doug Henwood, radical economist and author says in his latest Left Business Observer newsletter, “The best we can do is hope for a Kerry victory, and that disillusionment will rapidly set it… Some similar disillusionment with Clinton probably helped spark Seattle. It could happen again. Let’s hope it does.”


Yes, if it’s close in California (which it won’t be), I’ll vote for Kerry - but in the meantime, progressives need to hold his feet to the fire on the Iraq war and also to bring progressive ideas into the campaign. Nader and Camejo can do just that.


If Democrats want those votes, all they need to do is bring those ideas into their campaigns too…

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U.S. soldiers to be charged…

U.S. soldiers to be charged in Iraqi general’s death



The U.S. Army plans to file charges against two military intelligence officers in the suffocation death of an Iraqi general during questioning in Iraq


The newspaper said negligent homicide and manslaughter charges were being brought against two warrant officers over the death of Iraqi Maj. Gen. Abed Hamed Mowhoush.

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Moonie leader ‘crowned’ in Senate

Moonie leader ‘crowned’ in Senate


Republicans and Democrats attend cult blessing ceremony



The US Senate was used for a bizarre ritual in which the Rev Sun Myung Moon  the head of the Unification church, was “crowned” and declared himself the messiah in the presence of more than a dozen Republican and Democratic members of Congress.

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Computer pioneer Bob Bemer

Computer pioneer Bob Bemer


ASCII is the alphabetic character set used used by virtually all computers, including PCs. Bob Bemer spearheaded its development, and passed away today at age 84.

“Mr.
Bemer’s accomplishments resonate so deeply one almost assumes they have
been with us always, snatched out of the ether by a collective
consciousness, instead of having been the creation of one man. A short
list includes:

  • Helped create the 8-bit per byte standard
  • Helped create and standardize the ASCII character set (as in “Father of”)
  • Helped create COBOL (as in “Grandfather of”)
  • Invented the ESCape sequence
  • Put the backslash into the ASCII set
  • Created the PICTURE clause

For
you non-geeks out there, the above list may appear incomprehensible.
However, let me assure you, these are amazing accomplishments, and puts
him up there with the legendary Grace Hopper
(AKA Grandma COBOL) who pioneered COBOL, invented the compiler, and had
the outlandish idea in the late 40’s that computers could be used for
business purposes. (She also inspired countless women to enter the
computer world.)

She’s
also credited with coining the term bug when she traced an error in the
Mark II to a moth trapped in a relay. The bug was carefully removed and
taped to a daily log book. Since then, whenever a computer has a
problem, it’s referred to as a bug.

If
the computer world now speaks many languages eloquently and fluently,
it’s because pioneers like Bemer and Hopper invented the alphabet, then
words, then sentences…

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Hide-the-priest

Hide-the-priest


The Dallas Morning News is running an investigation on the noxious Catholic Church practice of hiding pedophile priests from the authorities, often letting them work with children.


Runaway priests hiding in plain sight



Catholic Priests accused of sexually abusing children are hiding abroad and working in church ministries, the Dallas Morning News has found.


From Africa to Latin America to Europe to Asia, these priests have started new lives in unsuspecting communities, often with the help of church officials. They are leading parishes, teaching and continuing to work in settings that bring them into contact with children, despite church claims to the contrary.


Priests charged with sexual abuse hidden abroad by church


Convicted priest sexual abuser and fugitive works with kids in Samoa

Cardinal offered sanctuary to admitted molester



Cardinal Oscar Rodríguez could be the next pope. He also recently sheltered an admitted child molester.


Slide show and audio

And from the LA Times


Vatican aware of abuse for centuries, study says



Facing an estimated 800 sexual-abuse lawsuits in California, Roman Catholic officials have argued that the church learned only in recent years that it had a widespread problem with priests molesting children.


A report in February by the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, for example, said Cardinal Roger M. Mahony and other bishops didn’t realize until 1985 that sexual abuse by clergy was “more than a matter of tragic but isolated incidents.”


But a North Carolina priest and two former monks who live in Southern California say they have scoured ancient Vatican records and forgotten Latin texts to show just the opposite: that the church has recognized the problem of abuse by priests for at least 1,700 years and has failed to address it successfully.


Thanks to Miss Monica for the info!

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Nader to supporters: Vote for…

Nader to supporters: Vote for Kerry if it’s close



The longtime consumer advocate wants would-be supporters to attend his rallies, but he says he wants them to feel free to cast their votes for Sen. John Kerry once they enter the voting booth — especially in swing states where their vote might help defeat President Bush.


Good. This is a principled stand, and will also shut up the more loony and vociferous Democrats. DailyKos generally has excellent political coverage, but on Nader, Kos isn’t rational. For example, he just posted a photo of a Nader organizer in Arizona talking to a Republican as proof of the hideous conpiracy Nader is engaging in, consorting with actual Republicans and all. I guess Kos must be so unsullied and pure that he has never ever spoken to a Republican, eh?


In reality, speaking as a former co-chair of the Green Party of LA County, I know several Green activists who say they would be Republicans if they weren’t Greens, including one who was an elected Republican town council member. Plus, polls have shown about 25% of those voting for Nader in 2000 were Republicans. So, take off the tinfoil hat, Kos.


The Nader/Camejo ticket will focus on the war and progressive issues. Hey, someone has to, Kerry sure isn’t. Nader has shown he can grab major media attention, and Camejo is a mature, intelligent long-time activist who impressed many non-Greens during his California governor run earlier this year. Together, they may well force Kerry to tilt left. Good.


Meanwhile, Kerry continues to waffle on the war



Senate votes to add 20,000 troops to Army: Kerry abstains

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