Archive for May 29th, 2005


France rejects EU Constitution

European leaders desperately played down Europe’s biggest crisis in 50 years as voters in France overwhelmingly rejected the European constitution.


Chirac’s government will probably fall because of this, and it never had to happen. He could have just had it raftified, but instead called the election in an attempt to boost his re-election chances. The Netherlands votes in three days, and will probably reject it too. This is a political earthquake.

No Comments »

Net swarming the Minutemen?

swarming the Minutemen with the ECD.


Updating the anti-Minuteman swarm topic: the Electronic Civil Disobedience group has urged people supporting the Swarm the Minuteman project to join an electronic sit-in against the Minuteman movement, scheduled for May 27-29th. This uses Floodnet to overwhelm Minuteman web sites.


Don’t use the program. I tried it for about three minutes, then closed it down, to discover it had opened four more windows. I closed those, and found it was still running, clicking each time it contacted a Minutemen site. I had to reboot. At best this is an ill-mannered program.


Plus, what does this accomplish? Not much. Get in the streets, organize, sway public opinion our way. That’s the way to do it. Netwars like this prove little.

No Comments »

Ah-nold and the non-existent potholes

Email from Kirsten Anderson



Didja hear about Schwartengrabber’s latest P.R. stunt?  This was in San Jose. He was doing some sort of publicity stunt about funding for transportation. They were going to have him join with a bunch of Cal Trans and city people and fill pot holes. (put on a hard hat and a day-glo orange vest the same color as my macaroni and cheese)  But the street they decided to do this on didn’t have any potholes for the cameras–there were just a few cracks. SO! Oh, NO!!! The cameras and lights and stage and everything were set up, but no potholes to fill.


So they got a crew to dig potholes, then (for the cameras) had the big show of the governator filling in the phony holes with the rest of the workers. What’s cool, is neighbors on this street filmed the entire thing. They’re pissed off. Because only two blocks away and all over the city, there are tons of potholes that need filling. And they’re also finding out that the city of San Jose not only had to pay for all those workers to dig holes and refill them, but the police protection and everything else. So, mega-bucks for a p.r. stunt.


I think the emperor’s lack of clothes is starting to show!


And yes, this really did happen

No Comments »

20 years for 9 pounds

Schapelle Corby, 28, from Australia, was sentenced last week to 20 years in Indonesia after 9 pounds of marijuana were found in her luggage. Her sentence has gotten huge media attention in Australia, and even the government is involved.



Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said yesterday said it would take some months to finalise a prisoner exchange agreement between Australia and Indonesia that would allow Corby to serve some of her sentence in Australia, but not reduce it. The only way she could reduce her sentence, if her appeal was unsuccessful, was to seek a presidential pardon.


Indonesia clearly resents the intrusion of Australian politics into their courts, saying that she could have received death and that 20 years is a moderate sentence by their standards. Corby is appealing, but this is risky, as her sentence can be increased as well as decreased during the appeal.


Among the the 10 pieces of evidence against her



A drug dealer employing baggage handlers would be highly unlikely to smuggle four kilograms of marijuana into Brisbane airport and then into a stranger’s bag, just to send it on to Sydney. Such a task would further require another handler at Sydney to sneak it out of the bag and hide it while attempting to get it out of the airport. As road haulage experts have confirmed, smugglers could avoid this by sending it by road.


Me, I think a pro trying to smuggle drugs in tourist luggage would be more likely to smuggle cocaine or heroin, as it’s odorless and far more valuable, and that attempting to sneak 9 lbs.of pot out in luggage is something a neophyte one-time smuggler would recklessly attempt - and pay way too high a price for doing.

No Comments »

Hypocrisy

Employers of illegal immigrants face little risk of penalty



Owners of hotels, farms, restaurants and retail stores who hire illegal workers — never widely sanctioned to begin with — now face a negligible risk of being penalized.


What the Minutemen don’t realize is they will be taking on entrenched business classes who need that cheap labor. They probably think, being good right wingers and all, that they are allies with business. They will learn differently.

No Comments »

The real cost of air travel

It might be cheap, but it’s going to cost the earth. The cut-price airline ticket is fuelling a boom that will make countering global warming impossible.


Unless the boom in cheap flights is halted, say Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace, Britain and other countries will simply not be able to meet targets for cutting back on the emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) that are causing the atmosphere to warm, with potentially disastrous consequences.


Hmm, in the past 5 months, I’ve travelled 16,000 miles by air.

No Comments »

No bucks, no bouncing

Texas bans all Medicaid claims for Viagra

No Comments »