Archive for October 24th, 2005


Fear vector management

From Global Guerrillas 

The triple suicide attack on the Palestine hotel in Baghdad is an interesting new example of Fear Vector Management. Chris Allbritton puts an interesting twist on this:

This means they knew where the cameras are. They know how to get into the compound. And there’s a good chance the first two explosions were designed to get journalists’ attention, draw them to the windows and then explode the third one.

If they knew where the cameras were and how to get inside, then they must have people inside. Thus they are invisible to the US occupying forces.

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The old blog is here (mostly)

Polizeros was published on the Radio Userland platform from 2002 to Oct. 21 2005. Polizeros now uses the Wordpress platform. There is no easy way (or even a difficult way!) to import Radio Userland posts into Wordpress, so I published the entire Radio Userland blog to a folder here on the new site.

Click http://www.polizeros.com/pzarchive/radio/ to view the archive.

Update: During the publish process a few links got broken, primarily images in individual posts. I’ll be fixing them as needed. Ditto for some of the permalinks.

Other than that, the entire Radio Userland archive of Polizeros is now online!

(And I never ever want to do this process again! I’m a seasoned programmer/geek, and republishing Radio to a different folder than it was published to originally broke all sorts of links that I spent most of the day fixing. In fairness, Radio also discovered it had made errors and fixed many of them itself the second time around. Confused? Yes, so was I. However, all’s well that ends well.)

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This is the archive site for Polizeros

Polizeros moved to the Wordpress platform on 10/23/05. Previously it had been published using Radio Userland. This is the Radio Userland archive of Polizeros from 2002 to Aug 21, 2005.


To return to the new Polizeros site, click http://www.polizeros.com


The new Polizeros rss feed is http://polizeros.com/?feed=rss2


Aside from a few minor rendering errors, this ported version of the complete Radio Userland archive for Polizeros is now online and functional!

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Bye, bye Harriet

Bush refuses to give Miers material to U.S. Senate

The Senate will object, and Bush will then pull the nomination, claiming he was standing on principle. In other words, the Miers nomination is dead. He’s got way more important stuff to worry about.

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Bush in denial

The (NY) Daily News has learned Bush has told associates Cheney was overly involved in intelligence issues in the runup to the Iraq war that have been seized on by Bush critics.

Sounds like Bush is aiming the blame gun at Cheney, because of course he himself is blameless.

Bush is so dismayed that “the only person escaping blame is the President himself,” said a sympathetic official, who delicately termed such self-exoneration “illogical.”

During the end days of Watergate, Nixon sometimes acted irrationally. I think we’re starting to see that in Bush now too. The kingdom is crumbling while the whole world is watching.

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Sacramento homeowner’s protest

People try to tear it down, the owner keeps putting it back up. The photo is currently on the home page of the LA Times website, and the story is on page one of the California/local section. For this to be featured so prominently signals a big shift in public opinion.

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Not a Monty Python joke, sadly

Dead parrot did have killer strain of bird flu

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Prison Nation

The U.S. prison population, already the largest in the world, grew by 1.9 percent in 2004, leaving federal jails at 40 percent over capacity, according to Justice Department figures

According to the International Center for Prison Studies at King’s College in London, there are more people behind bars in the United States than in any other country.

China had the second-largest prison population with 1.5 million prisoners, according to statistics updated in April and cited by King’s College. The total U.S. population is about 296 million, while China’s is 1.3 billion.

The U.S. prison population continued to grow last year even though reports of violent crime during 2004 were at the lowest level since the government began compiling statistics 32 years ago.

So there’s less crime but more prisoners. More than China. More than any other country. Someone is getting richer from building all those prisons, not to mention US convicts being used as ultra-cheap labor by large corporations.

The US Prison Industry: big business or slavery?

Human rights organizations, as well as political and social ones, are condemning what they are calling a new form of inhumane exploitation in the United States, where they say a prison population of up to 2 million – mostly Black and Hispanic – are working for various industries for a pittance. For the tycoons who have invested in the prison industry, it has been like finding a pot of gold. They don’t have to worry about strikes or paying unemployment insurance, vacations or comp time. All of their workers are full-time, and never arrive late or are absent because of family problems; moreover, if they don’t like the pay of 25 cents an hour and refuse to work, they are locked up in isolation cells.

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Frankenpumpkins on parade

Sue grew giant pumpkins last year and saved the seeds. When we planted them this year we discovered they’d cross-bred with gourds, hence the frankenpumpkins.

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Miami Herald. Wilma coverage

Complete coverage

Major high rise damage (photo)

Over one million without power.

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