Archive for November 11th, 2005


US Army article confirms white phosphorous use in Fallujah

This is a few days old, but it’s important.

Fallujah bombingA March ‘05 publication by the US Army confirms that US soldiers used white phosphorus offensively in the Battle of Fallujah. This directly contradicts statements made by the U.S. Department ofDefense and by the US State Department.

The white phosphorus hits and disperses into an indiscriminately lethal cloud with a kill zone approximately a quarter of a mile wide — over a tenth of a mile in all directions. Although white phosphorus often has no effect on clothes, when it makes contact with a person’s skin, it will burn it down to the bone. If the gas is inhaled, it will blister the throat and lungs, causing rapid suffocation, burning the body from the inside.

Here is the story on artillery use from the March/April edition of the US Army’s "Field Artillery Magazine" 

However, the pdf has disappeared from the Army site, and I can’t find a version online. Anyone have it cached? (I did read it a few days back, it’s genuine.)

And despite pathetic justifications from the right saying, well, white phosporous is just for illumination (I guess they forgot it melts people from the inside), it’s also illegal.

In the Battle Book of the US Army Command and General Staff College, Section 5-11 (b4), it states:

(4) Burster Type White phosphorus (WP M110A2) rounds burn with intense heat and emit dense white smoke. They may be used as the initial rounds in the smokescreen to rapidly create smoke or against material targets, such as Class V sites or logistic sites. It is against the law of land warfare to employ WP against personnel targets.

Thanks to Radical Glascow for the nudge on Fallujah.

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Tinfoil helmets a goverment plot?

Read the shocking MIT report.

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This is news?

Poll: Most Americans doubt Bush’s honesty

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Viridian Design and global warming

Viridian Design is a design movement about global warming. It’s net-based, founded by sf author Bruce Sterling in 1998, and communicates primarily through the Viridian Notes listserv with occasional online contests which I archive at the Viridian Repository.

Big Mike, the Viridian mascotTo give a flavor of what it’s about, here’s excerpts from Viridian Notes #455, commenting on Al Gore’s recent speech on global warming. The quoted parts are Gore’s speech. The ((( parts ))) are Viridian Notes comments on the speech

"This summer, more than 200 cities in the United States broke all-time heat records. Reno, Nev., set a new record with 10 consecutive days above 100 degrees. Tucson, Ariz., tied its all-time record of 39 consecutive days above 100 degrees. New Orleans and the surrounding waters of the Gulf also hit an all-time high."

(((I wonder what sci-fi novelist and self-appointed climate expert  Michael Crichton makes of all this. Has anybody asked Mike lately?  Maybe he thinks that leftists have rigged all the thermometers.)))

"This summer, parts of India received record rainfall, 37 inches fell in Mumbai in 24 hours, killing more than 1,000 people."

(((Might I point out that the valiant Indians handled their mayhem rather more gracefully than Bush did Katrina?  Oh, and then there’s Mississippi governor Haley Barbour, that sworn enemy of Kyoto…  I wonder if Haley will be available to take press questions when Trent Lott’s newly repaired house blows down, yet again.)))

"To those who say this problem is too difficult, I say that we have accepted and met such challenges in the past."

(((Uh, not really, Al.  Nobody ever melted the North Pole before.)))

"With Hurricane Katrina, the melting of the Arctic ice cap and careless ecological mayhem, we, too, are entering a period of consequences. This is a moral moment."

(((Yep, it’s a moral moment likely to last a couple of hundred years. After all, that’s how long it took us to get here.)))

"This is not ultimately about any scientific  debate or political dialogue. Ultimately it is about  who we are as human beings. It is about our capacity to transcend our own limitations."

(((It’s also about our capacity to endure all kinds of new limitations being thrust upon us by our ignoramus willingness to breathe our own trash, like, for instance, wrecked major cities and our shocking loss of an ice-cap.)))

"We have everything we need to face this urgent challenge. All it takes is political will. And in our democracy, political will is a renewable resource."

(((Although he knows the facts, he’s asking us not to despair. That should be news that stays news.)))

True. These aren’t band-aid fixes we’re talking about either. To prepare for and then reverse global warming means a restructuring of the economic system. People and the earth need to come first. After that, corporations can make a profit. Not the other way around like we have now, with a planet being trashed by greedheads. Getting to that new system will be a serious brouhaha as dinosaurs like ExxonMobil do whatever to delay their inevitable extinction. This ain’t tree-hugging! We need a new economic system.

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Sony rootkit. Greedy record company compromises PC security

Sony is sneaking rootkit software onto PCs of those playing their music CDs. The rootkit is difficult if not impossible to deinstall, very hard to detect, and deliberately hides itself. This in the name of copy protection.

From the pay version of the indispensable WindowsSecrets newsletter.

What if I told you the new audio CD you’ve been playing on your PC has installed software without your knowledge — and has used hacker techniques to hide that software so you won’t find out?

What if I also told you that this same software is also watching every program that you’re running on your PC, taking up system resources even if you aren’t listening to that audio CD?

On top of all that, what if I told you that this software also doesn’t come with an uninstall program and if you try to manually take it off, you could disable parts of Windows if you aren’t careful.

I bet you’d be pretty mad if you found out something like this. Well you wouldn’t be the only one.

Antispyware companies are calling the Sony rootkit "spyware."

Plus, the rootkit software is buggy, poorly written, insecure, and hackers are already exploiting it, with at least one trojan already in the wild.

In the first of many lawsuits, Sony has been sued in California under a recent statute banning installation of spyware.

Here’s 20 Sony CDs so far identified having the rootkit.

All because this greedy dinosaur of a record company is terrified someone might copy a CD.

Boycott Sony.

And WindowsSecrets recommends running the free RootkitRevealer.

PS This doesn’t effects Macs. Much more of this crap and I will switch!

Update:

Viruses use Sony anti-piracy CDs

Virus writers are exploiting Sony’s controversial anti-piracy software to hide their malicious creations.

In late October Sony was found to be using stealth techniques to hide software that stopped some of its CDs being illegally copied.

Now three virus variants have been found that use the Sony software to evade detection by anti-virus programs. 

The rootkit hides itself by using special names for its files. Virus makers discovered this and are doing the same,  hiding their viruses in the rootkit. Sony couldn’t have tested their rootkit and appear to care not a whit for the security of the PCs their rootkit software infests.

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