Archive for December 4th, 2006


Yikes. Microsoft to buy healthcare software companies

Gosh, the possibilities are endless. Heart-lung machines running Vista crash randomly. Dialysis machines pause while they download and install 27 new patches then have to be rebooted. Hospital administration forget to pay licensing fees or Vista erroneously decides it’s a bootleg copy, and the operating system then cripples itself.

You didn’t know Vista could cripple itself if it thinks you’ve been naughty? It sure can. Want to bet your health on Microsoft healthcare software? I don’t.

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John Bolton Quits

First Donald Rumsfeld went and now John Bolton has quit.

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Facing opposition from key senators, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton will leave office in a matter of days, the White House announced on Monday.

Spokeswoman Dana Perino said President George W. Bush had reluctantly accepted Bolton’s decision to leave the U.N. post when the current session of the U.S. Congress ends, likely at the end of the week.

The recent election “thumping” is already bearing fruit. I guess it was obvious that Bolton wasn’t going to get the necessary Senate support but it doesn’t make the news any less sweet. This must be much-needed dose of reality for an increasingly deluded George Bush.

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The state within a state

From Etherzone comes this report on the first-ever North American Secessionist Convention, which was recently held in Burlington, Vermont.

It may very well be that such dreams of secession for say, Hawaii or Alaska or even the South once again, may very well be just that, just dreams. But as events around the world are showing, there are ways to declare one’s independence on a de facto basis, whether it is secession of the mind or culture, or creating parallel governments to rival the central authority.

In short, the state within a state.

The centralizers better get used to it.

It is the wave of the future.

They mention Hezbollah and Sadr City as prime examples of the state within a state, with other examples including Quebec, Scotland, Wales, and Kurdistan. (Palestine too.) Some want to do the same in the U.S.

Hawaiian Independence Blog says that while the experience of Hawaii is not directly comparable to either U.S. states or Lebanon, this could still be a useful framework.

It provides an interesting perspective that helps put Hawaii’s situation into a more global context that those seeking either “nation-within-a-nation” (federal recognition) or independence will find interesting.

American Secession Project details the various secession movements, with lots of useful links and information too.

P.S. 8% of registered voters in Vermont favor secession.

Free Vermont

While the idea of Vermont seceding might indeed seem improbable to some, the state in a state thesis is a riff upon what John Robb discusses about global guerrillas, networked tribes, and 4th generation warfare - that the power of states is currently being eroded and sometimes outmaneuvered by non-state entities.

(As one who has spent considerable time in Vermont, you must understand, this is a highly independent state. Their patron saint is Ethan Allen, “early American revolutionary and guerrilla leader during the era of the Vermont Republic” and Vermont just elected Bernie Sanders to the US Senate, he becomes the first at least nominally socialist member of that body.)

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Scottish independence

In Scotland, the Labour Party is trailing the Scottish National Party in the runup to the May elections. While the SNP is center-left, they are probably even more in favor of untrammeled trade than Labour, however they also favor Scottish independence.

Perspective says this could lead to serious fireworks if they win, but that we need something better than just more neoliberalism.

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It’ll be a merry Xmas - if you’re wealthy

However, “lower-income shoppers are in ‘really bad shape‘”

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