Archive for June, 2007


iPhone madness

Uber geek Robert Scoble says the iPhone “lives up to every bit of hype“while Boing Boing exclaims, hopefully somewhat tongue-in-cheek, “Jesusphone: He is Risen“, and huge lines of people across the nation line up at at Apple stores to buy one.

But another uber geek, Chris Pirillo, details “20 Reasons i’m not getting an iPhone today” and Lenin’s Tomb calls such consumerist lust “idolatry.”

Me, I follow the venerable geek rule, “never buy version 1.0 of anything.”

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Thoughts on Sicko

Michael Moore - Sicko

Email from Daniel Rivera-Franqui

Hey Bob! It seems the campaign against Moore’s movie has started already. Health care companies (well, long before the movie) are, as always, extolling the “virtues” of the American health care system, claiming that in countries with socialized health care they have to wait hours upon hours to get care, people do not get the attention needed, people are not able to choose their doctors, etc. etc. etc.

Like that doesn’t ever happen here! I know several people in the US who have insurance who weren’t able to get proper medical care when needed. Also, if you’re under a HMO like Kaiser, you can not choose your doctors, they are assigned. Most important, as Moore points out in the movie, very few who live in a system of socialized medicine want to swap for what the US has.

Their claim is pretty much that of “hey it is better for you to pay hundreds and hundreds in insurance and get treatment only under certain, exclusive circumstances than it is to just get free quality health care even if you have to wait a bit more to get it.” Moore’s movie even proves wrong this idea that socialized health care doesn’t work and that it is just a big huge mess.

The health care industry’s claim that paying for (at times) half-assed treatment (or in other cases, no treatment at all!) is better than getting it for free reminds me of a column I read about open source. The column’s author (who for the life of me I cannot remember his name) claimed that open source software felt like it had little to no value at all compared to paid software. In other words, software that you get for free (and are able to modify too!) is practically worthless. Yup, same argument as the health care industry: Why get free chemotherapy to cure you of your cancer when you can pay thousands for it? (or, if you are young, be denied treatment at all because you are too young to die)

Uh huh. Better not tell that to the Internet, which mainly runs on open source software like Apache, PHP, and MySQL, and which bypasses the profit motive. We need a health care system that similarly bypasses the profit motive. Hey, maybe we could have open source health care. Everyone works together towards improving it.

I sincerely hope this movie lights up a fire under our collective asses and moves the country toward socialized health care for all.

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Failed States and the environment

The Foreign Policy Failed States Index shows a strong correlation between environmental sustainability and political stability.

In poorly performing states on the edge, including Bangladesh, Egypt, and Indonesia, the risks of flooding, drought, and deforestation have little chance of being properly managed.

This means displaced peasants, food and water shortages, economic upheaval, with the inevitable political unrest that will follow.

Worse, failed states can and do affect entire regions, destabilizing other countries too.

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Closing in on 100

collapsing house

The Mortgage Lender Implode-o-Meter now stands at 91. That’s 91 major US lender and mortgage companies that have gone bankrupt, closed their doors, or otherwise gone belly-up since Dec. 2006. More than a few have managed to get themselves indicted too.

Tell me, is this how the “invisible hand of capitalism” makes everything right as long as the pesky government backs off and doesn’t interfere in business? Well, the government didn’t interfere, the vultures went mad with greed, and now it’s all blown up into pieces.

Government intervention will be required to try to fix the mess they made. But, I’m guessing free marketeer greedheads won’t turn down government bailouts -while no doubt continuing to loudly protest how the government should keep its hand out of business.

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Obama Watch

Obama came out against impeachment for either Bush or Cheney, saying that they’ve done nothing to merit it.

Gee, thanks for that window into your judgment Senator.

Indeed, why anyone thinks Obama is even slightly liberal baffles me. I got fooled by Bill Clinton, won’t get fooled again.

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EC report details devastating climate change consequences

The European Commission has released a draft of a report on the likely consequences of global warming, urging their member nations to act now to protect “power stations, transport systems and agriculture from flooding, droughts, forest fires and landslides.”

More apocalyptically, this report says Europe could be faced with “relocating ports, industry and entire cities and villages from low-lying coastal areas and flood plains.”

“Soft” measures enacted now, like “water conservation, changes in crop rotation and working on wetlands on flood prevention” could prevent “hard” measures from being needed later on. Such hard measures would include “increasing the height of dikes, relocating ports, industry and entire cities and villages from low-lying coastal areas and flood plains, and building new power plants because of failing hydropower stations”

The contrast between Europe, which is actively providing solutions to climate changes, to the do-nothing US Congress, which has lethargically just now decided to create a commission (see next post) to study climate change, is telling. European governments get it. The US government, and this includes both parties, does not, and instead is living in a dream world of unreality.

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This train was long overdue

But it’s finally arrived, sort of.

US House passes bill affirming global warming exists.

But rather than, you know, actually do something pro-active about climate change, the esteemed members of the House have instead decided to “establish a new commission to review scientific questions that need to be addressed.”

Golly, it shouldn’t take the commission more than a couple of years to conclude that more study is needed, and goodness, that rash action needs to be avoided as this might impact our all-important and patriotic oil and coal industries.

Meanwhile, countries like Germany and Japan are actively working to combat global warming, rather than establishing pointless commissions.

Why is the US government (both parties included) so willfully and deliberately ignorant about climate change?

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‘Perfect drought’ in southern California

cactusdrought-sm.jpg

Experts across [Los Angeles] concur that the conditions are ripe in southern California for the “perfect drought“. Los Angeles has recorded just 3.21 in. of rain in the year ending June 30, making it the driest year on record since 1877. According to the National Drought Mitigation Centre, southern California faces “extreme drought” this year, with no rain forecast before September.

Hmm, the “rainy season’ in L.A. can start in September, but generally starts much later, like in December or January. This is when it *can* rain, but there is no guarantee that it will rain. And often it doesn’t.

One climatologist referred to the temperatures in Los Angeles as “Death Valley numbers”.

This means temperatures above 110 (43 C) will be common in the hotter areas. Last summer, when we lived in the San Fernando Valley area of L.A., we had an unprecedented 60 days in a row over 90, 19 days in a row over 100, and it peaked out at 119. This summer looks to be even hotter there, and the heat was certainly one of the reasons we moved to Connecticut. Climate change is happening. (Now we live in an area with ample rain, where 95 degrees is considered a blistering heat wave. We also get water from a well, something that is quite common here.)

“It’s disgusting that Los Angeles parks and golf courses are being irrigated with potable water,” says Nahai [president of the board of the city’s water and power commissioners]. “We have to re-educate people about living here.”

‘Disgusting’ it certainly is. ‘Criminally irresponsible’ also comes to mind.

The only local water supply in L.A. is the San Fernando Valley aquifer, which was declared a Superfund site in 1986. All other water comes from hundreds of miles away, from the Colorado River and the Sacramento Delta. A major well in the Valley aquifer has recently been shut down due to chromium 6 contamination which was probably caused by Lockheed Martin (who say they did no differently than any other company back then, and sadly, this is probably true.) If the contamination spreads, the entire aquifer could be poisoned. Not surprisingly, EPA has been asleep at the wheel, say city officials off the record.

In yet another case of a contaminated aquifer, multiple water wells in Santa Monica CA have been shut since 1996 due to MTBE contamination by oil companies. Are degraded water supplies polluted by private enterprise part of the ‘magic of capitalism’ that neocons are always wheezing about? If so, then let them drink the toxic water.

Water used for golf course irrigation in L.A. is not reclaimed. Except for the endangered Valley aquifer, there is no water storage of any consequence in L.A. Water used for irrigation does not trickle down into aquifers to then be pumped up and reused. Nor are there any reservoirs. Instead such water ends up in the ocean or in polluted aquifers.

So, how does a major metro area like southern California, with a population close to 20 million, cope with the likely coming prospect of permanent drought and much less water?

One thing for sure, it will require governments that are not beholden to private enterprise to mandate and enforce the needed changes.

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How insane are the water laws in the US southwest?

This insane. In Colorado it is illegal to collect rainwater flowing off your roof into a rain barrel because under their bizarre and arcane water laws, that water already belongs to someone else - something which takes the concept of private property to entirely new levels of psychosis.

However it’s not just Colorado, all the states in the southwest have equally screwy laws. Upstream rights. Got-here-first rights. Use it or lose it threats. It’s a ball of confusion, yes it is.

Now factor in the huge population growth there, coupled with increasing drought, pitting states against states, cities against agriculture, and you might have some idea of the train wreck that is coming.

PS I’m guessing the American Rainwater Catchment Systems Association will not be having their conference in Colorado…

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Climate change

18 inches of rain in 24 hours in Texas. 11 dead in past two weeks of storms.

Temperatures reach 115 in Europe. 31 dead.

Both are unprecedented weather events.

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Synfuel from chicken fat

Tyson Foods announced plans to build multiple facilities to process synfuel from chicken byproducts. The first facility will produce 75 million gallons of fuel annually.

That’s a LOT of chickens…

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All the causes are linked

After Gutenberg nails it

energy.jpg

Global warming is just as much a threat to the world dominance of the US ruling class as is losing a war in Iraq - and they know it. Those who invade countries for oil based on lies are the same people who pretend climate change isn’t happening. It’s the same mindset.

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Cell phones as social activist tools

Especially in the Third World.

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Carry on poodle

poodle.jpg

Tony Blair, no longer PM of Great Britian, is now a special Middle East envoy backed by the US, EU, UN, and Russia charged with a mission to “stabilize” Palestine. I’m guessing his idea of stabilization means Palestinians will be allowed to lie on the ground in a prone, quite stable position as Israelis point guns at their heads.

BlairWatch and Lenin’s Tomb have more.

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Gas rationing riots in Iran

Gas stations have been burned down in Iran by mobs, all supposedly due to gas rationing and increased prices.

While the price of fuel may be the reason, it certainly seems like there’s more to the story than that. Like, Iran has a gas shortage? Maybe conditions there are so tense that the riot was just looking for a reason to happen? Especially considering that the government has been vicious towards dissenters of late. Andrew Sullivan, a conservative who supports regime change both here and in Iran, has more on both.

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Paaarty at the pub near 10 Downing Street

They’ll be seeing off the poodle today.

(As I don’t drink, I can not toast with a beer mug, but do raise my coffee cup in solidarity.)

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I’m blushing

Polizeros is Featured Blog of the Week at LeftClickBlog.

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Missing Person. Habeus Corpus

Habeus Corpus

The “Great Writ” of habeas corpus is a fundamental right in the Constitution that protects against unlawful and indefinite imprisonment. Translated from Latin it means “show me the body.” It has historically been an important instrument to safeguard individual freedom against arbitrary executive power.

The neocons, aided and abetted by Democrats, have vanished Habeus Corpus, and he’s been MIA for some time now.  Maybe it was another of those “extraordinary rendition” kidnappings followed by torture?

Drinking Liberally in New Milford has some leads on where he might be.

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Sicko

Sicko. The movie

From a NYMag review of Michael Moore’s apparent new mega-blockbuster, Sicko.

Kaiser Permanente emerges as the supervillain, if only because of an astounding 1971 Oval Office recording. On the tape, John Ehrlichman convinces a dubious (or drunk) Richard Nixon to go along with Edgar Kaiser’s scheme to create a for-profit managed-care system on the grounds that hospitals would have incentives to give less care.

I’ve read multiple reviews of Sicko by people who say they can’t stand Michael Moore but the movie is brilliant, moving, and made them cry. We could be looking at a political earthquake caused by Sicko. Expect vicious retaliation by the Kaisers, insurance companies, and other assorted greedheads and slime, so let’s stand by Moore and defend him from the sickos.

Socialized medicine is coming to the US. Doctors, I’m told, in a major US hospital who were utterly opposed to socialized medicine just a few years ago now see it as inevitable.

Sicko may be the precipitating event that makes it happen.

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Socialism for the rich

JP Morgan Chase & Co. will receive over $750 million dollars in rent subsidies from New York City and state authorities as an incentive to relocate its offices from Midtown Manhattan to ground zero.

In 2005, Goldman Sachs got $650 million in subsidies for a similar move.

Gee, a trillion here, a trillion there, and pretty soon you’re talking real money. And that’s a trillion that won’t be spent on the people of New York City, but rather on the already super-wealthy.

Clearly, the US already has socialism. But right now, it’s just for the wealthy. We need it for everyone.

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War: unwinnable

Observation #5: A militant group and the state can have very different goals in a conflict; thus at he same time, both may believe they are winning.

Back in 1999, I worked in Sri Lanka on a team that included Sharif Abdullah of the Commonway Institute. In one of his many gems of wisdom, he observed that the LTTE’s goal for the war was to gain influence, while the GOSL’s goal was to control territory. GOSL said it was winning if it could control (or say it controlled) “uncleared areas”– territory formerly open to the LTTE. But LTTE said it was winning if it hurt GOSL and gained support among the Tamils.

This fundamental divergence of interests makes post-modern conflict more intractable: if both sides believe they are winning, then they have little incentive to stop fighting.

Observation #6: In a post-modern war, there can be no military victory without genocide.

This is another of Sharif’s insights. He said of the war in Sri Lanka in 1999, “As long as babies are being born, there will be more soldiers.” At the time, this was incredibly profound, because it touched on the new nature of war in post-modern times.

From kingdoms to nation states, the goal of war was to defeat the opposing military and replace the government. The people, it was assumed, would go along– and often enough, they did. Modern times gave us “total war,” in which the populace became militarized in factory production, and also became a legitimate military target. But the goal remained: defeat the military and install a government to rule the people.

In post-modern war, conflict is often associated with a segment people, not a government. That segment may be ethnic, linguistic, or religious. The difference is, the segment is represented not by a government but by a militant group that relies, at least in some measure, on its identity with that segment for survival and success. It uses that segment not only for recruits and support, but for cover– the militants “hide” within the civilian population.  Thus a war against that militant group is a war against the segment of people it represents. The militant group cannot be conquered militarily without destroying the segment itself as a recognizable identity.

In essence, this eliminates military action as a useful offensive tool. First, it can’t win, and second, as previously observed, it actually makes the militants stronger. Which suggests that a militant group must be “subdued” by non-military means.

Together, these two observations suggest another characteristic of post-modern war: it is self-perpetuating.  Both sides believe that they are winning, but in actual fact the war cannot be won. If left to the combatants, the war will continue without end.

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Day of Silence

Save Net Radio
Thousands of Internet radio stations will observe a partial or complete day of silence today to bring attention to proposed huge royalty rate increases that could mean the end of net radio. The rates go into effect on July 15 and are retroactive to Jan 1, 2006. Oh yeah, that’s certainly fair…

Launchcast, Yahoo, Pandora, Live365, and KRCW are among those participating.

Kurt Hanson and SaveNetRadio have more.

This is one of those focused-issue campaigns that is having a demonstrable effect on Congress, who, due to the pressure, will be holding more hearings about it. Call your Congress members now.

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Decline and Fall of the liberal left

Ted Rall

Still need convincing?

The views of Obama and Romney on war and imperialism are virtually the same, says a WaPo op-ed. Both want more troops, more intervention by the US, and criticize Bush not for doing too much, not for a starting a war based on lies, but for doing too little.

If Iraq-weary voters are looking for someone who will call on America to “come home,” they won’t find that candidate here.

The end of the war will come when the people demand it. The ANSWER Coalition has called for all antiwar groups to unite under the banner of End The War Now, and have the biggest protest ever in DC sometime in the next several months. If we put a million people in the streets they will be forced to listen.

The aim is not just one more demonstration but the largest antiwar demonstration in US history.

A mobilization of one million people marching on Washington DC would be the best possible trigger for an avalanche of grassroots organizing throughout the country and among service members and their families and veterans. It is time for something bold and broad. Something that sends an unmistakable message to the powers that be that the people of the United States have entered the field of politics in such a way as to become an irresistible force.

Barack Obama is just another Slick Willy, pretending to be liberal but is not really that way at all. By his own words, he’s a mouthpiece for the status quo in DC and for continued aggression abroad. Forget about hoping that presidential candidates will get bring the troops home. They (and Congress) will act only when the power of the people force them to. That’s why we need to make this the biggest antiwar protest in history.

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Desert dust cuts snowpack duration

Dust from deserts is blowing onto snowpack in the Rockies, China, and the Himalayas, causing the snow to melt a month or more earlier than normal. This could create a feedback loop that will lead to even faster snowmelt.

Early snowmelt means much less water is available for those areas in the late Spring and Summer, something which is extremely bad news for southern California and the US southwest.

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Subprime pain may just be starting

Bank of America analysts said the current losses in the subprime mortgage market could be the “tip of the iceberg” as over one trillion dollars in adjustable rate mortgages will reset this year and next, with 70% of those being subprime.

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