June 18, 2006

News -- June 18, 2006

How an Al-Qaeda Cell Planned a Poison-gas Attack on the N.Y. Subway - "Al-Qaeda terrorists came within 45 days of attacking the New York subway system with a lethal gas similar to that used in Nazi death camps. They were stopped not by any intelligence breakthrough, but by an order from Osama bin Laden's deputy, Ayman Zawahiri. And the U.S. learned of the plot from a CIA mole inside al-Qaeda."

Lost in translation - "Experts confirm that Iran's president did not call for Israel to be 'wiped off the map'. Reports that he did serve to strengthen western hawks."

America's bogeyman is an Islamist hero to many in Somalia - "The man was Aden Hashi Ayro - to the Americans al-Qa'ida's chief killer in east Africa, but to many Somalis a nationalist fighting for his country and for Islam against the US and their corrupt client warlords."

Police launch eye-in-the-sky technology above Los Angeles - "Police launched the future of law enforcement into the smoggy Los Angeles sky in the form of a drone aircraft, bringing technology most commonly associated with combat zones to urban policing."

GOVERNMENT ORDERS SPY BLIMP - "The government has hired defense subcontractor Lockheed Martin to design and develop an enormous blimp that will be used to spy on Americans, according to the Athens News. Government agencies such as the NSA are anticipating that as early as 2009 the blimp will be operational and begin supporting new ways of monitoring everything that happens in the country."

Life Without Religion - "The notion of reconciling science and religion has lost its charm. Too many people have used religion for too long as a manipulative tool to obtain and maintain inordinate power and authority over others. And religion is based upon nothing but non-verifiable supernatural beliefs. It's founded on nothing that is real. Certainly, many people have done good in the name of religion, but balance that with all the Crusades, the jihads, the Spanish Inquisition, and the many "heretics" throughout history who were hanged and burnt at the stake."

Custodians of chaos - "How about Jesus' Sermon on the Mount, the Beatitudes? Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the Earth. Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy. Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God. And so on. Not exactly planks in a Republican platform. Not exactly George W Bush, Dick Cheney, or Donald Rumsfeld stuff. For some reason, the most vocal Christians among us never mention the Beatitudes. But, often with tears in their eyes, they demand that the Ten Commandments be posted in public buildings. And of course that's Moses, not Jesus. I haven't heard one of them demand that the Sermon on the Mount, the Beatitudes, be posted anywhere. "Blessed are the merciful" in a courtroom? "Blessed are the peacemakers" in the Pentagon? Give me a break!"

Whose Silence? - "Religious people can wrestle with the pope's remarks. What does it mean that God was silent? That He approved? That He liked what He saw? That He didn't give a damn? You tell me. And what does it mean that He could "tolerate all this"? That the Nazis were okay by Him? That even the murder of Catholic clergy was no cause for intercession? I am at a loss to explain this. I cannot believe in such a God. This is a God who was away from his desk or something and did not notice the plumes of human ash reaching to the heavens themselves. Is that what the pope wants us to believe? No, I think it is something even worse: If God was silent, who could blame the church for being silent, too? Is that what Benedict is saying? If so, he is continuing the tradition of saying nothing."

Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon - "Breaking the spell of religion is a game that many people can play. The best player of this game that I ever knew was Professor G.H. Hardy, a world-famous mathematician who happened to be a passionate atheist. There are two kinds of atheists, ordinary atheists who do not believe in God and passionate atheists who consider God to be their personal enemy. ... Paul Erdös was another world-famous mathematician who was a passionate atheist. Erdös always referred to God as SF, short for Supreme Fascist. ... And now comes Daniel Dennett to take his turn at breaking the spell. Dennett is a philosopher. In this book he is confronting the philosophical questions arising from religion in the modern world. Why does religion exist? Why does it have such a powerful grip on people in many different cultures? Are the practical effects of religion preponderantly good or preponderantly evil? Is religion useful as a basis for public morality? What can we do to counter the spread of religious movements that we consider dangerous? Can the tools and methods of science help us to understand religion as a natural phenomenon?"

Which Way To The Apocalypse? When all the fanatical Christians disappear, will traffic finally improve? - "I might have been napping. Did the Apocalypse finally hit? Did the deep wish of roughly a half-billion zealous believers come to pass and were they suddenly whisked off into the humming glorious divine ether in one big orgiastic load of divine redemption, leaving us heathens and pagans and Wiccans and Jews and Muslims and Buddhists and journalists to fight it out over the last scraps of artisan Gruyère and fine Pinot Noir and gorgeous new Porsche Caymans? I simply cannot be sure. ... But be reminded: As reported here previously, the "Left Behind" series of Apocalypse-porn books has sold upward of 65 million copies worldwide. Many, many in high positions of power in the U.S. government (Hi, Senator Santorum!) see the accelerated deterioration of the Earth as a very good thing indeed, as there is no deed more worthy, no abuse more justified than that which helps hasten the Second Coming. SUVs? War? Oil gluttony? Ozone depletion? Condi Rice? All good, baby. All quickening the imminent Apocalypse."

Brouhaha in the Bible belt - "Being in a room with 11,000 Americans who all believe in the inerrancy of the Bible is a curiously scary experience. That's the Southern Baptists, the fundamentalist denomination whose 16 million members in the US make it the second largest Christian group (after the Catholics) in America. Large, overweight, overwhelmingly white and middle class, their eyes and teeth gleam at you as you pass by. "Hi!" they ejaculate in a friendly fashion, and "God bless!" as they recede from view. ... More directly, the Southern Baptists voted for George Bush almost to a man and woman in 2004. The president favoured them with a special message from the Oval Office on Tuesday and sent Condi Rice to schmooze them yesterday. He knows how vital their votes are in November's mid-term elections, which the Republicans may lose. Some, though, even here, have noticed that the president has recently started talking about family values and actively supporting the constitutional amendment outlawing same-sex marriages. "How come he only does that when he wants our votes?" one messenger (that's what they're called here, not delegate) asked Richard Land, the Baptists' chief lobbyist in Washington. "We are living under the best president we will see in our lifetime," the Oxford-educated Land replied- he has a doctorate in 17th-century English puritanism - which may make him the only living Oxonian to think so."

One nation, under God -- or not - "For most of the 20th century, the main debate over religion was whether it was merely dying or already dead. From Descartes to Darwin, the purveyors of Enlightenment rationalism and the scientific method had inflicted critical wounds. The only question in the minds of many thinkers was how much longer the bleeding could last before the veins went slack. At the outset of the 21st century, we appear to have an answer: When it comes to belief in the supernatural, there is no such thing as a mortal injury. Whether we're talking about Mormonism or Scientology or Wahhabi Islam, the obituaries have been premature. This is a source of great grief to committed secularists who would have liked nothing so much as to dance on organized religion's grave. It is a triumph for many others, some of whom do not approve of dancing at all. Either way, religious faith is coursing through the world with amazing and sometimes unsettling vitality, and perhaps nowhere is its pulse stronger than in the United States. It is time to pose a new question and stop scheduling the autopsy and start thinking about how to foster some degree of harmony in a society where religious voices are strident, occasionally inflexible and gaining strength all the time."

Religion Running Roughshod Over Cancer Science - "Despite the benefits of the vaccine, conservative organizations began to rally against it last year. One of the most vocal opponents was the Family Research Council. The council, according to its mission statement, “promotes the Judeo-Christian worldview as the basis for a just, free, and stable society.” Last October the council’s president, Tony Perkins, spoke against the vaccine. “Our concern,” he said, “is that this vaccine will be marketed to a segment of the population that should be getting a message about abstinence. It sends the wrong message.” He went on to say that he would not vaccinate his 13-year-old daughter."

Drugs firm blocks cheap blindness cure - "A major drug company is blocking access to a medicine that is cheaply and effectively saving thousands of people from going blind because it wants to launch a more expensive product on the market." -- It's always about money.

ACLU Probes Six Flags Hairstyle Ban - "The American Civil Liberties Union is investigating complaints from more than a dozen black employees at a Six Flags theme park who were told their hairstyles were inappropriate. ... "They told me I had to cut them even shorter or go home," DeLeon told The Washington Post. "They said they wanted an all-American thing. That's what they said to all the black people. I had already cut it a lot, so I just left.""

Bill aims to make national water standards voluntary - "The Small Systems Safe Drinking Water Act makes it voluntary for plumbing companies to comply with national standards. The introduction of the act announces that it's intention is to, "to prevent the enforcement of certain national primary drinking water regulations unless sufficient funding is available or variance technology has been identified." If your water is tainted with lead, there isn't much you can do about it. The manufacturer probably won't be liable and probably can't be sued."

Art teacher in hot water over topless photos - "Until they found the topless photos, Austin High School officials considered Tamara Hoover an excellent art teacher with a knack for helping students find their creativity. Now, she's fighting for her job. ... "I'm an artist and I'm going to participate in the arts," Hoover said. "If that's not something they want me to do then I want to be told that. I don't feel as if I was doing anything that was beyond expectations."" -- This country's hang-up over nudity disgusts me.




Quote of the Day
"Religion is the fashionable substitute for belief."
~ Oscar Wilde

June 16, 2006

News -- June 16, 2006

U.S. reveals face of alleged new terror chief - "The U.S. military on Thursday revealed for the first time a photo of the man said to be the new leader of al Qaeda in Iraq." -- Where's my copy of 1984?

Iraq's War Porn - "We believe the war would end if the media showed more images of the human horrors in Iraq, yet we turn away when they're placed in front of us. Not anymore."

Judge Rules That U.S. Has Broad Powers to Detain Noncitizens Indefinitely - "A federal judge in Brooklyn ruled yesterday that the government has wide latitude under immigration law to detain noncitizens on the basis of religion, race or national origin, and to hold them indefinitely without explanation."

Guantanamo should shut, says Bush - "IMPRISONING terror suspects without trial at Guantanamo Bay provides ammunition to those who accuse the US of not upholding the values it encourages elsewhere, President Bush admitted yesterday."

Government Increasingly Turning to Data Mining - "As federal agencies delve into the vast commercial market for consumer information, such as buying habits and financial records, they are tapping into data that would be difficult for the government to accumulate but that has become a booming business for private companies."

Why the Dollar Bubble is about to Burst - "And worse for Bush. It makes sense for Europe, China, India and Japan -- as well as all the other countries mentioned above -- to buy and sell oil in Euro's. They will certainly have to stock-up on euros now, and they will sell dollars to do so. The euro is far more stable than the debt-ridden dollar. The IMF has recently highlighted US economic difficulties and the trade deficit strangling the US -- there is no way out."

Police don't have to knock, justices say - "A split Supreme Court ruled Thursday that drug evidence seized in a home search can be used against a suspect even though police failed to knock on the door and wait a "reasonable" amount of time before entering."

Report: Shock therapy hurts kids at school - "A state report on a Massachusetts school for the disabled said electric shocks were administered to students - sometimes as they bathed - for offenses as minor as nagging, swearing and sloppy appearance."

Girls Can Marry at 15, Colo. Court Finds - "A 15-year-old girl can enter into a common-law marriage in Colorado, and younger girls and boys possibly can, too, a state appeals court ruled Thursday."

The Naked Truth About Sex Ed - "It's a book on honest communication about sex, with an emphasis on sexual pleasure and emotional health. It recognizes that sex is so much more than intercourse and encourages readers to have an extensive pre-sex discussion, or PSD, before becoming sexually involved with a partner. And it advises not committing monogamously to one partner too soon. ... And even though the title perfectly captures what's between the covers -- The Naked Truth About Sex: A Guide to Intelligent Sexual Choices for Teenagers and Twentysomethings -- it is apparently so dangerous in America to acknowledge that teenagers have sexual feelings and behaviors that few media outlets are willing to risk bringing attention to it."

74% hate their job - "That's not necessarily because Americans are lazy, experts say. The main problem is that most companies are simply rotten places where people are forced to waste their lives in exchange for a paycheck that will never be big enough. According to employment author Curt Coffman, no more that 15% of companies provide the kind of workplace that lets people enjoy actually working."

Yahoo 'Strictest' Censor in China - "Yahoo is stricter than any other search engine in China when enforcing censorship, said a journalism-advocacy group Thursday."

The US Wises Up To the World Game - "Even as the world stops to watch the World Cup, a survey of American public opinion published this week by the Pew Research Centre seemed to confirm the country's disdain for the "world sport". Only 4 per cent of Americans said that it was their favourite sport to watch. How did this compare with the made-in-America sports? American football commanded first place with 34 per cent, basketball was next with 14 per cent and baseball enjoyed 13 per cent. The chief reason for US wariness of soccer, as with the metric system, is its foreignness. ... It has become a political symbol. "Opinion on soccer doesn't divide precisely along political lines, but it has become an emblem of yuppie liberals - like me - and it's generally opposed by conservatives," says Foer, who is also the editor of the magazine The New Republic."




Quote of the Day
"Now I'm leaving normal and I'm heading for who knows where."
~ Cowboy Junkies

June 15, 2006

News -- June 15, 2006

Iraq Announces Info From Al-Zarqawi Raid - "Iraq's national security adviser said Thursday a "huge treasure" of documents and computer records was seized after the raid on terror leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's hideout, giving the Iraqi government the upper hand in its fight against al-Qaida in Iraq."

Rumsfeld expels US media from Guantanamo Bay - "Writing for the Miami Herald, journalist Carol Rosenberg stated Wednesday morning that the military had "ordered all independent news media off the base by 10 a.m. Wednesday, and had arranged a flight to Miami to expedite their departure."" -- Hmmm.

Warcrimes court finds multiple Darfur massacres - "The chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court said his office had documented massacres with hundreds of victims in Sudan's war-torn Darfur region as well as hundreds of rape cases."

Flying a Plane Into the World Trade Center? Why Not Fly Out of LaGuardia? - "Here is a new, and so far unasked question about the badly debunked official explanation of the events of September 11th 2001. If you spend years planning a spectacular attack on the World Trade Center in New York City, and you are a less than adequate pilot, and you wanted to ensure the attack would be completed without giving the U.S. air defense apparatus the chance to follow their normal procedures and intercept your plane, why would you choose to fly out of Boston? Why would you choose to risk getting lost or stopped as you try to fly 190 miles to your target when you can hijack a plane from one of three airports within sight of the target?"

Scientists respond to Gore's warnings of climate catastrophe - "Carter is one of hundreds of highly qualified non-governmental, non-industry, non-lobby group climate experts who contest the hypothesis that human emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) are causing significant global climate change. "Climate experts" is the operative term here. Why? Because what Gore's "majority of scientists" think is immaterial when only a very small fraction of them actually work in the climate field."

Southern Baptists Consider School Strategy - "As concerns persist about how classrooms are handling subjects such as homosexuality and "intelligent design," some members of the nation's largest Protestant denomination want the Southern Baptist Convention to consider creating an exit strategy from public schools."

Wealthy foreign couples coming to U.S. so they can select baby's sex - "Opponents say this amounts to medical tourism for designer babies and should awaken lawmakers."

Study: Meth use rare in most of the U.S. - "Methamphetamine use is rare in most of the United States, not the raging epidemic described by politicians and the news media, says a study by an advocacy group."

Smog in Beijing: 'Doctors tell you not to go outside' - "China is the world's second-biggest producer of greenhouse gas emissions and is expected to overtake the United States as the biggest, bringing acid rain to roughly a third of the country and poisoning nearly three quarters of rivers and lakes."

Scientists create hybrid butterfly species in lab - "Scientists said on Wednesday they have created a distinctive red and yellow butterfly in the laboratory by interbreeding two different species in a way similar to what they believe has occurred in nature."

Hawking says humans close to finding answers to origin of universe - "Acclaimed British physicist Stephen Hawking has said that humanity is finally getting close to understanding the origin of the universe."

Photos taken of 'living fossil' in Laos - "The first pictures showing a live specimen of a rodent species once thought to have been extinct for 11 million years have been taken by a retired Florida State University professor and a Thai wildlife biologist."




Quote of the Day
"Wish I didn't know now what I didn't know then."
~ Bob Seger, (Against the Wind)

June 14, 2006

News -- June 14, 2006

House Approves Another $66 Billion for War - "The House-Senate compromise bill contains $66 billion for the two wars, bringing the cost of the three-year-old war in Iraq to about $320 billion. Operations in Afghanistan have now tallied about $89 billion, according to the Congressional Research Service. The bill, which passed by a 351-67 vote, had only minimal debate Monday night."

Just a Small Child... - "Is human life worth nothing anymore?" -- Look closely.

The fluctuating value of life - "Why does a terrorist attack on the transport system in London that kills and injures dozens, draw utter condemnation and creates shock amongst us all, yet an attack by the Israeli military on a beach in Gaza killing and wounding dozens, including young children on a seaside outing, fails to register the same decibel levels? Shouldn't we be equally as horrified and as shocked when innocent commuters and bystanders are killed in a horrific terrorist attack on a Madrid train, as we are when hundreds are slain in a US air-raid on a village celebrating a wedding in the Afghani mountains?"

Your congressman just got a raise - "Despite record low approval ratings, House lawmakers Tuesday embraced a $3,300 pay raise that will increase their salaries to $168,500." -- They should not be allowed to vote themselves a raise.

New poll shows US image sinking abroad - "The Iraq war and the leadership of President George W. Bush helped drag down the global image of the United States for the second year straight, according to a new released study."

God and gays: Churchgoers divided - "Gay or not, progressive or traditional, those who disagree with their denomination's stance wonder: Should they leave their church? Has their church left them? Is this any place to find God at all?"

Revealed: the lax laws that could allow assembly of deadly virus DNA - "DNA sequences from some of the most deadly pathogens known to man can be bought over the internet, the Guardian has discovered."

MySpace May Be Linked With Search Engines - "News Corp. could let one of the larger Web search engines, like Google Inc., Yahoo Inc. or Microsoft Corp.'s MSN, take over the search function on popular social networking site MySpace.com, a News Corp. executive said Tuesday."

Housing bubble correction could be severe - "Contrary to popular belief, the housing market hasn't cooled off that much. In fact, residential real estate prices continue to soar in a number of key metropolitan areas, according to a new study released this week. That's a good thing, right? Actually, no–because the froth building in housing prices raises the distinct possibility of significant corrections to come in many of those regions."

Housing boom will not end in a crash, says Harvard - "Markets seldom disappoint both bulls and bears for long. But over the coming years the US housing market looks likely to do just that, according to a study by Harvard University."

FEMA hurricane cards bought jewelry, erotica - "A $200 bottle of champagne from Hooters and $300 worth of "Girls Gone Wild" videos were among items bought with debit cards handed out by FEMA to help hurricane victims, auditors probing $1 billion in potential waste and fraud have found."

Hawking Says Space Colonies Needed - "The survival of the human race depends on its ability to find new homes elsewhere in the universe because there's an increasing risk that a disaster will destroy Earth, world-renowned physicist Stephen Hawking said Tuesday. Humans could have a permanent base on the moon in 20 years and a colony on Mars in the next 40 years, the British scientist told a news conference."

Cheating students using Web to buy coursework - "Cheating students are using outsourcing Web sites where bidders compete to write their coursework for them, researchers have found."

Students find ring tone adults can't hear - "Some students are downloading a ring tone off the Internet that is too high-pitched to be heard by most adults. With it, high schoolers can receive text message alerts on their cell phones without the teacher knowing."

Flowers for Algernon -- A classic short story.




Quote of the Day
"What's important is getting ahead. The better grades you have, the better school you get into, the better you're going to do in life. And if you learn to cut corners to do that, you're going to be saving yourself time and energy. In the real world, that's what's going to be going on. The better you do, that's what shows. It's not how moral you were in getting there."
~ Alice Newhall, High School Senior

June 13, 2006

News -- June 13, 2006

This summary is not available. Please click here to view the post.

June 12, 2006

News (Page 2) -- June 12, 2006

Germany Says No to Rumsfeld Request for Help - "US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld is reportedly looking for Germany to provide more assistance in Iraq. The German government, however, has declined the invitation."

Violent Crime Up for 1st Time in 5 Years - "Murders, robberies and aggravated assaults in the United States increased last year, spurring an overall rise in violent crime for the first time since 2001, according to FBI data."

Using Children as 'God's Army' - "The star of the film is Pastor Becky Fischer, who explains the startling mission of her "Kids on Fire" camp: "I want young people to be as committed to laying down their lives for the Gospel as they are in Pakistan." At the camp, the children are asked: "How many of you want to be those who will give up your life for Jesus?" Little hands shoot up from every direction. They are told: "We have to break the power of the enemy over the government." At one point, Becky yells: "This means war! Are you a part of it or not?" More little hands."

Employee verification system would affect all workers, privacy experts say - "Remember the Department of Homeland Security's "no-fly'' lists that erratically flagged 3-year-old children and dozens of men named David Nelson as terrorists seeking to board commercial airplanes? Well, now privacy experts are warning America to prepare for the "no-work'' list."

NSA Train Wreck - "But the bill, which the committee could take up this week, does a whole lot more, just about all of it bad. In an effort to win votes, Mr. Specter has turned it from a flawed accountability measure into one that rewrites the rules of domestic surveillance and gives the administration an all but blank check to spy."

Bush Administration Quietly Plans NAFTA Super Highway - "Quietly but systematically, the Bush Administration is advancing the plan to build a huge NAFTA Super Highway, four football-fields-wide, through the heart of the U.S. along Interstate 35, from the Mexican border at Laredo, Tex., to the Canadian border north of Duluth, Minn. Once complete, the new road will allow containers from the Far East to enter the United States through the Mexican port of Lazaro Cardenas, bypassing the Longshoreman’s Union in the process. The Mexican trucks, without the involvement of the Teamsters Union, will drive on what will be the nation’s most modern highway straight into the heart of America. The Mexican trucks will cross border in FAST lanes, checked only electronically by the new “SENTRI” system. The first customs stop will be a Mexican customs office in Kansas City, their new Smart Port complex, a facility being built for Mexico at a cost of $3 million to the U.S. taxpayers in Kansas City."

News -- June 12, 2006

Al Qaeda in Iraq threatens large scale attacks - "Al Qaeda in Iraq vowed on Sunday to carry out large-scale attacks that would "shake the enemy" after the killing of its leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, but did not name a successor." - How convenient.

The fax that reveals the US is flying terror suspects to Europe’s secret jails - "The discovery of the fax seriously undermines the US’s denial that it has ever used secret detention facilities, breaching international law. It also adds to the pressure for the release of information on “extraordinary renditions”. These rendition flights see kidnapped terror suspects taken by the CIA to countries where torture is common, such as Uzbekistan."

Global military spend hits $1.12 trillion: report - ""The USA is responsible for 48 percent of the world total, distantly followed by the UK, France, Japan and China with 4 to 5 percent each," the Swedish government-funded institute added."

Sarah McLachlan - World on Fire -- Check out the video.

BofA: Train your replacement, or no severance pay for you - "Bank of America has been steadily moving thousands of tech jobs to India. The latest to go are about 100 positions that handle BofA's internal tech support. While many of the bank's Bay Area techies accept the inevitability of their jobs heading abroad, what rankles them is the fact that, in many cases, they're being told they have to first train the Indians who are getting their gigs." -- And this is the world we live in.

Arab leaders pressed on women's rights - "About 200 delegates, mostly women, from 13 Arab states and Turkey, gathered in Rabat for a conference on the U.N. Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW). The delegates at the meeting adopted a resolution calling on Arab states to adopt the law in full."

CEDAW: The Women's Treaty - "The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) is often described as an international bill of rights for women. ... The United States is the only industrialized country that has not ratified CEDAW. By not ratifying, the U.S. is in the company of countries like Iran, Sudan, and Somalia."

Diabetes Cases Rise From 30 Million To 230 Million In 20 Years - "The spread of diabetes type 2 today is due to lifestyle, diet and genetics. Many more people today have better access to food, eat more of the wrong nutrients and do much less exercise. This combination of bad diet and inactivity leads to weight gain, which in turn raises the risk of developing diabetes type 2."

NASA shelves climate satellites - "NASA is canceling or delaying a number of satellites designed to give scientists critical information on the earth's changing climate and environment." -- Interesting.

Uh Oh; The Bugs Are Eating Those "Pest Killing" Crops - "Two research teams in England and Venezuela have discovered something alarming about the new genetically modified crops filled with insecticide. The insects not only eat them, they seem to thrive on them." -- Again, humanity's arrogance is slapped down.

Why Good People Kill - "The problem with this theory is that it rests on a false assumption about the relationship between character and deeds. Yes, sociopaths exist, but ordinary, "good" people are also perfectly capable of committing atrocities. "

1040 Checkmate? - "On May 12, 2006 in Peoria, Illinois, the attorney for the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) begged the court to dismiss all charges against IRS victim Robert Lawrence in federal District Court. The motion for dismissal came on the heels of a surprise tactic by Lawrence’s defense attorney Oscar Stilley. The tactic threatened exposure of IRS’s on-going efforts to defraud the public. The move put DOJ attorneys in a state of panic that left them with only one alternative: beg for dismissal, with prejudice."

Foiled Burglar Sues Store Employees for 'Emotional Distress' - "A man who was beaten by employees of a store he was trying to rob is now suing."

New shark discovered in US waters - "A new type of hammerhead shark has been discovered in the northwestern Atlantic Ocean, marine scientists say."

Make Those Uranium Jeans Talk - "While many young ladies can make blue jeans talk by just walking down the street, others may need technological help, and that’s where Uranium Jeans can spell it out right there across their asses. The scrolling LED text, displayed by an embedded flexible micro screen, can be changed via text messaging from a cellphone, or stock messages can be downloaded from the Uranium Jeans web site."




Quote of the Day
"Only two great groups of animals, men and ants, indulge in highly organized mass warfare."
~ Charles H. Maskins

June 9, 2006

News -- June 9, 2006

War Criminal Nation - "Gentle reader, are you getting enough vicarious pleasure from the slaughter of Iraqi women and children to justify this price tag? Is murdering "ragheads" that important to you? If so, you are one sick person, just like every member of the Bush administration."

Overselling Terror - "But the recent developments in Iraq and Canada have obscured other new evidence that points toward a very different reality: that the Islamic terror threat was never as severe as Bush made it out to be after the 9/11 attacks and that it has been fading ever since. While Bush has sought to frighten the American people with apocalyptic visions of Islamic terrorists establishing an empire that “spans from Spain to Indonesia,” the new intelligence data actually reveals al-Qaeda as a largely dissipated force that now exists more as an inspiration to violence than as an organized movement."

Iran confirms stepping up nuclear activities - "An Iranian official has confirmed that the country has stepped up its nuclear activities, following a report from the UN atomic agency that said Iran has accelerated uranium enrichment."

Poll: U.S. disapproves of war in Iraq - "The death of al-Qaida leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in Iraq came as more Americans than ever thought the war in Iraq was a mistake, according to AP-Ipsos polling."

Pentagon sets its sights on social networking websites - "New Scientist has discovered that Pentagon's National Security Agency, which specialises in eavesdropping and code-breaking, is funding research into the mass harvesting of the information that people post about themselves on social networks. And it could harness advances in internet technology - specifically the forthcoming "semantic web" championed by the web standards organisation W3C - to combine data from social networking websites with details such as banking, retail and property records, allowing the NSA to build extensive, all-embracing personal profiles of individuals."

House rejects Net neutrality rules - "By a 269-152 vote that fell largely along party lines, the House Republican leadership mustered enough votes to reject a Democrat-backed amendment that would have enshrined stiff Net neutrality regulations into federal law and prevented broadband providers from treating some Internet sites differently from others."

U.S. taxpayers financed human trafficking, report says - "For the first time since Congress mandated its annual publication, a State Department report cataloging human trafficking across the globe includes allegations that American taxpayers financed such abuses."

God Has Got to Go - "Imagining just isn't good enough. God definitely has got to go, our pious mutual friend and millions like him notwithstanding. Why? Because this ridiculous God business is getting really out of control. The United States is becoming a nation guided by religious fanatics, just like the nations of the Middle East—a state of affairs that could lead, as my friend pointed out, to a worldwide religious war. One can only imagine the devastation such a conflict would effect. Obviously, God cannot be on everyone's side at the same time, no matter how omnipotent anyone claims Him to be. This is just one of many logical arguments against the existence of a personal God who is supposedly looking after us."

Cervical cancer vaccine approved - "The Food and Drug Administration today approved use of the vaccine, Gardasil, for use in girls and women ages 9 to 26. It works by preventing infection by four strains of the human papillomavirus, or HPV, the most prevalent sexually transmitted disease."

Global warming has forced animals to evolve already - "Smaller animals in particular that can breed quickly, such as squirrels, some birds and insects, are showing signs of evolving new patterns of behaviour to increase their chances of survival. Scientists say that many of the genetic adaptations are to cope with changes in the length of the seasons rather than the absolute increases in summer temperatures. Larger animals and species that are slow to reproduce may on the other hand find it difficult to cope with climate change because they cannot adapt genetically as quickly as smaller, more fertile creatures that have rapid life cycles."

Robot device mimics human touch - "US scientists have created a sensor that can "feel" the texture of objects to the same degree of sensitivity as a human fingertip."




Quote of the Day
"If it can't be expressed in figures, it is not science; it is opinion."
~ Lazarus Long

June 8, 2006

News -- June 8, 2006

Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi Killed in Air Raid - "Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the al-Qaida leader in Iraq who waged a bloody campaign of suicide bombings and beheadings of hostages, has been killed in a precision airstrike, U.S. and Iraqi officials said Thursday. It was a long-sought victory in the war in Iraq."

FBI says, “No hard evidence connecting Bin Laden to 9/11” - "When asked why there is no mention of 9/11 on Bin Laden’s Most Wanted web page, Tomb said, “The reason why 9/11 is not mentioned on Usama Bin Laden’s Most Wanted page is because the FBI has no hard evidence connecting Bin Laden to 9/11.”"

Field commanders tell Pentagon Iraq war 'is lost' - "Military commanders in the field in Iraq admit in private reports to the Pentagon the war "is lost" and that the U.S. military is unable to stem the mounting violence killing 1,000 Iraqi civilians a month."

Specter tells Cheney to stop interfering - "Senate Judiciary Chairman Arlen Specter is firing off a three-page letter to Cheney. At issue is the committee's review of the Bush administration's warrantless surveillance program. The letter asks Cheney to stop lobbying other committee Republicans to oppose subpoenas for phone company executives."

Amendment to ban gay marriage fails in Senate - "In a 49-48 test vote, the Senate blocked a proposed constitutional amendment to declare marriage as strictly between a man and a woman."

High hopes for drone in LA skies - "Commander Heal is quick to point out that it is not their intention to launch 'big brother' style surveillance operations. "There's no place in an urban environment that you can go to right now that you're not being looked at with a video camera and you have nothing to fear from your own government - you are being watched by your fellow citizens," he says. "The only time that this is ever going to be operational is in some kind of emergency condition."" -- Sure. Isn't that how it always begins?

'Godless' is Gutless - "Anne Coulter says we’re “Godless” — we “liberals.” And by “liberals,” she means anyone who wants to keep the government out of our underpants, out of Iraq, and out of the business of helping Big Business shoplift America. ... You accuse those who don’t sign on to your list of prejudices as the Lord’s enemies. That’s not original, Anne: the Taliban thought of it before you and they too were partial to dressing in black. You want to talk about Godless? OK, let’s go:"

Ann Coulter, "Bitch" Is Too Kind a Word For You - "I've got a better word for you, Ann Coulter. The word that rhymes with what football teams often do on fourth down." -- Coulter is a vile specimen.

Christians-Only Baseball? - "The Colorado Rockies recruit Christian players and claim God is at work on their game. Something's gone rotten on the diamond." -- Jesus Christ.

Muslims craft their own video games - "Tired of Arabs and Muslims being portrayed as bad guys, a Syrian firm puts out a new line of games."

Americans want universal health coverage, group says - "The federal government should guarantee that all Americans have basic health insurance coverage, says a committee set up by Congress to find out what people want when it comes to health care."

Before Scoring That Job, You'd Better Ace the Test - "Similar probing questions await many job seekers this summer, as personal-assessment tests have leaped from the pages of teen magazines to become a standard practice in corporate America. An increasing number of companies use these tests to sift through thousands of résumés and assess the acceptability and future success of prospective hires."

Time for gamblers to fold - "Beginning next month, Washington residents who play poker or make most other types of wagers on the Internet will be committing a Class C felony, equivalent under the law to possessing child pornography, threatening the governor or torturing an animal." -- Yes, freedom reigns in America.

Adios, apostrophe - "The Internet is killing off punctuation it doesn't need, want or comprehend Compound words, hyphens are also facing extermination."

New CD swap site to give back to artists - "A new Web site that aims to transform music industry economics is set to go live on Thursday, giving musicians a major cut of the proceeds while largely freezing out record labels and other intermediaries."

JK Rowling voted greatest living British writer - "The Harry Potter creator whose stories of the young wizard have sold over 300 million copies worldwide received nearly three times as many votes as Discworld author Terry Pratchett in second place."




Quote of the Day
"Give me the sense to wonder. To wonder if I'm free."
~ Iron Maiden

June 7, 2006

News -- June 7, 2006

Another Terrorist Attack Coming Soon? - "U.S. officials believe Canadian arrests over the weekend and three recent domestic incidents in the United States are evidence the U.S. will soon be hit again by a terrorist attack. Privately, they say, they'd be surprised if it didn't come by the end of the year."

Source: Killing of Iraqi may have been 'premeditated' - "Investigators have concluded U.S. Marines dragged the man from his house and shot him before placing the shovel and AK-47 next to his body, implicating him as an insurgent, the official told CNN."

Gay marriage ban headed for certain defeat - "A constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage is headed toward certain Senate defeat, but supporters say new votes for the measure represent progress that gives the GOP's base reason to vote on Election Day."

Big business, not religion, is the real power in the White House - "Bush is again pandering to the Christian right over gay rights. But Democrats should not be distracted from the main enemy."

Senate won't quiz telecoms about NSA spying - "A prominent Republican senator backed away on Tuesday from his pledge to question executives from telecommunications companies that have allegedly been cooperating with the government's secret wiretapping program."

Scientists to try to clone human embryos - "Stepping into a research area marked by controversy and fraud, Harvard University scientists said Tuesday they are trying to clone human embryos to create stem cells they hope can be used one day to help conquer a host of diseases."

Chill out over global warming - "The only inconvenient truth about global warming, contends Colorado State University's Bill Gray, is that a genuine debate has never actually taken place. Hundreds of scientists, many of them prominent in the field, agree."

The worst bill you’ve never heard of - "Simply put, SIRA fundamentally redefines copyright and fair use in the digital world. It would require all incidental copies of music to be licensed separately from the originating copy. Even copies of songs that are cached in your computer's memory or buffered over a network would need yet another license. Once again, Big Copyright is looking for a way to double-dip into your wallet, extracting payment for the same content at multiple levels."

Senate to consider letting Hawaiians pursue sovereignty - "Hawaii Sen. Daniel K. Akaka thinks Hawaiians should be allowed to govern themselves as Native Americans and Alaskans do, and after seven years of pushing a bill to start the process, the Senate is expected to take it up this week."

Wal-Mart's data center remains mystery - "Behind a fence topped with razor wire just off U.S. Highway 71 is a bunker of a building that Wal-Mart considers so secret that it won't even let the county assessor inside without a nondisclosure agreement. The 125,000-square-foot building, tucked behind a new Wal-Mart Supercenter, is only a stone's throw from the Arkansas line and about 15 miles from corporate headquarters in Bentonville, Ark. There is nothing about the building to give even a hint that Wal-Mart owns it."

Reading, Writing, Arithmetic - "National reading tests show that 46 percent of Arizona public school 4th graders can’t read. Such a catastrophe has no single cause, but the teacher preparation programs at our colleges and universities cannot avoid some amount of responsibility."

Many teenage girls feel pressured into sex: study - "Teenage girls commonly have sex not because they want to, but because they feel pressured into it - and the result may be a higher risk of sexually transmitted diseases and pregnancy, a new study suggests."

Strange New Worlds Could Make Miniature Solar Systems - "Planet-like objects floating alone through space harbor disks of material that could make other planets or moons, something like miniature versions of our solar system, astronomers said today."

Top Scientists Validating the Supernatural Universe - "A bit like finding there is such a thing as ‘The Force in Star Wars’. The Field tells the story of respected frontier scientists all over the globe who have produced extraordinary evidence to show that an energy field -The Zero Point Field - connects everything in the universe, and we ourselves are part of this vast dynamic cobweb of energy exchange."




Quote of the Day
"Now everybody do the propaganda. And sing along to the age of paranoia."
~ Green Day

News -- June 7, 2006

Another Terrorist Attack Coming Soon? - "U.S. officials believe Canadian arrests over the weekend and three recent domestic incidents in the United States are evidence the U.S. will soon be hit again by a terrorist attack. Privately, they say, they'd be surprised if it didn't come by the end of the year."

Source: Killing of Iraqi may have been 'premeditated' - "Investigators have concluded U.S. Marines dragged the man from his house and shot him before placing the shovel and AK-47 next to his body, implicating him as an insurgent, the official told CNN."

Gay marriage ban headed for certain defeat - "A constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage is headed toward certain Senate defeat, but supporters say new votes for the measure represent progress that gives the GOP's base reason to vote on Election Day."

Big business, not religion, is the real power in the White House - "Bush is again pandering to the Christian right over gay rights. But Democrats should not be distracted from the main enemy."

Senate won't quiz telecoms about NSA spying - "A prominent Republican senator backed away on Tuesday from his pledge to question executives from telecommunications companies that have allegedly been cooperating with the government's secret wiretapping program."

Scientists to try to clone human embryos - "Stepping into a research area marked by controversy and fraud, Harvard University scientists said Tuesday they are trying to clone human embryos to create stem cells they hope can be used one day to help conquer a host of diseases."

Chill out over global warming - "The only inconvenient truth about global warming, contends Colorado State University's Bill Gray, is that a genuine debate has never actually taken place. Hundreds of scientists, many of them prominent in the field, agree."

The worst bill you’ve never heard of - "Simply put, SIRA fundamentally redefines copyright and fair use in the digital world. It would require all incidental copies of music to be licensed separately from the originating copy. Even copies of songs that are cached in your computer's memory or buffered over a network would need yet another license. Once again, Big Copyright is looking for a way to double-dip into your wallet, extracting payment for the same content at multiple levels."

Senate to consider letting Hawaiians pursue sovereignty - "Hawaii Sen. Daniel K. Akaka thinks Hawaiians should be allowed to govern themselves as Native Americans and Alaskans do, and after seven years of pushing a bill to start the process, the Senate is expected to take it up this week."

Wal-Mart's data center remains mystery - "Behind a fence topped with razor wire just off U.S. Highway 71 is a bunker of a building that Wal-Mart considers so secret that it won't even let the county assessor inside without a nondisclosure agreement. The 125,000-square-foot building, tucked behind a new Wal-Mart Supercenter, is only a stone's throw from the Arkansas line and about 15 miles from corporate headquarters in Bentonville, Ark. There is nothing about the building to give even a hint that Wal-Mart owns it."

Reading, Writing, Arithmetic - "National reading tests show that 46 percent of Arizona public school 4th graders can’t read. Such a catastrophe has no single cause, but the teacher preparation programs at our colleges and universities cannot avoid some amount of responsibility."

Many teenage girls feel pressured into sex: study - "Teenage girls commonly have sex not because they want to, but because they feel pressured into it - and the result may be a higher risk of sexually transmitted diseases and pregnancy, a new study suggests."

Strange New Worlds Could Make Miniature Solar Systems - "Planet-like objects floating alone through space harbor disks of material that could make other planets or moons, something like miniature versions of our solar system, astronomers said today."

Top Scientists Validating the Supernatural Universe - "A bit like finding there is such a thing as ‘The Force in Star Wars’. The Field tells the story of respected frontier scientists all over the globe who have produced extraordinary evidence to show that an energy field -The Zero Point Field - connects everything in the universe, and we ourselves are part of this vast dynamic cobweb of energy exchange."




Quote of the Day
"Now everybody do the propaganda. And sing along to the age of paranoia."
~ Green Day

June 6, 2006

News -- June 6, 2006

U.S. to drop Geneva rule, officials say - "The Pentagon has decided to omit from new detainee policies a key tenet of the Geneva Conventions that explicitly bans "humiliating and degrading treatment," according to knowledgeable military officials, a step that would mark a further shift away from strict adherence to international human rights standards."

Dying for Peace and Freedom? - "Since 1945, no nation on Earth has either declared war against us or attacked us. We intervened in a Korean civil war, a Vietnamese civil war and a Lebanese civil war, and we have gotten men killed to remove political leaders our political leaders didn't like (Panama, Grenada, Afghanistan, Iraq). I can't think of a logical reason why we bombed Serbia, the only Balkan country that fought on our side in two world wars, unless it was because the Bosnians hired a better public-relations firm. ... President Bush let the cat out of the bag in his recent speech at West Point. He didn't talk about world terrorism. He talked about reshaping the Middle East, a fool's errand if ever there were one. Our precious people are not dying for peace and freedom in Afghanistan and Iraq. They are dying for corporate profits and to make the Middle East a safer place for Israel. The only people who are dying for freedom are the Iraqis and the Afghans who want to free their countries of our presence."

The Gay Marriage Amendment - Nazi Ideology with Neocon Spin - "As the war in Iraq descends from "shock and awe" to "shock and disgust" in the American psyche, as the recent revelations from Haditha and Ishaqi, added to Fallujah, Abu Gharib and countless more examples begin to finally hit home to the American public as to what is being done in their name , the Bush cartel has decided that the most immediate and important threat to the American way of life, is, unbelievably, Gay Marriage."

Holes begin to appear in Canadian terrorism case - "The fact that the swoop spread over two years was a sting operation is being underplayed or not even mentioned by the Canadian and American press and electronic media. There is no evidence that the 17 people arrested, five of them minors, had any link with Al Qaeda. Pen portraits appearing in the Canadian press show some of the young men to have become overly religious in the last couple of years. It is also now known that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and probably some other US agencies were also involved in the sting operation."

The Religious Right is Un-American - "Many people associated with the Religious Right in America would have us believe that the United States was founded as a Christian nation. They foster this lie because they want to force their narrow-minded religious beliefs down our throats. They would like us to envision that Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and James Madison are standing with them shoulder to shoulder when they spout their distorted views on abortion, contraception, gay marriage, school prayer, evolution, etc. But to assert that the U.S. is a Christian nation is clearly un-American, if we define "American" as holding dear the precepts and values handed down to us in the Constitution by the Founding Fathers. The framers of the Constitution had no intention of defining our country as Christian. On the contrary, they were deeply concerned about preventing any kind of religious tyranny. ... Have you read the Constitution lately? The words "God," "Christ," "Christian," and "Jesus" do not appear even once. The word "religious" appears but a single time, in Article VI: No religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States.The word "religion" can be found only in the First Amendment: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.When we see the words "religious" and "religion" in the Constitution, it is in the context of a warning against the use of religious pressure as a weapon of tyranny."

Normalizing the Unthinkable - "I asked Pilger what the untold story of Iraq was that’s just not getting through. “Well, the untold story of Iraq should be obvious,” Pilger said. “But it never is. The untold story of Vietnam was that it was an invasion and that huge numbers of civilians were killed. And in effect it was a war against civilians and that was never told and that’s exactly true of Iraq.”"

Documents show issues with wives, child support - " Republican Jim Galley, who is running for Congress as a “pro-traditional family” candidate, was married to two women at the same time, defaulted on his child support payments and has been accused of abuse by one of his ex-wives."

Desert cities are living on borrowed time, UN warns - "Desert cities in the US and Middle East, such as Phoenix and Riyadh, may be living on borrowed time as water tables drop and supplies become undrinkable, says a report coinciding with today's world environment day."

Study says millions have 'rage' disorder - "To you, that angry, horn-blasting tailgater is suffering from road rage. But doctors have another name for it — intermittent explosive disorder — and a new study suggests it is far more common than they realized, affecting up to 16 million Americans."

How bad do you have to go? - "Even though Daniel Thornton occasionally needed to go to the bathroom during his AP history course last year, he also needed a B on the midterm to maintain his grade. So he did what lots of students at Forest Park Senior High School in Woodbridge do in their Darwinian pursuit of academic success: Thornton endured a full bladder and instead hoarded his two restroom passes, which, unused, were worth six points of extra credit."


Again, no bumper sticker.


Quote of the Day
"Knowledge makes a man unfit to be a slave."
~ Frederick Douglass

June 5, 2006

News -- June 5, 2006

The way Americans like their war - "For who can be held to account when we regard ourselves as the brightest, the most honorable of creatures, doing endless battle with the killers of Sept. 11 or July 7 because we love our country and our people -- but not other people -- so much. And so we dress ourselves up as Galahads, yes as Crusaders, and we tell those whose countries we invade that we are going to bring them democracy."

BACK TO THE BUNKER - "The exercise is the latest manifestation of an obsession with government survival that has been a hallmark of the Bush administration since 9/11, a focus of enormous and often absurd time, money and effort that has come to echo the worst follies of the Cold War."

Bush, senators renew fight against gay marriage - "President Bush and Senate conservatives renew their battle Monday to ban same-sex marriage through a constitutional amendment that has a slim chance of passage."

Gay Marriages? Again? Must Be An Election Year! - "They should just call it the Bush ADD-ministration, they can't seem to stay focused on an issue long enough to bring about a solution to anything. Last month, it was all about illegal immigrants, they can't seem to stay focused on the wars they are still fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan without wanting to start another one in Iran, leaving problems that as Bush has said himself, another president will have to deal with. ... Everybody else's freedoms are becoming more restricted by this administration, why not pick on the gays too? Plus Bush gets to play up to the thumpies who labor under the misguided belief that God prefers the US over the rest of the world. Yeah, that makes sense. There's a whole fucking planet, but God's only going to favor the greediest and most wasteful nation on it. If you believe that, you'd probably believe you could leg press a ton using a protein shake developed by Pat Robertson."

Vast DNA Bank Pits Policing Vs. Privacy - "Brimming with the genetic patterns of more than 3 million Americans, the nation's databank of DNA "fingerprints" is growing by more than 80,000 people every month, giving police an unprecedented crime-fighting tool but prompting warnings that the expansion threatens constitutional privacy protections. With little public debate, state and federal rules for cataloging DNA have broadened in recent years to include not only violent felons, as was originally the case, but also perpetrators of minor crimes and even people who have been arrested but not convicted. Now some in law enforcement are calling for a national registry of every American's DNA profile, against which police could instantly compare crime-scene specimens. Advocates say the system would dissuade many would-be criminals and help capture the rest."

Bible Scholars Predict an 85 Percent Probability of a Nuclear Terrorist Attack on the UN Complex in Manhattan on June 9 or 10 - "This work is not a New York Times best seller like the Hebrew Letter Skip code of Michael Drosnin and it is not a commercially successful fiction like the Da Vinci code of Dan Brown. But it does reveal accurately how the last true Christian church should be run, which is what might one expect from a true Bible code. It also reveals that Armageddon begins on March 23rd 2008, and ends on August 20th 2008. It reveals that Jesus comes down to earth to sort out the sheep from the goats on 5th/6th May 2008 during Armageddon, at the end of the 1335 days of Daniel 12:12 and that the faithful sheep are raptured to be angels on 6th/7th June 2008. This is the post tribulation rapture. After that things get really bad, and we succeed in destroying ourselves fully by August 20th 2008. ... The true Bible code reveals the true nature of Hell and the unceasing and everlasting love that God has for every person whom he ever created, the wicked and the good alike. It reveals that there will be 7 terrorist nuclear bombs before Armageddon, which is the final man made nuclear holocaust. The first of these bombs will hit the UN complex in Manhattan between sundown on Friday June 9th and Sundown on June 10th, this year."

New film to prove accuracy of Bible? - "'Exodus' project documents evidence from Joseph, Red Sea, Mount Sinai."

Bush - Most Hated President Ever Stole Both Elections - "The latest polls say Americans now dislike Bush more than any other president including even Tricky Dick. It only took the public five and half year to see through him. That said, I wonder how long it will take people to accept the news that Bush never won either election and the country is in such a mess that it will take 50 years to get back to how it was when Bush took office."

Basic Facts of the Academic Freedom Violation at Roosevelt Univeristy - "The reason for my job termination is clear. Because I allowed open and respectful discussion of Judaism and Islam in my classes, I am censored from teaching at Roosevelt."

Backing for baby cloning to beat disease - "A proposal to create babies that are both cloned and genetically altered to prevent serious hereditary disease is outlined today by the leader of the team that created Dolly the sheep."

Climate Control, Beijing-Style - "Not content with simply making it rain, now China's weather modifiers have taken on another meterological mission: to help guarantee perfect weather when Beijing hosts the Olympic Games in 2008."

Lawmakers Poised to OK Indecency Bill - "Signaling a more expensive era of broadcast decency ahead, congressional leaders have agreed on legislation that would dramatically increase maximum fines for radio and TV stations that violate Federal Communications Commission regulations. The House is expected to approve a Senate bill Wednesday that includes a tenfold increase in indecency fines to a maximum of $325,000 for each violation. The bill, called the Broadcast Decency Enforcement Act, unanimously passed the Senate last month."

Propaganda about "docu-ganda" - "The Christian Science Monitor has published an impressively blatant piece of propaganda attacking films like "An Inconvenient Truth" as "docu-ganda."The term "docu-ganda" itself is introduced as if it were an objective description. It implies without argument that the point of view presented in the film is false and deceptive. However, neither the point of view nor any of the evidence presented in any of the films is directly challenged, and not a shred of counter-evidence is presented. The opposing point of view is not even named."

Study: 1 in 5 students practice self-injury - "For some young people, self-abuse is an extreme coping mechanism that seems to help relieve stress; for others it's a way to make deep emotional wounds more visible."

Strict parenting linked to overweight kids - "Strict mothers were nearly five times more likely to raise tubby first-graders than mothers who treated their children with flexibility and respect while also setting clear rules."


No bumper sticker today.


Quote of the Day
"This administration is a culture of death, and so is the religious right."
~ Rev. Rich Lang

June 3, 2006

News -- June 3, 2006

New Army documents reveal US knew of and approved torture before Abu Ghraib scandal - ""When our leaders allow and even encourage abuse at the 'outer limits', America suffers," said Anthony D. Romero, ACLU Executive Director. "A nation that works to bring freedom and liberty to other parts of the world shouldn't stomach brutality and inhumanity within its ranks. This abuse of power was engineered and accepted at the highest levels of our government.""

GIs Cleared of Misconduct in Iraqi Village - "The U.S. military said Saturday that it had found no wrongdoing by American troops accused of intentionally killing civilians during a raid in a village north of Baghdad that left up to 13 Iraqis dead." -- Killing is their busines, and business is good.

Straight From The Horse's Ass - "So there you have it, straight from the horse's ass, the US intends on acting unilaterally against Iran, regardless of the consequences. But at least they put on a nice dog and pony show for the beer swilling brain damaged chemically imbalanced NASCAR watching morons out there. And in the end, isn't that all that matters?"

Bush urges gay marriage ban enshrined in Constitution - ""Ages of experience have taught us that the commitment of a husband and a wife to love and to serve one another promotes the welfare of children and the stability of society," Bush said in his Saturday radio address. "Marriage cannot be cut off from its cultural, religious and natural roots without weakening this good influence on society.""

Public health and religion: Aids, America, abstinence... - "Abstinence is working for Isaac and Simon - and for tens of thousands of teens and twentysomethings proudly attending virginity rallies in Uganda. But Aids activists and development officials point to the 130,000 Ugandans infected with HIV last year alone - up from 70,000 in 2002 - and say the recent obsession with abstinence is handicapping the country's once-successful fight against the virus. Health workers see the fingerprints of America's Christian right all over the chastity message and believe the Bush administration is using its financial might to bully them into accepting evangelical ideology at the expense of public health."

The earth is heating up like a meteor from hell and we're all going to die. Now, that's inconvenient. - "If things are even half as bad as Al Gore says they are, "An Inconvenient Truth" is the most important movie anyone will make this year. The film's significance as a wake-up call about global warming overshadows all its other virtues. Yes, it handles complicated material in a clear and entertaining way. Yes, it renders cinematic what might have seemed like a static lecture, and yes, Al Gore is funny and engaging in a way you've never seen him be. But beyond that, the movie brings a feeling of history: Virtually everyone who sees this movie will be galvanized to do something about global warming -- and everyone should see this movie."

Justice Department Wants Internet Companies to Save Personal Web Surfing Data - "The U.S. Department of Justice has told Google, Microsoft and other major Internet companies that it wants them to keep detailed records of where people go while surfing the Web for up to two years. The proposal, which would require Congressional approval, could dramatically change how companies cooperate with law enforcement agencies investigating everything from terrorist networks to child pornography. Internet service providers such as Verizon, AT&T and Comcast, could also be forced to comply."

Russian Web site angers music industry - "A Russian Web site that lets visitors download albums for less than $1 is a smash hit with music fans -- but not with U.S. trade and music industry officials."

Video games in Congress' crosshairs - "The purported problem of violent and sexually explicit video games has resurfaced on politicians' agenda as the November election draws near."

Mysterious red cells might be aliens - "As bizarre as it may seem, the sample jars brimming with cloudy, reddish rainwater in Godfrey Louis's laboratory in southern India may hold, well, aliens."




Quote of the Day
"Would someone please let me know how we have spun out of control?"
~ Queensrÿche

June 2, 2006

News -- June 2, 2006

Universal National Service Act of 2006 (Introduced in House) - H.R. 4752: To provide for the common defense by requiring all persons in the United States, including women, between the ages of 18 and 42 to perform a period of military service or a period of civilian service in furtherance of the national defense and homeland security, and for other purposes."

Six Powers Reach Accord On Iran Plan - "The United States and five other major world powers agreed Thursday to offer Iran a broad new collection of rewards if it halts its drive to master nuclear technology, but they threatened "further steps in the Security Council" if Iran refuses."

Iran proposal 'excludes use of force' - "Russia today said a plan to break the international impasse over Iran's nuclear programme excluded the use of military force "in any circumstances"."

Iran signals to press on with nuclear program - "A senior Iranian nuclear official signaled Tehran's determination on Friday to press on with its nuclear work, despite facing what Washington called a "moment of truth" over a program that could produce atomic weapons."

Former CIA Analyst Says Iran Strike Set For June Or July - "Former CIA analyst and Presidential advisor Ray McGovern, fresh from his heated public confrontation with Donald Rumsfeld, fears that staged terror attacks across Europe and the US are probable in order to justify the Bush administration's plan to launch a military strike against Iran, which he thinks will take place in June or July."

Too Stupid for Citizenship - "It's clear that the Bush administration has chosen war. One, it refuses to negotiate with Iran; two, it refuses to recognize Iran's right, as a signer of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes; three, it has already set up an office in the Pentagon and another in the State Department to agitate for regime change; and four, it has begun its anti-Iranian propaganda campaign. President Bush is a liar when he says he wants to use diplomacy to end the crisis. In the first place, he created the crisis; in the second place, he refuses to negotiate; and in the third place, he has, for all practical purposes, issued an ultimatum: Give up your right to enrich uranium, or we'll attack. No country in the world wants us to attack Iran except Israel. That's no surprise. If the American people haven't figured out that Israel exerts an undue and injurious influence on the American government, then that's another reason for them to tear up their voter-registration cards."

Bush to Back Gay Marriage Ban Amendment - "President Bush will promote a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage on Monday, the eve of a scheduled Senate vote on the cause that is dear to his conservative backers. The amendment would prohibit states from recognizing same-sex marriages. To become law, the proposal would need two-thirds support in the Senate and House, and then be ratified by at least 38 state legislatures."

Proposal to Implant Tracking Chips in Immigrants - "Scott Silverman, Chairman of the Board of VeriChip Corporation, has proposed implanting the company's RFID tracking tags in immigrant and guest workers. He made the statement on national television on May 16."

What Blacklash Against the Dixie Chicks? - "The supposed justification for this "backlash" against the Dixie Chicks is a myth now just as it was in 2003. What actually happened then when the media was filled with stories about a backlash, with allegations that all country fans and especially Southerners are rightwing rednecks, when country stars such as Toby Keith were attacking the Chicks every day?"

Giant Crater Found: Tied to Worst Mass Extinction Ever - " An apparent crater as big as Ohio has been found in Antarctica. Scientists think it was carved by a space rock that caused the greatest mass extinction on Earth, 250 million years ago. The crater, buried beneath a half-mile of ice and discovered by some serious airborne and satellite sleuthing, is more than twice as big as the one involved in the demise of the dinosaurs."




Quote of the Day
"People need somebody to watch over them... Ninety-five percent of the people in the world need to be told what to do and how to behave."
~ Arnold Schwarzenegger

June 1, 2006

News -- June 1, 2006

America may be ready for a new political party - "All my adult life, people have been saying that the two-party system is ending, that the Democrats' and Republicans' control of political power in America is winding down. According to the traditional critique, the two parties no longer offer the people the choice they want and deserve. Sometimes it's said they are too much alike--Tweedledum and Tweedledee. Sometimes it's said they're too polarizing--too red and too blue for a nation in which many see things through purple glasses."

New CIA director Hayden plans massive expansion of spying on Americans - "Now that he is officially sworn in as the new head of the Central Intelligence Agency, Gen. Michael Hayden plans to build a vast domestic spying network that will pry into the lives of most Americans around the clock."

101 People Who Are Really Screwing America - "As we read through "101 People," we kept thinking, "and there's plenty more where they came from." It's like the book version of "The Invasion of the Body Snatchers." You keep thinking, all these people should be shunned by society. But, instead, they are at the pinnacle of power.How did that happen?"

The Clownification of America - "When I saw this Kunstler quote a couple of weeks ago, I thought it a bit harsh. Then I picked up my morning paper -- and, all at once, I got it. There, in 120-point bold headline type, above the fold, the lead story of the day, was the "news" that: In less than 24 hours, singer Taylor Hicks would battle singer Katharine McPhee for the title of American Idol! Clowns. We have indeed become a nation of frivolous, self-indulgent, overweight, undereducated, unserious, clowns. When an event of such monumental unimportance wins precious front-page status, what other conclusion can be reached? ... Aren't you embarrassed? Well damn it, you oughta be."

U.S. orders 'values training' for troops in Iraq - "The U.S. military chief in Iraq on Thursday ordered troops to undergo fresh training in legal, moral and ethical standards for the battlefield."

Ancient Scroll May Yield Religious Secrets - "A collection of charred scraps kept in a Greek museum's storerooms are all that remains of what archaeologists say is Europe's oldest surviving book _ which may hold a key to understanding early monotheistic beliefs."

Yet again we cave into religious bigots. And this time they're Hindus - "The Satanic Verses, Behzti, Theo van Gogh's Submission, Jerry Springer: The Opera, the Danish cartoons of Muhammad ... now we can add the London exhibition of the work of Maqbool Fida Husain to the rapidly expanding list of works of art and satire targeted by militant religion."

Tyranny of the Christian Right - "The mass movement I've described aims to supplant Enlightenment rationalism with what it calls the "Christian worldview." The phrase is based on the conviction that true Christianity must govern every aspect of public and private life, and that all -- government, science, history and culture -- must be understood according to the dictates of scripture. There are biblically correct positions on every issue, from gay marriage to income tax rates, and only those with the right worldview can discern them. This is Christianity as a total ideology -- I call it Christian nationalism. It's an ideology adhered to by millions of Americans, some of whom are very powerful. It's what drives a great many of the fights over religion, science, sex and pluralism now dividing communities all over the country."

U.S. men place high value on being dads - "A federal report released yesterday found that 47 percent of American men without a high-school diploma have fathered a child out of wedlock, compared with about 6 percent of college graduates." -- This speaks volumes about the state of this country.

Most college graduates in debt - "Nearly two of every three undergraduate students are going into debt to go to college, owing an average of more than $19,000, most often to the government." -- And I believe that is by design.

Panel: N.C. should pay for 1898 race riot - "A state-appointed commission is urging North Carolina to provide reparations for the 1898 racial violence that sparked an exodus of more than 2,000 black residents from Wilmington."

FCC plans relaxation of media ownership rules, watchdogs say - "The Federal Communications Commission is poised to propose new media ownership rules that will allow media companies to own newspapers, television and radio stations in the same city, according to media watchdog groups. The proposed rule would dissolve a longstanding policy that prohibited corporations from owning a television station and a daily newspaper in the same market. The "cross ownership" rule, promulgated in 1975, was enacted to ensure media diversity."

Studies Portray Tropical Arctic in Distant Past - "The first detailed analysis of an extraordinary climatic and biological record from the seabed near the North Pole shows that 55 million years ago the Arctic Ocean was much warmer than scientists imagined — a Floridian year-round average of 74 degrees."




Quote of the Day
"When the autopsy of our democracy is performed, it is my belief that media silence will be given as the primary cause of death."
~ Jonathan Simon, Editor, Tribune Media Services