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Eight Killed by Bomb Blasts in Iran
Today's Headlines
Headline Comments [Views]
20:52 4 00:00 bigjim-ky [3]
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14:52 6 00:00 Tom Dooley [1]
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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Girl Abuses Koran, gets Turned into Dog
(Hat tip: LGF)

'Allah turned girl into dog'

Well, son of a bitch!

Punishment meted out after girl mishandles Quran, according to rumor circulating at Arab-Israeli town

TAIBEH — Harsh punishment? A Muslim girl from Taibeh was punished by Allah and turned into a dog, according to rumors that have been circulating in the Arab-Israeli town this week, Arab-language newspaper Panorama reported.

According to the rumors, the harsh punishment was meted out after the girl, upset by her mother's request to bring her the Quran as she was watching television, threw the holy Muslim book at the mother with disdain.
As opposed to throwing it with respect, I suppose.
The newspaper decided to look into the rumors and sent a reporter to check where they originated.
"Sounds credible to me, Achmed, go check it out"

As it turned out, the source was a photocopy of a news story posted in Taibeh's largest mosque. According to that report, taken from the Internet, the unusual story happened in a Muslim country in Asia.

Local women say they saw story on TV
"But, Sarai, everything on tv is true! That is how we know about the infidel atrocities in Iraq and the censorship and repression in America."

However, the newspaper reported, the rumor changed several versions as it was passed on. At one point, the dog apparently "moved" from to one of the Persian Gulf countries, and from there to Gaza, before ending up in Taibeh itself

Later on, women in Taibeh even claimed they saw the story featured on Palestinian television and on Israel's channel 33.

The newspaper reporter also turned to the Muslim leaders to ask their opinion on the matter. One religious cleric responded that the story was obviously baseless, "since Allah doesn't need to turn a girl into a dog in order to prove his strength. If Allah wants to prove his power he can make the entire universe shake." "or tell us to stone her or set off a car bomb or something." She is lucky she didn't burn the Koran instead, she might have been turned into something really awful, like a DUper or an NYT columnist.

Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy || 06/12/2005 20:52 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Don't let the male dogs come sniffing around, or your father will have to kill you for his family's honor.

So, would it be worse to be a dog or a woman under sharia?

If that's the penalty for misusing a Koran, do we have more members of the K-9 Corps in Gitmo?
Posted by: Jackal || 06/12/2005 21:24 Comments || Top||

#2  Allah wants to prove his power he can make the entire universe shake.

SO... The Haliburton Earthquake Machine must be Allah! Ooo.. Then he's on our side... snark..
Posted by: 3dc || 06/12/2005 21:44 Comments || Top||

#3  And we're supposed to show respect for these ignorant clowns and take them seriously?

Whatever for?
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 06/12/2005 22:02 Comments || Top||

#4  Maybe the village elders should have the dog publicly gang raped.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 06/12/2005 22:27 Comments || Top||


Venezuela's Chavez blames Bush for Bolivia crisis
Venezuela's Chavez blames Bush for Bolivia crisis
Soooooo predictable and booooooring!
By Pascal Fletcher
1 hour, 45 minutes ago

CARACAS, Venezuela (Reuters) - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez blamed President Bush on Sunday for Bolivia's crisis and said Bush's "poisoned medicine" of free-market democracy was being rejected by Latin America.

The left-wing Venezuelan leader said the protests that shook the Andean nation this week were triggered by popular opposition to capitalist free-trade policies advocated by Bush.

Chavez condemned as "poisoned medicine" a speech given by Bush to the Organization of American States last week in which he recommended a mix of representative democracy, integration of world markets and individual freedoms.

"That is what is killing the peoples of Latin America. ... This is the path of destabilization, of violence, of war between brothers," Chavez said, speaking on his "Hello President" weekly television and radio show.

The Venezuelan leader is a fierce critic of U.S. policies although his country, the world's No. 5 oil exporter, sells billions of dollars worth of oil to the United States each year.

Chavez rejected charges by some U.S. officials that he and Cuban President Fidel Castro were directing the Bolivian miners, rural peasants and labor groups who are demanding the nationalization of their country's rich gas resources.

"What's the cause? Is Fidel? Is it Chavez? No, Bush is the cause ... and what he represents," he said.

Addressing Bush in broken English and calling him "Mr. Danger," he added, "We, the people of Latin America are saying 'No Sir, Mr. Danger,' your poisoned medicine has failed."

Chavez welcomed signs the Bolivia protests were easing following the inauguration as president on Thursday of Eduardo Rodriguez. He replaced Carlos Mesa who resigned.

Chavez, a firebrand nationalist first elected in 1998, says free-market economic policies have increased not reduced poverty in Latin America. He proposes as an alternative his self-styled "revolution" in Venezuela, which channels oil income into health, education and job training for the poor.

He spoke while inaugurating one of 600 new medical treatment centers which his government was opening with help from Communist Cuba.

During his program lasting more than seven hours, Chavez received a phone call from Castro, which was broadcast live.

The two leaders mocked U.S. accusations that they had created an anti-U.S. alliance to destabilize Latin America and that it was being financed by Venezuela's oil income.

"You're the malevolent genius and I'm the rich financier of revolutions, what do you think?" Chavez told Castro.

"Well, it's marvelous," the Cuban leader replied.

Venezuela ships up to 90,000 barrels per day of oil to Cuba and more than 20,000 Cuban doctors, dentists, teachers and technicians, including sugar experts, are working in the South American oil exporter under a broad cooperation program.

The United States has criticized Chavez's close alliance with Castro, a longtime foe of Washington, and says it fears his rule in Venezuela is becoming increasingly authoritarian.

Posted by: TMH || 06/12/2005 20:26 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "'You're the malevolent genius and I'm the rich financier of revolutions, what do you think?' Chavez told Castro. 'Well, it's marvelous,' the Cuban leader replied."
Yes, it's marvelous to be a Chavez, a Castro, a Mugabe, a Kimmie... I do hope there is a Hell.
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 21:09 Comments || Top||

#2  There is a Hell. Unfortunately, it's living under the rule of one of those tyrants. Maybe we can hope for reincarnation back in time. They can be Cambodian schoolteachers.

Posted by: Jackal || 06/12/2005 21:26 Comments || Top||

#3  Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez blamed President Bush on Sunday for Bolivia's crisis..

If there was anything Hugo did NOT need to do was something like this. If people already didn't suspect he was just another leftist nut bag, it's all but certain now.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 06/12/2005 22:27 Comments || Top||

#4  In Heaven, the police are British, the cooks are Italians, the staff are Germans, the lovers are French, and it's all organized by the Swiss.

In Hell, the police are Germans, the cooks are British, the staff are Italians, the lovers are Swiss, and it's all organized by the French.
Posted by: mojo || 06/12/2005 22:37 Comments || Top||

#5  LMAO mojo!
Posted by: Rafael || 06/12/2005 23:32 Comments || Top||

#6  ... more than 20,000 Cuban doctors, dentists, teachers and technicians, including sugar experts ...

Uh huh. Sure they're all humanitarian experts, sure ...
Posted by: Steve White || 06/12/2005 23:53 Comments || Top||


Yet another Mother of the Year candidate
Hours before being mauled to death by the family pit bull, 12-year- old Nicholas Faibish had been told to stay in the basement separated from the dogs, said his distraught mother, Maureen Faibish, who called The Chronicle on Saturday, trying to make sense of what she called a "freak accident.''

"I put him down there, with a shovel on the door,'' said Faibish, who had left the boy alone with the dogs on June 3 to run some errands. "He had a bunch of food. And I told him, 'Stay down there until I come back.' Typical Nicky, he wouldn't listen to me.'' She should have given the kid the shovel to protect himself...

Faibish said she was concerned that the male pit bull, Rex, was acting possessive because the female, Ella, was in heat. Apparently, Nicholas found a way to get the door open and come upstairs. At that point Faibish believes he walked in while the dogs were mating and was attacked by Rex.

"It was Rex, I know it in my heart,'' Faibish said. "My younger dog (Ella) was in heat and anyone who came near her, Rex saw as a threat. He may have been trying to mate. Or he may just have been hungry. It was a freak accident. It was just the heat of the moment.''



"It's Nicky's time to go," she said. "When you're born you're destined to go and this was his time."

rest at link...
Posted by: Pholush Phease8235 || 06/12/2005 20:25 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  And your time is coming, Mom!
Posted by: Bobby || 06/12/2005 22:27 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
Daniel Pipes: Mysteries of the Lodi, California Qaeda Cell
Lodi, California Mysteries The arrest this week of five men of Pakistani origins in Lodi, California, on what are likely to be terrorism-related charges (terrorism was initially a formal part of the picture but was then retracted) has prompted extensive media coverage. The coverage has uncovered some mysteries, which I note here in the hopes of finding answers to.

* Hamid Hayat, 22, arrested on his return from what he admits was a jihadist camp in Pakistan, is an American citizen born in Stockton, California who attended school (though only up to the sixth grade) in the United States. That being the case, why does the Los Angeles Times write that, "Apparently unable to follow the proceedings in English, Hayat listened with the help of an Urdu translator"? Does Lodi contain an Urdu-speaking ghetto? (In the absence of the two imams yesterday, the mosque service was held in Urdu.)
* When he was arrested, Hamid Hayat, the junior-high dropout, was packing cherries. His father, Umer, sells ice cream from a truck. But his maternal grandfather, Qari Saeed ur Rehman, founded the Jamia Islamia Madrassa in 1962 (and still runs it), is a leader in the Jamiat Ulema Islam Party, and served as minister of religious affairs in the late 1980s. The family is Pakistani religious royalty — so, what are the father and son doing in California as unskilled laborers?
* Hamid Hayat's attorney, Wazhma Mojaddidi, explaining why his family traveled so often to Pakistan, said that it went "on one occasion to seek medical treatment for the mother." It traveled to Pakistan for medical reasons? Urdu-speaking doctors are not hard to find in northern California and they dispose of far superior facilities, so what's up?
* On April 19, 2003, on the way to Pakistan, the same day Hamid and Umer Hayat were stopped at Dulles International Airport outside of Washington, D.C. Customs and Border Protection spokeswoman Christiana Halsey revealed that they were found with $28,093 in cash. What is an ice-cream vendor doing with such an amount of money and why is he breaking U.S. customs regulations by taking out so much cash without declaring it?
* And, speaking of money and travel, here is something curious about the Farooqia Islamic Center: the 2003 tax return of this apparently Islamist institution (it hosted the likes of Siraj Wahaj and links to the Islamic Society of North America and the Saudi Ministry of Religious Affairs) shows operating expenses of $57,544 in 2003, of which over one third, or $20,625, was spent on travel. Wonder why.
Posted by: PlanetDan || 06/12/2005 17:06 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  cuz Southwest doesn't fly to Pakiland?
Posted by: Frank G || 06/12/2005 18:39 Comments || Top||

#2  Another mystery: the camp was in WakiPakiLand. Does anyone on the left or right have a plan towards making WPL a functional ally instead of either a dysfunctional one, or a functional enemy?
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 06/12/2005 21:43 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Time Magazine Reveals Gitmo Torture Technique: Christina Aguilar
snippet RTWT

According to the log, al-Qahtani experienced several of those over the next five weeks. The techniques Rumsfeld balked at included ''use of a wet towel or dripping water to induce the misperception of suffocation.'' And I thought Rumy was a tough guy. ''Our Armed Forces are trained,'' a Pentagon memo on the changes read, ''to a standard of interrogation that reflects a tradition of restraint.'' Nevertheless, the log shows that interrogators poured bottles of water on al-Qahtani’s head when he refused to drink. Interrogators called this game ''Drink Water or Wear It.'' I believe they call this the American Water Torture

Dripping Water or Playing Christina Aguilera Music: After the new measures are approved, the mood in al-Qahtani’s interrogation booth changes dramatically The reporter was an embed. He knows the mood exactly. Well, actually he was getting telemetry from al-Q's mood ring.. The interrogation sessions lengthen. The way classes lengthen from middle school to high school and high school to college. The quizzing now starts at midnight Yikes, all-nighters!, and when Detainee 063 dozes off, interrogators rouse him by dripping water on his head or playing Christina Aguilera music That's a Geneva buster, fer sher. . According to the log, his handlers at one point perform a puppet show ''satirizing the detainee’s involvement with al-Qaeda. They should have replayed Mr. Rogers and his little king puppets. That's PBS approved. '' He is taken to a new interrogation booth, which is decorated with pictures of 9/11 victims, American flags and red lights. He has to stand for the playing of the U.S. national anthem.Yup, just like my high school His head and beard are shaved. He is returned to his original interrogation booth. A picture of a 9/11 victim is taped to his trousers. Al-Qahtani repeats that he will ''not talk until he is interrogated the proper way.'' "Put him in the chopper, boys." At 7 a.m. on Dec. 4, after a 12-hour, all-night session, he is put to bed for a four-hour nap, TIME reports.

And on and on.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 06/12/2005 14:52 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sorry,but taping a picture of a 9/11 victim to his trousers fails my BS detector. Once something that inane is "reported" as fact,I automaticaly think the rest of the story is bogus.
Posted by: Stephen || 06/12/2005 15:37 Comments || Top||

#2  Quit yer bitching, Time Magazine....or we'll make them listen to Britney.....
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 06/12/2005 19:53 Comments || Top||

#3  Mooselimb grabs a shank, holds up against his copy of the Koran and shouts: "No body move or the Koran gets it."

The guards watch the Moose Limb's mouth as he shouts: "Oh Lawdy, oh lawdy! Do what he say! Do what he say!"
Posted by: badanov || 06/12/2005 20:00 Comments || Top||

#4  Still the same Lefty BS, double-standard, and hypocrisy as during the Cold War, trying to turn US milfors into a benign police force while every one else can violate human rights as maliciously as they please. The Left is still NOT telling the Moslems to stop presecuting Christians, Jews, or other non-Moslems - its only the US that has to make concessions whilst the Left reserves its right to use force, violence, and destruction.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 06/12/2005 21:11 Comments || Top||

#5  Well said, Joseph.
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 21:14 Comments || Top||

#6  time magazine has changed little since the days of Whitaker Chambers. Still the same old propganda organ of the communist party........any anti-American baloney will do just fine.
Posted by: Tom Dooley || 06/12/2005 21:37 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Economy
A Collision Course for GM and the UAW
I post this because this may - IMHO - be the most critical moment for the auto industry since the original union battles of the Thirties. We will feel the results whichever way it goes - Mike

By Keith Naughton
Newsweek

June 20 issue - As GM's engine stalled this year, CEO Rick Wagoner has laid much of the blame on the automaker's runaway health-care costs. And he's pushed the United Auto Workers union to give concessions on its generous medical bennies (no deductibles, tiny co-pays). The union has steadfastly refused to reopen its contract, which runs until 2007. So last week Wagoner ratcheted up the pressure. While announcing plans to cut 25,000 jobs and close factories by 2008, he promised to find a way to "promptly" reduce GM's health-care burden—with or without the union's help. The UAW fired back that GM can't "shrink its way" to prosperity, but instead needs to design cars people want. By late last week the war of words had escalated. "If we don't fix some of the basic problems that exist when it comes to the product," UAW president Ron Gettelfinger told NEWSWEEK, "then it seems to me that no matter what we did, it wouldn't be enough. Ever."
GM is on a collision course with its union over health care. And if there's a crash, the results would be devastating. Last time the UAW struck GM, for 54 days in 1998, it cost the automaker $3.5 billion and dealt such a blow to the economy it shaved a point off the GDP. Back then, though, the American auto industry was riding high on the SUV boom. Now analysts expect GM's North American car business to lose $4 billion this year, as SUV-fatigued buyers reject its aging lineup of guzzlers in favor of stylish sippers from Toyota, Nissan and Hyundai. Wagoner says the automaker's turnaround is threatened by accelerating health-care costs that add $1,500 to the cost of each car GM builds. The UAW and GM are in intense negotiations to reach a compromise because neither "side wants to see this thing go in the ditch," says Gettelfinger. Wagoner once made it his personal mission to improve GM's historically horrible labor relations. But now that he's taking a harder line, a relationship that has been carefully nurtured since the '98 strike hangs in the balance. "Without question," says Gettelfinger, "this will be a test."
The big question now: will GM try to break the contract if the UAW won't agree to benefit cuts? In a closed-door meeting with union leaders in Detroit last week, UAW VP Richard Shoemaker promised to block any attempts by GM to reopen the contract. But he also offered to help the ailing automaker find ways within the contract to cut health-care costs. At Chrysler this year, the UAW agreed to deductibles on some PPO plans. After the union meeting, GM stock surged on optimism that the union might give the company a break. But if GM acts unilaterally, the union hints at dire consequences. "Any corporation would have a hard time breaking contracts," Shoemaker told NEWSWEEK, "and still convincing consumers that they'd be a good company to do business with."
Wall Street has begun wondering if GM is overplaying the health card. "Even if GM solves their medical-cost disadvantage," says Standard & Poor's analyst Scott Sprinzen, "they will still not be another Toyota." And some question whether Wagoner's tough talk doesn't help because it simply backs the union into a corner. Says veteran analyst Maryann Keller, "It makes it difficult for the union to do anything without looking like the bad guys."
A roadblock to any deal is the union's feeling that GM brass is not sharing in the sacrifice. Wagoner just took a $2.5 million bonus (while Bill Ford swore off compensation until his company is fixed). And GM shareholders still receive $1.1 billion in yearly dividends. That makes the union suspicious that Wagoner's big job cuts are merely saber rattling, especially since they reflect the automaker's normal attrition rate. "Do they have problems?" says Gettelfinger. "They've got some issues. But I certainly wouldn't rate it as a crisis." The real crisis would be a breakdown in communications between GM and its union.
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski || 06/12/2005 14:34 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sometimes you have to slip the comb under the cholla and pull it out. Yeah, it hurts, but then it's over and you can get healed.

Either GM does this, or they file Chapter 11 and stiff all the retirees. Or, they get liquidated and Toyota and Kia buy some more plants.
Posted by: Jackal || 06/12/2005 17:27 Comments || Top||

#2  Jackal-
I have several GM salesmen for clients, and to a man, they are all quietly dreading one of two possibilities: first, that GM may implode due to runaway costs and utterly incompetent management. (Right now, the largest single cost at GM is health care.) Apparently, Federal law is such that GM might just be able to do that and simply blow off all its pensions and health care plans. The other rumor that has them concerned - one that has apparently been floated as a trial balloon - is scuttling Buick, Saturn, Pontiac, Hummer, and GMC's personal vehicles. This would come damn close to taking out about one HALF - or more - of the Automotive Division's personnel. The dealership structure would, with the exception of Cadillac, be 'dualled': each dealer would sell a combination of Chevies, Caddys, and/or Saturns.
These guys all feel that GM is in deep, deep trouble and it will not survive the decade in its present form.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski || 06/12/2005 19:13 Comments || Top||

#3  Look for
The Union Label
On a guy in a breadline
Near You!
Posted by: M. Murcek || 06/12/2005 21:28 Comments || Top||

#4  Time for Detroit to stop fiddling with the Unions and focus on dev George Jetson's flying/space car, or does the guy from Guam, i.e Madonna's daddy, have to do it, AGAIN. IN about ten years the Koreans will be where the Japanese automakers were in the late 1960s - ready to blow out Detroit and the world.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 06/12/2005 21:55 Comments || Top||

#5  I grew up in the Detroit area and had family and neighbors who worked in local plants or in the tubes. When I was young, I always thought GM cars were the best. My family had near-canine loyalty to Pontiac. Of course, this was the days of the SS/396, GTO, and Corvair, before the Vega, the Cimarron, and V8-6-4. It's a shame to see how far the company has fallen.

Unfortunately, the overhead is killing them. Having 6 divisions made sense when they had almost 50% of the market. Now that they have 25%, they have, what, nine divisions? Caddy, Buick, Pontiac, Chevy, Saab, GMC, Isuzu, Saturn, Hummer, Opel, ... Unless they can quickly get back to 50% share (as likely as My embracing Islam), they need to cut down the brands and the dealers servicing them. If you are selling half as many cars (I know the market's bigger, but let's just say half), you should have half as many dealers. Either they can close a bunch of them and give the franchise to others nearby, or they can continue to have them all slowly sink. You can keep the brands, but you simply must cut down the overlap, accepting fewer sales per brand, and having fewer dealers per brand.

No more Pontiac minivans. No more Buick trucks. Get Chevrolet out of any truck larger than Class 2 (or 3) and GMC out of any truck smaller than that. Clip Saturn back to its original plastic-bodied import-fighters. It did OK (not great, but OK) there. I don't know what to do about Saab.

As for the health care and pensions being thrown out in a bankruptcy, that's essentially what United, Kaiser, and many other companies have done. If it ends up being that or liquidation, which do we want?

Fans of Hudson and Packard must have felt the same way in the 50s.

Posted by: Jackal || 06/12/2005 22:12 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
Hunter: Bush team split over closing Guantanamo
The White House is split over whether to close a U.S. detention camp in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, a Republican lawmaker said on Sunday, as a magazine reported a top al Qaeda suspect interrogated there was made to bark like a dog and subjected to Christina Aguilera music.

U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter, chairman of the House of Representatives Armed Services Committee, said some members of the Bush administration wanted to close the camp to end a high-profile debate over allegations of abuse at Guantanamo.

The military jail for suspected terrorists has been criticized as a modern "gulag" by Amnesty International, and it has become a hated symbol for many Muslims.

"I think they're divided. I think ... some members of the White House have come to the conclusion that the legend is different than the fact," Hunter, a California Republican, told "Fox News Sunday."

"And when that's the case, you go with the legend that somehow Guantanamo has been a place of abuse. And you close it down and you shorten the stories, you shorten the heated debate and you get if off the table and you move on," he said.

After calls to close the camp from former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and others, President Bush said last week he was "exploring all alternatives." Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, however, said he knew of no one in the administration who was thinking of closing Guantanamo.

A White House spokesman, asked about Hunter's comments, said, "We should never limit our options."

Vice President Dick Cheney told Fox, in an interview on Friday to be broadcast on Monday, there was "no plan to close" Guantanamo, but he cited Bush as saying options were under review "on a continuous basis."

"The important thing here to understand is that the people that are at Guantanamo are bad people," he said.

BARKING, NO PRAYER, AGUILERA MUSIC

Time magazine on Sunday disclosed new details of methods at the camp, citing an interrogation log of al Qaeda suspect Mohammad al-Kahtani. Techniques included inflicting a "sissy slap" with an inflated latex glove, forcing Kahtani to "bark to elevate his social status up to that of a dog," and rejecting a request that he be allowed to pray.

Interrogators also played music by pop singer Christina Aguilera to keep him from dozing off, Time said.

Kahtani, a Saudi citizen, is suspected to have been an intended fifth member of the team that hijacked United Airlines flight 93 during the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, the Pentagon said in a statement. He had tried and failed to enter the United States in August 2001, and was captured on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border in 2002.

Under questioning, Kahtani "provided valuable information helping the U.S. to understand the recruitment of terrorist operatives, logistics and other planning aspects of the 9/11 terrorist attack," the Pentagon said. It described the document cited in Time as a "compromised classified interrogation log."

The log spanned 50 days in the winter of 2002 and 2003, when Rumsfeld approved more coercive interrogation techniques.

Time said water was poured Kahtani's head to keep him awake in midnight sessions. It also said Kahtani was questioned in a room decorated with pictures of Sept. 11 victims, was made to urinate in his pants, and forced to wear pictures of scantily clad women around his neck.

He asked to commit suicide at one point, and was hooked up to a heart monitor after he became seriously dehydrated from refusing to drink water and his heartbeat slowed, the magazine said.
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 14:21 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "...a 'sissy slap' with an inflated latex glove, forcing Kahtani to 'bark to elevate his social status up to that of a dog,' and rejecting a request that he be allowed to pray. Interrogators also played music by pop singer Christina Aguilera to keep him from dozing off..."
Okay No. 20, it's Christina Aguilera or a firing squad -- take your choice.
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 14:53 Comments || Top||

#2  Kill me now heartless infidels!
Posted by: Abu Schmoo || 06/12/2005 15:10 Comments || Top||

#3  So this is supposed to what....make us feel sorry for the prisoners at Gitmo? Tell that to the poor souls on 911 who had a choice....burn to death or jump 110 stories from the Trade Center buildings as they collapsed.....I refuse to feel story for some gober who is being "tortured" at Gitmo.
Posted by: Grins Sluper5274 || 06/12/2005 16:22 Comments || Top||

#4  I'm sorry, I can't feel that sorry for someone who kills the innocent.
But that music...
Cruelty.
Posted by: DON KING || 06/12/2005 16:54 Comments || Top||

#5  Christina Aguilera music? That's it? If they were really cruel, they'd play her videos.
Posted by: Pappy || 06/12/2005 17:39 Comments || Top||

#6  explains all the "hooker" anecdotes
Posted by: Frank G || 06/12/2005 17:53 Comments || Top||

#7  "a top al Qaeda suspect interrogated there was made to bark like a dog..."

OK I'm really stupid, but HOW did they succeed? He obviously refused to give information despite a Dirrty song... so why would he bark on command?

Is it a "ok I will bark for you infidels but not tell you anything?

Ahh questions...
Posted by: True German Ally || 06/12/2005 17:58 Comments || Top||

#8  Lol. Sounds like a variation on the Python "newt" skit.
Posted by: .com || 06/12/2005 20:02 Comments || Top||

#9  These days, truth and reality seem to lie somewhere between Monty Python and ScrappleFace...
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 21:13 Comments || Top||

#10  "...bark to elevate his social status up to that of a dog..."

Izzat so, Mohammad? Well, have we got the perfect girl for you.
Posted by: Jackal || 06/12/2005 21:45 Comments || Top||

#11  Dead fascists tell no tales. Kill 'em first, then no one gets tortured. How 'bout a deadly dose of Aguilera?
Posted by: Captain America || 06/12/2005 22:19 Comments || Top||

#12  Come to think of it, listening to a Carter speech is more deadly than Aguilera, but it is close.
Posted by: Captain America || 06/12/2005 22:20 Comments || Top||

#13  ..some members of the Bush administration wanted to close the camp to end a high-profile debate over allegations of abuse at Guantanamo.

If this is what they're actually fretting over, then they need not bother with closing Gitmo. Allegations of "abuse" are going to pop up anywhere terrorist prisoners are housed. Should Gitmo be decommissioned, sooner or later someone is going to claim that Americans "abused" prisoners in some other location.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 06/12/2005 22:33 Comments || Top||

#14  Can it be only 2 years since Rachel Corrie had a fight with a bulldozer? Remember who won?

http://www.wrmea.com/archives/May-June_2005/0505010.html#corriesidebar#corriesidebar

Bangla-iman in the Saud terrorist entity is arrested for faking death during a sermon. Allah-the-dog-faced-god is displeased,

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1§ion=0&article=65312&d=13&m=6&y=2005
Posted by: War on Islam || 06/12/2005 22:50 Comments || Top||


CIA and FBI reach new agreement on intelligence
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The CIA and the FBI have for the first time in two decades reached a new wide-ranging agreement on how to coordinate their intelligence activities in a post-Sept. 11 world of increasingly blurred divisions of duty, officials say.

A classified memorandum of understanding, which is under review by senior Bush administration officials, redefines the relationship by which the two agencies have operated worldwide since the Cold War era of the 1980s, officials said.

The document, which was jointly negotiated several weeks ago, is expected to be submitted for approval to the new director of national intelligence, John Negroponte. It is also awaiting the signatures of CIA Director Porter Goss and FBI Director Robert Mueller.

A congressional official who was briefed on the agreement by CIA and FBI representatives said the memorandum marked a major step toward implementing the interagency coordination and information-sharing reforms enshrined in two main post-Sept. 11 laws -- the USA Patriot Act and the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004.

"It deals with who's responsible for recruiting and running human assets both in the United States and overseas," the official said without elaborating.

The heart of the agreement appears to address questions of jurisdiction in cases where individuals of interest to FBI and CIA agents cross international boundaries, the congressional official said.

"If you have a scientist from Botswana who's an expert in biological weapons, and we know he's going to visit New York, do you have the FBI approach him for recruitment or do you have the CIA? That's the kind of thing it addresses," the official said.

"They have a pretty good idea of who does what, where. But they want to make sure it's all properly coordinated so that if the CIA has a counterterrorism asset coming into the United States, they can make sure the FBI doesn't arrest him."

COORDINATING ACTIVITIES

The need for an official working agreement was prompted by the FBI's heightened concentration on counterterrorism after the Sept. 11, 2001, hijacked airliner attacks on New York and Washington, officials said.

Ambitious efforts by the FBI to recruit foreigners as spies for use inside the United States, as well as its growing counterterrorism involvement overseas, have been cited by intelligence officials recently as a cause of friction.

"It underscores the need for coordination and cooperation, on which both agencies agree," a CIA official said.

An FBI official described the pact as a basic agreement that was reached several weeks ago.

The FBI and CIA officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the agreement deals with classified material and is not yet final.

Some officials have referred to a rift between the CIA and FBI and the Defense Department due to increased pressure on the federal government to enhance its post-Sept. 11 intelligence capabilities.

Few details of the memorandum's contents were made available, including how the two agencies would modify their traditional relationship which placed the FBI in charge of domestic counterterrorism and counterintelligence activities while the CIA was limited to overseas operations.

Former CIA officer Melissa Boyle Mahle noted in her recent book, "Denial and Deception: An Insider's View of the CIA from Iran-Contra to 9/11" that the FBI and CIA signed a broadly worded memorandum of understanding on counterintelligence coordination in 1988.

Lawmakers in the U.S. House of Representatives took steps to shore up the CIA's role in overseas human intelligence last week by proposing a bill that would put all such activities under the CIA director.

"That's mainly aimed at DOD," the congressional official said. "Overseas, the FBI willingly says the CIA has primacy."

The New York Times reported over the weekend that the FBI had also agreed under White House pressure to establish a new national security division and allow Negroponte to help Mueller choose the bureau's intelligence chief.

Negroponte oversees all 15 spy agencies in the sprawling U.S. intelligence community from a position created by last year in response to huge intelligence lapses surrounding the Sept. 11 attacks and false U.S. assertions that prewar Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction.

Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 14:14 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:


Britain
What Labour Wants out of the Push for African Aid
The last half of an article in the Tory magazine the Spectator. Free reg required.

The broader political significance of this poverty agenda has not yet been noticed. It has its roots in the terror all mainstream politicians feel at the collapse of mass party politics. The Labour party and the Tory party, which both enjoyed memberships of over one million voters barely a generation ago, today cannot count on more than 500,000 between them. By contrast, the four largest aid agencies — Oxfam, Christian Aid, Action Aid and Save the Children — have the best part of three million members.

Just before the general election the ace Labour strategist Douglas Alexander, now minister for Europe, delineated the problem in a pamphlet, Telling It Like It Could Be. 'Citizens are increasingly participating in activities such as single issue campaigns,' wrote Alexander, 'without seeing these as activities in which party politics should or could play a role. Labour needs to engage these people in our vision of the good society.' Alexander, a key adviser to Chancellor Gordon Brown, argues that Labour must take full advantage of all this energy. His pamphlet, though published before the election, was a manifesto for much that has happened since. It explains exactly why the British government is so mesmerised by the Geldof agenda, and accounts for the perplexing collusion that will take place when the G8 summit takes place in Scotland: the British government conspiring with protesters by urging them to come and disrupt its own event. For New Labour, Make Poverty History will win back the voters lost over Iraq.

It is, of course, good that we should think about Africa, and there is no denying that Bob Geldof is a wonderful man. Nevertheless, there are substantial reasons for concern at this new method of making policy. For one thing, it is not democratic. Africa did not loom large during the general election campaign. Pretty well all MPs report that alarm about mass immigration was a much bigger issue. And yet we have heard nothing about immigration since 5 May. The day after the election Tony Blair announced that he had been chastened by the result, and would spend much more time addressing the domestic agenda. Instead, he has set about the prodigious task, which has frustrated all politicians since Alfred Milner a century ago, of how to solve the African problem. This project is about re-energising lost activists, not appealing to the average voter.

Giving way to pressure groups like Make Poverty History is as bad a way of making policy as surrendering to corporate lobbyists. Its agenda — debt forgiveness and a huge increase in aid — is very hard to defend. As Richard Dowden of the Royal Africa Society notes, 'If aid were the solution to Africa's problems it would be a rich continent by now.' Tony Blair is open to the same criticism over Africa as over Iraq: that he is guilty of a naive belief in interventionism. The contrast between the British insistence on aid and the American focus on proper governance is very striking.

Nevertheless George Bush did his best for Tony Blair this week in Washington. He is extremely fond of the British Prime Minister, and the real venom is felt towards Gordon Brown. The Chancellor badly upset the White House when he tried to railroad Condoleezza Rice over Africa at a meeting in the British Foreign Office on 4 February. According to well-placed sources, he treated Rice with the same contempt that he normally hands out to Cabinet colleagues. Afterwards the Americans briefed that Brown's financing plan was poorly thought through and would 'be forgotten within a year'.

Well-informed sources say that President Bush is proud of what he has done for Africa, and is 'affronted by the way Gordon Brown is trying to get cheap publicity ahead of the G8'. The US President may well have spent a portion of his private meeting with Tony Blair this week urging the British Prime Minister to remain in power as long as possible. Meanwhile the volume of private briefing against the Chancellor from within the White House is remarkable by any standards.

None of this will do Gordon Brown any harm at all with the Labour party. Quite the reverse: falling out in such a spectacular fashion with the White House, and the prospect of a sharp cooling in the special relationship with Brown at No. 10, will help ensure him the succession. Even so, the Chancellor's clumsy, bullying diplomacy raises real questions about whether he has the calibre to be prime minister.

Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 14:09 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:


International-UN-NGOs
Wolfowitz begins key African tour
Mr Wolfowitz says Africa is facing an "extraordinary moment in history"
Paul Wolfowitz has arrived in Nigeria at the start of a week-long trip to Africa, his first overseas mission as head of the World Bank.
Mr Wolfowitz will also visit Burkina Faso, Rwanda and South Africa in a clear attempt to signal that Africa is at the top of the agency's priorities.

The ex-Pentagon chief's appointment was criticised by development bodies which questioned his credentials for the job. Right. The guy only has a PhD in political science and economics and served as Dean of the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins after serving as ambassador to Indonesia and assistant SecState for East Asia/Pacific affairs. Idiots.

Mr Wolfowitz has stressed that poverty reduction in Africa is his main goal.

Clear signal

His visit comes on the back of an historic agreement by the G8 group of nations on Saturday to cancel $40bn of debt owed by 18 of the world's poorest countries, including Burkina Faso and Rwanda.

Tackling poverty in Africa through a combination of debt relief, increased aid and trade initiatives will be top of the agenda at next month's G8 summit in Gleneagles which Mr Wolfowitz will attend.

This visit to Africa signals willingness from Mr Wolfowitz to listen but it must translate into real change in World Bank policy

Oxfam spokesperson

During his seven-day visit Mr Wolfowitz will meet political and community leaders in each of the four countries and view World Bank funded projects supporting infrastructure and medical facilities.

Officials said Mr Wolfowitz's first visit had been to a group of Fulani nomads on the outskirts of the Nigerian capital, Abuja.

"His first assignment of visiting the poor cattle rearers near Abuja is an indication that under his tenure at the World Bank, the poor in Africa and the developing world can enjoy a new lease of life," a member of Mr Wolfowitz's entourage told Agence France Presse.

Mr Wolfowitz's appointment as president of the world's leading development agency in April provoked a storm of controversy.

Critics pointed to his role as chief architect of the Iraq war when he was deputy US defence secretary and his lack of specific development experience.

Mr Wolfowitz has since sought to reassure sceptics that, under his leadership, the World Bank's primary focus would continue to be on poverty reduction, particularly in Africa.

Last week he said the international community was facing an "extraordinary moment in history" in terms of its support for Africa.

Action needed

However, charities and development bodies said Mr Wolfowitz needed to back up his words with actions.

Oxfam called on him to secure increased investment in education and healthcare, particularly treatment for HIV-AIDS.

"This visit to Africa signals willingness from Mr Wolfowitz to listen to poor men and women in Africa but it must translate into real change in World Bank policy," said a spokesperson for the charity.

"The Bank must stop enforcing blanket trade liberalisation policies on poor countries that leave them unable to compete with rich producers."

Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 13:44 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:


Europe
Chirac and Schröder facing rebuff on pleas for more EU referendums
Europe's leaders were yesterday at odds over the future of the EU constitution, with demands growing for the treaty to be put on ice indefinitely.

Jacques Chirac, French president, and Gerhard Schröder, German chancellor, yesterday said in Paris they believed the ratification of the treaty should go ahead, in spite of the French and Dutch No votes.

But European leaders are expected to conclude at next week's EU summit in Brussels that pressing ahead with referendums on the treaty in the current climate would be to invite further rejections.

Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Denmark's prime minister, said the ratification could not continue until Mr Chirac and Jan Peter Balkenende, the Dutch prime minister, explained how they intend to overcome their No votes.

"It must be up to the French and Dutch governments to present a solution," he said. Denmark is expected to join Britain in suspending its planned referendum indefinitely.

Neither Mr Chirac nor Mr Balkenende is expected to be able to provide a solution in the summit, since an offer to hold a second referendum on the same treaty would create domestic uproar.

The problems of ratifying the treaty after the double No votes was illustrated when a new Portuguese opinion poll showed a referendum in that country could be hard to win.

It predicted an extremely close result, with 50.8 per cent voting Yes and 49.2 per cent No - a sharp fall in support for the constitutional treaty.

Margot Wallström, European Commission vice-president, broke ranks with the official line when she said the ratification process "has de facto been put on hold".

"One can no longer ask for a Danish referendum to take place," she told Politiken newspaper.

But both Mr Chirac and Mr Schröder insisted that all other member states should proceed with ratification. "I think that respect for others and for democracy implies that the ratification process continues," Mr Chirac said.

In adopting that position, Mr Chirac hopes to deflect blame for "killing" the constitution from France to those leaders who want to postpone their referendums - notably Tony Blair, Britain's prime minister.

Mr Chirac's tactic of diverting attention from his own political embarrassment has already been highly successful in the case of the British rebate from the EU budget, which is also up for discussion at next week's summit.

The hardening of positions in London and Paris has dampened hopes of a budget agreement at the summit. Goran Persson, Swedish prime minister, said yesterday he was "not over-optimistic".

Mr Blair knows, however, that he will be portrayed as the villain of the summit if he refuses to negotiate on Britain's €4.6bn (£3.2bn) rebate, first secured by Margaret Thatcher in 1984.

He wants to reopen the 2002 Brussels deal at which EU leaders - including Mr Blair - agreed farm subsidies until 2013, as a precursor to allowing 10 new member states to join the club.

The deal would set farm spending at about €300bn over the seven-year period; together with other rural subsidies that would amount to 43 per cent of the total proposed EU budget.

Europe's foreign ministers meet tomorrow in Luxembourg for a "conclave" to try to narrow the differences over the seven-year budget, which is expected to be set at €800bn-€900bn.

The Netherlands and Sweden are also digging in to cut their net contributions to the budget
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 13:42 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Denmark's prime minister, said the ratification could not continue until Mr Chirac and Jan Peter Balkenende, the Dutch prime minister, explained how they intend to overcome their No votes.

That says a lot about the mindsets of these bureacrats. The people have spoken, so the first order of business would be to examine the premise of the proposal. But that would be too logical.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 06/12/2005 13:51 Comments || Top||

#2  I think what Mr. Rasmussen wants to know is how Chirac intends to proceed with the ratification, in spite of the No vote. Forget about examining the premise!

What I don't get is that Chirac & Shroeder want the referendums to continue, knowing that the constitution will have to be "adjusted" for France to have another go at a referendum. So, what, different countries will vote for different constitutions? I guess then they'll propose a merger of all the constitutions to sort out this mess after everyone has voted. Only in Europe.
Posted by: Rafael || 06/12/2005 14:33 Comments || Top||

#3  I think what Mr. Rasmussen wants to know is how Chirac intends to proceed with the ratification of the same constitution (no changes), in spite of the No vote. Forget about examining the premise!
Posted by: Rafael || 06/12/2005 14:36 Comments || Top||


France to bring in immigrant quota system
France is adopting a tougher immigration policy by introducing a quota system for immigrants with professional skills and accelerating the expulsion of illegal entrants.

The move, announced by the government yesterday, is partly in response to the voters' "revolt" in the referendum of May 29 in which they rejected the European Union's constitutional treaty. Illegal immigration and unemployment were two of the main causes of voter discontent, fanned by far-right political parties.

Dominique de Villepin, prime minister, said the new policy would be aligned more closely to the demands of the French economy. It would also help relieve some of the pressure on the job market, helping reduce an unemployment rate that stands at 10.2 per cent.

"There are no quotas by ethnic origin or nationality. That is not in the spirit of our country. We are faithful to a humanist tradition," he said. "France has the right and the duty to control its immigration policy with criteria adapted to its needs and its principles," a government statement said.

One of the points Mr de Villepin - appointed last week with a mission to cut French unemployment and unite a divided nation - said he wanted the plan to achieve was to decide how to adapt "our immigration practice to the needs of the French economy".

Nicolas Sarkozy, interior minister, said the government wanted to fix an annual quota for immigrants with different categories of professional qualifications. The categories would be approved by parliament each year. The policy would operate in a similar way to the Canadian system, he said, in which immigrants were assessed according to their education, language skills, age, work experience, and capacity to adapt.

This would enable France to move from a policy of "immigration by submission" to one of "immigration by choice", he said.

Mr Sarkozy said he also wanted to increase the expulsion rate for clandestine immigrants by 50 per cent from 15,000 a year to 22,500. "France can only remain generous if those who are here in violation of our rights and our laws are returned home," he said.

It is estimated that there may be up to 400,000 illegal immigrants in France.

The tougher policy has attracted the criticism of human rights organisations, which have contrasted it with the amnesty policy adopted in Spain.

Both Mr de Villepin and Mr Sarkozy, who are potential rivals in the presidential elections of 2007, are keen to signal their tough stance on immigration to head off criticisms from the far right. Mr de Villepin, previously interior minister, was appointed prime minister following the referendum defeat.
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 13:40 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This is pure window dressing, Sark and co are trying to "look tough" on that matter.

Basing on an article I read, official immigration (that is, not counting the illegals) went from 192.000 in 1999 to 341.000 in 2003, the bulk or it being non-workers brought by "family reunion" (173.000 in 2003), plus asylum seekers (80.000) and students (55 000), most of which stay in France whatever.
Economical immigration, ie workers, to which thoses quota would apply concerned only 6500 in 2003.

French immigration is not a work immigration like in the USA, but a settlement immigration, period, as acknowledged recently by the gvt (Sarkosy IIRC), only 5% of it can be considered a work immigration, the rest living off social redistribution.

There is at the very minimum a 300 000 immigration each year (counting the illegals), the higher end being 400 000+. There are 750 000 birth, an estimated 30-35% of which being from non-european parents. Newly arrived "settlers" tend to have an higher birthrate than in their own native country, having access to parental subsidies and free medecine.
In 2003, only 17% of the illegals expulsions were effectively carried out.

You do the calculation.

For thoses who can read french, an excellent article by Maxime Tandonnet, an immigration specialist :
www.autre-europe.org/doc/intervtandonnet09.doc (.doc)
or http://66.102.9.104/search?
q=cache:o2U8I6EdBP8J:www.autre-europe.org/doc/intervtandonnet09.doc
+maxime+tandonnet&hl=fr&start=1&lr=lang_fr(Google html)
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 06/12/2005 14:29 Comments || Top||

#2  Future French history books will read as follows:
"...Dominique de Villepin, the infidel prime minister who was a man..."
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 15:39 Comments || Top||

#3  Yikes! Tom! LOL or Cry. 9.87
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 15:56 Comments || Top||


International-UN-NGOs
Turkey forging strategic relations with ChiComs on multiple levels
From Geostrategy-Direct, EFL, subscription req'd.
A flurry of high-level Turkish delegations to China this year are among the indications the two nations are significantly increasing security cooperation.
The increased security relationship was part of a decision by Ankara and Beijing to forge strategic cooperation, Turkish officials said. This cooperation would encompass defense and military ties as well as joint industrial projects.
So how can we be allies with Turkey when they can take our intel and weapons systems (inc. NATO) and pass it along to the ChiComs?China has expressed interest in procuring advanced technology from Turkey, particularly in the area of electronic warfare, they said, while Turkey has sought to purchase medium-range air defense systems from China.
Against whom will they use them? The Greeks?Turkish Gendarmerie Commander Gen. Fevzi Turkeri has been touring China and meeting with the nation's security chiefs to discuss joint projects for next year.

Officials said Turkeri, who met Chinese Defense Minister Cao Gangchuan, has sought to begin joint police training, exercises, intelligence sharing and joint investigations.
[*snip*]
"We have always emphasized the importance of international cooperation against global crimes threatening humanity such as organized crime and drug smuggling," Turkeri said.
Nice cover, Turkeri. You have all the buzzwords covered.
The Turkish commander said the militaries of China and Turkey have been growing closer since 1999. Turkeri predicted that military relations would reach a "much improved level."

Earlier this year, Turkish Defense Minister Vecdi Gonul and air force commander Gen. Ibrahim Firtina visited China and discussed arms sales. In late May, Chinese Chief of Staff, Gen. Liang Guanglie visited Turkey and reviewed similar issues.

On June 12, Turkish President Ahmet Sezer was scheduled to begin a state visit to China. Sezer's schedule has not yet been released.

Posted by: Alaska Paul || 06/12/2005 13:28 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Hey, I'll be willing to bet, that the Chinese will be a lot more willing to let Turkey join with China than with the EU...
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 06/12/2005 17:57 Comments || Top||

#2  LOL and Yep.
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 19:59 Comments || Top||

#3  Of course, they won't get subsidies... or voting rights... but still...
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 06/12/2005 21:44 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Economy
Trade data point to a rebound in US economy
Trade figures released by the Commerce Department on Friday suggested the US economy bounced back after a soft patch in March, but did not provide clear evidence that the trade deficit was stabilising.

The trade deficit rose to $57bn in April, below Wall Street's consensus forecast of $58bn. March's deficit was revised down $1.4bn to $55bn.

Imports and exports both hit new records in April, indicating stronger economic activity than in the previous month. The downward revision to the March data suggested that first quarter growth in gross domestic product would be revised up further, economists said.

The dollar strengthened against the main currencies. The euro under pressure for the past month due to stuttering eurozone economic growth, the French and Dutch rejection of the EU constitution treaty and worries over the long-term viability of the currency fell 0.7 per cent to $1.213, a nine-month low against the dollar.

Bond prices also fell after the US report, with the yield on the 10-year Treasury note rising above 4 per cent for the first time in two weeks.

Alan Greenspan, Federal Reserve chairman, gave upbeat testimony on the economy this week and provided no indication that the central bank was about to cease its rate tightening campaign.

Imports rose by more than 4.1 per cent in April, after the depressed March reading, with about half the increase accounted for by the higher price of oil. Exports to China rose, but the larger rise in imports meant the bilateral trade deficit rose 14 per cent to $14.7bn. In the four months to April, textile imports from China were twice as large as the same period of last year.

Exports rose by 3 per cent, though more than a third of the increase was accounted for by the volatile civil aircraft component, meaning that pace of growth was unlikely to be sustained.

Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at the consultancy Global Insight, said the trade figures provided further support for the Fed's sanguine view of economic prospects. "Oil played a role in boosting imports but domestic demand growth was quite strong in April. The economy is still probably expanding at about a 3œ per cent rate," he said.

April's deficit was less than the average of the first three months of the year, which if sustained would mean the international economy would add to US growth rate in the second quarter. In the first four months of the year the trade deficit was almost $229bn, compared with $187bn in the same period of last year.

Economists said that while the US economy continued to grow faster than Europe and Japan, and Asian governments prevented their currencies from rising against the dollar, the trade deficit was unlikely to shrink significantly.

Kathleen Stephansen, director of global economics at CSFB in New York, said: "The manufacturing sector has largely shifted from the US to Asia. While Asian economies are pursuing export-led growth, it is inevitable we will see large trade imbalances with the US." High oil prices have boosted the trade deficit in recent months, meaning that the trade figures looked better in inflation-adjusted terms.

Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 13:26 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: Politix
Re-Rethinking the Death Penalty
h/t to the Atlantic for a short summary and a reference to this paper. Sunstein is a strong liberal, politically.

Is Capital Punishment Morally Required? The Relevance of Life-Life Tradeoffs

CASS R. SUNSTEIN, University of Chicago Law School
ADRIAN VERMEULE, University of Chicago Law School

March 2005

Abstract:
Recent evidence suggests that capital punishment may have a significant deterrent effect, preventing as many eighteen or more murders for each execution. This evidence greatly unsettles moral objections to the death penalty, because it suggests that a refusal to impose that penalty condemns numerous innocent people to death. Capital punishment thus presents a life-life tradeoff, and a serious commitment to the sanctity of human life may well compel, rather than forbid, that form of punishment. Moral objections to the death penalty frequently depend on a distinction between acts and omissions, but that distinction is misleading in this context, because government is a special kind of moral agent. The familiar problems with capital punishment - potential error, irreversibility, arbitrariness, and racial skew - do not argue in favor of abolition, because the world of homicide suffers from those same problems in even more acute form. The widespread failure to appreciate the life-life tradeoffs involved in capital punishment may depend on cognitive processes that fail to treat "statistical lives" with the seriousness that they deserve.

The full paper can be downloaded from the linked page.
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 13:18 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I've never understood the big hoopla about the death penalty. You don't give the death penalty as a deterrent - though it works out to be one. You give the death penalty because an individual is unfit to live in a civilized society.

It matters less to me whether or not you kill them or just put them away. Seems to me personally - and it's just MHO - that it's more humane just to put them down than to keep them in a cage forever. Not to mention the cost and for what purpose? If you've decided they are unfit to live in society then it seems mean to lock them in a closet for life. but hey, that's just me.

we don't allow lions to walk down the street and eat our children.

It's nothing against the lion, it's just a "it's you or me and I choose me" kind of thing.

If you don't like the death penalty fine. Come up with someplace to put the unfit that makes you happy. But it should not be about deterrent. It should be about a decision, one person at a time: are they fit to live among us, or not? And if not, then what?
Posted by: 2b || 06/12/2005 13:46 Comments || Top||

#2  Vox populi, vox dia. Yes, please teach the American people that government is a farce and disregards their wishes. Teach them that they are to be ruled rather than they rule themselves. Disregard their unquestionable desire to have upon due process their right to require a individual to forfeit their life if they are properly convicted of hidious crimes. If life and death is the ultimate power on this planet, then teach them that 'their' government is ineffectual while the thugs and scum of society hold far more power, enough to cause the good citizenry to change their behavior - by locking themselves up in their abodes, to fear to travel to parts of their own cities, and to fear for the lives of their children when the sun goes down.
Consent withdrawn.
Posted by: Ebbereck Uneregum5631 || 06/12/2005 14:52 Comments || Top||

#3  The death penalty is less an issue that the ability to avoid the death penalty. Over and over again, sober and serious judges and political leaders, not squishy types, look at how the death penalty is used, and are appalled at how it is mis-used. First of all, if you are white, female, attractive, middle class or above, and able to hire a private attorney, you WILL NOT get the death penalty for ANY crime. However, if you are a minority, male, unattractive, lower middle class or poor, and must rely on a public defender, the dice have been tossed. By this, I mean that all the things we hold dear about the rationality or reasonableness of the court system mean *nothing*, compared to what can only be called "corruption" of the system. At that point, you trial stops being an adversarial debate and becomes a toy for bias, prejudice, political ambition, misconduct, incompetance, and other subjective sins that make honest people gag. For this reason alone, these honest judges and political leaders say that NO executions are tolerable until THE SYSTEM is restored to SOMETHING more equitable, fair, or rational. This is really not debateable, in that the statistics for who receives the death penalty are open to review.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 06/12/2005 16:56 Comments || Top||

#4  People on "life" terms get out of prison, through pardons or escapes. There is a long list of people murdered by ex-cons. Anyone who opposes quick and frequent executions needs to justify those murders.
Posted by: Jackal || 06/12/2005 17:30 Comments || Top||

#5  First of all, if you are white, female, attractive, middle class or above, and able to hire a private attorney, you WILL NOT get the death penalty for ANY crime.

Not applicable in Texas, 'moose.
Posted by: Pappy || 06/12/2005 17:57 Comments || Top||

#6  Pappy: My list is pretty inclusive. Has Texas taken to executing Martha Stewart types? If so, I would be amazed. I know some of those cheerleader mother types can be pretty homicidal, but find it hard to imagine someone getting a death sentence whose shoes match her designer purse.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 06/12/2005 19:05 Comments || Top||

#7  Don't try the "perfection trap" on us: That is, if it can't be done PERFECTLY, WITHOUT FLAW, then it shouldn't be done at all. Iraq war. Death Penalty. The whine is always the same.

The Roman sense of Justice is that we're willing to let SOME of the guilty go free to make sure that the innocent is not punished. This, however, implies that SOME of the guilty WILL BE PUNISHED. The whine NOW is that some of the guilty get off, while others get what they deserve, so NOBODY should be given what they deserve.

Not accepted.
Posted by: Ptah || 06/12/2005 19:21 Comments || Top||

#8  Sorry Moose, but
1) There is no perfect
2) No one said life's fair

To screw over everyone else declaring that perfect has to be achieved first is just another attempt to stop capital punishment. This is a society of men not angels. If we were angels there would be no need for a death penalty.
However, lets use your own arguement. Why imprison anyone? Cause your same arguement means that unless you're white good looking middle class female you are going to receive inequitable treatment for a life sentence or any sentence as punishment for crimes committed. Bah!
Meanwhile the death penalty is being carried out over 18,000 times a year on our streets, in our homes, our neighborhoods, and our schools. There is no due process and no appeal, just swift quick death. The state that can not or will not deal out the same to these social-pathic murders says basically that the rest of us are expendable for the 'greater good'. I repeat - consent withdrawn.
Posted by: Ebbereck Uneregum5631 || 06/12/2005 19:28 Comments || Top||

#9  0 for 2 moose
Posted by: Frank G || 06/12/2005 20:59 Comments || Top||

#10  Look, Jackal, I ain't buying it. I worked for a department that sent an innocent man to death row (former employer, Phoenix Police Department....the man they sent there was Ray Krone.) If his execution would have been speeded up, the exonerating evidence (ie. borderline criminal incompetence from the PPD) would never have come to light in time to save him from death row.

Before you say, "big freakin' deal!", stop to consider....what if you were Mr Krone, or someone you love was in his position?

I don't think perfection is too high a standard for the death penalty. What is more precious to you than your own life? And how do you make it up to someone who has been wrongly executed? If they were imprisoned, there are some things that can be done to rectify the wrong.

EU, the big difference is the death penalty is being carried out in all of our names. It is not trivial or unreasonable to demand that the government be absolutely, positively right if they are going to take a life. Why do you have a problem holding the state to a higher standard than some homicidal idiot out on the street?

How can you honestly believe that justice is being done when someone who didn't do the crime is killed when the perp walks free? That's not justice, that's appalling.

People who kill fall into two categories: premeditated (ones who plan it out and generally make attempts before or after the murder to escape detection), or "crimes of passion" (under the influence of emotion, insanity and/or drugs). The first category generally thinks they are so friggin' clever that they will get away with it, the second, well, they're not really thinking.

Neither one generally stops to consider, "Hmm....I don't want to have a lethal injection...." If it has such a deterrent effect, why are the murder rates higher in Texas and Florida (two death penalty states) than Wisconsin and Hawaii?
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 06/13/2005 0:06 Comments || Top||


Numerous Congress Members May Have Received Illegal Congressional Pay in 2003-2004
Many current or former Senators and Representatives appear to have taken illegal Congressional salary payments during the current Congress, prior to the October recess.

The chronically absent list is well-represented by candidates who ran for higher office, including those who ran for President or Vice President: Senators John Edwards (D-NC), Bob Graham (D-FL), John Kerry (D-MA), and Joseph Lieberman (D-CT), and Congressmen Richard Gephardt (D-MO) and Dennis Kucinich (D-OH). Senate candidates Brad Carson (D-OK), Mac Collins (R-GA), Jim DeMint (R-SC), Pete Deutsch (D-FL), Joseph Hoeffel (D-PA), Johnny Isakson (R-GA), Chris John (D-LA), Denise Majette (D-GA), George Nethercutt (R-WA), and Patrick Toomey (R-PA), who have served in the House during 2003 — 2004, also had numerous unexcused absences. In 2003 now-Kentucky Governor and former Representative Ernie Fletcher (R) missed 27 session days.

Federal law requires Members of Congress to forgo Congressional pay for days missed due to campaign appearances or other unexcused absences. In June 2003 National Taxpayers Union wrote to each of the six Presidential candidates serving in Congress to ask whether they planned "to voluntarily follow this law during your campaign." None of the candidates replied.

Here are the estimated salary overpayments made to each of the six Presidential and/or Vice Presidential candidates:

Senator John Edwards was absent for every vote during 52 of the 115 days when the Senate cast floor votes in 2003. In 2004, Senator Edwards missed every vote during the months of July, September, and October — a total of 59 consecutive votes. Senator Edwards' 50 absent days in 2004 equal an estimated salary overpayment of $63,543.16.

Representative Richard Gephardt was absent for every vote during 85 of the 109 days when the House cast floor votes in 2003. Gephardt compiled many streaks of consecutively missed votes, including all votes from April 10 to May 8, June 2 to June 24, September 9 to October 1, and October 20 to November 20, when he missed 93 votes in a row. In 2004 Gephardt was absent for 46 days. Representative Richard Gephardt's total estimated salary overpayment: $81,362.53.

Senator Bob Graham's 41 absences in 2003 add up to an estimated salary overpayment of $25,269.53.

Senator John Kerry was absent for every vote during 76 of the 115 days when the Senate cast floor votes in 2003. The Senator's longest streak of missed votes in 2003 ran from July 11 to September 9, when he missed 62 in a row. For 2004, Senator Kerry was absent for every vote during the months of July, September, and October — and compiled a total of 76 consecutive votes missed from June 23 through October 11. Kerry's absences for 2004 total 70 days. Senator John Kerry's estimated salary overpayment: $90,932.68.

Representative Dennis Kucinich was absent for every vote during 28 days in 2004, but did not meet the study's missed-votes threshold for 2003. Representative Dennis Kucinich's estimated salary overpayment: $17,636.64.

Senator Joseph Lieberman was absent for every vote during 63 of the 115 days when the Senate cast floor votes in 2003. Lieberman skipped 54 percent of all the votes. Notably, Lieberman was first elected to the Senate after criticizing the incumbent for missing too many votes. Lieberman's longest lineup of missed votes ran from July 10 to July 29, when he missed 43 votes. Senator Joseph Lieberman's estimated salary overpayment: $38,828.79.

All Members of Congress who are included in this report are noted in the table below:

see link for table of 2003 and 2004 data

The Law

According to 2 U.S. Code 39, "The Secretary of the Senate and the Chief Administrative Officer of the House of Representatives (upon certification by the Clerk of the House of Representatives), respectively, shall deduct from the monthly payments (or other periodic payments authorized by law) of each Member or Delegate the amount of his salary for each day that he has been absent from the Senate or House, respectively, unless such Member or Delegate assigns as the reason for such absence the sickness of himself or of some member of his family."

In 1981, and again in 1996, this provision in the law was amended in unimportant respects, thus reaffirming a Congressional belief in its continued legal vitality. It therefore seems indisputable that Section 39 is binding on all Members of Congress.

The candidates have a duty to comply with this law. The Code of Ethics for Government Service says, "Any Person in Government service should ... uphold the Constitution, laws, and legal regulations ... and never be party to their evasion." The House Ethics Manual also notes that if a Member violates any "provision of statutory law, a Member or employee may also violate these provisions of the House rules and standards of conduct."

House Rule 23, clauses 1 and 2 state:
1.) A Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, officer, or employee of the House shall conduct himself at all times in a manner that shall reflect creditably on the House.

2.) A Member, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, officer, or employee of the House shall adhere to the spirit and the letter of the Rules of the House and to the rules of duly constituted committees thereof.
Both House and Senate ethics rules contain strict prohibitions against the use of official resources for campaigns.

Paying Congress Members to miss work is unfair to other candidates who usually campaign without pay. If any of the other candidates worked for a corporation that gave a paid leave of absence for campaigning for President, the Federal Election Commission would impose a stiff fine for an illegal corporate contribution.

The records of the House show that in 1971 then-Congressman Edwards of Louisiana, someone not known for high ethical standards, took action to ensure that he was in compliance with this law when he did not attend House sessions during his campaign for Governor.

Methodology

We studied those Members of Congress who were absent for a high percentage of votes, over 15 percent, for 2003 and 2004. Each year's absences were studied independently; thus, in order for a Member to have absences noted for both 2003 and 2004, they would need to exceed the study's threshold each year.

If a lawmaker was present for even one floor vote during a session day, credit for full attendance that day was assumed. The study only counted absences if every floor vote was missed during a day.

We performed a computer search of the Congressional Record to determine whether any of the House candidates had received a leave of absence for any reason, even those not authorized by law. If a leave was granted, no salary overpayment was calculated. Senators' requests for leave are not stated in the Congressional Record.

We also inquired with the offices of each absent Senator and Representative to determine which, if any, days were for absences provided by the law. We updated our records to reflect any information from lawmakers who replied. Furthermore, we conducted independent research of online media sources for each lawmaker to ascertain whether illness or surgery may have accounted for any absences. Those lawmakers who still had more than 10 days of absences remaining after these examinations are included in this report.

To estimate the amount of salary to deduct for each day missed, we divided the 2003 annual Congressional salary of $154,700 by 251, since there are 261 weekdays per year, and 10 federal holidays. That calculation yields a Congressional salary of $616.33 per day. In 2004, a leap year with an added workday, an added holiday for Ronald Reagan's funeral, and a higher salary of $158,100, the per-day deduction was $629.88.

This is a conservative estimate of the overpayment. Others have suggested that the docking of congressional pay should be based on the number of session days. Such a calculation would yield a substantially higher overpayment estimate for each candidate. For example, under such a formula, Representative Gephardt's overpayment would have exceeded $122,000 in 2003.

Data citing missed votes that was used to perform the calculations was obtained from the respected Congressional Observer Publications (http://www.proaxis.com/cop/), a Congressional vote data service widely used by educational institutions and media outlets. Individual reports, detailing the dates on which a Member missed every vote, are available upon request.

I read a summary of this in the Atlantic, which cited the full report.
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 12:48 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  There's something called Garnishee, isn't there?

Garnish their paychecks like a dead beat dad's is.
Posted by: Ptah || 06/12/2005 19:23 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
Turks Now Think The US Better Friend Than EU
From the NY Times....EFL.

Zeynel Erdem, a leading Turkish businessman, came to Izmit, a seaside industrial town, to give 400 of his prominent peers a message. "Don't count on the European Union," he told the crowd after a chicken dinner in a hotel ballroom here. "Look to the U.S.; they're our real friends." A bit slow on the uptake, ain't they?

That view is spreading in Turkey, a sprawling land of 70 million people who have yearned for decades to become a part of the EU gravy train Europe. With the European Union in political disarray after the French and Dutch rejected a European constitution, and with opposition to Turkish membership gaining ground in Europe, many Turks are beginning to wonder whether their European dreams are worth the effort. Short answer....no. They are reassessing instead their relationship with the United States, a relationship that has been declared DOA suffered since the start of the Iraq war.

Turkey's stated goal is still to see who gives them a better deal join the European Union, but the shift in sentiment signals a deepening awareness that they might have REALLY @#$%-ed up this time ambivalence toward the vaunted vision of shared sovereignty.

Just as French and Dutch voters expressed dismay at the increasing European-level control over their lives and worried aloud about immigrants diluting their nations, many Turks are now questioning whether their country should see its future as part of Europe.

Of course, few Turks have bought into the American program for reshaping the Middle East, and relations with the United States lost their pre-eminence during the Iraq war, which Turkey opposed. Turkey's focus shifted to Europe.

But that is beginning to change. Prime Minister Recip Tayyip Erdogan's fence-mending trip to Washington this week played well here. He even won some support from Washington in ending the economic and political isolation of Turkish Cypriots. I can think of one real nervous Greek Army recruit right now....

European Union leaders agreed in December to begin membership negotiations with Turkey on Oct. 3, and the country has done a great deal to make that happen. It has put a new penal code into effect and agreed to sign a protocol extending its customs union to all the newest members, including the Greek-dominated Republic of Cyprus, which Turkey does not recognize.

Yet despite all that, the prospects for Turkey's membership look gloomier than ever. Turkey will have a larger population than any member country by the time it completes its membership process - a projected 80 million - and will probably still be far poorer. More troubling to many Europeans is that Turkish membership would create a powerful Muslim presence and push Europe's eastern borders out to Syria, Iraq and Iran. Like there aren't any Muslims already in Europe?

Some European politicians have started talking openly about offering a "privileged partnership" instead of full membership, something roundly rejected here. That's Eurospeak for "separate but equal", methinks. The idea, first suggested publicly three years ago by the former French president Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, has most recently been taken up by German's Christian Democrats, whose leader, Angela Merkel, is expected to run against Chancellor Gerhard Schröder in September. Ms. Merkel's party has stated unequivocally that it will try to block Turkey's membership if it comes to power.

Hanging in the background is the pledge last year by President Jacques Chirac of France to submit Turkish membership to a national referendum. After last month's rejection of the constitution, few believe such a referendum would pass.

Many Turks say they are getting fed up with meeting Europe's manifold demands without some guarantee that they will become a part of Europe in the end.

"Europe is playing us for suckers a dangerous game with Turkey," said Can Paker, chairman of the Turkish Economic and Social Studies Foundation. "It's giving a stronger hand and more motivation to people who want the status quo to prevail."

Turkey's economic output surged nearly 10 percent last year and is expected to grow as much as 6 percent this year. The current 10 percent inflation rate is the lowest in more than 30 years. Foreign investment from the West, slow because of Turkey's chronic corruption, has picked up.

While there is still strong support for membership, polls have recorded a decline in national enthusiasm to 63 percent before the French referendum in May from more than 70 percent a year ago.

Hansjörg Kretschmer, the European Union's point man in Turkey, warns that without better understanding on both sides, Turkish attitudes could turn quickly. "Strong support based on ignorance is not good because it can collapse very quickly," he said before meeting Tuesday with representatives of nongovernmental organizations in Trabzon, on the Black Sea. "The key element is that Turkey does its homework and completes the necessary political and other reforms. No one will say no to a Turkey which has become a liberal democracy in the European understanding. "Well, except for the French...and the Greeks....Cyprus....maybe Germany....Luxembourg is a tossup...."

Saban Disli, deputy chairman for foreign affairs in the ruling Justice and Development Party, said Europe should not try to project a decision of 10 years from now by looking at Turkey today. "Who knows?" he said, "Maybe in 10 years' time, it will be Turkey who holds a referendum to see if Turks still want to become a part of the E.U."

This was posted at RB yesterday, too. It's an important development, if in fact it plays out this way.
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 06/12/2005 12:39 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I would approach this news with a bit of caution. The Turks are hedging their bets. They have also been having high level meetings with the Chicoms. I will post an article I saw last week to the Rantburg Turkey Dept, page 2. When a government jacked us around like the Turks did in OIF, I would not go off and kiss and make up without some verification.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 06/12/2005 13:28 Comments || Top||

#2  They still fantasize about nuking us, though.
Posted by: someone || 06/12/2005 14:15 Comments || Top||

#3  The Turks are on the take. They'll take from the EU, the US, the ChiComs or anyone else who will give. They have proven to be untrustworthy and it will require a long time to earn trust. We need to do to them exactly what the EU is doing to them: dangle a carrot on a stick indefinitely, just to keep them focused on not being a bother.
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 14:34 Comments || Top||

#4  AP, we'll do it in an instant. For better or worse, the alternative is that they go to the ChiComs. That'd be even worse for them and us than their little French flirtation. Besides, if they cross us again, Kurdistan becomes a reality. And we should tell them that while we exchange the first hug.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 06/12/2005 14:39 Comments || Top||

#5  AP is on to something. Turkey has been spending the decade, since the fall of the Soviet Union, building ties with the various Turkman stans of Central Asia. It flows with their historic 'identity'. Check where the national Turkish airlines flies to. An alternate Chicom approach for the Turks can't be any less fulfilling than with the EU.
Posted by: Ebbereck Uneregum5631 || 06/12/2005 15:04 Comments || Top||

#6  Looks like the Turks are wrong yet again! Looking like the Tampa Bay Devil Rays of the Med here. New best friends for Turkey ares the Zionist Entity for awhile and what ever 'stan they can spook.
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 15:05 Comments || Top||

#7  Ask anybody who used to work at Motorola, their feeling about doing business in Turkey.

A mild Motorola press release on the swindle
Posted by: 3dc || 06/12/2005 15:44 Comments || Top||

#8  Amazing, 3dc. Don't know how I missed that in the news. Whatta pack of thieves! Perhaps Erdogan's next visit should be contingent on extradition.
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 15:51 Comments || Top||

#9  No worse ennemy, no better friend than a Turkish Marine. But there are no Turkish marines.
Posted by: JFM || 06/12/2005 16:31 Comments || Top||

#10  As I said yesterday, Geography and the distribution of power and economics point to a Turkey aligned with Iraq as the heart of a Middle East Common Market. Importantly, with democracy as the most important prerequisite for membership, it would be a population and economic bloc in competition with the EU. Inclusive to the "Arab" nations, necessarily excluding Israel, and Iran being much as Russia is to the EU: too big, too powerful, and too divisive to belong.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 06/12/2005 18:47 Comments || Top||

#11  IF that happens, it will be based on natural resources -- not oil so much as WATER, which Turkey has and Iraq needs the uninterrupted flow of.
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 19:30 Comments || Top||

#12  I suggest applying the same Rule of Thumb that savvy expats learned in Saudi Arabia regards Muzzies:

You can be his friend, but never make the mistake of thinking he's your friend.
Posted by: .com || 06/12/2005 19:50 Comments || Top||

#13  Turks Now Think The US Better Friend Than EU

U.S. to Turks: "How do you like me now, bitch?"
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 06/12/2005 22:35 Comments || Top||

#14  ...And this surprises them precisely how?

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski || 06/12/2005 23:01 Comments || Top||


e-mail humor
Moving to California
Chuck was sitting in an airliner when another fellow took a seat
beside him. The new guy was an absolute wreck.... he was pale, his hands were
shaking, he was biting his nails and moaning in fear.
"Hey pal, what's the matter?" Chuck asked.
"Oh man.... I've been transferred to California," the other guy answered.
"There's crazy people in California .... and they have shootings, gangs,
race riots, drugs, rapes, the highest crime rate...."
"Hold on," Chuck interrupted. "I've lived in California all my life
and it is not as bad as the media says. Find a nice home, go to work, mind
your own business, enroll your kids in a good school, and it's as safe as
anywhere in the world."
The other passenger relaxed and stopped shaking for a moment and
said, "Thank you. I've been worried to death but if you live there and say
it's OK, I'll take your word for it. By the way, what do you do for a
living?"


"Me?" said Chuck. "I'm a tail gunner on a bread truck in Oakland."
________________________________________________________________Wish I had gotten in on yesterdays discusion on the merits of Sonoran Flora,I have some good stories.
Here is one:I friend of mine had just moved to Tucson from Arkansa.We went out plinking our .22's and I was explaining to him that everything that lives in the desert sticks,stings or bites.One of the first things I pointed out was a piece of Cholla laying on the ground.Said give that stuff a wwwide berth,they call it jumping cactus for a reason.What dose this dummy do,he say's that and kicks it(wearing canvase sneakers). He started danceing around and kicking like a cat with tape on his foot.I was laughing so hard it took 5 min.to help him out.
Posted by: raptor || 06/12/2005 11:10 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:


Britain
EU is forced to reveal 'obscenely high' salaries
Civil servants on the Brussels gravy train now earn £70,000 a year after tax. Take home base pay of $127,000 PLUS allowances and a huge pension, PLUS not one has ever been fired. And that's just for starters. The European Commission, by instinct bashful about its generous perks and allowances, was forced to disclose the figure, and much more, in response to a written question from a Czech MEP.

The Commission admitted that its officials, who number nearly 20,500, are entitled to seven separate allowances over and above their pay, plus a generous pension scheme after just 10 years' service.

The average take-home pay of £70,000 is based on the income of an "A" grade Eurocrat - one who can draft new laws, for example - who is married with two children and in the middle of his or her career.

Chris Heaton-Harris, a Conservative MEP, described the figure as "obscenely high". He said: "They get paid too much for doing too little and most of that is done badly. They take Friday afternoons off and they get all the Belgian bank holidays. And what's more, they get extra money for having children."

Brussels admitted to the following family staff perks:

• Household allowance: two per cent of basic salary plus £100 a month.

• Dependent child allowance: £185 a month per child.

• Pre-education allowance: £11 a month.

• School fees: reimbursement of up to £150 a month "doubled in certain cases".

Eurocrats are also eligible for other allowances:

• Expatriation allowance:

16 per cent of the total sum of basic salary, household allowance and dependent child allowance.

• Secretarial allowances of between £77 and £120 a month.

• "Various" allowances - among them standby duty, shiftwork, overtime, for which values were not given.

Bureaucrats who are posted outside Brussels and Luxembourg are also eligible for an allowance known as a "correction coefficient". It compensates officials posted to cities with a high cost of living and rounds down salaries where life is cheaper than in Brussels or Luxembourg.

As a result, expatriate officials posted to Britain are entitled to a further 42 per cent on top of their basic deal.

The perks don't stop there. At the end of their careers, pensioners can expect £3,681 a month for the rest of their lives - at a total cost to the taxpayer of £303 million last year.

What's more, in return for adhering to the EU's mantra of "ever closer union", the bureaucrats know they will never willingly be let go.

There has never been a round of redundancies at the Commission and under-performing employees are often promoted because the bureaucracy involved in firing them is too onerous.


Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 10:45 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  LOL! Thisn better than Chicago!
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 10:52 Comments || Top||

#2  Actually, one or two have been fired - for breaking the code of Omerta about things like obscenely high salaries and maladjustded budgets
Posted by: Pappy || 06/12/2005 12:27 Comments || Top||

#3  Sounds ideal for our favorite Greek conscript -- if he survives.
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 15:23 Comments || Top||

#4  The Lefties will bitch and moan if an American CEO makes big bucks, even if he/she was responsible for increased dividends for stockholders.

The EUrocrats make MUCH more than the average European - whose wages are taxed at confiscatory levels to give said Eurocrats those salaries - and the silence from the usual suspects is deafening.

Guess they don't want to interrupt those chirping crickets.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 06/12/2005 18:10 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
Stupendous LLL hypocrisy: "Piss Christ" creator joins denunciation of Koran abuse
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy || 06/12/2005 10:44 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Someone whose claim to fame involves mixing religious symbols and urine is complaining about religious symbols and urine? Stupendously jaw-dropping. I don't see how ScrappleFace can ever compete with stuff like this. You don't suppose Scott Ott is feeding these articles anonymously to the 'respectable media', do you?
Posted by: SteveS || 06/12/2005 10:59 Comments || Top||

#2  Hell, this gotta be somekinda statement in and of itself..... may be on our side.
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 11:24 Comments || Top||

#3  Bare-knuckle satire will become an endangered species as the LLL media-cult becomes more desperate in the coming years. This is because their worldview is rooted in the business of fantasy, advertising and entertainment, and is therefore utterly inflexible in the face of real challenges. Their only option will be more of the same: louder, crazier, shriller; more emotion, more radical 60s memes, more extreme and outrageous repetition of the same old themes. They can't change their tune, they can only turn up the volume. Their actual positions and statements will exceed anything that the most skilled satirist could devise.
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy || 06/12/2005 11:27 Comments || Top||

#4  Not hypocrisy. A declaration of alliance.
Posted by: Pappy || 06/12/2005 12:11 Comments || Top||

#5  Exactly - and a dangerous one, too.
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 12:13 Comments || Top||

#6  Yeah, I was just being optimistic. A dangerous thing in unsettled times.
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 12:19 Comments || Top||

#7  I guess Anne Coulter was more rationale than anyone thought when she commented that the 911 guys took out the wrong building in NY.
Posted by: Jack is Back! || 06/12/2005 12:22 Comments || Top||

#8  It is pretty simple to figure out the LLL and how it works. Look, they hate the US, our sense of values and our government, so anything that can be used as a tool to break down the country is fair game. Logic has nothing to do with it. PCB (Piss Christ Boy) sees Koran Abuse™ as a useful tool.

Logic? Don't bother me with your stinkin' logic!
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 06/12/2005 13:09 Comments || Top||

#9  Ya gotta hand it to the NYT: When it comes to desecrating religious symbols, they went out of their way to find an expert....
Posted by: Ptah || 06/12/2005 14:54 Comments || Top||

#10  Secular Blasphemy: Bush's "faith based" mob of Bible-mutts and the spineless morons who support him, have all but buried Secularism in the Middle East and Central Asia. The nominal victories against Taliban/Baath were achieved at the cost of alliances with the same Islamofascists who carried out the 9-11 terror. On Sept. 11, 2001, Egypt's Secular government held over 19,000 koranimals in prison. Three years of Bush pressure has put over half of those terrorist pigs back on the streets, in the name of his oil-patch polluted notion of "freedom."

Listen!!! If it made sense to outlaw Nazism and (Japanese) Militarism after WW2, would it not make equal sense to outlaw Islamofascism, and wage total war against these elements, on a global scale. You people talk tough, but it is a fact that the jackass in the White House has not pacified either the Afghan or Iraq dog's breakfasts. In fact, terror attacks are increasing in both. Currently, 54% of Americans support withdrawl from Iraq. I believe that most of the declining support is extremely weak, and wavering. Troop recruitment, in face of one-arm-behind-the-back nation-building pseudo-war, has dropped in each the past 5 months. And why the hell not? Why participate in a winless farce, directed by suicidal misfeasants?

If you defend Bush's civil-policing/political-inclusivism (viz political-Islam) policies then you are both morally blind and intellectually bankrupt. Try to go beyond name-calling. Start by saying: Bush blew it! You will feel better without the apologist-baggage that hampers free thought at this forum. Thank me, and beg for my forgiveness!
Posted by: War on Islam || 06/12/2005 14:59 Comments || Top||

#11  Hi Rex!
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 15:05 Comments || Top||

#12  Simple solution. Declare ALL guards at Gitmo to be "artists"...give 'em all Gummint grants...encourage them to let their artistic spirits free, and thus change "debasement" of the Koran into "artistic expression".

Next problem please.
Posted by: Justrand || 06/12/2005 15:27 Comments || Top||

#13  I see the short bus showed up.
Posted by: Pappy || 06/12/2005 17:37 Comments || Top||

#14  War, you posted a pablpable lie in your insane diatribe.

"In fact, terror attacks are increasing in both. "

Wrong. Prove your statement, especially compared to data a year ago.

Shorten your horizone and hand pick statistics and you can lie just as badly as the other lardass thats just like you when it comes to truth: Michael Moore.
Posted by: OldSpook || 06/12/2005 17:38 Comments || Top||

#15  I hope a dainty soft-liner like you can handle the truth, Old Spook. Stats reveal that the Islamofascist terrorists - at least those (like al-Sadr) who are not Bush-dhimmis - can spike US casualties at will. Their attacks are generating increasing casualties, per terrorist action.
http://icasualties.org/oif_a/Lunaville.htm

You should be aware that Iraqi military deaths are on the rise, as US theater troops either bunker down or give operations over to special ops. These totals do not include the serial slaughter of would be police/military recruits.
http://www.icasualties.org/oif/IraqiDeaths.aspx

AP recently reported that almost 100% of Iraqi soldiers are Shiites. A free thinker like me would conclude that the Shis are taking a jihad subsidy from Uncle Sam. Don't let the White House put words in your mouth; its not sanitary. Nuke Mecca!
Posted by: War on Islam || 06/12/2005 19:38 Comments || Top||

#16  Hi Rex!
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 19:40 Comments || Top||

#17  ima free thinker too, is thatn my bong you hammerin on? Damn freepers.
Posted by: Half || 06/12/2005 19:42 Comments || Top||

#18  The only thing those statistics tell me is Islamists are killing other Islamists. They won't survive a standup fight against trained soldiers so they bravely attack the only folks they can: civilians.
Posted by: badanov || 06/12/2005 19:45 Comments || Top||

#19  I hope a dainty soft-liner like you can handle the truth, Old Spook.

You don't know who Old Spook is. I suspect what you know about the situation might a 3X5 card on his desk.

Idiot.
Posted by: Pappy || 06/12/2005 19:55 Comments || Top||

#20  I hope a dainty soft-liner like you can handle the truth, Old Spook.

Like Pappy said, with that single statement you demonstrate that you have failed to take any deliveries off of the clue train that stops at RB on a daily basis ....
Posted by: rkb || 06/12/2005 20:15 Comments || Top||

#21  LOL - so much for ROPMA
Posted by: Frank G || 06/12/2005 20:50 Comments || Top||

#22  Listen, "War", we've lost 1,700 soldiers in Iraq. Even if I grant you tens of thousands of Iraqi deaths in the last two years, how does that compare to over 400,000 dead people in Saddam's mass graves? How does that compare to Saddam's Baathist/Sunni minority wielding a club against a Shiite/Kurd majority of roughly 20 million people? People are still getting blown up in Iraq every day, but about 25 million Iraqis aren't involved other that seeing it on TV or reading it in the newspaper. I'd say Bush is doing fine under the circumstances.

As for nuking Mecca, there is little doubt in my mind that the Islamofascist Saudis have a day of reckoning coming. But it's not today. A nuclear Iran is a bigger problem today. You're either a poser or an idiot.
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 20:59 Comments || Top||

#23  Friday, the Washington Post had an article about SUNNI soldiers
(http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=121288&D=2005-06-10&HC=1) which, while not glowing, was not completely negative. Did this not fit your "mold"?
Posted by: Bobby || 06/12/2005 21:14 Comments || Top||

#24  "I hope a dainty soft-liner like you can handle the truth, Old Spook."

What rkb said above, about the Clue Train. More specifically, War, you give the term "fucking idiot" a whole new dimension: you're one of those blubbering hysterics who've got no spine, no stomach and no brain, and just want to "nuke Mecca" because you don't have either the patience or the intelligence to see a long struggle through to the end which will allow your grandchildren to look themselves in the mirror every morning and not see genocidal mass murderers.

Useless fucking coward. Sit down and shut up, and leave this war to the adults. Because you are NOT one.
Posted by: Dave D. || 06/12/2005 22:11 Comments || Top||

#25  Be nice. Remember, you 46%ers endorse subsidizing Islamofascism, and indulge al-Sadr power politics. I don't want a ballot in the hands of those koranimals; I want bullets in their foreheads.

Name-calling is a sign of desperation. I want US troops in Iraq, in order to keep the local savages away from OUR oil fields, and to break up that vulgar lunatic asylum that has posed as a state for too long. Please join in my chorus: Nuke Mecca!
Posted by: War on Islam || 06/12/2005 22:35 Comments || Top||

#26  Oh my goodness. I haven't laughed this hard in quite some time.

I think that dear "War on Islam" should lead us all by example. You start the attack, WoI, and we'll be right behind you. Or anyway, we'll catch up after the tea and cream cakes have been properly digested (yes, yes, the strong stuff is there on the sideboard for those of you who loathe tea, right next to the embroidered napkins -- what kind of a hostess do you think I am?). Ok, to be honest, I won't be coming... I'll be needed here to clean up after, and then I simply must take a nap, but all the others will be along shortly, I'm certain.

And if you haven't a nuke of your own, dear WoI, although I must tell you that anyone who is anyone got an adorable little neutron bomb for Christmas courtesy of Old Spook's unparalleled generosity, I'm sure you'll be able to gin up something useful -- some Molotov cocktails to throw at a mosque, or send away for a few Korans to desecrate. But as I said, we'll all (excepting me, of course) be right behind you. Promise!
Posted by: trailing wife || 06/12/2005 22:47 Comments || Top||

#27  Fuck you, War, and stuff your forgiveness.

Pray I let you live, if only in agony, you dhimmicrat pussy.

"Jesus died for somebody's sins - but not mine..."
-- Patty Smith
Posted by: mojo || 06/12/2005 23:24 Comments || Top||

#28  Name-calling is a sign of desperation

No, in your case it's a sign of our frustration at having to read the ravings of a fool.
Posted by: Pappy || 06/12/2005 23:52 Comments || Top||


Africa: Subsaharan
Nigeria's war on Christians (WND)
Islamic law brings death, suffering to non-Muslims

More than 10,000 Christians have been killed since 1999, the year Islamic "Sharia law" was introduced in Nigeria, according to Voice of the Martyrs, a group that aids the persecuted church around the world.

Nearly 1,000 homes and churches have been burned down by Muslim radicals — with a wink and a nod from a government that doesn't recognize the rights of non-Muslims.

The war on Christians began in 1999 when Alhaji Ahmed Sani assumed the office of governor in Nigeria's Zamfara state. Just five months later, he introduced Sharia law. Soon 11 other northern Nigerian states, all with Muslim majorities, followed Zamfara's lead and implemented some form of the harsh Islamic legal code.

Sharia is based on the Quran and Hadith, the Islamic sacred book and teachings. It imposes a strict code of conduct on the population. For example, if an individual is convicted of stealing, the punishment is amputation of his hand. In the case of adultery, the punishment is death by stoning.

"If you go around villages, you will see people missing one hand or one foot," explained Rev. Obiora Ike. "Do you think that's the result of an illness? That is the result of Sharia Law."

Christians in the country say the imposition of Sharia law has resulted in a wave of violence and attacks against them, their homes, churches and villages as the militants wage jihad, or holy war, against them.

Sharia law permits violent attacks against non-Muslims and the killing of former Muslims who have converted to Christianity or other faiths. The destruction of churches and the prohibition of new church constructions are considered legitimate actions.

Recently, before a large crowd, the Zamfara state government recently held a five-year anniversary to celebrate the implementation of Sharia. Governor Ahmad Sani recalled why Sharia was introduced into the state: to satisfy the desire of the people for governance by the "laws of Allah 
 to cleanse society of social and moral vices like alcoholism, gambling, theft, armed robbery, prostitution, bribery, corruption and deceit."

Muslim zealots are being financed by Saudis who want to Islamicize the entire African continent.

The implementation of Sharia has been blamed for the vast violence and deaths occurring not just in Zamfara state, where it was first implemented, but in other states as well.

Earlier this year Muslim militants announced a death sentence on five Christian students expelled from Abubaker Tafawa Balewa University and the Federal Polytechnic in state of Bauchi, in November 2004, for sharing the gospel with Muslim students. Muslims in the schools complained that the Christian students blasphemed the prophet Mohammed.

The families of two of the students, Hanatu Haruna Alkali and Abraham Adamu Misal, were attacked Jan. 26, when militants went to their family homes located in the state of Gombe, in northern Nigeria, with the intent to kill them. Reportedly, Muslim militants have attacked Hanatu's family's house several times, and the family fears for their lives.

Rev. Oludare Aliu, national coordinator of the students' ministry of the Evangelical Church of West Africa, said: "Muslim militants went to Gombe to 
 kill Hanatu, but fortunately, she was not at home at the time. The family was held at gunpoint. Hanatu's father happens to be a former military officer. He wrestled with the militants and was able to disarm one of them who had a gun. While he was fighting them, one of the militants stabbed Hanatu's mother with a knife. She has been treated for the wounds."

Hanatu is now in hiding. Militants also attacked Abraham Adamu Misal's family. He escaped and is in hiding.

On March 17, in the Nigerian state of Benue, a Christian student, Ngumalen Atser, was raped and poisoned to death by two Muslim men. This incident escalated tension between Muslims and Christians, which led to Muslim militants attacking the villages of Chilakera and Imbufu April 10. Seventeen people, mostly Christians, died.

According to a Compass Direct report on this situation, "Community leaders in Nigeria — both Muslim and Christian — blame the escalating violence on social tensions produced by the implementation of Islamic law in a dozen northern states of Nigeria."

The meeting place of Word of Faith Ministries in the state of Kaduna was burned to the ground that same day — April 10, for the fourth time in five years. However, members of the church have rebuilt every time. No arrests have been made in connection to the arson.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 06/12/2005 10:38 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Just more pathetic examples of disaffected peoples cloaking themselves in a religion to validate the oppression and homicide of others not like them... whether its Isalami or Christun or Jewdaism or Hindoo or whatever... all great flavors of spiritual potential and worship of our creator, but always perverted by the perverts sent by Satan himself and hoisted high by the blind and ignorant... not to mention the media too.
Posted by: Shomble Shoger7533 || 06/12/2005 14:47 Comments || Top||

#2  Ima kinda pissed at gawd too, I haven't won the lottery yet.
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 15:14 Comments || Top||

#3  "Muslim zealots are being financed by Saudis..."
Saudi business as usual.
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 15:55 Comments || Top||

#4  Stupid super-religious psychos. Does anybody remember what the JEwish, or Muslim, or Christian, or Catholic, beliefs are all about? Peace. Quit killing, start building.
'course, when's that ever gonna happen?
Posted by: DON KING || 06/12/2005 17:17 Comments || Top||

#5  hmmmm, dunno DON. Islam pays a lot of lip service to peace but the reality of it just doesn't live up. Of course, all of the major religions have had their violent spells - some longer than others. But with Islam, for its entire existence, it has brought suffering, enslavement and death. Does one blame the religion or its patrons? I've wrestled with that one....and in the end is there a difference? Meantime....the killing goes on. The best I can come up with is that we need to eradicate this disease. Do it with a cold, dispassionate focus as one deals with ants in the kitchen. And, while we are doing it, proclaim loud and clear we are doing it because Shari'a goes against the grain of humanity. Provacitive, yes but that helps clarify where one stands. That's jut my "If I were King of the World" take. But then, as the name implies, I am.
Posted by: Rex Mundi || 06/12/2005 19:39 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Tech
Coming in out of the cold: Cold fusion, for real
A different approach, not yet net energy producing but does appear to be fusion at room temps ... and explainable, too.

PASADENA, CALIF. — For the last few years, mentioning cold fusion around scientists (myself included) has been a little like mentioning Bigfoot or UFO sightings.
After the 1989 announcement of fusion in a bottle, so to speak, and the subsequent retraction, the whole idea of cold fusion seemed a bit beyond the pale. But that's all about to change.

A very reputable, very careful group of scientists at the University of Los Angeles (Brian Naranjo, Jim Gimzewski, Seth Putterman) has initiated a fusion reaction using a laboratory device that's not much bigger than a breadbox, and works at roughly room temperature. This time, it looks like the real thing.

Before going into their specific experiment, it's probably a good idea to define exactly what nuclear fusion is, and why we're so interested in understanding the process. This also gives me an excuse to talk about how things work deep inside the nuclei of atoms, a topic near and dear to most astronomers (more on that later).

Simply put, nuclear fusion means ramming protons and neutrons together so hard that they stick, and form a single, larger nucleus. When this happens with small nuclei (like hydrogen, which has only one proton or helium, which has two), you get a lot of energy out of the reaction. This specific reaction, fusing two hydrogen nuclei together to get helium, famously powers our sun (good), as well as hydrogen bombs (bad).

Fusion is a tremendous source of energy; the reason we're not using it to meet our everyday energy needs is that it's very hard to get a fusion reaction going. The reason is simple: protons don't want to get close to other protons.

Do you remember learning about electricity in high school? I sure do - I dreaded it whenever that topic came around. I had a series of well-meaning science teachers that thought it would be fun for everyone to hold hands and feel a mild electric shock pass their arms. Every time my fists clenched and jerked and I had nothing consciously do with it, my stomach turned.

In addition, I have long, fine hair, and was often made a victim of the Van de Graf generator - the little metal ball with a rubber belt inside it that creates enough static electricity to make your hair stand on end. Yeesh.

Anyway, hopefully you remember the lesson that two objects having different electrical charges (positive and negative) attract one another, while those with the same charge repel. It's a basic law of electricity, and it definitely holds true when two protons try to get close together. Protons have positive charges, and they repel each other. Somehow, in order for fusion to work, you've got to overcome this repulsive electrical force and get the things to stick together.

Here's where an amazing and mysterious force comes in that, although we don't think about it in our day-to-day lives, literally holds our matter together. There are four universal forces of nature, two of which you're probably familiar with: gravity and electromagnetism.

But there are two other forces that really only come in to play inside atomic nuclei: the strong and weak nuclear forces (and yes, the strong force is the stronger of the two, the weak is weaker. Scientists really have a way with names, dont they?) I'm going to focus on the strong force, as that's the one responsible for nuclear fusion.

The strong force is an attractive force between protons and neutrons - it wants to stick them together. If the strong force had its way, the entire universe would be one big super-dense ball of protons and neutrons, one big atomic nucleus, in fact.

Fortunately, the strong force only becomes strong at very small scales: about one millionth billionth of a meter. Yes, that's 0.000000000000001 meters. Any farther away, and the strong force loses its grip. But if you can get protons and neutrons that close together, the strong force becomes stronger than any other force in nature, including electricity.

That's important- all protons have the same charge, so they'd like to fly away from each other. But if you can get them close together, inside the volume of an atomic nucleus, the strong force will bind them together.

The whole trick with fusion is you've got to get protons close enough together for the strong force to overcome their electrical repulsion and merge them together into a nucleus. The sun does this pretty much by brute force. The sun has over 300,000 times the mass of the Earth, which means there's a lot of gravity weighing down on its core.

That pressure gets the sun's internal temperature up to several millions of degrees, which means that particles inside the sun's core are flying around at huge velocities. Everything is moving around so fast that protons sometimes get slammed together before their charges have a chance to repel. The strong force takes hold, and a new atom (helium) is born.

In this process, some of the mass of the protons is converted into energy, powering the sun and producing the light that will eventually reach the Earth as sunlight.

Scientists have gotten fusion to occur in the laboratory before, but for the most part, they've tried to mimic conditions inside the sun by whipping hydrogen gas up to extreme temperatures or slamming atoms together in particle accelerators. Both of those options require huge energies and gigantic equipment, not the sort of stuff easily available to build a generator. Is there any way of getting protons close enough together for fusion to occur that doesnt require the energy output of a large city to make it happen?

The answer, it turns out, is yes.

Instead of using high temperatures and incredible densities to ram protons together, the scientists at UCLA cleverly used the structure of an unusual crystal.

Crystals are fascinating things; the atoms inside are all lined up in a tightly ordered lattice, which creates the beautiful structure we associate with crystals. Sometimes those orderly atoms create neat side-effects, like piezoelectricity, which is the effect of creating an electrical charge in a crystal by compressing it. Stressing the bonds between the atoms of some crystals causes electrons to build up on one side, creating a charge difference over the body of the crystal. Other crystals do this when you heat or cool them; these are called pyroelectric crystals.

The new cold fusion experiment went something like this: scientists inserted a small pyroelectric crystal (lithium tantalite) inside a chamber filled with hydrogen. Warming the crystal by about 100 degrees (from -30 F to 45F) produced a huge electrical field of about 100,000 volts across the small crystal.

The tip of a metal wire was inserted near the crystal, which concentrated the charge to a single, powerful point. Remember, hydrogen nuclei have a positive charge, so they feel the force of an electric field, and this one packed quite a wallop! The huge electric field sent the nuclei careening away, smacking into other hydrogen nuclei on their way out. Instead of using intense heat or pressure to get nuclei close enough together to fuse, this new experiment used a very powerful electric field to slam atoms together.

Unlike some previous claims of room-temperature fusion, this one makes intuitive sense: its just another way to get atoms close enough together for the strong force to take over and do the rest. Once the reaction got going, the scientists observed not only the production of helium nuclei, but other tell-tale signs of fusion such as free neutrons and high energy radiation.

This experiment has been repeated successfully and other scientists have reviewed the results: it looks like the real thing this time.

For the time being, don't expect fusion to become a readily available energy option. The current cold fusion apparatus still takes much more energy to start up than you get back out, and it may never end up breaking even. In the mean time, the crystal-fusion device might be used as a compact source of neutrons and X-rays, something that could turn out to be useful making small scanning machines. But it really may not be long until we have the first nuclear fusion-powered devices in common use.

So cold fusion is back, perhaps to stay. After many fits and starts, its finally time for everyday fusion to come in out of the cold.

If it gets to net positive as an energy source, well ... don't have to tell RB'ers what that will do
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 10:36 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  If it gets to net positive as an energy source, well ... don't have to tell RB'ers what that will do

Does Islam allows cannibalism (of other Moslems, that is)?
Posted by: gromgoru || 06/12/2005 11:07 Comments || Top||

#2  Does Islam allows cannibalism?

I'm guessing that eating christians, heretic muslins and generic infidels is ok. Joooos, of course, are considered unclean.
Posted by: SteveS || 06/12/2005 11:17 Comments || Top||

#3  So when do they start selling fusion kits at Wal-Mart and what website will give me hacking tools to turn it into a bomb? I can hardly wait. My neighbor's gonna pay for that atrocious purple garage door.
Posted by: Zpaz || 06/12/2005 11:51 Comments || Top||

#4  For a bomb you're gonna have to reproduce what the big boys have. Sorry about that neighbor .....
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 11:59 Comments || Top||

#5  "The current cold fusion apparatus still takes much more energy to start up than you get back out"
And why would anyone assume that will change?
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 12:28 Comments || Top||

#6  "...the scientists at UCLA cleverly used the structure of an unusual crystal."

Hmmm...so just make sure that Scotty can keep the crystal from overloading in the future.
Posted by: Ebbereck Uneregum5631 || 06/12/2005 12:47 Comments || Top||

#7  This isn't a device for producing power. It is a neutron generator similar to the accelerated ion neutron generators that have been produced for years. This one is just a little smaller, more reliable, longer lifed, and somewhat more efficient. This article is pop science crock, in that they are slanting it to make you believe some new way of producing energy was discovered. Lousy science reporting aside, it's still a nifty new method for generating neutrons, which will have many benefits for medical treatment, material analysis, etc.
Posted by: DO || 06/12/2005 12:58 Comments || Top||

#8  From the American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Physics News:

Pyrofusion: A Room-Temperature, Palm-Sized Nuclear Fusion Device

A room-temperature, palm-sized nuclear fusion device has been reported by a UCLA collaboration, potentially leading to new kinds of fusion devices and other novel applications such as microthrusters for MEMS spaceships.

The key component of the UCLA device is a pyroelectric crystal, a class of materials that includes lithium niobate, an inexpensive solid that is used to filter signals in cell phones. When heated, a pyroelectric crystal polarizes charge, segregating a significant amount of electric charge near a surface, leading to a very large electric field there. In turn, this effect can accelerate electrons to relatively high (keV) energies (see Update 564).

The UCLA researchers (Brian Naranjo, Jim Gimzewski, Seth Putterman) take this idea and add a few other elements to it. In a vacuum chamber containing deuterium gas, they place a lithium tantalate (LiTaO3) pyroelectric crystal so that one of its faces touches a copper disc which itself is surmounted by a tungsten probe. They cool and then heat the crystal, which creates an electric potential energy of about 120 kilovolts at its surface.

The electric field at the end of the tungsten probe tip is so high (25 V/nm) that it strips electrons from nearby deuterium atoms. Repelled by the positively charged tip, and crystal field, the resulting deuterium ions then accelerate towards a solid target of erbium deuteride (ErD2), slamming into it so hard that some of the deuterium ions fuse with deuterium in the target.

Each deuterium-deuterium fusion reaction creates a helium-3 nucleus and a 2.45 MeV neutron, the latter being collected as evidence for nuclear fusion. In a typical heating cycle, the researchers measure a peak of about 900 neutrons per second, about 400 times the "background" of naturally occurring neutrons.

During a heating cycle, which could last from 5 minutes to 8 hours depending on how fast they heat the crystal, the researchers estimate that they create approximately 10-8 joules of fusion energy. [To provide some perspective, it takes about 1,000 joules to heat an 8-oz (237 ml) cup of coffee one degree Celsius.]

By using a larger tungsten tip, cooling the crystal to cryogenic temperatures, and constructing a target containing tritium, the researchers believe they can scale up the observed neutron production 1000 times, to more than 106 neutrons per second. (Naranjo, Gimzewski, Putterman, Nature, 28 April 2005).

The experimental setup is strikingly simple: "We can build a tiny self-contained handheld object which when plunged into ice water creates fusion," Putterman says. (More information at http://rodan.physics.ucla.edu/pyrofusion .)


And in the team's news release:

The researchers say that this method of producing nuclear fusion won't be useful for normal power generation, but it might find applications in the generation of neutron beams for research purposes, and perhaps as a propulsion mechanism for miniature spacecraft
Posted by: rkb || 06/12/2005 13:12 Comments || Top||

#9  I was going to leave this alone, but WTF. You start out with Hydrogen atoms and end up with Helium atoms, then fusion has occured. This not open to debate. Only time will tell if this or other mechanisms for cold fusion result in a commercially viable source of energy. And I still don't get the pathological objection to the possibility, which this article demonstrates. It is a precondition to being taken seriously in this field that you deny the possibility of a viable energy source. You will forgive me if it looks to me like a manifestation of the Left/Green/Enviro Western Capitalism is evil and therefore the sky must be falling syndrome, cos cold fusion as a viable energy source means the energy crisis dissapears overnight. Thanks, I feel better now.
Posted by: phil_b || 06/12/2005 18:40 Comments || Top||

#10  Good, I'm glad you're better, phil_b. So far cold fusion uses expensive materials (e.g. Palladium at $183 USD per troy ounce) to produce little or no excess energy or uses lithium tantalite crystals (cost unknown to me) to produce no excess energy. I can do better striking a match.

All the facsination with scale-up so "the energy crisis disappears overnight" is wildly-optimistic conjecture with no basis in fact. There are lots of things that don't scale up well. [The billions of dollars that have gone into "hot" fusion research in the last 50 years prove that.]

And even if they did scale up well, they may not be cost-effective or they may have large-scale major drawbacks such as the "free neutrons and high energy radiation" mentioned in this article. One of the many problems with "hot" fusion is that everything around it gets a mega-radiation dose and that creates contamination and material properties changes that don't get mentioned in the glossy brochures for non-physicist lab visitors.

It's not time to buy Palladium or lithium tantalite crystals yet.
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 20:32 Comments || Top||


Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Explosion Derails Moscow-Bound Train
A suspected terrorist bomb blast derailed a train traveling from Chechnya to Moscow on Sunday morning, injuring at least 15 people, officials said. It was a national holiday, the Day of Russia, and the blast occurred hours before President Vladimir Putin held a reception and awards ceremony in the Kremlin. Many Chechen rebel attacks have been timed for significant Russian holidays.

A spokeswoman for the Federal Security Service, or FSB, said the train's driver reported that an explosion occurred on the tracks in front of the train, and that a crater and wires were found at the site about 90 miles south of Moscow.

Deputy prosecutor general Nikolai Savchenko said a criminal case was opened on suspicion of terrorism and attempted murder, the Interfax news agency reported. He said investigators found signs of an explosion at the site, and Interfax quoted a deputy Moscow region governor as saying the blast was caused by a bomb containing the equivalent of 11 pounds of TNT.

Federal Security Service spokeswoman Diana Shemyakina said four cars of the train went off the tracks. Savchenko said 15 people were injured, Interfax reported. He said a conductor was hospitalized with a spinal injury that was not life-threatening.

Interfax later quoted a Russian Railways company spokesman as saying that five people were hospitalized, including a boy with a broken ankle, and that a total of 42 people had sought medical aid after the derailment.

Russian news agencies initially reported that the derailment, which occurred shortly after 7 a.m., was caused by an explosion, but later quoted Moscow region authorities as saying a preliminary investigation indicated a technical cause. Then the Federal Security Service said it was an apparent explosion.

"According to the driver, there was an explosion on the track bed in front of the train," Shemyakina said. She said there was a crater about 3 feet wide and 1 1/2 feet deep at the site, and that authorities had found wires attached to the right rail and a spot where the person who caused the blast might have been located.

State-run Channel One television showed footage of the derailed cars standing at an angle. Authorities said none of the cars overturned. Emergency Situations Minister Sergei Shoigu headed to the site.

Trains started traveling between the Chechen and Russian capitals only a year ago after a five-year interruption due to the war in the rebellious province. The city's central railroad station was destroyed early in the fighting, which began in September 1999, and nearby tracks were damaged. The train, which takes two days to make the trip, travels twice a week.
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 10:29 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:


Down Under
Drought-stricken Aussie farmers dance in the rain
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australian farmers have been dancing in the rain as downpours delivered the first soaking falls in over four years to large parts of drought-ridden eastern Australia.

The rainfall would be enough to allow many farmers to plant their winter crops after months of waiting, New South Wales Primary Industries Minister Ian Macdonald said on Saturday.

Australia, the world's second-largest wheat exporter after the United States, is a major supplier to Asia and the Middle East.

"Farmers are out dancing in the rain," farmer Chris Groves told Reuters by telephone from his prime wheat-growing area at Cowra, 250 kilometers (155 miles) west of Sydney. "This rain has the potential to save our winter cereal crops. There's still a good planting window available for people to sow and all we need now is good follow-up rain," he said.

Australia's eastern farmers have endured three months with barely a drop from the sky. Some areas have not even begun to recover from Australia's worst drought in a century, which destroyed crops and caused a mass slaughter of livestock in 2002.

That drought never broke in some far-inland areas of eastern Australia.

Farmers in country towns, dustbowls a few days ago, happily trudged through brown rivulets of rain water running through streets and fields.

Some held hats to the sky in quiet gestures of thanks.

On the edge of the Outback, the far western New South Wales town of Ivanhoe received one of the best falls on Friday and Saturday of around 50 millimeters (2 inches).

"TREMENDOUS"

"That'd be the best rain that we've had here since November 12, 2000," Ivanhoe property owner John Vagg told ABC radio. "It's actually drought-breaking rain -- its absolutely a tremendous fall."

The rain came just days after Australia officially slashed its forecast for the next wheat crop by almost 30 percent. However, wheat planted up to the end of June, although sown late, can still yield good crops.

Up to 50 mm of rain fell on Saturday in a sweeping band along a 1,500 kilometer (930 mile) front, from Adelaide in South Australia, through Victoria and into western New South Wales.

"Those that have dry-sown are going to get a great fillip," Macdonald said on ABC radio in reference to farmers who plant seed in dry ground in the hope that rain will fall to produce an otherwise-doomed crop.

Brown hills and valleys throughout Australia's grains belt, unusually quiet in recent weeks as farmers prayed for rain, will now turn frantic as growers sow their crops.

On the border between New South Wales and Victoria, leading wheat farmer Angus Macneil said most of his farm will be sowed as quickly as possible.

"We might get going tomorrow afternoon, but more likely Monday," he said. "And then we'll be going 24 hours a day."

Prime grain-growing areas throughout New South Wales and Victoria also received good Saturday falls of up to 30 mm.

Recipients included the Cowra-Dubbo-Parkes region in New South Wales and the northeast of Victoria.

Victoria's Mallee and Wimmera wheat-growing areas received good falls on Friday.

More rain forecast for the next week or so would really set up winter crops, farmers said.

But much more was needed throughout winter to fill dams and ensure enough irrigation to support the next summer's crops, Macdonald said.

Very dry areas in south-east parts of New South Wales, including Goulburn which is getting close to running out of drinking water, had received some rain but missed the heaviest parts of the downpour, they said.

"We're just about prayed out," Mayor Paul Stephenson said.

Good to hear that some rain has come; hope for more.
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 10:06 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Meanwhile here in the West we have had the wettest start to winter in a hundred years (15 inches in 6 weeks) and I wish it would just stop f@@kin raining.
Posted by: phil_b || 06/12/2005 10:59 Comments || Top||

#2  Let's Dance!
dancer ina rain />
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 11:03 Comments || Top||

#3  I was hoping for something more like Gene Kelly
Posted by: Jackal || 06/12/2005 17:24 Comments || Top||


Europe
Former Israeli Leads Anti-Semites in Europe
by Steven Plaut

Eyal Sivan is one of the most openly anti-Semitic far-leftist extremists in Europe. He grew up in Israel but then migrated to Europe, where he divides his time between making Jew-bashing anti-Israel films and filing frivolous SLAPP suits against people who criticize him.

In recent years a growing anti-democratic harassment tactic used by the very worst left-wing fascists has been the filing of such SLAPP suits for "libel" as a way to silence critics of the Left. SLAPP (which stands for 'Strategic Lawsuits against Public Participation') suits are anti-democratic harassment suits in which someone attempts to suppress the free speech of his critics. They are illegal in many parts of the US and there are penalties for those who file them.

Eyal Sivan is a radical anti-Semitic pro-terror ex-Israeli "film artist" living in France (where else?). He is the French equivalent to that other notorious ex-Israeli Eurobat, Dror Feiler. Feiler lives in Sweden and who made the "sculpture art" celebrating the suicide bombing woman who mass murdered 23 people at the Maxim restaurant in Haifa, many of them children, including three generations of two families. One of her victims is a 10 year old who lost his parents and was permanently blinded by the blast.

Sivan lately has been co-making anti-Israel propaganda films with a local Palestinian pro-terrorist. Eyal Sivan likes to make venomous propaganda movies against Israel and Jews. In one of his recent movies, "Route 181 - Splinter from a Trip in Palestine-Israel," he devotes much of the screen time to justifying the Arab attack on Israel in 1948 designed to annihilate Israel (and its population) and which coincidentally gobbled up the land the UN had allocated to become an Arab state of Palestine.

The Arabs, declares Sivan, were in the right when they attacked Israel in 1948, because the Arabs were seeking a nice Rwanda-style bi-national state with an Arab majority in which the Jews would be treated almost as well as are the southern Sudanese Christians and animists today.

The film also alleges all sorts of gory Israeli "war crimes" against the poor innocent Arabs of 1948, including imaginary rapes. It is capped by scenes of railroad tracks designed to be associated in the minds of French viewers with scenes from the "SHOAH" movie about the Holocaust, and of course with Israel in the role of Nazi Germany. [Ironically, when Sivan needed an actor to play a thuggish Israeli, he chose an Arab. Talk about racial profiling!]

This latest "film" was broadcast in England, Germany and France, a 4.5 hour pseudo-documentary. Sivan wanted it to be the Palestinian answer to the French documentary movie "Shoah" about the Holocaust. Sivan has also long justified arson attacks against French Jews and their synagogues, saying the French Jews themselves were to blame for these (Jerusalem Report, March 22, 2004) because they support Israel.

Ah, but then the heroic French Jewish philosopher Alain Finkielkraut described the cinematic atrocity being prepared by Sivan as "incitement to murder Jews" and a tissue of lies. He also openly called Sivan a Jewish anti-Semite. Sivan decided to file a frivolous harassment SLAPP libel suit in France against Finkielkraut for daring to tell the truth.

Meanwhile, other French intellectuals petitioned the Pompideau Center and other institutions not to screen the scurrilous propaganda film of Sivan, successfully. It was evidently not screened.

In Israel, Sivan is embroiled in a conflict with members of the family of the heroic Gideon Hausner, who had been the prosecutor in the famous trial of Adolf Eichmann, the German architect of the Holocaust captured and executed by Israel. The Hausners began petitioning the Attorney General last February to prosecute Sivan, because of his deliberately distorted "documentary" film on Hausner and the trial, in which he misrepresented and mocked the deceased Hausner, they insist. The family members want Sivan charged with "receiving profit from deliberate fraud," a crime in Israel.

The frivolous harassment suit against Finkielkraut is stuck in the French court backlog, but Sivan may be getting his comeuppance from an Israeli court in the Hausner case. Now Sivan has decided to try the harassment suit tactic all over again, this time against a leading Israeli professor and politician from Israel's Zionist Left.

Sivan this week filed a "libel suit" against Israeli Prof. Amnon Rubinstein, a professor of constitutional law and a one-time cabinet minister from the leftist Meretz party. Two weeks back, Rubinstein had called Sivan an anti-Semite in an opinion column that was published in the Jerusalem Post and also in Maariv, Israel's second largest daily. Rubinstein had denounced the attempts by Sivan to paint Israel in his films, especially in "Route 181", as morally equivalent to Nazi Germany. Rubinstein also noted that Sivan's film had been banned in France but was being screened in Israel itself by local far-leftist moonbats.

Yes, the same anti-Semitic film by Sivan that French institutions refused to screen, too anti-Semitic even for FRENCH tastes, has been screened repeatedly in Israel itself by the far-Leftist Jerusalem Cinematek, a moonbat institution maintained by Jerusalem taxpayers and which is always on the lookout for seditious anti-Israel propaganda that it can screen as "art". You may recall its role in promoting the Goebbals-like film "Jenin Jenin", a propaganda film produced with PLO funds whose own producer has admitted he filled it with lies. The architecture department at the Bezalel College also showed it.

Rubinstein has courageously stuck to his guns and has announced he will retract nothing he wrote about Sivan and will certainly not apologize. Sivan will continue to attempt to suppress the free speech of his critics anti-democratically using SLAPP suit harassment.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 06/12/2005 09:55 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:


Dutch genocide suspect 'tried to bypass export ban' on chemicals to Iraq
Witnesses in the US and elsewhere have said Dutch genocide suspect Frans van A. intentionally tried to circumvent the ban on exporting chemicals to Iraq. Witnesses claim Van A. was unaware of the ban and tried to side-step it with various fraudulent schemes and companies. A bank director is even said to have assisted the businessman.
BZDEEP! Logic fault! Contact system administrator immedidately! System shutting down! Core dump: How the hell do you side-step something you're not aware of? BZDEEP!
Public prosecutor Fred Teeven also told The Hague Court on Friday dozens of witnesses to chemical weapons attacks have provided statements in recent months. Dutch justice officials are also taking statements from military doctors about the affects of chemical attacks. In addition, Van A.'s finances are under investigation because a bugged telephone call indicated he has hidden a large sum of money somewhere, the prosecutor said.
BZDEEP! BZDEEP! [Whimper!]
Van A. is accused of war crimes and complicity to genocide committed by the Iraqi regime under the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein. He allegedly exported raw materials to Iraq between 1984 and 1988. The Iraqi regime then used chemical weapons in the 1980-88 war against Iran and against the Kurds in northern Iraq. In its second pre-trial hearing against Van A., The Hague Court was due to make a ruling on his remand detention later on Friday.
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 09:53 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  It didn't happen, I didn't do it, Yes mistakes were made, The US made Saddam, Hundreds were doing it, I won't do it anymore, That was ages ago, Get over it.
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 10:30 Comments || Top||

#2  Shipman: You forgot "there never really were any WMD."
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 06/12/2005 11:34 Comments || Top||

#3  I keeping that for the Appeals Court Phil. ;)
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 12:22 Comments || Top||

#4  Van A. is accused of war crimes and complicity to genocide committed by the Iraqi regime under the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein. He allegedly exported raw materials to Iraq between 1984 and 1988. The Iraqi regime then used chemical weapons in the 1980-88 war against Iran and against the Kurds in northern Iraq.

The only way they can convict this guy of collusion in Genocide is to admit that Saddam is guilty of COMMITTING genocide. Works havoc on Saddam's defense in his upcoming trial, no?
Posted by: Ptah || 06/12/2005 15:02 Comments || Top||


When France sneezes . . .
Lengthy analysis of the "Non!" vote and what the author considers the breakdown of the Fifth Republic. Go read it all; here's a taste:

Power sits with the executive nationally - the President - or locally in the mayoralty, with big city mayors being key political actors. Parliament does not provide the political platform from which to build a constituency, launch an argument or build a career.

As a result, the democratic disconnection in France is even more pronounced than in Britain. There's an understated sense of disaffection and fragmentation; French cafes, for example, no longer seem to bring people together but, rather, they emphasise their separateness. Africans hawk cheap tat in the streets, an unintegrated and unwanted subculture. Brutal new shopping precincts, car parks and roads arbitrarily cut through familiar communities.

French youth culture wants to embrace the latest from Britain or America, but also wants to be French and doesn't know how. Four years after university, 40 per cent of graduates are still unemployed.

Ariane Chemin, a writer for Le Monde, captured contemporary France perfectly in her piece on Compiegne, a typical commuter town 64 kilometres east of Paris. With the aid of some local estate agents, she plotted the 'no' vote against the price per square metre of property, advancing through the town and its outlying villages quarter by suburban quarter.

The correlation between low property prices and readiness to vote no was perfect. The part of town where the Africans were most visible and social housing most evident registered the biggest no vote at 77.24 per cent.

But in Saint-Jean-aux-Bois, the gilded village retreat of Compiegne's professional classes and Parisian second home-owners, the yes vote was 65 per cent. In the suburbs in between, even with a socialist mayor calling for a yes, the denizens of small, three-bedroom houses voted no by 64 per cent.

This is the France over which President Chirac presides. He and the constitution which confers on him such power is the France of Saint-Jean-aux-Bois, but the rest of Compiegne gazes on in mute disaffection and gathering anger. Its deputy in the National Parliament might as well not exist; its President and the aristocrat Prime Minister, Dominique de Villepin, speak a language, come from a class and represent a political system that is light years away from their daily experience. . . .

I would be very interested in the reactions of our European contingent (JFM--this means you!) to this guy's analysis.
Posted by: Mike || 06/12/2005 09:51 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  but also wants to be French and doesn't know how.

Take a cue from Runway Boy a few days ago - sport loud, obnoxious striped clothing and wear your clip-on braces backwards. At least it's a start...
Posted by: Raj || 06/12/2005 10:30 Comments || Top||

#2  When France Sneezes....

They blame the U.S. and demand that some other EU country pay for the Kleenex.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 06/12/2005 18:04 Comments || Top||

#3  Sounds to me like they're ripe for a(nother) revolution - or a civil war.
Posted by: LC FOTSGreg || 06/12/2005 19:06 Comments || Top||

#4  From the article: While corporate France has restructured and raised its productivity to the highest in the industrialised West, easily surpassing the US, the rest of the French economy has been becalmed.

I hate it when people just f-ing lie. From the OECD website (scroll to the bottom): French productivity is 26% lower than the US. In fact the only OECD country that comes slose is Norway, which is 2% lower.
Posted by: 11A5S || 06/12/2005 23:14 Comments || Top||


Asylum seekers turn tables on violent skinheads
Two asylum-seekers turned the tables on two German skinheads who chased them with baseball bats and knives, police in the western German city of Dortmund said on Friday. The victims, from Turkey and the former Yugoslavia, ran into their refugee hostel for help. The residents emerged armed with clubs, a broomstick and a lamp and defeated the two 23-year-old racists. An inquiry has been opened against the two skinheads as well as the Yugoslav. Police said he exceeded his right to self-defence by continuing to club an attacker who was prone on the ground.

It's beginning.

Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 09:49 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Huh? A lamp?
A lamp?
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 11:38 Comments || Top||

#2  Shipman, I love that movie.
Posted by: Super Hose || 06/12/2005 12:59 Comments || Top||

#3  Not just a lamp but a major award!

Greatest. Movie. Ever.
Posted by: Doc8404 || 06/12/2005 13:06 Comments || Top||

#4  ...Filmed in my old neighborhood in Cleveland, too. I watch it every year and it's just like a trip home. And remember - it's fra-GEE-lay!

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski || 06/12/2005 14:46 Comments || Top||

#5  I guess the Skinhead just lay there like a slug. It was his only defense.
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 06/12/2005 19:28 Comments || Top||

#6  I just wish I could finder a copy of the Phantom of the Open Hearth... don't tell me there's no such a pictuure, I've seen it, just can't remember when....
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 19:55 Comments || Top||


International-UN-NGOs
VDH : The Global Shift
The world will soon better appreciate the United States.

Radical global power shifts have been common throughout history. For almost a millennium (800-100 BC) the Greek East, with its proximity to wealthy Asia and African markets and a dynamic Hellenism, was the nexus of Western civilization — before giving way to Rome and the western Mediterranean.

Yet by A.D. 300 the Greek-speaking half of the empire, more distant from northern European tribal attacks, proved the more resolute. It would endure for over 1,000 years while the fragmented West fell into chaos.

And then yet again the pendulum shifted back. The Renaissance was the product of Florence, Venice, and Rome as the Byzantine East was worn out by its elemental struggles with Islam and straitjacketed by an increasingly rigid Orthodoxy and top-heavy imperial regime.

But by 1600 the galley states of the Western Mediterranean were to lose their restored primacy for good, as to the north the ocean-going galleons of the Atlantic port nations — England, France, Holland, Portugal, and Spain — usurped commerce and monopolized the new trans-oceanic trade routes to Asia and the New World.

By the time of the industrial revolution, another radical shift had occurred in influence and power. The northern European states of England, France, and Germany, products of the Enlightenment, with sizable Protestant populations, outpaced both the old classical powers of the Mediterranean and the Spanish empire. And in early 20th century, the United States, benefiting from the Anglo tradition of transparency and the rule of law — combined with a unique constitution, exploding population, and vast resources — displaced the old European colonial empires and stood down the supposed new future of Soviet totalitarianism.

Globalization and technology, of course, can speed up these shifts and accomplish in a few years what used to transpire over centuries. We are told that a third of the planet, the two billion in China and India, is now moving at a breakneck pace with market reforms to remake the world. The old idea of a "population bomb" of too many people and too few resources has been turned upside down: The key is not how many people reside in a country but rather what those people do. A billion under a Marxist regime leads to terrible human waste and starvation; a billion in a market economy is actually advantageous — as seemingly endlessly active minds and arms flood the world with cheap consumer goods and rebuild a decaying infrastructure from the ground up.

Europe — high unemployment, layers of bureaucracy slow growth, unsustainable entitlements, ethnic and religious tensions, shrinking populations, unresponsive central governments — is often juxtaposed with Asia, as if its sun is setting just as the East's is once again rising.

So far the European Union's decision not to spend on defense; its inherited infrastructure and protocols; and its commitment to the rule of law keep the continent seemingly prosperous. It has some breathing space to decide whether it will reemerge as a rising power or be relegated to a curious museum for cash-laden tourists from Asia and America.

Somewhere between these poles is the United States. Pessimists point out that we increasingly don't create the cars we drive, the phones we used, or mirabile dictu, soon the food we eat. High budget deficits, trade imbalances, enormous national debt, and growing military expenditures will supposedly take their toll at last, as pampered Americans consume what by the new global rules they don't quite earn.

Optimists counter with their own set of statistics and point out that immigration and religion have ensured a steady if not rising population. Unemployment, interest rates, and inflation are low, and alone in the world America has an amazing resiliency and flexibility to fashion citizens and a single culture out of diverse races and religions. It also, of course, enjoys a unique constitution and laws that provide freedom without license.

We seem to enjoy the best of both worlds, symbolized by our two coasts that look on both east and west. Our European traditions ensure the rule of law and the vibrancy of Western civilization. Yet decades ago, unlike the EU, we understood the Asian challenge and kept our markets open and our economy free, often requiring great dislocation and painful adjustment. The result is that for all our bickering, we continue to remain competitive and flexible in a way Europe does not.

If we have avoided the state socialism of Europe that stymies growth, we have also already passed through all the contradictions of a breakneck capitalist transition — the dislocation of rural people, industrial pollution, unionization, suburban blues, ubiquitous graft, and petty bribery — that will increasingly plague both India and China as they leave the 18th century and enter the 21st.

But the real question is how both China and India, nuclear and arming, will translate their newfound economic clout and cash into a geopolitical role. If internal politics and protocols are any barometer of foreign policy, it should be an interesting show. We mostly welcome the new India — nuclear, law-abiding, and English-speaking — onto the world stage. It deserves a permanent seat on the Security Council and a close alliance with the United States.

China, however, is a very different story — a soon-to-be grasping Soviet Union-like superpower without any pretense of Marxist egalitarianism. Despite massive cash reserves and ongoing trade surpluses, it violates almost every international commercial protocol from copyright law to patents. It won't discuss Tibet, and it uses staged domestic unrest to send warnings to Taiwan and Japan that their regional options will increasingly be limited by Beijing.

China could rein in Kim Jong Il tomorrow. But it derives psychological satisfaction from watching Pyongyang's nuclear roguery stymie Japan and the United States. China's foreign policy in the Middle East, Central and South America, and Southeast Asia is governed by realpolitik of the 19th-century American stripe, without much concern for the type of government or the very means necessary to supply its insatiable hunger for resources. The government that killed 50 million of its own has not really been repudiated and its present successor follows the same old practice of jailing dissidents and stamping out freedom. When and how its hyper-capitalist economy will mandate the end of a Communist directorate is not known.

The world has been recently flooded with media accounts that U.S. soldiers may have dropped or at least gotten wet a few Korans. Abu Ghraib, we are told, is like the Soviet gulag — the death camp of millions. Americans are routinely pilloried abroad because they liberated Iraq, poured billions into the reconstruction, and jumpstarted democracy there — but were unable to do so without force and the loss of civilian life.

This hysteria that the world's hyper-power must be perfect or is it is no good is in dire contrast to the treatment given to China. Yet Pavlovian anti-Americanism may soon begin to die down as the Chinese increasingly flex their muscles on the global stage and the world learns better their methods of operation.

So far they have been given a pass on three grounds: the old Third World romance accorded to Mao's Marxist legacy; the Chinese role as a counterweight to the envied power of the United States; and the silent admission that the Chinese, unlike the Americans, are a little crazy and thus unpredictable in their response to moral lecturing. Americans apologize and scurry about when an EU or U.N. official remonstrates; in contrast, a Chinese functionary is apt to talk about sending off a missile or two if they don't shut up.

The Patriot Act to a European is proof of American illiberality in a way that China's swallowing Tibet or jailing and executing dissidents is not. America's support for Saudi Arabia is proof of our hypocrisy in not severing ties with an undemocratic government, while few care that a country with leaders who traverse the globe in Mao suits cuts any deal possible with fascists and autocrats for oil, iron ore, and food.

Yes, we are witnessing one of the great transfers of power and influence that have traditionally changed civilization itself, as money, influence, and military power are gradually inching away from Europe. And this time the shake-up is not regional but global. While scholars and economists concentrate on its economic and political dimensions, few have noticed how a new China and an increasingly vulnerable Europe will markedly change the image of the United States.

As nations come to know the Chinese, and as a ripe Europe increasingly cannot or will not defend itself, the old maligned United States will begin to look pretty good again. More important, America will not be the world's easily caricatured sole power, but more likely the sole democratic superpower that factors in morality in addition to national interest in its treatment of others.

China is strong without morality; Europe is impotent in its ethical smugness. The buffer United States, in contrast, believes morality is not mere good intentions but the willingness and ability to translate easy idealism into hard and messy practice.

Most critics will find such sentiments laughable or naïve; but just watch China in the years to come. Those who now malign the imperfections of the United States may well in shock whimper back, asking for our friendship. Then the boutique practice of anti-Americanism among the global elite will come to an end.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 06/12/2005 09:48 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I don't think so.
Posted by: Ptah || 06/12/2005 15:21 Comments || Top||

#2  While, I mostly agree with VDH's analysis, he falls into the trap of blaming Europe's ills on socialism. Socialism, at least the version practiced in north west Europe worked extremely well. One has only to look at Sweden's world beating industries from a population about the same as a US mid-western state or Holland's or Denmark's world beating agribusinesses from very small land areas and Finland of all places came to dominate the most important industry to emerge in the last 20 years.

It is a historical fact that euro-socialism worked in small culturally homogenous countries. Europe's current problems in this regard are 2 fold. One is that they tried to scale the model up to work across a large heterogenous population. The recent referendums have shown that while people are willing to sacrifice to help a fellow Dane, Dutchman or Finn, they feel no such responsibility for someone on the other side of the continent speaking a different language. The other dynamic at work is large scale emigration has made these countries internally much less homogenous and now the sacrifice is to help an immigrant, who does not reciprocate. While the first problem is solvable by a loose confederation style EU, the second is much more intractable and I fear they have lost the social cohesion that makes the model work and will find the search for either a solution or new model too difficult.

Further in this vein. India and China are quite different in this respect. India is very diverse and to use an example from my own experience. A Tamil thinks of him/her self as a Tamil first and an Indian second. As a result they seem to be gravitating towards an 'Anglo' social model. China in contrast is remarkably homogenous for such a large country and its far from clear what comes after the communist government and how assertively nationalist they will be.
Posted by: phil_b || 06/12/2005 17:38 Comments || Top||

#3  Phil, you can't understand the agony of living on a Danish Collective Farm.
Posted by: Thor Snorkem || 06/12/2005 20:01 Comments || Top||

#4  But HOMOGENIETY is not the basis for Left-based Socialism - HETEROGENIETY is. As for China. Rummy already indir said it - no way China will ever replace America unless it reduces the size of government and allows more democapitalism and personal wealth - until it actually happens, the only thing the USA, espec the still mostly pro-Left Big Medias, is doing is helping delusional Chicoms and other Commies-Socies believe their own woeful propaganda. EITHER THE COMMIES WAGE WAR AND DESTROY THE USA SOON, OR ELSE THEIR UNIVERSE WILL IMPLODE FOREVER. When the US Medias talk about US econ problems, they are talking about TEMP fluxes and probs in a generally STILL UPWARDLY EXPANDING US NATIONAL AND GLOBAL HYPERPOWER, HYPERCONSUMER ECONOMY. The Commies either kill America, or get us to make more concessions/freebies, i.e PC Tribute, one last time before before they go SOLYENT GREEN and or YUGOSLAVIA for real. The "official" trade gap between the USA and rest of the world as of today is US$50.0B +/-, although many analysts and academics believe is a helluva lot higher - as during the Cold War, the USA is deliberately UNDERSTATING its strengths!?
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 06/12/2005 21:47 Comments || Top||

#5  Phil_B: If socialism is working so well in NW Europe, how come noone there can _afford_ to have any kids?

They're running the pyramid scheme by cannibalizing the middle class, which will grow smaller and less secure with each generation, until there's nothing left but a Moslem underclass and a small Tranzi pretend-elite that probably won't last very long by itself.
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 06/12/2005 22:41 Comments || Top||


Europe
French industry 'in recession'
PARIS, June 10 (AFP) - French industry continued to flag in April on falling demand for energy for heating, and analysts say the overall climate for growth targets this year is gloomy as the new government turns its guns on unemployment.

Official data showed that industrial output fell in April by 0.3 percent compared to figures in March, the second monthly contraction in a row following a 0.3-percent fall reported in March from February, mainly caused by declining energy sector production.

At Natexis Banques Populaires, economics analyst Marc Touati said: "Now, it is a fact: French industry has gone into recession."

However, the official, seasonally adjusted data from the INSEE statistics office showed that manufactured output grew by 0.5 percent, an increase coming on the heels of a 0.7-percent jump in March.

But Touati also commented that this increase did not compensate for a fall of 1.9 percent in the previous two months.

At BNP Paribas, analyst Jean-Marc Lucas commented that the recent trend did not point towards recovery of growth in the second quarter.

"Recent developments in industrial productivity do not suggest that gross domestic product will increase in the second quarter," he said. "Growth risks finishing at slightly less than 1.5 percent this year, a rate normally insufficient to beat back unemployment."

A new French centre-right government was appointed this week following French rejection of the European Constitution. The vote was widely interpreted as expressing exasperation with some structural reforms of the economy and a perception that living standards are stagnating.

There is also deep public concern about high unemployment which successive governments have been unable to treat for years. The new administration has given itself 100 days to make an impact, but is constrained by heavy state overspending and slowing growth.

Several analysts noted that the slowdown shown in the latest industrial data reflected mainly a seasonal fall in energy needed for heating, but also commented that other recent data has not been bullish for growth.

Xerfi finance house chief economist Nicolas Bouzou said that the situation "is less serious than it seems", pointing to moderate growth in the consumer goods and automobile sectors.

Energy sector production fell by 4.8 percent in April and textile output by 2.7 percent percent.

But automobile industry output rose by 0.7 percent, output by the construction sector grew by 1.6 percent, consumer goods production by 0.7 percent, semi-finished goods by 0.4 percent, and electronics by 0.5 percent.

Bouzou said that the automobile and aeronautical sectors seemed set to underpin manufacturing during the year.

From February to April, industrial production dipped in volume by 0.6 percent compared to figures from the previous three months, and manufactured output fell by one percent.

Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 09:41 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  There is also deep public concern about high unemployment which successive governments have been unable to treat for years.

When you refuse to consider tax cuts and / or deregulation, that's usually what you wind up with.
Posted by: Raj || 06/12/2005 10:32 Comments || Top||

#2  is gloomy as the new government turns its guns on unemployment.

I've oft thought this might be the most efficient way to handle the long term unemployed.
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 11:14 Comments || Top||

#3  These numbers are deceptively good. The fall in energy production is the one that got my attention. Energy consumption is a basic metric of economic activity and unlike the others there is no lag in it. 5% is a very large fall and signals these numbers will get a lot worse fast.
Posted by: phil_b || 06/12/2005 18:16 Comments || Top||

#4  With Socialists, the longer the depression - eerrr, recession - the better the numbers look.
Posted by: Elmerens Flaise7447 || 06/12/2005 20:55 Comments || Top||


Fifth Column
Police prepare to make thousands of arrests at G8
The Army is preparing barracks and military bases in Scotland for use as holding camps if, as police expect, thousands of protesters are arrested during the G8 summit of world leaders next month. The decision to earmark sites where protesters may be held follows warnings from European police forces and intelligence officials that foreign anarchists have already entered Britain and are plotting to disrupt the meeting, to be held at Gleneagles, the luxury hotel and resort in Perthshire, Scotland.

Senior detectives have told The Sunday Telegraph that more than 50 dedicated troublemakers with criminal records have slipped into the country, before the imposition of stringent security measures at airports, ferry terminals and on the Eurostar train service in the immediate run-up to the summit.

World leaders including Tony Blair and presidents Putin, Bush and Chirac will attend the three-day meeting and police are straining to protect them and keep protesters at bay. There are fears that anarchists from across Europe will mingle with anti-capitalism campaigners in and around Edinburgh, which is expected to be the focal point of demonstrations against the international financial system.

Their numbers are likely to be swollen by campaigners for African debt relief, who have been urged to descend on the Scottish capital by Bob Geldof. According to warnings passed by Italian police to their British counterparts, some Italian protesters intend to dangle themselves on ropes from motorway bridges to disrupt traffic. Italian police have also uncovered plans to overturn and set fire to lorries on the main A9 approach road to Gleneagles. Detectives also believe that some anarchists want to blockade the Faslane nuclear base on the Clyde, near Glasgow.

Detectives in Scotland and at Special Branch headquarters at Scotland Yard in London, say that protest groups including Ya Basta, which once held a squat on a train and demanded to be taken to a financial summit in Prague, have sent "sleepers" into Britain to organise protests. One Italian anarchist known as "The Raven" entered Britain two weeks ago but police have lost track of him. Some of the information disclosed to senior police officers by Scotland Yard and MI5, the security service, follows the arrest in Rome on May 26 of five suspected anarchists - three men and two women, including their suspected ringleader, Massimo Leonardi - who were planning to target Gleneagles. They revealed that colleagues had already left Italy for Britain.

In a related investigation, police raided 80 homes in Bologna and other central and northern cities, targeting two further anarchist groups intending to visit Gleneagles. One senior detective who monitors anarchist groups said: "There are close connections between British groups such as Class War and foreign groups such as Ya Basta. "We know that some Italian anarchists have already entered the country and are staying at squats and safe houses with British sympathisers. They are planning major violent disruptions to the Gleneagles summit and we will be powerless to stop them."

The army bases earmarked to hold arrested protesters include the Dreghorn and Redford barracks, and the bases of the 2nd Division Craigiehall and the 51 Scottish Regiment, all within a 20-mile radius of Gleneagles. Police are concerned that Geldof's call for a million people to descend on the city will provide perfect cover for anarchists, and fear a repeat of the violence at the 2001 Genoa summit in Italy. There, hundreds were injured, one man died after being run over by a police vehicle, and the crowds were eventually dispersed by armed police using tear gas.

Assistant Chief Constable Ian Dickinson, of the police force which covers Gleneagles and Edinburgh, said: "A million people coming to Edinburgh - it is difficult to conceive how they could all get to this area in the first place and where they could assemble safely. No one wants tragedy to distract world attention from the aims of the campaigners."

The grounds of Gleneagles and much of the surrounding area will be fenced off and patrolled during the meetings, but one group, calling itself the People's Golfing Association, plans to invade the hotel grounds and golf course and disrupt the first-day photocall of the G8 leaders.

Dissent, a south London-based anti-capitalist group, has called for supporters to blockade roads around the resort on July 6. Some foreign anarchists also intend to storm Edinburgh's leading financial institutions including Standard Life and the Royal Bank of Scotland and stage sit-ins. Police said the plans were discussed at a "conference of anarchists" in Nottingham earlier this month. In response, police will mount their biggest ever operation in Scotland, with more than 5,000 officers on duty instructed to enforce a zero-tolerance policy and arrest anyone breaking the law.

Police intend to set up road blocks in a 40-mile radius of Edinburgh and Gleaneagles and say they will use the Public Order Act 1988 - originally intended to control outdoor raves - to detain people and disperse crowds. Intelligence officers said that S26, an international anarchist umbrella group, originally formed to organise protests in Prague against the International Monetary Fund/World Bank conference there on September 26, 2002 - hence its name - was orchestrating some of the protest actions.

Class War, a veteran British anarchist outfit, some of whose 200 activists have declared their support for violence, especially against property, is expected to take part in protests. The so-called Wombles (White Overall Movement Building Liberation through Effective Struggle), the largest of the three, is an anti-capitalist group formed in 2002. A spokesman for the Association of Chief Police Officers in Scotland said: "We will be properly prepared for any eventuality. We have said all along that, while we will facilitate lawful protest, we will deal with anyone who wants to cause disruption."
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 09:38 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Didn't MP Galloway threaten that W and Blair would be arrested (for war crimes, of course) during their stay in Scotland?
Posted by: VAMark || 06/12/2005 11:42 Comments || Top||

#2  sounds like ample opportunity for head-cracking on teh whackos. Snipers for the molotov-carrying
Posted by: Frank G || 06/12/2005 12:05 Comments || Top||

#3  Scotland can be such a warm, fuzzy place. Take for example some of their older prisons, hewn out of live rock, where air conditioning was never at issue, and oatmeal was the food. They also have a very interesting set of laws, Scots' Law, which is more Roman than Common Law. I would really not like to be a visitor on an extended stay there.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 06/12/2005 13:32 Comments || Top||

#4  Two words: Vomit gas. :-D
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 06/12/2005 15:03 Comments || Top||

#5  Galloway almost makes me ashamed to be decended from Scots.
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 06/12/2005 19:50 Comments || Top||

#6  Why on earth are they not holding this meeting on an unaccessible island off the coast somewhere? This is just plain foolishness.
Posted by: trailing wife || 06/12/2005 23:43 Comments || Top||


Arabia
US Embassy Meddling in Yemen Affairs
Al-Ahmar describes US spokesman statement as meddling in Yemeni affairs
SANA'A - Speaker of Parliament Sheikh Abdullah bin Hussein Al-Ahmar expressed his amazement at a statement published in Al-Sharq Al-Awsat newspaper and attributed to a US spokesman, revealing unconventional diplomatic contacts between the US and Yemeni officials. Sheikh Al-Ahmar said the Sana'a US ambassador's meetings with sheikhs and heads of parties and non-governmental organization representatives without informing official bodies did not concord with accepted diplomatic principles that require ambassadors and other diplomatic to go through official channels when making such contacts.
Posted by: Cheng Uleregum5971 || 06/12/2005 09:38 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I will say for GWB that he has an uncanny ability to keep these dictators both on their toes and unbalanced. Very discreetly for a while now we have been carrot-and-sticking the Yemenese into getting their house in order. In many ways they are doing so, but their government is still rife with rotten apples that need to be purged. We are just letting everybody concerned know that the essense of democracy is that you do your job better than the other guy, or the other guy gets your job.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 06/12/2005 13:17 Comments || Top||

#2  Sheikh Abdullah has been known to call the U.S. "bloodsuckers" and worse. I don't know what diplomatic channels you have to go through to get that kind of rhetoric OKed, but...
Posted by: beagletwo || 06/12/2005 19:28 Comments || Top||


Iraq-Jordan
StrategyPage Iraq: How the Cops Took Back the Streets
Tensions between the "Accomodationists" and "Rejectionist" factions of the Baathist movement seem to be leading to the possibility of a violent confrontation. The "Accomodationists" support cooperation with the Iraqi government, and support participation in the political process. Given that the Baath Party seems to have stashed away an enormous amount of money, and that Baathists are really the only experienced managers and administrators in the country, following the Accomodationists line could arguably result in a return of the Baathists to power eventually. The Rejectionists are violently opposed to any accommodation with the government, and seek a return to power by force, sooner rather than later.

There have been an increasing number of violent attacks on Accomodationists, or people who appear to be Accomodationists. Until recently, most of the incidents were in the form of attacks on property, threats, and occasional kidnappings for the purpose of intimidation. But lately there have been several killings. The possibility of a serious violent confrontation between the two wings of the Baath movement is increasing.

One reason for the despair within the Baath Party is the improved performance of the Iraqi police. This is no accident. Late last year, two changes were made to how the United States recruited and deployed the Iraqi police. First, standards for recruitment were increased, and training made longer and more intense. As expected, this did not reduce the number of new recruits coming in, because being a cop was still one of the better paying, and available, jobs in the other country. But firing poorly performing cops and police commanders did wonders for the morale and performance of the good cops. The other change was to deploy trained police battalions to areas the cops were not native to. This was a technique even Saddam had to use. If you recruit all the cops from the area they will be working in, too many of those policemen will be corrupted by local criminals and bureaucrats. The corruption wasn't always in the from of cash or favors. Threats against a cops family would work as well. This was what was happening to so many of the police recruited from areas where they were working, particularly in Sunni Arab areas. So the U.S. formed special police battalions, trained them a bit more, screened their commanders more thoroughly, and paid them a bonus to work away from home. These were mainly Kurdish and Shia Arab cops being sent to work in Sunni Arab areas.

Sunni Arab cops needed all the help they could get. The Baath Party, and the most vicious criminal gangs were dominated by Sunni Arabs. Al Qaeda was also a Sunni Arab outfit. It was hard to get Sunni Arab police to come down hard on misbehaving Sunni Arabs. But Kurdish and Shia Arab cops saw cracking down on Sunni Arabs as a rare combination of business and pleasure.

Meanwhile, al Qaeda continues to be its own worst enemy. Unable to make other types of combat work, Al Qaeda has bet everything on the use of car bombs, driven by suicidal foreign volunteers. For all of 2004, there were under 30 car bombs used in Baghdad. But in the last four months, there have been over 130 in Baghdad. Nearly as many have been used in other parts of Iraq in that time period. Even Iraqis who support al Qaeda cannot understand this reliance on car bombs, which kill many innocent bystanders, and generate much hatred against al Qaeda, and Sunni Arabs in general. But it makes sense if you ignore al Qaeda's English language pronouncements, and look at what they say in Arabic. There, al Qaeda denounces Shia Moslems as heretics and miscreants who must be converted to the true Islam (Sunni Islam), or slaughtered. In Iraq, al Qaeda is mainly sending its car bombs against Shias. It's a matter of practicing what you preach.
Posted by: ed || 06/12/2005 09:24 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Memo

TO: the mainstream press
FROM: Rantburg
RE: Attached story

We're winning in Iraq. You need to cover things like this better.
Posted by: Mike || 06/12/2005 9:45 Comments || Top||

#2  Garrisoning soldiers outside of their home provinces has been a standard means of maintaining control of the state for thousands of years. That our people did not use this method, choosing instead (until now) to have Sunnis garrison their own territory means either that they were being ultra-nice to the Sunnis just for niceness's sake or that they wanted to keep the Sunnis alive as a political counterweight to the Shias. I hope that it was the latter objective that prompted this policy.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 06/12/2005 10:57 Comments || Top||

#3  Best line in the whoel article:

"Kurdish and Shia Arab cops saw cracking down on Sunni Arabs as a rare combination of business and pleasure."
Posted by: OldSpook || 06/12/2005 17:47 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Sean Penn in new role at Friday Prayers
Hollywood actor Sean Penn, adopting the role of a journalist, scribbled in his notebook as Friday prayer worshippers in Tehran chanted "Death to America." Penn, 44, in Iran on a brief assignment for the San Francisco Chronicle ahead of presidential elections on June 17, may be one of the best known faces in film, but he went unrecognized by the 6,000 faithful at Tehran University. Working with a translator, Penn took copious notes as hardline cleric Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati urged the congregation to vote en masse "to make America angry."

The actor, who visited Iraq before and after the U.S.-led invasion in 2003 and wrote an account of his second trip for the Chronicle, told Reuters he had decided to come to Iran because of growing tensions between Washington and Tehran.
Posted by: Fred || 06/12/2005 09:21 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Excellent work agent Penn. A medal is waiting for your great success in scouting pre-invasion targets. The Army will follow shortly.
Posted by: ed || 06/12/2005 10:00 Comments || Top||


Arabia
First Kuwaiti female minister
KUWAIT has appointed its first female cabinet member, naming veteran women's rights activist Massouma al-Mubarak as planning minister, the state news agency KUNA said. Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah "announced the appointment of Dr Massouma Mubarak as planning minister and minister of state for administrative development affairs," KUNA reported. Mubarak, a columnist and political science professor at Kuwait University, said she had been offered the post, and said she was honoured to be the first woman minister in the Gulf Arab state's history. She replaces Sheikh Ahmad al-Abdullah al-Sabah in both posts.

The appointment makes Kuwait the third country in the conservative Gulf Arab region to have a woman cabinet minister. Sheikh Ahmad retained his post as communications minister and was also given the health ministry portfolio, official sources said. Energy Minister Sheikh Ahmad al-Fahd al-Sabah had been interim health minister since Mohammad al-Jarallah resigned in April after parliament members called for a no-confidence vote, accusing him of squandering public funds and mismanagement. Kuwait appointed two women to its municipal council earlier this month, the first women appointed to the body.

Kuwait gave women the right to vote and run in elections last month, but passed the legislation too late for them to vote or stand for election in municipal polls on June 2. Women will vote for the first time in the 2007 parliamentary elections. The suffrage bill was seen as a breakthrough in Kuwait, which had promised to carry out democratic reforms.
Posted by: Spavirt Pheng6042 || 06/12/2005 08:52 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Real power for a woman? Wow!
Posted by: trailing wife || 06/12/2005 23:22 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan/South Asia
Eight Arrested in Afghan Kidnapping
Afghan police have arrested eight people suspected of involvement in the kidnapping of an Italian aid worker, who was freed after three weeks in captivity, the interior minister said Saturday. Ali Ahmad Jalali said the eight have been detained separately since May 16, when Clementina Cantoni, 32, was abducted at gunpoint in the heart of the Afghan capital, Kabul. She was freed Thursday and flew home Friday.

On Saturday, Cantoni said she planned to return to Afghanistan at some point. "I will go back to Afghanistan, perhaps in a year or two, to see my friends, but not in the near future," Cantoni told a press conference in Milan, Italy. She added that the situation in Afghanistan remained "unstable and of high risk, not only for international aid workers, but also and especially for the Afghans."

At a press conference in Kabul, Jalali gave no details about the eight except to say they were still being questioned. According to Italian media reports, Cantoni told prosecutors the number of her kidnappers varied from four to six. Jalali reiterated a government claim that no concessions were made or ransom paid to free the Italian, who had been working for CARE International on a project helping Afghan widows and their families. Italian papers have reported that Cantoni's freedom was secured thanks to the release of the mother of the leader of the kidnappers. Jalali acknowledged the mother of one kidnapper was released, but he said it was not part of a deal. He said the mother had been detained on suspicion of involvement in an earlier kidnapping of the son of an Afghan businessman, but she was not charged.
Posted by: ed || 06/12/2005 08:37 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Eight Killed by Bomb Blasts in Iran
Four bombs exploded in the capital of an oil-rich province on the Iranian border with Iraq on Sunday, killing at least eight people and wounding at least 36 in the deadliest explosions in the nation in more than a decade, state-run television reported. At least four women were among those killed in the explosions in Ahvaz, capital of the southwestern Khuzestan province. At least two of the explosions were caused by car bombs, witnesses said.

Gholamreza Shariati, deputy provincial governor for security affairs, said the bombers were seeking to undermine public participation in Friday's presidential elections. Television pictures showed the blast sites with heavily damaged buildings and blood on the ground. The force of the explosions also damaged cars in the streets. Shariati said 36 people, including eight police officers, were injured. After the first three blasts, disposal experts tried to defuse a fourth bomb but failed, and it exploded, injuring one officer.

Amir Hossein Motahar, director of security at the Interior Ministry, said one bomb went off in front of the Ahvaz governor's office and another next to the city's housing department. The third bomb blew up in front of the residence of the head of the provincial radio and television station, he said. The fourth bomb was placed near the same residence. Shariati said intelligence and security officials were investigating the bombings, which targeted " Iran's territorial integrity as it was on the verge of presidential elections." Ahvaz was the site of two days of violent demonstrations in April after reports circulated of an alleged plan to decrease the proportion of Arabs in the area. Officials at the time confirmed one death but opposition groups said more than 20 demonstrators had been killed. Some 250 were arrested.
Posted by: ed || 06/12/2005 08:37 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Chickens? Roost?
Posted by: gromgoru || 06/12/2005 9:31 Comments || Top||

#2  Car bombs no less. Interesting.
Posted by: phil_b || 06/12/2005 10:01 Comments || Top||

#3  This is possibly (probably?) Arab response to the leaked plans to move more Persians into that area in the runup to the election.
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 10:11 Comments || Top||

#4  I still like using Jiffy Pop, it's fun and you can involve your kidz.
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 10:34 Comments || Top||

#5  :-) Ship
Posted by: Frank G || 06/12/2005 11:27 Comments || Top||

#6  Maybe some of the boys sent to Iraq got turned back, and they didn't know what else to do with the stuff? Maybe it's getting too hartd to play with fireworks in Iraq? ANYway, the bad news is that terrorism is spreading; the good news is where it's spreading to.
Posted by: Bobby || 06/12/2005 13:07 Comments || Top||

#7  I'm sure they are using criminals to get expolsives to Iraq's. Criminals will go to the highest bidder.
Posted by: plainslow || 06/12/2005 18:47 Comments || Top||

#8  Has Sean Penn been accounted for???
Posted by: Rafael || 06/12/2005 23:34 Comments || Top||


Britain
Toddler tearaways targeted
There's some good insight in this British report, although the idea of the national government running this makes me shudder.

A CONFIDENTIAL Home Office report recommends that children should be targeted as potential criminals from the age of three. It says they can be singled out by their bullying behaviour in nursery school or by a history of criminality in their immediate family.

It proposes parenting classes and, in the worst cases, putting more children who are not "under control" into intensive foster care instead of care homes. Nursery staff would be trained to spot children at risk of growing up to be criminals.

The 250-page report, entitled Crime Reduction Review, was drawn up on the instructions of Tony Blair, who wanted to identify the most effective ways of cutting crime by 2008.

Its leak coincides with an expected announcement tomorrow by Ruth Kelly, the education secretary, of a £430m package to provide out-of-hours clubs at schools for children aged four to 14.

The Home Office strategy unit, which spent five months compiling the report, concluded that "from the simple perspective of reducing crime . . . the arguments for focusing resources on the children most at risk are 'overwhelming'".

Children who were not "under control" by the age of three were four times as likely to be convicted of a violent offence, it warned. It adds: "Getting schools to tackle bullying, exclusions and truancy effectively is key to diverting more adolescents from crime". They're right that this needs dealing with. But no mention of dealing with the parents?????

The report was conducted against a bleak assessment by the Home Office that, without new measures, the crime rate would rise 8.5% by 2008.

Last July the government used the review's findings on what worked and what didn't to underpin a formal commitment to reduce crime by 15% by 2008.

Measures such as CCTV, increased street lighting and longer custodial sentences were judged in the report to have been expensive failures, with only a few exceptions.

Instead, it maintained that if potential offenders were spotted young enough, "soft" measures — such as improving their reading, language and social skills — could be enough to change their direction. there's some real truth here. Kids who are neglected by self-centered or messed up parents need attention and need opportunities to learn. That's what develops self esteem and a stake in social order.

Kelly's £430m is intended to provide breakfast clubs and after-hours sports and arts; some children could be at school from 8am to 6pm. The sessions will be run by private sector and voluntary groups, rather than by the schools' regular staff. That has promise ... let's make sure those private groups aren't teaching jihad tho, okay?

Research in the report found that 85% of inmates in young offenders' institutions had been bullies at school, while 43% of male prisoners had children with a criminal record. In a verdict likely to anger leftwingers, the report suggests that bullies should be treated as aggressors rather than victims of their social background. GASP - could it be ... Common Sense??? YES!! score one for reality.

It states that bullies, who can start from a very young age, do not suffer from low self-esteem but act as gang leaders who "recruit" others to commit crime. As they graduate to being juvenile offenders, aged 8 to 15, they act as magnets by drawing in followers one or two years younger than themselves.

Those who by the age of 18 reach this stage, it states, are best dealt with in young offenders' institutions with "boot camp" regimes.
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 07:52 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sorry TT but you're suffering from Optimists syndrome here.

"In a verdict likely to anger leftwingers, the report suggests that bullies should be treated as aggressors rather than victims of their social background. GASP - could it be ... Common Sense??? YES!! score one for reality."

But just who gets to determine who is a bully and who is a victim, hmmmmm?? That's right, all those left wingers in the social services and educational industries. I'll garauntee that any law of this kind would rapidly be used to attack any parent who dared to question a school or a teacher.

And the victim can be made to look like the instigator very easily. After all, how many times do we here about a foul in a sport being called on the reaction rather than the action?

This is nothing more than Orwell redux.
Posted by: AlanC || 06/12/2005 10:02 Comments || Top||

#2  The give away is the use of the plural Parent(s). LOL! Parent is singular as is Granny or Aunt Milly.

Oppppsssss.... nevermind.

/it's summer.
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 10:57 Comments || Top||

#3  While discussing self defense with my sons Jr.High Princepal,he's answer to the ??? of when does a student have the right of self-defense. His answer was a student's right of self-defense(acorrding to the Az.school board)consists of falling to your knees,covering your head with your arms,and praying.I let him know in no uncertain terms what I thought of that.
Posted by: raptor || 06/12/2005 11:54 Comments || Top||

#4  raptor: Was that in Arizona??????

12 or so years ago my son was having trouble with a bully. He got in trouble with the school for defending himself. When I spoke to the teacher (the bully was the teacher's pet) I explained that my son knew that I would not accept him starting a fight but that I had no problem at all with him finishing one, and that I had not raised him to be a compliant victim of violence. If she had any objections I would give her the number of my lawyer ( which I did not have). The trouble stopped and I never heard a word again. AND this was in Massholia!
Posted by: AlanC || 06/12/2005 12:08 Comments || Top||

#5  Yeap,Alan.Lee Kornigee Jr.High,Miami,Arizona.
Posted by: raptor || 06/12/2005 12:17 Comments || Top||

#6  Yep, self defense is also not permitted in Southern California. However, my school immediately suspends and expels (2-strikes) the attacker. Did it to one 1st grade miscreant this year; his parents took the hint and moved him out of state.
Posted by: Pappy || 06/12/2005 12:33 Comments || Top||

#7  Raptor, same thing in Tennessee. My daughter was walking down the hall at school and a girl said, "Hey, Lauren." She turned around and was met with a fist to the mouth. She grabbed hold of the other girl and they both went down, She was suspended for 3 weeks. I really gave the school Principal and the school board a piece of my mind and then filed charges against the other girl. I had dental costs to pay whitch I got back from the other girl's parents as a result of the charges. It doesn't matter what happens both students are suspended. Absolutely rediculus.
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 06/12/2005 19:45 Comments || Top||

#8  Be very quiet and know that most of the teaching staff is on your side in any sort of face of in or out of court.... make them your friends.
Posted by: P Drake || 06/12/2005 20:18 Comments || Top||

#9  Same in Ohio. Fortunately a teacher came through the blocked bathroom door and took both girls directly to the principal's office, where the other girl was given no time to think up lies, so she confessed to attacking trailing daughter #1. Both girls were given in-school suspension and required to write an essay detailing what she'd done wrong. I explained to the principal that td1 would write the essay, but that as the descendent of Holocaust survivors I require her to protect herself from attack, and that we'd be going out to dinner to celebrate her behaviour. The principal was shocked by my attitude, which is too damn bad.
Posted by: trailing wife || 06/12/2005 23:31 Comments || Top||


A Witch's Brew of Idiocy
from the London Times

The horrible case of the little African girl, Victoria Climbié, has been back in the news. She was murdered by her foster parents because they thought she was possessed by the devil. Now, Victoria's social worker, Lisa Arthurworrey, has been told she shouldn't shoulder too much blame. She was instead, a tribunal decided, a caring and dedicated professional and, indeed, a "victim".
It is often said that we live in a blame culture. This is, by definition, a ghastly place to be. It strikes me, looking at the Climbié business, that we live very much in an exculpatory culture. It is clear Arthurworrey contributed to a series of errors that resulted in Victoria not being taken into care, as she should have been. But the lowly social worker should not have been alone in copping the rap. In an "exclusive" interview with the Daily Mail — a newspaper that tends to take a robust stance towards immigrants, until they are murdered — Arthurworrey painted an interesting picture of life inside Haringey social services in 2000.



One senior manager believed in witchcraft; another loathed all white people (especially the police). A third was obviously disturbed. Meetings degenerated into discussions about how unpleasant it was to be a black person living in England. The executives in the Climbié case received no punishment. All now have very remunerative jobs elsewhere in the public sector. If we live in a blame culture it's not very punitive.

It's not just Haringey social workers who believe in witchcraft. There are many African immigrants who subscribe to one or another brand of one of Britain's fastest-growing religions (and who are not yet employed by our social services departments).

Last month police investigating the murder of the boy whose torso was found in the Thames in 2001 announced that 300 African boys aged between four and seven had gone missing in a three-month period in the capital that year, though — a police spokesman reassured us — "there is no reason to assume that they have all been murdered".

Earlier this month we had the case of "Child B", another little African girl who had been tortured by her relatives (shoved in a bin bag, chilli pepper rubbed in her eyes, etc) because the devil was deemed to have gained access to her soul. A fervent belief in the power of the Dark One is, apparently, very common among some west African immigrants.

The term "ndoki" designates those who are possessed. There are many African-based churches in north London who will exorcise for a fee. At the time of Child B, the NSPCC announced "this trial has exposed some beliefs in some communities that can lead to child abuse". I suppose murder counts as "abuse".

Unfortunately, we now have the Incitement to Religious Hatred Bill about to enter the statute books, so I am prohibited from suggesting that people who believe in witches, the demonic possession of children and exorcisms are either cretins from a Stone Age culture or psychologically deranged. Which is a shame, because that's what I'd hoped to do.

In fact the government, through its charismatic Home Office minister Paul Goggins, has announced that people who worship the great Satan himself should indeed receive protection from the bill; so we mustn't whip up hatred when we see a wild-eyed person carrying a black bin bag, some chilli pepper and a small child. Each to his own; live and let live, etc.

The bill was introduced to secure the votes of Britain's Muslims, but if it gives succour to the followers of Beelzebub, all well and good.

The same principle behind this fatuous new legislation also lies behind the terrible mistakes of the Climbié case. Social services have long treated immigrant families differently from indigenous families.

This whole notion of "private fostering", for example, which occurred with Child B and Victoria was, we were told, culturally acceptable within African communities. So they were dealt with by African social workers who accepted the practice with little demurral. Later it emerged that cultural acceptability had less to do with it than simple benefit fraud — but by then it was too late for Victoria.

Similarly, we are cautioned — and indeed now legally obliged — to have respect for those who believe any amount of primitive superstitious rubbish because this cultural relativism demands that we should not be judgmental. Similarly, we must remove crucifixes from crematoria because they might offend people from other religions or atheists.

This self-flagellation does immigrants no favours. Nor does the confusion of race with religion — of something genetic, skin deep and irrevocable with a set of ideas consciously embraced.

At the end of Child B's case, NSPCC director Mary Marsh called for a taskforce of child protection officers drawn from the African community. Why must they be African? Maybe instead we should send African child protection officers to investigate white families and send white child protection officers to sort out the Africans, using precisely the same criteria in each case.
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 07:34 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Two of my three children were possessed, but the demons gradually faded away in their 20's; the third joined the Marines.
Posted by: Bobby || 06/12/2005 12:55 Comments || Top||

#2  My three teenagers are all possessed, but I've never had the urge to put them in bin bags and rub chili pepper in their eyes. Grounding seems to be sufficient.
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 14:20 Comments || Top||

#3  Frankly, I did want to maybe try the chilli thing for a second or two...
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 20:20 Comments || Top||

#4  Maybe the social workers could bring a scale and see if the kid weighs more than a duck.

Maybe that would convince the parents?
Posted by: Adriane || 06/12/2005 22:01 Comments || Top||


Why Cherie Blair is more unpopular than Abu Hamza
"THE trail-blazing first lady of Downing Street", as her promoters like to characterise her, was reportedly paid around £30,000 ($55,000) this week to share her thoughts with a Washington audience. Cherie Blair returned home to a media outcry and accusations that she was exploiting her public role for private profit. If prime ministers' wives could quit, Mrs Blair would have faced calls for her resignation.

Officially, Mrs Blair has done nothing wrong. That is because, officially, she does not have much of a job at all. She is not a state employee, which means her job is not covered by the various codes that bind political figures. But that's what has annoyed Britons. Although she has no official role, and so is not bound by the official rules, it seems unlikely that rich Americans would have paid to hear from her were she not Tony Blair's wife.

For a human-rights lawyer with four children and no dark stains on her character, Mrs Blair is remarkably unpopular. She recently topped a BBC radio poll of people who Britons most wanted ejected from their country, beating Abu Hamza, a fundamentalist Muslim cleric with a winning combination of dead eye and hook, by a good length. Mrs Blair's problem is not just that she is the wife of a prime minister loathed by many Britons, but also that her judgment has proved to be dodgy in the past. In 1998, she was spotted wearing a new-age "bio-electric" pendant, said to contain magical crystals. A reputation for credulity was confirmed by news that she employed a "lifestyle guru" to advise on spiritual matters. The guru's ex-husband, an Australian swindler, claimed to have helped Mrs Blair purchase two flats at a discounted price. Having first denied any wrongdoing, she made a tearful public apology.

The Conservatives have called for rules covering ministers' conduct to be extended to spouses. But regulations seem an unnecessarily heavy-handed response to a rather small problem when any sensible prime ministerial consort would take care not to behave in a way that turned the electorate against their spouse. Perhaps painful experience will at last have taught Mrs Blair what the famously low-profile Denis Thatcher told the Duchess of York: "Whales get killed only when they spout."
Posted by: phil_b || 06/12/2005 04:50 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  She's on a roll: the London Times has more on her financial activities
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 7:34 Comments || Top||

#2  she's also an apologist for Paleo/Arab atrocities
Posted by: Frank G || 06/12/2005 13:28 Comments || Top||


Down Under
8 Explosions Rock Australian Suburbs
RESIDENTS in Newcastle, New South Wales, had a sleepless night with reports of up to eight loud explosions rocking the suburbs. Residents of a house in James Street, Hamilton, were woken by a loud noise about 4.30am (AEST). Their letterbox, gate and part of a fence had been badly damaged, while two front windows were shattered, police said. Pieces of shrapnel were found embedded in a tree on the footpath, as well as in a pair of leather workman's boots near the front door. Police said they received reports of up to eight loud bangs in the Hamilton and Islington areas between 4am and 5am, but it was unknown if the incidents were linked. Police are appealing to the public for information.
My initial guess is teenagers, dumb ones.
Posted by: Spavirt Pheng6042 || 06/12/2005 03:35 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Salim: Abdul you blew up the house!!
Abdul: But you said we should act like theese aussie kaffirs?
Salim: A shrimp on the barbie you idiot, not the RDX!

Posted by: john || 06/12/2005 7:47 Comments || Top||

#2  End of term mail box bombers?
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 10:26 Comments || Top||

#3  Sounds like it. Used a little more than needed, kind of like Butch and Sundance did to the safe on the last train.
Posted by: Steve || 06/12/2005 12:24 Comments || Top||

#4  It didn't even make the Perth morning news.
Posted by: phil_b || 06/12/2005 18:45 Comments || Top||


Southeast Asia
Indonesia-Malaysia Agree: Foreign Help, But No Foreign Troops for Straits
JAKARTA, June 11 (Bernama) -- Indonesia shares the Malaysian view that the task of maintaining security in the Melaka Straits does not require the involvement of troops from any major power but it was the joint responsibility of the three littoral states namely Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore.

At the same time, however, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said that if there were other countries that wished to contribute in boosting patrolling capacity in the busiest sea lane in the world, such assistance was most welcome.

"However, President Susilo stressed that whatever equipment and system contributed by the foreign powers must be handled by operators from the three littoral states," Malaysian Armed Forces (ATM) Chief Laksamana Tan Sri Mohd Anwar Mohd Nor told Bernama, here Saturday. This was stated by Susilo yesterday at the approximately 45-minute meeting with Mohd Anwar who was making his first visit to Indonesia since being appointed to the post last month.

Also present at the meeting were Indonesian Armed Forces Chief Jen Endriartono Sutarto and ATM's Director-General of Defence Intelligence Lt Jen Datuk Wan Abu Bakar Omar. Mohd Anwar said Susilo also wanted the armed forces chiefs of Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore to hold a meeting to discuss in more detail how to increase the effectiveness of the coordinated joint operations "Malsindo", carried out by the three littoral states.

He said if the three armed forces chiefs could not meet at least once in six months, then the working groups of the three armed forces should meet. In addition, he said Susilo was of the opinion that patrolling efforts by the three countries in the Melaka Straits must be able to convince the international community especially the merchant ships plying the route.

Mohd Anwar said Susilo also wanted the sharing of information especially early intelligence reports on ships carrying dangerous equipment or materials passing through the Melaka Straits to be boosted.

"This is to enable the three countries to launch integrated operations to tackle the problem," he said.

Replying to questions why Japan and the United States were very keen to participate in security patrols in the Melaka Straits, Mohd Anwar said this was because many merchant ships from both countries were using the straits.

"The incident where one Japanese ship was attacked by pirates in the Melaka Straits with its crew being held hostage for ransom recently prompted that country to look for the best approach. They have the perception that the three littoral states do not have the capacity yet and they wish to help," he said.

However, he said, whatever assistance to be given must get the agreement of Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia.
Posted by: Pappy || 06/12/2005 02:12 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Our eminently trustworthy militaries...
Posted by: gromgoru || 06/12/2005 9:36 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Tech
Massive Reorganization Underway at NASA
Hat tip Vodkapundit:
A massive reorganization has begun at NASA. NASA Administrator Mike Griffin has begun the process by sending out formal notices to more than 50 senior NASA managers aprising them of pending changes in their job titles. One person has already resigned. Associate Administrator for NASA's Exploration Systems Mission Directorate, Adm. Craig Steidle, tendered his resignation today effective 24 June 2005. Changes will occur across all of the agency's activities - except human space flight - those changes come later after both the STS-114 and STS-121 missions have been completed. Federal regulations require a 120 day waiting period after a new agency head takes office before involuntary reassignments can be implemented. Notices can be sent to affected employees no sooner than 60 days after that date. The countdown clock for the 120 day moratorium on involuntary reassignments [regulations] of SES career appointees started on 14 April 2005.
Posted by: Seafarious || 06/12/2005 02:07 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The WaPo had a longer article yesterday.

New NASA Administrator Michael D. Griffin has decided to replace about 20 senior space agency officials by mid-August in the first stage of a broad agency shake-up. The departures include the two leaders of the human spaceflight program, which is making final preparations to fly the space shuttle for the first time in more than two years.

Senior NASA officials and congressional and aerospace industry sources said yesterday that Griffin wants to clear away entrenched bureaucracy, and build a less political and more scientifically oriented team to implement President Bush's plan to return humans to the moon by 2020 and eventually send them to Mars.

The moon-Mars initiative has put severe pressure on NASA's budget, forcing Griffin into a difficult balancing act -- trying to build quickly a next generation spaceship without crippling programs ranging from Earth observation satellites and aeronautics research to maintaining the Hubble telescope.

At the same time, the sources said, Griffin wants to restore NASA's glamour, reasserting the engineering and science leadership that has been eroding since the Apollo era. To this end, the sources said, he is willing to oust as many as 50 senior managers in a housecleaning rivaling the purge after the 1986 Challenger explosion. ....

Griffin, a former NASA chief engineer and associate administrator for exploration, settled into his new job. ....

"He's wanted to be NASA administrator for a long time and has given a lot of thought to what has been done well or badly," one congressional source said. "Because of that, he is not going to take a year or two to get to know the organization."

Instead, the sources said, he expressed dismay that NASA over the past several years had put a lot of people in top management positions because of what one source described as "political connections or bureaucratic gamesmanship -- not merit."

Several sources spoke of a corps of younger scientists and engineers, including Griffin, who had been groomed in the 1970s and 1980s as NASA's next generation of leaders only to be shoved aside during the past 15 years. They said Griffin hopes to bring them back.

"The people around him will be quite outstanding," one source said. "The philosophy is that good people attract outstanding people. This is going to be a very high-intensity environment, and NASA needs experienced, outstanding people."
Posted by: rkb || 06/12/2005 9:12 Comments || Top||

#2  Thanks RK. NASA is one of our greatest accomplishments. There is no doubt it is full of politically placed bureaucrats. Lets hope the polticians that put them there stay silent or this will be a mess.
Posted by: 49 pan || 06/12/2005 9:41 Comments || Top||

#3  At this point, he should focus on NASA's "core business", the completion of "one shot" existing unmanned projects, maintenance, and human space flight--his directed priority. However, he should set up a major "subcontracting" agency within NASA, to farm out future unmanned projects to free enterprise. This would accomplish three things: mission accomplishment at significantly less cost and time; greatly expanding the commercial space industry; retention of overall control of space authority by NASA. This last insures that "lessons learned" by the subcontractors remain proprietary United States property, and that space "management" be centralized much like the FAA manages airspace, for much the same reasons. Hopefully the end result would be not just "scientifically interesting" unmanned technology development, but practical commercial development, too. Boffins are far too prone to want to only use tweezers when a sledge hammer is needed, technologically speaking. That is, never go inside a house *both* designed *and* built by an engineer. People focused on money are far more practical than people focused on science.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 06/12/2005 11:07 Comments || Top||

#4  Boffins are far too prone to want to only use tweezers when a sledge hammer is needed, technologically speaking. That is, never go inside a house *both* designed *and* built by an engineer. People focused on money are far more practical than people focused on science


what a load of crap. Proof I was right in my first take on you, "moose"
Posted by: Frank G || 06/12/2005 11:13 Comments || Top||

#5  People focused on money are far more practical than people focused on science.

People focused on money rather than science were at the heart of the Challenger O-ring cluster foo.
Posted by: SteveS || 06/12/2005 11:24 Comments || Top||

#6  The issue here is the degree to which we want or need to regard the moon and Mars in geopolitical as well as economic terms.

As Griffin put it a few weeks ago:

The new administrator said he foresees no reason why Johnson Space Center's mission would be significantly altered and hopes to maintain the balance that has been reached between robotic and human space missions.

"If you ask anyone in this country, 'Do you believe that the United States should cede the moon to say the Chinese, Europeans, Russians, whoever?' I bet you the answer would be, 'No,'" he said.

Griffin said he believes a majority of people "want to make sure that as humankind expands into space the United States is there in the forefront."

"That is why this is important," he said. "It's about where human beings go and what they do when they get there and what that means to the future of the human race."


The subtext is human presence there with regard to economic, political ... and possibly military uses, although the latter would be a major shift in national policy.
Posted by: rkb || 06/12/2005 13:04 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
Introduction to Bio-power and it's the Little Eichmenn Engineers
Another visit to the moonbat ward. Here we find someone who went to University a long time ago and has never left campus since. I presume there's some sort of 'invisible fence' around the Quad...tinfoil hat tip to Pirate Ballerina, your source for all things Ward Churchillian.
...Science is not a mere recording of 'objective' reality. It is more of an attempt to manipulate and control the ontological domain that has been delimited by a discipline's observational activities. The objects that appear present-at-hand were originally given ontological status to by the process of man carving out entities from the monistic Earth to use as instruments in the actualization of the objectives defining the teleology of his or her projects. Consequently, science should be understood less as a form of an objective rendering of reality than a manifestation of Nietzsche's Will to Power—the drive or impetus to come to control and manipulate one's surroundings that in actuality are probably too complex of which to ever come a complete, 'objective' knowledge...
Posted by: Seafarious || 06/12/2005 01:28 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  F = ma

Okay, next subject!
Posted by: gromky || 06/12/2005 2:44 Comments || Top||

#2  What this means is those in the WTC on 9/11 willed the airliners to crash into the towers. The hijackers were just an incidental mechanism to actualize that will.
Posted by: phil_b || 06/12/2005 3:51 Comments || Top||

#3  A whole lotta words that mean nothing.(At least near as I can interprate them)
Posted by: raptor || 06/12/2005 9:24 Comments || Top||

#4  Amateurs. You forgot to play the gender card:

"... as interpreted from the lens of the dominant patriarchical power structure."

Bonus - it fits anywhere!
Posted by: Raj || 06/12/2005 10:37 Comments || Top||

#5  Here is Ward Churchill's latest art project.
Posted by: badanov || 06/12/2005 10:40 Comments || Top||

#6  Oooh, golly! Ritualistic mumbo jumbo! The uttering of magic words and incantations! Words like "ontological" and "teleology" and "monistic" have great ju-ju. The rubes are major impressed and bow down toward the nearest university, uttering sounds of admiration, while the universities themselves award tenure to the utterers...
Posted by: Fred || 06/12/2005 10:42 Comments || Top||

#7  I think I've already heard somewhere what the word "ontological" means, but I'm not sure... sounds pretty impressive and academic... will try to google it, this method has shown good results with others unknown words... the search for "bukkake" was certainly memorable, ahem,...
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 06/12/2005 10:48 Comments || Top||

#8  I read that paragraph three times, and I still can't figure out what the hell it says.

Raj: you're correct :-)
Posted by: Steve White || 06/12/2005 11:35 Comments || Top||

#9 
Consequently, science should be understood less as a form of an objective rendering of reality than a manifestation of Nietzsche’s Will to Power—the drive or impetus to come to control and manipulate one’s surroundings that in actuality are probably too complex of which to ever come a complete, ‘objective’ knowledge...


So? I mean, what's the problem with that? What's wrong with bending reality to your Will To Power?
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 06/12/2005 11:39 Comments || Top||

#10  "I reject your realty and substitue my owm":Myth Busters.
Posted by: raptor || 06/12/2005 11:59 Comments || Top||

#11  Bio-power to the people! (with appropriate fist pump)
Posted by: Seafarious || 06/12/2005 12:46 Comments || Top||

#12  The problem is that this essentially denies there is any such thing as objective truth in science.

Once you accept that, then you can justify all sorts of things, including suppressing the results of studies (or even the intent to study phenomena) whose political implications you don't like.
Posted by: rkb || 06/12/2005 13:28 Comments || Top||

#13  The second assertion here will be familiar to people who study systems dynamics modeling ... the idea that there are feedback loops that make the behavior of complex systems counterintuitive and difficult to predict.

The subtext is that we should muck around with nature, therefore, because we may trigger things we can't control.
Posted by: rkb || 06/12/2005 13:34 Comments || Top||

#14 
The subtext is that we should muck around with nature, therefore, because we may trigger things we can't control.
You know, I do not think that phrase means what you think it means... I think you forgot a negative there.

Seriously, have you ever seen how much money, energy, and face is invested in the belief that there will never be any significant drop in the price of carrying a kg of payload into LEO?
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 06/12/2005 14:53 Comments || Top||

#15  rkb, I happen to agree with the statement 'There is no such thing as objective truth in science.' However, and this is the motherofall howevers, to act as if there is, has huge utility. I.e. science may not reveal truth, but it sure as hell works.
Posted by: phil_b || 06/12/2005 18:11 Comments || Top||

#16  Yup, should read "shouldn't muck ..."
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 18:14 Comments || Top||

#17  IMNSHO the author shows a profound misunderstanding of the tenets of basic science, how basic science is done, and how scientists think about the world around them.

I work at a major national science laboratory. I encounter scientists every day and often have the chance to speak with them and ask them questions about their research. Many read philosophy, but few would describe themselves as philosophers.

This nutbar, aside from trying to sound as high-falutin' as possible to, as someone said above, convince the rubes, simply doesn;t understand that good science has a sound foundation in a fundamental reality that we call natural physical laws - like that of gravity, that most of these natural physical laws can be understood through a solid grounding in mathematics, and that science is constantly striving to push the borders back, to understand more, and to improve its understanding of what science already thinks it understands. Few, if any scientists would ever presume they know everything (or even anything) about their own field of specialty let alone the universe.

If it were up to this guy the laws of thermodynamics would not apply and he'd be the one getting the free lunch

Posted by: LC FOTSGreg || 06/12/2005 19:20 Comments || Top||


Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Bandit disguised in Russian military uniform detained in Chechnya
Law enforcement officers detained a bandit from Shamil Basayev's group, representative of the Regional Operative Headquarters of the anti-terrorist operation in the Northern Caucasus (ROH) told RIA Novosti. "The bandit has been detained in the village of Mesker-Yurt in the Shalinsky district of Chechnya. The investigation established that the bandit, disguised as a federal soldier, killed local resident Vakhi Khasanov in September 2002," the ROH representative reported.

In addition, in July 2002, the bandit, together with other members of a group, destroyed a car with local residents on the road near the same village. A source in the Chechen interior ministry told RIA Novosti the detainee is suspected of criminal activities against the federal forces. For instance, he blew up a Zhiguli car with two Russian military. As a result, one soldier was killed, and the other injured. In September 2002, the bandit blew up a UAZ vehicle with police officers. Nine operatives were injured.
Posted by: Steve White || 06/12/2005 00:53 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  If these terrorists (the ones disguised in uniforms) don't start getting shot on the spot, this tactic will eventually become commonplace.
Posted by: Raj || 06/12/2005 9:56 Comments || Top||

#2  I'd call that an optimal outcome.
Posted by: Fred || 06/12/2005 18:19 Comments || Top||


Africa: Horn
Russia may send aid, military advisors to Darfur
I'm not sure this is good.
Russia may send humanitarian aid and military advisors to Darfur under the UN aegis, Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov announced. "We do not rule out that we will provide humanitarian aid and military advisors within the framework and under the flag of the United Nations," he said. Military advisors are expected to separate the parties and monitor the humanitarian situation, he explained. "But I do not see much sense in investing large resources, because the developments there [in Darfur, western province of Sudan] do not threaten our security and our interests," he added.

Unlike Russia, NATO wants to send as many observers and advisors to new leaders as possible, as well as its own humanitarian aid, Ivanov emphasized. "The civil war in southern Sudan has been going on for 25 years and as far as I know Africa it will go on for as long, no matter what we do. This is an endless conflict," he said.
He's got a point there.
Posted by: Steve White || 06/12/2005 00:44 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  An endless conflict but a great training recruiting ground. You are right, This is not good.
Posted by: 49 pan || 06/12/2005 9:13 Comments || Top||

#2  Unless of course they keep those big fuzzy hats on and all their brains fry in the brutal Sudan summer...
Posted by: Raj || 06/12/2005 10:09 Comments || Top||

#3  Not certain how things could be made worse. Maybe the Russ can knock off the odd islamist.
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 10:39 Comments || Top||

#4  Maybe the Ruskies can swing a development program there... a long lasting one. Perhaps in exchange for the uranium ores and minerals in the region can be swapped for building a nuclear power plant to provide electricity to the oppressed and starving masses in their squalor camps and mud and stick hovels. That way the grateful Soodanazi government can keep a better eye on all those non-muslim types running around out there in the wastelands. Ruskies get what they want, the Soodanazis get what they want, the the oppressed get what their oppressors want. And think... what great PR this would bring!
Posted by: Shomble Shoger7533 || 06/12/2005 12:51 Comments || Top||

#5 
Russia may send aid, military advisors to Darfur
On whose side?

They normally back the Arabs.... :-(
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 06/12/2005 14:57 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Rice Takes to Stage to Aid Ailing Soprano
Wotta woman.
Posted by: Steve White || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Rice, whose first name is a variation on the Italian musical term ``con dolcezza,'' which is a direction to play with sweetness,

Heh, you learn somethin' new every day.
Posted by: Rafael || 06/12/2005 0:06 Comments || Top||

#2  LOL the more I learn about this person the more I think she should be the next resident of 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. She has it all!
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 06/12/2005 0:18 Comments || Top||

#3  A true Rennaisance woman. Just awesome.
Posted by: badanov || 06/12/2005 0:50 Comments || Top||

#4  Class.
Posted by: Mike || 06/12/2005 9:50 Comments || Top||

#5  ``con dolcezza''
I'd like to experience the tempestuous side w/ those spiky leather boots. >:]

BTW against any dummycrat shes got my vote.
Posted by: Red Dog || 06/12/2005 11:54 Comments || Top||

#6  ..You know, I simply cannot picture ANY LLL woman of national significance doing something like this. They all seem to be too busy being angry.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski || 06/12/2005 15:04 Comments || Top||

#7  Bingo, Mike.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 06/12/2005 18:26 Comments || Top||

#8  Agree, Barbara - Mike nailed it.

Y'know, this is the second article from alG posted on RB in a week which was spot-on and contained no spin. I can't remember the other one off the top of my head, but my astonishment at it certainly registered. And now we have another. Sheesh, if they keep this up for another 10 or 20 years, I'll forgive them for trying to screw with our election, lol!
Posted by: .com || 06/12/2005 19:42 Comments || Top||

#9  How can you hold their letters to Ohio against them, .com? After all, it was that effort which tilted Ohio to the side of the angels! ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife || 06/12/2005 23:52 Comments || Top||


Olde Tyme Religion
Muslim World League goes to UN on 'desecration'
The Muslim World League (MWL) has lodged a protest with the United Nations against the alleged desecration of the Holy Quran at the detention centre in Guantanamo Bay. League General Secretary Dr Abdullah Ibn Abdul Mohsin Al-Turki said this while addressing a press conference at the Press Information Department's media centre on Saturday.
Al-Turki...that's a Soddy family, yes?
Former Sudanese president Air Marshall (r) Abdul Rehman was also present at the press conference. Mr Turki said that the league had also demanded that the US president help legislate that all holy books, including Holy Quran, should be honoured.
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
He said that the main objective of the league was to protect the rights of the Muslims particularly those who were a minority and were being oppressed by the non-Muslims. He said that the Kashmir and Palestine issues had always been on the agenda of league since the inception of the organisation. He added that the body was touring the Islamic world to work towards harmony on issues between Muslim majority nations. Mr Turki said the Muslim world should adopt moderate ways and renounce repressive politics. He said that responsible people from seminaries should introduce scientific education there so that the students could also benefit from modern education and become economically prosperous. The general secretary said that during his stay in Pakistan he met President Pervez Musharraf, Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz and leaders of religious and political parties.
That'd be Qazi and Fazl and Sami and Prof. Sajid Mir...
He said that his organisation was trying to obscure present the true face of Islam to the world. Praising the efforts by President Musharraf to follow the enlightened moderation, he said that Gen Musharraf was doing his best for the welfare of the Muslims. He added that the organisation had convened a meeting of religious scholars in August and its recommendations would be presented to the upcoming summit of Organisation of Islamic Countries. Religious Affairs Minister Ijazul Haq was also present during the press conference.
Posted by: Seafarious || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Dear Dr Abdullah Ibn Abdul Mohsin Al-Turki and Air Marshall Abdul Rehman:

Here is our answer to your demands:

....................../´¯/)
....................,/¯../
.................../..../
............./´¯/'...'/´¯¯`•¸
........../'/.../..../......./¨¯
........('(...´...´.... ¯~/'...')
..........................'...../
..........''............. _.•´
..........................(
...............................

Sincerely,

The American People



Posted by: 11A5S || 06/12/2005 0:22 Comments || Top||

#2  Actually, the UN is expert in desecration, as in the tacit acceptance of mass deaths of muslims in Iraq, the killing in Rwanda, and the Sudan.

We should all be urining for (on) the UN.
Posted by: Captain America || 06/12/2005 0:54 Comments || Top||

#3  The Muslim World League (MWL) has lodged a protest with the United Nations against the alleged desecration of the Holy Quran at the detention centre in Guantanamo Bay.

Those Paleos that were holed up in a church and actually trashed it - when are they going to answer for their actions?? Hmmm?
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 06/12/2005 4:46 Comments || Top||

#4  Pentagon releases koran abuse photos.

His partner in crime, Private Simpson, was heard to say "Eat my shorts Mohammed"!
Posted by: ed || 06/12/2005 7:57 Comments || Top||

#5  http://egyptiansandmonkey.blogspot.com/2005/05/koran-desecration-protests-and-other.html
Posted by: Sam || 06/12/2005 8:14 Comments || Top||

#6  Mr Turki said that the league had also demanded that the US president help legislate that all holy books, including Holy Quran, should be honoured."

Sure lets start at the Saudi Airports where Bibles and even non-Wahabi Koran's are confiscated and shredded. Asshats.

P.S. Get over it. It's a BOOK, only a BOOK, nothing more and nothing less. Asshats.
Posted by: 98Zulu || 06/12/2005 8:51 Comments || Top||

#7  I don't know how these guys can keep a straight face. Christians in Muslim countries face the death penalty, and goodness knows what happens to any religious literature they might get caught with. But the US has to pass a law guaranteeing that the Koran only be handled by people wearing gloves? What nerve!
Posted by: Captain Pedantic || 06/12/2005 8:56 Comments || Top||

#8  Dhimmi obidience training goes on.
Posted by: gromgoru || 06/12/2005 9:34 Comments || Top||

#9  LOL! The Who'ley 'K'ur'ara'man is getting to be the only book with it's own set of civil rights.

I still prefers Trop'ic of K'ancer.
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 10:37 Comments || Top||

#10  Dang it, Ship! I wasn't expecting anything that funny on Sunday morning, he said, wiping coffee off the monitor.
Posted by: SteveS || 06/12/2005 11:06 Comments || Top||

#11  How about this: all Gitmo detainees get to choose between being treated according to US rules or according to the rules prevailing in the prisons of their country or origin.

"Awright Mahmoud, it says here that you're Syrian. We're going to start giving you the treatment you'd get in a Syrian jail unless you indicate that you'd prefer US rules. Whaddya have to say about that?"

"Oh say can you see..."

Posted by: Matt || 06/12/2005 11:40 Comments || Top||

#12  why don't you bring the 6 dead KFC employees? - they can testify on the "Islam is Peace" meme for ya
Posted by: Frank G || 06/12/2005 11:48 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
GOP Sen. Suggests Closing Guantanamo Jail
KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) - Sen. Mel Martinez said the Bush administration should consider closing the Guantanamo Bay prison for terrorism suspects - the first high-profile Republican to make the suggestion. ``It's become an icon for bad stories and at some point you wonder the cost-benefit ratio,'' Martinez said Friday. ``How much do you get out of having that facility there? Is it serving all the purposes you thought it would serve when initially you began it, or can this be done some other way a little better?''
Sure, we can close it. Options: 1) shoot all the cons 2) move them to Bagram 3) move them to an undisclosed location 4) move them to Antartica.
Martinez served in President Bush's first cabinet and is a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Martinez, who strongly supported Bush's efforts in Iraq during his campaign last year, also expressed concerns about progress in the war. ``I am discouraged by how long it has taken for us to begin to draw down some forces,'' Martinez said at the annual Florida Society of Newspaper Editors/Florida Press Association convention.

He said he has had to write many condolence letters to the families of Floridians killed in Iraq. ``It brings home the importance of the decision to send men and women to go to war,'' he said. ``It has become a foreign fighters' war against us there and the progress seems slow and difficult.''
Posted by: Steve White || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  WTF is wrong with our senate? It seems like the victory of 2004 has made them lose their sacks. Is this guy trying to lose the war for us?
Posted by: badanov || 06/12/2005 0:40 Comments || Top||

#2  It's like we have 101 Secretaries of State.

Note Mel Martinez is from Florida and there may be some hyperlocal Cuban politix involved...
Posted by: Seafarious || 06/12/2005 0:42 Comments || Top||

#3  He said he has had to write many condolence letters to the families of Floridians killed in Iraq. ``It brings home the importance of the decision to send men and women to go to war,'' he said. ``It has become a foreign fighters' war against us there and the progress seems slow and difficult.''

If you close Gitmo, all those Floridian combats deaths will be a meangingless statistic. Please do not dishonor them or their deaths by shutting down Gitmo. Let us honor them by completing the mission those brave and honorable men and woman embarked on voluntarily and by winning this war.

And Mel, news in wartime is often bad, and in these times magnified beyond any reason and perspective by our fifth column media. What will determine the character of this nation is how it slogs on in despite any apparent adversity.

This isn't SNES where we can win a war by intense activity for a few hours.
Posted by: badanov || 06/12/2005 0:47 Comments || Top||

#4  4) move them to Antartica

Damn that's cold!
Posted by: Rafael || 06/12/2005 1:11 Comments || Top||

#5  How many prisoners can we afford to house at Gitmo and how useful is the intelligence they provide us after a period of time? I think Martinez is right to question the long term usefulness of Gitmo.

If you close Gitmo, all those Floridian combats deaths will be a meangingless statistic
I think you are romanticizing the signifigance of Gitmo.
Posted by: Thotch Glesing2372 || 06/12/2005 2:25 Comments || Top||

#6  I think you are romanticizing the signifigance of Gitmo.

What a coincidence. So are you.
Posted by: badanov || 06/12/2005 2:43 Comments || Top||

#7  Look, the only damn way to determine its long-term is to know, quite frankly, what became known as a result of the Gitmo detainees, and dammit but I sure as hell don't want to know!
Posted by: Edward Yee || 06/12/2005 3:18 Comments || Top||

#8  One posibility is Gitmo is kept as a lightening rod for those who will criticize anyway and the really bad guys are held elsewhere Bagram? Diego Garcia? Which almost never mentioned except in extreme leftwing sites.
Posted by: phil_b || 06/12/2005 4:02 Comments || Top||

#9  ``It's become an icon for bad stories and at some point you wonder the cost-benefit ratio,''..

Gee, I wonder where those "bad stories" are coming from....?
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 06/12/2005 4:56 Comments || Top||

#10  Top 11 Gulag Guantanamo Atrocities
Posted by: Abu Felcher || 06/12/2005 6:05 Comments || Top||

#11  From the list:

"#10 Only white wine is served – even on filet mignon night"

Those ba$tard$!!
Posted by: eLarson || 06/12/2005 8:35 Comments || Top||

#12  My argument is simple: Any complaints about GitMo, as transparently humanely as the detainees have been treated, is fifth column propaganda. No one in their right mind thinks anything worse will befall these guys while in US custody than some mussed hair and maybe a dirty look from armed guards.

Funny how liberals like to mention "cost-benefit." It makes them sound as though they are being sensible and conservative, more so than conservatives. However, my experience has been the truth is far, far more mundane and boring than the lies being repeated by Amnesty et al, and no amount of posturing or using economic terms to bolster a terribly weak argument will clear away the fact that once those prisoners at Gitmo are released they will resume their illegal war against us and more people, preferably in the liberal mind, Americans, will die as a direct result.
Posted by: badanov || 06/12/2005 10:33 Comments || Top||

#13  use them as shark and marlin bait when sport fishing off of GitMo.
Posted by: 3dc || 06/12/2005 11:56 Comments || Top||

#14  I agree with Phil_b, let all the bitching and whining go towards Gitmo. The fact that we hear anything good or bad tells you that there is little to hide. The worst thing I heard come out of gitmo was that some prisoner got roughed up AFTER attacking the guards. If you really want to mess these guys up, release them into GenPop in any State prison. They would demand to be sent back to Gitmo after a couple of days of beatings and sodomy at the hands of the gangs inside. Also we could just line them all up and execute the whole bunch. I wonder if we would draw as much anger as China and Iran do get when they hold mass executions. I think a precident has been set here.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 06/12/2005 14:35 Comments || Top||

#15  Why don't we just outsource GITMO to Sans Francisco? Lonely boys and lonely nights will finally end all the atrocity stories buggering us in the international press arena, the ACLU will be happy because there will be no moral standard at all, Amnesty International will be openly allowed to dress in drag and make frequent and intimate visits to the poor boys, the Mooslim redicals will be happy to regain the male bonding they ache so much for, and we don't have to pay out a pension to the outsourced staff. When the GITMO rats are finally deemed harmless and redeemed before the true creator of man and the true people he created then they can limp wrist themselves to Sans Francisco and be happy and gay once again. Its all twisted i realize, but have you ever been over there? Now thats a twisted experience!
Posted by: Shomble Shoger7533 || 06/12/2005 15:03 Comments || Top||

#16  Simple solution...vote on closing Gitmo and if it passes relocate the jihadists to the districts represented by every traitorous senator who voted to close it. Make this the plan and make it public BEFORE the vote - then lets see what happens. Bastids.
Posted by: Rex Mundi || 06/12/2005 15:07 Comments || Top||

#17  Funny how liberals like to mention "cost-benefit."
I've never heard liberals ever worrying about the costs of anything, along as the bill is being paid for by taxpayers. Maybe you know more fiscally responsible liberals than I do.

What intel do we get from Gitmo detainees? Maybe we just shoot AQ jihadists rather than taking them prisoner and warehousing them at great expense to the US taxpayer indefinitely.

As for folks who think that these Gitmo detainees are a "threat" to America's survival - hum, guess you haven't heard but there are graver threats here already in the form of 8,000-10,000 M-13 gang members, who have known links as well as sympathies with AQ, and who have settled in the USA courtesy of our open borders politicians, both Democrats and Republicans, with President Bush being one of the more vocal open borders advocates. There's greater immediate dangers to American citizens' lives stateside from M-13 violence, I'll wager, than from the majority of low lives housed at Gitmo, which number around 600.
Posted by: Thotch Glesing2372 || 06/12/2005 17:34 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan/South Asia
MQM member shot dead
A former member of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) was shot dead in North Nazimabad in Taimuria police limits on Saturday. Four armed men riding two motorcycles opened fire on Imran Khan, aged 40, at Bhayani Centre. He was rushed to Abbasi Shaheed Hospital where doctors pronounced him dead on arrival. An MQM spokesman in a statement said the dead man was a former member of the party's Korangi sector.
Posted by: Seafarious || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:


Iraq-Jordan
Wolf Brigade leader survives suicide attack
A bit more detail for yesterday's story:
A FORMER Iraqi police commando blew himself up yesterday in a failed bid to assassinate the leader of the anti-insurgent Wolf Brigade, killing three other policemen in the process. The mainly Shi'ite Muslim force has been at the centre of controversy about aggressive methods and accusations of a sectarian "dirty war" on minority Sunnis. Bayan Jabor, an interior minister, said the suicide bomber, a former member of the unit, had walked into its Baghdad headquarters with the morning shift, wearing the brigade's uniform. Major General Mohammed Qureishi, the brigade's founder, was unhurt in the blast.

Better known by the nom de guerre Abu Walid, he runs his own television show, Terrorism in the Grip of Justice, on which alleged insurgents make confessions. "[The bomber] failed to reach him so he blew himself up in the courtyard," Jabor said. Two other former members of the unit were being hunted, he added. Body parts littered the compound, close to the interior ministry and police academy, which houses the Wolf Brigade. One officer was injured.
Posted by: Seafarious || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  So was he a Sunni or a Shi'ite? Have there been any Shi'ite suicide bombers in Iraq?
Posted by: gromky || 06/12/2005 0:10 Comments || Top||

#2  Oh DAMN!

Does this mean that even the Wolf Brigade can be infiltrated???
Posted by: Edward Yee || 06/12/2005 3:13 Comments || Top||

#3  Wait a minute: only three Wolves were killed? The impression I got from yesterday's article was that the bomber took about 20 with him. And they know exactly who he was? Very, very good, indeed.
Posted by: trailing wife || 06/12/2005 6:59 Comments || Top||

#4  While the Wolf Brigade may be predominantly Shiite (but so is Iraq) it certainly has Sunnis, Kurds and Christians in its ranks.
Posted by: phil_b || 06/12/2005 7:30 Comments || Top||

#5  And incidents like this will just accelerate purging of Sunnis from many/most organizations = more Sunni seething and 'extremism'. The Sunnis are working on being an excluded underclass in the new Iraq.
Posted by: phil_b || 06/12/2005 7:35 Comments || Top||

#6  The Sunnis have been exploring the boundaries of the irrationality envelope ever since Sammy was deposed and de-holed. Every corner of the boundary is "Coffin Corner." Maybe some day some of them will grow a brain, but many are just lost causes.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 06/12/2005 13:18 Comments || Top||

#7  boundaries of the irrationality envelope

RB's own makes a psycho-topological discovery.
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 19:39 Comments || Top||


Africa: Subsaharan
Mugabes' £1m party as millions face starvation
I think I'm gonna be sick.
Robert Mugabe and his wife Grace are this weekend preparing for a lavish wedding anniversary celebration by approving a guest list that includes the names of African leaders seeking massive debt relief for their impoverished countries.
Now I know I'm gonna be sick. Please tell me Geldof and Bono sent their regrets...
"It will be a classy, royal-like occasion," a government source said in Harare. "The Mugabes will be driven from a church service at Kutama Mission outside Harare where they were married in August 1996 in an open Rolls-Royce with horses in front. That's how they want it."
They should be driven from the church in chains and sackcloth.
The wedding anniversary party will reportedly cost close to £1m. It will be preceded by a Mugabe family trip to an as yet unnamed country with close ties to Zimbabwe - possibly Libya.
Gah.
The all-day party will be partly paid for by President Mugabe - one of Africa's wealthiest men - partly by impoverished Zimbabwean taxpayers and partly by local companies seeking to stay in business at a time when the words "ethnic cleansing" are never far away from the lips of European, Asian and middle-class African businesspeople. Grace Mugabe is 40 years younger than her husband. The couple met when President Mugabe was still a married man.
They were probably introduced by Suha Arafat, who knows from golddiggers and mass murdering klepto-thugocrats.
His first wife, Ghanaian-born Sally Mugabe, died in 1992 and 40 days of national mourning was declared. Then rumours started that the austere Catholic-educated Mugabe had been having an affair for years with a State House security operative, Grace Marufa. Robert Mugabe fathered two children with her - Robert Jnr (now 18) and Bona, who is 16. The children were presented to almost 30,000 wedding guests at the end of August 1996. Since then the couple have had a third child. They will have a 10th wedding anniversary celebration next year. "It will probably be held at Mugabe's multi-million-pound palace in the suburb of Borrowdale," said a source in the ruling Zanu-PF party. "This year's anniversary will be huge. Next year's will be unnecessary colossal," he said, owing to the unfortunate demise of Mugabe and his Zanu cronies at the hands of an enraged populace.
Posted by: Seafarious || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "an open Rolls Royce with horses in front"

Well, at least the horses will provide appropriate decorations for the parade route.
Posted by: VAMark || 06/12/2005 11:58 Comments || Top||

#2  If you want to find Mugabe, just look for a horse's ass.
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 12:33 Comments || Top||

#3  "President Mugabe - one of Africa's wealthiest men"
Help me out here: why does Kofi want to tax us 0.7% of our income and send it to places like Zimbabwe and North Korea?
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 14:27 Comments || Top||

#4  Tom - because he's a fellow kleptocrat.

He just kills people indirectly with incompetent UN "peacekeepers," while lining his pockets on the backs of people who actually work for a living.

Does Zim-bob-we have absolutely NO snipers? :-(
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 06/12/2005 18:23 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan/South Asia
Bomb defused in passenger bus
QUETTA: Heavy explosive material found in a bus was defused after passengers informed the police, said Deputy Inspector General of Police Salman Syed on Friday. He said that bus was coming from Kuchlak village, some 25 kilometres north of Quetta when passengers brought to the notice of police near Hazra that an identified man left a bag in the bus. The DIG said that there were four slabs of explosives that could cause enormous damage on explosion. He said that the police had started investigation.
Another of those "accidental" bombs, was it? Or was this one intentional?

Posted by: Seafarious || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Maybe they left they skool bag under the seat.

/muck4doo
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 12:20 Comments || Top||

#2  hmmm does everyone in Pak have access to plastic explosives and acid (to throw in the face of any woman who sez 'no')?
Posted by: Frank G || 06/12/2005 12:40 Comments || Top||

#3  Hell Frank, of course. We collect C4 for poor kidz backpacks around here.
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 15:07 Comments || Top||


Nepal Necropsies Numerated
Communist rebels ambushed a public bus east of Nepal's capital, killing at least six soldiers and two civilians on board, the Nepalese army said Saturday. The brave rebels hid in bushes beside the mountainous highway Friday evening and fired at the passing bus, which carried soldiers along with civilians, the army said in a statement from its headquarters. The attack near the village of Narke, 75 miles east of the capital, Katmandu, came several days after rebel leaders said they would no longer attack civilian vehicles or targets. On Monday, guerrillas bombed a civilian bus in southern Nepal, killing at least 38 people. The rebels said that attack was a mistake.
Sure. Rat bastards.
Posted by: Steve White || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:


Woman dies from acid burns
A woman hospitalised after her husband and in-laws allegedly threw acid on her died in Bahawalpur Victoria Hospital on Saturday. Atiqur Rehman told the Naushra Jadid police that his sister Rozina was killed by her husband Asgher after she opposed his plan for second marriage. On Friday, Asgher's sister Fatima and Shammoo threw acid on Rozina and her little daughter Sonia when they were asleep. Both were taken to the hospital where Rozina died.
Posted by: Seafarious || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:


Iraq-Jordan
Syria PM meets Iraqi ministers, says keen on security
His own security, he means.
DAMASCUS - Syrian Prime Minister Naji al-Otari discussed economic cooperation with two Iraqi ministers on Saturday and said Syria was keen to promote the stability and security of its neighbour.

US officials have repeatedly accused Syria of not doing enough to prevent militants from crossing into Iraq to fight its forces. Syria, which opposed the US-led war in Iraq, says it is cooperating for Iraq stability. "The prime minister emphasised Syria's keenness on the security and stability of Iraq and that its future is set in line with its own will and in the framework of its unity both in terms of territory and people," the official news agency said.

Otari's remarks came after a meeting in Damascus with Iraqi Electricity Minister and Mohsen Shalash and Water Resources Minister Abdul Latif Rasheed. Their visit is the first announced meeting of this level between senior Syrian and Iraqi officials since July 2004 when former caretaker Prime Minister Iyad Allawi visited Damascus to discuss cooperation, especially on security.

The agency said the talks focused on "cooperation between Syria and Iraq and the necessity of developing and enhancing it in a manner that achieves common interests in economy, development, water and power projects". Otari said Syria was willing to "support and respond to the needs of the brethren in Iraq and offer all forms of help required for the reconstruction of facilities and services".

Syrian officials said they were waiting for Iraq to send officials to ink a security cooperation agreement discussed during Allawi's 2004 visit. Syria complains that the United States and Britain did not deliver on a promise to give the Arab state high technology systems to better monitor the desert border that straddles over around 600 km (375 miles).
We can give them to you. In fact, we'll assign US/UK teams to help run the equipment 24/7. For training purposes, of course. How much fairer can we be?
Syria plans to increase the level of diplomatic representation in Iraq to an ambassador, maybe after a possible visit to Damascus by Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari. It has an interests' office in Baghdad eastblished in the era of Saddam, whose chronic tensions with Damascus led to the closure of missions in the early 1980s.
Posted by: Steve White || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:


China-Japan-Koreas
China to Have Strategic Oil Reserve Soon
China is on track to complete building its first strategic oil reserve storage tanks by August, but Beijing has not indicated when it may start filling them in the face of high oil prices, an industry official said on Friday.

The world's second-largest oil consumer after the United States will finish the crude oil tank farm in Zhenhai, located in the port city of Ningbo in the booming east coast province of Zhejiang, on schedule with plans announced last year, he said.

No salt domes, just tanks? Heck, this military district is already responsible for Taiwan, just add a few more targets into the mix.

The 5.2 million-cubic-meter (33 million-barrel) facility will hold about one-third of China's initial planned emergency reserves, the foundation of state efforts to bolster energy security as consumption soars and domestic output plateaued.

"The entire infrastructure in Zhenhai will be completed by August. But prices are so high right now and it is not clear when Beijing will kick off emergency stockpiling activities," the Chinese official told Reuters.

A top Chinese government official said last week that China would build up its emergency stockpile gradually, lessening the impact on global energy prices.

He did not say when Beijing could begin filling the tanks, a move being closely monitored by oil traders fearful that even a modest build will add stress to a taut global crude market that some fear may struggle to meet global demand later this year.

China's oil demand is forecast to rise by almost 8 percent this year to nearly 7 million barrels per day (bpd), half last year's explosive growth rate but still increasing its dependence on foreign crude.

Cars are selling like hotcakes these days. And Chinese rarely buy used cars.

It now imports 40 percent of its oil needs and the growing reliance on imports has moved energy up the political agenda, especially as prices cling above $50 a barrel.

China has also earmarked three other sites for strategic stocks along the eastern seaboard, aiming to build a total of 16.2 million cubic meters (101.9 million barrels) of reserves in the next five years, equivalent to 20 days of consumption.

Whee, 20 days. I suppose the giant U.S. supply is only 60 days, but still.

This would augment the commercial stocks of the country's major refiners and importers, who typically hold 10 to 30 days worth of supplies, and give Beijing some cushion against any unexpected supply outages, particularly from the Middle East.

The other crude oil tanks will be in Aoshan in Zhejiang, Huangdao in Shandong and Dalian in Liaoning.

The capacity in Aoshan will be similar to Zhenhai, while the other two sites will each boost 30 tankers storing up to 3 million cubic meters of oil.
Posted by: gromky || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  It's a good thing. Reserves have a quieting effect on price swings.
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 11:31 Comments || Top||

#2  Price will go up - with China purchasing all the "extra" oil necessary to fill it's new strategic reserve (demand ^. then price ^)
Posted by: Hupavilet Sholuth6087 || 06/12/2005 17:31 Comments || Top||

#3  In the short term yes, but consider the long term price viz. short term fluctuations in the ice market.... in Pensacola last year it was 1.5 us a lb on the nreal spot market.. the price variation was soon dampened by the large terrestrial ice reserves.
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 19:47 Comments || Top||

#4  To wit Ima mean the short term increase price caused by demand was quickly damped by a large reserve.

/Macro is easy
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 19:48 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan/South Asia
Kashmir Korpse Kount
SRINAGAR, India - Nine people have died in fresh violence in revolt-hit Indian Kashmir including six militants who were shot dead by troops, two of them inside a mosque, police said on Saturday.

Two rebels died late Friday in a gun battle at a Shiite mosque in the Wullarhama village in southern Anantnag district, a police statement said. The mosque was damage in the clash, in which two security force personnel were also wounded.

Four more militants were killed in two other clashes, police said, adding that two policemen died in the gunbattles. In a separate incident, suspected rebels killed a civilian late Friday, police said.
Posted by: Steve White || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Nine people?

More like Three people.

The six terrorists probably mostly Pakistani Punjabis, can hardly be called "people".
Posted by: john || 06/12/2005 7:11 Comments || Top||


Europe
Krekar threatens to leave courtroom
What is it with these people? Oh, that's right: the only court is a Shari'a court. BTW, the caption for the foto is "Krekar studies the Koran during his appeals trial in Oslo." I didn't know the Koran covers Norwegian immigration law...
Mullah Krekar became visibly upset with assistant government advocate Tolle Stabell's line of questioning and threatened to leave the room during Friday's proceedings at Oslo's court of appeals. Stabell began his questioning of mullah Krekar by trying to determine Krekar's interpretation of "jihad" and whether he felt that Islam could approve of armed reaction to political disagreement. Krekar called Stabell's approach, which included a mention of the assassination of Egyptian president Anwar Sadat in 1981 as a waste of his designated court time. Krekar is trying to overturn the decision to expel him from Norway on the grounds that he is a national security risk and has violated the terms of his residence. "This has nothing to do with the deportation ruling. You are judging my statements. If you compel me I will leave the courtroom," Krekar said, clearly agitated and upset. Krekar, born Najmuddin Faraj Ahmad, is the former leader of militant Kurdish Islamic group Ansar al-Islam. Krekar has previously said that Anwar Sadat was an infidel that came to power in Egypt via a coup and that he deserved to die.
Also:
Former Ansar Al-Islam leader mullah Krekar compared his goal for Kurds with the establishment of the state of Israel as he testified in his trial to overturn a decision to expel him from Norway. On Thursday morning mullah Krekar began his explanation of why he should not be sent out of the country.
"It's like this, yer Honor..."
Before beginning his testimony the mullah kissed the Koran and said that Norwegian authorities were justified in their investigation but explained that he felt a victim of religious persecution. "I perceive this as being due to my faith. Sixty years ago it was the Jews in this situation, 27 years ago it was the Shia Muslims. Today they all have power in their countries," mullah Krekar said.
Posted by: Seafarious || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  If you compel me I will leave the courtroom," Krekar said...

...and the courthouse, and the city, and the country, and the continent.

By George, I think he's got it!
Posted by: Darth VAda || 06/12/2005 1:30 Comments || Top||

#2  Shouldn't he have the Koran memorized by this time in his life?
Posted by: Raj || 06/12/2005 9:58 Comments || Top||

#3  No, all the 'Hol'le'y 'K'Qur'ram's's' smell funny since the deadly 'flu'i'ing incident and make you forget that 'a''ll''ah' is not god and 'mo'hamme'med was a damned liar.

/end Sunday school lesson
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 10:33 Comments || Top||

#4  "This has nothing to do with the deportation ruling. You are judging my statements. If you compel me I will leave the courtroom," Krekar said, clearly agitated and upset."

...and no doubt go back to doing his one man show based on the work of Andy Kaufman, Latka Lives!.
All kidding aside, I'm pretty sure what happened here is that the line of questioning wasn't quite what he'd convinced himself it would be.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski || 06/12/2005 11:03 Comments || Top||

#5  deport him to someplace totally without a sense of humor and a real dislike for Islamist assholes
Posted by: Frank G || 06/12/2005 11:26 Comments || Top||

#6  "This has nothing to do with the deportation ruling. You are judging my statements. If you compel me I will leave the courtroom," Krekar said, clearly agitated and upset.

Why YES, we are going to judge you by your statements! Muslims do it ALL THE TIME to others, so it is high time it be DONE TO YOU.
Posted by: Ptah || 06/12/2005 15:06 Comments || Top||


Southeast Asia
Court acquits 8 charged with 2002 Mumbai bus blast
A court in India acquitted eight people Saturday who were blamed for planting a bomb in a bus in the western commercial centre of Mumbai, formerly known as Bombay, in 2002 that killed two and injured 50. The accused, all Muslims, were acquitted by judge A.P. Bhangale who said the prosecution had failed to prove the charges.
Better luck next bomb!
Police had sought to build a case that the accused planned the December 2002 bus blast to avenge the deaths of hundreds of Muslims who died in Hindu-Muslim riots in February 2002 in neighbouring Gujarat state. The prosecution's case suffered a setback in March when key witnesses failed to identify the accused. The sprawling commercial centre of Mumbai, which is also famous for its shadowy underworld, has seen several bombings in the past and was rocked in 1993 by a series of blasts which killed some 250 people and injured over 1,000. The 1993 blasts were termed an act of revenge by Muslim mafia for the demolition of an ancient mosque by Hindu fanatics a few month earlier. Several top underworld bosses, who fled the country after the attacks, face charges over the blasts. In August 2003, two huge car bombs — one of them outside the city's famous Gateway of India monument — killed 52 people and injured 150.0. Police have blamed Muslim underground figures and Kashmiri militants for most of the blasts.
Posted by: Seafarious || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:


Iraq-Jordan
Saddam's lawyers ''left in the dark''
Saddam Hussein's lawyers said they have not yet been given any details of the case against him.
Drive the lawyers out to one of the mass graves. Point. Don't say a word. Repeat daily.
Iraq's government has said the former dictator could go trial within months over alleged crimes against humanity. But the lawyers said they have none of the estimated eight million documents relating to the case, and have not been formally told of the charges. Saddam Hussein has been allowed two meetings with his lawyers since his capture in December 2003. The complaints from his Jordan-based lawyers cast serious doubts on the claim that his trial could begin on schedule, said the BBC's John Leyne in Amman.
I'm not an internationally recognized expert in jurisprudence, but I really do think this is going to be a simple affair.
One doesn't get to be a internationally recognized expert in jurisprudence by keeping things simple, methinks. Somebody's gotta go to the conferences and award ceremonies and CNN.
Conferences and ceremonies? Is that all? Sign me up!
A spokesman for the legal team, Issam Ghazzawi, said recent pictures of Saddam Hussein in his underwear that appeared in the British Sun newspaper showed that the former Iraqi leader''s basic human rights were being violated. "You see that his rights are violated as a human being, not only as a president," Ghazzawi said. "He's not treated well in the prison regarding to his status as prisoner of war and president of Iraq."
With 100% of the vote, remember.
Last week the Iraqi government said Saddam Hussein could face as few as 12 charges when he goes on trial. There had been speculation he might face as many as 500 charges, but an Iraqi spokesman said there was no point "wasting time" with that many.
Somebody has my idea of jurisprudence.
"We are completely confident that the 12 fully documented charges that have been brought against him are more than sufficient to ensure he receives the maximum sentence," government spokesman Leith Kubba told reporters on Sunday. Saddam Hussein would face the death penalty if convicted. On Thursday, Iraq''s Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari said he may well be put to death - but only if he is convicted before a transparent trial. "We think that every crime has a proportionate punishment, but there can be no execution without proving the crime," he said.
That's for European consumption.
However, Saddam Hussein's lawyers insist he is innocent of all the crimes of which he is accused - from the gassing of the Kurds to the murder of women and children found in mass graves in southern Iraq.
"Lies! All lies! Hey! Stop laughing at us!"
Ghazzawi said the appropriate channel for the accusations was not through the media, but with a proper indictment issued through the court.
Posted by: Steve White || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  However, Saddam Hussein's lawyers insist he is innocent of all the crimes of which he is accused - from the gassing of the Kurds to the murder of women and children found in mass graves in southern Iraq.

"Insanity! I plead insanity!!!"
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 06/12/2005 5:14 Comments || Top||

#2  Saddam Hussein's lawyers said they have not yet been given any details of the case against him.

Neither was Perry Mason.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 06/12/2005 6:58 Comments || Top||

#3  I'll drive into Basra and nose around a little. I'll be back 12 minutes into the trial.
Posted by: P Drake || 06/12/2005 7:47 Comments || Top||

#4  His lawyers are smoking and drinking the same thing Bagdad Bob was. I remember the tanks in the background as Bob was tellin the media they were kicking our ass! Now the legal fools are using the same ploy. This trial will be a simple one that a first year law student could win.
Posted by: 49 pan || 06/12/2005 9:28 Comments || Top||

#5  Left in the dark, eh?

Better they were left in the cell with Soddom. They can all hold hands and sing "We Are Family" - right up until they're all hanged with their client.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 06/12/2005 15:01 Comments || Top||

#6  Left in the dark.

Good. Maybe you can see the ghosts of all the children murdered by the man you are trying to free?
Posted by: Jackal || 06/12/2005 17:19 Comments || Top||

#7  Saddam's laywers "left in the dark"

Well, that's the best time to find cockroaches, isn't it?
Posted by: Jereter Jomoling2160 || 06/12/2005 17:40 Comments || Top||

#8  typo - should've been "bred in the dark"
Posted by: Frank G || 06/12/2005 18:49 Comments || Top||

#9  Well Perry, down in Basara there saying it's a done deal. Are you on retainer? Take care of yourself I fear a wheelchairs in your future.Hopper1
Mum sez HI
Posted by: P Drake || 06/12/2005 20:12 Comments || Top||


Africa: Subsaharan
AU chairman welcomes debt relief deal
LAGOS - Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, who is the African Union (AU) chairman, on Saturday said an agreement reached in London to provide debt relief for 18 of the world's poorest countries was "a welcome development," according to his spokeswoman.
"Mastercard upped my limit again and sent me a bunch of courtesy checks. Now I can buy that island I've had my eye on."
"The fact that we have been on it for a long time, this (debt relief) is a welcome development," Oluremi Oyo quoted him as saying while reacting to the development at a traditional ceremony in Ijebu-Ode in southwest Nigeria. "As chairman of AU, this is what he has been campaigning for. What has happened in London is a manifestation of his efforts and those of other African leaders and a vindication of his campaign for debt relief for poor African countries," she also quoted her boss as saying. "Nigeria is looking forward to a special arrangement with the G8 on debt relief," Obasanjo said, according to Oyo who spoke to AFP on telephone.
And he's looking forward to an 8% commission.
"Daiquiris, anyone? I'll have my houseboy whip up a fresh batch. And do try these petit fours. They're delicious."
Posted by: Steve White || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  ifn I could get some debt relief maybe I could hire some aliens to make me some new steps for my trailer house, stepping on this old motor block kida iffy in the present wet circumances i find myself in
Posted by: Half || 06/12/2005 12:31 Comments || Top||

#2  I can't imagine why he would need debt relief considering how many of his people send me e-mails offering me millions of dollars to assist them in getting money out of his country.
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 14:48 Comments || Top||


Arabia
Kuwait prosecution demands death penalty for 34 militants
KUWAIT CITY - Kuwait's public prosecutor demanded Saturday the death penalty for 34 of 37 militants suspected of links to Al Qaeda and deadly clashes with police in January as their trial resumed here. The request for the death sentences against 34 militants, including a woman, came in the charge sheet.
Most excellent.
The charges include joining an illegal extremist group, the Peninsula Lions Brigade, reportedly linked with the Saudi Al-Haramain Brigades and Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda network. They are also charged with carrying out terrorist acts, participating in the killing of several policemen and plotting to attack US forces and citizens in the oil-rich Gulf emirate. The trial, which opened on May 24, resumed amid tight security. One of 11 men initially tried in absentia, Nuri Mutashar Mudallal, turned himself in during the hearing. Mudallal, 30, is one of seven bidoon, or stateless Arabs, in the group. Twenty-five defendants are Kuwaitis, two Jordanians and one each from Saudi Arabia, Australia and Somalia, the case documents showed. Most of the suspects are accused of involvement in four gunbattles with Kuwaiti security forces in January that left four police officers dead and 10 others wounded. Eight militants were killed in the fighting, while the alleged leader of the group died in police detention eight days after his arrest on January 31.
This article starring:
NURI MUTASHAR MUDALLALPeninsula Lions Brigade
Posted by: Steve White || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  carry through to the finish and I'll be impressed
Posted by: Frank G || 06/12/2005 12:20 Comments || Top||

#2  "...an illegal extremist group, the Peninsula Lions Brigade, reportedly linked with the Saudi..."
Always the Saudi's. Some day people are going to collect pieces of Saudi glass just for that cool glow-in-the-dark characteristic it will have.
Posted by: Tom || 06/12/2005 14:40 Comments || Top||

#3  Some day people are going to collect pieces of Saudi glass just for that cool glow-in-the-dark characteristic it will have.

Good one. That goes on my Cool and Pointed Sayings of Truth list.
Posted by: too true || 06/12/2005 18:10 Comments || Top||


Europe
9/11 suspect resists expulsion from Germany
HAMBURG - Mounir al-Motassadeq, 31, the student currently on trial a second time for his alleged role in the September 11, 2001 attacks, will resist German efforts to deport him to Morocco, his lawyer was quoted saying on Saturday.
"Hey! You can't send me there!"
This week legal counsel for another student, Abdel-Ghani Mzoudi, 32, had said their client would voluntarily return to Morocco soon.
"I' goin' back to turban territory!"
His acquittal on terrorism and accessory-to-murder charges was confirmed on appeal by Germany's high court. The news weekly Der Spiegel quoted a lawyer saying Motassadeq insisted on staying in Germany till he had completed a degree at a technical university in suburban Hamburg. The story was released two days before Der Spiegel's publication Monday. The lawyer, Udo Jacob, said Motassadeq would resist a deportation order served on him last year "to the last court of appeal". That order is currently in suspense while Motassadeq, who is free on bail, participates in his own trial for being a member of a terrorist organization. Prosecutors say he knew of the plot and helped three of the 9-11 suicide pilots who were Hamburg students. Under current scheduling, a verdict is expected in August. He was convicted and sentenced to 15 years in jail at his first trial, but the verdict was quashed on appeal.

Hamburg officials say that even without a conviction for plotting the attacks on New York and Washington, there are ample grounds to deport both Moroccans. Evidence showed both attended Al Qaeda training camps in Afghanistan. The Spiegel online news service said earlier it was not clear what would happen to the men in Morocco, but that Morocco had been known to hand over terrorism suspects to US authorities who took them to third countries for the Central Intelligence Agency to question.
Perhaps we could finish his 'education' at the University of Diego Garcia.

This article starring:
ABDEL GHANI MZUDIal-Qaeda
MUNIR AL MOTASADEQal-Qaeda
Posted by: Steve White || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I hear that school has an excellent solitary confinement independent studies program. Good for Mounir!
Posted by: Raj || 06/12/2005 10:14 Comments || Top||

#2  "You are all infidels!.....I want to stay!!!"
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 06/12/2005 22:48 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan/South Asia
Bomb blasts rock South Waziristan
Two remote-controlled bomb blasts rocked the Makeen area of South Waziristan on Saturday morning, but no casualties or damage was reported, an official said. Security forces surrounded the area soon after the explosions and searched suspected homes for terrorists but made no arrests, said the official, who asked not to be named. In a separate incident, unidentified people attacked a tribesman's home with a bomb, wounding his two young children. Witnesses told Daily Times that Salim Khan's two-storey house was attacked with a bomb late Friday night, and his two children were injured when the roof of their room caved in.
Posted by: Seafarious || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:


Pak rape victim asks govt to lift restrictions on her movement
Follow-up on yesterday's story. Very EFL.
A Pakistani woman who was gang-raped on orders from a village council asked the government on Saturday to lift restrictions on her movement, a day after a court ordered the release of a dozen men detained in her high-profile case. Mukhtar Mai, 36, said she had suddenly been included without explanation on a government list of people who cannot leave Pakistan.

"Now, police deployed at my home for my protection are not allowing me to go anywhere," Mai told The Associated Press by phone from Meerwala village, about 565 kilometers (350 miles) southwest of Islamabad where she lives with her family. "I demand that all restrictions on my movement be lifted so that I could travel to Islamabad to meet with my lawyer," she said.
I think Ms. Mai should get a medical visa to come to the US for treatment. She undoubtedly has problems related to her attack that will require therapy for oh, 2 to 3 years. At some point when things are quiet we could grant her and her family asylum. Works for me.
Posted by: Steve White || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Did the Pak government arrange for Mukhtar's rapists to be released so they would have an excuse to keep her 'under protection'?

The Mukhtar Mai case, one of the most sordid high-profile cases in Pakistan’s recent history, seems to be getting even more sordid. On June 10, a full-bench of the Lahore High Court released the 12 accused in the alleged gang-rape case...Insiders, however, say there may be more to it than meets the eye. Amnesty International had invited Mukhtar Mai to an awards ceremony. It seems that the government did not want her to go abroad, fearing that the Western press would write about her ordeal and whatever she might say would be bad for Pakistan’s image. So it decided not to let Mukhtar Mai go abroad by putting her name on the Exit Control List. Interestingly enough, when international pressure on the government to let her go increased, the LHC announced it was releasing the accused. This gave the government an opportunity to quickly cordon off her house and refuse to let her out on the pretext that her security was at risk, following the release of the accused.
Posted by: Paul Moloney || 06/12/2005 0:37 Comments || Top||


Iraq-Jordan
Iraqi Sunnis reject compromise offer
BAGHDAD: Political leaders of Iraq''s Sunni minority rejected a compromise offer on giving them more say in the drafting of a constitution on Friday, reports Reuters.
Oh well. Guess they'll just have to be marginalized for a while. Insh'allan.
Scattered violence, including the discovery of 16 victims of execution-style killings and a gun attack on a Shi''ite mosque in Baghdad, highlighted the dangers if growing friction among Iraq''s religious and ethnic communities. The identities of the dead found at two spots near the Syrian border were unclear. But there were fears for the lives of 20 or more soldiers from the mainly Shi''ite south who were kidnapped nearby, apparently by Sunni al Qaeda fighters.
There is no excuse for soldiers being kidnapped. Our guys walk around with their weapons, armor and a full ammo load at all times. Iraqi soldiers should do the same. If an al-Q fighter tries to kidnap you, grease them. They'll get the idea.
It was not clear how the Shi''ite-dominated National Assembly and government would react to the rejection by the main Sunni political group of an offer of more seats on the parliamentary committee charged with drafting a constitution by Aug. 15. Further wrangling could jeopardize that deadline.

A spokesman for the Gathering of the Sunni People said they would hold out for 25 seats against the 15 on offer. He said they would boycott negotiations if arbitration by a three-person panel consisting of a Sunni, a parliamentary representative and a United Nations official failed to settle the matter. "We will not agree and will not concede any seat," spokesman Adnan al-Dulaimi said. "If they refuse our demand we will resort to arbitration. If they insist then we will suspend our participation."
I smell a compromise at around 18 to 21 seats.
Calls for a boycott and insurgent violence in Sunni areas meant few of the formerly dominant 20-percent minority took part in the Jan. 30 election. Only 17 Sunnis sit in parliament and only two are now on the 55-seat constitutional committee.
Posted by: Steve White || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  There is no excuse for soldiers being kidnapped. Our guys walk around with their weapons, armor and a full ammo load at all times. Iraqi soldiers should do the same. If an al-Q fighter tries to kidnap you, grease them. They'll get the idea.

I dunno Steve. I've actually watched foreign soldiers surrender in freakin field exercises. As you do in training, so you do in war.

I guess its just something in the national psyche. I can only see maybe a few nations pulling a FLT 93: the UK, Israel, Australia, Singapore, maybe Mongolia. The rest would just sit there and wait for someone to tell them what to do, or would wring their hands impotently, spending their last moments cursing America for pushing the poor Arabs to this point. It may be better to die standing up than live on your knees, but if you're already living on your knees, why bother to waste the energy standing?
Posted by: 11A5S || 06/12/2005 0:16 Comments || Top||

#2  if the iraqi guards had gps stuff we would know where the bad guys were
Posted by: mhw || 06/12/2005 0:31 Comments || Top||

#3  Political leaders of Iraq''s Sunni minority rejected a compromise offer on giving them more say in the drafting of a constitution on Friday, reports Reuters.

Phuck 'em then. This attempt at appeasement has passed, now let them reap the rewards of their actions (and non-actions, as well).
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 06/12/2005 4:59 Comments || Top||

#4  I suggest forming a new category: dumber than Paleos.
Posted by: gromgoru || 06/12/2005 11:20 Comments || Top||

#5  It's still close for the RantBurg meanest spirt of the year.... .com & gromgorum to close to call.

:)
/we should all be so pithy
Posted by: Shipman || 06/12/2005 12:28 Comments || Top||


Arabia
Kuwait Suspects Claim Forced Confessions
Eight suspects accused of joining a terror group that allegedly planned to attack U.S. troops in Kuwait testified Saturday that they were forced to confess after their families were threatened with harm.
"'Fess up, or Mom gets it!"
The suspects, among 22 total, all pleaded innocent when the trial opened last month. They were also accused of killing policemen in a series of deadly clashes this year in this small, oil-rich country.
"They forced us to do that, too!"
In an earlier hearing, seven other the defendants had told the court that they also confessed under duress; four of them removed their shirts in the courtroom to display scars on their backs.
Classic Jihadi 101..."The State beat me up."
Hussam Youssef Abdul-Rahim, a Jordanian defendant, said state security threatened to sexually abuse his wife, who was detained in another room, if he didn't say he knew that members of the group - who once lived in his apartment - had fought battles with police.
"Hrarrr! That's right! We'll have our way with the wench!"
"I asked them to have mercy on me because I had undergone an operation on my right testicle, so they lashed me on it with a stick," he said.
"Ow."
I'm comfortably certain that hurts.
Just reading the words brought tears to my eyes, even while I remained comfortably apathetic. Strange, conflicting emotion and lack thereof...
The gang's alleged ringleader, Amer al-Enezi, was captured in one of the clashes in January and died in a hospital of what the Interior Ministry said was a
*Ahem*
heart attack.
Ultimately, any form of death can be put down to heart failure, can't it?
Majed Mayyah al-Mutairi, one of the suspects, testified Saturday that he was brought to visit Al-Enezi and that the leader had been "cut to pieces."
Note: if your name is Enezi or Mutairi, you're GUILTY. Go directly to jail and moulder there for the rest of your inbred life. Insh'allah.
Al-Mutairi, 33, said he himself was not beaten but it "was enough" for him to see the tortured ringleader to sign a false confession.
"Sign here, lad, or you're next!... Mahmoud, get him some more Depends!"
The majority of those in custody face the death sentence or life in prison if convicted. Most of the defendants are charged with joining the Lions of Peninsula, a group "based on extremist ideology" and rebellious against state institutions.
Kuwaiti Cadre of Al-Q.
Four policemen and eight suspected terrorists believed connected to the group were killed in clashes across the country in January. The shootouts brought terrorism to the streets of Kuwait for the first time.
... but the coppers made them do it! Really!

This article starring:
AMER AL ENEZIPeninsula Lions Brigade
HUSAM YUSEF ABDUL RAHIMPeninsula Lions Brigade
MAJED MAIYAH AL MUTAIRIPeninsula Lions Brigade
Lions of Peninsula
Posted by: Seafarious || 06/12/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:



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Two weeks of WOT
Sun 2005-06-12
  Eight Killed by Bomb Blasts in Iran
Sat 2005-06-11
  Paleo security forces shoot it out with hard boyz
Fri 2005-06-10
  Arab lawyers join forces to defend Saddam Hussein
Thu 2005-06-09
  Italy hostage released in Kabul
Wed 2005-06-08
  California father and son linked al-Qaeda, arrested
Tue 2005-06-07
  U.S-Iraqi offensive launched near Syria
Mon 2005-06-06
  Iraq Nabs Nearly 900 Suspected Militants
Sun 2005-06-05
  Marines uncover bunker complex, Saddam sad.
Sat 2005-06-04
  Iraqi troops nab 'prince of princes'
Fri 2005-06-03
  Virgin Airbus Jet Emitting Hijack Signal Lands In Canada; False Alert
Thu 2005-06-02
  Bomb kills anti-Syria journalist in Beirut
Wed 2005-06-01
  At least 27 dead in Afghanistan mosque suicide blast
Tue 2005-05-31
  At least six killed in Karachi mosque attack
Mon 2005-05-30
  Doc faces terror charges in Palm Beach
Sun 2005-05-29
  "Non."

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