Saturday, September 30, 2006

The Decider is also The Torturer~Congress fails to uphold The Constitution

Published on Saturday, September 30, 2006 by CommonDreams.org

Democracy The Big Loser on Habeas Corpus


The messianic, authoritarian George W. Bush and the minds of his cohorts have further collapsed the rule of law with his bulldozing through a divided Congress more dictatorial powers in his increasingly self-defined, self-serving and failing "war on terror."

The normally restrained /New York Times/ in an editorial titled "Rushing off a Cliff" condemned Bush's "ghastly ideas about antiterrorism that will make American troops less safe and do lasting damage to our 217 year-old nation of laws-while doing nothing to protect the nation from terrorists. Democrats betray their principles to avoid last-minute attack ads. Our democracy is the big loser."

Bush has concentrated so much arbitrary power in his Presidency that he can be described in the vernacular as the torturer-in-chief, the jailer-in-chief and the arrestor-in-chief. Who needs the courts? Who needs the constitutional rights to habeas corpus
for defendants to be able to argue that they were wrongfully arrested or capriciously imprisoned indefinitely without being charged?

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Rice: Clinton Claims 'Flatly False'



Secretary Of State Challenges Ex-President's Record On Fighting Terror

WASHINGTON, Sept. 26, 2006
(AP / CBS)

"The notion somehow for eight months the Bush administration sat there and didn't do that is just flatly false — and I think the 9/11 commission understood that."

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice

(CBS/AP) Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice challenged former President Bill Clinton's claim that he did more than many of his conservative critics to pursue al Qaeda, saying in an interview published Tuesday that the Bush administration aggressively pursued the group even before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Bill Clinton out foxes Faux News


Clinton’s interview with Chris Wallace on Fox News Sunday. In this clip, Wallace asks Clinton why he didn’t do more to capture or kill Osama bin Laden while he was in office.

Fox News thought that they could strengthen Bush's case by making Bill Clinton look bad for not capturing Bin Laden, and draw some of the attenion from Bush's failure to do so. They didn't have much luck though, as the Rhodes Scholar gave Wallace the facts, and answered his questions with so much information that he tried to backtrack, and ask other questions to distract Clinton, but recieved a few questions himself. There is no question who came out on top on this one, in spite of the whining and crying of the Neocons.

Kieth Olbermann of MSNBC did a follow up of Fox New's interview, in Clintons defense from attacks by Gingrinch and other Neoconservatives.

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

George W Bush wows the New York Public Library



















President and Mrs. Bush Attend White House Conference on Global Literacy
New York Public Library
New York, New York

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you all. Thank you for attending this important conference. I look around the room and see some familiar faces -- my mother. (Laughter.) How are you doing? It's good to see you. My mother-in-law. (Laughter.) Both of these ladies have instilled a great passion for literacy not only in Laura and me, but for others around our country. Thank you all for coming. Laura, thank you for your leadership

As you probably can tell, our government takes this initiative seriously. After all, we've got the Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, and the Secretary of Education, Margaret Spellings, both here. It should say to people loud and clear that, when you combine the resources of the Department of Education and the State Department, that we're serious about helping global literacy. And then we've added Randy Tobias, who's the head of USAID. He's the fellow who's got the responsibility of handing out some money -- (laughter) -- which is what we're doing, because we believe strongly in this initiative. So I want to thank you all for taking time out of your busy schedules to send a clear message to folks.

I mean, think about it, it's pretty clear; in order to be an informed consumer you have to read. In order to be able to take advantages of jobs that may come to your country as a result of expanding economic opportunity, you've got to read. In order to be a productive worker, you have to be able to read the manual. And so part of this initiative, part of the practical application of this initiative is to encourage prosperity by enhancing people's capacity to read. And I want to thank you for your focus on that important issue.

But one thing that's for certain: It is very hard to have free societies if the citizens cannot read. Think about that. It's much harder for a society to realize the universal blessings of liberty if your citizens can't read the newspaper in order to be able to make informed choices and decisions about what may be taking place in a country. You can't realize the blessings of liberty if you can't read a ballot, or if you can't read what others are saying about the future of your country.

Friday, September 22, 2006

The Internet of Tomorrow

Google, corporate interests, and politics

PAC to raise money for causes, candidates; lobbyists on board

Verne Kopytoff, John Wildermuth, Chronicle Staff Writers

Saturday, September 16, 2006: Under fire on Capitol Hill, Google Inc. has boosted its political muscle by creating its first political action committee while taking steps to reach out to Republicans.

The Mountain View search-engine company joins a sizable club of corporate titans that have established major political operations in Washington in hopes of influencing legislation and votes.

Sergey Brin is one of the founders of the Mountain View company.




"Google probably learned that to be successful, you have to make campaign contributions," said Bob Stern, president of the Center for Governmental Studies in Los Angeles and an expert on money in politics. "I'm sure they've been told time and time again by everyone in Washington that 'If you want to play, you play by our rules.' ''





Larry Page is co-founder of the Internet search-engine giant. Associated Press photo by Noah Berger







Google is also a member of the World Economic Forum
Industry Partners are select member companies of the World Economic Forum who strongly support the Forum's commitment to improve the state of the world. The Industry Partnership leverages the unparalleled convening power of the Forum in a unique way, bringing together select Members of the Forum through a series of integrated modules throughout the year. The Industry Partnership will facilitate strategic decision-making for its participants by providing privileged access to industry-specific and cross-industry insights.

Connie Mack, ex-Republican senator from Florida, is on board. Associated Press file photo, 2005, by Kevin Wolf




What does this mean to "We The People", who use the facilities that Google offers us? So far, their primary source of revenues is advertising, and we are offered free email, a free web log, free bookmarks, free too bar, and more...While storing all of this data in their huge banks of servers all over the world, we are part of the data that is brought up in their search engines, and become dependent on a premier service that can't help but to become involved with corporate government.

Should we be concerned?




Dan Coats is a former Indiana GOP senator who will lobby for Google. Associated Press file photo, 1996, by Tom Strattman

How many LED's does it take to change the light bulb?

Sep 21st 2006
From The Economist print edition
Lighting technology: The light bulb is synonymous with invention. But, as this case history explains, it may lose out to the light-emitting diode, which is better in many ways

An even brighter idea

Corbis

HOW long does it take to change a light bulb? According to iSuppli, a market-research company that specialises in technology trends, the answer is 131 years. That is the amount of time that will have elapsed between 1879, when Thomas Edison first demonstrated his incandescent light bulb, and 2010, when semiconductor-based light-emitting diodes (LEDs) are expected to have made significant inroads into general illumination, a market worth $15 billion.

George W Bush - Fool Me Once

George W Bush proving why he was certainly the best choice for President.

Thursday, September 21, 2006

The magnificent four double cross the American people

America legalizes torture; Dems get played badly

Posted by Joshua Holland at 6:24 PM on September 21, 2006.

This could not possibly have worked out any worse

This afternoon, the White House announced that a deal had been struck with the Senate GOP "rebels" -- McCain, Warner and Graham -- that will basically continue the status quo on prisoner detentions and "coercive" interrogations. McCain, it appears, set up the Dems and the media most deftly, and then turned around and sold out America's values for a few primary votes in 2008.

************************
Well ...the magnificent four lied to us., and handed over the keys of the dungeon to our War President, who will soon have absolute
power to do anything he wants to anybody he wants to. This was an action, meant to deceive, but what can we expect from this administration. The Democrats were snoozing while John Mc'Cain lied to us and then double crossed the American public.

McCain: No compromise on torture ban

• McCain discusses anti-torture legislation
Dec. 4: Sen. John McCain discusses his proposal to ban "cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment" of prisoners held by the United States.
Meet the Press

Updated: 11:02 a.m. PT Dec 4, 2005
WASHINGTON - Sen. John McCain, a prisoner of war who was tortured in Vietnam, said Sunday he will refuse to yield on his demands that the White House agree with his proposed ban on the use of torture to extract information from suspected terrorists.

“I won’t,” he said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” when asked whether he would compromise with the Bush administration. He is insisting on his language that no person in U.S. custody should be subject to “cruel, inhumane, or degrdegrading treatment or punishment.”

---------------------------

President Thanks Senate for Agreement on Pending War on Terror Legislation

~Bill Kristol of the Weekly Standard~


Video: Steven Colbert interviews William Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard, and one of the original signers of The Project For The New American Century.

In this video, Kristol said that Rummy only signed some of the papers, but denied that he was a member of the pnac. However, here is a link to the original Statement of Principles from the PNAC web site.

Iran: ~Same Game...Different Name~


Senior intel official: Pentagon moves to second-stage planning for Iran strike option

Larisa Alexandrovna
Published: Thursday September 21, 2006


The Pentagon's top brass has moved into second-stage contingency planning for a potential military strike on Iran, one senior intelligence official familiar with the plans tells RAW STORY.

The official, who is close to the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the highest ranking officials of each branch of the US military, says the Chiefs have started what is called "branches and sequels" contingency planning.

"The JCS has accepted the inevitable," the intelligence official said, "and is engaged in serious contingency planning to deal with the worst case scenarios that the intelligence community has been painting."

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Willie nelson~What happened to peace on earth


Willie wrote a song last Christmas about what was on his mind. It reflects the thoughts of most Democrats and most everybody that questions the current administration.

What happened to peace on earth
Congressman Dennis Kucinich with Willie Nelson. Video done by Chad Ely. Come and visit kucinich.
4 min - Aug 10, 2006

Bush never had any intentions of leaving Iraq


















Liberating Iraq the Bush Way - Barrel by Barrel

Let me tell you a story about the Secretary of Defense you didn't read in the New York Times, related to me by General Jay Garner, the man our president placed in Baghdad as the US' first post-invasion viceroy. Garner arrived in Kuwait City in March 2003 working under the mistaken notion that when George Bush called for democracy in Iraq, the President meant the Iraqis could choose their own government. Misunderstanding the President's true mission, General Garner called for Iraqis to hold elections within 90 days and for the U.S. to quickly pull troops out of the cities to a desert base. "It's their country," the General told me of the Iraqis. "And," he added, most ominously, "their oil." Let's not forget: it's all about the oil.
Greg Palast: Friday Apr 14, 2006

--------------------------------

WEF

"Iraq's primary industry is oil, and the second largest is banking.
A nation with that much oil has a lot of money going through banks.
This too will be privatized - put into corporate, not Iraqi control."

So instead of being democratically run, Iraq will be run by
corporations. That sounds very much like the US.

"One of the most interesting things is that the World Economic Forum
(WEF) is guiding the transition, not the World Bank."

What's the difference between the World Bank and the World Economic Forum?

"The World Bank is evil enough - a real Darth Vader on the
international scene. But behind every figurehead, there's always a
group of truly evil guys."

That's the WEF?

"The World Economic Forum is a group of powerful international corporations.

"The World Bank is just a middleman. It's an official government
body - a tool of the corporations, but still officially impartial.
It's used to make these transactions less odious on the world stage.

"But the WEF is the corporations themselves. It's not a middleman.
It's the powerbrokers.

"Paul Bremer set up a special meeting of the WEF that took place in
Jordan from June 21 to 23 for the specific purpose of reorganizing
the Iraqi economy.

"By cutting out the middleman - the World Bank - they've made it
perfectly clear that their sole purpose in Iraq is plunder.

"In their own words, the WEF is 'A unique, member-based institution
comprised of the 1,000 foremost corporations worldwide.' WEF members
include British Petroleum, Boeing, Cisco Systems, Coca-Cola, IBM,
Merck, Merrill Lynch, Microsoft, PepsiCo and Pfizer, to name a few.
And that's precisely who's running Iraq.



Unreported: The Zarqawi Invitation
by Greg Palast


They got him -- the big, bad, beheading berserker in Iraq. But, something's gone unreported in all the glee over getting Zarqawi … who invited him into Iraq in the first place?

If you prefer your fairy tales unsoiled by facts, read no further. If you want the uncomfortable truth, begin with this: A phone call to Baghdad to Saddam's Palace on the night of April 21, 2003. It was Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld on a secure line from Washington to General Jay Garner.

The General had arrived in Baghdad just hours before to take charge of the newly occupied nation. The message from Rumsfeld was not a heartwarming welcome. Rummy told Garner, Don't unpack, Jack -- you're fired.

Monday, September 18, 2006


Olbermann: “The President of the United States owes this country an apology”

Barack Obama Has Had Enough


Barack Obama

speaking in Louisville on 9/14

I was wondering when Barack would speak his mind. I think that he has been cooling it as a junior senator long enough. What he is saying here is not in anger, but is an observance of unprecedented trampling on the rights of "We The People", and when this man decides to do something about it, he will have a following that may surprise us all.

Senator Obama

And he has enough honor, integrity, honesty, and savvy to lead this country out of the Neoconservative abyss we are in because of an incompetent liar that became what he wanted to be,...A War President". Now the commander in chief of the most powerful country on the planet, and what used to be the most respected country in the world, says that he has the right to ignore the Geneva convention. That the only way he can get information, is to torture terrorist suspects.

Sunday, September 17, 2006

The Pythagorean theory of music and color


This dude Pythagorius is known for his theorum on the right triangle which is the basis for trigonometry. We don't hear much mention of his philosophy relating to light and sound waves, but it sure makes sense. Maybe if we can play harmonious music, it will affect the vibrations on both lower and higher levels. Whoah...I feel like I'm back in the 1960's.

The Pythagoreans lived in a colony and were subjected to all kinds of abstinences and physical exercises as a preparation for the extraordinary intellectual work which they accomplished. They were deeply concerned with rhythm, with movement, with the analysis of the octave, and with other apparently irrelevant subjects which are studied at Fontainebleau. In some respects the parallel is indeed almost absurdly exact. Pythagoras himself was a Greek who spent many years in Eastern Persia and Afghanistan, and who on returning to Europe established a school for the study and teaching of music and mathematics. He was indeed the founder of European mathematics, of the European theory of music, and of European astronomy. He taught the doctrine of re-incarnation before Buddha; he laid the foundations and solved the crucial problems of pure geometry 200 years before Euclid was born; and he described the earth as a sphere and a planet revolving with the other planets round a 'central fire', 2,000 years before Copernicus.



The Enneagram
These mathematical relations are from the book "In Search Of The Miraculous" by P.D. Ouspensky













1/7=.142857142857142857142857142857142857142857
2/7=.285714285714285714285714285714285714285714
3/7=.428571428571428571428571428571428571428571
4/7=.571428571428571428571428571428571428571428
5/7=.714285714285714285714285714285714285714285
6/7=.857142857142857142857142857142857142857142
7/7=.999999999999999999999999999999999999999

The Pythagorean Theory of Music and Color


DO
RE
MI
FA
SOL
LA
SI
DO

The pythagorean theorum of color and sound points out that all wave lengths behave in the same manner. Just as sound naturally breaks up into 8 notes with the last being double the vibrations of the first, light breaks up into 8 colors in the same manner. In the case of light this can be seen in the rainbow. Sometimes you can see a double rainbow, or even faintly one more.
Ouspenski in his book "IN Search Of The Miraculous" relates mathematics to the philosophy of vibrations and explains in those terms how the notes of the octave are formed, and the two shocks are introduced as the frequency of the waves increase. This all relates to the enneagram.
In music these shocks are the notes formed by the bugle, which forms only four notes, the last being double the vibrations of the first. The native Americans have an instrument that is a string stretched on a bow that they swing in the wind. It too plays these notes. The same notes that are heard in Taps.

See also the teachings of Gurdjieff

Should we really call for Rumsfelds resignation?



















Well...It looks like Rummy is now being used as "the old hat on a stick trick" to draw fire untill the Democrats decide that his resignition isn't really an important issue. He has been exposed for what he is and should probably be left right where he is in the light of day, much like Dubya who is looking pretty ridiculous trying to cover his lies with more lies. This secretive and unaccountable cabal who has taken over our government is no longer trusted by the majority, and is grasping at straws to secure absolute power for their long planned agenda. All this with a puppet that has called hiself "The War President" and commander in chief. A puppet that right after the World Trade disaster ask the American people to speak with one voice. The one voice that we have heard from every member in this administration from that day to the present. Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Condaleeza Rice, Scooter LIbby, John Bolton, Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Armitage, Richard Perle, James Woolsey, & Colon Powell spoke with that voice. General Jay Garner didn't, and was promptly fired, because he thought that we were in Iraq to help the people.

DESERT RATS LEAVE THE SINKING SHIP
WHY RUMSFELD SHOULD NOT RESIGN

REVISION: 11-11-2006 The above link no longer works or has been deleted, but this link to the same artical still exists... RE: Geezerpower

Palast: Why Rumsfeld Should Not Resign
Saturday, 15 April 2006, 1:35 pm
Opinion: Greg Palast


George Bush called for democracy in Iraq, the President meant the Iraqis could choose their own government. Misunderstanding the President's true mission, General Garner called for Iraqis to hold elections within 90 days and for the U.S. to quickly pull troops out of the cities to a desert base. "It's their country," the General told me of the Iraqis. "And," he added, most ominously, "their oil." Let's not forget: it's all about the oil.

Hail to the THIEF!



















How Bush Defeated Gore--The Real Story

Saturday, September 16, 2006

View of the Oregon coast



For Art and Martha. We wish you well in your new home.

A bottle of water costs more than a can of beer?


Well...Being from the times of cheap gas and plentiful water, it doesn't surprise me that bottled water is not such a good deal. In fact a small bottle of water sometimes costs more than a can of beer. There used to be a lot of places along the old roads, where there was a spring where folks could water their horses for free. Some of them were still there, even in the 1960's, and we would bring our 5 gallon bottles and get free spring water. I don't know of any springs like that today though, and I live in rural Oregon where there is a lot of water. City water didn't cost much, no matter how much you used, but not so today. Mine is $40 per mo. minimum, but over $70 per mo. when I water a small garden and some flower beds. I don't even think about watering the grass.

Bottled Water: Nectar of the Frauds?

WASHINGTON - Water, water everywhere and we are duped into buying it bottled.

Consumers spend a collective $100 billion every year on bottled water in the belief--often mistaken, as it happens--that this is better for us than what flows from our taps, according to environmental think tank the Earth Policy Institute (EPI).

For a fraction of that sum, everyone on the planet could have safe drinking water and proper sanitation, the Washington, D.C.-based organization said this week.

Malicious software on Diebold can steal votes

Princeton University Exposes Diebold Flaws

The main findings of our study are:
1. Malicious software running on a single voting machine can steal votes with little if any risk of detection. The malicious software can modify all of the records, audit logs, and counters kept by the voting machine, so that even careful forensic examination of these records will find nothing amiss. We have constructed demonstration software that carries out this vote-stealing attack.
2. Anyone who has physical access to a voting machine, or to a memory card that will later be inserted into a machine, can install said malicious software using a simple method that takes as little as one minute. In practice, poll workers and others often have unsupervised access to the machines.
3. AccuVote-TS machines are susceptible to voting-machine viruse! s - computer viruses that can spread malicious software automatically and invisibly from machine to machine during normal pre- ! and post-election activity. We have constructed a demonstration virus that spreads in this way, installing our demonstration vote-stealing program on every machine it infects.
4. While some of these problems can be eliminated by improving Diebold's software, others cannot be remedied without replacing the machines' hardware. Changes to election procedures would also be required to ensure security.

Bush ignores congress and the constitution


"When conservative military men like John McCain, John Warner, Lindsey Graham and Colin Powell stand up to the president, it shows how wrong and isolated the White House is," said Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. "These military men are telling the president that in the war on terror you need to be both strong and smart, and it is about time he heeded their admonitions.

To illustrate some of the ways that Bush ignores the congress and tramples on The Constitution, I refer to "The American Conservative".

July 17, 2006 Issue
Copyright © 2006

Power of the Pen

The president uses signing statements to decree which laws apply to him.

by James Bovard

For generations, Republican politicians have spoken reverently of the rule of law. But since 2001, this hoary doctrine has been redefined to mean little more than the enforcement of the secret thoughts of the commander in chief.
George W. Bush has added more than 750 “signing statements” to new laws since he took office. Earlier presidents occasionally appended such comments to new statutes, but Bush is the first to use signing statements routinely to nullify key provisions of new laws. He perennially announces that he will not be bound by limits on his power and that he will scorn obligations to disclose how federal power is being used.

Bush’s most famous signing statement was on the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005. After White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales publicly declared that Bush enjoyed a “commander in chief override” regarding laws prohibiting torture, members of Congress enacted legislation to make it stark that torture was illegal. The White House engaged in long and arduous negotiations with Congress. After Bush signed this law last Dec. 30, he announced that he would construe it “in a manner consistent with the constitutional authority of the President to supervise the unitary executive branch and as Commander in Chief and consistent with the constitutional limitations on the judicial power.” This was widely interpreted to mean that the law is binding only when Bush pleases. He was reiterating a confidential 2002 Justice Department memo that declared that the federal Anti-Torture Act “would be unconstitutional if it impermissibly encroached on the President’s constitutional power to conduct a military campaign.”

We have a nullification crisis at the heart of the American Republic. Torture is apparently legal, despite a federal prohibition. Domestic wiretapping is apparently legal, despite clear legal and constitutional prohibitions. Seizing suspects and holding them indefinitely is apparently legal, despite the Constitution’s requirement of habeas corpus.
Apparently, the government is not obliged to obey any law that Bush does not personally approve of. And how can we know which laws Bush approves of? It’s a secret. Bush’s personal thoughts thus become the ultimate law of the land—and no one can know if the government is violating the “law” because Bush has not publicly declared what the law is.
Why should anyone give Bush the benefit of the doubt and assume that he is obeying all of the laws that he has not yet publicly proclaimed a right to violate? New York University law professor David Golove told the Boston Globe, “Where you have a president who is willing to declare vast quantities of the legislation that is passed during his term unconstitutional, it implies that he also thinks a very significant amount of the other laws that were already on the books before he became president are also unconstitutional.”

Thursday, September 14, 2006








ACTUALLY THERE ARE
storys that you won't see on the corporate media. I found this out thanks to GEF on PJF's blog.

Top 25 Censored Stories of 2007
Merle Haggard - America First

Broadband Pros & Cons


Defining the Internet for the 21st Century

From StreamingMedia.com, February 14, 2006
By Geoff Daily

The Internet is at a legislative crossroads. The last major telecom legislation passed by the U.S. Congress was the Telecommunications Act of 1996. Its stated goal was to let communications businesses compete in any market against each other.

Since that time, though, the explosive growth and paradigm-shifting nature of the Internet have fundamentally altered the communications landscape. Today, the lines between cable operators and telephone companies are blurring, and a host of Internet-based communications services are quickly gaining mainstream adoption.

As a result, Congress has begun discussions on what will likely generate a complete overhaul of laws that concern communications services. This debate will have a profound effect on the future of the Internet as it will create the environment in which network operators and online service providers will coexist for the foreseeable future.
--------------------
Finally, a two-tiered Internet has the potential to expand network operators’ role as a gatekeeper in such a way that could harm the foundation on which the Internet was built. “The tiering system destroys the DNA of the Internet, the open architecture that allows everyone to speak equally,” says Scott. “It’s essentially the cable-ization of the Internet. A two-tiered Internet will behave just like cable TV does today where the cable TV provider controls exactly what content is available on their network. You as a consumer don’t have a voice in that and neither do independent programmers.”

Looking Ahead
The great telecom debate has already begun to pick up steam. A series of draft bills have been circulating for some months now and companies on both sides of the two-tiered coin are making their views known publicly. For BellSouth, the goal is to dissuade the federal government from stepping in and legislating specific provisions regarding network neutrality. “The Internet has developed to where it is today with a very light hand of regulation,” says Morton. “We want to make sure that we continue from a government perspective to have a hands-off approach to the Internet.”

Opponents of the two-tiered Internet, on the other hand, want clear guarantees that the principles of Internet neutrality will be upheld and enshrined in law to ensure that online service providers continue to have open, unfettered access over the public Internet into consumers’ homes. “The real danger of the quiet elimination of common carrier regulations is that it puts you in a regulatory structure where it’s a slippery slope to an environment of complete unaccountability for a monopoly or duopoly,” says Scott. “We tried that once in the late 19th century with the railroad and it didn’t work out. We got robber barons instead

Web of Deceit: How Internet Freedom Got the Federal Ax, And Why Corporate News Censored the Story

A BUZZFLASH GUEST CONTRIBUTION
by Elliot D. Cohen, Ph.D.

The days are now numbered for surfing an uncensored, open-access Internet, using your favorite search engine to search a bottomless cyber-sea of information in the grandest democratic forum ever conceived by humankind. Instead you can look forward to Googling about on a walled-off, carefully selected corpus of government propaganda and sanitized information "safe" for public consumption. Indoctrinated and sealed off from the outer world, you will inhabit a matrix where every ounce of creative, independent thinking that challenges government policies and values will be squelched. Just a wild conspiracy theory, you say? No longer can this be rationally maintained.

~You can hear some of the news some of the time~



Ten big news stories you aren't hearing

Traditional media ignore or downplay significant events
By Thomas Kostigen, MarketWatch
Last Update: 12:03 AM ET Sep 8, 2006

1. The Feds and the media muddy the debate over Internet freedom

2. Halliburton charged with selling nuclear technology to Iran

3. World oceans in extreme danger

4. Hunger and homelessness increasing in the United States

5. High-tech genocide in Congo

6. Federal whistleblower protection in jeopardy

7. U.S. operatives torture detainees to death in Afghanistan and Iraq

8. Pentagon exempt from Freedom of Information Act

9. World Bank funds Israel-Palestine wall

10. Expanded air war in Iraq kills more civilians

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

NY Times Vs Bush Administration

Exerpt from Time Magazine artical

Jill Abramson led a panel discussion in Washington. She told the audience that the NSA story “may very well turn out to be this generation’s Pentagon Papers” and recalled A. M. Rosenthal, the legendary executive editor of the Times who published the story and died in May, as an aggressive hero of journalism, “a gutsy, larger-than-life character, an editor perfectly matched to the historic moment.”

Was Bill Keller also a man perfectly matched to his historic moment? When I ask her this question, Abramson pauses. “I want to think about it,” she says. Not because she doubts it, she emphasizes, but because she wants to draw up the perfect response.

Sitting next to Abramson at the Pentagon Papers panel was reporter James Risen. In the fall of 2004, Risen had brought a massive scoop to his editors: Beginning in the days after September 11, he discovered, the Bush administration had authorized the National Security Agency to eavesdrop on foreign calls into the United States without court-approved warrants.

When the Times first approached the White House with the story that fall, Taubman took the lead editorial role, beginning a series of meetings with Bush officials. General Hayden, the NSA director, took him on a personal tour of the agency’s headquarters and tried to impress upon him the importance of its secret programs. Taubman also met personally with then–national-security adviser Condoleezza Rice, a close friend of his for more than twenty years. Six months before the 2004 election, Taubman had thrown a lavish dinner party for Rice at his house in Washington.

Shortly after Taubman was briefed by the Bush administration, Keller himself met with Rice, Hayden, and others. “I think they were shocked they were having to share this with journalists,” Keller recalls. But, sitting on a potentially explosive piece of news that could tip the presidential election to John Kerry, Keller was persuaded by the administration’s counterarguments and decided against publishing Risen’s revelations.

Asked recently if there was a defining piece of evidence that affected his decision to hold the story then, Keller said no, then took a deep breath and ­added, “The argument they made was that, even though it may seem obvious to us that they’re going to try to eavesdrop on terrorists’ phone calls, the behavior of terrorists suggested that it wasn’t obvious to them. Therefore, publishing the story would change their behavior.”

In a long, explanatory e-mail he sent me, Keller says the issue of the legality of the NSA program had not been the thrust of the original story—at least, not that he recalls. “Perhaps [the legality of the wiretaps] should have struck me earlier, perhaps it was clear to the reporters,” he writes. “In its original incarnation, I saw it as essentially a story about the methodology of counter terrorism.” In other words, Keller maintains that he did not originally grasp what the reporters considered the essence of their scoop.

The fact that the Times was suffering from a profound lack of institutional confidence also contributed to the decision to hold the story. On October 25, 2004, the Times reported on unsecured munitions left after the invasion of Iraq and was promptly slammed by the Bush administration, which vigorously questioned the story’s accuracy and scared editors so bad that Abramson worried she was going to be the next Mary Mapes, the producer of the flawed CBS News report on Bush’s National Guard service. When a Minnesota TV station broadcast video that proved the munitions story, Keller told a friend, “Thank God for that.”





New York Magazine

The United States of America vs. Bill Keller

How hard is it to be executive editor of the New York Times today? The White House calls him a traitor. He gets roasted every day on talk shows and blogs. The newsroom is losing faith. The paper is shrinking. And the worst part is that fighting back means overcoming his own nature.

* By Joe Hagan

Bill Keller, the executive editor of the New York Times, sat on a couch in the Oval Office of the White House, three feet from President George W. Bush, and listened.

For a meeting without historical precedent, the president of the United States had called the Times to the White House to personally try to prevent a state secret from appearing in print—an exposé of the National Security Agency’s efforts to monitor phone calls without court-approved warrants that the Times had held back on for over a year. Times publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. sat in a wing chair facing Bush, while Keller and Washington bureau chief Philip Taubman sat across from Bush’s lawyer, Harriet Miers, and national-security adviser Stephen Hadley. General Michael Hayden, the then-director of the National Security Agency, sat alongside Bush with a thick briefing book in his lap.

After stiff pleasantries, Bush issued an emphatic warning: If they revealed the secret program to the public and there was another terrorist attack on American soil, the Paper of Record would be implicated. “The basic message,” recalls Keller, “was, ‘You’ll have blood on your hands.’ ”

The meeting lasted an hour. Afterward, Sulzberger and Keller stood outside the White House. Undaunted by the president’s logic and his threats, Keller told Sulzberger, “Nothing I heard in there changed my mind.” Sulzberger agreed.

Eleven days after the meeting with Bush, the Times defied the president; the story, by James Risen and Eric Licht­blau, was headlined bush lets u.s. spy on callers without courts. That same day, the USA Patriot Act was blocked in the Senate.

The White House went into attack mode. Its target: Bill Keller and the New York Times.

------------------------------------
State of War: The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration,' by James Risen
Spies and Spymasters

Review by WALTER ISAACSON
Published: February 5, 2006

THIS explosive little book opens with a scene that is at once amazing and yet not surprising: President Bush angrily hanging up the phone on his father, who ''was disturbed that his son was allowing Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and a cadre of neoconservative ideologues to exert broad influence over foreign policy.'' The colorful anecdote is symptomatic of ''State of War.'' It is riveting, anonymously sourced and feels slightly overdramatized, but it has the odious smell of truth.

87% of Americans aren't ready for apocalypse

Report: Majority Of Americans Unprepared For Apocalypse

September 13, 2006 The Onion

WASHINGTON, DC—Over 87 percent of Americans are unprepared to protect themselves from even the most basic world-ending scenarios, according to a study released Monday by the nonpartisan doomsday think-tank The Malthusian Institute.

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Bush's job approval @ 39%


September 12, 2006
Bush Job Approval at 39%
Congressional job approval, national satisfaction still low

by Joseph Carroll

GALLUP NEWS SERVICE

PRINCETON, NJ -- A new Gallup poll finds little change in the public's approval ratings of President George W. Bush and Congress, along with Americans' overall satisfaction with the course of the nation. About 4 in 10 Americans currently approve of the job Bush is doing, 29% of Americans approve of the way Congress is handling its job, and 32% of Americans say they are satisfied with the way things are going in the country at the present time.





Monday, September 11, 2006

Metal from ground zero promptly sold for scrap


Baosteel Will Recycle World Trade Center Debris

January 24, 2002)

A shipment of scrap steel from New York's collapsed World Trade Center will arrive in Shanghai tomorrow, according to media reports. The steel was bought by Shanghai Baosteel Group Corp. and several other domestic mills, which are always eager to buy scrap metal.

Baosteel Group, the nation's largest steel firm, has purchased 50,000 tons of the scrap steel from "Ground Zero," the ruins of the September 11 terrorist attack, at no more than US$120 each ton, according to yesterday's Beijing Youth Daily.

Most of the scrap will be recycled into ingots, but part of the relics will be mold-ed into WTC souvenirs, the paper said.


A collection of high definition photos of World Trade Center cleanup.

Photos of World Trade Center: Ground zero 31 October

In some of these pictures are steel beams that are cleanly cut, rather than sheared off.
It is believed that this was done by thermite, an ultra-hot explosive used by building demolition experts.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Destruction of Evidence from Ground Zero at the World Trade Center

From SourceWatch

The Destruction of Evidence from Ground Zero at the World Trade Center following the events of September 11, 2001, occurred, even though the criminal code requires that crime scene evidence be kept for forensic analysis. FEMA had steel recovered from the building rubble destroyed or shipped overseas before a serious investigation could take place.

However, the Associated Press reported in a February 26, 2004, update that not only did the FBI ban the removal of crime scene evidence "after 13 agents stole WTC rubble," but also stated that "'All relevant evidence connected with the WTC crime scene was properly retrieved, catalogued and maintained.

ABC's Disney 911 Soap Opera

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I tuned in to the television docudrama "The Path To 911" on ABC last night. I nodded out during the part where they were singing Old Dannyboy. All I can remember about it is that it was like watching a soap opera. Maybe I'll brew up a pot of coffee tonight, to see what I missed, allthough I doubt that there was much factual information in this Disney movie, that uses disclaimers to admit that it does not necessarily show actual events.

This morning I was watching a good documentory, "911 PRESS FOR TRUTH", on google video. A comprehensive and informative video on the same subject, but involving real people who experienced the event. The four women, who iniated their own investigation because they could get no answers from government officials, are finally heard after they gain some recognition through the media. So far this video has over 13,000 views. I wonder how many people have viewed the Disney docudrama on tv.

Saturday, September 09, 2006


DO YOU BELIEVE IN ANY 911 CONSPIRACY THEORIES




~OO~ ~OO~ ~OO~


Widowed Husband Of Former Disney Records Exec Killed On 9/11 Writes To ABC's Iger: I "Urge You Not To Air This Film"

911 Cover Up Interviews

Loose Change 2nd Edition -
Korey Rowe / Dylan Avery / Jason Bermas

Government corruption knows no bounds


Well...I guess this sad commentary about corporate government, reminds us that the scope of corruption knows no bounds. Here is congressman William Jefferson, Democrat-La, using his position to promote the business of his friend, and accepting large amounts of money to do so. We must keep in mind that there are also some Democrats that must be replaced in the upcoming elections. While it is important to gain a Democratic majority in congress and the senate, "We The People" must be informed about our local leaders, and replace corrupted office holders with honest and legitimate government.

Vernon L. Jackson, left, pleaded guilty to bribing U.S. Rep. William Jefferson, who had $90,000 in cash in a freezer at his D.C. home.

ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) -- A Kentucky businessman who admitted paying more than $400,000 in bribes to a Louisiana congressman was sentenced Friday to more than seven years in prison.

Vernon Jackson, 54, of Louisville, is a key figure in the federal investigation of Rep. William Jefferson, D-La. The chief executive of the telecommunications firm iGate Inc. said he paid the bribes to gain the congressman's help in obtaining business deals in Africa.

The bribes paid by Jackson, including stocks and cash paid to a company controlled by Jefferson's family, had a value of $400,000 to $1 million, according to court records.

The congressman has not been charged but court records allege the FBI caught Jefferson on videotape taking a $100,000 cash bribe from an FBI informant who agreed to have her conversations with the congressman taped. Most of that money later turned up in a freezer in Jefferson's home.

The bribes paid by Jackson are separate from the $100,000 found in the freezer.

Jackson did not speak during the hearing and declined to comment afterward. He has previously expressed remorse for his conduct.

The seven-year, three-month sentence imposed by U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis III was at the low end of federal sentencing guidelines. Prosecutor Mark Lytle said Jackson was continuing to cooperate in the investigation, and his sentence could later be reduced. He will not begin serving his sentence until January.

Jefferson was never mentioned by name in Friday's hearing, but prosecutors have made it clear in court papers that he is the congressman to whom Jackson paid bribes.

Jefferson has denied any wrongdoing. His lawyer, Robert Trout, suggested Jackson is lying to garner leniency from prosecutors.

''Congressman Jefferson knows well the pressure that the Department of Justice can apply once it targets someone for criminal prosecution. As Jackson's plea bargain makes clear, the government has offered powerful inducements to cause Jackson to plead guilty. He has every reason to expect that his sentence will be substantially reduced depending on his testimony against the congressman,'' Trout said.

The government's investigation of Jefferson has been delayed by the furor that resulted from the Justice Department's decision to raid Jefferson's congressional office earlier this year.

Jefferson claims that his status as a congressman grants him immunity from executive branch search warrants. The Justice Department has not yet reviewed the documents it seized from the office while the issue is being litigated.

A former congressional aide of Jefferson was sentenced to eight years in prison after admitting that he helped broker some of the bribes paid to Jefferson

-----------------------------

Behind the cash in the freezer

Scandal follows a Louisville businessman's dealings with a Louisiana congressman

By Sharon Walsh Posted on Sun, Aug. 20,
LEXINGTON-HERALD-LEADER STAFF WRITER

-----------------------------

Va. Woman Wore a Wire In Rep. Jefferson Inquiry

By Allan Lengel
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, May 9, 2006; Page A03

A wary Northern Virginia investor agreed to cooperate with the FBI in a public corruption investigation of Rep. William J. Jefferson (D-La.) and wear a "wire while engaged in face-to-face meetings with the Congressman," according to a court document filed yesterday.

Friday, September 08, 2006

9/11 - 2/1/2006 BYU Professor Steven E Jones WTC Lecture UVSC

BYU Physics professor and founder of SCHOLARS FOR 9/11 TRUTH Steven E Jones presents his presentation on the collapse of WTC Buildings 1,2, and 7 on 9/11. A very informative and scientific presentation that raises serious questions about the official account of the collapse of the World Trade Center Towers and Building 7.

Thursday, September 07, 2006

Bush fesses up on secret prisons

Bush admits secret CIA prisons
PM - Thursday, 7 September , 2006 18:29:00
Reporter: David Mark
MARK COLVIN: The President of the United States has admitted that what many long suspected: the CIA runs a network of secret prisons. George W. Bush made the admission in a speech overnight in which he announced new legislation for trying terrorism suspects.

Administration’s Secret Prison System Violates Law
Earler this year, White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan said the United States was adhering to both U.S. law and treaty obligations outlawing torture:

And as we carry out the war on terrorism, and seek to prevent attacks from happening, we must adhere to those laws, and we must adhere to those treaty obligations and we must adhere to — we must adhere to our values. [White House, 3/17/05]

Rights group leader says U.S. has secret jails

Top GOP senator says Gitmo hearings might be appropriate
Monday, June 6, 2005 Posted: 3:35 AM EDT (0735 GMT)

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The chief of Amnesty International USA alleged Sunday that the Guantanamo Bay detention camp is part of a worldwide network of U.S. jails, some of them secret, where prisoners are mistreated and even killed.

U.S. officials responded with outrage. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld rebuffed such a comparison, saying a gulag was where the Soviets "kept millions in forced labor concentration camps."

President Bush said the comparison was "absurd" and Vice President Dick Cheney said he was offended by Amnesty's assertions.
---------------------------------
Above right:
In Afghanistan, the largest CIA covert prison was code-named the Salt Pit.
Photo Credit: Space Imaging Middle East Photo
----------------------------------

~LINKS~

World News Network

Guantanamo.com

ABC World News

Wednesday, September 06, 2006















Has Bush gone over the edge?

Bush beats the drums of war


Dubya & Co. is pulling out all of the stops on the gamble that they can convince "We The People" that we are dealing with an enemy that is like Nazi Germany. They are using the same "War President" rhetoric that has been repeated since the days preceeding the invasion of Iraq. I, for one will be marching to the beat of another drum. The picture shown, is approximately 10,000 people in Sydney Australia, in protest to the 2003 invasion, a small part of the world wide protests to this historical atrocity. The demonstrations against the invasion of Iran
, will dwarf what we have seen so far, and the good news is that some of the media is not completely controlled anymore.

Bush Seeks More Support for Terror Fight

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: September 6, 2006
Filed at 6:58 a.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Quoting repeatedly from Osama bin Laden, President Bush said Tuesday that pulling U.S. troops out of Iraq would fulfill the terrorist leader's wishes and propel him into a more powerful global threat in the mold of Adolf Hitler.


Between war and peace
By Bruce Fein
September 6, 2006

The Bush administration wrongly insists America's post-September 11, 2001 conflict with international terrorism is indistinguishable from World War II. Premised on that false analogy, President Bush has claimed authority as commander in chief to violate the spirit if not the letter of the Constitution in detaining individuals, gathering foreign intelligence, frustrating congressional oversight, and creating military tribunals.


7 British Officials Resign in Revolt Over Blair

By ALAN COWELL
Published: September 6, 2006
LONDON, Sept. 6 — Prime Minister Tony Blair sought to face down a revolt within his Labor party today as seven junior aides resigned to protest his refusal to quit.

His popularity is sapped by scandal at home and by his close alliance with the United States in the Iraq war.

Tuesday, September 05, 2006


TAKE A BITE OUTA CRIME