Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Link to a website documenting communities which have successfully fought to keep out Big-Box stores


...with in-depth information about the pernicious effect big-box stores, especially Wal-Mart, have on the local environment, economy, crime rates, and health care.

Fake News


"Fake News Stories on American TV"
By Andrew Buncombe
The Independent UK
Monday 29 May 2006

Federal authorities are actively investigating dozens of American television stations for broadcasting items produced by the Bush administration and major corporations, and passing them off as normal news. Some of the fake news segments talked up success in the war in Iraq, or promoted the companies' products.

Investigators from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) are seeking information about stations across the country after a report produced by a campaign group detailed the extraordinary extent of the use of such items.

The report, by the non-profit group Centre for Media and Democracy, found that over a 10-month period at least 77 television stations were making use of the faux news broadcasts, known as Video News Releases (VNRs). Not one told viewers who had produced the items.

"We know we only had partial access to these VNRs and yet we found 77 stations using them," said Diana Farsetta, one of the group's researchers. "I would say it's pretty extraordinary. The picture we found was much worse than we expected going into the investigation in terms of just how widely these get played and how frequently these pre-packaged segments are put on the air."

Ms Farsetta said the public relations companies commissioned to produce these segments by corporations had become increasingly sophisticated in their techniques in order to get the VNRs broadcast. "They have got very good at mimicking what a real, independently produced television report would look like," she said.

The FCC has declined to comment on the investigation but investigators from the commission's enforcement unit recently approached Ms Farsetta for a copy of her group's report.

The range of VNR is wide. Among items provided by the Bush administration to news stations was one in which an Iraqi-American in Kansas City was seen saying "Thank you Bush. Thank you USA" in response to the 2003 fall of Baghdad. The footage was actually produced by the State Department, one of 20 federal agencies that have produced and distributed such items.

Many of the corporate reports, produced by drugs manufacturers such as Pfizer, focus on health issues and promote the manufacturer's product. One example cited by the report was a Hallowe'en segment produced by the confectionery giant Mars, which featured Snickers, M&Ms and other company brands. While the original VNR disclosed that it was produced by Mars, such information was removed when it was broadcast by the television channel - in this case a Fox-owned station in St Louis, Missouri.

Bloomberg news service said that other companies that sponsored the promotions included General Motors, the world's largest car maker, and Intel, the biggest maker of semi-conductors. All of the companies said they included full disclosure of their involvement in the VNRs. "We in no way attempt to hide that we are providing the video," said Chuck Mulloy, a spokesman for Intel. "In fact, we bend over backward to make this disclosure."

The FCC was urged to act by a lobbying campaign organised by Free Press, another non-profit group that focuses on media policy. Spokesman Craig Aaron said more than 25,000 people had written to the FCC about the VNRs. "Essentially it's corporate advertising or propaganda masquerading as news," he said. "The public obviously expects their news reports are going to be based on real reporting and real information. If they are watching an advertisement for a company or a government policy, they need to be told."

The controversy over the use of VNRs by television stations first erupted last spring. At the time the FCC issued a public notice warning broadcasters that they were obliged to inform viewers if items were sponsored. The maximum fine for each violation is $32,500 (£17,500).

Note: Videos of the offending VNR's are here.

Monday, May 29, 2006

My Lai, Vietnam, and Haditha, Iraq


Note: Almost forty years separate these combat episodes; but they share the same underlying dynamic. In both episodes, soldiers wantonly killed civilians in the town, in part because some of their fellow soldiers had been killed by enemy fighters in the same area in an ambush or asymmetrical attack. Those who have never experienced combat, with friends dying right next to them, have no idea of the rage one feels toward an enemy one cannot confront directly. A roadside bomb, a pungi-stake, a booby-trapped body, or a jet overhead that drops napalm on a village then disappears into the sky can cause that rage because the fighters cannot directly do battle with those who caused the carnage. What is unusual is that this doesn't happen, or rather that it isn't discovered, more often. The other prime element in both episodes, (most likely), is the perception the combat troops have of the town's inhabitants and their level of complicity in the attacks.

[From the Peers Report: The Army Report on My Lai]

" (3) The massacre resulted primarily from the nature of the orders issued to persons in the chain of command within TF Barker.

(4) The task force commander's order and the associated intelligence estimate issued prior to the operation were embellished as they were disseminated through each lower level of command, and ultimately presented to the individual soldier a false and misleading picture of the Son My area as an armed enemy camp, largely devoid of civilian inhabitants.

(5) Prior to the incident, there had developed within certain elements of the 11th Brigade a permissive attitude toward the treatment and safeguarding of noncombatants which (contributed to the mistreatment of such persons during the Son Ply Operation.

(6) The permissive attitude in the treatment of Vietnamese was, on 16-19 March 1968, exemplified by an almost total disregard for the lives and property of the civilian population of Son My Village on the part of commanders and key staff officers of TF Barker.

Marine Corp General flies to Iraq to refine core principles of combat operations


NY Times Article

"In an unusual sign of high-level concern, the commandant of the Marine Corps, Gen. Michael W. Hagee, flew from Washington to Iraq on Thursday to give a series of speeches to his forces re-emphasizing compliance with international laws of armed conflict, the Geneva Conventions and the American military's own rules of engagement."

Murtha Alleges Coverup


By Thomas E. Ricks
The Washington Post
Monday 29 May 2006

A powerful member of Congress alleged yesterday that there has been a conscious effort by Marine commanders to cover up the facts of a November incident in which rampaging Marines allegedly killed 24 Iraqi civilians.

"There has to have been a coverup of this thing," Rep. John P. Murtha (Pa.), ranking Democrat on the House Appropriations defense subcommittee, charged in an interview on ABC's "This Week." "No question about it." John W. Warner (R-Va.), chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, also raised the issue of whether the military chain of command reacted properly and legally.

"There is this serious question . . . of what happened and when it happened, and what was the immediate reaction of the senior officers in the Marine Corps when they began to gain knowledge of it," he said on the same program. He added, "That is seriously a question that is going to be examined."

Warner said he intends to hold hearings on the Haditha incident as soon as he can without interfering with the prosecution of criminal charges, which are expected to be brought this summer.

Iraqi witnesses in Haditha, an Upper Euphrates Valley farm town, say the Americans shot men, women and children on Nov. 19 at close range in retaliation for the death of a Marine lance corporal in a roadside bombing.

Two U.S. military inquiries began earlier this year after Time magazine presented military officials in Baghdad with the findings of its own investigation, based on survivors' accounts and on a videotape shot by an Iraqi journalism student at Haditha's hospital and inside victims' houses. People familiar with the case say they expect that charges of murder, dereliction of duty and making a false statement will be brought against several Marines.

Sunday, May 28, 2006

The Essential Krugman: "Swift Boating the Planet"

The Essential Krugman: "Swift Boating the Planet"


by Paul Krugman, Climate Lies Commentary, NY Times:

"A brief segment in "An Inconvenient Truth" shows Senator Al Gore questioning James Hansen, a climatologist at NASA, during a 1989 hearing. But the movie doesn't ... tell you what happened to Dr. Hansen later.

And that's a story worth telling, for two reasons. It's a good illustration of the way interest groups can create the appearance of doubt even when the facts are clear and cloud the reputations of people who should be regarded as heroes. And it's a warning for Mr. Gore and others...: you're going to have to get tougher, because the other side doesn't play by any known rules.

Dr. Hansen was one of the first climate scientists to say publicly that global warming was underway. In 1988, he made headlines with Senate testimony in which he declared that "the greenhouse effect has been detected, and it is changing our climate now."...

By rights, Dr. Hansen should have been universally acclaimed... But soon after Dr. Hansen's 1988 testimony, energy companies began a campaign to create doubt about global warming... And in the late 1990's, climate skeptics began a smear campaign against Dr. Hansen himself.

Leading the charge was Patrick Michaels, a professor at the University of Virginia who has received substantial financial support from the energy industry. In Senate testimony, and then in numerous presentations, Dr. Michaels claimed that the actual pace of global warming was falling far short of Dr. Hansen's predictions. As evidence, he presented a chart supposedly taken from a 1988 paper written by Dr. Hansen and others, which showed a curve of rising temperatures considerably steeper than the trend that has actually taken place.

In fact, the chart Dr. Michaels showed was a fraud... The original paper showed a range of possibilities, and the actual rise in temperature has fallen squarely in the middle of that range. So how did Dr. Michaels make it seem as if Dr. Hansen's prediction was wildly off? Why, he erased all the lower curves, leaving only the curve that the original paper described as being "on the high side of reality." ...

Dr. Hansen has been trying to correct the record for years. Yet the claim ... has remained in circulation, and has become a staple of climate change skeptics, from Michael Crichton to Robert Novak. There's a concise way to describe what happened to Dr. Hansen: he was Swift-boated.

John Kerry, a genuine war hero, didn't realize that he could successfully be portrayed as a coward. And it seems to me that Dr. Hansen ... didn't believe that he could successfully be portrayed as an unreliable exaggerator. His first response to Dr. Michaels, in January 1999, was astonishingly diffident. ... rather than denouncing the fraud involved, he offered a rather plaintive appeal for better behavior.

Even now, Dr. Hansen seems reluctant to say the obvious. "Is this treading close to scientific fraud?" he recently asked about Dr. Michaels' smear. The answer is no: it isn't "treading close," it's fraud pure and simple.

Now, Dr. Hansen isn't running for office. But Mr. Gore might be, and even if he isn't, he hopes to promote global warming as a political issue. And if he wants to do that, he and those on his side will have to learn to call liars what they are."

Memorial Day - Politicians who did and did not serve

Saturday, May 27, 2006

First Amendment Applies to Internet, Appeals Court Rules


NY Times
By LAURIE J. FLYNN
Published: May 27, 2006

SAN FRANCISCO, May 26 — A California appeals court ruled Friday that online reporters are protected by the same confidentiality laws that protect traditional journalists, striking a blow to efforts by Apple Computer to identify people who leaked confidential company data.

The three-judge panel in San Jose overturned a trial court's ruling last year that to protect its trade secrets, Apple was entitled to know the source of leaked data published online. The appeals court also ruled that a subpoena issued by Apple to obtain electronic communications and materials from an Internet service provider was unenforceable.

In its ruling, the appeals court said online and offline journalists are equally protected under the First Amendment. "We can think of no workable test or principle that would distinguish 'legitimate' from 'illegitimate' news," the opinion states. "Any attempt by courts to draw such a distinction would imperil a fundamental purpose of the First Amendment."

The Essential Krugman: "A Test of Our Character

The Essential Krugman: "A Test of Our Character


by Paul Krugman, Gore's Movie Commentary, NY Times:

"In his new movie, "An Inconvenient Truth," Al Gore suggests that there are three reasons it's hard to get action on global warming. The first is boiled-frog syndrome: because the effects of greenhouse gases build up gradually, at any given moment it's easier to do nothing. The second is the perception, nurtured by a careful disinformation campaign, that there's still a lot of uncertainty about whether man-made global warming is a serious problem. The third is the belief, again fostered by disinformation, that trying to curb global warming would have devastating economic effects.

I'd add a fourth reason... But first, ... Mr. Gore couldn't have asked for a better illustration of disinformation campaigns than the reaction of energy-industry lobbyists and right-wing media organizations to his film. ...

As evidence that global warming isn't really happening, [the National Review] offers the fact that some Antarctic ice sheets are getting thicker ... Curt Davis, ... whose work is cited ... has already protested. ... He points out that an initial increase in the thickness of Antarctica's interior ice sheets is a predicted consequence of a warming planet, so that his results actually support global warming...

[T]hey [also] issue hysterical warnings about the economic consequences of environmentalism. "Al Gore's global warming movie: could it destroy the economy?" Fox News asked. Well, no, it couldn't. There's ... broad consensus that even a very strong program to reduce emissions would have only modest effects on economic growth. At worst, G.D.P. growth might be, say, one-tenth or two-tenths of a percentage point lower over the next 20 years. ....

But "An Inconvenient Truth" isn't just about global warming... It's also ..., implicitly, a cautionary tale about what's been wrong with our politics.

Why, after all, was Mr. Gore's popular-vote margin in the 2000 election narrow enough that he could be denied the White House? Any account that neglects the determination of some journalists to make him a figure of ridicule misses a key part of the story. Why were those journalists so determined to jeer Mr. Gore? Because of the very qualities that allowed him to realize the importance of global warming, many years before any other major political figure: his earnestness, and his genuine interest in facts, numbers and serious analysis.

And so the 2000 campaign ended up being about the candidates' clothing, their mannerisms, anything but the issues, on which Mr. Gore had a clear advantage...

I won't join the sudden surge of speculation about whether "An Inconvenient Truth" will make Mr. Gore a presidential contender. But the film does make a powerful case that Mr. Gore is the sort of person who ought to be running the country.

Since 2000, we've seen what happens when people who aren't interested in the facts, who believe what they want to believe, sit in the White House. Osama bin Laden is still at large, Iraq is a mess, New Orleans is a wreck. And, of course, we've done nothing about global warming.

But can the sort of person who would act on global warming get elected? Are we — by which I mean both the public and the press — ready for political leaders who don't pander, who are willing to talk about complicated issues and call for responsible policies? That's a test of national character. I wonder whether we'll pass.

Memorable Quotations for Memorial Day 2006


"You have to know how to accept rejection and reject acceptance."
-- Ray Bradbury

"Being in the army is like being in the Boy Scouts, except that the Boy Scouts have adult supervision."
-- Blake Clark

"The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it."
-- Terry Pratchett

"A government that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul."
-- George Bernard Shaw

"What is written without effort is in general read without pleasure."
-- Samuel Johnson

"Freedom is not worth having if it does not include the freedom to make mistakes."
-- Mahatma Gandhi

"We are always more anxious to be distinguished for a talent which we do not possess, than to be praised for the fifteen which we do possess."
-- Mark Twain

"When I was younger, I could remember anything, whether it had happened or not."
-- Mark Twain

"It is better to keep your mouth closed and let people think you are a fool than to open it and remove all doubt."
-- Mark Twain

"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm."
-- Sir Winston Churchill

"Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new."
-- Albert Einstein

"Sometimes one pays most for the things one gets for nothing."
-- Albert Einstein

"The definition of insanity is: Doing the same thing and expecting different result."
-- Albert Einstein

"Ah, yes, Divorce, from the Latin word meaning to rip out a man's genitals through his wallet."
-- Robin Williams

"You know "that look" women get when they want sex? Me neither."
-- Steve Martin

"People willing to trade their freedom for temporary security deserve neither and will lose both."
-- Benjamin Franklin

"God gave men both a penis and a brain, but unfortunately not enough blood supply to run both at the same time."
-- Robin Williams

"I am not young enough to know everything."
-- Oscar Wilde

"If everything seems under control, you're just not going fast enough."
-- Mario Andretti

"Knowledge speaks, but wisdom listens."
-- Jimi Hendrix

"God is a comedian playing to an audience too afraid to laugh."
-- Voltaire

"In the End, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends."
-- Martin Luther King Jr.

"In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. But, in practice, there is."
-- Jan L.A. van de Snepscheut

"Walking on water and developing software from a specification are easy if both are frozen."
-- Edward V. Berard

"Sailing: The fine art of getting wet and becoming ill while slowly going nowhere at great expense."
-- Tuntematon

"A smart person knows all the rules so he can break them wisely."
-- Lubna Azmi

"The secret of managing is to keep the guys who hate you away from the guys who are undecided."
-- Casey Stengal

"You´re not drunk if you can lie on the floor without holding on."
-- Dean Martin

"The very powerful and the very stupid have one thing in common. Instead of altering their views to fit the facts, they alter the facts to fit their views ... which can be very uncomfortable if you happen to be one of the facts that needs altering."
-- Doctor Who

"It may be that your sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others"
-- John Kirinrich

Friday, May 26, 2006

Homosexuality and the Bible

Homosexuality and the Bible


Rev. Dr. Virginia Child on Ecunet.org - United Church of Christ -
May 25th, 2006
[Reply to a question about homosexuality in the Bible]

"The Bible is not infallible; it is not God. Only God is perfect and it is a kind of idolatry to hold the Bible to the standard of perfection. The Bible is a collection of stories, poems, letters and histories written over a period of time - maybe 3000 years, given that most scholars think that David lived about 1000 years before Christ. The Bible reflects the historical assumptions and scientific beliefs of its times, and can't be taken as authoritative on those matters about which knowledge has increased over the centuries. It was written to illustrate God's relationship with creation, with humanity -- in which, God's mind does change. In Genesis 18:22-30, Moses bargains with God and God's mind is changed about destroying the city.

I am a little puzzled about your reference to slavery. You suggest that just because it's in the Bible, and as an acceptable practice, that doesn't mean that God approved it. At the same time you also suggest that because there are places in the Bible where homosexuality is condemned, that does mean that God condemns it.

Why the difference? I'd say that the acceptability of slavery is a cultural artifact which reflects the reality of slavery in Biblical times, rather than a reflection of God's intention for this world. And then I go on to say that the same is true of homosexuality, which in Biblical times was seen as a sign of a licentious life-style; today it is not. Then they thought people chose to be gay; today we know that affectional orientation is part of our inmost nature. And when the outer facts of life change, we then re-examine the Bible to see what the underlying message God was sending is -- and in this case it is about living modestly, hospitably, generously, caringly -- and not about homosexuality at all."

All human beings read Scripture out of their own cultural conditioning and out of their understanding of the physical nature of the world. You suggested that was not true with regard to homosexuality but was true with regard to slavery when you read one literally and the other metaphorically. I only sought to highlight the logical inconsistency in your argument. You cannot say that slavery is not a parallel to homosexuality because slavery was about service; it was about forced servitude, and Paul re-interpreted it to be about service. Paul was using the cultural realities of his time to make a point.

What I said, and believe, is that current responsible scientific inquiry teaches that homosexual orientation is part of our being, not a lifestyle choice. People do not choose to be gay in order to satisfy licentious desires; they are gay and, like the rest of us, seek someone with whom to spend their life and expect to be able to consummate their relationship sexually.

When Scripture speaks of homosexuality I believe it reflects an agrarian culture's abhorrence of anything which might prevent the procreation necessary for the continuance of the community. In other words, OT condemnations of homosexual behavior are analogous to the OT condemnation of masturbation. In the NT, Paul writes of promiscuous behavior he observed in a licentious society. If he were writing today, his illustrations might include "wardrobe malfunctions" and lewd advertising on television.

Lev 20 says that the penalty for homosexual behavior must be death, ditto for adultery. It says that if you have sex with a woman while she's having her period both of you should be thrown out of the church. I see no difference between the condemnation of the one behavior with condemnation of the other and believe the entire section should be read today as the use of a particular instance to teach a general truth -- that we should behave with respect for one another and keep our covenants. Whatever it meant to the people who originally heard it, it does not mean that to us today.

You appear to be looking for a proof text which mentions homosexuality. When I read the Bible, I look first for the overarching message of Scripture, as seen thru Jesus's words and actions. Jesus welcomed outcasts, reached out to those who were unclean, spoke to women, said that he came for the lost. While Paul talks about indecent behavior, he talks more about love -- it's that overarching message which guides my understanding of Scripture. Proof-texting is dangerous because it can lead you to read things out of context and end up in places which do not reflect God's intended love.

Leviticus: Really Folks, We've Had Enough of this Book


Offerings, Rituals, Cleanliness, and Priestly Duties abound in this third book of the Hebrew bible, or as Christians label it: The Old Testament. There are some fundamentalists who cite various segments of this book in support or condemnation of a huge variety of human activities. To those who believe in the inerrantcy of the Bible, Leviticus gives them lots of justifications for condemning a multitude of actions a modern, or ancient person might consider acceptable before God.

My favorite, especially as it applies to a long line of right-wingnuts is this one from Leviticus 20:10 -

"If a man commits adultrey with another man's wife - both the adulterer and the adulteress must be put to death."

Oh, that this would happen - we would be rid of Cheney, Gingrich, Limbaugh, Brock, Helms, Ravenscroft, Burton, Trout, Prince Charles, Swaggart, Bakker, Bowers, Crane, Giuliani, Hutchinson, Hyde, Kerik, Ryan, Schlessinger, Sherwood, Terry, et al.

Incidentally, there is a website that lists, with sources, the names and offenses of several dozen "family-focused Republican" legislators who committed incest, rape, sodomy, solicitation of a minor, and other sex crimes. While I'm not about to assert Democrats have not also been charged with similar offenses, the hypocracy of "Family Friendly" legislators being so engaged is mind-boggling. And we certainly do not need to go into detail about the problems with the hundreds of cases involving Roman Catholic clergy in sex crimes.

Equally troublesome is the concentration of writings about offerings to God by way of the priests, which are specified in great detail in Leviticus. Jesus certainly had a quite different concept of "offerings" to God. The idea that one could absolve themselves of sinful behavior by giving animal sacrifices to the priests is repugnant in the extreme. And where is today's sinner who maintains a flock of rams, sheep, fowl, or other animal to offer to the modern day priest? Burnt offerings on the altar? I don't think so with today's fire codes. To strictly abide by the "laws as given to Moses by God" as listed in Leviticus one could not possibly live in a modern urban environment.

And as for the stoning - make damn sure you've read Leviticus before you pick up that rock.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Atlantic Station


Building a City Within the City of Atlanta
Article Tools Sponsored By
By LISA CHAMBERLAIN
Published: May 24, 2006

ATLANTA — "Make no little plans" was the sentiment espoused by the celebrated architect and city planner Daniel H. Burnham at the turn of the last century, and it seems to be making a comeback at the turn of this one. From Denver to Dallas to downtown Los Angeles, multibillion-dollar large-scale mixed-used developments are taking shape. But Atlantic Station here is Exhibit A.

Atlantic Station is not only extraordinarily large, but it is also being built on a formerly contaminated site that was home to a hundred-year-old steel mill, which ceased operation in 1998. Now, the location has become a city within a city on 138 acres with retail, residential, commercial and public space in Midtown Atlanta, the commercial district. And the development seems to be exceeding the expectations of some people.

It will be several more years before the project, which is about half finished, is completed. If it all happens as planned, the $2 billion investment will create a total of 13 million new square feet — about 50 percent larger than the huge Atlantic Yards project proposed in Brooklyn.

The Atlanta development will ultimately include 6 million square feet of ultramodern Class A office space; 5,000 residential units (from luxury condo lofts to more affordable town houses and apartments); 2 million square feet of retail and entertainment space, including restaurants and movie theaters; 1,000 hotel rooms; and 11 acres of public parks.

"There are other projects like this around the country, but not on this scale with as many complicating factors," said James F. Jacoby, president of Jacoby Development Inc., an Atlanta-based development firm.

In 1996, he had the idea of redeveloping the steel mill property, despite the environmental concerns that had scared off many others. "To have this much property in the hands of one owner in a location like this, it's very rare," he said.

Atlantic Station has three areas: the District is the town center of sorts with commercial, retail and urban-style lofts; the Commons is predominantly a high-rise residential area; and the Village is low-rise housing as well as an Ikea store.

Much of the commercial property within the District — where the second Class A office building is coming out of the ground — is built atop a parking structure that will eventually have 15,000 spaces. (The structure was part of the environmental remediation to cap the area where the steel mill operated and it is built on top of the contained area.)

Since Mr. Jacoby first disclosed his plans for the project 10 years ago, it has been a target of critics and skeptics. Many doubted that the project would ever happen, only to wonder later if it could possibly live up to the hype.

But even Kyle Jenks, principal at Parkside Partners, a rival commercial development company that is not affiliated with Atlantic Station, said the project had been a boon to commercial real estate in Midtown Atlanta.

"Over all, the project has far exceeded expectations," Mr. Jenks said. "The residential component has been very successful, and equally impressive is the amount of Class A office they've been able to do in a tough speculative market.

Stamps to Become a Marketing Vehicle


By Caroline E. Mayer
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, May 24, 2006; Page D01

The U.S. Postal Service is allowing companies to create their own branded stamps for first-class mail. Instead of flags, you can expect to see a company logo; instead of photos of famous Americans, you might see pictures of your local real estate agent. It is a test, part of an effort to reverse the decline in first-class mailings. As USPS spokeswoman Joanne Veto said, "We want to make mail more interesting to consumers."

The first company to buy in is Hewlett-Packard, which is using its corporate logo and pictures from its early days -- including founders Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard -- on mail sent to customers and partners.

"HP views this as an opportunity to extend the brand," said Gary Elliott, vice president of brand marketing in a statement. "It is a new 'brand canvas.' " The cost can be as little as 10 cents extra per stamp. The money goes to vendors who manufacture the stamps.

For the past year, consumers have been able to create personal stamps, with pictures of babies, pets and other loved ones, for about twice the cost of a regular stamp. But advertising was barred from stamps until earlier this year when Congress overturned a 19th-century law barring commercial images on stamps. Can a scratch-and-sniff stamp promoting a product such as soda be far behind?

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Eco-Megamall


Upstate New York Greenlights Revolutionary Eco-Megamall
eMagazine Online
May 23, 2006
Reporting by Roddy Scheer

"After years of bickering and delays, local officials in Syracuse, New York have finally given the green light to the world’s first green megamall. Developers have promised that the proposed multi-billion dollar entertainment and shopping complex, dubbed DestiNY USA, would run entirely on wind turbines, solar panels, fuel cells and biofuels while serving as a model for clean living and green shopping. The new mall would be the largest green real estate development in the world to date.

Developer Robert Congel, who is spearheading the project, says that once the complex is completed it will attract tourists from around the world while becoming a “paradigm-shifting catalyst” for the nation’s renewable energy markets. Once completed, the development will host the world’s largest solar installation, accounting for as much as a third of the total solar capacity in the U.S.

Congel has even predicted that the project could accelerate economies of scale to the point where the price of renewable energy would become cost-competitive with fossil fuels in as little as ten years. He calls the proposed development an “Apollo Project” for renewable energy, boasting that it will grow the economy, strengthen national security by reducing reliance on foreign oil sources, and protect the environment.

Construction on the project, which will take place in three phases over a decade, could start as early as September, with stores opening to shoppers as soon as 2008.

William J. Jefferson


Note: According to an article in the NYT on May 5th, 2006:

"In the court documents made public on Sunday, which were designed to persuade a judge to approve the search of Mr. Jefferson's Congressional office, the F.B.I. said its investigation of Mr. Jefferson began in March 2005 and had turned up evidence of various crimes by the lawmaker, including bribery, wire fraud, conspiracy and attempted bribery of officials of foreign governments in Nigeria and Ghana."

...am I the only one who sees this episode as just too unlikely to be as simple a case as has been written about by the media? A black, Harvard trained lawyer turned three term representative from Louisiana named William Jefferson is accused of bribery of foreign officials. The FBI assigns up to twenty-some-odd agents to investigate, and after a year returns an 83 page indictment against him, complete with a midnight raid of his House Congressional offices...and just incidentally, he is a Democrat.

This I guess is roughly comparable to Tom Delay's outright bribery of hundreds of domestic House Representatives, forcible expulsions of Democrats and dissidents from K-Street agencies, and the blackmail of House Ethics and Rules Committee staff. BS !! If all political entities were charged with bribery based on their use of money to obtain preferences, exert pressure on opponents, or obtain favorable results for themselves and their clients, there would be almost no-one serving elective office!

It is also wonderfully convenient that the FBI has found a Democrat to charge with these crimes - helping to politically offset the charges against Cunningham, Ryan, Nye, Abramoff, DeLay, Santorum, Reid, Scanlon, Norquist, Burns, et al. If guilty, Jefferson accepted money from a company to bribe officials in Nigeria and Ghana in support of a telecommunications project. But wait, wasn't Boeing, KBR, Bechtel, Enron, Global Crossing, Haliburton and several of its company officers guilty of doing the same thing, except they targeted the Federal Government of the USA, not Nigeria?

The Bushies complained about the moral corruption they saw in President Clinton's personal actions with an intern, and asserted they would change the climate in Washington. Well, they certainly have done that! No more blowjob hedonists - instead we have a culture of grifters, religious fundamentalists, incompetents, autocrats, and jingoistic nationalists to provide inspiration to our citizens.



F.B.I. Raid Divides G.O.P. Lawmakers and White House


By CARL HULSE
Published: May 24, 2006

WASHINGTON, May 23 — After years of quietly acceding to the Bush administration's assertions of executive power, the Republican-led Congress hit a limit this weekend.

Resentment boiled among senior Republicans for a second day on Tuesday after a team of warrant-bearing agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation turned up at a closed House office building on Saturday evening, demanded entry to the office of a lawmaker and spent the night going through his files.

The episode prompted cries of constitutional foul from Republicans — even though the lawmaker in question, Representative William J. Jefferson of Louisiana, is a Democrat whose involvement in a bribery case has made him an obvious partisan political target.

Speaker J. Dennis Hastert raised the issue personally with President Bush on Tuesday. The Senate Rules Committee is examining the episode.

Representative John A. Boehner of Ohio, the House majority leader, predicted that the separation-of-powers conflict would go to the Supreme Court. "I have to believe at the end of the day it is going to end up across the street," Mr. Boehner told reporters gathered in his conference room. A court challenge would place all three branches of government in the fray over whether the obscure "speech and debate" clause of the Constitution, which offers some legal immunity for lawmakers in the conduct of their official duties, could be interpreted to prohibit a search by the executive branch on Congressional property.

Lawmakers and outside analysts said that while the execution of a warrant on a Congressional office might be surprising — this appears to be the first time it has happened — it fit the Bush administration's pattern of asserting broad executive authority, sometimes at the expense of the legislative and judicial branches. Pursuing a course advocated by Vice President Dick Cheney, the administration has sought to establish primacy on domestic and foreign policy, not infrequently keeping much of Congress out of the loop unless forced to consult.

"It is consistent with a unilateral approach to the use of authority in Washington, D.C.," Philip J. Cooper, a professor at Portland State University who has studied the administration's approach to executive power, said of the search. "This administration," Dr. Cooper said, "has very systematically and from the beginning acted in a way to interpret its executive powers as broadly as possible and to interpret the power of Congress as narrowly as possible as compared to the executive."

Some Republicans agreed privately that the search was in line with what they saw as the philosophy of the Justice Department in the Bush administration. They said the department had often pushed the limits on legal interpretations involving issues like the treatment of terrorism detainees and surveillance.

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Another Federal Disaster Zone


US blames Fannie management
Tue May 23, 2006 4:18 PM ET
By Kristin Roberts

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Mortgage finance giant Fannie Mae will pay a $400 million fine after a U.S. probe of its $11 billion accounting scandal blamed management, the board and an "arrogant and unethical" culture for massive profit manipulation.

A scathing report from Fannie's regulator, the U.S. Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, said employees massaged earnings to trigger bonuses for executives. The board contributed by failing to act independently, the report said.

"They were flat out wrong, or to use the proper regulatory phrase, they were managing Fannie Mae in an unsafe and unsound manner," said James Lockhart, acting director of the regulatory agency, known as OFHEO.

"The image of Fannie Mae as one of the lowest-risk and best in class institutions was a false facade. Our examination found an environment where the ends justified the means," he said.

The 340-page report laid out a litany of accounting problems and failures by Fannie Mae's (FNM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) executives, including current Chief Executive Officer Daniel Mudd.

It said Fannie used its power in Washington to lobby Congress in an effort to interfere with the federal examination of the company's accounting problems. Even after serious accounting problems surfaced, the company failed to take steps to address them, the report said. "Congress created Fannie Mae to expand homeownership by increasing mortgage financing," said Christopher Cox, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission. Fannie Mae describes itself as an instrument of national policy and as a private company with a public mission."

"For that reason, today's announcement is especially bitter because it underscores a breach of trust," Cox said. The accounting errors are likely to lead to one of the largest profit restatements in U.S. corporate history, said Linda Thomsen, director of the SEC's enforcement division.

Note: On and on it goes. One Bush Administration Agency, Department, or Bureau after another fails the management performance test. AG, CIA, FBI, DHS, FEMA, NSA, ad nauseum. These guys seem not to be involved in "starving the beast" as much as they seem actively working to destroy the effective functioning of their organizations. Adherence to neocon political ideology, cronyism, graft, corruption, mismanagement, disfunctional systems planning and operations, all paint a very disturbing picture of the Federal Government under this Administration. Is there even one current Federal organization that has demonstrated superlative results which are viewed as legitimate by a solid majority of knowledgeable parties? If so, please let us know, as it appears our 2000 vintage "Mighty Empire" has dissolved before our eyes.

Bullshit vs Lying


On Bullshit (ISBN 0-691-12294-6) is an essay by Princeton University professor emeritus Harry Frankfurt.

"It is impossible for someone to lie unless he thinks he knows the truth. Producing bullshit requires no such conviction. ... Someone who lies and someone who tells the truth are playing on opposite sides, so to speak, in the same game. Each responds to the facts as he understands them, although the response of the one is guided by the authority of the truth, while the response of the other defies that authority and refuses to meet its demands.

The bullshitter ignores these demands altogether. He does not reject the authority of the truth, as the liar does, and oppose himself to it. He pays no attention to it at all. By virtue of this, bullshit is a greater enemy of the truth than lies are..."

Monday, May 22, 2006

'An Inconvenient Truth':


Al Gore's Fight Against Global Warming - Showing June 9th at Loew's Tara in Atlanta

Health Care: Single Payer System


  • Single-payer saves money.

    By having one organization handle all of the bureaucracy and all of the administration of the health care system (mostly consisting of paperwork and payments) paper-pushing greatly decreases in frequency and cost. More of each of our dollars that go toward health care would actually be used to care for people's health, instead of going toward managers and forms. Single-payer eliminates the bulk of paperwork duplication, and in the process, could potentially save hundreds of BILLIONS (that's 100,000 million) of dollars. As it is right now, American businesses are at an economic disadvantage, because their health costs are so much higher than in other countries. The Canadian branches of Ford, GM, and Daimler-Chrysler all publicly support Canada's health care system, because it saves them an enormous amount of money, compared to their counterparts in the US.

    What's more, a single-payer system would mean fewer personal bankruptcies due to medical bills--and an end to patients actually receiving bills. In most countries with a single-payer system, patients never see a bill. The billing process doesn't even involve patients. (This saves money, too--think of how much work goes into itemizing each bill, sending it to each patient, following up on the bill if there's been an error... and on, and on.)

    Most single-payer systems save a ton of money by buying prescription drugs for its patients in huge bulk quantities. You know the money you save for buying in bulk at Costco or Sam's Club? Think of applying that concept to buying prescription drugs for America's 290 million people. (Hint: this is what Canada does--it's what makes their drugs much cheaper.

  • How would it be financed

    Luckily there's already plenty of money in the health care system. The US spends double what most other countries spend on health care, and Americans still have shorter lifespans, and 45 million people still go uninsured every year. Many financing schemes exist. Hundreds of billions of dollars could potentially be saved in administrative costs, which would far exceed the amount needed to insure everyone in the United States. Put most simply, the money that businesses currently pay for health care would go to the single-payer; this would make up most of the money needed.

  • Bulk-purchasing of drugs is big government price control. Shouldn't the market decide that?

    Virtually all other industrialized, capitalist countries have some sort of large-scale bulk-purchasing program. It's just like Wal-Mart using its purchasing power to buy in bulk, and provide cheap goods to customers. In fact, the reason many people are buying drugs from Canada is because they're much cheaper there. Insurance companies do this all the time--buy drugs for all of their members, and get cheaper prices, so would it really be that different to have the government buy for everyone? The VA and the Department of Defense already do this, but the current Medicare legislation does not allow the government to do so.

  • Is national health insurance “socialized medicine”?

    No. Socialized medicine is a system in which doctors and hospitals work for the government and draw salaries from the government. Doctors in the Veterans Administration and the Armed Services are paid this way. Examples also exist in Great Britain and Spain. But in most European countries, Canada, Australia and Japan they have socialized financing, or socialized health insurance, not socialized medicine. The government pays for care that is delivered in the private (mostly not-for-profit) sector. This is similar to how Medicare works in this country. Doctors are in private practice and are paid on a fee-for-service basis from government funds. The government does not own or manage their medical practices or hospitals.

  • Unaffordable Costs

    Our medical system drives staggering numbers of families to financial ruin. It is now commonplace to hear stories of families, co-workers, and churches holding fundraisers and garage sales to pay for medical bills.

    * Number of bankruptcies in the US in 2001: 1,458,000 [7]

    * Percent of these bankruptcies for which illness was a significant cause: 50 [7]

    * Percent increase in bankruptcies between 1981 and 2001: 360 [7]

    * Percent increase in medical bankruptcies between 1981 and 2001: 2,200 [7]

    * Percent of medical bankruptcies in which the sick person was insured when they fell ill: 75.7 [7]

    * Percent of these bankruptcies that happen to the middle class: 90 [4]

    * Percent of terminally ill patients reporting that medical costs caused financial problems: 39 [7]

    * Rank of “lapse in health insurance coverage during the two years” as a predictor of medical bankruptcy: 1 [7]

    * Rank of US in fairness of financial contribution to health care: 55 [13]

    * Rank of Iraq: 56 [13]

  • Advantages of the Single-Payer Health Coverage:

    * Comprehensive Health Coverage for everyone
    * Greater choice of provider
    * Health decisions made by patient and provider instead of HMOs
    * Improved Health Planning
    * Health coverage would be portable, not tied to employment.
    * Eliminates the high (up to 33 percent) overhead cost of multiple private, for-profit insurances by including coverage for everyone in a single-risk pool (reducing administrative costs to 1-5%).
    * Instead of hundreds of insurances with differing requirements (requiring increased office staff), providers would deal with only one form.
    * The plan would be financed with a progressive tax, at less per-capita cost.
    * Companies would avoid hassles of managing health care, and become more competitive without annual inflationary health costs.
    * Consumers would pay less for goods and services that are inflated by businesses’ high health costs - e.g., currently $1,500 is added to the cost of each U.S.-made automobile due to health costs.
    * U.S. Consumers , who now spend twice as much per capita as consumers in other developed countries (with poorer outcomes), would save as administrative health costs are reduced.
    * Single-risk-pool coverage would permit negotiation of lower, bulk rates for medications.
    * Increased U.S. life expectancy: Similar socioeconomic single-payer European countries enjoy average two-year longer life expectancies.
    * The over-45 million uninsured Americans and 50 million more underinsured would have access to preventative care, without having to resort to delayed, crisis Emergency Room care. at 4 to 5 times higher cost.
    * Lessening demands on the nation’s emergency rooms for primary care would stem the tide of closures of overburdened emergency rooms.
    * Retirees would not face loss of health coverage by employers.
    * Eliminates the profit motive that places priority on stockholders’ profits, and creates a perverse incentive to deny health coverage to the ill or high-risk.

  • And the why nots?
       *Signal Health argues because of political concerns
       *A doctor worries that the government might not create a fair, accountable, and equitable system
       *A psychologist says he's for universal health care coverage; but not a single payment system. Basically worried about a bureaucrat deciding on the merits of health options
       *Another doctor concerned about limitations on doctor and patient "choices"
       *A HMO group tries to assert it would be too costly. (See also the OMB and CBO counter-arguments in support of a single-payer system)
       *A lot of pro and con arguments both ways...mostly pro because of fairness, cost, and access...cons against because of belief in efficiencies of "the markets", worries about limits on choice, potential political implementation problems.

  • Saturday, May 20, 2006

    New Ads Portray Global Warming Science as Smear Campaign Against Carbon Dioxide

    Matthew Yglesias on Constitutional Protections


    Talking Points Memo Blog
    May 17th, 2006

    "I am a strong supporter of the First Amendment, the Fourth Amendment and civil liberties," Senator Pat Roberts (R-Kansas) remarked at yesterday's Hayden confirmation hearings, "but you have no civil liberties if you are dead." This comes via Dave Weigel and nicely encapsulates at least three different pieces of horribly misguided rightingery.

    First off is the sheer cowardice of it. Sure, liberal democracy is nice, but not if someone might get hurt. One might think that strong supporters of civil liberties would be willing to countenance the idea that it might be worth bearing some level of risk in order to preserve them.

    Second is just this dogmatic post-9/11 insistence on acting as if human history began suddenly in 1997 or something. The United States was able to face down such threats as the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany without indefinite detentions, widespread use of torture as an interrogative technique, or all-pervasive surveillance. But a smallish group of terrorists who can't even surface publicly abroad for fear they'll be swiftly killed by the mightiest military on earth? Time to break out the document shredder and do away with that pesky constitution.

    Last, there's the unargued assumption that civil rights and the rule of law are some kind of near-intolerable impediment to national security. But if you look around the world over the past hundred years or so, I think you'll see that the record of democracy is pretty strong. You don't see authoritarian regimes using their superior ability to operate in secret and conduct surveillance to run roughshod over more fastidious countries. You see liberalism prospering -- both in the sense that the core liberal countries have grown richer-and-richer and in the sense that liberal democracy has consistently spread out from its original homeland since people like it better. You see governments that can operate in total secrecy falling prey to crippling corruption. You see powers of surveillance used not to defend countries from external threats, but to defend rulers from domestic political opponents.

    The U.S.S.R., after all, lost the Cold War, not because we beat them in a race to the bottom to improve national security by gutting the principles of our system, but because the principles underlying our system were actually better than the alternative. If you don't have some faith the American way of life is capable of coping with actual challenges, then what's the point in defending it?"

    Friday, May 19, 2006

    The Essential Krugman: "Coming Down to Earth"

    The Essential Krugman:" Coming Down to Earth"


    by Paul Krugman, Commentary, NY Times
    May 15, 2006

       "We shouldn't read too much into a couple of days' movements in stock prices. But it seems that investors are suddenly feeling uneasy about the state of the economy. ... the puzzle is why they haven't been uneasy all along. The rise in stock prices that began last fall was essentially based on the belief that the U.S. economy can defy gravity — that both individuals and the nation as a whole can spend more than their income ... more or less indefinitely.

    To be fair, for a while the data seemed to confirm that belief. In 2005, the trade deficit passed $700 billion, yet the dollar actually rose against the euro and the yen. Housing prices soared, yet houses kept selling. The price of gasoline neared $3 a gallon, yet consumers kept buying ... even though they had to borrow to keep spending...

    Over the last few weeks, however, gravity seems to have started reasserting itself. The dollar began falling about a month ago. ... there's a definite sense that foreign governments, in particular, are becoming less willing to keep the dollar strong by buying lots of U.S. debt. The housing market seems to be weakening rapidly. ... Finally, there are preliminary indications that consumers, hard-pressed by high gasoline prices, may be reaching their limit. ...

    I can't resist pointing out that the Bush administration's response to the squeeze on working families has been, you guessed it, to accuse the news media of biased reporting.

    On May 10 the White House issued a press release titled "Setting the Record Straight: The New York Times Continues to Ignore America's Economic Progress." The release attacked The Times for asserting that paychecks weren't keeping up with fixed costs like medical care and gasoline. The White House declared, "But average hourly earnings have risen 3.8 percent over the past 12 months, their largest increase in nearly five years."

    On Wednesday John Snow repeated that boast before a House committee. However, Representative Barney Frank was ready. He asked whether the number was adjusted for inflation; after flailing about, Mr. Snow admitted, sheepishly, that it wasn't. In fact, nearly all of the wage increase was negated by higher prices.

    Meanwhile, the return of economic gravity poses a definite threat to U.S. economic growth. After all, growth over the past three years was driven mainly by a housing boom and rapid growth in consumer spending. ... As I summarized it awhile back, we became a nation in which people make a living by selling one another houses, and they pay for the houses with money borrowed from China.

    Now that game seems to be coming to an end. We're going to have to find other ways to make a living — in particular, we're going to have to start selling goods and services, not just I.O.U.'s, to the rest of the world, and/or replace imports with domestic production. And adjusting to that new way of making a living will take time.

    Will we have that time? Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the Federal Reserve, contends that what's happening in the housing market is "a very orderly and moderate kind of cooling." Maybe he's right. But if he isn't, the stock market drop of the last two days will be remembered as the start of a serious economic slowdown.

    Did the Bush Tax Cuts Increase Economic Growth?



    Paul Krugman answers a question about the Bush tax cuts in Money Talks: Economy No Longer Defying Gravity. The question is based upon his latest column:
    <------------------------------------->
    Alan Gertler, Reno, Nev.: I'm a scientist, not an economist, so I'm fairly naive when it comes to what drives the economy. My question is this: Have the tax cuts stimulated the economy as claimed (which I don't believe given the past cases of Reagan and Bush senior), or has it been the willingness of the government to continue massive spending by increasing our debt that has led to the growth of the economy?
    <------------------------------------->
    Paul Krugman: It's actually neither. About the Bush tax cuts: the tax cuts of 2001 evidently didn't do the job; these days, the Bush people talk about the economy as if history began in the middle of 2003, after their SECOND wave of tax cuts.

    But while the economy did start growing, finally, in 2003, the growth wasn't at all of the form you'd expect if tax cuts were responsible. The main tax cuts were on dividends and capital gains; supposedly this would make it easier for businesses to raise funds and invest. But business investment hasn't been the main driver of growth; in fact, businesses have been sitting on huge piles of earnings, reluctant to invest. Instead, the big driver was housing construction and consumer spending.

    So what really happened? Low interest rates led to a housing boom that eventually turned into a housing bubble. High house prices made people feel richer, and they could borrow against the increased value of their homes, feeding consumer spending. Tax cuts had nothing to do with it.

    Photos of Political Drag Queens


  • George W. Bush:   {One, Two, Three, Four}
  • Bill Clinton:    {One, Two, Three, Four}
  • Jimmy Carter:   {One, Two, Three, Four}
  • John Kerry:   {One, Two}
  • Colin Powell:    {One}
  • Donald Rumsfeld:   {One)
  • Prince Charles:   {One}

  • Note: Courtesy of Maria Rees

    Thursday, May 18, 2006

    Everyone Wants to 'Own' Your PC


    By Bruce Schneier
    Wired News
    May 4, 2006

    When technology serves its owners, it is liberating. When it is designed to serve others, over the owner's objection, it is oppressive. There's a battle raging on your computer right now -- one that pits you against worms and viruses, Trojans, spyware, automatic update features and digital rights management technologies. It's the battle to determine who owns your computer.

    You own your computer, of course. You bought it. You paid for it. But how much control do you really have over what happens on your machine? Technically you might have bought the hardware and software, but you have less control over what it's doing behind the scenes.

    Using the hacker sense of the term, your computer is "owned" by other people.

    It used to be that only malicious hackers were trying to own your computers. Whether through worms, viruses, Trojans or other means, they would try to install some kind of remote-control program onto your system. Then they'd use your computers to sniff passwords, make fraudulent bank transactions, send spam, initiate phishing attacks and so on. Estimates are that somewhere between hundreds of thousands and millions of computers are members of remotely controlled "bot" networks. Owned.

    Now, things are not so simple. There are all sorts of interests vying for control of your computer. There are media companies that want to control what you can do with the music and videos they sell you. There are companies that use software as a conduit to collect marketing information, deliver advertising or do whatever it is their real owners require. And there are software companies that are trying to make money by pleasing not only their customers, but other companies they ally themselves with. All these companies want to own your computer.

    Some examples:

    * Entertainment software: In October 2005, it emerged that Sony had distributed a rootkit with several music CDs -- the same kind of software that crackers use to own people's computers. This rootkit secretly installed itself when the music CD was played on a computer. Its purpose was to prevent people from doing things with the music that Sony didn't approve of: It was a DRM system. If the exact same piece of software had been installed secretly by a hacker, this would have been an illegal act. But Sony believed that it had legitimate reasons for wanting to own its customers’ machines.

    * Antivirus: You might have expected your antivirus software to detect Sony's rootkit. After all, that's why you bought it. But initially, the security programs sold by Symantec and others did not detect it, because Sony had asked them not to. You might have thought that the software you bought was working for you, but you would have been wrong.

    * Internet services: Hotmail allows you to blacklist certain e-mail addresses, so that mail from them automatically goes into your spam trap. Have you ever tried blocking all that incessant marketing e-mail from Microsoft? You can't.

    * Application software: Internet Explorer users might have expected the program to incorporate easy-to-use cookie handling and pop-up blockers. After all, other browsers do, and users have found them useful in defending against internet annoyances. But Microsoft isn't just selling software to you; it sells internet advertising as well. It isn't in the company's best interest to offer users features that would adversely affect its business partners.

    * Spyware: Spyware is nothing but someone else trying to own your computer. These programs eavesdrop on your behavior and report back to their real owners -- sometimes without your knowledge or consent -- about your behavior.

    * Internet security: It recently came out that the firewall in Microsoft Vista will ship with half its protections turned off. Microsoft claims that large enterprise users demanded this default configuration, but that makes no sense. It's far more likely that Microsoft just doesn't want adware -- and DRM spyware -- blocked by default.
    * Update: Automatic update features are another way software companies try to own your computer. While they can be useful for improving security, they also require you to trust your software vendor not to disable your computer for nonpayment, breach of contract or other presumed infractions.

    Adware, software-as-a-service and Google Desktop search are all examples of some other company trying to own your computer. And Trusted Computing will only make the problem worse.

    There is an inherent insecurity to technologies that try to own people's computers: They allow individuals other than the computers' legitimate owners to enforce policy on those machines. These systems invite attackers to assume the role of the third party and turn a user's device against him.

    Remember the Sony story: The most insecure feature in that DRM system was a cloaking mechanism that gave the rootkit control over whether you could see it executing or spot its files on your hard disk. By taking ownership away from you, it reduced your security.

    If left to grow, these external control systems will fundamentally change your relationship with your computer. They will make your computer much less useful by letting corporations limit what you can do with it. They will make your computer much less reliable because you will no longer have control of what is running on your machine, what it does, and how the various software components interact. At the extreme, they will transform your computer into a glorified boob tube.

    You can fight back against this trend by only using software that respects your boundaries. Boycott companies that don't honestly serve their customers, that don't disclose their alliances, that treat users like marketing assets. Use open-source software -- software created and owned by users, with no hidden agendas, no secret alliances and no back-room marketing deals.

    Just because computers were a liberating force in the past doesn't mean they will be in the future. There is enormous political and economic power behind the idea that you shouldn't truly own your computer or your software, despite having paid for it.

    The N.S.A.'s Math Problem


    By JONATHAN DAVID FARLEY
    NY Times
    Published: May 16, 2006
    Stanford, Calif.

    "News that AT&T, Verizon and BellSouth gave customer records to the National Security Agency has set off a heated debate over the intricacies of espionage law. But legal or not, this sort of spying program probably isn't worth infringing our civil liberties for — because it's very unlikely that the type of information one can glean from it will help us win the war on terrorism.

    If the program is along the lines described by USA Today — with the security agency receiving complete lists of who called whom from each of the phone companies — the object is probably to collect data and draw a chart, with dots or "nodes" representing individuals and lines between nodes if one person has called another.

    Mathematicians who work with pictures like this are called graph theorists, and there is an entire academic field, social network analysis, that tries to determine information about a group from such a chart, like who the key players are or who the cell leaders might be.

    But without additional data, its reach is limited: as any mathematician will admit, even when you know everyone in the graph is a terrorist, it doesn't directly portray information about the order or hierarchy of the cell. Social network researchers look instead for graph features like "centrality": they try to identify nodes that are connected to a lot of other nodes, like spokes around the hub of a bicycle wheel.

    But this isn't as helpful as you might imagine. First, the "central player" — the person with the most spokes — might not be as important as the hub metaphor suggests. For example, Jafar Adibi, an information scientist at the University of Southern California, analyzed e-mail traffic among Enron employees before the company collapsed. He found that if you naïvely analyzed the resulting graph, you could conclude that one of the "central" players was Ken Lay's ... secretary.

    And even if you manage to eliminate all the "central players," you may well still leave enough lesser players that the cell retains a complete chain of command capable of carrying out a devastating terrorist attack.

    In addition, the National Security Agency's entire spying program seems to be based on a false assumption: that you can work out who might be a terrorist based on calling patterns. While I agree that anyone calling 1-800-ALQAEDA is probably a terrorist, in less obvious situations guilt by association is not just bad law, it's bad mathematics, for two reasons.

    The simplest reason is that we're all connected. Not in the Haight-Ashbury/Timothy Leary/late-period Beatles kind of way, but in the sense of the Kevin Bacon game. The sociologist Stanley Milgram made this clear in the 1960's when he took pairs of people unknown to each other, separated by a continent, and asked one of the pair to send a package to the other — but only by passing the package to a person he knew, who could then send the package only to someone he knew, and so on. On average, it took only six mailings — the famous six degrees of separation — for the package to reach its intended destination.

    Looked at this way, President Bush is only a few steps away from Osama bin Laden (in the 1970's he ran a company partly financed by the American representative for one of the Qaeda leader's brothers). And terrorist hermits like the Unabomber are connected to only a very few people. So much for finding the guilty by association.

    A second problem with the spy agency's apparent methodology lies in the way terrorist groups operate and what scientists call the "strength of weak ties." As the military scientist Robert Spulak has described it to me, you might not see your college roommate for 10 years, but if he were to call you up and ask to stay in your apartment, you'd let him. This is the principle under which sleeper cells operate: there is no communication for years. Thus for the most dangerous threats, the links between nodes that the agency is looking for simply might not exist.

    If our intelligence agencies are determined to use mathematics in rooting out terrorists, they may consider a profiling technique called formal concept analysis, a branch of lattice theory. The idea, in a nutshell, is that people who share many of the same characteristics are grouped together as one node, and links between nodes in this picture — called a "concept lattice" — indicate that all the members of a certain subgroup, with certain attributes, must also have other attributes.

    For formal concept analysis to be helpful, you need much more than phone records. For instance, you might group together people based on what cafes, bookstores and mosques they visit, and then find out that all the people who go to a certain cafe also attend the same mosque (but maybe not vice versa).

    While researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory have used this tool to sift through hundreds of terrorism-related reports — and find connections that human analysts could not have found easily — it's still dangerous to rely on the math.

    This is because, as Kennedy and Lincoln assassination buffs know, two people can be a lot alike without being the same person. Even if there is only a 1 in 150 million chance that someone might share the profile of a terrorist suspect, it still means that, in a country the size of the United States, two people might share that profile. One might be a terrorist, or he might be Cat Stevens.

    This isn't to say that mathematicians are useless in fighting terrorism. In September 2004 — 10 months before the bombing of the London Underground — Gordon Woo, a mathematician and risk-assessment consultant, gave a speech warning that London was a hotbed of jihadist radicalism. But Dr. Woo didn't anticipate violence just using math; he also used his knowledge of London neighborhoods. That's what law enforcement should have been doing then and should be doing now: using some common sense and knowledge of terrorists, not playing math games.

    Math is just a tool. Used wisely, math can indeed help in warfare: consider the Battle of Britain, won in part by breaking the German codes. But use it unwisely — as seems to be the case here — and your approval ratings might just hit a new all-time low.

    Note: Jonathan David Farley is a science fellow at the Center for International Security and Cooperation at Stanford.

    NSA Spying: How Well Does It Work?


    By Matthew Yglesias | bio
    TPM Cafe - May 16th, 2006
    [Follow Up TPM Comments Here]
    [Jonathan Farley's Op-Ed in the Times]

    "I think Michael Levi's critique of Jonathan Farley's op-ed denigrating the efficacy of what we take the NSA data mining operation to be is a little misframed. The question "does it work?" is a bit misleading. Unless they're feeding the data into a computer program that just doesn't function (which I suppose is possible) it's obviously going to "work" in the sense that it will provide some information that's somewhat useful. The relevant issue is how much information and how useful? I went into some of this back in December last time we were worried about data mining, but it still seems to me that it doesn't make sense to apply statistical analysis to a huge set of people -- roughly 200 million -- when you're looking for a tiny number of terrorists.

    The problem is that when you're searching for a rare condition, like being a terrorist, even a very precise statistical tool is going to overwhelmingly give you false positives. Ordinarily, when people are doing statistical analyses they take 95 percent confidence to constitute a statistically meaningful result. But there are 200 million people in the NSA pool and only a handful of terrorists. How many? Let's be generous and say there are 200 al-Qaeda sleeper agents in the USA. Then you apply a 95 percent accurate statistical filter to 200 million people. What you're going to wind up with are 10 terrorists labeled non-terrorists, 190 terrorists labeled terrorists, and a whopping 10 million non-terrorists labeled terrorists.

    That's a process that works. You've reduced the size of your search pool by an order of magnitude. The program "works." But what does it really accomplish?

    In practice, nothing. The NSA can't hand the FBI the names of 10 million Americans and ask them to investigate -- that would be a silly waste of time.

    Now what you can do is that if in addition to your secret, illegal, oversight-free call records database you're also running a secret, illegal, oversight-free wiretapping operation is start listening to the content of everyone in the 10 million group's conversations. Obviously, the manpower's not going to exist to actually listen to all that, but maybe you have another data-mining algorithm that can run on the content. Say this one is also 95 percent accurate. That means 10 more terrorists will get away. And 7.5 million innocent people will be off the hook. But you're still left with a pool of 2.5 million innocent people and only 180 terrorists left under suspicion.

    What you would do with that information just isn't clear to me. There's still not enough manpower to do serious investigations into all those people. And it would be insanely abusive anyway to subject such a huge group to invasive investigations when over 99.9 percent of them are totally innocent. Trying to compile a list of "people with Arab-sounding names" would be about as effective as these two computer algorithms.

    But it's actually much worse than that. Whatever algorithm the NSA is using, they have no way to figure out what its error rate is. On top of that, they have no idea how many terrorists they're looking for. 200 is almost certainly a giant overestimate. You run the program, and you really don't know what you have. All you can know for sure is that even if it's really, really accurate the people it fingers as likely terrorists are overwhelmingly not terrorists.

    As I say, that doesn't mean it "doesn't work." It works fine. The algorithm is accurate -- you're just not sure how accurate. You've narrowed your search pool -- you just don't know how much you narrowed it. But it remains very unclear what you're supposed to do with your results. It seems that most actions you could take would be a waste of time compared to alternative uses of manpower.

    Contrast this with the potential utility of a phone records database for snuffing out leakers. You read an Adam Nagourney article that quotes an unnamed Republican member of congress talking shit about the administration. People in the White House probably have Nagourney's phone number. So you punch that into the database and see which numbers have spoken to Nagourney's. Then you need to check and see if any are the numbers of Republican members of congress. Maybe he spoke to more than one for the story, but still your data's going to be pretty good. You've got three or four dudes, one of whom is the anonymous shit-talker. Unlike knowing that you have 180 terrorists in a pool of 2.5 million innocent citizens, knowing that you have one anonymous shit-talker among two or three innocent congressmen is very useful. You can take action to further investigate. Or you can put it in your back pocket and wait for the next outbreak of anonymous shit-talking. If any of the three or four congressmen show up in the next pool, you probably have your guy.

    That is a program that works.

    Another thing this could be really useful for would be if there's someone you don't like, or want to blackmail, and you want to try and see if he has a mistress.

    In a lot of ways, that's the most troubling aspect of this. You have a program that would be much more effective for abusive uses than it would be for its ostensible purpose. The people ultimately in charge of the program have a well-earned repuation for dishonesty and a well-earned reputation for hardball politics. They've gone out of their way to make sure that the program operates in total secrecy and is subject to no meaningful oversight. Why on earth would you want a program like that?

    If the Bush administration isn't abusing that kind of tool, then you'd pretty much have to conclude that they're dumb. It would be very useful if abused, and there's nobody to stop them from abusing it.

    The Eternal Recurrence of Tom Friedman


    By Matthew Yglesias on TPM Cafe

    Wednesday, May 17, 2006

    How to Recycle Almost Anything

    Messing with God’s Creation


    The New Religious Activism to Save the Environment
    eMagazine Online
    by Ned Sullivan
    May 2006

    With the passion of a convert, former oil-executive George W. Bush kicked off a multi-state tour on President’s Day 2006, barnstorming from Wisconsin to Michigan and Colorado to stump for his new “Advanced Energy Initiative.” The blitz followed the President’s State of the Union address, in which he said, “Here we have a serious problem: America is addicted to oil, which is often imported from unstable parts of the world.”

    Bush went on to promise a 22 percent boost in research at the Department of Energy and other measures to advance clean energy technology, including long-lasting batteries for hybrid vehicles, and biofuel systems.

    While the initiative targeted public concern about record-high gasoline prices and instabilities in the Middle East, the President may also have been positioning himself for a long-anticipated jolt from his political base. Just a week after his speech, the Christian right took aim at Bush’s long-standing refusal to impose limits on U.S. sources of carbon dioxide (CO2), the primary culprit in global warming.

    Replacing dire warnings about fire and brimstone after death with a call for immediate action on Earth, 85 evangelical leaders proclaimed, “This is God’s world, and any damage that we do to God’s world is an offense against God himself.” The signers included a long list of right-leaning religious advocates, including Rick Warren, author of The Purpose Driven Life; Rich Stearns, president of World Vision; and Todd Bassett, national commander of the Salvation Army. Reverend Peter Borgdorff, head of the Christian Reformed Church, said, “As signatories, we are committing ourselves to use our influence as evangelical leaders to focus attention and prompt action of Christian believers to work to limit the emissions that are contributing to disastrous climate change.”

    Since the Bush administration took office six years ago, natural disasters of biblical proportion linked to climate change have aroused this sleeping giant. Concerns among scientists about the rate of melting of the polar ice cap escalated with the 2002 collapse of a massive glacial shelf in Antarctica the size of Rhode Island. The 2004 extreme heat waves in Europe cost some 20,000 deaths. As global surface temperatures reached the highest levels on record in 2005, the devastation caused by Katrina appeared to verify experts’ predictions of increasingly intense hurricane activities due to warming coastal areas.

    Immediately upon issuing their call to action, the religious leaders descended on Capitol Hill to lobby for federal mandates for economy-wide reductions in CO2 emissions. They unleashed a blitz of television, radio and print advertisements, including a full-page ad in the New York Times.

    Notwithstanding this fracture within the evangelical right, the increasingly devastating impacts of global climate change seem to be the galvanizing force inspiring members of the clergy across the ideological spectrum to move to concrete action to save creation. The Reverend Sally Bingham, founder of Interfaith Power and Light in California, noted dramatic progress in her energy conservation initiatives over the past four years. The program she launched, which encourages parishes in California to reduce their demand for electricity and heating fuel, has grown from 140 participating congregations in 2002 to 400 in 2006. On a parallel track, it has spread to 16 other states and the District of Columbia.

    “Our goal is to have an educated clergy, preaching from the pulpit so that every person of faith who claims to love God [is] committed to protecting creation,” explains Bingham. With evangelical zeal, she noted that more than 1,000 congregations around the country have pledged to conduct energy audits and follow through with conservation measures. Last year, she publicly committed to double that number by the end of 2006.

    Maine Interfaith Power and Light (MIPL) has gone a step further, according to Erika Morgan, a founder and board member of the not-for-profit group. In addition to encouraging parishes to conserve energy, MIPL has become a “licensed aggregator,” playing matchmaker between electricity purchasers (both individuals and organizations) and sources of renewable energy.

    Since its founding in 2000, the group has spurred 1,500 parishes and other participants to purchase 12 million kilowatt-hours of renewable electricity generated by Maine hydropower and biomass plants and 804,000 kilowatt-hours of wind and solar electricity. The bottom-line impact of the sale of wind and solar energy is 1.1 million pounds of CO2 kept out of the atmosphere.

    While President Bush’s energy initiative has been cheered by some clean fuels advocates, those concerned about global warming in both clerical and secular ranks are calling for stronger leadership. Environmental Defense is among the green groups that blasted Bush for inadequate action, complaining he didn’t even mention the words “global warming” in his State of the Union address.

    Reverend Peter Borgdorff was more charitable in his assessment, saying, “Any initiative or statement promoting the use of clean fuel is encouraging and gratefully noted. Did the President say enough, is he doing enough? I would like to see more and will advocate for our society taking major initiatives to deal with a growing concern.”

    Tuesday, May 16, 2006

    Health Care: The Deadline Debacle


    American Progress Report
    May 16th, 2006

    "Yesterday was the deadline to sign up for President Bush's Medicare prescription drug plan (Part D), called a "debacle" by New York Times columnist Paul Krugman. Approximately 10 million older adults and Americans with disabilities still had not enrolled in Part D before yesterday's deadline and many will now have to pay seven percent more if they decide to sign up during the next enrollment period (beginning Nov. 15, 2006).

    While the Bush administration has agreed to extend the deadline without penalty for low-income beneficiaries, it has refused to do the same for other seniors who still lack coverage. Deadlines "help people understand there's finality, and people need to get after it," said Bush last week. But the goal of the Medicare program needs to be "people's health, not monetary penalties."

    In an ABC/Washington Post poll last month, 70 percent of seniors favored extending the deadline. In recent weeks, there has been a "growing rebellion" against Bush by a bipartisan group of lawmakers who have urged the administration to extend the deadline and lift the penalties on the program, which has been "plagued by computer mistakes, inadequately staffed telephone help lines, and government exaggerations and misstatements" from the beginning.

    FUZZY ENROLLMENT MATH: The Bush administration has been inflating Part D's enrollment numbers to make the program appear more successful. In Dec. 2003, shortly after the passage of the Medicare Modernization Act, the administration projected 40.7 million seniors and Americans with disabilities would enroll in the prescription drug plan. In late April, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) spokesman Peter Ashkenaz said, "Enrollment is surpassing our goals, satisfaction is high, and we see no reason to extend a deadline that's working." But enrollment has not even met administration goals. Last week, CMS administrator Dr. Mark McClellan said that "37 million people with Medicare have prescription drug coverage." But this number doesn't reflect actual Part D enrollment. For example, while nine million individuals actually enrolled in a stand-alone Medicare prescription drug plan, many others have coverage through retiree plans, not through Medicare Part D.

    MILLIONS OF SENIORS LEFT BEHIND: While the Bush administration congratulates itself on "surpassing" its goals, 10 million elderly adults and Americans with disabilities continue to lack coverage. USA Today reports that the program "is being used least by those who could benefit most: poor, often minority Medicare beneficiaries." Only 24 percent of such beneficiaries have been approved or have enrolled. Individuals with few health problems -- necessary to keep drug prices down for the entire group -- have also been slow to sign up. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that 1.1 million more seniors would enroll if given more time.

    A DIFFICULT INTIMIDATING ENROLLMENT PROCESS: The Medicare prescription drug plan's enrollment has been confusing and riddled with mistakes. A recent GAO report found efficient customer service to be sorely lacking from the new Medicare prescription drug benefit, concluding that "Medicare's telephone operators frequently give callers false or incomplete information...that call waiting times lasted from a few minutes to almost an hour, and the government Web site was so confusing that some people gave up before completing the process."

    Additionally, the easiest way to enroll in the plan is on the Internet, but only one in four seniors have access. Even the parents of Health and Human Services Secretary Michael Leavitt, "ended up picking a plan that put their retiree medical coverage at risk. And this after Leavitt helped his parents in making their initial selection." Seniors who managed to enroll in the plan also faced problems. Tens of thousands of recipients of the new Medicare prescription drug benefit received letters warning them they could be "kicked out because their premiums have not been paid. But many who received the letters in the past few days insist they have already paid, have signed up for automatic Social Security deductions or qualify for free coverage."

    The Part D plan was described as somewhat or very difficult to understand by 75 percent of seniors in a recent CBS/New York Times poll.

    REBELLION BY LAWMAKERS: Last month, forty-eight senators -- including four Republicans -- signed a letter authored by Sens. Bill Nelson (D-FL) and Olympia Snowe (R-ME) to Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN), asking him to extend the deadline through the end of the year and to waive the penalty. Last week, forty-six senators wrote to Leavitt with the same request. "I think it's fair and reasonable to eliminate the penalty," said Rep. Nancy Johnson (R-CT), who heads the House Ways and Means's subcommittee on health. "Senate Finance Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and House Ways and Means Chairman Bill Thomas, R-Calif., indicated last week that they might consider changes once [yesterday's] deadline has passed."

    The Bush administration insisted that it was not "legally permissible" for it to extend the enrollment deadline, but it had already extended the deadline for low-income beneficiaries without congressional approval, citing "exceptional circumstances." As Rep. Pete Stark (D-CA) notes, "Given numerous implementation problems, the same authority could be used to extend the deadline for all beneficiaries." Lawmakers in the House and the Senate have introduced bills to extend the deadline through the end of the year without penalties.

    PROBLEMS PERSIST, MORE HELP NEEDED: While extending the deadline would be an important first step, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) points out that "[w]aiving the penalty does not do enough." Twenty-three percent "of seniors and people with disabilities are paying more for prescription drugs than they did before enrolling in a Medicare Part D plan" and costs of basic plan deductibles, coverage limits, and out-of-pocket expenses will increase nearly seven percent next year. Center for American Progress Director of Health Policy Karen Davenport notes that "legislators should also consider lifting or eliminating the asset test for the Low-Income Subsidy program -- the 'extra help' that low-income people with Medicare coverage can receive for their premiums and co-payments."

    Currently over half the Low-Income Subsidy applicants are turned down, many because their modest assets exceed the limits, even though this extra cash is actually used to "supplement their monthly income and help them pay for care that Medicare does not cover, or life insurance policies or other financial instruments that provide peace of mind for their families." (American Progress has a plan for comprehensive health care reform.).

    Myths and falsehoods on the NSA domestic call-tracking program


    MediaMatters for America - May12th, 2006

    Summary: Media Matters documents the misleading or false claims advanced by media figures and Bush administration supporters in the wake of news that the National Security Agency had since 2001 been secretly collecting records of phone calls made by millions of Americans.

    The Essential Krugman: "D is for Debacle"

    The Essential Krugman: "D is for Debacle"


    by Paul Krugman, Commentary, NY Times
    May 15th, 2006

    Today is the last day to sign up for Medicare Part D, the prescription drug benefit. It appears that millions of Americans, confused by the array of competing plans or simply unaware of the cutoff date, will miss the deadline. This will leave them without drug coverage for the rest of the year, and subject to financial penalties for the rest of their lives.

    President Bush refuses to extend the sign-up period. "Deadlines," he said last week, "help people understand there's finality, and people need to get after it, you know?" His real objection to extending the deadline is probably that this would be an implicit admission that his administration botched the program's start-up. And Mr. Bush never, ever admits mistakes...

    Even Mr. Bush has acknowledged that signing up for the program is a confusing process. But ... prescription drug coverage didn't have to be bafflingly complex. Drug coverage could simply have been added to traditional Medicare. If the government had done that, everyone currently covered by Medicare would automatically have been enrolled in the drug benefit.

    Adding drug coverage as part of ordinary Medicare would also have saved a lot of money, both by eliminating the cost of employing private insurance companies as middlemen and by allowing the government to negotiate lower drug prices. This would have made it possible to offer a better benefit at much less cost to taxpayers.

    But while a straightforward addition of drug coverage to Medicare would have been good policy, it would have been bad politics from the point of view of conservatives, who want to privatize traditional social insurance programs, not make them better.

    Moreover, administration officials and their allies in Congress had both political and personal incentives not to do anything that might reduce the profits of insurance and drug companies. Both the insurance industry and, especially, the pharmaceutical industry are major campaign contributors. And soon after the drug bill was passed, the congressman and the administration official most responsible for drafting the legislation both left public service to become lobbyists.

    So what we got was a drug program set up to serve the administration's friends and its political agenda, not the alleged beneficiaries. Instead of providing drug coverage directly, Part D is a complex system of subsidies to private insurance companies. The administration's insistence on running the program through these companies, which provide little if any additional value beyond what Medicare could easily have provided directly, is what makes the whole thing so complicated. And that complication, combined with an obvious lack of interest in making the system work, is what led to the disastrous start-up.

    All of this is, alas, terribly familiar. As John DiIulio, the former head of Mr. Bush's faith-based initiative, told Esquire, "What you've got is everything — and I mean everything — being run by the political arm." Ideology and cronyism take complete precedence over the business of governing.

    And that's why when it comes to actual policy as opposed to politics, the Bush administration has turned out to have the reverse Midas touch. Everything it gets its hands on, from the reconstruction of Iraq to the rescue of New Orleans, from the drug benefit to the reform of the C.I.A., turns to crud.

    Career counseling for the 21st century

    by Robert J. Shiller, Project Syndicate:
    Editorial in the Korea Herald
    May 16th, 2006

    "As a college professor, I hear a lot of career concerns. As my students prepare to enter working lives that will last 50 years or more, practically all of them try to be futurists in choosing the skills in which to invest. If they pick an occupation that declines in the next half-century, they may deeply regret it. They know that a mid-life career change is difficult, so they want to make the right choice while they are very young.

    From what my students tell me, there is a widespread fear of "commoditization" of jobs in the modern, information technology-driven global economy. They worry that in coming years even highly skilled people might be hired and fired indiscriminately, bought and sold like so many tons of copper or cases of frozen turkeys. ...

    Indeed, while it is often thought that computers will replace only low-skilled jobs, my students remind me otherwise. Medical expertise is in some ways being replaced by computer-based diagnostic systems (expert systems), and much of the work that engineers once did has been replaced by computer-assisted design (CAD) systems. My students worry that such trends may continue, reducing job security, lowering rates of pay, and even eliminating some of the jobs altogether.

    Some students, reckoning that it is better to buy and sell than to be bought and sold, conclude that they should be trained for careers in business, finance, or possibly law. They want the kinds of skills that will keep them among the managers, rather than the managed, and some intuit greater job security and better career prospects at the international level of these fields.

    By contrast, my students often regard occupations like medicine or engineering - involving highly specialized technical knowledge... - as particularly vulnerable to commoditization.

    Should students really be worried about commoditization? Labor economists have discerned some trends that may reinforce their fears, but that don't support the conclusions that students tend to draw.

    In their recent book ... economists Frank Levy and Richard Murnane, using job descriptions that go back to 1960, ... show evidence from the United States that jobs involving both routine manual work and routine cognitive work have become much less plentiful..., and that these jobs have indeed tended to be replaced by computers.

    In an important sense, their research confirms that my students are right to be worried. But ... The important issue, according to Levy and Murnane, is that the most promising future careers will be those grounded in either expert thinking or complex communication skills.

    Expert thinking means understanding how to deal with new and different problems that do not fit the mold of past problems. Complex communications skills entail understanding ideas, how to evaluate their social significance, and how to persuade - tasks that no computer can accomplish.

    As long as young people direct their efforts accordingly, they can acquire these skills in virtually any of the major courses of university study. Moreover, those who would like to devote their college years to acquiring technical skills in a narrow field that they love would be wrong to conclude that they must give up their dream. Specializing in business, finance, or law does not really protect one from commoditization. People in these fields are ultimately bought and sold by corporate managers as much as people in technical fields...

    The important point for students to bear in mind is that they should motivate themselves to attain deep understanding, not rote memorization, of the subjects that they study, in order to fulfill the role of a true expert... At the same time, they should invest in acquiring the communications skills that will be similarly crucial to a successful career.

    Achieving this kind of education probably means pursuing what one naturally finds interesting and engaging, whether that is finance or physiology. Students should stop worrying so much, immerse themselves in the field they love, and learn to appreciate the people who populate it. What may appear to them to be an unaffordable luxury is really a necessity that they can't afford to reject.

    Monday, May 15, 2006

    Will the Real Traitors Please Stand Up?
    By FRANK RICH
    NY Times Op-Ed
    May 14th, 2006

    "When America panics, it goes hunting for scapegoats. But from Salem onward, we've more often than not ended up pillorying the innocent. Abe Rosenthal, the legendary Times editor who died last week, and his publisher, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, were denounced as treasonous in 1971 when they defied the Nixon administration to publish the Pentagon Papers, the secret government history of the Vietnam War. Today we know who the real traitors were: the officials who squandered American blood and treasure on an ill-considered war and then tried to cover up their lies and mistakes. It was precisely those lies and mistakes, of course, that were laid bare by the thousands of pages of classified Pentagon documents leaked to both The Times and The Washington Post.

    This history is predictably repeating itself now that the public has turned on the war in Iraq. The administration's die-hard defenders are desperate to deflect blame for the fiasco, and, guess what, the traitors once again are The Times and The Post. This time the newspapers committed the crime of exposing warrantless spying on Americans by the National Security Agency (The Times) and the C.I.A.'s secret "black site" Eastern European prisons (The Post). Aping the Nixon template, the current White House tried to stop both papers from publishing and when that failed impugned their patriotism.

    President Bush, himself a sometime leaker of intelligence, called the leaking of the N.S.A. surveillance program a "shameful act" that is "helping the enemy." Porter Goss, who was then still C.I.A. director, piled on in February with a Times Op-Ed piece denouncing leakers for potentially risking American lives and compromising national security. When reporters at both papers were awarded Pulitzer Prizes last month, administration surrogates, led by bloviator in chief William Bennett, called for them to be charged under the 1917 Espionage Act.

    We can see this charade for what it is: a Hail Mary pass by the leaders who bungled a war and want to change the subject to the journalists who caught them in the act. What really angers the White House and its defenders about both the Post and Times scoops are not the legal questions the stories raise about unregulated gulags and unconstitutional domestic snooping, but the unmasking of yet more administration failures in a war effort riddled with ineptitude. It's the recklessness at the top of our government, not the press's exposure of it, that has truly aided the enemy, put American lives at risk and potentially sabotaged national security. That's where the buck stops, and if there's to be a witch hunt for traitors, that's where it should begin.

    Well before Dana Priest of The Post uncovered the secret prisons last November, the C.I.A. had failed to keep its detention "secrets" secret. Having obtained flight logs, The Sunday Times of London first reported in November 2004 that the United States was flying detainees "to countries that routinely use torture." Six months later, The New York Times added many details, noting that "plane-spotting hobbyists, activists and journalists in a dozen countries have tracked the mysterious planes' movements." These articles, capped by Ms. Priest's, do not impede our ability to detain terrorists. But they do show how the administration, by condoning torture, has surrendered the moral high ground to anti-American jihadists and botched the war of ideas that we can't afford to lose.

    The N.S.A. eavesdropping exposed in December by James Risen and Eric Lichtblau of The Times is another American debacle. Hoping to suggest otherwise and cast the paper as treasonous, Dick Cheney immediately claimed that the program had saved "thousands of lives." The White House's journalistic mouthpiece, the Wall Street Journal editorial page, wrote that the Times exposé "may have ruined one of our most effective anti-Al Qaeda surveillance programs."

    Surely they jest. If this is one of our "most effective" programs, we're in worse trouble than we thought. Our enemy is smart enough to figure out on its own that its phone calls are monitored 24/7, since even under existing law the government can eavesdrop for 72 hours before seeking a warrant (which is almost always granted). As The Times subsequently reported, the N.S.A. program was worse than ineffective; it was counterproductive. Its gusher of data wasted F.B.I. time and manpower on wild-goose chases and minor leads while uncovering no new active Qaeda plots in the United States. Like the N.S.A. database on 200 million American phone customers that was described last week by USA Today, this program may have more to do with monitoring "traitors" like reporters and leakers than with tracking terrorists.

    Journalists and whistle-blowers who relay such government blunders are easily defended against the charge of treason. It's often those who make the accusations we should be most worried about. Mr. Goss, a particularly vivid example, should not escape into retirement unexamined. He was so inept that an overzealous witch hunter might mistake him for a Qaeda double agent.

    Even before he went to the C.I.A., he was a drag on national security. In "Breakdown," a book about intelligence failures before the 9/11 attacks, the conservative journalist Bill Gertz delineates how Mr. Goss, then chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, played a major role in abdicating Congressional oversight of the C.I.A., trying to cover up its poor performance while terrorists plotted with impunity. After 9/11, his committee's "investigation" of what went wrong was notoriously toothless.

    Once he ascended to the C.I.A. in 2004, Mr. Goss behaved like most other Bush appointees: he put politics ahead of the national interest, and stashed cronies and partisan hacks in crucial positions. On Friday, the F.B.I. searched the home and office of one of them, Dusty Foggo, the No. 3 agency official in the Goss regime. Mr. Foggo is being investigated by four federal agencies pursuing the bribery scandal that has already landed former Congressman Randy (Duke) Cunningham in jail. Though Washington is titillated by gossip about prostitutes and Watergate "poker parties" swirling around this Warren Harding-like tale, at least the grafters of Teapot Dome didn't play games with the nation's defense during wartime.

    Besides driving out career employees, underperforming on Iran intelligence and scaling back a daily cross-agency meeting on terrorism, Mr. Goss's only other apparent accomplishment at the C.I.A. was his war on those traitorous leakers. Intriguingly, this was a new cause for him. "There's a leak every day in the paper," he told The Sarasota Herald-Tribune when the identity of the officer Valerie Wilson was exposed in 2003. He argued then that there was no point in tracking leaks down because "that's all we'd do."

    What prompted Mr. Goss's about-face was revealed in his early memo instructing C.I.A. employees to "support the administration and its policies in our work." His mission was not to protect our country but to prevent the airing of administration dirty laundry, including leaks detailing how the White House ignored accurate C.I.A. intelligence on Iraq before the war. On his watch, C.I.A. lawyers also tried to halt publication of "Jawbreaker," the former clandestine officer Gary Berntsen's account of how the American command let Osama bin Laden escape when Mr. Berntsen's team had him trapped in Tora Bora in December 2001. The one officer fired for alleged leaking during the Goss purge had no access to classified intelligence about secret prisons but was presumably a witness to her boss's management disasters.

    Soon to come are the Senate's hearings on Mr. Goss's successor, Gen. Michael Hayden, the former head of the N.S.A. As Jon Stewart reminded us last week, Mr. Bush endorsed his new C.I.A. choice with the same encomium he had bestowed on Mr. Goss: He's "the right man" to lead the C.I.A. "at this critical moment in our nation's history." That's not exactly reassuring.

    This being an election year, Karl Rove hopes the hearings can portray Bush opponents as soft on terrorism when they question any national security move. It was this bullying that led so many Democrats to rubber-stamp the Iraq war resolution in the 2002 election season and Mr. Goss's appointment in the autumn of 2004.

    Will they fall into the same trap in 2006? Will they be so busy soliloquizing about civil liberties that they'll fail to investigate the nominee's record? It was under General Hayden, a self-styled electronic surveillance whiz, that the N.S.A. intercepted actual Qaeda messages on Sept. 10, 2001 — "Tomorrow is zero hour" for one — and failed to translate them until Sept. 12. That same fateful summer, General Hayden's N.S.A. also failed to recognize that "some of the terrorists had set up shop literally under its nose," as the national-security authority James Bamford wrote in The Washington Post in 2002. The Qaeda cell that hijacked American Flight 77 and plowed into the Pentagon was based in the same town, Laurel, Md., as the N.S.A., and "for months, the terrorists and the N.S.A. employees exercised in some of the same local health clubs and shopped in the same grocery stores."

    If Democrats — and, for that matter, Republicans — let a president with a Nixonesque approval rating install yet another second-rate sycophant at yet another security agency, even one as diminished as the C.I.A., someone should charge those senators with treason, too.


    Saturday, May 13, 2006

    There never really was any doubt was there?


    Rove Informs White House He Will Be Indicted
    By Jason Leopold
    t r u t h o u t | Report
    Friday 12 May 2006

    Within the last week, Karl Rove told President Bush and Chief of Staff Joshua Bolten, as well as a few other high level administration officials, that he will be indicted in the CIA leak case and will immediately resign his White House job when the special counsel publicly announces the charges against him, according to sources.

    Moron - the tax cuts


    by Robert Reich
    May 2006

    "Tax Obscenity: Here we are six months before a mid-term election, with polls showing only about 20 percent of the American public approving the job Congress is doing. The federal budget deficit is still out of control. We’ve got a war going on. So what’s Congress giving us now? A $70 billion tax cut.

    The tax cut would be politically irresponsible, but not obscene, if it went to middle-income workers now facing sky-high fuel prices and soaring health-insurance costs, and variable-rate mortgage payments heading through the roof. But this tax cut is mostly going to people who are already very comfortable. Hence, it’s both irresponsible and obscene. 87 percent of the benefits of this tax cut will go to the 14 percent of American households earning above $100,000 a year. Twenty-two percent of the benefits will go to the richest two-tenths of one percent of American households earning more than a million dollars a year.

    I’d appreciate it if someone could explain to me why we need another tax cut for high-income Americans especially when the gap between the rich and poor ... is wider than it’s been in almost a century. Some administration apologists, including the editorial page of the Wall Street Journal, claim repeatedly that the rich are paying a larger-than-ever share of income taxes, so it’s entirely fitting that they get the lion’s share of any tax cut.

    This logic conveniently leaves out two facts. First, the rich are now paying a smaller percentage of their income in taxes than at any time in the last seventy-five years. That they pay a lot of taxes nonetheless is a by-product of the mind-boggling increase in their income and wealth relative to most other Americans. Second, if you consider not just income and capital-gains taxes but all the taxes people pay – including payroll taxes and sales taxes – you find that middle-income workers are now paying a larger share of their incomes than people at or near the top. We have turned the principle of a graduated, progressive tax on its head.

    Thursday, May 11, 2006



    May 2006 N.Y. Times - CBS Poll Results Show Continuing Decline

    F.B.I.'s Focus on Public Corruption Includes 2,000 Investigations


    The New York Times
    By DAVID JOHNSTON
    Published: May 11, 2006

    WASHINGTON, May 10 — A post-9/11 effort by the F.B.I. to concentrate on public corruption now includes more than 2,000 investigations under way, highlighted by the Jack Abramoff lobbying inquiry, the racketeering and fraud conviction of former Gov. George Ryan of Illinois, and the multipronged corruption probes after the guilty plea by Randy Cunningham, a former Republican House member from San Diego, bureau officials said.

    As one of the Bush administration's least known anticrime efforts, the F.B.I. initiative has yielded an unexpectedly rich array of cases. The results suggest that wrongdoing by public officials at all levels of government is deeply rooted and widespread.

    Bureau officials believe that the investment in corruption cases is easily worth the cost. In 2004 and 2005, more than 1,060 government employees were convicted of corrupt activities, including 177 federal officials, 158 state officials, 360 local officials and 365 police officers, according to F.B.I. statistics. The number of convictions rose 27 percent from 2004 to 2005.

    Wednesday, May 10, 2006

    Not sure who the neocon's are?


    The Christian Science Monitor has a webpage up that gives a quick introduction to the principal players.

    Also, on the same site is an introduction to the basic tenets of their political ideas.

    Not sure if you are a neo-con? Take the quiz.

    Tuesday, May 09, 2006

    George Carlin's Incomparable Video: "Stuff"


    Large Video: 17mb - Open/Download
    Here - or - Here

    What is Net Neutrality & and Why Should I Care About It?


    Watch the Video Here

    Soda Distributors to End Most School Sales
    Yahoo News
    By SAMANTHA GROSS, Associated Press Writer Wed May 3, 6:57 PM ET

    NEW YORK - The nation's largest beverage distributors have agreed to halt nearly all sales of sodas to public schools — a step that will remove the sugary, caloric drinks from vending machines and cafeterias around the country.

    The agreement was announced Wednesday by the William J. Clinton Foundation and will also likely apply to many private and parochial schools.

    "This is a bold step forward in the struggle to help 35 million young people lead healthier lives," former President Clinton said at a news conference. "This one policy can add years and years and years to the lives of a very large number of young people."

    Under the agreement, the companies also have agreed to sell only water, unsweetened juice and low-fat milks to elementary and middle schools. Diet sodas would be sold only to high schools.

    "I don't think anyone should underestimate the influence this agreement will have," Susan Neely, president and CEO of the American Beverage Association, which has signed onto the deal, said earlier Wednesday. "I think other people are going to want to follow this agreement because it just makes sense."

    The agreement should reach an estimated 87 percent of the public and private school drink market, Neely said. Industry giants Cadbury Schweppes PLC, Coca-Cola Co. and PepsiCo Inc. and the ABA have signed on. Officials said they hope companies representing the other 13 percent of the market would follow suit.

    The Alliance for a Healthier Generation, a collaboration between Clinton's foundation and the American Heart Association, helped broker the deal.

    "The soft drink industry has decided that it won't wait to be pushed," said Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, the co-chair of the alliance. "It jumped in. ... It may be the soft drink industry, but they made a very hard decision."

    The move follows a mounting wave of regulation by school boards and legislators alarmed by reports of rising childhood obesity. Soda has been a particular target of those fighting obesity because of its caloric content and popularity among children.

    Still, the deal imposes stricter drink regulations than are currently in place for nearly 35 million public school students.

    "This is really the beginning of a major effort to modify childhood obesity at the level of the school systems," said Robert H. Eckel, the president of the Heart Association, adding that the alliance would also be working to put healthier foods in schools.

    John Sicher, editor and publisher of Beverage Digest, which compiles extensive data on the beverage industry, said the agreement would have no impact on the $63 billion beverage industry's bottom line.

    "The sale of sugar-carbonated sodas in schools is a tiny, tiny part of their overall volume," said Sicher. "Financially, on the big companies, it will have virtually no impact."

    He applauded the move, however, saying "The impact is more in terms of responsibility and accountability to the consumer."

    Under the agreement, high schools will still be able to sell low-calorie drinks that contain less than 10 calories per serving, as well as drinks that are considered nutritious, such as juice, sports drinks and low-fat milk. The "nutritious" drinks will be limited to 12-ounce servings, Neely said.

    Elementary schools will sell 8-ounce servings of the "nutritious" drinks, and middle school kids will get 10-ounce-size drinks.

    Whole milk will no longer be offered to any schools, Neely said.

    School sales of sports drinks, diet sodas and bottled water have been on the rise in recent years, while sugary soft drink purchases by students have been falling, according to an ABA report released in December. But regular soda, averaging 150 calories a can, is still the most popular drink, accounting for 45 percent of drinks sold in schools in 2005, according to the report.

    Diana Garza, a spokeswoman for the Atlanta-based Coca-Cola Co., said in a telephone interview that "these voluntary guidelines escalate ... the shift to lower calorie, more nutritious beverages."

    A man who answered the phone at Cadbury Schweppes' London headquarters said no one was available for comment. A call to PepsiCo Inc. was not immediately returned.

    The new rules will apply to beverages sold on school grounds during the regular school day and at after-school activities such as band and choir practice, said Jay Carson, a spokesman for ClintonBut sales at events such as school plays, band concerts and sporting events, where a significant portion of the audience are adults, won't be affected, he said.

    The deal will be most easily enforced at vending machines, where students buy most of their drinks, Neely said.

    How quickly the changes take hold will depend in part on individual school districts' willingness to alter existing contracts, The Alliance for a Healthier Generation said in a release. The companies will work to implement the changes at 75 percent of the nation's public schools before the 2008-2009 school year, and at all public schools a year later.

    Dozens of states have considered legislation on school nutrition this year, but about 32 states still have no legislative or regulatory policy regulating the sale of drinks in schools, according to the American Heart Association.

    Lawmakers in Connecticut voted last week to prohibit schools from selling regular and diet soda as well as electrolyte replacement drinks such as Gatorade.

    The agreement follows an August decision by the ABA to adopt a policy limiting soft drinks in high schools to no more than 50 percent of the selections in vending machines. Unlike the agreement announced Wednesday, that recommendation was not binding.

    Most elementary schools are already soda-free.

    Monday, May 08, 2006

    Eschaton's Working List of Tasks for the Next Administration:

    # Undo the bankruptcy bill enacted by this administration
    # Repeal the estate tax repeal
    # Increase the minimum wage and index it to the CPI
    # Universal health care (obviously the devil is in the details on this one)
    # Increase CAFE standards. Some other environment-related regulation
    # Pro-reproductive rights, getting rid of abstinence-only education, improving education about and access to contraception including the morning after pill, and supporting choice.
    # Simplify and increase the progressivity of the tax code
    # Kill faith-based funding. Certainly kill federal funding of anything that engages in religious discrimination.
    # Reduce corporate giveaways
    # Have Medicare run the Medicare drug plan
    # Force companies to stop underfunding their pensions. Change corporate bankruptcy law to put workers and retirees at the head of the line with respect to their pensions.
    # Leave the states alone on issues like medical marijuana. Generally move towards 'more decriminalization' of drugs
    # Paper ballots
    # Improve access to daycare and other pro-family policies.

    The FBI has no business investigating the files of deceased journalists.
    By Daniel Schorr
    Christian Science Monitor - May 01, 2006

    WASHINGTON – I haven't had any problems with the FBI lately that I know of, and I was hoping it would stay that way.

    In 1971, President Nixon had J. Edgar Hoover launch an investigation of me that ended up as an item in the Bill of Impeachment under "Presidential Abuse of Power."

    We in the press hoped that the FBI would learn from that experience and refrain from doing political chores. But now it seems that the FBI is back investigating what it has no business investigating. It has told the family of Jack Anderson, the justly celebrated investigative columnist who died last December, that it wants access to Anderson's 60 years worth of files. Why? The FBI says it wants to remove any secret papers.

    It seems to be assumed that Mr. Anderson collected a lot of secret papers in a career of baring official secrets. Like the column that won Anderson a Pulitzer Prize, revealing that in contradiction to the proclaimed Nixon-Kissinger policy of neutrality in the India-Pakistan war, the United States was actually tilting towards Pakistan.

    Anderson's son, Kevin, says he won't surrender the papers to the FBI, but that all his father's files will eventually be available to the public in the repository at George Washington University. The FBI seems unwilling to wait. It maintains that the mere possession of papers once marked "secret" is illegal.

    In a hearing last Tuesday before the Senate Judiciary Committee, ranking Democrat Patrick J. Leahy criticized FBI Director Robert S. Mueller for wanting to search the Anderson files. He said, "There's a concern that the FBI may go into his files because of things he discovered about J. Edgar Hoover's personal life." Mr. Mueller insisted that the FBI's concern was that classified national security documents not be made public.

    So there we are. I can identify with Jack Anderson, with whom I shared an honored place on the Nixon enemies list. But I have a more immediate concern. I don't want the Feds poking around in my files after I die. Not that they contain any great revelations. Everything I learned that was of possible interest, I reported.

    It's just the principle of the thing.

    So, with Kevin Anderson, I say to the FBI, "Why don't you go and find some terrorists and leave the files of deceased journalists alone?"

    • Daniel Schorr is the senior news analyst at National Public Radio.

    "We are the strongest nation in the world today"..."and I do not believe we should ever apply that economic, political or military power unilaterally. If we'd followed that rule in Vietnam, we wouldn't have been there. None of our allies supported us. If we can't persuade nations with comparable values of the merit of our cause, we'd better re-examine our reasoning."

    Robert S. McNamara - Secretary of Defense during Kennedy/Johnson Administrations

    Note: First it was the Department of Education which couldn't deal with low achievement by Americans students, then it was the Social Security Administration, that "failed" to respond to pending illiquidity in the next forty years, then the CIA, an agency that "failed" to anticipate 9/11. Then it was FEMA, who "failed" to respond to Katrina. Lately it is Congress who "failed" to limit a supplemental appropriations bill to $92B. Pardon me; but this is really BS.

    We have been subjected to an endless stream of "failures" of government agencies during the Bush Administration's term. Is the Administration admitting that they are incapable of providing governance of these agencies? Hell No !! They act as if the agencies are not accountable to the Administration, which they clearly are. G.W. Bush appointed the Cabinet members, and his Administration selected the heads of all these departments and agencies.

    Yet when it is shown the "failures" the Administration acts as if they were unaware, and incapable of responding to circumstances, and deflects blame and accountability to a variety of other actors.

    No ! It is impossible to argue convincingly that this Administration can effectively or efficiently govern it's own agencies, let alone the nations interests at home and abroad. Unfortunately we have another 1,000 days to go with these incompetents.

    What else can this gang screw up in that amount of time? I don't know; but I will absolutely guarantee there will be another major incident that will show how stupid, egotistical, short-sighted, and ill-equipped this Administration is in governing. I'll even lay odds: Put up $100 at a Wachovia account we specify, and if nothing major happens in the next 1,000 days that can be laid at the Administration's feet, I'll pay you $10,000 cash. Wanna bet??

    Russia Says UN Plan for Iran Is "First Step to War"
    By Anne Penketh
    The Independent UK
    Monday 08 May 2006

    Russia will seek the removal tonight of the core of a UK-sponsored draft United Nations resolution on Iran because it fears that it could pave the way to unilateral military action to curb the Iranian nuclear programme.

    A bruising battle looms in New York at a dinner of foreign ministers of the five UN Security Council veto-holding members, plus Germany, over UN plans to compel Iran to abandon uranium enrichment. The high-stakes talks at the Waldorf hotel will be the first official duty for Margaret Beckett, who replaced Jack Straw as Foreign Secretary on Friday, and could result in an embarrassing climb-down for Britain.

    British and US officials have said the core of the draft text is its placement under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, which provides for possible sanctions and military enforcement.

    John Bolton, the US ambassador to the UN, said last week when Britain, France and the US tabled the draft: "The fundamental point is for Russia and China to agree that this is a threat to international peace and security under Chapter VII."

    But faced with heated Russian and Chinese objections to the Chapter VII provision at ambassador level, Mr Bolton was saying by Saturday night that he had asked the two countries to come up with another way of making the resolution's demands mandatory.

    Yury Fedotov, the Russian ambassador in London, said his country opposed the Chapter VII reference because it evoked memories of past UN resolutions on Yugoslavia and Iraq that led to US-led military action which had not been authorised by the Security Council.

    Russia's partners in the Security Council had argued in the past that the reference was needed to obtain "robust language," he said. But "afterwards it was used to justify unilateral action. In the case of Yugoslavia, for example, we were told at the beginning that references to Chapter VII were necessary to send political signals, and it finally ended up with the Nato bombardments."

    Mr Fedotov said Russia regretted that the co-sponsors decided to table the resolution without holding further consultations, acknowledging that Iran could take political advantage of the disunity among the big powers on the Security Council.

    Iran threatened yesterday to pull out of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), which would end the international supervision of its nuclear programme. Europe and the US believe that Iran is using the cover of a civilian programme to build a nuclear bomb, while Tehran says that its uranium enrichment is purely for peaceful purposes.

    The Iranian parliament wrote to the UN secretary general, Kofi Annan, threatening to ask the Tehran government to withdraw from the treaty unless the UN Security Council resolved the crisis "peacefully."

    Russia says that although statements by the Iranian President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, had been "unacceptable", the international community should build on the official Iranian position to bring Iran into compliance through "incentives rather than sanctions".

    Mr Fedotov said: "Our position is not much different from Britain and the US. We want Iran's nuclear programme to remain in a peaceful framework, and we need clarification on its past programmes on the questions raised by the International Atomic Energy Agency [the UN nuclear watchdog]. But on tactics we have our own views, based on past experience regarding Iraq and Yugoslavia.

    "We have serious doubts sanctions would work. [They] could pave the way to a military action. The military option is a nonsense. It's [an] adventure that could threaten international stability in this region and beyond."

    Iran remains defiant and has threatened to strike back against the interests of any country that tries to stop it enriching uranium.

    The Essential Krugman: " "

    The Essential Krugman: " Who's Crazy Now?"


    by Paul Krugman, Commentary, NY Times:
    May 08, 2006

    "Some people say that bizarre conspiracy theories play a disturbingly large role in current American political discourse. And they're right. For example, many conservative politicians and pundits seem to agree with James Inhofe, the chairman of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works, who has declared that "man-made global warming is the greatest hoax ever perpetrated..."

    Of more immediate political relevance is the claim that the reason we hear mainly bad news from Iraq is that the media, for political reasons, are conspiring to suppress the good news. As Bill O'Reilly put it ..., "a good part of the American media wants to undermine the Bush administration."

    But these examples, of course, aren't what people are usually referring to when they denounce crazy conspiracy theories. For the last few years, the term "conspiracy theory" has been used primarily to belittle ... anyone suggesting that the Bush administration used 9/11 as an excuse to fight an unrelated war in Iraq.

    Now here's the thing: suppose that we didn't have abundant evidence that ... the Bush administration ... cherry-picked intelligence ... Even so, it would be an abuse of the English language to call the claim that the administration misled us into war a conspiracy theory.

    A conspiracy theory, says Wikipedia, "attempts to explain the cause of an event as a secret, and often deceptive, plot by a covert alliance." ... But ... administration officials ... weren't part of a covert alliance; they all worked for President Bush. The claim that these officials hyped the case for war isn't a conspiracy theory; it's simply an assertion that people in ... power abused that position. And that assertion only seems wildly implausible if you take it as axiomatic that Mr. Bush and those around him wouldn't do such a thing.

    The truth is that many of the people who throw around terms like "loopy conspiracy theories" are lazy bullies..., they try to suggest that anyone who asks those questions is crazy. ... "It looks as if Al Gore has gone off his lithium again," said Charles Krauthammer ... after Mr. Gore gave a perfectly sensible if hard-hitting speech. Even moderates have tended to dismiss ... harsh critics as victims of irrational Bush hatred.

    But now those harsh critics have been vindicated. And it turns out that many of the administration supporters can't handle the truth. They won't admit that they built a personality cult around a man who has proved almost pathetically unequal to the job. Nor will they admit that opponents of the Iraq war, whom they called traitors ..., have been proved right. So they have taken refuge in the belief that a vast conspiracy of America-haters in the media is hiding the good news from the public.

    Unlike the crazy conspiracy theories of the left — which do exist, but are supported only by a tiny fringe — the crazy conspiracy theories of the right are supported by important people: powerful politicians, television personalities with large audiences. And we can safely predict that these people will never concede that they were wrong. When the Iraq venture comes to a bad end, they won't blame those who led us into the quagmire; they'll claim that it was all the fault of the liberal media, which stabbed our troops in the back.

    ...and furthermore...


    Conspiracy Theories: Body Armor for the Bush Administration, Money Talks, Commentarty, by Paul Krugman, NY Times: ...Paul Krugman: Just in case you think I'm exaggerating when I say that right-wingers are becoming addicted to bizarre conspiracy theories: on the same day my column was published, The National Review came along with a remarkable editorial. Here are the key sentences:

    "The C.I.A. has always had a leftist bent, well represented in its upper echelons even under directors of staunchly anti-Communist and pro-national-security orientation.

    During the Bush presidency, however, the agency has not been content with subtly pushing its own agenda while underperforming its nominal mission. It has run amok. In fact, it worked assiduously, though unsuccessfully, to depose the administration in the 2004 election, and since then has continued brazenly undermining Bush's foreign policy."

    Think about that. The editors of America's premier conservative magazine believe that the C.I.A. is controlled by leftists, who are conspiring against the Bush administration. I'm tempted to make jokes about precious bodily fluids and so on, but this is really scary stuff.

    Also: Not only are there leftists at the C.I.A., there are jihadists. Charles Krauthammer says that Porter Goss was "trying to deal with the jihadists inside the agency, the people who consider themselves the loyal opposition, which really is the role of Congress, but who oppose administration policy, had been leaking, and had been trying to undermine and obstruct administration initiatives."

    Sunday, May 07, 2006

    Lyrics: Eve of Destruction


    Artist: Undead Lyrics
    Song: Eve of Destruction Lyrics
    (P.F. Sloan)

    "The eastern world
    It is explodin'
    Violence flaring, bullets loading
    You're old enough to kill
    But not for votin'
    You don't believe in war
    Then what's that gun you're totin'
    When even the Jordan River has bodies floating
    But you tell me
    Over and over and over again my friend
    You don't believe we're on
    The Eve of Destruction
    Don't you understand what I'm tryin' to say
    Can't you feel the fear that I feel today
    If the button i's pushed there's no running away
    There'll be no one to save
    With the world in a grave
    Take a look around you boy
    It's bound to scare you boy
    But you tell me
    Over and over and over again my friend
    You don't believe we're on
    The Eve of Destruction
    My blood's so mad
    Feels like coagulating
    And I'm just sitting here
    Contemplating
    I can't change the truth
    It has no regulation
    A handful of senators
    Won't pass legislation
    And marchers alone
    Can't bring integration
    When human respect
    Is disintegrating
    This whole damn world
    Is too frustrating
    But you tell me
    Over and over and over again my friend
    You don't believe we're on
    The Eve of Destruction
    Think of all the hate
    There is in Red China
    Then take a look around
    To Selma, Alabama
    You might leave here
    For four days in space
    But when you return
    It's the same bloody place
    The beating of the drums
    And the pride and discgrace
    You can bury yout dead
    But don't hleave a trace
    And hate your next-door-neighbor
    But don't forget to say grace
    But you tell me
    Over and over and over again my friend
    You don't believe we're on
    The Eve of Destruction
    Yeah, you don't believe we're on
    The Eve of Destruction

    Saturday, May 06, 2006

    The fallout from a falling dollar


    As foreign buyers shun the currency, it could be harder to finance the US trade deficit.
    By Ron Scherer | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
    Friday, May 5th, 2006
    NEW YORK

    For two weeks, the dollar has been hammered as foreign buyers shun the US currency. As a result, the Canadian "loonie" is at its highest point in 30 years. The British pound is at its uppermost level since last September. Even the closely managed yen is at a six-month peak.

    If the dollar were to continue falling, it could have wide ramifications:

    • It could imperil the economy next year because Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke might have to defend the currency with higher interest rates.

    • A lower-valued dollar makes imports more expensive, possibly ratcheting up the inflation rate. But it could also stimulate US exports, thus providing more jobs.

    • This summer, Americans traveling abroad will feel as if everything is expensive. However, foreigners coming to America will feel as if the country is one giant Wal-Mart.

    Behind the falling currency is a changing global economy. As the US Federal Reserve appears to be near the end of its round of interest-rate hikes, foreign banks are starting to hike their rates - which puts foreign currencies in higher demand, thus making the dollar less attractive. Thursday, in fact, the president of the European Central Bank indicated that rates could rise in Europe next month. At the same time, the giant US trade imbalance has produced a huge outflow of dollars to other countries, as well as the need to finance the ever-bigger US deficit. The deficit has attracted increasing scrutiny, most recently at a meeting of finance ministers in Washington last month.

    In addition, the central banks of some foreign countries, which are key in financing the US deficit by buying US Treasury bills, are now less willing to do so. Instead, they're diversifying their reserve holdings with euros and yen.

    "We seem to have reached a crossroads," says Anthony Chan, chief economist at JPMorgan Private Client Services in Columbus, Ohio. With foreign interest rates on the rise, he says, it will become harder to finance the US current account deficit.

    Last year, the trade deficit in goods and services hit a record $726 billion, as US imports far exceeded exports. The gap has now reached 7 percent of the nation's gross domestic product, says Robert Scott, senior international economist at the Economic Policy Institute in Washington.

    A big part of the rise - some 63 percent - is because of the surging price of oil. US energy officials expect the price to remain at these levels, if not higher, for some time.

    The largest non-oil deficit is with China, which last year recorded a $202 billion surplus with the United States. On April 21, the world's finance ministers issued a statement calling for "exchange rate flexibility" in emerging economies with large current account surpluses, "especially China."

    On Wednesday and Thursday, finance ministers in Japan and Europe tried to stem the dollar's fall. The Japanese Finance Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki warned that flexible exchange rates could cause speculation that could hurt the world economy. Both the euro and the yen were little changed after the comments.

    In the 1980s, there was also a large trade deficit, and the greenback was devalued by 50 percent, Mr. Scott says. "The trade gap, which had been 3 percent of GDP, was reduced to 1 percent of GDP in two years," he says.

    Financing the current US trade deficit is requiring increasing agility. "Every business day requires $3.5 billion of net new money entering the country to finance the current account deficit," says Jay Bryson, an international economist at Wachovia Securities in Charlotte, N.C.

    Most of that money comes from foreign central banks, which own large amounts of dollars. Recently, however, the central banks of Sweden, Finland, and Russia have said they will diversify their foreign reserve holdings and reduce their US dollars.

    Behind the shift may be concern that the dollar will be devalued, making their holdings worth less. Ten-year US securities, for example, have started to reflect this risk.

    To date, the imbalance has not caused much economic pain, Mr. Bryson says. The dollar, on a trade-weighted basis, is actually higher than it was last year at this time. But it's down about 12 percent from its highs at the end of the 1990s.

    He cautions, however, "My guess is that sooner or later, probably later, foreigners will get tired of financing us, and at that point, long-term rates will start to rise."

    One way to keep foreign investors interested in US dollars is to raise interest rates, says Mr. Chan. But the risk, he says, is that "we slow down to the point where it may even become a recession."

    The large US budget deficit doesn't help, says Bryson. "The US is spending more than it produces, and to the extent government is spending more, it becomes a compounding factor," says Bryson.

    It's possible that the trade imbalance will be discussed in July when the world's leaders meet for their annual economic summit in St. Petersburg, Russia. "They should invite China and India and come up with some deal to adjust currencies, consumption, and savings rates around the world," says Clyde Prestowitz, head of the Economic Strategy Institute.

    Even now, Americans traveling in other countries will notice a difference from the late 1990s, when the dollar was strong. For a family of four, tickets to a Toronto Blue Jays game will cost $18 more, a room at the Hotel Duret in Paris is an additional $44, and a ride on the London Eye is an extra $3 per person.

    Like A Box of Chocolates


    eWeek.com
    By Jim Rapoza
    April 24, 2006

    Opinion: You never know what you're going to get these days with security threats.
    Stupid is as stupid does." That's what my mama always said to me.

    One example of folks who weren't being too smart about their computers happened over there in London not too long ago. These fellas from an IT training group called The Training Camp decided to do a test to see if people there were being smart about computer security.

    People from The Training Camp handed out what they were callin' Valentine's Day CDs. They passed these silvery discs to workers as they headed into their offices in the morning.

    These CD thingies weren't really no Valentines. The Training Camp fellas were using them to see if any of these fancy-pants people with the funny accents would be daffy enough to stick a CD from a stranger into their PCs. Sure enough, a whole bunch of these London workers went ahead and stuck these CDs into their computers at work, including some folks at banks and other such places.

    Now, these people definitely weren't being smart about security. They shoulda known that you don't take a CD from a stranger and just load it into a PC—at work or at home.

    But the stupidness ain't just on the side of the workers. Their employers weren't being too smart, either. After all, if they'd been listening to some of the nice folks over at eWeek Labs, they'da known that they shoulda been—what they call it?—lockin' down their employee computers so they couldn't just load software from any ol' CD or even download it off that there info highway.

    While I'm sure those companies weren't too happy with their employees loadin' those outside CDs, they should probably be careful 'bout who they're callin' stupid.

    Course, while a lot of those security-type problems can be avoided by people being just a tiny bit smarter about how they use their computers, e-mail and the Internet, some of those bad seeds out there are gettin' smarter about how they try to trick folks. So even those who ain't being too dumb can be fooled into clickin' on the wrong sites and givin' up their credit cards numbers and other info.

    Take the case of this phishing trick that came up not too long ago. Naw, I ain't talking 'bout when you grab your pole and some crawlers and try to catch some catfish. I'm talking 'bout this Internet thing where bad guys try to make an e-mail and a Web site look just like one from a real-live bank or credit card company.

    As the smart fellas over at The SANS Institute tell it (isc.sans.org/diary.php?storyid=1118), some pretty smart bad guys came up with a phishing attack that would trick even a lot of really smart Internet-using folks.

    These bad phishers made the e-mail look like it knew some folks' credit card numbers, so it looked all personallike. Even worse, they were able to trick the company that makes secure Web site technology into making their fake site look legit to users' Web browsin' tools.

    It wouldn't be quite right to call folks who fell for this kind of trickery stupid. Lots of people who followed all the advice from the smart security people would still end up gettin' tricked by this here scam.

    Course, there are ways to tell that this phishing e-mail ain't quite right. The biggest is that it don't have the user's name there in the e-mail—it just says, "Dear customer." Now, anyone who gets these e-mail letters from banks and such knows that they always use your real name in the part that says hello. (What's that called? The salutation?)

    With any e-mail like this, if it ain't usin' your name upfront, then something might be up with that there e-mail. (Although it's probably only a matter of time till some smart bad guy comes up with a way to put the names in a phishing letter.)

    So, remember, there's a whole lotta different types of stupid out there. Sometimes users don't do the smart thing. Sometimes the companies aren't bein' smart enough to protect against users who are being kinda dumb. And, sometimes, the bad guys are so slick they can trip up folks who are doin' their best to be smart.

    Note: eWeeks Labs Director Jim Rapoza can be reached at jim_rapoza@ziffdavis.com.

    Friday, May 05, 2006

    Sec. Rumsfeld comes to Atlanta -

    and gets a question which he doesn't handle very well

    The Essential Krugman: "Our Sick Society"

    The Essential Krugman: "Our Sick Society"


    by Paul Krugman, Commentary, NY Times:
    May 5th, 2006

    Is being an American bad for your health? That's the apparent implication of a study just published in The Journal of the American Medical Association.

    It's not news that something is very wrong with the state of America's health. ... But it isn't clear exactly what causes this stunningly poor performance. How much of America's poor health is the result of our failure, unique among wealthy nations, to guarantee health insurance to all? How much is the result of racial and class divisions? How much is the result of other aspects of the American way of life?

    The new study ... doesn't resolve all of these questions. Yet it offers strong evidence that there's something about American society that makes us sicker than we should be.

    The authors of the study compared the prevalence of such diseases as diabetes and hypertension in Americans 55 to 64 years old with ... a comparable group in England. Comparing us with the English isn't a choice designed to highlight American problems: Britain spends only about 40 percent as much per person on health care..., ... Moreover, England isn't noted either for healthy eating or for a healthy lifestyle.

    Nonetheless, the study concludes that "Americans are much sicker than the English."... What's ... striking is that being American seems to damage your health regardless of your race and social class. That's not to say that class is irrelevant. ... In fact, there's a strong correlation within each country between wealth and health. But Americans are so much sicker that the richest third of Americans is in worse health than the poorest third of the English.

    So what's going on? Lack of health insurance is surely a factor in the poor health ...[and] everyone in England receives health care from the government. But almost all upper-income Americans have insurance.

    What about bad habits...? The ... statistical analysis suggests that bad habits are only a fraction of the story. In the end, the study's authors seem baffled by the poor health of even relatively well-off Americans. But let me suggest a couple of possible explanations.

    One is that having health insurance doesn't ensure good health care. For example, a ... report on diabetes pointed out that insurance companies are generally unwilling to pay for care that might head off the disease... It's possible that Britain's National Health Service, in spite of its limited budget, actually provides better all-around medical care ... because it takes a broader, longer-term view than private insurance companies.

    The other possibility is that Americans work too hard and experience too much stress. Full-time American workers work ... about 46 weeks per year; full-time British, French and German workers work only 41 weeks a year. I've pointed out in the past that our workaholic economy is actually more destructive of the "family values" ... than the European economies in which regulations and union power have led to shorter working hours.

    Maybe overwork, together with the stress of living in an economy with a minimal social safety net, damages our health as well as our families. These are just suggestions. What we know for sure is that although the American way of life may be, as Ari Fleischer famously proclaimed back in 2001, "a blessed one," there's something about that way of life that is seriously bad for our health.

    Wednesday, May 03, 2006

    ...hmm...Vista, eh?


    Vista OS to increase computer disposal
    May 03, 2006
    LiveWIre

    Computer industry experts are saying the introduction of Microsoft's (Redmond, Washington) new Vista operating system this winter will result in many corporations scrapping perfectly fine computers.

    Technology advisors such as Gartner (Stamford, Connecticut) are telling clients that a large number of two- and three-year-old desktops will need to be upgraded to handle several of Vista's features, such as the addition of a new graphics card. Existing PCs will also need as least one gigabyte of RAM. Consultants are telling corporate technology managers it'll be cheaper to buy new Vista-containing computers now than to upgrade many older units and then replace them in a year or two.

    The size of this problem may be immense. Jon Peddie Research (Tiburon, California), the digital media technology consulting firm, estimates that 51 percent of the PCs in use at the end of 2005 are not capable of fully employing Vista.

    Tuesday, May 02, 2006

    Broadband over Electric Wires? Whatisit?


    James Fallows explains here

    The Essential Krugman: "Death by Insurance"

    The Essential Krugman: "Death by Insurance"


    by Paul Krugman, Health Crisis Commentary, NY Times

    "For lower-income working Americans, lack of health insurance is quickly becoming the new normal. That's the implication of survey results just released ... The survey found that 41 percent of nonelderly American adults with incomes between $20,000 and $40,000 a year were without health insurance for all or part of 2005. That's up from 28 percent as recently as 2001.

    Many of the uninsured reported spending their entire savings on health care and/or that they were having difficulty paying for basic necessities. And most uninsured adults reported cutting corners on medical care to save money — failing to fill prescriptions, skipping medications, going without preventive care.

    Here's the other side of the same coin: health insurers' business is lagging ... And some investors are feeling the pain. Aetna's stock price fell sharply last week, on news that its "medical cost ratio" — a term I'll explain in a minute — rose from 77.9 to 79.4.

    Taken together, these stories tell the tale of a health care system that's driving a growing number of Americans into financial ruin, and in many cases kills them through lack of basic care. (The Institute of Medicine ... estimates that lack of health insurance leads to 18,000 unnecessary American deaths — the equivalent of six 9/11's — each year.) Yet this system actually costs more to run than we would spend if we guaranteed health insurance to everyone.

    How do we know this? The medical cost ratio is the percentage of insurance premiums paid out to doctors, hospitals and other health care providers. Investors are upset about Aetna's rising ratio, because it leaves less room for profit. But even after the rise..., Aetna spends less than 80 cents of each dollar in health insurance premiums on actually providing medical care. The other 20 cents go into profits, marketing and administrative expenses.

    Other private insurers have similar ratios. ... Older Americans are covered by Medicare, which doesn't spend large sums on marketing and doesn't devote a lot of resources to screening out people likely to have high medical bills. As a result, Medicare manages to spend about 98 percent of its funds on actual medical care.

    What would happen if Medicare was expanded to cover everyone? ... [T]his would mean covering 46 million Americans who are currently uninsured. But the uninsured already receive some medical care at public expense ... And Medicare manages to spend much more of its funds on medicine ... than private insurers. If you do the math, it becomes clear that covering everyone under Medicare would actually be significantly cheaper than our current system. And this calculation doesn't even take into account the costs our ... system imposes on doctors and hospitals. ...

    Many pundits see red at the words "single-payer system." They think it means low-quality socialized medicine; they start telling horror stories — almost all of them false — about the problems of other countries' health care. Yet there's nothing foreign or exotic about the concept: Medicare is a single-payer system. It's not perfect, it could certainly be improved, but it works.

    So here we are. Our current health care system is unraveling. Older Americans are already covered by a national health insurance system; extending that system to cover everyone would save money, reduce financial anxiety and save thousands of American lives every year. Why don't we just do it?

    Monday, May 01, 2006

    A Right and Responsibility to Speak Out
    On 35th anniversary of Senate testimony, Kerry says history repeating itself
    Boston, MA - John Kerry spoke in Boston's historic Faneuil Hall today about patriotism and dissent at a time of war and the assault on free speech in America today. Below are Kerry's remarks as prepared for delivery.

    Senator John Kerry
    "Dissent"
    Faneuil Hall
    April 22, 2006

    "Thirty-five years ago today, I testified before the Foreign Relations Committee of the United States Senate, and called for an end to the war I had returned from fighting not long before.

    It was 1971 - twelve years after the first American died in what was then South Vietnam, seven years after Lyndon Johnson seized on a small and contrived incident in the Tonkin Gulf to launch a full-scale war-and three years after Richard Nixon was elected president on the promise of a secret plan for peace. We didn't know it at the time, but four more years of the War in Vietnam still lay ahead. These were years in which the Nixon administration lied and broke the law-and claimed it was prolonging war to protect our troops as they withdrew-years that ultimately ended only when politicians in Washington decided they would settle for a "decent interval" between the departure of our forces and the inevitable fall of Saigon.

    I know that some active duty service members, some veterans, and certainly some politicians scorned those of us who spoke out, suggesting our actions failed to "support the troops"-which to them meant continuing to support the war, or at least keeping our mouths shut. Indeed, some of those critics said the same thing just two years ago during the presidential campaign.

    I have come here today to reaffirm that it was right to dissent in 1971 from a war that was wrong. And to affirm that it is both a right and an obligation for Americans today to disagree with a President who is wrong, a policy that is wrong, and a war in Iraq that weakens the nation.

    I believed then, just as I believe now, that the best way to support the troops is to oppose a course that squanders their lives, dishonors their sacrifice, and disserves our people and our principles. When brave patriots suffer and die on the altar of stubborn pride, because of the incompetence and self-deception of mere politicians, then the only patriotic choice is to reclaim the moral authority misused by those entrusted with high office.

    I believed then, just as I believe now, that it is profoundly wrong to think that fighting for your country overseas and fighting for your country's ideals at home are contradictory or even separate duties. They are, in fact, two sides of the very same patriotic coin. And that's certainly what I felt when I came home from Vietnam convinced that our political leaders were waging war simply to avoid responsibility for the mistakes that doomed our mission in the first place. Indeed, one of the architects of the war, Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, confessed in a recent book that he knew victory was no longer a possibility far earlier than 1971.

    By then, it was clear to me that hundreds of thousands of soldiers, sailors, Marines and airmen-disproportionately poor and minority Americans-were being sent into the valley of the shadow of death for an illusion privately abandoned by the very men in Washington who kept sending them there. All the horrors of a jungle war against an invisible enemy indistinguishable from the people we were supposed to be protecting-all the questions associated with quietly sanctioned violence against entire villages and regions-all the confusion and frustration that came from defending a corrupt regime in Saigon that depended on Americans to do too much of the fighting-all that cried out for dissent, demanded truth, and could not be denied by easy slogans like "peace with honor"-or by the politics of fear and smear. It was time for the truth, and time for it all to end, and my only regret in joining the anti-war movement was that it took so long to succeed-for the truth to prevail, and for America to regain confidence in our own deepest values.

    The fissures created by Vietnam have long been stubbornly resistant to closure. But I am proud it was the dissenters-and it was our veterans' movement-and people like Judy Droz Keyes-who battled not just to end the war but to combat government secrecy and the willful amnesia of a society that did not want to remember its obligations to the soldiers who fought. We fought the forgetting and pushed our nation to confront the war's surplus of sad legacies-Agent Orange, Amer-Asian orphans, abandoned allies, exiled and imprisoned draft dodgers, doubts about whether all our POWs had come home, and honor at last for those who returned from Vietnam and those who did not. Because we spoke out, the truth was ultimately understood that the faults in Vietnam were those of the war, not the warriors.

    Then, and even now, there were many alarmed by dissent-many who thought that staying the course would eventually produce victory-or that admitting the mistake and ending it would embolden our enemies around the world. History disproved them before another decade was gone: Fourteen years elapsed between the first major American commitment of helicopters and pilots to Vietnam and the fall of Saigon. Fourteen years later, the Berlin Wall fell, and with it the Communist threat. You cannot tell me that withdrawing from Vietnam earlier would have changed that outcome.

    The lesson here is not that some of us were right about Vietnam, and some of us were wrong. The lesson is that true patriots must defend the right of dissent, and hear the voices of dissenters, especially now, when our leaders have committed us to a pre-emptive "war of choice" that does not involve the defense of our people or our territory against aggressors. The patriotic obligation to speak out becomes even more urgent when politicians refuse to debate their policies or disclose the facts. And even more urgent when they seek, perversely, to use their own military blunders to deflect opposition and answer their own failures with more of the same. Presidents and politicians may worry about losing face, or votes, or legacy; it is time to think about young Americans and innocent civilians who are losing their lives.

    This is not the first time in American history when patriotism has been distorted to deflect criticism and mislead the nation.

    In the infancy of the Republic, in 1798, Congress enacted the Alien and Sedition Acts to smear Thomas Jefferson and accuse him of treason. Newspapers were shut down, and their editors arrested, including Benjamin Franklin's grandson. No wonder Thomas Jefferson himself said: "Dissent is the greatest form of patriotism."

    In the Mexican War, a young Congressman named Abraham Lincoln was driven from public life for raising doubts about official claims. And in World War I, America's values were degraded, not defended, when dissenters were jailed and the teaching of German was banned in public schools in some states. At that time it was apparently sounding German, not looking French, that got you in trouble. And it was panic and prejudice, not true patriotism, that brought the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II-a measure upheld by Supreme Court Justices who did not uphold their oaths to defend the Constitution. We are stronger today because no less a rock-ribbed conservative than Robert Taft - "Mr. Republican" himself - stood up and said at the height of the second World War that, "the maintenance of the right of criticism in the long run will do the country maintaining it a great deal more good than it will do the enemy, and will prevent mistakes which might otherwise occur."

    Even during the Cold War-an undeclared war, and often more a war of nerves and diplomacy than of arms-even the mildest dissenters from official policy were sometimes silenced, blacklisted, or arrested, especially during the McCarthy era of the early 1950s. Indeed, it was only when Joseph McCarthy went through the gates of delirium and began accusing distinguished U.S. diplomats and military leaders of treason that the two parties in Washington and the news media realized the common stake they had in the right to dissent. They stood up to a bully and brought down McCarthyism's ugly and contrived appeals to a phony form of 100% Americanism.

    Dissenters are not always right, but it is always a warning sign when they are accused of unpatriotic sentiments by politicians seeking a safe harbor from debate, from accountability, or from the simple truth.

    Truth is the American bottom line. Truth above all is fundamental to who we are. It is no accident that among the first words of the first declaration of our national existence it is proclaimed: "We hold these truths to be self-evident…".

    This hall and this Commonwealth have always been at the forefront of seeking out and living out the truth in the conduct of public life. Here Massachusetts defined human rights by adopting our own Bill of Rights; here we took a stand against slavery, for women's suffrage and civil rights for all Americans. The bedrock of America's greatest advances-the foundation of what we know today are defining values-was formed not by cheering on things as they were, but by taking them on and demanding change.

    And here and now we must insist again that fidelity, honor, and love of country demand untrammeled debate and open dissent. At no time is that truer than in the midst of a war rooted in deceit and justified by continuing deception. For what is at stake here is nothing less than life itself. As the statesman Edmund Burke once said: "A conscientious man should be cautious how he dealt in blood."

    Think about that now-in a new era that has brought old temptations and tested abiding principles.

    America has always embraced the best traditions of civilized conduct toward combatants and non-combatants in war. But today our leaders hold themselves above the law-in the way they not only treat prisoners in Abu Ghraib, but assert unchecked power to spy on American citizens.

    America has always rejected war as an instrument of raw power or naked self-interest. We fought when we had to in order to repel grave threats or advance freedom and self-determination in concert with like-minded people everywhere. But our current leadership, for all its rhetoric of freedom and democracy, behaves as though might does make right, enabling us to discard the alliances and institutions that served us so well in the past as nothing more now than impediments to the exercise of unilateral power.

    America has always been stronger when we have not only proclaimed free speech, but listened to it. Yes, in every war, there have been those who demand suppression and silencing. And although no one is being jailed today for speaking out against the war in Iraq, the spirit of intolerance for dissent has risen steadily, and the habit of labeling dissenters as unpatriotic has become the common currency of the politicians currently running our country.

    Dismissing dissent is not only wrong, but dangerous when America's leadership is unwilling to admit mistakes, unwilling to engage in honest discussion of the nation's direction, and unwilling to hold itself accountable for the consequences of decisions made without genuine disclosure, or genuine debate.

    In recent weeks, a number of retired high-ranking military leaders, several of whom played key combat or planning roles in Afghanistan and Iraq, have come forward publicly to call for the resignation of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. And across the administration, from the president on down, we've heard these calls dismissed or even attacked as acts of disloyalty, or as threats to civilian control of the armed forces. We have even heard accusations that this dissent gives aid and comfort to the enemy. That is cheap and it is shameful. And once again we have seen personal attacks on the character of those who speak out. How dare those who never wore the uniform in battle attack those who wore it all their lives-and who, retired or not, did not resign their citizenship in order to serve their country.

    The former top operating officer at the Pentagon, a Marine Lieutenant General, said "the commitment of our forces to this fight was done with a casualness and swagger that are the special province of those who have never had to execute these missions--or bury the results." It is hard for a career military officer to speak those words. But at a time when the administration cannot let go of the myths and outright lies it broadcast in the rush to war in Iraq, those who know better must speak out.

    At a time when mistake after mistake is being compounded by the very civilian leadership in the Pentagon that ignored expert military advice in the invasion and occupation of Iraq, those who understand the price being paid for each mistake by our troops, our country, and Iraq itself must be heard.

    Once again we are imprisoned in a failed policy. And once again we are being told that admitting mistakes, not the mistakes themselves, will provide our enemies with an intolerable propaganda victory. Once again we are being told that we have no choice but to stay the course of a failed policy. At a time like this, those who seek to reclaim America's true character and strength must be respected.

    The true defeatists today are not those who call for recognizing the facts on the ground in Iraq. The true defeatists are those who believe America is so weak that it must sacrifice its principles to the pursuit of illusory power.

    The true pessimists today are not those who know that America can handle the truth about the Administration's boastful claim of "Mission Accomplished" in Iraq. The true pessimists are those who cannot accept that America's power and prestige depend on our credibility at home and around the world. The true pessimists are those who do not understand that fidelity to our principles is as critical to national security as our military power itself.

    And the most dangerous defeatists, the most dispiriting pessimists, are those who invoke September 11th to argue that our traditional values are a luxury we can no longer afford.

    Let's call it the Bush-Cheney Doctrine.

    According to the Bush-Cheney Doctrine, alliances and international institutions are now disposable-and international institutions are dispensable or even despicable.

    According to the Bush-Cheney Doctrine, we cannot foreswear the fool's gold of information secured by torturing prisoners or creating a shadow justice system with no rules and no transparency.

    According to the Bush-Cheney Doctrine, unwarranted secrecy and illegal spying are now absolute imperatives of our national security.

    According to the Bush-Cheney Doctrine, those who question the abuse of power question America itself.

    According to the Bush-Cheney doctrine, an Administration should be willing to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on the Iraq war, but unwilling to spend a few billion dollars to secure the American ports through which nuclear materials could make their way to terrorist cells.

    According to the Bush-Cheney Doctrine, executive powers trump the constitutional doctrine of separation of powers.

    According to the Bush-Cheney Doctrine, smearing administration critics is not only permissible, but necessary-and revealing the identity of a CIA agent is an acceptable means to hide the truth.

    The raw justification for abandoning so many American traditions exposes the real danger of the Bush-Cheney Doctrine. We all understand we are in a long struggle against jihadist extremism. It does represent a threat to our vital security interests and our values. Even the Bush-Cheney Administration acknowledges this is preeminently an ideological war, but that's why the Bush-Cheney Doctrine is so ill-equipped to fight and win it.

    Our enemies argue that all our claims about advancing universal principles of human rights and mutual respect disguise a raw demand for American dominance. They gain every time we tolerate or cover up abuses of human rights in Abu Ghraib or Guantanamo Bay, or among sectarian militias in Iraq, and especially when we defiantly disdain the rules of international law.

    Our enemies argue that our invasion and occupation of Iraq reflect an obsession with oil supplies and commercial opportunities. They gain when our president and vice president, both former oil company executives, continue to pursue an oil-based energy strategy, and provide vast concessions in Iraq to their corporate friends.

    And so there's the crowning irony: the Bush-Cheney Doctrine holds that many of our great traditions cannot be maintained; yet the Bush-Cheney policies, by abandoning those traditions, give Osama bin Laden and his associates exactly what they want and need to reinforce their hate-filled ideology of Islamic solidarity against the western world.

    I understand fully that Iraq is not Vietnam, and the war on terrorism is not the Cold War. But in one very crucial respect, we are in the same place now as we were thirty five years ago. When I testified in 1971, I spoke out not just against the war itself, but the blindness and cynicism of political leaders who were sending brave young Americans to be killed or maimed for a mission the leaders themselves no longer believed in.

    The War in Vietnam and the War in Iraq are now converging in too many tragic respects.

    As in Vietnam, we engaged militarily in Iraq based on official deception.

    As in Vietnam, we went into Iraq ostensibly to fight a larger global war under the misperception that the particular theater was just a sideshow, but we soon learned that the particular aspects of the place where we fought mattered more than anything else.

    And as in Vietnam, we have stayed and fought and died even though it is time for us to go.

    We are now in the third war in Iraq in as many years. The first was against Saddam Hussein and his supposed weapons of mass destruction. The second was against terrorists whom, the administration said, it was better to fight over there than here. Now we find our troops in the middle of an escalating civil war.

    Half of the service members listed on the Vietnam Memorial Wall died after America's leaders knew our strategy would not work. It was immoral then and it would be immoral now to engage in the same delusion. We want democracy in Iraq, but Iraqis must want it as much as we do. Our valiant soldiers can't bring democracy to Iraq if Iraq's leaders are unwilling themselves to make the compromises that democracy requires.

    As our generals have said, the war cannot be won militarily. It must be won politically. No American soldier should be sacrificed because Iraqi politicians refuse to resolve their ethnic and political differences.

    Our call to action is clear. Iraqi leaders have responded only to deadlines-a deadline to transfer authority to a provisional government, and a deadline to hold three elections. It was the most intense 11th hour pressure that just pushed aside Prime Minister Jaafari and brought forward a more acceptable candidate. And it will demand deadline toughness to reign in Shiite militias Sunnis say are committing horrific acts of torture every day in Baghdad.

    So we must set another deadline to extricate our troops and get Iraq up on its own two feet.

    Iraqi politicians should be told that they have until May 15 to deal with these intransigent issues and at last put together an effective unity government or we will immediately withdraw our military. If Iraqis aren't willing to build a unity government in the five months since the election, they're probably not willing to build one at all. The civil war will only get worse, and we will have no choice anyway but to leave.

    If Iraq's leaders succeed in putting together a government, then we must agree on another deadline: a schedule for withdrawing American combat forces by year's end. Doing so will actually empower the new Iraqi leadership, put Iraqis in the position of running their own country and undermine support for the insurgency, which is fueled in large measure by the majority of Iraqis who want us to leave their country.

    So now, as in 1971, we are engaged in another fight to live the truth and make our own government accountable. As in 1971, this is another moment when American patriotism demands more dissent and less complacency in the face of bland assurances from those in power.

    We must insist now that patriotism does not belong to those who defend a President's position-it belongs to those who defend their country. Patriotism is not love of power; it is love of country. And sometimes loving your country demands you must tell the truth to power. This is one of those times.

    Lives are on the line. Lives have been lost to bad decisions - not decisions that could have gone either way, but decisions that constitute basic negligence and incompetence. And lives continue to be lost because of stubbornness and pride.

    We support the troops-the brave men and women who have always protected us and do so today-in part by honoring their service, and in part by making sure they have everything they need both in battle and after they have borne the burden of battle.

    But I believe now as strongly and proudly as I did thirty-five years ago that the most important way to support the troops is to tell the truth, and to ensure we do not ask young Americans to die in a cause that falls short of the ideals of this country.

    When we protested the war in Vietnam some would weigh in against us saying: "My country right or wrong." Our response was simple: "Yes, my country right or wrong. When right, keep it right and when wrong, make it right." And that's what we must do again today.

    Belief in the Best Sellers
    -- Martin E. Marty

    Don't believe the celebrators of "the good old days" in American religion, when "everyone was religious and religion was all over the public place." And don't believe the denigrators of "the good new days" who sulk because government will not do the church's work by allowing and providing for the worship of God(s?) in public schools and in courts. There is now more evidence of religion in public media and non-governmental institutions than before. And in the "free market" of ideas and markets, religion never had it so good in recent or semi-distant memory. I thought of that when scanning the New York Times Book Review best-sellers list.

    First, fiction. I am happy to see that the author of The Da Vinci Code in court had to call his book fiction. It's delusional to look for and claim to find factual or evidential bases for much of anything in it. Equally hokey -- but, remember it is fiction -- is Steve Berry's The Templar Legacy, which shares the ethos of the "Da Vinci" enterprise. So does Javier Sierra's The Secret Supper. "Clues in 'The Last Super' reveal Da Vinci's heretical beliefs." Authors and publics can't get over "the Holy Grail," though it is pretty much beside the point.

    As for nonfiction, two of five on the list are worth taking seriously. Kevin Phillips, in American Theocracy, worries about the takeover of the religious right, fearing it might become a privileged, dominant force. I also take very seriously a refreshing book by Newsweek editor Jon Meacham: American Gospel probes the faith of American founders and their legacy. Next comes a silly one, Michael Baigent's The Jesus Papers. "One of the authors of Holy Blood, Holy Grail argues that Jesus survived his crucifixion." (And the moon is made of greenish cheese -- a proposition on the same level of "nonfiction" as the Baigent book.) Add to these: The Gospel of Judas, about which too much has already been said, and Bart D. Ehrman's Misquoting Jesus, whose author has discovered and is informing us that we do not have original gospel documents and that those we have are of diverse quality and display variants -- something even fundamentalists freely learn from the footnotes in the Greek New Testaments that they used in seminary.

    Still, nine of thirty best sellers in the sales by 4,000 godless bookstores and wholesalers are religious in content, as bannered for everyone to see. Don't look for much of anything canonical or orthodox in those that relate to biblical life and times. G. K. Chesterton once said that when people stop believing in God, the problem is not that they do not believe in anything but that they believe in everything and anything. That's made clear with "everything and anything" showing up as religious on dust jackets, covers, title pages, and in texts.

    More and more we read editorials or letters in humanist magazines and elsewhere: Can secularism survive? It'll do all right in the marketplace and the marketplace of ideas; one need not worry about that. Were I a worrier, I'd be more inclined to worry about those who are taken in by everything and anything that is sensationally marketed as potentially replacing classic religious texts or more cautious and profound new ones. Still, the books are likely to sort themselves out, while they gain a huge hearing right now.

    Martin E. Marty's biography, current projects, upcoming events, publications, and contact information can be found at www.illuminos.com. Sightings comes from the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School.

    Amazing what you can do with a little editing...
    "Keeping America Scared"

    Email Msg: "This one came from a co-worker who retired recently. Hope you enjoy!"



    "Their marriage was good, their dreams focused. Their best friends lived barely a wave away I can see them now, Dad in trousers, tee shirt and a hat and Mom in a house dress, lawn mower in one hand, and dish-towel in the other. It was the time for fixing things. A curtain rod, the kitchen radio, screen door, the oven door, the hem in a dress. Things we keep. It was a way of life, and sometimes it made me crazy. All that re-fixing, eating, renewing, I wanted just once to be wasteful. Waste meant affluence. Throwing things away meant you knew there'd always be more.

    But then my mother died, and on that clear summer's night, in the warmth of the hospital room, I was struck with the pain of learning that sometimes there isn't any more

    Sometimes, what we care about most gets all used up and goes away... never to return. So... while we have it... it's best we love it... and care for it... and fix it when it's broken... and heal it when it's sick.

    This is true... for marriage... and old cars... and children with bad report cards... and dogs with bad hips... and aging parents... and grandparents. We keep them because they are worth it, because we are worth it. Some things we keep. Like a best friend that moved away or a classmate we grew up with.

    There are just some things that make life important, like people we know who are special... and so, we keep them close!

    I received this from someone who thinks I am a keeper, so I've sent it to the people I think of in the same way. Now it's your turn to send this to those people that are "keepers" in your life. Good friends are like stars... You don't always see them, but you know they are always there. Keep them close! "