Saturday, January 15, 2005

Random Ten Songs



Random Ten Songs

Roxanne asked for 10 random songs. She said:(1) Fire up your IPOD, MP3 or other digital media player
(2) Set to random play
(3) List the first ten songs

Here are the first ten that came to mind for the way I feel today:


Drug Store Truck Drivin' Man - The Byrds
From The Morning - Nick Drake
Beeswing - Richard Thompson
Streets of London - Ralph McTell
Steal My Sunshine - Len
Light and Day - Polyphonic Spree
Tiger In My Tank - Eels
Echo Park - Joseph Arthur
Boulevard of Broken Dreams - Green Day
Late In The Day - Hot Rize

-- Jude


Cartoon




Credit: Tom Toles Cartoon/Copyright Washington Post



Me, Blaire, and G Star





Hanging out at my brother's place on New Years Eve with my niece, B. Hannah, and my pal G. Star



Bring 'Em On, Li'l Dawgies



Bring 'Em On,
Li'l Dawgies


Hank says: "Bring 'em on? Oh yeah?
We'll see how you swagger when I get
through with ya! Woof!"

LINK

*Thanks, Echidne
Hank rocks. ;)



Protecting Armstrong Williams, Right-Wing Lies About Kos



Protecting Armstrong Williams, Right-Wing Spreads Lies About Kos

Desperately trying to take the "heat" off so-called "journalist" Armstrong Williams, who was caught red-handed taking a government bribe for a secret political agenda, right-wing mud-slingers are suddenly trying to claim that Kos (Markos Moulingas of Daily Kos) secretly had a political agenda while leading one of the top blogs in the world.

THAT'S A LIE.

I have been a Kos diarist a long time. I knew who Markos was and what he did for a living. He has always made it clear.

Kos has NEVER hidden what he does for a living, and the fact that his consulting firm did some work for Howard Dean was made public long ago. Markos was never ashamed and never took taxpayer's money.

The question is: What other journalists have been taking taxpayer bribes from the Bush administration? Who's bribing them?

I want to know!

______________


Related Stories:

Kos speaks (and he's pissed - and I don't blame him a bit for feeling that way.)

American Street - Echidne, who asks: "Who in the government is BRIBING journalists?"

A Story from a YEAR AGO TODAY publicizing Kos' activities. It was no secret!

Wall Street Journal's totally lame-ass attempt to impugn the ethics and integrity of Markos-as-blogger

Digby speaks (via Anonymoses' link)


Disturbed & Deranged in Alabama



Disturbed & Deranged in Alabama

This is really and truly sickening.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. "A woman angry with her 12-year-old daughter for having sex forced the girl to drink bleach and sat on her until the child died..The girl's 9-year-old brother was forced to watch the attack...She told him that if he shed a tear that she was going to kill him, too."....she told authorities she was disturbed because "her daughter told her that she was no longer a virgin."..

LINK


Friday, January 14, 2005

WMD LIES AND BRING 'EM ON BLUNDERS



WMD LIES AND BRING 'EM ON BLUNDERS

What can YOU do?
-- Go to the above link and watch.
-- E-Mail Congress - ask them to stand up and challenge Bush's deceitful policy on Iraq.
-- E-Mail President Bush - tell him you know policy in Iraq is a failure and is based on a lie. When saving face means sacrificing and taking more precious lives, it's time to put it to a screeching halt.

This dismal puzzle has already been done for you.


credit: Christian Science Monitor, Bennett Cartoons


Want a laugh?



Want a laugh?

If you've seen the film Napoleon Dynamite, this is a must-see.

Blogging, Journalism, and Credibility



Blogging, Journalism, and Credibility

On January 9, I'd written about the upcoming invitation-only conference Blogging, Journalism, and Credibility to be held at Harvard on January 21 and 22. The schedule is here.
At Greensboro101 and Ed Cone, I was referred to a link at Raving Lunacy about the conference and
The 'Head Lemur' breaks down the strange fellowship of Blogging as tool, Journalism as occupation, and Credibility as goal. He comments that, while only time and events will bestow credibility to anybody, it's undeniable that the Internet is becoming the primary source for news and information for more and more people, and that there is both promise and danger to the intersection of blogging and journalism. Be sure to read his entire blogpiece.

Ed Cone, who will attend the conference, says that Greensboro has
"interesting things going on here with our traditional journalists as they try to figure out how blogging and newspapers co-exist."
Looking ahead to the time he gets to the Harvard conference, Ed says:
I think I have something to tell the media elite in Cambridge next week, and that is the way traditional and alternative journalism are being practiced on the web here Greensboro. It's not about blogging as punditry, or blogs as the bane of reckless TV journalists, it does not answer burning questions about the place of bloggers in the social hierarchy of Manhattan and DC, but it does address the issues of blogging, journalism, and credibility.
As a community blogger working in harmony with the Syracuse, NY newspaper, The Post Standard, I can relate to Greensboro blogger David Wharton, who will blog about a local issue one day and blog about the tsunami the next.

I wish Ed Cone and all attendees the best of luck at the conference.


Meet the next-door blogger/Syracuse.com



Meet the next-door blogger
By Brian Cubbison, Assistant News Editor
Syracuse Post Standard, January 13, 2005

My interaction with the Greensboro101 bloggers was printed on Page 2 of The Syracuse Post Standard yesterday.

If you live in Cazenovia, Parish or Camillus, your neighbor might be a blogger.

Syracuse.com is nurturing local bloggers who write about their neighborhoods. It’s a trend that’s also taking roots in communities in New Jersey, North Carolina and Washington state.

Jim Jurista writes the Cazenovia Free Press. The technology consultant writes about national politics or village events, such as the Cold War and a men’s night out.

Lou Guindon writes Positively Parish, sometimes in the classic style of a weekly newspaper: "Mr. and Mrs. James Anderson and Lloyd and Arreta Ware had dinner at a local restaurant Friday evening and then enjoyed a duel of cards, the men beating the women. Arreta’s home made chocolate cake soothed the ladies, but they pledged to get even another time."

In Faith Meets Life, the Rev. Jim Corl, of Christ Church in Manlius, wrote a post-election blog about values.

Donna Reynolds, of Syracuse, writes a daily blog, That’s Entertainment. This prolific freelancer is an assistant editor for Reality News Online, among other projects. She’s your source for Survivors, Idols, Amazing Racers and Elvis water on eBay.

Orange fans write blogs about Syracuse University sports. Downstate and Jersey fans weigh in on the Yankees, Mets, Knicks, Jets and Giants.

Gridiron Grit covers local high school football and Track Smack follows auto racing. Dr. Scott Petosa, tennis coach at LeMoyne College, writes The Fitness Fanatic.

When the News and Record of Greensboro, N.C., wondered how to turn a traditional newspaper into an online destination of the future, it turned to the local bloggers at greensboro101.com and the visionaries at the Press Think blog at New York University.

From Camillus, Jude Nagurney Camwell urged them on. She writes The Rational Liberal at syracuse.com. She vouched for her experiences with syracuse.com and The Post-Standard and urged on the Greensboro experiment. "The people in Greensboro have such talent — and such heart!" she wrote. "I wonder — is it something in the drinking water?"

Maybe blogging is in your water. To check them out, or to start your own, go to
www.syracuse.com/weblogs


— Brian Cubbison, assistant news editor

For more, plus links to sources mentioned here, see the News Tracker blog at
www.syracuse.com/newslogs/ newstracker/

* The soundtrack:From "Hometown Hero" by Mary Chapin Carpenter.

Copyright 2004 The Post-Standard

Press Think Comments on Rathergate



"If the anchorman is on the hook, you don't let him do the news from the hook position."
- Jay Rosen, speaking about Dan Rather
Press Think Comments on Rathergate

Don't miss Jay Rosen's Press Think coverage in the aftermath of the release of the CBS report on "Rathergate". I had recently said that Mary Mapes' superiors should have been held responsible. Mr. Rosen seems to agree, and gives his reasons. He says:
My other major reaction is that, like others, I am shocked that CBS News President Andrew Heyward still has his job. This is the reason.

As soon as the reporting of the Air National Guard story came under question, CBS had not one but two problems. The evidentiary problems with the story were one. The involvement--no, the immersion--of Dan Rather in the events thereafter was the other. Rather is the star of CBS News, the face of the brand, the personification of the news division. The anchor. Immediately it was clear that he had "bigfooted" the rest of the division and took over defense of a case in which he was accused. In effect, he was making policy for the network, as when he said that there is no investigation underway at CBS. There were huge dangers for Rather, for CBS News and for the network itself in allowing Rather to become so involved in defense of the story, which muted everyone else "under" Rather, leaving only Andrew Heyward, the boss, who did not act. He was the one who could have protected the brand and his friend, Dan Rather, by speaking truth to (star) power. The responsibility was his alone and he failed in the clutch.


See Mr. Rosen's Short Letter to Dan Rather.
"So I kind of resent your attitude toward your numerous critics who operate their own self-published sites on the Web. They were being more accurate than you were, much of the time. I don't speak for them, but I know my own archive." Plus: Lose the spokeswoman, Dan. Hire a blogger.
Not a bad idea, eh?


Democracy is a Means, Not an End



Democracy is a Means, Not an End
FEATURED COLUMN OF THE DAY:

Democracy is a Means, Not an End
by Michael Munger

Think carefully when reading this article by Michael Munger, Chair of Political Science at Duke University.
"When we help a developing nation design its government, we need unashamedly to advocate something like the U.S. model."
We may be totally disgusted (disappointed, at best) with the President with whom we are forced to endure for the next four years, but at the same time, we need to be careful not to abandon the hope of the PROMISE built into the American framework created by the Founders of this nation.

We can began to take matters into our own capable hands and become active in ensuring that the PROMISE is delivered, or we can watch the PROMISE of America die.
"We live together because social organization provides the efficient means of achieving our individual objectives and not because society offers us a means of arriving at some transcendental common bliss. Politics is a process of compromising our differences, and we differ as to desired collective objectives just as we do over baskets of ordinary consumption goods."

--James Buchanan, The Limits of Liberty


A good part of that PROMISE depends upon having a CONGRESS which fulfills its responsibilities to the American people. We are a people who must remember we have the Bill of Rights to protect us from the realistic tyranny that "liberal America" (I prefer to call us "Progressive America") is experiencing today.

If you are a liberal thinker and a Progressive in contemporary America, you are (sadly) in the (large-sized) minority. When you look at the big picture, a government poised to recognize pure democracy, in the United States today, is not something for which a truly liberal thinker would thirst.

Frankly, we have too many under-educated and misinformed people to trust the masses. If this sounds haughty to you, I ask you to consider that it is a reality. Americans have been systematically misinformed with false information (the most recent example is the WMD issue in Iraq). With an right-elitist mainstream media taking control of the radio and television airwaves, propaganda is allowed to reign, where a good and decent Civics/History education and an academic ability to discern truth from propaganda once took priority. Intellectualism, frighteningly, is a dirty word with today's American majority.

I do not believe, from his track record to date, that President Bush has ever carefully considered how his decided encouragement of a 'tyranny of the misinformed majority' has effected the nation he is leading. He has done tremendous damage to the spirit of civic unity of the people of America. Even after suffering the 9/11 attack, the U.S. is just as politically divided as in the Civil war era. Bush could never unite America because he has absolutely no spirit of civic compromise.

That said, we have a serious problem, in my opinion, with the Congress we have today. When I say "serious", I mean life-or-death for the PROMISE of democracy within the framework of government.

Those in the Legislative branch are not appropriately or adequately acting out the will of half the nation, fully knowing that the President exclusively embraces the (slim) majority in a nation so politically divided. 50% of the American culture and society is being politically ignored by a Congress which is too easily cowed by right-heavy popular media. They are also a Congress which has been virtually purchased, with political contributions, by corporations. ( No conspiracy theory - one look at the Open Secrets website will prove this to be true ). The fact that so many retiring Congresspeople move on to become high-paid lobbyists, perpetuating a corrupt system, takes the small amount of hope and trust that Progressive America has had in the "American PROMISE" and blows it away with an ill wind.

Chances are very good that there will be a need for Supreme Court nominations within the next four years. The odds that President Bush will offer any Judicial nominees who are from a moderate ideology is slim-to-none.

Progressives must understand that the Legislative branch is the only current hope for a change.

American Progressives tend to place all the blame for political isolation on the Bush administration, while neglecting to understand that our Congressional representatives have a duty to enact laws in accordance with the culture that actually exists in their nation. Does the Right have political capital to spend? Yes, thanks to dubious 2000 and 2004 presidential elections. Does that require them to be duty-bound to the majority and to the wishes of the Executive, exclusively? Of course not! Yet, a wholesale political neglect of half a nation has taken place for the past four years, and I see little indication that we will soon see a change.

What has become of the American public's trust in their Federal government? We must ask ourselves: Is (small "d") democracy working against the liberal Progressive in America today?

Mr. Munger recognizes the serious problem facing today's America when he says:
"Policy makers must understand the twin anachronisms that complicate the failures of voting institutions and democratic ideologies in the U.S. There really are two distinct anachronisms, each of which requires immediate attention.

First, our technology of democracy is too old, and prone to abuse or at least distrust. We must bring voting technology into the 21st century, because we accept much less than is possible. We must immediately solve the problem of guaranteeing mechanisms for recording and counting votes that are beyond reproach. As the election of 2004 shows, we are nearly out of time.

Second, our ideology of democracy, our notion of what democracy can accomplish, is anachronistic also. But in this case, the anachronism is not out of the past, but out of a utopian science fiction future. So, we must also take voting ideology back to the 19th century, where it belongs. We have come to expect much more than is possible from democracy, and democratic institutions."

Headlines



Headlines

Aljazeera.net - A US National Guard unit has defied a Pentagon request that sought to stop television news crews filming six flag-draped soldiers' coffins arriving in Louisiana.

ColumbiaTribune.com - "Louisiana community mourns fallen soldiers" Quote: In civilian life, Bradley Bergeron was an air conditioning technician. Kurt Comeaux was a probation officer, and Warren Murphy was a tugboat deckhand. You could find Christopher Babin behind the wheel of his truck. Armand Frickey and Huey Fassbender III worked in restaurants. Each of the six also had another job: Members of the Louisiana National Guard.

MediaMonitors.com - "Church at war? :: An Overview of the Religious Front" by Abid Ullah Jan, the author of "A War on Islam?" Quotes: "Everyone who loves peace on this earth earnestly hopes that this is a war for oil but reports that emerged from left and right suggest otherwise..[..]..On the media front, ABC, CNN, NBC, etc. are as much for the global domination as Fox News. The New York Times, Washington Post and LA Times are as radical in proposing solutions as the Washington Times. Friedman and Safire are as radical as Daniel Pipes.."

TLS - Tsunami myths by Wendy Doniger, Quote: "Philosophy doesn’t do the trick for most people; Leibniz failed, Voltaire failed, and in India, too, the myths pick up the pieces where philosophy throws up its hands. The great myths may help survivors to think through this unthinkable catastrophe, to make a kind of sense by analogy, to say, “This is not unlike anything else; this is like that. This tsunami is like the doomsday flood."

Democrats: How Long Before We Proudly Admit We’re a Party of Progress?



Democrats: How Long Before We Proudly Admit We’re a Party of Progress?
by Jude Nagurney Camwell
From: American Street January 13, 2005

I wonder how long the Democratic party thinks Progressive Americans can hold out on promises which never come close to realistically materializing? How long could any person dedicated to the principles of their party hold out hope for "the future" while core principles of the party are trampled upon and trivialized by both major political parties?
"[Tim] Roemer as head of the DNC sounds like a desperate effort to figure out which way the wind is blowing, long after the 2004 wind blew the Democrats away."

Boston Globe columnist Joan Vennochi is clearly not a proponent of Roemer's campaign for DNC chair. She views the current "win-at-all-costs" philosophic thrust of the DNC as nothing more than institutionalizing John Kerry's losing campaign strategy:
"When it comes to controversial issues, duck. Stand for everything and nothing. Whenever possible, avoid direct answers on issues like war and abortion."
Where the party's half-assed embrace of true values and principles may gain few firmly-entrenched Bush voters into the 'big tent', it may cause an elephant-sized hole in the rear of the tent where progressives have run from the circus of vague complacency that the Democratic party has become.

Thursday, January 13, 2005

Happy Birthday, Anonymoses!



Happy Birthday, Anonymoses!


Blogstud

To my guest blogger and American Street colleague Anonymoses HyperLincoln, a very happy birthday!


The Best Chance to Expose GOP Noise Machine



The best chance we have ever had to hold the Republican Noise Machine up to public scrutiny

Do you think the volume of Rush Limbaugh and his ilk is far too loud? Do you think the heavy weight the right wing talk radio circuit is allowed to throw upon our political system and mainstream media is undeserved?

Well, this is your chance, bloggers!

Do your jobs.

Get this story going.

You know Armstrong Williams was not an isolated incident!


Dem Club in CA Writes to DNC



Dem Club in CA Writes to DNC

Take a look at this letter from the Democratic Club of Central Orange County (CA) to the DNC. See if you identify with any of their thoughts.

Wednesday, January 12, 2005

You Tell 'Em, Teddy



You Tell 'Em, Teddy

"We cannot become Republican clones. If we do, we will lose again, and deserve to lose. As I have said on other occasions, the last thing this country needs is two Republican parties.

"If the White House's idea of bipartisanship is that we have to buy whatever partisan ideas they send us, we're not interested."

"I do not retreat from the view that Iraq is George Bush's Vietnam. The administration turned away from pursuing Osama bin Laden and made the catastrophic choice instead to bog down American forces in an endless quagmire in Iraq."


- Sen. Ted Kennedy, National Press Club speech (Reuters)

See Boston Globe story

Adam Nagourney's article/review of the speech


Tuesday, January 11, 2005

Nation's Political Elite Live in a Bubble


"Do not go gentle into that good night; Blog, blog against the dying of the light."
- Blogger Cathie from Canada

Nation's Political Elite Live in a Bubble
Progressive Bloggers Needed Now More Than Ever

Progressive bloggers understand that America's political elite live in a world all their own. Unfortunately, opinion leaders lay their 'bubble-speak' on the American public 24/7 on cable news networks and the public is believing in their bubblemush just as much as they believe that "reality TV" is actually "reality".

Dave Johnson of Seeing the Forest writes:
" America's political elite live in an information bubble. It's like the Right has set up a "conventional wisdom machine" that is targeted at opinion leaders, legislators, their staffs and the circles they associate with. Heavily-funded right-wing organizations work to infiltrate their message into the information that these "leadership elite" receive. They achieve this in many ways. One way, of course, is that they have their very own bought-and-paid-for media outlets like Fox, the Washington Times, and most of AM radio. But they also have worked to get the more mainstream opinion leaders under their influence. Influential columnists and reporters receive large speaking fees from corporations and trade associations. They get free "retreats" where they learn about "market solutions." And everyone is certainly afraid of the shame and humiliation should they become the target of the character assassination machine. That acts as a powerful incentive to toe the line and reject "marginalized" information sources -- people like Scott Ritter and Michael Moore, constituents complaining about election fraud, and Progressive online news sources or blogs (those terrible things that leaked the exit polls) -- and stick to "credible" sources.

The Armstrong Williams scandal shows us the amounts of money involved in, and the "reach" of this effort. I mean, Armstrong Williams? If Armstrong Williams is getting $240,000 directly from the government, imagine what mainstream opinion leaders are getting from the big-money corporate trade associations, right-wing think tanks, etc. -- over (speaking fees, travel, gifts) and under (bribes, like Williams got) the table..[.] "

* [Where's 'the drumbeat' on Armstrong Williams, by the way? David Corn has plenty of insightful commentary about Williams this week. ]

[.]" ..The amounts of money the Right is putting into their outside-the-election-process propaganda effort -- over $300 million a year just for the think tank/advocacy communication infrastructure -- ought to warn us that most of the traditional channels through which "the leadership elite" get their info are likely targets of this effort.

Marginalizing sources like blogs is one way to scare Washington types away from the info they contain. Reading blogs is a way to break through that bubble."

To All Progressive Bloggers -

We need you more than ever. Keep it real. Keep truth alive. America needs you if you care about truth. We've already seen most truth bled from the mainstream vein of journalism.

Our democracy's future rests with you, Progressive Bloggers. This is no easy task, and Heaven knows it's not a thankful or economically lucrative job. But when you think about the big-time cable journalists raking in their far-more-than-decent payday while touting their cherry-picked headlines (I just saw one about Kim Jong-il's hair on MSNBC complete with a playing of the song "God Bless The USA") and giving the political elite endless (hot)-air time, and then you look at the measly little blogger expecting no reward and loving her country and the world's people enough to care to be here working day in/day out - -

Well, you tell ME who has more stock in having "an agenda". Look in the mirror. See the ones who really care, knowing the news and views they relay bring them no reward. We do what we do all day long, and will get up tomorrow and do it all over again.

We have an endless love affair with truth and compassion.

Progressive Bloggers, I'm grateful to each one of you.


Howard Dean: "I'm Running"



Howard Dean: "I'm Running"
"There is only one party that speaks to the hopes and dreams of all Americans. It is the party you have already given so much to. It is the Democratic Party.

We can win elections only by standing up for what we believe."


LINK

Monday, January 10, 2005

Jesus Loves a 4-Door



"..Jesus said to "feed my lambs, tend my sheep, and his sheep were the poor, the downtrodden, the poor in spirit. That's pretty challenging stuff.

I don't think progressives can ever win elections in this country without appealing to moral values and presenting our own. We want people to step up to the problems of the world.

We need to step up first.."



Jesus Loves a 4-Door

I found this article by Bob Geary at the Independent Weekly/Durham, NC, to be a good and sane way to begin to speak about progressive faith-based values.
"...when I listen to Bill O'Reilly, the Rev. James Dobson or any of a number of other conservative haranguers who've shoved themselves into our daily lives, I'm reminded how incongruous it is that a loving God would repose her moral values in folks who rant and rave about the people they hate and how stupid they are.

If we on the progressive side are going to reclaim the moral-values mantle, and I think we must, ranting and raving is not the way to do it. So I won't rant, at least from this point on. Good Catholic boy that I still am at some level, I think God comes to us with a smile and his hand out to help, even if--especially if--there's no rational reason why he'd want to help you.

I see a God at work at every execution, when People of Faith Against the Death Penalty come to Central Prison to plead for a life to be spared and stay into the early morning hours to pray for a soul when it isn't."
Geary provides a list of ministries in his area which are helping people in a very tangible way.


2004 In Review at Alt.Weeklies



2004 In Review at Alt.Weeklies

Catch the 2004 Best-Of Lists HERE.

-- I particularly enjoyed Geov Parrish's top overhyped and underreported stories.

-- Newcity Chicago's Top 5 of Everything That Matters is interesting. Ross McElwee's "Bright Leaves" made the Top 5 Documentary list.

-- Artvoice's Top 20 Albums of 2004

-- Seattle Weekly's Best Music Lists

-- Independent Weekly Durham, N.C. Best-Of Lists

I notice a group called "The Thermals" are on many of these Best-Of lists. I guess I'll have to check them out to see what I'm missing.


CBS Breakdown: How it Happened



CBS Breakdown: How it Happened
by Al Tompkins
Poynter Online

The investigation into what went wrong at CBS' "60 Minutes Wednesday" paints a portrait of an intensely competitive producer who feared being scooped...


I cannot begin to tell you how disappointed I am with CBS News on the Rathergate incident. I wonder how many voters they may have turned off (and away from John Kerry) because of their impulsive reporting. Unfortunately, in the minds of many incompletely-informed Americans, a lack of credibility on the part of the CBS news network likely translated to a lack of trust in the party that was opposing Bush in the election. [Joe Lockhart's involvement here surely didn't help].

"If there was a journalistic crime committed here, it was not by me." - Mary Mapes

The sad part was this: The story about Bush, the way he was helped to get out of dangerous duty (in-country/Viet Nam), and his absence during his stateside tour of duty was, in essence, quite true and Bush supporters know it to this day. CBS, through deceit, whether intentional or unintentional, took the focus off the REAL story and, through their journalistic irresponsibility, made the story about THEM.

Mary Mapes most likely deserved to get the boot. But read Al Tompkin's series at Poynter Online. Mapes' superiors should have gotten the boot, too. They all belong together in the Armstrong Williams/Jayson Blair/Judith Miller/Bob Novak shitebucket of journalism. The way I see it, they may have played a key role in the Democrats' electoral loss on November 2.

I'd like to reiterate something I've said before: The bloggers DO deserve much credit for breaking the story. And quite a story it was. But the way our mainstream media works is such that the story was allowed to run away with the material truth behind Bush's desertion of duty in the National Guard. The bloggers who broke the story were partisans who rightly jumped on the story. Some of them wonder why "the left" is fairly silent on the matter today. The answer is that the partisan bloggers succeeded in doing their job and the matter was over on November 2, when Bush won the election. Why are they surprised that this story doen't garner quite the same attention now than it did when the heart and soul of America was at risk? The little deserter won his shady election and 1 in 5 Americans believe the election was won by fraudulent means. Now THERE'S something for bloggers to be talking about!

SEE MODERATE VOICE for Joe's RATHERGATE post

________________


"The long awaited report of CBS's investigation of the 60 Minutes/Dan Rather report on President Bush's National Guard service record has arrived, bringing with it an interesting rational for their use of fraudulent documents. "Myopic Zeal". This bland sounding excuse for terrible behavior on the part of a national media outlet just got four 60 Minutes staffers fired.."

--Diane at Respublica

My previous Rathergate-related posts: HERE, HERE, HERE, HERE

Meanwhile, sloppy liars extraordinaire continue fibbing shamelessly, mockingly, and regularly at FOX News.


Is the U.S. Organizing Salvador-Style Death Squads in Iraq?



Is the U.S. Organizing Salvador-Style Death Squads in Iraq?
Democracy Now!
Monday, January 10th, 2005

Read Transcript - Amy Goodman interviews journalist/activist Allan Nairn

Listen to Segment

Excerpt:
ALLAN NAIRN: "..I did in a closed session and was questioned by dozens of the Intelligence Committee staff for about three or four hours about what the U.S. had done to back and create the Salvadoran death squads. Now this was a bit curious since they were the ones, who had security clearance, who had access to the C.I.A. and Pentagon files. They were the ones who worked with them, indeed funded them, but they were asking me, I think in part maybe to try to find out how much I knew. What I knew is what I printed in the magazine, but I was trying to spur them to investigate. And they did. They then launched an investigation where they say they examined more than a million internal documents. They produced a 400 page report, which was heavily classified. They told me that only two copies of the report were produced, one was in a sealed room that only -- kept on Capitol Hill, which only the Senators on the committee could read, and another at the C.I.A. headquarters. A public report was released, which said nothing. Some of the Senators told me that the classified - they told me a little bit about the classified report. They said they had verified that in fact, yes, the U.S. had set up these death squads in Salvador and also that U.S. personnel had sometimes been on the premises during torture sessions and had supplied questions for the prisoners being tortured.

AMY GOODMAN: So, this was back in 1984 and 1985 when this was coming back -- coming out. Did it surprise you that the Pentagon is actually calling this proposal, according to Newsweek, to train -- it's not clear if it's C.I.A.-backed, Pentagon-backed assassination and kidnapping squads in El Salvador, that they're calling it the Salvador option. Have they ever acknowledged it publicly?

ALLAN NAIRN: Well, it sounds … No, they never acknowledged it publicly. That Senate report was classified. But now it sounds like in an offhand way, it's almost -- it sounds as if they're almost talking about it even in a -- almost a joking way, oh yeah, we'll do to them what they did to Salvador. It's an astonishing admission, but I think now that this is on the record, immediately, the Senate Intelligence Committee should release their classified report of 1984, and there should be a demand that the Pentagon and the C.I.A. release all internal documents they have about the Salvador option, and similar activities in Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Salvador, also - there are dozens of other countries in the world where this has happened.



Poem for Mothers / Tsunami Charity for Women



Poem for Mothers / Tsunami Charity for Women


AP photo

When she awoke he was not there
She recalls a man with a mask shaking her
To a consciousness she'd wished she'd not regained

For all the pain that followed when memory fell
back in, like the flood that swept him away
from her desperate arms, his cries drowned by the sea

If she'd only been carried along with him
She would not be left here, cursed with knowing
she'll leave without his body, miraculously saved, alone.


--Jude Nagurney Camwell

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



There are many agencies ready and waiting to take donations for tsunami relief. I have posted a list of these agencies, with links, at my personal website. Sri Lanka and Indonesia are likely to have the greatest need for humanitarian support. In Sri Lanka alone, over one million people have been displaced. Among them are tens of thousands of pregnant and nursing women, who are especially susceptible to waterborne diseases and require emergency medical attention and trauma counseling.

I want to make readers aware of one of those agencies, which is called MADRE.
MADRE is an international women’s human rights organization that works in partnership with women’s community-based groups in conflict areas worldwide. MADRE specializes in assisting displaced women and families, offering them crucial trauma counseling which will help them cope with the deaths of their children and other loved ones, gradually heal from their trauma, and begin to rebuild.

MADRE has chosen to partner with INFORM. They are part of a regional network of women’s groups that can reach out immediately to many different communities at at time such as this.

MADRE can be found on several websites (including Charity Navigator and GuideStar) that rate the business practices and overall effectiveness of charities.

Donation information can be found HERE.


DNC Chair Election Buzz / Emanual Elected DCCC Head



DNC Chair Election Info /
Emanual Elected DCCC Head/
A Good Dem Committee Website


How is the DNC Chair Elected?

SEE HERE.

Here is a background on what happened down South with the interviews of
some of the candidates for the Chair.

Wnat to see an example of a gem of a local democratic committee web site?

Check it out.

I've been hearing a buzz amongst many grassroots Dems - -

"Joe Trippi for DNC Chair!"

Don't confuse DNC and DCCC positions. Rahm Emanuel hasn't been elected as the DNC Chairman, but was chosen as the "DCCC Chairman", which means he will spearhead democratic races for the House of
Represenatives.

SEE THE NYT



* Thanks to Vicki Trojnor, Fingerlakes DFA, for leading me to all the above-mentioned information.

___________________________


Speaking of DFA, at Blog for America, Greg Greene has a great post. It deserves repeating here:

Irony Comes Supersized These Days ...

And now, the quote of the day — thanks to a Seattle Post-Intelligencer article about a Republican suit to throw out the result of the Washington gubernatorial election:

"... Harry Korrell, the lawyer for the GOP, said: 'If you can't tell who won an election because of errors and mistakes, you have to rerun it.'"


Wait a sec — really?!!

Sunday, January 09, 2005

Will Future Journalism Prompt Govt Reps to be More Accountable?



Will Future Journalism Prompt Government Representatives to be More Accountable to the People?

Will Pitt lays out the names of those he considers heroes in last week's objection to certification of the Ohio Electors.

While I highly respect Sen. Barbara Boxer and Rep. John Conyers for doing their duty [I consider them to be honest and forthright in light of standing up to such an ugly and intimidating Congress], I expected far more from the rest of our Democratic representatives. I couldn't be more disappointed with Senator Kerry himself for disappearing on "objection day". I realize he has political aspirations and is aiming for the next Presidential run. Good for him, but remember this: Politics stopped him from defending the American people's right to vote and expect the vote to be fairly and accountably counted. I'm sorry. That's not "okay" with me. Think back, if you will. It was not moral sense or common sense that led Kerry and many other Democrats to vote "yes" on the Iraq resolution in 2002. Politics was the prime consideration they offered when they gave Bush authorization to unleash immoral hell upon Iraq's people, writing a death scenario for over 1000 Americans and, according to a Lancet report, over 100,000 Iraqi civilians. God forgive them, I don't think they knew where their political stupidity was leading them or our nation. How can we reward any of these people for their utter stupidity?

Lately I hear many of them rationalizing about the acceptability of torturing other human beings, as if they were not human at all, but some form of alien called "terrorists". In their rush to accept the wrong man for attorney general, dopes in Congress waver on the respect for the rule of law and call a torturer their "buddy". Call it politics. Call it whatever you want. Our nation is totally messed up because of a lot of fantasy-hugging lunatics are making a circus of our government and ignoring the base truth behind the sheer will of the people. The Founding Fathers would line them up and shoot every one of them for their dedication to fantasy and their irresponsible stupidity. The only thing I can tell you, based upon knowledge of history, is that history will surely see that we, the people who allegedly have a say in our own government, will pay for that stupidity in ways we probably would never suspect. We are responsible for letting these government representatives run roughshod over sanity itself.

Will Pitt is right, though. The big heroes in this story are the individual citizens who stood up in the face of so many lies and demanded the truth. The force of the people's demands for accountable and reality-based government must become more concentrated and much stronger. My hope for 2005 is for a strong Blogger Corps to create that force. [Rebecca MacKinnon gets credit for this great idea]. I believe it is only citizen-bloggers can save our mainstream media from falling into a permanent state of fantasy-following. Rather than working against one another, my hope is that mainstream media will work directly with the blogging world in order to produce honest stories in the full scope of the American experience.

I recommend Jay Rosen's 2004 Top Ten ideas to get an an idea as to where he believes journalism is going.
1. The Legacy Media.
2. He said, she said, we said.
3. What the printing press did to the Catholic Church the blogging press does to the media church.
4. Open Source Journalism, or: "My readers know more than I do." (Dec. 28)
5. News turns from a lecture to a conversation. (Dec. 29)
6. "Content will be more important than its container." (Jan. 1)
7. "What once was good--or good enough--no longer is." (Jan.4)
8. "The victory of affinity over geography."
9. The Pajamahadeen.
10. The Reality-Based Community.
I look forward to seeing what comes from the Blogging, Journalism, and Credibility Conference: Battleground and Common Ground, to be held January 21st and 22nd, 2005 at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government.

To be continued..


Friday, January 07, 2005

Headlines



Headlines

Armstrong Williams Column Axed by TMS

Shill for Bush adminstration propaganda. I'll bet he's not the only unethical creep in media who's accepted these types of bribes. He was simply found out.

Groups Protest Ouster of Veterans' Committee Chief

He was too good to Vets. Wouldn't toe the GOP line. Refused to screw the vets.

Thursday, January 06, 2005

Omidyar.net



Omidyar.net

Welcome to omidyar.net

We believe every individual has the power to make a difference.
We exist for one single purpose:
So that more and more people discover their own
power to make good things happen.

If my readers do not yet know about the open source commons known as Omidyar.net, I strongly recommend you join and participate, based upon your interests and desire to connect with others of like mind.


The Rough Guide To A Better World



The Rough Guide To A Better World
THE ROUGH GUIDE TO A BETTER WORLD is the essential guide to how the world can be a better place for everyone. Poverty in the developing world is well known, but less publicised are the efforts of those who combat hunger, disease and illiteracy. This guide shows how you can get involved. It covers:

THE ISSUES: How prosperity in poorer countries benefits us all; how development works; and why the bad news is only half the story.

THE CHALLENGES: The nature and scale of the problems faced by developing countries.

FIVE WAYS TO CHANGE THE WORLD: How activism, ethical shopping and tourism, giving to charity and volunteer work can all help.

THE INFORMATION: Lets you know what to do - from a change in shopping habits to a change of job. It tells you the most effective ways of contributing and gives contacts for relevant organisations.

Click on the photo to order book - it's free (although there is a shipping charge).

You can read it online.



John Boehner Claims Voter Concerns Not Serious



Claims Voter Concerns Not Serious

I just saw Ohio Republican Congressman John Boehner call the American electoral problems NON-SERIOUS.
Seriously. How dare he?
There is political rhetoric -- and there is Constitutional blasphemy.
Calling concern over voter's rights NOT a serious issue is assuredly American-style blasphemy.
Boehner said he wanted to get back to "the serious work of the people", that we should "get over it" [get over asking questions about the possibility of the Ohio swindle] and then he commenced to try to shame the Democrats who were brave enough to stand up to these unaccountable fascists.

Tom Delay called the move by Democrats "a shame", but said it was a serious matter. I agree--it is a shame. But not the kind of shame he'd like to showcase. It is a shame upon him and the likes of him for calling good and decent Americans like me "X-files"-paranoid freaks. Tom Delay is dead wrong, and is so heavily addicted to his power that he's lost touch with the reality of the people who own this nation. He is our servant, not our moral guru. He's calling the challenge a threat to American ideals. Guess what? The little right-wing power-drunk has got it perfectly backwards. He's a colossal shame himself. This was a GOOD debate to be having TODAY. It was of great symbolic importance. His "leadership" has brought his House to this point. I hope he's proud of himself. He is no healer. He never will be.

This isn't an effort to scrape away at the legitimacy of the Bush presidency. This is to open up a wide debate about what we have REASON to suspect about Ohio's electoral shenanigans. They cannot get away with it. We cannot blink or shame it away.

President Bush should join in the concern and should support his own American people, not his partisan goons. Let's see what he's worth - let's hear President Bush speak to us on this issue in a serious way.

To Congressman John Boehner, this is the most serious issue facing free people of America. You are accountable.

There will be no "healing" until the partisan power of the Republicans in the Oval Office, House, and Senate will ADMIT there is an issue to BE healed.

GET REAL!


You can see which House Reps and Senators stood and spoke today at Will Pitt's blog. Thanks, Will!


Liberal Hawks: Ideological Deserters?



Liberal Hawks: Ideological Deserters?

Reason Online editor Tim Cavanaugh calls "liberal hawks" a bunch of 'ideological deserters' for publically skating on Bush now that the Iraq war is a security failure.

Let's back up.

How soon we forget!

I think we should all be afraid and dismayed that ANYONE, from the House to the Senate to Bush himself, authorized this pre-emptive, immoral war to begin with, especially since there were outright lies told to the American public to get us there.

They are truth deserters.
They are morality deserters.
They are honesty deserters.
They abandoned their duty and lost the trust of the American people.
Thousands upon thousands have died for each and every one of their lies and authorizations.

I'm not being facetious here.

I won't forgive any of them anytime soon.

Stick THAT in your REASON pipe - and smoke it!


Democrats: Cowards or Not?



Democrats: Cowards or not?
A formal challenge would not affect the outcome of the election, because both houses of Congress are controlled by Republicans, who promise to certify Mr. Bush as the winner. But it would force lawmakers to abandon the ordinarily polite ritual, which takes place in the House chamber. Instead, the House and Senate would retreat to their own chambers, on opposite sides of the Capitol, for a two-hour debate and a formal vote on the objection.

Such a debate could prove uncomfortable for Democrats, who do not want to be viewed as sore losers. But Republicans seemed eager for it.

"They are really just trying to stir up their loony left," John Feehery, a spokesman for Speaker J. Dennis Hastert, said of the Democrats.

LINK
Screw John Feehery and Dennis Hastert and every intimidated Democrat who refused to stand up to them. I see how little they care about the concerns of the people who vote them into office. I am not at all hopeful for the future of fair elections in America. My trust is gone. Completely.

My dear readers, I no longer recognize the America I was raised to understand or to respect or to trust. Is there no one with a keen sense of virtue, honesty, or duty left in Congress?

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

UPDATE: 9:58 am- William Rivers Pitt:
"...just got confirmation from several sources: Senator Barbara Boxer will stand with House members to challenge the Ohio Electors. There will be a debate on what happened in Ohio, in all likelihood followed by a vote to accept those Ohio Electors.

But the messed-up way we run elections in this country is about to become part of a national dialogue, and you know what? It was the people who got this done. The calls, the emails, the faxes, the letters, the protests compelled this action. This is a big day in the history of citizen action.

More Senators may be coming later. Stay tuned
.."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

10:16 am Associated Press - (posted ONE MINUTE ago....)
A small group of Democrats agreed Thursday to force House and Senate debates on Election Day problems in Ohio before letting Congress certify President Bush's win over Sen. John Kerry in November..[..]

[..}"I have concluded that objecting to the electoral votes from Ohio is the only immediate way to bring these issues to light by allowing you to have a two-hour debate to let the American people know the facts surrounding Ohio's election," Boxer wrote in a letter to Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones D-Ohio, a leader of the Democratic effort."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

John Kerry and "Boy Wonder" Barack Obama have disappointed me greatly:

[UPDATE 4pm Jan 6: I take back what I'd said about Obama. He stood up for Democrats today. Thanks, Senator O. ]

"On Thursday we need a senator to stand up. Either Dick Durbin [Illinois Democrat], Harry Reid [Nevada Democrat] or John Kerry himself as the candidate should stand up and support an investigation into Ohio's voting process," Mr. Jackson said.
A spokesman for Mr. Kerry said the senator supports examining voting irregularities, which is "crucial to our democracy, not because it would change the outcome of the election."
Mr. Jackson called on newly sworn-in Sen. Barack Obama, Illinois Democrat, to support them. Mr. Obama said his staff is reviewing the Ohio resolution, but said he has not decided whether he will sign it.
"The election is over and President Bush won fair and square, [my emphasis added--Omigawd, I can't believe he said that!] so I don't think we need to challenge the election, but we continue to have chronic problems in our voting system,"he said. "Some of the practices in Ohio were clearly illegal and disenfranchised voters and, let's be real about this, some Republicans were denied their rights to vote as well."

WASHINGTON TIMES
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

From ABC's NOTE:
There was plenty of high-level Democratic pressure to talk Boxer out of doing this. They do not welcome the spectacle of Jesse Jackson and 'Granny D' holding little rallies outside the Capitol. [*My note: What a haughty and smug non-democratic statement.] And they acknowledge it makes them look like poor losers, since, after all, Bush did win Ohio by more than 100,000 votes. [*My note: According to Diebold? Triad? Hmmm...isn't someone totally missing the point here?]

"Senate Democratic aides say few if any Democratic Senators will vote to support the challenge, with the exception of Boxer," ABC News' Linda Douglass reports. "Some Democrats, like Ted Kennedy, may make floor statements calling for election reform but not challenging the outcome of this election. It is not clear how many will speak, since many senators have already left town," Douglass reports.

"Republicans are delighted. A leadership aide calls this a 'golden opportunity to remind people that President Bush won and John Kerry lost. Bring it on.'"

Doug Chapin and colleagues at electionline.org (http://www.electionline.org) have a post-election report that's a must-read for anyone concerned about election administration. The Hill fronts the story: LINK

Rick Klein and Susan Milligan of the Boston Globe lead with Sen. Boxer's consideration of challenging Ohio's electoral votes. LINK

Conyers released a report on Wednesday outlining voter problems in Ohio, alleging that the irregularities were the result of deliberate misconduct, and urging the challenge of the state's electoral votes. LINK

Cam Kerry offers up an inside look at the forces marshaled on election night to watchdog and deal with voting problems and issues in a Boston Globe op-ed, arguing that while this election is over, the need to investigate and overhaul the system to make sure votes are counted continues. LINK

[My note:

Cam Kerry says: "Next time the electoral votes are tallied, every American citizen should be able to know that his or vote has counted."

...and this was the same cry 4 years ago. No, Sir. I'm convinced that if we don't stand up - - if not now - - then it will be never.

- Jude]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

GOOGLE SEARCH



Wednesday, January 05, 2005

Advance in Collective Technology Provides Hope in Wake of Tsunami



American Street:
Advance in Collective Technology Provides Hope in Wake of Tsunami

by Jude Nagurney Camwell
LINK

The most recent advances in collective technology have come about out of necessity, and those who have lent their time and effort deserve much credit for their respective contributions.

Cell phones with text messaging can be much more effectively utilized during emergencies. Text messaging is also called SMS - (Short Message Service) - a feature available with some wireless phones that allow users to send and/or receive short alphanumeric messages. The recent tsunami has proven the need for this improvement in communications technology.

Taran Rampersad, a former Hospital Corpsman in the United States Navy, is showing how SMS systems can be put to more practical use. His favorite phrase is taken from the great artist Michaelangelo: “Criticize by creating.” When Taran imagines, he puts that imagination into practical and helpful use to the world. At his website, KnowProse.com, he explains that the Alert Retrieval Cache system (further discussed below) is meant to recieve messages from people on the ground in the affected areas and use human moderators to take actions based on the content of the messages recieved.

Taran was a recent guest on BBC News where he discussed his latest ideas, of great public interest in the aftermath of the tsunami disaster in Southeast Asia. LISTEN TO THE BBC SEGMENT HERE. Taran has quickly understood the need to centralize text messages and redistribute them in such a way that relief can be best brought to those who need it most.

The fact that people like Taran and Dan Lane of Great Britain, known as “SMS guru” , have caught the attention of a non-techie like me is no accident or odd coincidence. I have found them through common pathways on the internet. My expressive desire to see a change in the world has met with those who have created the means to make that dream come true, in small, realistic steps. Too often, the genius behind cutting-edge technology goes unnoticed, not properly credited, and/or misunderstood.

Dan Lane helped to create the ARC system (Alert Retrieval Cache), in less than 24 hours after the onset of the tsunami indicated a monster of a crisis. It was mentioned in a recent Boing Boing blog entry:
One approach to a solution, created in the span of about 24 hours by an impromtu volunteer geek corps -- A tech system called Alert Retrieval Cache (ARC) (socialtext.net), which collects, sorts, and routes SMS messages for the puposes of alerts and relay communication. An early warning system based on SMS, short message service.

The ARC Team is:

Dan Lane - Technical Architect and SMS Specialist
GV - ARC Developer
Rohit Gupta - Original Concept
Taran Rampersad - Project Coordinator

The following is just one small example of how SMS technology is shining through. At Malaysia’s Star Publications, there is currently an SMS hope/charity-based campaign (which will run through January 14) called “From The Heart” which utilizes SMS technology for the dual purpose of lifting victims’ spirits and providing financial relief.
“Hope all victims can overcome the problems they’re facing now, and know that there is always new hope ahead, it’s just the matter of time. Frm LKY”, read one message that was received for the campaign, which is organised by DiGi Telecommunications, The Star and ntv7. Some 225 messages were sent in yesterday, with most of them encouraging those affected by the disaster to continue to look for the silver lining in the midst of their suffering. “BE STRONG. LOOK AT THE BRIGHT SIDE. THERE’S ALWAYS S/THING TO LEARN,” wrote VEROLISA, while a message from KUMARAN read: “May GOD bless you. There is a future waiting for you.”
The Blogging World Responds to the Challenge

This new technology carries naturally over to the blogging world, and is becoming an extension of the old "tribal word-of-mouth" method of social networking.

The Asia Times recently published an article by James Borton, which describes, in detail, the effectiveness of blogs as independent media at a time when marginalized peoples are facing the aftermath of a great disaster.

Borton credits open source journalism, including humanitarian "smart-mobs", who are bringing troubled populations just one click away from the assistance they require. Although far from perfect, there is early proof that the concept will be an elemental part of the future of world communication.

In the article titled Tsunami bloggers in tribal news network, James Borton writes:
Malaysiakini.com [an independent news organization launched in 1999, offering daily news, opinions, editorials, etc. Since its launch, the website has become the leading source of independent news and views on Malaysia.. ] and bloggers as independent media are providing effective forums for marginalized people in Asia at a time when ordinary lives have been devastated by this natural disaster in which each tide washes ashore more victims. This band of online tribalists brings together a deeper appreciation of shared humanity and continues to open the flow of vital news arteries.


"[....] It is a marvelous demonstration of the collective intelligence of humanitarian smart mobs," blogger Rohit Gupta from the www.worldchanging.com website said in an Asia Times Online interview from Bombay. According to Gupta, Sri Lankan bloggers Morquendi [Sanjay Senanayake] and LastNode are building a Short Message Service (SMS) news and alert service, where they are recruiting more citizen reporters at www.wavesofhope.org."

[...]Blogger Nick Lewis [also Founder and Chief Administrator of The Progressive Blog Alliance and One World] has established a website called Emergency Action Blog, which provides some exemplary action steps, updates on tsunami information, collected personal stories and links to aid-relief sites.

Other bloggers, such as Jon Lebkowsky , are even more committed to discussions on what went wrong since the world knows all too painfully that there was no available tsunami detection information in the Indian Ocean and apparently no one at the warning center had the telephone numbers of their neighboring scientists in Indonesia, Malaysia and eastern India.

[...]"We are truly witnessing the tribal word-of-mouth network return as a dominant medium in a heavily connected world. Blogs are a natural extension of that," added Malaysian blogger Jack Tuan from Penang, an area also hit by the killer tsunami…"

[...]Bloggers such as Malaysian Jeff Ooi and Nanda Kishore, a contributor to sumankumar.com from Chennai, India, along with scores of others at www.worldchanging.com, are sentries on the digital frontline, examining the impact of the regional tsunami that spilled over parts of South and Southeast Asian on December 26.

[...]"It's nice to see lots of learning on social software over the last two years implemented here; linking blog to wiki and wiki to blog, working with the limitations of using Blogger (though Google has been so so kind and offered us unlimited bandwidth), using blogrolling to enable links to wiki pages, putting up a Flickr Zeitgest on missing persons. We still need a button/logo. We still need cross-referencing between blog posts and wiki pages. We still need easy migration of data from blog to wiki ... We're now considering transitioning to another platform that enables easy integration between blogs and wikis ... prototyping some ideas at this point ... let's see how that emerges," [Dina] Mehta said."

Proof of success can be found in the words of families around the world in this one example, seen at the Tsunami Help Workspace. In a message from the SEA-EAT-Volunteers list:
Two more individuals, Lori Gustafson from London and Lindsay Francis from Seattle are fine and doing well.. their families have this to say to us:

"Thank you so much for your information. It is so nice to know there are so many people in the world who are still caring enough to take their time to respond to our request. We managed to conatct Lori and she is doing well. We wish you a Very Happy New Year."
Margaret Eastman (Lori's Mother)

"Thank you for your kind words. Lisa has be confirmed as safe. Please do convey my deepest regards and good wishes to all those who are putting so much time and effort to maintain this mammoth of task. We are all so happy to know that such amazing people live in this world too."
Lindsay's sister

I’d like to extend a personal thanks to the people, many with day jobs, who lose so much sleep; who work non-stop (losing all track of time); who devote so much of their personal lives and caring intelligence to alleviating the suffering of their fellow men and women. Let it go on the record that their efforts are very much appreciated. The future is dependent upon global people-to-people communications, and the efforts of these men and women to provide a technological venue to facilitate this communication is the stuff of which history books will be someday be comprised.

Tuesday, January 04, 2005

Will Boxer Stand Up for Voters?



Will Boxer Stand Up for Voters?
Will ANY Senator?

William Rivers Pitt is officially blogging now, and I couldn't be happier. If I guessed that I'd mentioned him sixty times in the past year, I would bet that would be an underestimation. When Will speaks, I listen. And now I can listen - every day.

Joy!

Will's latest article at Truthout is a must see. It's titled Stand Up, Senator.
"Four years ago, members of the Congressional Black Caucus ran deliberately and vociferously into a brick wall when they chose to stand and protest the deplorable election calamity in Florida. They sought the name of one Senator, just one, which they could append to their complaints. Had they gotten that one name, a debate and discussion on what happened in Florida would have taken place in the House and the Senate. No Senator came forward, and the debate never happened.

Now, four years later, another election has come and gone. Now, four years later, there are rafts of evidence which point, once again, to overwhelming disenfranchisement of minority voters. Now, four years later, members of the Congressional Black Caucus, along with several other House members, plan to stand once again and protest an election that failed to live up to the standards required of participatory democracy. Now, four years later, they seek a Senator to stand with them.

This time, a Senator must answer the call."


At the American Street, there is word that Sen. Barbara Boxer has indicated she will stand with Congressman John Conyers in questioning the electoral vote (it only takes one rep and one senator) if she receives enough feedback.

This is very important news. See the related Daily Kos diary, which urges you to call Boxer's office if you care.

All Senators should be contacted about this. Here is an easy way to fax a letter or send an e-mail about the topic to your Senator.


Gutting CIA: America strays further from truth



Gutting the Old CIA
America strays further from truth


I am quoting Laura Rozen on this entry (see below). Her recent post is telling you that the old CIA has recognized and communicated, all along, the folly of the Bush administration's disastrous foreign policy toward Iraq. It's because they know it that they are getting the axe from new director Porter Goss. How is that supposed to make us feel, as Americans? Since when does the act of our government overtly closing their eyes to crucial/bitterly honest truths bring about any positive/realistic outcomes?

Beware!

Laura's post:

______________________
Former CIA station chief Haviland Smith, writing in the WaPo:

Given the way the Bush White House has handled intelligence during the past three years, it makes sense that it is angry at the clandestine service. The officers in that service are often required to give their opinions about policies in advance of their implementation. It is unlikely that any clandestine service officer, having spent a career in the Middle East, would see our current policy there as flawless. Thus many in the White House probably see the clandestine service as a nest of enemies. They might just want to consider an alternative possibility: that the service is made up of professionals who would like to save their country from the further embarrassment and potential difficulties of a truly flawed and dangerous Iraq policy...

Given his dogged adherence to the righteousness of that policy, it makes sense that the president would be angry with the clandestine service. It seems quite possible that the service is being punished for having been right... The agency's statutory responsibility is to speak the truth, whether the truth supports the president's plans or not. It would appear that this concept is not shared by this administration
.


'Cutting off our nose to spite our face,' is how Smith sums up Porter Goss's White House ordered purge of the clandestine service underway.

--Laura Rozen
______________________________


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