Saturday, February 02, 2008

White Sox Cards: Dennis O'Toole

White Sox Cards: Dennis O'Toole

I love this guy's blog and hopefully he will not mind if I highlight his blog once in a while.....so please check it out.

Dennis O'Toole

This is the only Topps card that Dennis O'Toole has and probably the only one he ever will have. A 1973 Topps card number 604 depicting him and two other rookie pitchers.

The problem with this is that Dennis O'Toole's first game was in 1969. He played every year from 1969 until 1973. Sometimes that meant only 1 game, like in 1971, but he was there pitching each year. For a Chicago native, that could be a dream come true. How many other players do you know that could claim to be on their hometown team for 5 years and only called on 15 times? Not many, I imagine.

By the time this card came out, Dennis would see the most games he would ever see in a season. 6 games. He was traded to the Cardinals for Jim Kremmel at the end of the season. A few months later, he was traded to the Indians. He never played in another major league game after he left the White Sox.

Dennis naever won a game, but he never lost a game either. He never even had a save. If it wasn't for this Topps card, most people wouldn't even remember Dennis. It's a sad fact, but true. 15 games over 5 years doesn't provide a decent peek into the pitching proficiency of Dennis. He has a career ERA of 5.04, but that doesn't tell the story. It doesn't tell of his 1 game season of 1971, where he had an ERA of 0.00 over 2 innings with no hits, 1 walk and 2 strikeouts.

Dennis can be proud of that game. He can be proud that he stuck around the majors for 5 years, despite playing only an average of 3 games a year. At least it's a great story he can tell his kids and grandkids.

various from boing boing

Web Trend Map 2008

Posted: 01 Feb 2008 01:02 PM CST

 Webtrendmap3 Webtrendmap2008
Information Architects Japan created this 2008 Web Trend Map that positions "300 of the most influential and successful websites" on a Tokyo train map. Link (Thanks, Sean Ness!)

Dean Kamen's prosthetic "Luke" arm

Posted: 01 Feb 2008 12:59 PM CST

Dean "Segway" Kamen's prosthetic "Luke" arm (as in Luke Skywalker) is ready for clinical trials. It's now up to DARPA, who funded the project through the Revolutionizing Prosthetics contract, to determine whether to foot the bill for human testing, and the FDA to approve the trials. The new issue of IEEE Spectrum has a feature on the ready-to-wear Luke arm. From the article:
KamenarmWhen DARPA director Tony Tether and Revolutionizing Prosthetics program manager Colonel Geoffrey Ling approached him in 2005, Kamen says he thought they were crazy—"in the good kind of way," he says. There was no financial incentive to create a next-generation prosthetic arm. The research and development costs were enormous. Unless funded by DARPA, no private company would take such a risk for such a comparatively small market (in the Americas, about 6000 people require arm prostheses each year). Kamen spent a few weeks traveling around the country interviewing patients, doctors, and researchers to get an idea of the current technology—and soon saw the deficit in available arm prosthetics. He was swayed by the discrepancy between the current state of leg prostheses and that of arm prostheses. "Prosthetic legs are in the 21st century," he says. "With prosthetic arms, we're in the Flintstones."
Link

Previously on BB:
• Sense of touch restored to amputees Link
• Open source prosthetics movement Link
• Bionic arm Link

Amazon's anti-DRM tee

Posted: 01 Feb 2008 12:23 PM CST

This kick-ass "DRM: Don't Restrict Me" was apparently given to Amazon employees to coincide with the launch of the DRM-free Amazon MP3 store. Link (Thanks, Terence!) See also: Amazon buys Audible, promises to kill DRM if we complain

















Analyzing Bush based on his favorite painting

Posted: 01 Feb 2008 11:45 AM CST

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The Guardian has a silly article about George Bush's favorite painting, a 1916 cowboy scene by WHD Koerner. The painting hangs in his office, and he tells people that it's a "beautiful painting of a horseman determinedly charging up what appears to be a steep and rough trail. This is us."

The painting first appeared in the Saturday Evening Post in 1916 "to illustrate a story about a horse thief, and captioned as a picture of his flight from the law. Only later did it illustrate a story about Methodism."

The paper showed the painting to four people: a professor of gender studies, a psychoanalyst, a military historian, and a "psychotherapist and ex-Labour spin doctor," and asked them to analyze the President based on the painting and his story about it.

Derek Draper, psychotherapist and ex-Labour spin doctor: "Most revealing, though, is the simple fact that a healthy mind would look at this image and not be certain what it depicted. Bush, though, as he once told Senator Joe Biden, doesn't "do nuance". Instead he invariably replaces "not-knowing" with prejudiced certainty. A foolish psychological mindset when it comes to art or life; a catastrophic one in politics."
It's interesting that these analysts are taking Bush to task for inventing a story about the painting, instead of having ambiguous feelings about it. As the article states, it has been used at least twice to illustrate two very different stories. What's wrong with coming up with your own interpretation of what a painting means? This is probably the first time in my life that I'm on the President's side. (Also, it's a wonderful painting.) Go, Bush! Link (Thanks, Jane!)

Scan of 1979 book of the future

Posted: 01 Feb 2008 11:27 AM CST

Picture 1-148

The Pointless Museum has a complete scan of The Usborne Book of the Future: A Trip in Time to the Year 2000 and Beyond (1979), by Kenneth Gatland and David Jefferis.

A Boing Boing reader says: "The Usborne Book of the Future was a beautifully optimistic look at the future, from the 1970s. See the robots, machines and cities of the future, and then travel to the stars." Link



Scan of 1950 menstruation primer

Scan of 1950 menstruation primer

Posted: 01 Feb 2008 02:28 PM CST

Ward says:
Picture 4-65 Just Between Us..., a booklet for girls about menstration; published by Beltix Corporation, copyright 1950, 1955, 1961.

To me, it's amazing that the editors of this little booklet allowed the spokesgirl to have freaky swirly eyes -- usually a sign of craziness or dizziness! This is either a stroke of genius or incredibly inappropriate -- I'm not too sure.

Link

Depression peaks at age 44, according to study

Depression peaks at age 44, according to study

Posted: 01 Feb 2008 03:03 PM CST

Social Science & Medicine is publishing a study by the University of Warwick and Dartmouth College that found that the risk of becoming depressed peaks at age 44. The study used data from two million people in 80 countries.
Professor Oswald said for the average person, the dip in mental health and happiness comes on slowly, not suddenly in a single year.

Only in their 50s do most people emerge from the low period.

"But encouragingly, by the time you are 70, if you are still physically fit then on average you are as happy and mentally healthy as a 20-year-old.

Link (Via Mind Hacks)

Things that have always been true for the class of 2011

Things that have always been true for the class of 2011

Posted: 02 Feb 2008 03:50 AM CST

Beloit College has just published its 10th annual "Mindset List," detailing a list of significant things that have been true for the whole lives of the 1990-born Class of 2011. Here's my favorite skiffy/Christ-I'm-old bits:
1. The Soviet Union has never existed and therefore is about as scary as the student union.
3. For most of their lives, major U.S. airlines have been bankrupt.
12. Smoking has never been permitted on U.S. airlines.
23. Bar codes have always been on everything, from library cards and snail mail to retail items.
33. They have no idea why we needed to ask "...can we all get along?"
Link (via Charlie!)

(Photo: teen requisite, a Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike photo from Vidrio's Flickr stream)

Afghanistan: death sentence for downloading, distributing report on oppression of women

Afghanistan: death sentence for downloading, distributing report on oppression of women

Posted: 01 Feb 2008 06:09 PM CST

Authorities in Afghanistan have sentenced a 23-year-old journalism student to death for having downloaded and shared copies of a report criticizing the oppressive treatment of women in some Islamic societies. Snip from Wired News Threat Level blog:
Sayed Pervez Kambaksh (at right), who is a journalism student at Balkh University and a writer for Jahan-e Naw, was sentenced last October after downloading a report from a Farsi website that criticized Islamic fundamentalists who misrepresent statements in the Koran to justify the oppression of women. Kambaksh was arrested after someone filed a complaint against him. He is accused of blasphemy for distributing the report to other students and teachers at his school.

He was tried by a sharia court (which overseas Islamic religious law) and was not allowed legal representation, according to news reports. The Afghan Senate passed a motion this week supporting the sentence, according to the British newspaper The Independent.

Link.

Reporters Without Borders (RSF.org) has a statement on the case here, and a petition for Kambaksh's release here.

Global arms transactions, visualized in interactive map

Global arms transactions, visualized in interactive map

Posted: 01 Feb 2008 07:38 PM CST


ARMSFLOW.org is a data visualization project that shows international arms transactions between 1950 and 2006. The site (a big ole Java applet) was created by Jeffrey Warren of Vestal Design, based on data from Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

Link, via monochrom blog.

Replacement jawbone grown in a man's stomach

Replacement jawbone grown in a man's stomach

Posted: 02 Feb 2008 03:30 AM CST

Finnish scientists at the Regea Institute of Regenerative Medicine at the University of Tampere have successfully grown a human jawbone in a man's abdomen and the implanted it in his face. The procedure used the man's stem-cells, and took nine months.
A 65-year-old Finnish man received a new upper jaw that was grown in his abdomen using his own stem cells. Scientists had isolated stem cells from the patient's fat, and sorted out the type of cells that could grow into bone tissue. The cells were applied to a custom jaw-shaped scaffold and implanted in his abdomen for nine months. Tissues grew around the scaffolding, which was removed and attached to the man's skull to replace his upper jaw, which had been removed due to a tumor.
Link (Thanks, Marilyn!)

Friday, February 01, 2008

Snipes Is Acquitted of Tax Felonies - New York Times

Snipes Is Acquitted of Tax Felonies - New York Times

OCALA, Fla. — The actor Wesley Snipes was acquitted of the most serious charges against him on Friday in the most prominent tax prosecution since Leona Helmsley, the billionaire hotelier, was convicted of tax fraud in 1989.

Mr. Snipes was found not guilty on two felony charges of fraud and conspiracy. He was also acquitted on three misdemeanor charges of failing to file tax returns or to pay taxes, but was convicted on three others. He faces up to three years in prison.

Mr. Snipes had become an unlikely public face for the tax-denier movement, whose members maintain that Americans are not obligated to pay income taxes and that the government extracts taxes from its citizens illegally.

Two co-defendants — Eddie Ray Kahn, a promoter of tax denial, and Douglas Rosile, a disbarred accountant — were convicted on separate felony counts.

“The verdict shows that promoters face serious jail time” but clients who follow their advice will face a lesser but still-serious risk, said JJ MacNab, a Maryland insurance analyst who attended the trial and is writing a book about tax deniers.

Even as Congress has reduced income tax rates, the tax denier movement has spread, fueled by high payroll taxes, political attacks on the Internal Revenue Service and anger among people who have not benefited from decades of strong overall economic growth.

Instead of prosecuting all offenders, the Justice Department brings cases against well-known individuals, hoping that widespread news coverage will encourage compliance, a policy known as general deterrence.

Tax deniers assert variously that the tax laws are valid but do not apply to them, that no law makes anyone liable for taxes and that the government tricks people into paying. Promoters of tax denial claim that people can legally stop paying income taxes by executing certain documents, or by not signing others, such as tax returns. Courts have rejected all of these arguments.

Mr. Snipes, 45, was indicted in October 2006 on two felony charges: fraud for filing a false claim for a $7 million refund (of taxes paid in 1997, before he stoped paying taxes), and conspiracy with his two co-defendants to defraud the government.

Mr. Snipes was also charged with six misdemeanor counts of failing to file tax returns or to pay taxes on at least $58 million he and his film company earned from 1999 to 2004.

Since 1986, Mr. Snipes had appeared in more than 50 films, earning at least $103 million, court papers showed.

Mr. Snipes has built a huge following, especially overseas, with his portrayals of intrepid detectives and fearless vampire slayers and occasional comedic roles. In addition to the “Blade” trilogy of vampire movies, he starred in action films like “Drop Zone” and “The Art of War” and, with Sean Connery, the corporate crime thriller “Rising Sun.”

The defense rested on Monday without calling any witnesses. The prosecution presented its case over seven days.

In closing arguments on Tuesday, lawyers for Mr. Snipes sought to portray him as a well-intended victim of bad advice by his co-defendants. They called his tax theories “kooky,” “crazy” and “dead wrong,” but said acting on these views did not make him a criminal because he disclosed his actions. The defense also objected to his being tried by an all-white jury of seven women and five men.

The Supreme Court has ruled that tax deniers can demonstrate the absence of criminal intent by asserting that they “sincerely believe” that they are not required to pay taxes, although they cannot escape the levies.

Prosecutors argued that Mr. Snipes showed criminal intent when he sent the government three bogus checks to pay $14 million in taxes and an amended tax return that was subtly altered with software to state that he filed under “no” penalty of perjury.

Defense lawyers said Mr. Snipes did not file tax returns after his indictment because the I.R.S., by making him the target of a criminal investigation, “forced” him to exercise his right to remain silent.

After his indictment, however, Mr. Snipes sent the government a series of rambling letters describing his tax theories and warning that “pursuit of such a high-profile target will open the door to your increased collateral risk.”

Robert E. O’Neill, the United States attorney prosecuting the case, called the filings “gibberish” whose sole purpose was to thwart law enforcement.

In one 600-page document, Mr. Snipes said he was legally a “nontaxpayer” and the tax laws did not apply to him because he was not a resident of the District of Columbia, was not a federal official and was not engaged in any trade or business, all common tax denier arguments.

Mr. Snipes also complained that the I.R.S. violated his 14th Amendment rights to equal protection because it would not help him establish what he said was his rightful status as a legal nontaxpayer.

Kenneth I. Starr, a New York accountant who had long prepared Mr. Snipes’s tax returns, testified that he dropped Mr. Snipes as a client after he refused to pay taxes. Defense lawyers tried to attack Mr. Starr’s credibility, portraying him as dishonest and the target of a grand jury inquiry — accusations that Mr. Starr rebutted by pointing out that he was a witness before the grand jury, not its target.

The lead lawyer among the six representing Mr. Snipes, Robert G. Bernhoft of Milwaukee, has been under a federal court order since 1999 barring him from selling materials that supposedly relieve people of the need to pay taxes.

Mr. Snipes joined the tax denier movement after becoming upset when told that his 1999 income tax would be more than $2 million, Carmen Baker, his former assistant, testified.

A mutual acquaintance introduced Mr. Snipes to one of his co-defendants, Mr. Kahn. Mr. Kahn operated a Christian ministry, the Guiding Light of God Ministries, and a central Florida company called the American Rights Litigators that sold “nonenforcement pocket commissions” and other papers that were supposed to legally stop I.R.S. agents from collecting taxes.

Employees of the ministry and the company used fake names and were paid in cash, the court was told . One former employee testified that she came to realize Mr. Kahn (pronounced kane) was not a tax expert, but a scam artist.

After Mr. Kahn held a seminar in Mr. Snipes’s California home, the actor told associates that he would no longer pay taxes and would no longer withhold taxes from paychecks of his Amen Ra Films employees, whom he barred from paying taxes.

Ms. Baker, Mr. Snipes’s former assistant, testified that when she expressed doubt about Mr. Kahn’s claims, her job was threatened, she was sent out of the room and her notes and copies of Mr. Kahn’s literature were confiscated.

From 1998 through 2003, Mr. Kahn charged more than 2,000 clients up to $1,550 each to file bogus misconduct complaints against I.R.S. agents, part of what the Justice Department said in another case was a scheme to hobble tax law enforcement.

When Mr. Snipes formed a new company, Kimberlyte Productions, Ms. Baker’s signature was forged on documents identifying her as president, according to trial testimony. Because of her job title, federal law made Ms. Baker personally liable for any taxes not withheld from employee paychecks.

Mr. Kahn, who was imprisoned for tax crimes in 1985 to 1987, fled to Panama after the 2006 indictment. . He was extradited to stand trial on the latest charges but refused to attend the proceedings, remaining in his jail cell, after telling Judge Hodges that the court had no authority over him. Mr. Snipes and Mr. Rosile are free on bail.

Last year Congress passed a law drafted by Ms. MacNab empowering the Internal Revenue Service to impose $5,000 fines on people who assert tax denier claims not just in court, but also in papers sent to the agency. The law gives tax deniers one opportunity to withdraw the papers after the agency sends them a list of tax denier theories rejected by the courts.

Ms. MacNab reiterated her recommendation to Congress that it define the concept of willfulness so that people who ignore the advice of competent tax professionals in favor of what scam artists tell them cannot claim they seriously believe that the tax laws do not apply to their income.

The Snipes case is the fourth significant loss by Justice Department prosecutors who brought felony charges against people who were leading figures in the tax denier movement.

Mr. O’Neil, the prosecutor, was asked whether Congress needs to revise the tax laws to deal with people who follow scam artists.

“Absolutely,” he replied, directly contradicting the Justice Department’s written recommendation to Congress. Mr. O’Neil said the current standard “is entirely subjective” and results in acquittals by juries even when they are presented with what he considers unreasonable conduct by defendants.

Bush sees serious signs economy is weakening | Reuters

Bush sees serious signs economy is weakening | Reuters duh

Jobs decline by 17,000 in January; unemployment rate at 4.9% - Feb. 1, 2008

Jobs decline by 17,000 in January; unemployment rate at 4.9% - Feb. 1, 2008
It took Bush a little longer to figure out what the rest of us already knew.

Ex Met Watch: Someone on the White Sox is Crazy

Ex Met Watch: Someone on the White Sox is Crazy

In a sure sign that someone in Chicago has been driven mad by all this Johan Santana craziness, Jim Street of MLB.com reports the Sox are taking a look at former Met Carl Everett.

The current Long Island Duck led the Mets with 17 stolen bases in 1997 while hitting .248. He hit .250 over three seasons as a Met, and is best known for his lack of beliefs in things like dinosaurs and the moon landing.

Rambo’s Armed Guard Anti-Piracy Measures Torn Apart By Industry Insider

Rambo's Armed Guard Anti-Piracy Measures Torn Apart By Industry Insider

Posted: 01 Feb 2008 05:03 AM CST

Just days after Sylvester Stallone had an armed guard deliver an advance screener copy of the new "Rambo" movie to Howard Stern, it's shown that even these type of security measures can be rendered useless. A copy of the movie is now available on BitTorrent, likely leaked by an industry insider.

Pirated movies on the Internet are available in many forms, but broadly speaking they fall into just a few categories. So called 'Cams' are movies recorded in a theater with a hidden camcorder, usually of questionable quality. 'Telesyncs' are 'Cams' with (usually) better audio and DVD-Rips are copies from an original DVD.

The more interesting category is that of the 'screener' - a promo copy of a movie, usually on DVD - and the new arch nemesis of Rambo - the 'workprint' - an unfinished version of the movie, leaked by someone involved in its making. It's clear as day - you can't guard everyone, Sly, and although some people might like to try, you can't lock up everyone in the movie industry either.

According to reports, the quality of the recently leaked Rambo 'workprint' seems good, but it carries a very visible watermark saying "Culture Makers Entertainment", a phrase when put exactly into Google comes up with a surprising result.

Rambo

The fact that another movie is available on BitTorrent is nothing new and not really news these days. But, the leaking of movies by industry insiders before they're even completed is nothing new either. In fact, it happened in 2005 when a workprint copy of Star Wars Episode III got leaked, which resulted in a FBI raid on the EliteTorrents BitTorrent tracker.

Many people from the BitTorrent community went to prison because of their involvement in handling the leaked copy, yet surprisingly the FBI doesn't appear to have found the movie industry insider who leaked it. The long arm of the movie industry seems to reach right over its own security issues, concentrating only on the uploaders, and threatening as many of them as it can with prison. It clearly needs to look closer to home.

Yet when Lions Gate President Tom Ortenberg was asked if the leaking of a workprint copy of Hostel 2 would have a financial impact due to this type of piracy, he responded "..it will have no meaningful impact on the box office."

The new Rambo movie is currently sitting at No.2 in the US Box Office charts, proving that when the movie is considered good, people are happy to go watch it.

This is an article from: TorrentFreak

Rambo's Armed Guard Anti-Piracy Measures Torn Apart By Industry Insider

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Gale Sayers on Devin Hester: 'Great Talent, But It's Too Early to Say Where He Ranks' - FanHouse - AOL Sports Blog

Gale Sayers on Devin Hester: 'Great Talent, But It's Too Early to Say Where He Ranks' - FanHouse - AOL Sports Blog

Butkus brings a taste of Super Bowl to Mesa

Butkus brings a taste of Super Bowl to Mesa: "Butkus and other legendary players, including Deacon Jones and Ted Hendricks, are signing autographs at Valley supermarkets this week as part of a fundraiser sponsored by Miller Brewing Co. for the Gridiron Greats program, which raises money for retired players in need of medical care and other necessities. The campaign is expected to raise more than $100,000."

Problems with airport security? Tell the TSA on its new blog

Problems with airport security? Tell the TSA on its new blog

RIAA: No need to force ISPs by law to monitor piracy | Tech news blog - CNET News.com

RIAA: No need to force ISPs by law to monitor piracy | Tech news blog - CNET News.com

Verizon: We don't want to play copyright cop on our network | Tech news blog - CNET News.com

Verizon: We don't want to play copyright cop on our network | Tech news blog - CNET News.com

AlterNet: Blogs: Rights and Liberties: Cashing in on the Prison Boom

AlterNet: Blogs: Rights and Liberties: Cashing in on the Prison Boom

By Jeralyn Merritt, Talk Left
Posted on January 28, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/www.talkleft.com/75089/

The New York Times has an article today on communities that feed off the prisons within them. When America, prison nation, closes one of them, it can threaten the very existence of such towns.

As rural economies across the country crumbled in the 1980s and the population of prison inmates swelled, largely because of tougher drug laws, states pushed prison construction as an economic escape route of sorts. Throughout the 1960s and '70s, an average of four prisons were built each year in rural America; the rate quadrupled in the 1980s and reached 24 a year in the 1990s, according to the federal Agriculture Department's economic research service. The boom, experts say, provided employment, but it also fostered a cycle of dependency.

Count me among those with no sympathy. America's over-incarceration policies mean corporations make billions and the federal government throws millions to these communities in subsidies.

Take the town in the article, Gabriels, New York, which has a prison recently ordered closed by Gov. Spitzer. [More…]

The reliance on Camp Gabriels extends well beyond jobs. Small businesses have staked their survival on the prison workers who patronize their stores. Local governments and charities, meanwhile, have come to depend on inmate work crews to clear snow from fire hydrants, maintain parks and hiking trails, mow the lawns at cemeteries and unload trucks at food pantries.
….Four of Mrs. Keith's nine children work in state prisons, she said, including a son and a daughter at Camp Gabriels. "Everyone around here either works in the prisons, or has a relative who works in the prisons, or knows someone who works in the prisons," said Mrs. Keith, 78. "My kids were able to build their homes and raise their families here because of the prisons. If it weren't for the prisons, they would have had to leave the area."

The entire county feeds off prisons.

The correction industry is big business in Franklin County, which has five state prisons and one federal prison in its 1,678 sparsely populated square miles. In the town of Brighton, which encompasses Gabriels and five other hamlets, the prison is perhaps the only place where someone with a high school diploma can earn a decent wage and benefits.
"There ain't much else the local people could do for gainful employment," said Peter Martin, 48, the town's supervisor and a corrections officer at Camp Gabriels for 22 years.

There are political ramifications as well:

Prisons are also a valuable political tool, because inmates are counted as local residents, allowing communities to receive more state and federal aid for emergency services. Mr. Martin said that he was not yet sure how the town of Brighton stood to lose if Camp Gabriels closed, but he added, "We're concerned about losing any kind of aid here."

Conservatives get it.

Edmund J. McMahon, director of the Empire Center for New York State Policy, a conservative group [says] "There should be other ways of improving the economic situation in upstate New York that doesn't involve filling upstate New York with prisons."

Labor unions, on the other hand, don't get it.

Union leaders and many Camp Gabriels workers said they would not give in easily, though. They organized a rally in Saranac Lake on Thursday and a letter-writing campaign, hoping to convince state legislators that the prison was worth saving.

A new book arrived in my mailbox this week, Prison Profiteers: Who Makes Money From Mass Incarceration? Its contributors include lawyers, ex-prisoners, journalists and advocates.

Some stats: The U.S. accounts for 5% of the world's population but is responsible for incarcerating 25% of the world's inmates. In the last 30 years of our get tough on crime policy, our state and federal prison population has jumped from 300,000 to 2.3 million.

The book examines who profits from our policies of mass imprisonment. The answer ranges from "investment banks that issues bonds for prison construction to the companies that staff and manage the prisons to the organizations that provide health care."

The book finds that $186 billion tax dollars a year "intended for the public good" goes to "private prison companies, churches, investment banks, guard unions and medical corporations."

Bottom line: 1 of every 137 Americans is in prison today. And we're paying for it.

Jeralyn E. Merritt is criminal defense attorney in Denver representing persons accused of serious federal and state offenses. She served as one of the principal trial lawyers for Timothy McVeigh in the Oklahoma City Bombing Case.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/www.talkleft.com/75089/

AlterNet: Blogs: Water: World Economic Forum Takes on Water Crisis

AlterNet: Blogs: Water: World Economic Forum Takes on Water Crisis

By Abigail Brown, Water For The Ages
Posted on January 28, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://waterfortheages.wordpress.com//75273/

Water was a major topic of conversation at the World Economic Forum 2008 (WEF) coming to a close in Davos, Switzerland.

At the forum, according to the Environmental News Service, Bills Gates announced a grant of $306 million dollars for development projects to help boost yields of crops for farmers in developing countries. It is unclear whether a portion of this money will be devoted to water conservation practices in conjunction with agriculture. Also discussed was implementation of a cap and trade system for water supplies and the importance of market forces in water allocation.

Leaders at the forum pledged renewed support for the UN's Millennium Development Goals, of which one goal is to increase access to safe drinking water.

Created as a venue for dialogue, research, and networking among economic and political leaders, the WEF is often criticized for more talk rather than action, a membership majority of industrialized countries (primarily USA, Europe, and Asia), and limited media access to specified plenary sessions.

While members of the WEF did review the importance of water in the coming age, no definitive plan was drafted to move our global society in that direction. However, maybe discussions during the event will leave lasting impressions on these economic leaders. And gradually, they will come to the realization that water is more than a commodity, but a necessity of life.

Be sure to check out other blog posts on this issue... our friends at WaterWired give additional perspective on how water was incorporated into the WEF agenda.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://waterfortheages.wordpress.com//75273/

AlterNet: Blogs: Water: What Would You Say to Coke's Executives?

AlterNet: Blogs: Water: What Would You Say to Coke's Executives?

By Tara Lohan, AlterNet
Posted on January 30, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/www.alternet.org/75323/

OK, if you live in U.S., you have an important choice to make. You can turn on the tap in your home and get clean, safe drinking water for virtually nothing. Or you can buy bottled water, giving your hard earned dollars to a multinational company for a product that sucks an unnecessary amount of energy and resources, and creates a ton of waste.

If you are thinking you'd like to join the growing number of folks who are waking up and "taking back the tap," then here's a great initiative to get involved with. The folks who created Tappening reusable drinking bottles are asking you to send a note in a bottle that gives your pledge to drink tap over bottled water.

The first one million empty water bottles will all be delivered to incoming Coca Cola (marketer of Dasani bottled water) CEO, Muhter Kent, on his first day on the job this July. All the messages will be posted on the Tappening educational website. Empty water bottles with their messages should be sent to "Tappening" c/o DIGO, 220 East 23rd, Street, New York, New York 10010.

Here's a chance for Coke's excecutives to hear loud and clear, the direction we want our world to be going in. If you still aren't convinced, read these quick facts below from Tappening:

Reasons to not to drink bottled water

  • Bottled water uses energy and resources to create packaging for something that runs cheaply and cleanly from the faucet in your own home
  • Not only is it expensive and energy demanding to make bottles, but then to ship the bottled water costs more money and isn't eco-friendly
  • 96% of bottled water is sold in single-size polyethylene terephthalate plastic bottles, which end up in city trash cans rather than recycling bins. The national recycling rate for all PET bottles, including soda bottles, is 23.1 percent
  • About 4 billion PET bottles end up in the waste stream, costing cities around 70 million dollars a year in cleanup and landfill costs
  • Bottled water costs around as much as a bottle of soda or juice, which obviously requires additional ingredients and processing, yet people pay for it
  • Americans buy 28 billion water bottles a year, all that plastic and the energy used for manufacturing and transportation is very hard on the environment
  • In addition to this, few bottles are recycled properly or reused but instead placed into the nearest trash can
  • Bottled water costs as much as $10 per gallon compared to less than a penny per gallon for tap waters

Here's some of their great reason to pick tap water:

  • Why would you want to pay more for a product whose quality is worse than the water that flows from the faucet in your home?
  • More than 99.9 percent of Americans live in homes where unlimited amounts of fresh, treated water is available...so turn on the tap!
  • Tap water contains chlorination which kills bacteria
  • Water systems that provide tap water have to test for water pathogens that can cause intestinal problems, bottled water companies don't do this
  • City tap water can have no confirmed E.coli or fecal coliform bacteria. FDA bottled water rules include no such prohibition (a certain amount of any type of coliform bacteria is allowed in bottled water)
  • City tap water, from surface water, must be filtered and disinfected. In contrast, there are no federal filtration or disinfection requirements for bottled water.
  • Drinking tap water not only supports mental and physical health, but is easy on the planet. People who buy bottled water are doing harm to the environment and acting out of ignorance
  • In one publicized taste test in New York City, conducted by Showtime television, researchers found that 75% of participants actually preferred the taste of tap water to bottled water
  • Most cities using surface water have had to test for Cryptosporidium or Giardia, two common water pathogens, that can cause diarrhea and other intestinal problems, yet bottled water companies do not have to do this.
  • City tap water must meet standards for certain important toxic or cancer-causing chemicals, such as phthalate (a chemical that can leach from plastic, including plastic bottles); some in the industry persuaded FDA to exempt bottled water from the regulations regarding these chemicals.
  • City water systems must issue annual "right to know" reports, telling consumers what is in their water. Bottlers successfully killed a "right to know" requirement for bottled water.
  • Tap water is the best water available; according to the New York State Department of Health and the Environmental Protection Agency, there is nothing harmful in tap water
  • For those who feel tap water is any less clean than bottled water, filters may be purchased; buying filter cartridges once or twice a year requires much fewer resources than buying bottled water each day

Tara Lohan is a managing editor at AlterNet.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/www.alternet.org/75323/

AlterNet: Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace: Should Nursing Homes Be for Profit?

AlterNet: Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace: Should Nursing Homes Be for Profit?

By Emily Udell, In These Times
Posted on January 28, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/75107/

In late 2007, the investment firm The Carlyle Group purchased one of the country's largest nursing home chains despite the concerns of regulators, lawmakers and workers' groups that the acquisition would lead to staffing cuts and cause a decline in quality of care for residents. The $6.3 billion purchase of Toledo, Ohio-based Manor Care Inc. closed after a Michigan judge lifted a restraining order that temporarily halted the sale.

"The problem is, in the nursing home industry, making money means cutting care," says Julie Eisenhardt, a spokeswoman for Service Employees International Union (SEIU), which represents employees at about 15 Manor Care homes and which spearheaded a campaign to raise awareness about the buyout.

In 2006, Manor Care, which operates more than 500 nursing, rehabilitation and assisted living facilities in 32 states, posted $167 million in profits and $3.6 billion in revenues. Manor Care shareholders were slated to get $67 for each share as part of the deal.

The Carlyle Group has holdings in several industries, including healthcare, defense and energy. Former President George H.W. Bush was one of its advisers until 2003.

Officials from both firms have denied plans to reduce staffing or slash services following the takeover, and have said Manor Care will continue to be run as it was before the buyout. "There's not going to be a cut in staff and there's no reason for quality to go down," says Rick Rump, a spokesman for Manor Care. "Carlyle is going to realize a return in investment by our company growing and becoming a better provider of healthcare."

The deal's critics also say investment companies create Byzantine ownership structures that impede regulation and shield the firms from accountability for negligent care or wrongful death accusations.

Rump says that Carlyle would not separate its assets from its operations as some private equity firms have done and that the Manor Care management team would remain the same.

Carlyle officials did not return calls by deadline, but Karen Bechtel, the company's managing director and global head of healthcare, said in a statement: "We are pleased to back a high-quality company and management team. We support [Manor Care CEO] Paul Ormond's strategic vision and support his commitment to quality patient care."

But a preliminary study of a large nursing home chain owned by a private investment firm found that staffing of registered nursing homes dropped by 8 percent and deficiencies that harmed residents doubled.

"They're not there to invest in the care for the residents, they're there to make money," says Charlene Harrington, a professor of nursing at the University of California, San Francisco, and author of the 18-month study. "The way these chains have made money is by cutting the staff to the bare bones and pocketing the profits."

Harrington, who is part of a team that has researched nursing homes for 25 years, says the privatization of chains allows companies to shirk regulatory scrutiny because they are not required to file financial documents with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) or state regulatory agencies.

"These chains have had so many quality problems that they have wanted to go private in order to keep from having the litigation they have," she said.

A recent New York Times analysis of government data from 2000 to 2006 found that the quality of care declined at nursing homes that were taken over by investment firms such as Warburg Pincus and Carlyle because of cost-cutting and staff reduction.

David Adams, 40, entered one of Manor Care's homes in Pittsburgh, Pa., after he ruptured his Achilles tendon playing basketball. He says the care at the Shadyside Nursing and Rehabilitation Center was substandard before the takeover, and he's concerned it will only get worse.

"They're coming up short -- they do the minimum they can get away with and no more," says Adams, a former construction worker and cook, who testified during state hearings in Pennsylvania on the buyout. Adams says he contracted infections because his bandages weren't changed regularly, received the wrong medication and was stranded for 45 minutes after falling in his bathroom.

"One day I will leave," he says, "but there are people that are going to die here."

The Carlyle Group's buyout was announced last summer and given the green light by the SEC. Shareholders approved the deal in a December 2007 meeting. After the sale, several state health departments, including those in Illinois and Michigan, still had to approve the transfer of licenses from Manor Care to Carlyle, but Manor Care's Rump says he expected the transfers to be granted.

In November, legislators in Washington, D.C., held hearings on the issue of care at facilities owned by private investment firms, and hearings took place in several states.

In West Virginia, regulators reconsidered their initial approval of a deal just days before the completion of the sale. But after a Dec. 14 hearing, the state Health Care Authority lifted a stay on the approval, which would affect seven West Virginia nursing facilities. Manor Care had protested the stay, saying the delay was costing investors $1 million per day.

In Illinois, legislators and union leaders voiced concern about the deal.

"I think the size of the transaction, the nature of the business of the proposed buyer and the effects that could be felt by our most frail and vulnerable populations require us to give the proposal extra scrutiny," said State Rep. Greg Harris (D-Chicago) at a December hearing before the Illinois Department of Public Health, which regulates the state's nursing facilities.

In December, financial news service Bloomberg reported that the Manor Care purchase was the eighteenth sale of a nursing home operator in the United States in four years. Experts say investment firms' interest in nursing facilities is partially an effort to cash in on the aging of baby boomers into the system.

"As boomers get older, taking care of them is going to be big business," says Eisenhardt of SEIU. "The question is: Do we as a society think it's right that people are trying to make money off taking care of our most vulnerable population?"

"

Emily Udell is an itinerant journalist who has reported for the Daily Southtown newspaper in southwest Chicago, the Associated Press in Indianapolis and Radio Prague in the Czech Republic. She was co-host of In These Times' monthly radio show "Fire on the Prairie.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/75107/

AlterNet: Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace: Do Wall Street Wheeler-Dealers Ever Create Jobs?

AlterNet: Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace: Do Wall Street Wheeler-Dealers Ever Create Jobs?: "A landmark new study scrutinizes the high-flying private equity industry -- and complicates life for our global greedy."

AlterNet: Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace: Working Americans Respond to Bush's Last SOTU

AlterNet: Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace: Working Americans Respond to Bush's Last SOTU

By , AlterNet
Posted on January 29, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/75343/

Last night, six members of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) from the greater Washington D.C. metropolitan area joined the union's Secretary-Treasurer Anna Burger to watch President Bush's final State of the Union address. In a wide-ranging discussion about the impact of the past seven years, the effects of the economy's slide toward recession, and their hopes for a future leader, the SEIU members put a human face on some of the economic challenges the president glossed over in his speech. As oil and gas prices rise, wages stagnate, and the country hunkers down for a possible recession, America's working families have concerns that need to be addressed. The following are excerpts from the discussion:

On wages

"At the end of last year, I did the math and I realized that my total income for the year-after the expenses I cover for my child care center-was the same as what I was making 40 years ago, when I was in high school. I have two children and they both help support me. If my children weren't depositing money into my bank account, I wouldn't be able to keep my center open. The president didn't say anything tonight to make me think that this is going to change."

~Gloria Knight is a family child care provider in SEIU Local
500 Kids First Maryland. She cares for up to 8 children
ages 2-12 at any given time.

"I work two jobs and live paycheck to paycheck. When you look at your child's face and they say they're hungry and the only thing you can feed them is hot dogs and pork and beans, it hurts. You have to live below the poverty line to put your kids in daycare. Politicians don't see that."

~Raquel Mack, a member of SEIU local 32BJ, is a full-time security guard in Washington, D.C. She also works part-time in retail and plans to re-enroll at the University of District of Columbia this fall.

"Yes, they raised the minimum wage, but we still don't have a salary high enough to pay our bills. We've got higher gas prices, higher fuel bills. The American people are being fleeced."

~ Kevin Hills is a janitor for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and a member of SEIU local 32BJ.

On raising a family

"They should see what it's like to get up everyday at 6 a.m., come home at midnight and not spend time with your child. My son literally waits up to see me every night when I get home."

~Raquel Mack

"My whole life is about children. I raised two of my own, and now I care for my four grandchildren. Last night the president didn't even really mention kids. He talked about making healthcare more 'affordable'-whatever that means-for everyone. But he didn't talk about the SCHIP bill he vetoed last year. He didn't talk about healthcare for kids at all. I just don't think it interests him."

~Annette Scurry is a family child care provider and a member of SEIU Local 500 Kids First Maryland. She cares for up to 8 children daily ages six weeks to 12 years.

On healthcare

"He said he wants to make healthcare 'affordable' for all Americans. But what does that mean? I need a system where what's deemed 'affordable' is based on what I personally make. Because what's an affordable share for another worker-even for another child care worker who brings in a steady $2,000 a month-is not affordable for me when I make $4- or $5- or $600 a month."

~Gloria Knight

On gas prices

"He didn't talk about the gas prices. I need the gas to keep my child care center warm enough for the kids, and if it's not warm enough, they'll come in and shut down my facility. But I don't get extra money to pay for the more expensive gas. Already it takes my income and my husband's both to heat the house. I don't know what I'll do if the prices keep going up.

"There are poor families in this country that can't afford the energy prices, and so they're using candles at home. There are kids who have died in fires that started because they were trying to do their homework by candlelight. And last night, the president didn't talk about the gas prices."

~Annette Scurry

On education

"No Child Left Behind? Bush talked about the D.C. opportunity scholarships and increasing Pell Grant funds. But Pell grants don't cover entire tuitions - only a percentage. People can't afford that. He said nothing about college tuitions either. I want my child to get the best education he can get. This year, D.C. schools scored amongst the lowest in the nation. We're in the nation's capital - we should be scoring highest!

"We need to prepare the next generation. We have to rebuild school systems, show children positive things, keep them involved so they don't feel left out, so they understand how to make changes in their future. The Bush administration cut out funds for extracurricular activities. Kid used to have things to do and places to go, but now it's terrible and paying for anything is tough. Kids don't have anything to get involved in but hanging out on the street corner."

~Raquel Mack

On the 2008 election

"This is vital to us. WE need to get this message out there-SEIU local 32BJ, 1199, 1877, 500, and beyond. If not, we're going to hear the same person in office, saying the same thing eight years from now. If you're not in it, you're not going to win it."

~ Kevin Hills

"I usually work the polls, and I bring my kids and their lunches with me, and I sit them on the ledge, have them passing out flyers. It gets them interested. And the people love it. I'm looking forward to doing all we can this year for the presidential election."

~Gloria Knight

"The families that bring their kids to me tell me about their hard times, and I tell them, you HAVE to vote. They say, 'my vote doesn't count.' And I say, 'YES it does. If you want things to change, you have to vote.' I think the young people especially are getting fired up to vote this year."

~Annette Scurry

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/75343/

AlterNet: Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace: Bernanke and the Super Nanny-State

AlterNet: Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace: Bernanke and the Super Nanny-State

By Dean Baker, TruthOut.org
Posted on January 29, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/75372/

We all know the story of the "nanny state." That is what conservatives call a government that ensures people have basic necessities like decent childcare and decent health care. Conservatives deride the idea the government should have to provide such services to people, because people really should be able to look out for themselves. In the view of conservatives, people don't need the government to act like a nanny to ensure they are protected.

If a government that acts to protect ordinary people can be dubbed a "nanny state," then a government that protects the superrich certainly deserves the title of a "super nanny state," making its top officials "supernannies." The question for the moment is whether Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke now qualifies as a "supernanny."

His immediate claim to this title stems from his decision to have an emergency cut of 0.75 percentage points in the Federal Reserve Board's overnight loan rate. This rate cut came in response to the financial panic that had descended on Asian and European financial markets. It seems the sophisticated traders in these markets had finally discovered the $8 trillion housing bubble in the United States and realized its collapse would throw the US economy into a recession.

This knowledge sent these markets plummeting. The fear was about to spread to the US markets when Chairman Bernanke announced the dramatic rate cut. This cut spurred a turnaround, stabilizing financial markets for at least a few more days.

The Fed has no business using its interest rate policy to prop up financial markets. High prices in financial markets redistribute wealth from people who don't own large amounts of stocks and bonds to people who do. That is not the job of the government or an agency of the government, like the Fed.

In this particular case, Bernanke's decision was also the right decision for the economy as a whole. After ignoring the housing bubble as it expanded to ever more dangerous levels, the Fed is now trying to counteract the harm that will come from its collapse. Lower interest rates can be part of the story (aggressive fiscal stimulus is another part).

However, there is a limit to what the Fed can accomplish through lower rates. First, it can't bring its overnight rate below zero. Thus far, Bernanke has lowered the rate by 1.75 percentage points from 5.25 percent to 3.5 percent, that doesn't leave much more room to go down.

More importantly, the overnight rate has very little direct impact on the economy. The interest rates that most directly affect the economy are longer-term rates, like the 30-year mortgage rate. Typically long-term rates move together with the overnight rate set by the Fed and other short-term rates, but this is not always the case. If investors begin to anticipate higher inflation rates, then it is possible lower short-term rates could actually lead to higher long-term rates. This could already be happening. Long-term rates actually rose the day after the Fed's rate cut. If the Fed cuts rates further, and this leads to higher long-term rates, then we will know Bernanke is playing the role of supernanny. The logic of this is simple: Banks borrow short-term; they lend long-term. If the gap between short-term rates and long-term rates increases, then this will allow the banks to make back some of their big losses in the mortgage markets. This would be good news for the banks, but bad news for the economy.

Of course, Bernanke has not yet pushed rates to levels that clearly raise this spread. However, the public should be wary of this possibility.

In the same vein, it should also be concerned about the Fed's decision to create a new mechanism, the "term auction facility (TAC)," through which banks can secretly borrow reserves from the Fed. Ordinarily, banks have to disclose their borrowing, but due to the extraordinary crisis facing the banking system, Bernanke thought it best to create a mechanism through which the banks could conceal their borrowing.

While there may be nothing illicit about the conduct of these banks, there is little reason to have confidence in the integrity of the financial markets and the major actors within them. At the least, the TAC offers the opportunity for insiders to make large gains at the expense of those who rely only on publicly available information. To eliminate this possibility, the Fed should open the TAC. Too much transparency is not the cause of the current crisis.

Ben Bernanke may not have yet earned the title of "supernanny," but the public is right to be wary. A "nanny state" provides real benefits for the vast majority of its people. A "supernanny state" only benefits the rich at the expense of the vast majority.

Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/75372/

AlterNet: Health and Wellness: Taxpayer Money Squandered for Cholesterol Drug Vytorin

AlterNet: Health and Wellness: Taxpayer Money Squandered for Cholesterol Drug Vytorin

By Martha Rosenberg, AlterNet
Posted on January 29, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/75391/

"The American Heart Association is cautioning patients if they stop taking Vytorin abruptly, Schering-Plough and Merck's stock price will fall."

That's how a cartoon showing a news anchor would read after revelations that the American Heart Association -- which receives nearly $2 million a year from Vytorin makers Merck and Schering-Plough -- and the American College of Cardiology told patients to stay on the drug despite a recent damning study.

Cholesterol drug Vytorin was hyped as treating "cholesterol from two sources: food and family" but found to work no better than lower priced Zocor in the Enhance clinical study whose results were released in January.

Merck and Schering-Plough have pulled Vytorin ads, prescriptions are down 22 percent and federal and state law makers are asking What-did-they-know-and-when-did-they-know-it? questions of the pharma giants.

Rep. John D. Dingell (D-MI), Chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which requisitioned the study results, and Rep. Bart Stupak (D-MI), Chairman of the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee, now want to know if an outside panel Merck and Schering-Plough convened which changed the "end points" or purpose of the study to finesse the bad results is guilty of manipulating data and whether the Enhance study had a data safety monitoring board.

Dingell and Stupak also want to know more about the Merck and Schering-Plough-funded, $350,000 "cholesterol page" on the American Heart Association Web site.

Months before the HRT-implicating Women's Health Initiative (WHI), the American Heart Association ran an article paid for by Wyeth-Ayerst Research in its journal Circulation that said hormone therapy had "no significant effect on the risk for stroke among postmenopausal women with coronary disease."

They've also requested the amount of Medicare and Medicaid dollars spent on Vytorin since April 2006, arousing memories of the overpriced and over-prescribed to the elderly drug, Vioxx.

The state of New York, for example, spent $21 million for Medicaid prescriptions for Vytorin in the last two years -- it costs $3 a pill compared with 3 cents a pill for Zocor -- prompting New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo to also launch an investigation.

"Drug companies are on notice that concealing critical information about life-saving prescription drugs, profiting at the expense of patients' health, and wasting taxpayer dollars, is simply unacceptable," said Cuomo.

Cuomo also has questions about why Carrie Smith Cox, a Schering-Plough executive vice president, sold 900,000 company shares for $28 million on April 20, according to an SEC filing.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is also reviewing the Enhance study -- who remembers when FDA was the first not last responder? -- though it's not advising doctors to stop prescribing the drug because of the clinical belly flop.

Similarly, many doctors the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette interviewed said they were keeping patients on Vytorin despite being "inundated" with calls from patients asking if they should continue. The data are not all in yet, they say.

But on the industry site, cafepharma.com, an anonymous drug salesman met a different reception from a doctor he calls on.

"Got my ass chewed about if I knew... when was I going to give him the head's up ... he looks like an ass in front of his patients," posts the drug rep days after the Enhance study results hit.

"I just nodded and said that I got the information just about the same time he did and that I'm heartsick over it. LDL lowering more than Zocor!! I got thrown out."

One patient in Little Rock came out and asked his doctor the question that must be on many Vytorin takers' minds. "[I]f they say that 'It's not doing any good,' then why take it ?" Ronald Hesselschwerdt, 74, told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

We don't know if the doctor answered, “The stock price will fall if you don't.”

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/75391/

AlterNet: Election 2008: Obama Is Sub-Prime on Lending Crisis

AlterNet: Election 2008: Obama Is Sub-Prime on Lending Crisis

By Max Fraser, The Nation
Posted on January 31, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/75489/

Last year, forty-three states reported increased home foreclosure rates. Nevada led the way for eleven consecutive months; in Clark County, which includes Las Vegas, nearly one in twenty homes is in foreclosure. Whole blocks have been foreclosed in Chicago. Nationwide, rates are nearing Depression-era highs -- ravaging working- and middle-class neighborhoods that fell prey to the soft sell and outright chicanery of predatory lenders in the heyday of the housing boom. These lenders have targeted the most vulnerable -- black and Latino borrowers have been twice as likely to receive subprime loans as whites; female homeowners, 30 percent more likely than male; black women, five times more likely than white men.

As the subprime mortgage debacle drives a recession that threatens financial markets around the world, the Democratic presidential candidates are pushing plans to address the crisis. John Edwards and Hillary Clinton are pledging substantial federal resources to stabilize the mortgage market and intervene on behalf of borrowers. Barack Obama's proposal is tepid by comparison, short on aggressive government involvement and infused with conservative rhetoric about fiscal responsibility. As he has done on domestic issues like healthcare, job creation and energy policy, Obama is staking out a position to the right of not only populist Edwards but Clinton as well.

Edwards's plan includes a mandatory moratorium on foreclosures, a freeze on rising interest rates for at least seven years, federal subsidies to help homeowners keep up with payments and restructure loans, and explicit measures to rein in predatory lenders and regulate the financial sector. Clinton's plan is weaker -- a voluntary moratorium, a shorter freeze, less commitment to new regulations -- but she has promised $30 billion in federal aid to help reeling homeowners and communities.

Only Obama has not called for a moratorium and interest-rate freeze. Though he has been a proponent of mortgage fraud legislation in the Senate, he has remained silent on further financial regulations. And much like his broader economic stimulus package, Obama's foreclosure plan mostly avoids direct government spending in favor of a tax credit for homeowners, which amounts to about $500 on average, beyond which only certain borrowers would be eligible for help from an additional fund.

"One advantage to the tax credit is that there's no moral hazard involved," one of Obama's economic advisers explains. "There's no sense in which you're rewarding someone for taking too big a risk. If you lied about your income in order to get a bigger mortgage, then you're not qualified. Do you really want to give a subsidy to the guy who wasn't prudent?" Obama has used similar language on the campaign trail. "Innocent homeowners," he has promised, those "responsible" borrowers "facing foreclosure through no fault of their own," would get help restructuring their loans. But no such luck for those "claiming income they didn't have" or "lying to get mortgages."

"There's been less emphasis from the Obama campaign on the really dysfunctional role of the financial industry in the subprime mess," says Josh Bivens of the Economic Policy Institute. "Edwards and Clinton talk much more about regulation of the financial industry going forward, and to the extent that blame is placed, they tend to place it on the lenders for steering people into loans they couldn't afford."

Obama's disappointing foreclosure plan stems from the centrist politics of his three chief economic advisers and his campaign's ties to Wall Street institutions opposed to increased financial regulation. David Cutler and Jeffrey Liebman are both Harvard economists who served in the Clinton Administration, and they work on market-oriented solutions to social welfare issues. Cutler advocates improving healthcare through financial incentives; Liebman, the partial privatization of Social Security.

Austan Goolsbee, an economist at the University of Chicago who calls himself a "centrist market economist," has been most directly involved with crafting Obama's subprime agenda. In a column last March in the New York Times, Goolsbee disputed whether "subprime lending was the leading cause of foreclosure problems," touted its benefits for credit-poor minority borrowers and warned that "regulators should be mindful of the potential downside in tightening [the mortgage market] too much." In October, no less a conservative luminary than George Will devoted a whole column in the Washington Post to saluting Goolsbee's "nuanced understanding" of traditional Democratic issues like globalization and income inequality and concluded that he "seems to be the sort of fellow -- amiable, empirical, and reasonable -- you would want at the elbow of a Democratic president, if such there must be."

Robert Pollin, an economist at the University of Massachussets, believes "these three advisers generally reflect Obama's very moderate economic program, similar to Clintonism." Wall Street apparently has come to a similar conclusion. Obama had received nearly $10 million in contributions from the finance, insurance and real estate sector through October, and he's second among presidential candidates of either party in money raised from commercial banks, trailing only Clinton. Goldman Sachs, which made $6 billion from devalued mortgage securities in the first nine months of 2007, is Obama's top contributor. When asked if Obama would hold these financial institutions accountable for losses incurred by homeowners and investors, his campaign refused to comment.

But tax credits and continued deregulation won't solve the mortgage crisis, which threatens to dispossess more than 2 million homeowners this year. "There's no evidence that an unregulated market is going to be a stable market," Pollin says. "The unstable mortgage market is one indication of that. This is not anything new. What is new is that you have a serious presidential candidate who isn't really talking about it and doesn't have advisers that are prepared to deal with it."

If Obama is serious about his community organizing roots, then he would do well to take a lesson from groups like the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition and ACORN, which are calling for a moratorium on foreclosures of a year or longer and for the creation of a massive government loan agency on the scale of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation of the 1930s. "We need some serious federal government intervention to restructure loans, not repossess homes," says the Rev. Jesse Jackson. "Because it's not just the borrowers anymore, it's the economy itself. We're in for a very difficult economic season."

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/75489/

Martha Rosenberg: Gutted by Money Men, Chicago Newspapers Circling the Drain | BuzzFlash.org

Martha Rosenberg: Gutted by Money Men, Chicago Newspapers Circling the Drain | BuzzFlash.org

Daily Kos: Montel Williams Loses Job after Defending Troops on Fox News

Daily Kos: Montel Williams Loses Job after Defending Troops on Fox News

Soldier Suicides at Record Level - washingtonpost.com

Soldier Suicides at Record Level - washingtonpost.com

Shell's 'obscene' £13.9billion profit is biggest ever by British company | the Daily Mail

Shell's 'obscene' £13.9billion profit is biggest ever by British company | the Daily Mail

ABC News: Clinton Remained Silent As Wal-Mart Fought Unions

ABC News: Clinton Remained Silent As Wal-Mart Fought Unions

Tapes Reviewed by ABC News Show Clinton As a Loyal Company Woman

By BRIAN ROSS, MADDY SAUER and RHONDA SCHWARTZ

Jan. 31, 2008—

In six years as a member of the Wal-Mart board of directors, between 1986 and 1992, Hillary Clinton remained silent as the world's largest retailer waged a major campaign against labor unions seeking to represent store workers.

Clinton has been endorsed for president by more than a dozen unions, according to her campaign Web site, which omits any reference to her role at Wal-Mart in its detailed biography of her.

Wal-Mart's anti-union efforts were headed by one of Clinton's fellow board members, John Tate, a Wal-Mart executive vice president who also served on the board with Clinton for four of her six years.

Tate was fond of repeating, as he did at a managers meeting in 2004 after his retirement, what he said was his favorite phrase, "Labor unions are nothing but blood-sucking parasites living off the productive labor of people who work for a living."

Wal-Mart says Tate's comments "were his own and do not reflect Wal-Mart's views."

But Wal-Mart founder Sam Walton and other company officials often recounted how they relied on Tate to lead the company's successful anti-union efforts.

An ABC News analysis of the videotapes of at least four stockholder meetings where Clinton appeared shows she never once rose to defend the role of American labor unions.

The tapes, broadcast this morning on "Good Morning America," were provided to ABC News from the archives of Flagler Productions, a Lenexa, Kan., company hired by Wal-Mart to record its meetings and events.

A former board member told ABCNews.com that he had no recollection of Clinton defending unions during more than 20 board meetings held in private.

The tapes show Clinton in the role of a loyal company woman. "I'm always proud of Wal-Mart and what we do and the way we do it better than anybody else," she said at a June 1990 stockholders meeting.

Clinton would not agree to be interviewed on the subject but now says she no longer shares Wal-Mart's values and believes unions "have been essential to our nation's success."

The videotapes do show that Clinton used her role to push for more environmentally friendly policies and better treatment of women.

"We've got a very strong-willed young woman on our board now; her name is Hillary," said Wal-Mart founder Sam Walton at a 1987 stockholders meeting in describing Clinton's role in pushing for more women to be hired in management positions.

Critics say Clinton's efforts produced few tangible results, and Wal-Mart is now defending itself in a lawsuit brought by 16 current and former female employees.

"I don't doubt the sincerity of her efforts, but we don't see much evidence that conditions for women at Wal-Mart changed much during the late 1980s and early 1990s," said Joe Sellers, one of the lawyers suing Wal-Mart on behalf of the women.

Wal-Mart declined to comment to ABC News about the lawsuit, but the company has said previously that it is confident it did not discriminate against female employees.

Sen. Clinton has recently sought to distance herself from Wal-Mart.

In a campaign speech last year in New Hampshire, Sen. Clinton said, "Now I know that Wal-Mart's policies do not reflect the best way of doing business and the values that I think are important in America."

Her Senate campaign returned a $5,000 contribution from a Wal-Mart Political Action Committee, although ABCNews.com discovered another $20,000 in contributions from Wal-Mart executives and lobbyists.

Clinton spokesperson Howard Wolfson said, "There is no basis to return" the money.

According to the New York Times, Sen. Clinton "maintains close ties to Wal-Mart executives through the Democratic Party and the tightly knit Arkansas business community." The May 20, 2007 article also reported that her husband, former President Clinton, "speaks frequently to Wal-Mart's current chief executive, H. Lee Scott Jr." and held a private dinner at the Clinton's New York home in July 2006 for him.

President Clinton defended his wife's role on the Wal-Mart board last week after the issue was raised by Sen. Barack Obama in a CNN debate.

His wife did not try to change the company's minds about unions, the former Arkansas governor said.

"We lived in a state that had a very weak labor movement, where I always had the endorsement of the labor movement because I did what I could do to make it stronger. She knew there was no way she could change that, not with it headquartered in Arkansas, and she agreed to serve," President Clinton said.

In a written statement, Clinton spokesperson Wolfson said, "As President, she will fight alongside labor to promote the economic growth of America's middle class." He said Clinton strongly believes Wal-Mart workers should be able to unionize and bargain collectively.

He did not directly respond when asked why she did not quit the board over the conpany's anti-union efforts. "Wal-Mart was Arkansas's largest employer when Sam Walton asked Sen. Clinton to join the board," he said. "As the first woman to join Wal-Mart's board, she worked hard to make it a better corporate citizen."

In its statement, Wal-Mart described Sen. Clinton as "a valuable contributor" who "pushed us to be a better company."

Click Here for the Investigative Homepage.

Official: Bush's 2009 budget to be tight - Yahoo! News

Official: Bush's 2009 budget to be tight - Yahoo! News: "WASHINGTON - President Bush's 2009 budget will virtually freeze most domestic programs and seek nearly $200 billion in savings from federal health care programs, a senior administration official said Thursday."

AlterNet: Blogs: Election 2008: Sexism and Racism: Going Prime Time, Like It or Not

AlterNet: Blogs: Election 2008: Sexism and Racism: Going Prime Time, Like It or Not: "If this primary has taught us nothing else, it is that people hear things subjectively and view them through a filter of their own life experience."

By Jane Hamsher, Firedoglake
Posted on January 30, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.firedoglake.com//75516/

Over at DailyKos, Markos makes the observation that in this election "too many unmerited claims of racial insensitivity and sexism have been thrown around carelessly." I'll agree with that -- but I think it's an observation that deserves some further refinement.

Lately I've been told by no small number of men that if I hear something as sexist I'm being "oversensitive" or just plain wrong. When that happens my back goes straight up and all I hear is the patronizing tone of someone who thinks their life experience is superior to mine and that they are therefore entitled to tell me what I hear and when I hear it. Suddenly the discussion gets dragged onto the carpet of who's "right" and who's "wrong" and many distinctions that would allow us to have a reasonable conversation about the subject get abandoned.

No wonder people are desperate for liberation from the problems of sexism and racism and are to willing to sweep them under the carpet and pretend they don't exist any more.

But they do. And Pam Spaulding, writing about race politics, gets to the heart of it:

The subject is too deeply embedded in the American psyche to will it away - remember, Obama doesn't have to "make a big deal of his blackness." He's black, but he's not carrying the perceived "chip on his shoulder" that Jackson or Sharpton have by default. That's what scares white folks, because J&S have traded on race merchantry in the past - where all forms of racism - benign, ignorant, overt and violent, are seemingly the same. This only drives further discussion into the closet.
What I am saying is that the underlying reason for promoting "post-racial" (note you don't see many blacks tossing that around) is more about wanting it to be true so badly so that race doesn't have to be dealt with. It cuts both ways.
Note you will see folks on the right (and the Clinton camp) complaining that they "cannot talk about race" in regards to Obama. No, they feel they cannot successfully use the familiar political dog-whistles that evoke fear without getting called on it.
It all goes back to the fear of being labeled "racist." It's almost as if we need to come up with another term that doesn't conjure up visions of Klan Night Riders, lest whites recoil at the mere thought that they can hold ingrained biases through no fault of their own by growing up in this culture.
I'm pretty sure implicit bias is what drives much of The Bradley Effect, because many who change their minds and vote for the non-minority candidate don't see themselves as racist; they can rationalize their decisions in ways that avoid ownership of that factor.

If this primary has taught us nothing else, it is that people hear things subjectively and view them through a filter of their own life experience. When Michael Eric Dyson said Hillary Clinton was using racist code when she said that she was the best person for the presidency, I was left scratching my head and thinking, "well, that's what every politician says in every race. How is she supposed to run?" And at the same time, it didn't invalidate that this is what Dyson and others are hearing -- an echo of things they've heard their entire lives when people are attempting to be dismissive based on race. Hillary Clinton was just running a political campaign like any other political campaign, but it doesn't erase people's feelings or experience that they are bringing to the table.

And that's where Pam's call for a different way to discuss these things becomes important. Intent does matter -- and to deny that, to lump together the person who just doesn't know how their words are being perceived with the ones who bomb abortion clinics makes the subject explosive and untouchable. People recoil from it, the conversation gets shut down and teaching moments get lost.

There is a lot of sexism in this race, both overt and unconscious, and as someone who writes about gender a lot it's been extraordinarily difficult to address it without feeling like you're just going to make the problem worse. Because the time is coming when we're going to have to reconcile behind one candidate, and the ability to do that to insure that we don't wind up with another Alito on the bench is going to become paramount. We don't live in a time that allows the luxury of going Naderite. And I'm always conscious these days that making the race/gender divide more toxic and polarized is going to leave me poorly equipped to be a voice for that reconciliation, and yet to not address the subjects of sexism and racism when they're such huge motivational factors in this race makes me feel like I'm abandoning an opportunity to drag these subjects out for some much needed daylight.

I think the first necessary act in having a more healthy conversation is to acknowledge that you don't always know what someone else is hearing when something is said. When people say "out with the old, in with the new" about Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, what I hear is that there is no room for a middle aged woman in a position of political leadership. It takes a long time for a woman to accrue political clout in our society sufficient to rise to the top, as it does in business and many other fields, especially when she's taken the time to have kids. She's not allowed to be the young wunderkind that a man is. So she can't be on top when she's young, and by the time she's in a position to make the argument that she deserves to lead everyone is saying "out with the old." In other words, she's allowed to be in a position of power...never.

Which doesn't mean that this is what people are intending to say when they say it, and the tendency to throw labels around and attribute motivation and grand conspiracy probably needs a lot more evidence than most are asking for. "Out with the old" means, for a lot of people, and end to Clinton politics and the Clinton era. Fair enough. And anyone who wants to pretend they can look into a crystal ball and know what someone is thinking in that case is a bit presumptuous.

But not so long ago, you couldn't write anything negative about Bill Clinton online because the "Clinton era" was considered the halcyon days, and the "Clintons" only became toxic and archaic once Hillary started running. So the suspicion that many are hiding some old fashioned lizard-brain sexism behind this new found skepticism towards the Clintons remains.

I don't know how to repair the situation other than to acknowledge that people's feelings are legitimate with regard to what they hear no matter the intent, and presuming malicious intent is a great way to make an enemy of someone who probably really wants to be an ally.

Pam is right -- the need for new language, for a new way of talking about these things is acute.

Jane Hamsher is the founder of FireDogLake. Her work has also appeared on the Huffington Post, Alternet and The American Prospect.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.firedoglake.com//75516/

AlterNet: Blogs: Election 2008: Fox News' Ratings Take Another Slide

AlterNet: Blogs: Election 2008: Fox News' Ratings Take Another Slide: "There's just something about the drop in numbers that helps restore my faith in the American political system."

By Steve Benen, The Carpetbagger Report
Posted on January 31, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.thecarpetbaggerreport.com//75569/

I'll admit it; I have a special fondness for news about Fox News' declining ratings. There's just something about the drop in numbers that helps restore my faith in the American political system.

Eric Boehlert has the latest, in a great piece on why the Republican network is poised to have a very rough year.

The point is that Fox News years ago made an obvious decision to appeal almost exclusively to Republican viewers. The good news then for Fox News was that it succeeded. The bad news now for Fox News is that it succeeded.
Meaning, when the GOP catches a cold, everybody at Fox News gets sick. As blogger Logan Murphy put it at Crooks and Liars, "Watching FOXNews getting their comeuppance has been fun to watch. They made their bed, now they're having to lie in it and it's not too comfortable."
The most obvious signs of Fox News' downturn have been the cable ratings for the big primary and caucus votes this year, as well as the high-profile debates. With this election season generating unprecedented voter and viewer interest, Fox News' rating bumps to date have remained underwhelming, to say the least.

In 2004, on the night of the New Hampshire primary, for example, Fox News beat CNN by 200,000 viewers, despite the fact that there was no Republican contest at the time. Four years later, CNN beat Fox News by 250,000 viewers, despite very competitive contests in both parties. (On Saturday night, when results of the Dems' South Carolina primary were dominating the news, Fox News came in third, behind both CNN and MSNBC.)

It's been like this throughout the primary process, and Boehlert notes that the netroots-driven boycott has had a lot to do with it.

The problem for Fox News is that it's the Democratic race that's creating most of the excitement, yet Fox News has been forced to mostly watch the race from the sidelines. That's because last winter, after Fox News tried to smear Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) for purportedly attending a radical Muslim school as a child, liberal bloggers launched an initiative to get Democratic candidates to boycott a debate co-sponsored by Fox News and the Nevada Democratic Party. (The boycott, powered by Foxattacks.com, was later extended to any and all Fox News debates.)
The point of the online crusade was not to simply embarrass Fox News or rattle Nevada Democrats for being out of touch with the grassroots masses that distrusted and despised Fox News. The point, instead, was to begin chipping away, in a serious, consistent method, at Fox News' reputation. To spell out that Fox News was nothing more than a Republican mouthpiece and that Democrats need not engage with the News Corp. giant.
The lack of Democratic debates for Fox News has meant a huge setback for the news organization from a ratings perspective. Just look at the grand slam CNN hit last week when, on January 21, it broadcast the much-talked-about Democratic debate from South Carolina. The CNN event not only creamed Fox News in the ratings, nearly tripling its audience that night, but the debate set a new cable news mark for the most viewers ever to watch a primary debate.
In fact, of the 10 most-watched debates this election season, Fox has aired just two, compared to CNN's five.

If I'm not mistaken, this also suggests MSNBC has had three of the 10 most-watched debates, which is one more than Fox. (Also, this is likely to continue, given that the debates scheduled for tonight and tomorrow night -- the last two events before Feb. 5 -- are both on CNN.)

CNN President Jonathan Klein, following its New Hampshire ratings win, said, "There's a freshness and exuberance to our coverage that the others just aren't matching.... Fox almost seems downright despondent in their coverage."

It couldn't have happened to a more appropriate network.

Steve Benen is a freelance writer/researcher and creator of The Carpetbagger Report. In addition, he is the lead editor of Salon.com's Blog Report, and has been a contributor to Talking Points Memo, Washington Monthly, Crooks & Liars, The American Prospect, and the Guardian.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.thecarpetbaggerreport.com//75569/

AlterNet: Blogs: Health and Wellness: Bush Admin on FEMA's Toxic Trailers: Screw the Poor!

AlterNet: Blogs: Health and Wellness: Bush Admin on FEMA's Toxic Trailers: Screw the Poor!: "The Bush Administration, FEMA and Governor Hailey Barbour -- just said screw the poor, let's build more casinos and luxury accommodations."

By Christy Hardin Smith, Firedoglake
Posted on January 31, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.firedoglake.com//75573/

Remember those toxic FEMA trailers? Looks like folks in Mississippi hoping for more affordable housing to be built so that they can start to get back on their own feet again will have to keep on waiting.

The Bush Administration and FEMA -- along with former RNC head turned lobbyist turned Governor Hailey Barbour -- just said screw the poor, let's build more casinos and luxury accommodations. Again. I'm not kidding. Via Digby:

While thousands of Mississippians who lost their homes to Hurricane Katrina remain in FEMA trailers, the federal government on Friday approved a state plan to spend $600 million in grants earmarked for housing on a major expansion of the state-owned port -- a project that could eventually include casino and resort facilities.
[...]
The money in question is part of $5.5 billion in HUD Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) that Congress authorized for Mississippi after Hurricane Katrina struck on Aug. 29, 2005. Administered by the Mississippi Development Authority, about $3.4 billion was allocated to replace and repair some of the nearly 170,000 owner-occupied homes destroyed or damaged by the storm. Another $600 million was set aside for programs to replace public housing, help small landlords fix their units and foster construction of new low- and moderate-income housing.

Scout Prime has more. Well, what's wrong with being stuck in FEMA trailers because there is no where else to move to that these folks can afford? Here's what's wrong:

FEMA "ignored, hid and manipulated government research on the potential impact of long-term exposure to formaldehyde" on Katrina and Rita victims now living in the FEMA trailers, the congressmen wrote in a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, whose department includes FEMA.
Reps. Brad Miller (N.C.) and Nick Lampson (Tex.) cited agency documents given to Congress in alleging that the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention -- generally considered a repository of nonpartisan scientific expertise -- was "complicit in giving FEMA precisely what they wanted" to suppress the adverse health effects....
"Honest scientific studies don't start with the conclusion, and then work backwards from there," Miller said....
"For those who are too poor to live elsewhere, FEMA's position remains as it was in 2006: there are no possible adverse health effects that can't be cured by opening the windows," they added.

So, in sum, if there is no affordable housing because the grant money set aside for building it has been sucked up by big money donor casino interests, and if there is nowhere else for the very poor to live because said affordable housing does not exist in their location, and said very poor have no means of transportation to go elsewhere...it's okay if they are trapped in a carcinogenic, toxic trailer providedknowingly by our own government who has spent more effort suppressing evidence of the formaldehyde toxicity and protecting it's own employees from said toxicity than they have trying to resolve the lack of enough housing problem for their fellow Americans in need. Does that about cover it? (All of the preceding links in this paragraph are YouTubes from testimony and press briefings on this issue. And all are appalling.)

(H/T to reader WB.)

Christy Hardin Smith is a former attorney, who earned her undergraduate degree at Smith College, in American Studies and Government, concentrating in American Foreign Policy. She then went on to graduate studies at the University of Pennsylvania in the field of political science and international relations/security studies, before attending law school at the College of Law at West Virginia University, where she was Associate Editor of the Law Review.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.firedoglake.com//75573/

AlterNet: Blogs: PEEK: Key 9/11 Commission Staffer Held Secret Meetings With Rove, Scaled Back Criticisms of White House

AlterNet: Blogs: PEEK: Key 9/11 Commission Staffer Held Secret Meetings With Rove, Scaled Back Criticisms of White House

By Trish , Pensito Review
Posted on January 31, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.pensitoreview.com/75562/

I smell a rodent. ABC News is quoting WashingtonDeCoded's Max Holland about a soon to be released book that exposes the former executive director of the 9/11 Commission as a Bush White House insider. "[Zelikow] had laid the groundwork for much of what went wrong at the White House in the weeks and months before September 11. Would he want people to know that?"

9/11 Commission co-chairs Tom Kean and Lee Hamilton hired former Condoleezza Rice aide Philip Zelikow to be executive director, (sic) Zelikow failed to tell them about his role helping Rice set up President George W. Bush's National Security Council in early 2001 - and that he was "instrumental" in demoting Richard Clarke, the onetime White House counterterrorism czar...
"[Zelikow] had laid the groundwork for much of what went wrong at the White House in the weeks and months before September 11. Would he want people to know that?" ["The Commission: The Uncensored History of the 9/11 Investigation author Philip] Shenon writes, according to Holland.
Zelikow denied that was the case. "It was very well-known I had served on this transition team and had declined to go into the administration. I worked there for a total of one month. I had interviewed Sandy Berger, Dick Clarke and most of the NSC staff." He noted he recused himself from working on the section of the panel's report addressing the NSC transition, and that other staffers had held conflicting positions in the Clinton administration.

Did you get that? Clinton, Clinton, Clinton!

Not only did Zelikow work for Rice, he seemed to remain a tad too loyal to her as well.

Holland reports that Shenon discovered some panel staffers believed Zelikow stopped them from submitting a report depicting Rice's performance as "amount[ing] to incompetence, or something not far from it."

He also kept in close contact with Karl Rove whose business the 9/11 Commission should have been none of.

In his book, Shenon also says that while working for the panel, Zelikow appears to have had private conversations with former White House political director Karl Rove, despite a ban on such communication, according to Holland. Shenon reports that Zelikow later ordered his assistant to stop keeping a log of his calls, although the commission's general counsel overruled him, Holland wrote.

The book comes out on Feb. 5, the same day as Super Tuesday, when the newsers will be consumed in the minutiae of the Clinton/Obama contest. Chances are good it will be lost in the din. We'll try to keep an eye out for it, though, and keep you posted.

Trish is a regular blogger for the Pensito Review.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.pensitoreview.com/75562/

AlterNet: Blogs: Rights and Liberties: FISA: Wiretapping Without A Warrant, It Could Be You Next

AlterNet: Blogs: Rights and Liberties: FISA: Wiretapping Without A Warrant, It Could Be You Next

By Christy Hardin Smith, Firedoglake
Posted on January 27, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.firedoglake.com//75091/

So much for that "innocent Americans aren't being wiretapped" talking point. A Pulitzer Prize winning journalist was not only wiretapped while doing his job in following-up on some sources, but it resulted in the FBI coming to his house to ask questions about his daughter -- who was away at college at the time and not a party to any calls being made to or from the family home.

Think it couldn't happen to you? Read on:

U.S. intelligence tapped the telephone calls of Lawrence Wright, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Looming Tower, starting in 2002....
As far as I can tell, only Pam Hess of the Associated Press picked up on Wright's confrontation with spy chief Michael McConnell over the phone taps, and no major paper ran it. The version of her story that The Washington Post printed recounted McConnell's telling Wright that water boarding would be "torture" if it were done to him, but dropped the five paragraphs Hess wrote on the eavesdropping. The New York Times and Wall Street Journal skipped Wright's wiretap account altogether.
But The New Yorker's Web site did feature an audio interview with Wright in which he described the visit of FBI agents to his Texas home in 2002 to quiz him about the telephone calls intercepted by U.S. intelligence.
The encounter came, mind you, amid the constant assurances from the Bush administration that the U.S. has not, and is not, "spying on Americans" or running a "warrantless domestic spying program."
"Totally untrue!" McConnell told Wright, insisting that the conversations of American citizens with no connections to terrorists would be immediately discarded. U.S. intelligence is after al Qaeda, McConnell and others have repeatedly pledged, not innocent Americans.
"I'm telling you," the former Air Force general said, "if you're in the United States you have to have a warrant. Authorized by the court. Period!"
But Wright then told McConnell he had a more-than-professional interest in electronic surveillance.
"Let me make a disclosure," he told the spy boss. "I have been monitored."...
One of his intelligence sources had revealed to him that he had "read a summary of a telephone conversation that I had from my home with a source in Egypt."
McConnell said the eavesdropping must have been triggered by getting a call "from some telephone number that's associated with some known outfit."
The journalist, however, had originated the call.
What happened next bears repeating, not just because it has gone largely unreported, but because it's the kind of encounter many more Americans can expect if they end up as a target of our distressingly sloppy -- some would say incompetent -- counterterrorism agencies, if Congress extends a law (PL 110-55) enacted last August, that expanded the government's electronic surveillance authority.
The law, which expires on Feb. 4, in effect turned U.S.-based Internet servers into a mail drop for U.S. intelligence.
In 2002 Wright was visited by two FBI agents after placing calls in the course of researching The Looming Tower, his Pulitzer Prize-winning account of the rise of al Qaeda and U.S. responses to it, as well as an article on al Qaeda's number two leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri.
"They were members of the Joint Terrorism Task Force," he recounted. "They wanted to know about phone calls made to a solicitor in England" who was upset that I was talking to some of her clients, who were jihadis, former members of Zawahiri's terror organization in Egypt, and they wanted to know what we were talking about."
What startled him, however, was that the visiting gumshoes thought that his daughter, Caroline, had made the calls.
"Our understanding is that these calls were placed by Caroline Wright," they said.
But Wright's daughter was off at college at the time. He now worries that "she's now on the link chart as an al Qaeda connection."...

The Congressional Quarterly report from which this was taken is a must read for anyone concerned with the incursions on the rule of law, and in having more effective, carefully targets surveillance and intelligence -- not illegal band-aids that mask the fact that without on-the-ground live intelligence work. All the sifting of phone calls and e-mails in the world only provides an illusion of security. And that sort of shoddy work results in a lot of calls to Pizza Hut...but is that the best use of our nation's national security apparatus?

We had a teenage German foreign exchange student live with us a few years ago. I have to wonder how many of our calls were tapped because she wanted to talk with her family back home on occasion? And are they still? Where there is no oversight, no limitation, no real concern for civil liberties in how this is done -- and no real way to assure that such care is being taken, even when good people behind the scenes try to be careful in what they do, all it takes is a few bad actors to rig the system -- how can any of us ever know whether we have been a target, or whether we still are years after the fact?

Christy Hardin Smith is a former attorney, who earned her undergraduate degree at Smith College, in American Studies and Government, concentrating in American Foreign Policy. She then went on to graduate studies at the University of Pennsylvania in the field of political science and international relations/security studies, before attending law school at the College of Law at West Virginia University, where she was Associate Editor of the Law Review.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.firedoglake.com//75091/

AlterNet: Rights and Liberties: The End of Privacy

AlterNet: Rights and Liberties: The End of Privacy

By Elliot Cohen, Truthdig
Posted on January 28, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/75133/

Amid the controversy brewing in the Senate over Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) reform, the Bush administration appears to have changed its strategy and is devising a bold new plan that would strip away FISA protections in favor of a system of wholesale government monitoring of every American's Internet activities. Now the National Director of Intelligence is predicting a disastrous cyber-terrorist attack on the U.S. if this scheme isn't instituted.

It is no secret that the Bush administration has already been spying on the e-mail, voice-over-IP, and other Internet exchanges between American citizens since as early as and possibly earlier than September 11, 2001. The National Security Agency has set up shop in the hubs of major telecom corporations, notably AT&T, installing equipment that makes copies of the contents of all Internet traffic, routing it to a government database and then using natural language parsing technology to sift through and analyze the data using undisclosed search criteria. It has done this without judicial oversight and obviously without the consent of the millions of Americans under surveillance. Given any rational interpretation of the Fourth Amendment, its mass spying operation is illegal and unconstitutional.

But now the administration wants to make these illegal activities legal. And why is that? According to National Director of Intelligence Mike McConnell, who is now drafting the proposal, an attack on a single U.S. bank by the 9/11 terrorists would have had a far more serious impact on the U.S. economy than the destruction of the Twin Towers. "My prediction is that we're going to screw around with this until something horrendous happens," said McConnell. So the way to prevent this from happening, he claims, is to give the government the power to spy at will on the content of all e-mails, file transfers and Web searches.

McConnell's prediction of something "horrendous" happening unless we grant government this authority has a tone similar to that of the fear-mongering call to arms against terrorism that President Bush sounded before taking us to war in Iraq. Now, Americans are about to be asked to surrender their Fourth Amendment rights because of a vague and unsupported prediction of the dangers and costs of cyber-terrorism.

The analogy with the campaign to frighten us into war with Iraq gets even stronger when it becomes evident that along with the establishing of American forces in Iraq, the cyber-security McConnell is calling for was, all along, part of the strategic plan, devised by Dick Cheney and several other present and former high-level Bush administration officials, to establish America as the world's supreme superpower. This plan, known as the Project for the New American Century, unequivocally recognized "an imperative" for government to not only secure the Internet against cyber-attacks but also to control and use it offensively against its adversaries. The Project for the New American Century also maintained that "the process of transformation" it envisioned (which included the militarization and control of the Internet) was "likely to be a long one, absent some catastrophic and catalyzing event -- like a new Pearl Harbor." All that appears to be lacking to make the analogy complete is the "horrendous" cyber-attack -- the chilling analog of the 9/11 attacks -- that McConnell now predicts.

Apparently, the Bush administration had hoped to continue its mass surveillance program in secret, but as many as 40 civil suits were filed against AT&T and other telecoms, threatening to blow the government's illegal spying activities wide open. Unable to have these cases dismissed in appellate court by once again playing the national security card, the administration drafted and tried to push through Congress a version of the FISA Amendments Act of 2007 that gave retroactive immunity to telecom corporations for their assistance in helping the government spy en mass on Americans without a court warrant. The administration's plan was to use Congress' passage of this provision of immunity to nullify any cause of civil action against the telecoms, thereby pre-empting the exposure of the administration's own illegal activities.

Two versions of the FISA bill emerged, one from the Senate Intelligence Committee drafted largely by Cheney himself, which contained the immunity provision, and another from the Senate Judiciary Committee that did not contain the provision. Although Senate Majority leader Harry Reid inauspiciously chose the former to bring to the Senate floor, the bill was surrounded by much controversy. There had been well organized grassroots pressure to stop it from passing, and the House had already passed a version that did not include the retroactive immunity provision. Thus, in the face of a filibuster threat by Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), Reid postponed the discussion until the January 2008 session.

Now Reid has tried to put off the FISA Amendments Act once again by asking Republicans to extend, for one more month, the Protect America Act of 2007, an interim FISA reform act that is due to sunset in February. However, Cheney has urged Congress to pass his version of the FISA Amendments Act now. "We can always revisit a law that's on the books. That's part of the job of the elected branches of government," Cheney said. "But there is no sound reason to pass critical legislation … and slap an expiration date on it."

Cheney's point about the possibility of later revisiting the FISA Amendments Act after it becomes law may foreshadow replacing it in the coming months with a law based on McConnell's plan, which is due to emerge in February. This would mark a gradual descent into divesting Americans entirely of their Fourth Amendment right to privacy -- first by blocking their ability to sue the telecoms for violating their privacy and then by giving the government the same legal protection. After all, the FISA Amendments Act still requires the government to get warrants for spying on American citizens even if it does not afford adequate judicial oversight in enforcing this mandate. McConnell's proposal, on the other hand, would make no bones about spying on Americans without warrants, thereby contradicting any meaningful FISA reform.

President Bush has already made clear he would veto any FISA bill that did not give retroactive immunity to the telecoms. However, if McConnell's soon to be unveiled spy-at-will plan is turned into law, a separate law giving retroactive immunity to the telecoms would be unnecessary. All Bush and Cheney would need to do to protect themselves from criminal liability would be to make the new spy-at-will law retroactive in effect from the inception of the illegal NSA surveillance program. This would also be sufficient to deflate the civil suits filed against the telecoms because the past illegal spying activities that these companies conducted on behalf of the government would then become "legal." Indeed, the Bush administration has already done this sort of legal retro-dating and nullifying of civil rights and gotten it through Congress. For example, the Military Commissions Act of 2006 conveniently gave Bush the power to decide whether someone -- including himself -- is guilty of torture, irrespective of the Geneva Conventions, and it made this authority retroactive to Nov. 26, 1997.

Whatever the final disposition of FISA in the coming weeks or months, the administration is now bracing to take a much more aggressive posture that would seek abridgement of civil liberties in its usual fashion: by fear-mongering and warnings that our homeland will be attacked by terrorists (this time of the menacing hacker variety) unless we the people surrender our Fourth Amendment right to privacy and give government the authority to inspect even our most personal and intimate messages.

It would be a mistake to underestimate the resolve of the Bush administration. But it would be a bigger mistake for Americans not to stand united against this familiar pattern of government scare tactics and manipulation. There are grave dangers to the survival of democracy posed by allowing any present or future government unfettered access to all of our private electronic communications. These dangers must be carefully weighed against the dubious and unproven benefits that granting such an awesome power to government might have on fending off cyber-attacks.

Elliot D. Cohen, Ph.D., is a media ethicist and critic. His most recent book is The Last Days of Democracy: How Big Media and Power-Hungry Government Are Turning America Into a Dictatorship. He is a first-prize winner of the 2007 Project Censored Award.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/75133/

AlterNet: Rights and Liberties: The Supreme Court Forgets the Little People

AlterNet: Rights and Liberties: The Supreme Court Forgets the Little People

By Stephanie Mencimer, Mother Jones Online
Posted on January 30, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/75267/

The line forms early on Friday mornings at Foundry United Methodist Church, a nearly 200-year-old institution located a few blocks from the White House. Famous in some circles as Bill Clinton's church, among the city's down and out, Foundry is better known as one of the few places around that offer help securing a government-issued photo identification.

Two weeks ago, Deborah Killebrew, 58, was one of those queued up outside the church to pick up a copy of her birth certificate, which Foundry volunteers had helped her obtain. Six years ago, Killebrew was hit by a drunk driver. Her fiance was killed in the crash, and she was left with cervical spine injuries that eventually put her in a wheelchair. After a string of bad luck, she wound up living in a D.C. homeless shelter. Somewhere along the way, she lost her expired Virginia driver's license. Killebrew was unable to get a new one because she didn't have an official copy of her birth certificate from the state of Indiana, where she was born. But to get her birth certificate, Killebrew had to send the state a copy of her driver's license or a stack of other documents -- like a car registration or mortgage document -- that she also didn't have. Eventually, she just gave up until she was referred to Foundry.

Without a photo ID, Killebrew may not be able to drive or apply for food stamps, but here in D.C., one thing she can do is vote, which she does regularly. If she still lived in Indiana, though, she'd be out of luck. Two days before she arrived at Foundry to claim her birth certificate, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a lawsuit over a strict new Indiana law requiring all voters to show a government-issued photo ID before casting a ballot. The plaintiffs argued that the law was an unconstitutional burden on voters, particularly minority, poor and elderly voters, who are the least likely to have the requisite ID. The law does allow people without an ID to cast a provisional ballot, but it won't get counted until the voter turns up at a county clerk's office to present identification.

If the justices rule against the plaintiffs, they will clear the way for other states to implement similar laws restricting voting rights for the less fortunate. Judging from the oral arguments in Crawford v. Marion County Elections Board, that's just what the justices are poised to do. While John Roberts worked at a steel mill during college, and Clarence Thomas came up dirt-poor in Pin Point, Ga., the Supreme Court of late hasn't shown much interest in people like Killebrew who reside at the bottom of the economic food chain. The court's docket is increasingly dominated by business litigation -- patent challenges, anti-trust suits and attempts by big businesses to insulate themselves from all sorts of legal liability and litigation brought by their employees, investors or aggrieved customers. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce recently bragged that it had its best year yet before the high court in 2007, racking up a string of impressive victories for big business that even surpassed the chamber's record-breaking year in 2006.

Topped off by last week's decision in Stoneridge Investment Partners v. Scientific Atlanta, which sharply restricted the ability of shareholders to sue entities that abet corporate fraud, recent winners before the Supreme Court have included Enron and the banks that facilitated its scam, payday lenders, investment banks that engage in price fixing and tobacco companies, among others. Losers have been small investors, poor black schoolchildren, working-class women paid less than men -- and one kid who was paralyzed after a police officer rammed his car because he was speeding.

Not only are "the people" losing at a rapid clip when they come before the court, but it has gotten much, much harder for the average person to even get into court in the first place. Over the past two decades, Supreme Court decisions have quietly prevented a wide swath of the American population from even reaching the courthouse, much less prevailing there when they've challenged better-funded and more powerful interests. Lee Epstein, a professor at Northwestern law school, says that the court is "shutting down access to plaintiffs in all sorts of ways. The court seems to be saying 'stay out.'"

In the last term, the court ruled, for instance, that taxpayers had no right to challenge the federal government's use of tax dollars to pay for religious-based social services. The case overturned years of precedent giving people a say in how their money is spent if it seems to mix too much church with state business. In a complicated anti-trust case, the court basically rewrote the rules for filing a civil lawsuit, making it harder for plaintiffs to even get into a courtroom under the guise of protecting business from allegedly frivolous lawsuits.

Many civil rights lawsuits are brought by private individuals rather than the government through agencies like the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, making them the primary mode of enforcing anti-discrimination laws passed by Congress. Yet the Supreme Court has moved to sharply limit such lawsuits through decisions that, for instance, restrict the awarding of attorneys fees to plaintiffs so that lawyers can no longer afford to bring such cases.

Epstein says that while it's true many of these decisions break down along ideological lines, some of rulings also may stem from the justices' personal backgrounds. Never has the Supreme Court been more homogeneous, she says, noting that race and gender aside, the range of professional experience of the current court is extremely limited. All of the current justices came straight from the federal appeals courts, she points out, and most spent the bulk of their careers in government service or academia. Today's sitting justices are even geographically homogeneous, having lived most of their adult lives in Washington or other nearby East Coast metro centers. Before they were appointed, Epstein says, "Most of these people could have taken the Metro or Amtrak to get to work."

At least with Sandra Day O'Connor on the court, Epstein says, there was not just a female voice, but someone from the West who had a different background from the other justices. O'Connor had been an Arizona state legislator and served as an elected trial court judge in Maricopa County. Epstein suggests that some of the court's rulings in recent years may have as much to do with the justices' service on appellate courts as ideology. None of them has much experience as private-practice litigators or trial judges, where they would be forced to look the plaintiffs in the eye and hear their stories. Epstein believes that the current crop of justices is inclined to think that "the judges below them get it right."

The insular experience of the Supreme Court justices seems to be spilling over into their decision making in a way that goes beyond partisan politics. Indeed, some of the more arcane business cases, which will nonetheless have a profound impact on such things as consumer protection, were decided by majorities that included Clinton appointees. All of the justices seem reluctant to do anything that might mess with business too much, even when those businesses could use some messing with.

In Watters v. Wachovia last year, for instance, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a former ACLU lawyer, wrote the opinion for a majority that also included liberal Steven Breyer in a case that declared that states have no right to regulate the operating subsidiaries of national banks. On its face, this might sound like no big deal, until you recognize that some of those operating subsidiaries were engaged in subprime and other shady mortgage lending that's now wreaking havoc on the economy. The states had attempted to step in to combat some of the fraud at work long before the feds even noticed there was a problem.

But the court's liberals deferred to the federal banking regulators in the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. The decision was a huge victory for the banks, leaving their subsidiaries largely immune to regulation or lawsuits based on state consumer protection laws.

Ginsburg and Breyer also came down with the majority in a decision that upheld the use of mandatory-arbitration clauses in contracts for services that are themselves against the law. In Buckeye Check Cashing v. Cardegna, the court said a consumer could be forced to arbitrate a dispute with a payday lender rather than go to court even though payday lending is illegal in Florida, where the case originated.

During the oral arguments, Breyer expressed concern that if the court ruled for the consumer, businesses might suffer because so many of them now use mandatory arbitration to keep people out of court. He seemed to believe that letting people go to court would somehow lead to economic ruin, even when they were suing companies that had defrauded them. "I wouldn't want to reach a decision … that would make a significant negative difference in the gross national product of the United States," Breyer said. The case greatly expanded the number of people who can no longer bring their consumer disputes before a judge or jury.

Despite a few of these sorts of decisions, it is still the conservatives on the court who seem to be most out of touch with the people who will be affected by their rulings. The oral arguments during the Indiana voter ID case serve as a case in point. There was Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. with his movie-star good looks and a smile and smoothness that seemed so reasonable and reassuring during his confirmation hearings. And yet, during the oral arguments, Roberts couldn't have been more dismissive of the plight of poor and minority voters at the heart of the case. Like the other conservatives, Roberts, who earned $1 million a year in private practice, couldn't seem to fathom that there are people in this country who don't have a photo ID. When informed that a voter who didn't have an ID would have to travel to a county clerk's office to provide addition documentation for her vote to be counted, Roberts quipped that in his home state of Indiana, county clerk's offices weren't too far apart.

The plaintiffs' lawyer, Paul Smith, countered that for a poor person living in Gary, Ind., the county clerk's office was quite a schlep, 17 miles. ("Seventeen miles is 17 miles for the rich and the poor," Antonin Scalia chimed in.) Smith gently reminded the justices that the people he was talking about didn't have driver's licenses. That's why they couldn't vote at their local polling places. For them, getting to the clerk's office would require using public transportation, which, anyone who's ever spent much time on public transit would surely know, gets less and less frequent and reliable the farther you have to travel.

What was striking about the exchange between Smith and Roberts, though, wasn't just Roberts' unfamiliarity with riding the bus, but his lack of any apparent understanding of the lives of people on the lower end of the economic spectrum. In this regard, Roberts is not alone on the court. It's clear that many of the justices would rather not see these sorts of folks appearing on their docket at all. Simon Lazarus, public policy counsel at the National Senior Citizens Law Center, calls it the "arrogant abstractness" that predominates the court today.

The court's overt hostility to average- or low-income people is in itself keeping people out of court. One possible reason the Supreme Court docket is so crowded with business cases is that liberal public interest lawyers are avoiding it, says John Bouman, the president of the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law. "There's very little empathy on the court," he says, and as a result "people are showing restraint as to whether to take things up at all."

The change in the docket may only reinforce the court's ivory-tower qualities. The fewer everyday people who make their cases in court, the fewer opportunities the justices will have to let their perceptions evolve. One of the selling points of lifetime tenure for Supreme Court justices is that it can free them from politics and allow them to focus on the law and the facts of the cases before them. It is supposed to allow for evolution, which has been known to happen. Justice John Paul Stevens, now the last remaining reliable liberal on the court, is himself a Republican appointee nominated by Gerald Ford. His views on such hot-button issues as affirmative action and obscenity have changed during his many years on the court. Even former Chief Justice Rehnquist, who as a law clerk once wrote that he thought Plessy v. Ferguson, the case upholding racial segregation, ought to be reaffirmed, eventually came to champion Brown v. Board of Education.

But you do have to wonder about the current crop of young conservatives like Roberts. Insulated from the real world through an adult life of privilege, insulated from actual people by years of conservative legal rulings, it's hard to see where the opportunities for growth will come from. As Arthur Bryant, the executive director of Public Justice, a public-interest law firm, says, "Our system of justice cannot do justice if people cannot get into court."

Stephanie Mencimer is a reporter in Mother Jones' Washington, D.C., bureau and the author of Blocking the Courthouse Door: How the Republican Party and Its Corporate Allies Are Taking Away Your Right to Sue (Free Press, 2006).

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/75267/

AlterNet: Rights and Liberties: Pioneering Blackwater Protesters Given Secret Trial and Criminal Conviction

AlterNet: Rights and Liberties: Pioneering Blackwater Protesters Given Secret Trial and Criminal Conviction

By Jeremy Scahill, AlterNet
Posted on January 29, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/75244/

Last week in Currituck County, N.C., Superior Court Judge Russell Duke presided over the final step in securing the first criminal conviction stemming from the deadly actions of Blackwater Worldwide, the Bush administration's favorite mercenary company. Lest you think you missed some earth-shifting, breaking news, hold on a moment. The "criminals" in question were not the armed thugs who gunned down 17 Iraqi civilians and wounded more than 20 others in Baghdad's Nisour Square last September. They were seven nonviolent activists who had the audacity to stage a demonstration at the gates of Blackwater's 7,000-acre private military base in North Carolina to protest the actions of mercenaries acting with impunity -- and apparent immunity -- in their names and those of every American.

The arrest of the activists and the subsequent five days they spent locked up in jail is more punishment than any Blackwater mercenaries have received for their deadly actions against Iraqi civilians. "The courts pretend that adherence to the law is what makes for an orderly and peaceable world," said Steve Baggarly, one of the protest organizers. "In fact, U.S. law and courts stand idly by while the U.S. military and private armies like Blackwater have killed, maimed, brutalized and destroyed the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis."

A month after the Nisour Square massacre, on Oct. 20, a group of about 50 activists gathered outside Blackwater's gates in Moyock, N.C. There, they reenacted the Nisour Square shooting and staged a "die-in," involving a vehicle painted with bullet marks and blood. The activists stained their clothing with fake blood and dramatized the deadly shooting spree. Some of the demonstrators marked Blackwater's large welcome sign -- with the company's bear claw in a sniper scope logo -- with red hand prints. The demonstrators believed these "would be a much more appropriate logo for Blackwater," according to Baggarly. "We're all responsible for what is happening in Iraq. We all have bloody hands." It took only moments for the local police to respond to the protest, the first ever at Blackwater's headquarters. In the end, seven were arrested.

The symbolism was stark: Re-enact a Blackwater massacre, go to jail. Commit a massacre, walk around freely and perhaps never go to jail. All seven were charged with criminal trespassing, six of them with an additional charge of resisting arrest and one with another charge of injury to real property. "We feel like Blackwater is trespassing in Iraq," Baggarly later said. "And as for injuring property, they injure men, women and children every day." The activists were jailed for five days and eventually released pending trial.

When their day in court arrived, on Dec. 5, the activists intended to put Blackwater on trial, something the Justice Department, the military and the courts have systematically failed to do. Their action at Blackwater, the activists said, was in response to war crimes, the killing of civilians and the fact that no legal system -- civilian or military -- was holding Blackwater responsible. The Nisour Square massacre, they said, "is the Iraq war in microcosm."

But District Court Judge Edgar Barnes would have none of it. So outraged was he at Baggarly, the first of the defendants to appear before him that day, that the judge cleared the court following his conviction. No spectators, no family members, no journalists, no defense witnesses remained. The other six activists were tried in total secrecy -- well, secret to everyone except the prosecutors, sheriffs, government witnesses and one Blackwater official. Judge Barnes swiftly tried the remaining six activists behind closed doors and convicted them all. It was as though Currituck, N.C., became Gitmo for a day.

It's not unusual for a judge to clear a courtroom when there is a disruption by the public. Nor is it rare for judges to try to prevent activists from turning the tables and attempting to put the government -- or in this case a mercenary company -- on trial. But witnesses that day report that there was no disruption -- and the defendants say they were immediately cut off when they strayed from the narrow scope of the trespass charge to discuss Blackwater's actions or the war. So why clear the courtroom? That may be a question for Judge Barnes in the end, but it's hard not to view his conduct through the same veil of secrecy that shrouds all of Blackwater's actions -- and the seemingly endless lengths to which the Bush administration will go to protect Blackwater.

That was certainly how the activists saw it. "He didn't want people influenced by our message," Baggarly said. "There have been hundreds of thousands of civilian casualties in Iraq. If we're going to speak about that, nobody is allowed to hear it."

The North Carolina chapter of the ACLU quickly stepped in, saying it knew of no similar action in any previous criminal trials in the state. "It's a clear violation of constitutional rights, not only of the defendants but the press and public," said Katy Parker, the group's legal director. "They have a right to a public trial, so any trial that goes on behind closed doors is a farce." She added, "We are very concerned about this reported disrespect for the laws of our land by a member of the judiciary, especially in a controversial and politically laden case such as this." The ACLU filed a complaint against Barnes with the North Carolina Judicial Standards Commission, asking it to investigate him.

The activists appealed their convictions and were back in court last week, on Jan. 24, in front of Superior Court Judge Russell Duke. Unlike Judge Barnes, Duke allowed the defendants some freedom of speech and graciously decided to let the public witness the daylong trial. In his statement before the court, Baggarly recalled the story of one of the Nisour Square victims he and his fellow activists attempted to dramatize in their protest: "Mohammed Hafiz was driving four children when Blackwater mercenaries riddled the car with bullets. His ten-year-old son Ali was shot in the head. Mohammed had to gather up pieces of the child's skull and brains for the burial. During one point in the massacre, Blackwater operatives concentrated fire on a passenger bus. A small boy fled the bus in terror and was shot down as was his mother who ran after him."

The defendents said that they believed no court would hold Blackwater responsible for these killings and that, by committing civil disobedience on the company's private military base that day, they were guided by higher principles, citing the U.S. Constitution and the Bible. "U.S. law has immunized Blackwater, both in Iraq and at home, allowing it unrestricted license to kill and a five-year reign of terror," said Baggarly. The activists invoked the tradition of Martin Luther King Jr., Gandhi and the conveners of the Boston Tea Party. "'Made in the U.S.A.' is written all over those bullets that are flying all over Baghdad," one of the activists, Bill Streit, told the judge. "We're sick at heart about that."

Rather than ignore or dismiss their motivations, Judge Duke engaged the defendents in a theological discussion, challenging their Biblical interpretation and, at one point, admonishing the activists, many of whom are members of the Catholic Worker movement. "I've always thought that if you're going to be a follower of Jesus or someone who appreciates the Constitution, you can't select the portions that you like and disregard the rest," he said. The fact that the hearing was held at the same moment that the country was remembering the legacy of MLK, who called on his supporters to break unjust laws that violated the rights of others, seemed to be lost on Judge Duke. Perhaps he should have read Dr. King's "Letter from a Birmingham Jail," in which he wrote to other clergy accusing him of political extremism:

"[T]here are two types of laws: just and unjust … One has not only a legal but a moral responsibility to obey just laws. Conversely, one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws. I would agree with St. Augustine that 'an unjust law is no law at all.' … We should never forget that everything Adolf Hitler did in Germany was 'legal' … Any law that degrades human personality is unjust … I submit that an individual who breaks a law that conscience tells him is unjust, and who willingly accepts the penalty of imprisonment in order to arouse the conscience of the community over its injustice, is in reality expressing the highest respect for law."

It was in this tradition that those seven Americans found themselves engaging in nonviolent civil disobedience at Blackwater's gates last October and the very reason they were before Judge Duke last week.

Whether this mattered to him or not, Judge Duke's words were interesting, given the religious fanaticism and avowed patriotism of Blackwater's owner, Erik Prince. Like the "Blackwater 7," Prince considers himself a dedicated Christian and professes his love of country. How would Prince answer the judge if faced with a trial for the actions of his Blackwater killers in Iraq? How would he reconcile the killing of innocents by his men with the teachings of Jesus? What would his moral defense sound like?

The sad reality in this country right now -- as it was in Dr. King's day -- is that those who really belong before judges are not. Prosecutions are sought and secured for activists standing against killing and injustice and not for those meting it out. In the end, Judge Duke sentenced the activists to time served. It was the lightest sentence he could have issued -- but a far greater one than any Blackwater mercenary has faced for killing an Iraqi.

For its part, Blackwater issued a statement that would be funny if it wasn't so lethally ironic. "Many of the extraordinary professionals currently working for Blackwater are veterans who served their country in support of -- among other things -- the right to free speech and to peacefully protest in accordance with the law," said Blackwater spokesperson Anne Tyrrell. "We respect every person's right to speak out in support of his or her beliefs, but if laws are violated, it is the court system's responsibility to hold them accountable."

Tyrrell is right about one thing: The courts should hold the violators of laws accountable. But is that Blackwater's true position on its own conduct? Is that the Bush administration's position? No. Time and again, Blackwater and the White House have fought against having meaningful sanctions applied to mercenary forces. In fact, while the trial of the "Blackwater 7" was under way, last week the Bush administration was fighting once again to ensure continued immunity for Blackwater and other mercenary firms in Iraq. If we really were a nation of laws, there would be a lot of Blackwater mercenaries behind bars right now facing stiffer penalties than five days in jail. And these men would hardly be prisoners of conscience like the activists who protested Blackwater's lethal actions in Iraq.

In the end, before Judge Duke sent the activists home, he told them, "We're not here about what's happening in Iraq." Tragically for the U.S. Constitution and deadly for Iraqi civilians, when it comes to Blackwater and other merchants of death, this has been true of the American justice system for five years too long.

Jeremy Scahill, an independent journalist who reports frequently for the national radio and TV program Democracy Now!, has spent extensive time reporting from Iraq and Yugoslavia. He is currently a Puffin Writing Fellow at The Nation Institute. Scahill is the author of Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/75244/

» Even SSL Gmail can get sidejacked | Zero Day | ZDNet.com

» Even SSL Gmail can get sidejacked | Zero Day | ZDNet.com

AlterNet: Blogs: Election 2008: Conservatives Freak Out Over McCain's Likely GOP Nomination for President

AlterNet: Blogs: Election 2008: Conservatives Freak Out Over McCain's Likely GOP Nomination for President

By Steve Benen, The Carpetbagger Report
Posted on January 30, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.thecarpetbaggerreport.com//75499/

Last night, not too long after John McCain was declared the winner of Florida's Republican primary, National Review's Michael Graham wrote an item called, "It's all over."

Assuming there is no shocking revelation or health issue, the GOP nomination is over. Conservatives need to start practicing the phrase "Nominee presumptive John McCa...."
Sorry, I can't say it. Not yet.
But it's true. When the campaign comes here to Massachusetts on February 5th, I'll proudly cast my vote for any option on the GOP ballot other than You-Know-Who. But it will be a futile gesture. Mr. "1/3rd Of The GOP Primary Vote" is going to be the nominee.

It was easily one of the more grounded responses from a conservative blogger in response to McCain's success. The War Room's Alex Koppelman did a great job pulling together some of the "greatest hits" from the far-right last night, all of which, with varying degrees of subtlety, reflect a conservative base that considers the Arizona senator an absolute disaster for the party and the conservative movement.

Given this, I can't help but notice just how feckless the hard-right wing of the Republican Party looks today. The anti-McCain contingent of the GOP, at least at first blush, looks like it should be a force to be reckoned with. Rush Limbaugh, Tom DeLay, Rick Santorum, most of the Fox News crowd, most of the right's talk-radio hosts, and nearly all of the leading conservative bloggers consider John McCain completely unacceptable.

And yet, here we are, looking at a political landscape in which McCain is the undisputed frontrunner for the Republican nomination.

I think it's a disaster for the far-right for more reasons than one.

The obvious, of course, is that they're about to get stuck with a candidate they hate, and there's apparently not a whole lot they can do about it. McCain has demonstrated an ability to win without this contingent, and he'll owe them almost nothing moving forward. It's a message that's hard to ignore: this crowd lacks the power they like to think they have.

But I'm also left with the feeling that the hard-right conservatives are also slowly realizing that they also lack the ability to threaten Republicans to stay in line. As a Dem, I'll gladly concede that McCain has clearly moved to the right over the last couple of years, but at the same time, consider some of these truths:

* McCain broke with his party on taxes, immigration, an anti-gay constitutional amendment, judicial nominations, environmental policy, and campaign-finance reform;

* He's best buddies with the media establishment;

* He considered leaving the GOP altogether in 2001 and talked about joining John Kerry's ticket in 2004.

And he's still the Republican frontrunner.

When there's a key political dispute in DC, the hard-right wing of the party likes to threaten: "Play ball or your career's in jeopardy. We're the Republican base and we're calling the shots."

Except, with McCain's ascendancy, these guys look like a paper tiger, who wavering GOP lawmakers may take a little less seriously in the future.

No wonder they're going crazy.

Steve Benen is a freelance writer/researcher and creator of The Carpetbagger Report. In addition, he is the lead editor of Salon.com's Blog Report, and has been a contributor to Talking Points Memo, Washington Monthly, Crooks & Liars, The American Prospect, and the Guardian.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.thecarpetbaggerreport.com//75499/

AlterNet: Edwards' Withdrawl is America's Loss

AlterNet: Edwards' Withdrawl is America's Loss

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, New America Media
Posted on January 30, 2008, Printed on January 31, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/75479/

America just lost its best and brightest hope for real change when John Edwards gave up the presidential ghost. Edwards did something that Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and certainly none of the Republicans would dream of doing: He made poverty no longer a dirty word in the mouths of many, and that included Clinton and Obama, for a minute anyway.

But Edwards didn't stop there. He relentlessly pushed the envelope on America's next greatest crime and sin, the absolute refusal of the nation to provide decent health care for more than fifty million persons no matter whether poor, working class, middle class and even some with a few bucks to spare. He didn't stop even there. He hammered corporate and special interests for their shameless and unabashed pillage, loot, and rape of American consumers.

Edwards was truly a modern day Jeremiah crying in the wilderness against poverty, corporate greed, and the health care abomination, and predictably was bum rushed by the gaggle of ultra-conservative slam artists, the Fox network crowd, talk shock jocks, and the New York Times neo-liberal bunch. They slandered, slurred, and ridiculed him, and ultimately tried to marginalize him as a bare after thought, warm up act to Clinton and Obama.

Edward's much needed and almost never heard populist message didn't mark him as a threat. The fact that he could win and would have been in a position to deliver on his heartfelt advocacy made him a threat. The seeds of the attack were there from the start. He had barely stepped out of the barber salon early in the campaign when the pokes and digs started. He was the butt of laughs and late night TV talk show gags for committing the unpardonable sin of blowing $400 on a haircut. The barbs and the taunts didn't stop even after he shrugged it off as fun and games stuff. Months later David Letterman took another hair shot at him when he grabbed at his hair and tried to muss it up during his appearance on Letterman's late night show.

This slapstick silliness wouldn't have raised an eyebrow since he is a wealthy guy who made millions as a corporate lawyer. But it was the poverty thing that raised the hackles of his rich pals. This was not just a cheap campaign ploy to give him an edge over the other candidates. He made the case that nearly forty million poor people in the world's richest country is an abomination that nobody seemed to want to talk about it, let alone do anything about it. It was irksome enough that the GOP presidents and presidential candidates would stay silent on the plight of the poor. It was downright infuriating that his Democratic opponents would also stay mute on the issue.

Edwards put his body where his mouth was. He barnstormed through eight poor regions of the South in July 2007 with his modern day version of an anti-poverty fact finding campaign. He kicked off his three day campaign in New Orleans 9th Ward. The nearly all-black area suffered the worst Katrina flood devastation and had become the universal symbol of poverty and neglect. Worse it stood as tragic testament to the failed and broken promises of recovery made by corporations and the federal government.

His poverty crusade stirred a mild flutter for a couple of months with Obama and Clinton, but again only a mild flutter, and any talk of a crusade against poverty has disappeared from their campaign lexicon faster than a Houdini disappearing act. And now that he's out of the White House hunt, the chance that it'll reappear in their spiels is zilch.

Edwards became the first Democratic presidential candidate to go where no other Dem or certainly Republican candidate has gone in four decades and talked up poverty disgrace, universal health and economic democracy. He bucked history, negative public and political attitudes, and of course ridicule for championing these populist causes. But here's the deal. Edwards may be out of the race but his message and the reason for that message won't disappear like Houdini. Obama and Clinton will continue to pilfer and repackage parts of his message, while of course giving no credit to the messenger.

No matter. Edwards did himself, us and the nation proud when he boldly stepped up and tried to shame the shot callers into facing up to their sorry and disgraceful neglect of millions of poor and uninsured Americans. We owe Edwards a profound debt of gratitude for that. Here's a guess. Edwards won't and shouldn't go quietly into the night. We still desperately need his voice and we should do everything we can to make sure that his voice continues to be heard.

John, you have my eternal thanks for who you are and what you did. You are truly the better angel of America.

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. His forthcoming book is The Ethnic Presidency: How Race Decides the Race to the White House (Middle Passage Press, February 2008).

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/75479/

AlterNet: Best Progressive Books of 2007

AlterNet: Best Progressive Books of 2007

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

America's Hardest-Hit Foreclosure Spots - Forbes.com

America's Hardest-Hit Foreclosure Spots - Forbes.com

cook county is number 6 on the list

CNN Breaking News

-- Two GOP sources tell CNN that Rudy Giuliani will drop out, endorse Sen. John McCain for GOP presidential bid.


Multimedia - Chicago Bears

Multimedia - Chicago Bears
the top 12 plays of 2007 - its heavy on No 23 but Griese, Orton, Clark and the object of my man-crush, Brian Urlacher, are featured too....

FOX Sports ranks 2007 Patriots as the THIRD greatest NFL team of all time?

FOX Sports ranks 2007 Patriots as the THIRD greatest NFL team of all time?
According to FOX Sports on MSN, the greatest NFL teams are as follows:

1. 1984 San Francisco 49ers
2. 1992 Dallas Cowboys
3. 2007 New England Patriots
4. 1985 Chicago Bears
5. 1989 San Francisco 49ers
6. 1975 Pittsburgh Steelers
7. 1972 Miami Dolphins
8. 1962 Green Bay Packers

If it were me, IF the Patriots win Sunday, I'd have to put them at number one, knocking the 1985 "Super Bowl Shuffle" Chicago Bears out of my top spot. If the Pats lose, Sweetness, The Fridge, and Da Bears remain at number one. I agree with the 1972 Dolphins being as far down as they are. I don't understand why the 1985 Bears are ranked so low, and the 1991 Washington Redskins, for whatever reason, are always overlooked in these types of polls. Let the mud-slinging begin!

FOX Sports on MSN - NFL - Great moments in media day history

FOX Sports on MSN - NFL - Great moments in media day history: "1986: Jim McMahon's moon beam

The Bears quarterback didn't limit his fun to media day. He was all over Bourbon Street all week. A New Orleans TV personality claimed (falsely) that he slandered local women. He dropped his pants at a TV helicopter buzzing over a Chicago practice.

Commissioner Pete Rozelle fined him for wearing an unauthorized corporate logo on his headband, so he began writing various messages on his headband — creating ample photo opportunities.

'I was pleased with the game,' McMahon would later say, 'but all the rest of it was a pain.'"

Super start up - GloucesterTimes.com, Gloucester, MA

Super start up - GloucesterTimes.com, Gloucester, MA
Hector Longo
The Gloucester Daily Times

PHOENIX, Ariz. — For any New England football fan born before 1975, the words “46 Defense” still bring on the shakes.

It was the 1985 Chicago Bears — complete with bug-eyed linebacker Mike Singletary, and fearsome linemen Dan Hampton, Richard Dent, Steve McMichael and William “Refrigerator” Perry — who decimated Raymond Berry’s Patriots in Super Bowl XX, 46-10.

The Bears finished that season 18-1, the lone blemish a regular-season loss at Miami, behind that amazing defense, which gave up just 10.9 points in those 19 games.

Sunday, the 2007 New England Patriots, among other accomplishments, could wash any argument away that the 1985 Bears might have as “the greatest team ever.”

Beat the New York Giants in Super Bowl XLII and it’s bye, bye Bears.

But what if you could match up the two on field? What would happen if Tom Brady, Randy Moss and Co. took on the Mike Ditka-coached, Buddy Ryan-schemed 46?

Would those bullies on Bears clothing stand a chance?

“Really, I don’t think there’s a more potent offense that’s ever been on a football field,” said former Bears veteran safety Shaun Gayle, a starter in the secondary with the 1985 team. “I’ve never seen a team blessed with all these weapons.”

Gayle wouldn’t go as far as saying those big, bad Bears would prevail. He did declaratively state: “I can assure you of one thing. After the game, the Patriots would absolutely know that they had just been through the fight of their lives.”

Brady and the Patriots “spread” vs. the rush happy “46.”

Talk about a clash of styles.

“The “46” was based on each defender winning the one-on-one battles,” added Gayle, who now works for Ruppert Murdoch, helping bring the NFL game to Europe. “You have 11 men on offense and 11 on defense. Match up one-on-one and the guy accounting for the quarterback gets a clear run at him.”

Brady has chewed up gambling schemes all year long, finding the open men when it counts.

It sounds like advantage Patriots, but is it?

Doug Plank wore No. 46 for the Bears in the late 1970s and 1980s as a rugged, fearless safety.

He was the man Ryan named the defense for, because of Plank’s ability to step up and take on linebacker tasks and still get back as a safety.

“The ‘46’ basically featured six linemen, three defensive backs and two players, who were either linebackers or safeties, that were counted on for so much,” said Plank, now the head coach of the Arena Football League’s Georgia Force.

“We had certain coverages that would have linebackers covering the deep half of the field in the passing game.”

If the ‘07 Pats or the ‘85 Bears were ever to collide on the field, it would certainly feature a battle of wills.

“I don’t know if the game would ever get past the game-plan meeting early in the week,” said Plank, because of the matchups and more importantly, the mismatches it could create.

Remember, those Bears teams did what essentially would amount to putting a linebacker like Wilber Marshall or Otis Wilson on a Wes Welker.

“Many times, the defensive ends would have coverage responsibilities on the running backs,” added Plank.

So your talking Richard Dent, at 6-foot-5, 265 pounds trying to corral waterbug Kevin Faulk?

“Just imagine the defensive end, charging up field, with the angle he’s able to take. Most of the time, instead of covering, they just took the running back and tackled (even without the football),” said Plank.

Would Ryan and Ditka alter the game plan as Plank suggests?

Gayle’s not so sure.

In fact, he thinks the Giants could use some of that Bears’ philosophy come Sunday night. It may be New York’s only chance.

“Against New England, defenses this year have been picking their own poison,” said Gayle. “Shut down Moss, hold Wes Welker to only three or four points, and there’s still Laurence Maroney and the running game that can chew you up.”

Gayle’s point is a well-taken one. Teams have slowed the Pats down in the second half, pushed them some by taking away the long ball, but a loss, be it 52-7 or 38-35, is still just a loss.

The goal here at the Super Bowl is to win.

“Why not attack them? Get up in the receivers’ face, be physical and play tight man to man,” said Gayle. “The teams that have come close have taken some chances. Facing a team of destiny, to win, you have to gamble.”

The thought of Brady stinging the Bears with his quick release is a pleasant one.

As Patriots legend Andre Tippett noted in Super Bowl XX, there were a lot of “what ifs” in that game.

“What if Stanley Morgan didn’t drop that pass, and what if Don Blackmon had picked off those passes? He had two of them, that looked like he could take all the way,” said Tippett yesterday.

“What ifs” haven’t been part of the 2007 equation with the New England Patriots. And in the end, that fact — that Brady and his offensive mates have been closer to perfection than any other team in NFL history — would set New England, at 19-0, apart from any team to ever play the game.

Super start up - GloucesterTimes.com, Gloucester, MA

Super start up - GloucesterTimes.com, Gloucester, MA
Nice article comparing the '86 bears, possibly the greatest team in nFL history and the '08 Patriots, who will be the greatest if they win. Good explanation of where the name of the Bears' "46 defense" came from.

ESPN - Spellman arrested after chase with police - NFL

ESPN - Spellman arrested after chase with police - NFL

The Canadian Press: Tulsa police arrest former NFL player Alonzo Spellman after 20-minute chase

The Canadian Press: Tulsa police arrest former NFL player Alonzo Spellman after 20-minute chase: "The six-foot-four, 300-pound Spellman was a first-round draft choice out of Ohio State for the Chicago Bears in 1992. He played nine seasons in the NFL for the Bears, Detroit Lions and Dallas Cowboys, recording 43 sacks in 123 games and leading the Bears with eight sacks during the 1996 season."

This is sad; the guy was a favorite of mine as a kid when he played for the Bears. He was, ans still is, is a giant, as was evident when ESPN interviewed him last year, in real need of emotional assistance. Last I heard he was trying to get into MMA. I hope things get better for him, just as I hope for the best for any current and former Chicago Bear.

The 8 Houses of Bling

The 8 Houses of Bling
Now you can own homes owned by among others, Eminem, Run-DMC, and others....

TonyHomo.com: Drew Bledsoe's Blog

TonyHomo.com: Drew Bledsoe's Blog
this looked interesting...

The 12 Most Awesomely Ridiculous eBay Auctions | Cracked.com

The 12 Most Awesomely Ridiculous eBay Auctions | Cracked.com

Daily Garlic » Business Quotes

Daily Garlic » Business Quotes: "6. I will tell you how to become rich. Close the doors. Be fearful when others are greedy. Be greedy when others are fearful
- Warren Buffet"

40 really good business quotes....

One Bush Left Behind


by Greg Palast

Here's your question, class:

In his State of the Union, the President asked Congress for $300 million for poor kids in the inner city. As there are, officially, 15 million children in America living in poverty, how much is that per child? Correct! $20.

Here's your second question. The President also demanded that Congress extend his tax cuts. The cost: $4.3 trillion over ten years. The big recipients are millionaires. And the number of millionaires happens, not coincidentally, to equal the number of poor kids, roughly 15 million of them. OK class: what is the cost of the tax cut per millionaire? That's right, Richie, $287,000 apiece.

Mr. Bush said, "In neighborhoods across our country, there are boys and girls with dreams. And a decent education is their only hope of achieving them."

So how much educational dreaming will $20 buy?

-George Bush's alma mater, Phillips Andover Academy, tells us their annual tuition is $37,200. The $20 "Pell Grant for Kids," as the White House calls it, will buy a poor kid about 35 minutes of this educational dream. So they'll have to wake up quickly.

-$20 won't cover the cost of the final book in the Harry Potter series.

If you can't buy a book nor pay tuition with a sawbuck, what exactly can a poor kid buy with $20 in urban America? The Palast Investigative Team donned baseball caps and big pants and discovered we could obtain what local citizens call a "rock" of crack cocaine. For $20, we were guaranteed we could fulfill any kid's dream for at least 15 minutes.

Now we could see the incontrovertible logic in what appeared to be quixotic ravings by the President about free trade with Colombia, Pell Grant for Kids and the surge in Iraq. In Iraq, General Petraeus tells us we must continue to feed in troops for another ten years. There is no way the military can recruit these freedom fighters unless our lower income youth are high, hooked and desperate. Don't say, 'crack vials,' they're, 'Democracy Rocks'!

The plan would have been clearer if Mr. Bush had kept in his speech the line from his original draft which read, "I have ordered 30,000 additional troops to Iraq this year – and I am proud to say my military-age kids are not among them."

Of course, there's an effective alternative to Mr. Bush's plan – which won't cost a penny more. Simply turn it upside down. Let's give each millionaire in America a $20 bill, and every poor child $287,000.

And, there's an added benefit to this alternative. Had we turned Mr. Bush and his plan upside down, he could have spoken to Congress from his heart.

 

-For more on Bush and education read "No Child's Behind Left" in Armed Madhouse excerpted here.
-Also read Palast's take on the 2007 State of the Union here.

*************
Greg Palast is the author of the NY Times best-sellers, Armed Madhouse and The Best Democracy Money Can Buy. View Palast's investigative reports for BBC Television on our YouTube Channel.

Join our social networking sites on Facebook on MySpace and on Google's Orkut. Sign up for RSS updates of our site and for our podcasts.

Support our work by donating to the Palast Investigative Fund(a 501c3 educational foundation).

Monday, January 28, 2008

NFL ticket scalpers running wild | www.tucsoncitizen.com ®

NFL ticket scalpers running wild | www.tucsoncitizen.com ®
'85 Bears made Super Bowl what it is today

The first Super Bowl in 1967 was played in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and featured nearly 30,000 empty seats. After the game, then-commissioner Pete Rozelle reportedly told his staff that "never again is there going to be a championship game that isn't a sellout."
The game's growth started at that moment, each year building momentum and capturing more and more of the country's attention, which makes for a nice story.
Then the 1985 Chicago Bears came along, and the biggest event in American sports was never the same.
"With all the publicity we got leading into that game, it was just electric," said Shaun Gayle, a defensive back who spent 11 years with Chicago. "The coverage we got bordered on insanity. When I think back to that year, I don't think it's something we'll ever see again."
"Da Bears" rolled through the 1985 season with force and bravado seldom seen, even for a league known for such things. Then-coach Mike Ditka said the team had "characters with character."
That might be selling the squad short. After all, it was quarterback Jim McMahon who mooned a media helicopter as it flew over the practice field.
"I would challenge anyone to come up with a more charismatic team, a team that did a better job of crossing over into American culture than the '85 Bears," said Roy Taylor, a Bears historian and author of bearshistory.com.
Everyone wanted a part of them, everyone wanted a piece of the story. Star tailback Walter Payton appeared on the cover of Time magazine with rookie William "Refrigerator" Perry. McMahon graced the cover of Rolling Stone. At the time, Super Bowl coverage was still growing.

LXXX Years of Super Bowl History - Bleacher Report

LXXX Years of Super Bowl History - Bleacher Report
Super Bowl XX. Chicago Bears 46, New England Patriots 10. There's no way any joke about this game will top Jim McMahon struggling through his ridiculous quatrain in "The Super Bowl Shuffle." Unless you include Tony Eason's performance in this game.

Tommie And The Bartender dot com: Happy Birthday, Chicago Bears

Tommie And The Bartender dot com: Happy Birthday, Chicago Bears

Happy Birthday, Chicago Bears

On this date in 1922, The NFL's Decatur Staleys became The Chicago Bears.

Bears Expo to be held June 7-8 at Soldier Field - Chicago Bears

Bears Expo to be held June 7-8 at Soldier Field - Chicago Bears

LAKE FOREST, Ill. – The annual Bears fan convention is undergoing a major metamorphosis. After 10 years at the Hilton Chicago, the popular event will be reintroduced as the Bears Expo and be held for the first time at Soldier Field June 7-8.


Bears coach Lovie Smith and president and CEO Ted Phillips answer questions at a recent fan convention.
Bears Expo will continue to celebrate the franchise’s past, present and future, and include the best elements of the fan convention such as autograph sessions, informational seminars, Q&A sessions with management and the chance to purchase authentic Bears merchandise.

Increasing in popularity throughout the years, the fan convention ultimately outgrew the Hilton Chicago. Staging the event at Soldier Field will give fans more room to roam and allow the Bears to showcase their state-of-the-art stadium along Chicago’s lakefront.

In addition, moving the event back a few months will enable the Bears Expo to serve as the team’s unofficial kickoff for the 2008 season. More information about the event will be announced on ChicagoBears.com as it becomes available.

The Hilton Chicago will remain a partner in the event and offer special room rates. Tickets for Bears Expo will go on sale later this winter.

Deuce of Davenport | Sports News, Commentary, Humor, Videos: Bear Down Chicago Bears

Deuce of Davenport | Sports News, Commentary, Humor, Videos: Bear Down Chicago Bears

Bear Down Chicago Bears


We brought you the first kick in the dick with the story of CCTV presenter Zhang Bin and his wife who blew up his spot on national tv. Well we have another early 2008 candidate for mother of all kicks to the dick.

Going through a child custody battle is tough enough especially when you're a public figure. It's a whole other thing when the mother of your child is a coke-addicted hooker and you're former Chicago Bear Richard Dent.

Hit man allegedly sought in Craigslist ad | Tech news blog - CNET News.com

Hit man allegedly sought in Craigslist ad | Tech news blog - CNET News.com: "A Michigan woman is accused of using the popular bulletin board site to try to hire a hit man to kill the wife of a man with whom she had had an affair. Ann Marie Linscott, 49, was arrested Thursday at her home in Grand Rapids, after allegedly posting an ad in November for a 'freelance' job, according to a report by the Associated Press."

SCIENCE NOTEBOOK - washingtonpost.com

SCIENCE NOTEBOOK - washingtonpost.com

Asteroid to Miss Earth Tonight

If you feel a little breeze tonight, look up.

An asteroid as wide as the length of three football fields will be speeding past Earth at the astronomical equivalent of a rather close shave: less than one-and-a-half times the distance to the moon.

Okay, that's not close enough to cause a breeze. And it won't be visible without the help of a telescope. But near-Earth asteroids are unusual enough to have astronomers excited about the event. Among the hundreds of asteroids being tracked, the next of this size or larger to pass this close will not arrive until 2027.

That is why scientists at the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico will be training their instruments on the craggy piece of space debris known as 2007 TU24 to study its features and trajectory.

Scientists at Cornell University, which operates Arecibo for the National Science Foundation, emphasized that TU24 poses no threat. A miss is as good as a mile, after all, and in this case, we're talking about 334,000 miles.

But only two telescopes on the planet can examine such objects in detail -- those at Arecibo and NASA's Goldstone facility in California. Both use radar, a wavelength that can tell with great precision an asteroid's contours, its path through space and how it is spinning.

Goldstone devoted a couple of days to TU24 last week, but Arecibo has the more sensitive instrument, able to discern details as small as 25 feet across. Its radar "allows very accurate predictions of the future orbits of near-Earth asteroids, enabling a much better assessment of the likelihood of an impact with Earth," Cornell astronomy professor Donald B. Campbell said.

BBC NEWS | Americas | Why the spy satellite won't fall on your head

BBC NEWS | Americas | Why the spy satellite won't fall on your head: "In reality, a spy satellite heading uncontrollably towards Earth is not an uncommon event, says Dr Ruediger Jehn, a space debris analyst at the European Space Agency (Esa). He says that satellites come out of orbit and fall back to Earth harmlessly on average once a year."

TSA tester slips mock bomb past airport security - CNN.com

TSA tester slips mock bomb past airport security - CNN.com: "Editor's note: CNN's Jeanne Meserve and producer Mike M. Ahlers recently went along with a Transportation Security Administration official on an undercover test of airport screeners. Here is what they witnessed. CNN agreed not to disclose the name of the tester."

It should be no surprise that the Clintons are playing the race card. - By Christopher Hitchens - Slate Magazine

It should be no surprise that the Clintons are playing the race card. - By Christopher Hitchens - Slate Magazine: from the article ..."Say what you will about Sen. Obama (and I say that he's got much more charisma than guts), he is miles above this sort of squalor and has decent manners. Say what you will about the Clintons, you cannot acquit them of having played the race card several times in both directions and of having done so in the most vulgar and unscrupulous fashion. Anyone who thinks that this equals 'change' is a fool, and an easily fooled fool at that."

Fit Nation: The Obesity Fight - Special Reports from CNN.com

Fit Nation: The Obesity Fight - Special Reports from CNN.com
MAPS BY YEARS VISUALIZING HOW OBESITY HAS INCREASED

CO-ED Magazine » 9 Ridiculous Super Bowl XLII Bets You Can Actually Put Money On

CO-ED Magazine » 9 Ridiculous Super Bowl XLII Bets You Can Actually Put Money On

Obama Delivers Letterman's Top 10 List - Politics on The Huffington Post

Obama Delivers Letterman's Top 10 List - Politics on The Huffington Post

Top 30 Tips for Staying Productive and Sane While Working From Home | Zen Habits

Top 30 Tips for Staying Productive and Sane While Working From Home | Zen Habits: "“Dost thou love life? Then do not squander time, for that is the stuff life is made of.” - Benjamin Franklin"

Well Done

Well Done
A BOOK YOU COOK TO READ

Internet '96

Internet '96
vARIOUS WEB PAGES THE WAY THEY LOOKED IN '96.

Scientists Build First Man-Made Genome; Synthetic Life Comes Next

Scientists Build First Man-Made Genome; Synthetic Life Comes Next

Scientists have built the first synthetic genome by stringing together 147 pages of letters representing the building blocks of DNA.

The researchers used yeast to stitch together four long strands of DNA into the genome of a bacterium called Mycoplasma genitalium. They said it's more than an order of magnitude longer than any previous synthetic DNA creation. Leading synthetic biologists said with the new work, published Thursday in the journal Science, the first synthetic life could be just months away -- if it hasn't been created already.

"We consider this the second in our three-step process to create the first synthetic organism," said J. Craig Venter, president of the J. Craig Venter Institute where scientists performed the study, on Thursday during a teleconference. "What remains now that we have this complete synthetic chromosome … is to boot this up in a cell."

With the new ability to sequence a genome, scientists can begin to custom-design organisms, essentially creating biological robots that can produce from scratch chemicals humans can use. Biofuels like ethanol, for example.

"The J. Craig Venter Institute will be able to take a file stored on a computer and using synthetic chemistry, turn that information into life," said Chris Voigt, a University of California at San Francisco synthetic biologist. "I would be shocked if it doesn't come out in six months. I think they've done it."

The technique is basically a reverse of the Human Genome Project, which translated DNA into the letters A, C, T and G, which represent the body's building blocks: the nucleotides adenine, thymine, guanine and cytosine. Synthetic biologists' ambitious goal is to arrange those letters to create never-before-seen organisms that will do their bidding.

The first phase of Venter's three-step process, which he published last year, involved transplanting and "booting up" the genome of one species of bacterium into another. The remaining step is to combine the first two steps, then insert the new synthetic genome into a standard bacterium. Scientists said they expect the announcement of man-made life this year.

The ability to synthesize longer DNA strands for less money parallels the history of genetic sequencing, where the price of sequencing a human genome has dropped from hundreds of millions of dollars to about $10,000. Just a few years ago, synthesizing a piece of DNA with 5,000 rungs in its helix, known as base-pairs, was impossible. Venter's new synthetic genome is 582,000 base-pairs.

"The largest piece that had been published in the scientific literature was 32 kilobases," Venter said. "This is on the order of 20 times the size."

"I would think that you could get to a million base pairs," said Jim Collins, a professor of biomedical engineering at Boston University. "I don't think there's anything that's hindering the use of these approaches to go for much bigger genomes."

The key to the new technique is the yeast's natural ability to staple long strands of DNA together.

"What's really interesting about yeast is that … (it takes) multiple incomplete synthetic parts and assembles them," said Daniel Gibson, a synthetic biologist at the Venter institute and senior author of the paper.

Hamilton Smith, a synthetic biologist who led the Venter Institute research, said that the team's new technique should work for other genomes, although the full potential of the technique is unknown. But scientists were enthusiastic about the possibilities.

"Once this becomes routine, it allows us to build whatever genome we want," Voigt said. "You can design a genome to incorporate a particular chemical process to change what the cells are eating and what the cells are making. You can make robotic cells."

One goal of synthetic biology is to create a so-called minimal genome that would consist of the smallest amount of genes necessary to keep the organism alive. Such a bacterial "chassis" would provide an ideal platform for mounting modules like biofuel production to create tiny biological robots.

Other researchers, like Tom Knight of MIT, Drew Endy of Stanford, and a host of synthetic biology startup companies are all after this prize, which could lead to a replacement for fossil fuels. Voigt sits on the scientific advisory board of a biofuels startup, Amyris.

But synthetic biologists are also planning to scale up from the simplest organisms to the most complex: human beings. The first bacterial genome was sequenced in 1995 and was followed by the landmark sequencing of the human genome in 2001. Based on that trajectory, Voigt estimated that a synthetic human genome -- which could be used in human cloning research -- could be created by 2014.

But before researchers can do that level of synthetic biology, scientists will need to automate their methods. Beyond this work, Voigt said, scientists will need programming tools, in the same way computer scientists use higher level programming languages like Fortran, C++ and Java, to control computer function.

"(Otherwise it's like) writing Vista in binary," he said. "It's just not going to happen."

First benchmarks: MacBook Air is the slowest Apple machine on the block - Engadget

First benchmarks: MacBook Air is the slowest Apple machine on the block - Engadget

Windows 7 in 2009? Be careful what you wish for

Windows 7 in 2009? Be careful what you wish for
Take it as a sign that Windows Vista failed to capture the imagination of Windows users, or take it as a sign that sensationalism sells. Either way, the rumor mill is heating up with claims that the successor to Windows Vista—currently dubbed Windows 7—could be released as early as next year, as opposed to sometime in 2010, as currently expected.

The scuttlebutt (condensed): some users have seen early builds of Windows 7, including a poster at Neowin. Ars Technica has also seen an older build, as we told you about more than a month ago. A more recent build was reportedly described as Milestone 1. APC Magazine claims to have seen a roadmap which puts M2 in an April/May timeframe, and a M3 in the third quarter of this year. All of this points to a late 2009 release, they say, which is indicated by this "road map."

Arguing about whether or not Windows 7 will ship in late 2009 is pointless. No one can predict the future, and Microsoft's own history shows that its roadmaps and predictions are not to be trusted. A more interesting question is: should Microsoft be aiming for late 2009? Should the company be aiming at a date, or should it be aiming at an experience? To be sure, a software company can't develop without some kind of general timeframe. The question is what's most important: the date or the product?

Microsoft, please take your time

In its early days as Longhorn, perhaps the project was too ambitious. But once Microsoft rebooted Longhorn's development more than two years into the process, the company made a critical error: in a panic, it focused on when the product would ship, not when it would be ready.

Gates originally had it right. In the thick of Longhorn development problems in 2004, Gates tried to reassure everyone that the release would not become date-driven. To this day, it remains a literary classic to me (and, well, probably only to me):

This Is Not a Date-Driven Release
We have things where we say
The train is leaving on this date
Whoever has their act totally together
By that date the train will leave
And the train could have a lot of people on it
Or it could be
Fairly empty
—W.H. Gates III

Unfortunately, Vista did become date-driven, and even Gates seemed to admit that Vista shipped before it was ready when Gizmodo talked to him at CES this year. Admission or not, it's quite clear that things that were not "totally together" where included on the "shipping train," and that the departure time became more important than the quality of the release.

With Windows 7, Microsoft needs to deliver in a big way. I personally wouldn't call Windows Vista a bomb, but Microsoft has lost serious mindshare and respect in the many years since Windows XP, primarily on account of Vista. Vista will still sell well, if only because the momentum of the growing PC market will not allow otherwise. It does not appear that Vista is driving PC growth, however, and even among Vista fans, the mood is somber.

What's Microsoft to do? If you can't avoid a mistake, then you do the next best thing and learn from it. You don't want to move too quickly in an effort to fix your mistake, because you can end up making another, potentially costlier one. In Microsoft's case, the company can easily weather the trials and tribulations that Vista has brought it. But should the company release another operating system that fails to gain a critical, but positive reception, it will signal a true crisis for the company's desktop business. While Microsoft can't wait until 2012 to release a new version of Windows, it shouldn't be putting a shipping date before the need to make this release rock solid.

Of dates and timeframes

Once launched in a couple of weeks, it will have taken Microsoft about 16 months to deliver the first Service Pack for Windows Vista (Vista was released for businesses in November of 2006). A November 2009 release of Windows 7 would have afforded roughly 36 months of time between Vista and Windows 7, or a little more than twice the time consumed by Vista SP1 efforts. Sounds doable, eh? Keep in mind that a Windows 7 Milestone 3 in Q3 2008 leaves about a year for beta testing; by this time, the build should be very close to feature complete. As such, this would mean that Windows 7 would need to reach feature-complete status over the next nine months (or, within ~24 months of Vista being released to manufacturing).

There was once a time when Microsoft could accomplish quite a lot in such a short timeframe. Windows 98 was released in June 1998, and within only 40 months' time, Microsoft had released two major desktops OSes: Windows 2000 in February of 2000 and Windows XP in October of 2001. (Not to mention Windows ME in 2000, as well.) Sure, there were two separate teams involved back then, when there was a bifurcation between NT and the consumer desktop. The point is, Microsoft could do it back then, but I'd argue that company was a lot stronger then.

To regain its strength, Microsoft has to do two things. First, it cannot let Windows 7 ship without the spit and polish that Windows Vista didn't get. When time hasn't been spent on refining the experience, the rough edges come to annoy customers. Everything put in the OS needs to be ready for prime time, or be left out. That's not a timing issue, but a philosophical one. Related to this, Microsoft must therefore not bite off more than it can chew.

Second, and more importantly, Windows 7's milestones, beta process, and release to manufacturing should not be date-driven, but by the company determining what Windows 7 needs to be a truly worthy release. Rather than worry about Software Assurance customers, Microsoft needs to worry about righting its ship. If Windows 7 is a bomb, there won't be many Software Assurance customers left to worry about appeasing.

Windows 7 needs to bring with it the redemption of Microsoft. That, my dear reader, cannot and should not be rushed.

Employee's silent rampage wipes out $2.5m worth of data | The Register

Employee's silent rampage wipes out $2.5m worth of data | The Register

A Florida woman who believed she was about to get fired has been accused of deleting $2.5m worth of computer files to seek revenge on her employer.

Jacksonville Sheriff's officials say Marie Lupe Cooley, 41, used her own account credentials to access the server of Steven E. Hutchins Architects and delete seven years' worth of drawings. The firm's alarm company said someone entered the premises at 11 p.m. on Sunday and was there for about four hours.


Cooley went on her silent rampage after finding a help-wanted ad placed by her boss. It described an open administrative assistant position that sounded remarkably similar to hers.

"She decided to go and mess up everything for everybody," a spokesman for the sheriff's office told FirstCoast News here (http://www.firstcoastnews.com/news/local/news-article.aspx?storyid=100625). "She decided to be spiteful and go in and sabotage the records. And she did a very good job of that."

Firm owner Steven Hutchins said he was able to recover the files. "It was not a sensationalistic amount of money," he told El Reg, referring to the fee he paid a consultant to dredge up the discarded architectural drawings. He declined to say if he had stored backups of the files, which were valued at $2.5m.

Cooley was charged with damage in excess of $1,000 to computers and was released on bail.

As it turned out, the help-wanted ad listed a position available in the office of Hutchins's wife. Cooley's job was never under threat, though it probably is now. ®

Oops, sorry - 14,000 e-mail accounts get deleted - Download Squad

Oops, sorry - 14,000 e-mail accounts get deleted - Download Squad
Looks like Charter, a national cable and high-speed internet provider, decided to include more than just inactive accounts in its routine email account deletion. Although arguably not as bad as over-billing your customers a year in advance to the tune of $7.5 million, 14,000 users that had e-mail accounts with Charter found them to be completely emptied, including all the cute photos of the grandchildren and other attachments.

Worse yet, it's gone for good. According to the AP, Charter says that none of it can be restored. To make amends, the company credited the bill of each user who's account was deleted with $50. Better than nothing, but still - the only excuse Charter could come up with for this error was that something like this had never happened before.

All told, the mistake cost them $700,000 - and a few customers, perhaps. It seems that irresponsible handling of customer data has virtually no repercussions beyond self-inflicted ones. Airlines lose luggage on occasion, but not a whole day's flights worth of luggage. But who's to blame? The users who failed to protect their own data or the company that failed to protect the user's data?

Think Progress » Rove commencement address canceled.

Think Progress » Rove commencement address canceled.
Under heavy pressure from students, New England prep school Choate Rosemary Hall has decided to cancel Karl Rove’s address at its commencement ceremony this year. Instead, Rove will speak to the campus on Feb. 11. Headmaster Edward J. Shanahan said that about “80 percent of the communications he received from students, parents and alumni supported having Rove speak with students in a setting outside a graduation.”
rovem.jpg

Think Progress » Olbermann: I’d Sacrifice My Personal Success For A ‘Responsible Presidency’

Think Progress » Olbermann: I’d Sacrifice My Personal Success For A ‘Responsible Presidency’

Think Progress » Hansen: White House ‘Reviews And Edits’ All Testimony By Government Scientists

Think Progress » Hansen: White House ‘Reviews And Edits’ All Testimony By Government Scientists

Kennedy endorses Obama — 'change in air' - Yahoo! News

Kennedy endorses Obama — 'change in air' - Yahoo! News

Glenn Greenwald - Political Blogs and Opinions - Salon

Glenn Greenwald - Political Blogs and Opinions - Salon+
UPDATE: Of all the creepy post-9/11 phrases to which we've been subjected ("The Patriot Act" - "Protecting the Homeland" - "enhanced interrogation techniques" - "Department of Homeland Security"), I think the creepiest and most Orwellian is the phrase "good patriotic corporate citizen," used to describe companies which broke our laws because the President told them to. It's now apparently a Patriotic Duty to obey the President even if he tells you to violate the law.

The accompanying claim that companies should never "second-guess" the "judgment of the President regarding what's legal" -- which I just heard from John Cornyn and Saxby Chambliss -- is equally creepy, and is the crux of the authoritarian case for telecom immunity.

UPDATE II: The vote on the GOP cloture motion -- to ignore all the amendments and proceed to a final vote on the Bush-Rockefeller SIC bill -- has just occurred. The motion has failed, which means (shockingly) that Democrats have successfully mounted a filibuster preventing the vote on this horrible bill from occurring.

The vote was 48-45. Republicans missed by a whopping 12 votes to achieve cloture (60 votes needed for cloture). That's a pretty gaping defeat; the Democrats did well to stand together. Three Democratic Senators -- Ben Nelson (Nebraska), Blanche Lincoln, and Mark Pryor -- voted for cloture (Mary Landrieu originally voted for cloture, then apparently changed her vote). The rest of the Democrats (including Rockefeller, Reid, Clinton and Obama) voted in support of the filibuster, along with 1 lonely GOP Senator (Specter).

In one sense, this is an extremely mild victory, to put that generously. All this really means is that they will now proceed to debate and vote on the pending amendments to the bill, almost certainly defeat all of the meaningfully good ones, approve a couple of amendments which improve the bill in the most marginal ways, and then end up ultimately voting for a bill that contains both telecom immunity and warrantless eavesdropping. Moreover, it seems clear that Senate Republicans deliberately provoked this outcome and were hoping for it, by sabotaging what looked to be imminent Democratic capitulation so that Bush could accuse Democrats tonight of failing to pass a new FISA bill, thus helping their friend Osama.

Still, in another sense, this is significant. Preventing a vote today means that there is more time to work on opposing immunity, including by working on ensuring that the House stays firm behind its relatively decent bill. It also means that the Senate -- for once -- has refused to capitulate to brazen White House pressure tactics, whereby the President demanded that the Senate give the administration everything it wants before the Friday expiration of the PAA. Also, the presidential candidates responded to public pressure by joining in the filibuster, which is encouraging.

And, perhaps most significantly, this slight stirring of resolve might carry over into the next vote, to extend the PAA by 30 days and thus force Bush's hand either to veto the extension or back down (they will need 60 votes just to vote on that proposal). Again, anything that prevents quick and quiet resolution of telecom immunity and new FISA powers is a real benefit.

They will now vote on the 30-day extension. Reid just said the House was sure to vote in favor of it. That means the Republicans can either allow this "Critical Intelligence Tool" to continue (by voting for a 30-day extension) or deprive our intelligence professionals of the ability to Keep Us Safe.

UPDATE III: The vote on the Motion for Cloture on the 30-day extension (i.e., to proceed to a vote on it) just failed -- 48-45 (again, 60 votes are needed). All Democrats (including Clinton and Obama) voted in favor of the Motion, but no Republicans did -- not a single one. Thus, at least as of today, there will be no 30-day extension of the PAA and it will expire on Friday.

Reid, however, indicated that it was certain that the House will vote in favor of an extension tomorrow, which means it will be sent to the Senate for another vote. It's possible, then, that the Senate will vote again later in the week on an extension, but it's hard to imagine any Republicans ever voting in favor of an extension since Bush has vowed to veto it.

By blocking an extension, Republicans just basically assured that the PAA -- which they spent the last seven months shrilly insisting was crucial if we are going to be Saved from The Terrorists -- will expire on Friday without any new bill in place. Since the House is going out of session after tomorrow, there is no way to get a new bill in place before Friday. The Republicans, at Bush's behest, just knowingly deprived the intelligence community of a tool they have long claimed is so vital. Is the media going to understand and be able to explain what the Republicans just did? Yes, that's a rhetorical question.

President’s Expected Push to Make Tax Cuts Permanent is Irresponsible Fiscal and Economic Policy, 1/28/08

President’s Expected Push to Make Tax Cuts Permanent is Irresponsible Fiscal and Economic Policy, 1/28/08
By Aviva Aron-Dine

In his State of the Union address this evening, President Bush is expected to renew his push to make his signature tax cuts permanent. In recent weeks, Administration officials have offered three major arguments for this policy — (1) the tax cuts yielded strong economic growth over the past few years, (2) extending them would help the economy overcome its current weakness, and (3) extending them would improve the economy’s performance over the long run. None of these claims bears up well under scrutiny.

1. The economic expansion that began in 2001 has been weak by historical standards. The Administration bases its claim that the tax cuts yielded strong growth on the economy’s performance over the past seven years. But even setting aside the question of whether the tax cuts caused any of the growth that occurred, the reality is that the economy’s performance since 2001 has been nothing to brag about. With respect to overall economic growth, as well as growth in consumption, investment, wages and salaries, and employment, the expansion that began in 2001 is either the weakest or among the weakest since World War II. Investment, wage and salary, and employment growth also have been weaker than during the 1990s, a period in which taxes were increased. (These comparisons held true even before the slowdown of the past few quarters began. [1])

2. Making the tax cuts permanent would do little or nothing to stimulate the economy in the short run, since it would not put a dollar in anyone’s pocket until 2011. The Congressional Budget Office has concluded that extending the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts would have minimal effect on the economy in the near term.[2] Similarly, Brookings Institution economists Douglas Elmendorf and Jason Furman have listed this policy under the heading of “ineffective or counterproductive [stimulus] options.”[3] Simply put, measures to address short-term slack in the economy need to take effect in the short term. But the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts are not scheduled to expire until December 31, 2010, so extending them would have no direct effect on the economy until then.[4]

To its credit, the Administration did not insist on inclusion of its tax cuts in the bipartisan stimulus deal agreed to last week. But it continues to portray these tax cuts as good medicine for the current weak economy.

3. In the long run, making the tax cuts permanent would be more likely to weaken the economy than to strengthen it. The President and other advocates of extending the tax cuts have not proposed any measures to pay for them. Thus, making the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts and Alternative Minimum Tax relief permanent would add $4.3 trillion to deficits and debt over just the next ten years (2009-2018), [5] and would substantially worsen the nation’s already serious long-term fiscal problems.

All else being equal, larger deficits reduce national saving and thereby lower future national income. Studies by economists at the Joint Committee on Taxation, the Brookings Institution, and noted academic institutions all have found that the negative effects of added deficits and debt generally outweigh any positive economic effects of unpaid-for tax cuts. For example:

  • In a 2005 study, the Joint Committee on Taxation examined the economic effects of reductions in individual and corporate tax rates and an increase in the personal exemption. It found, “Growth effects eventually become negative without offsetting fiscal policy [i.e. without offsets] for each of the proposals, because accumulating Federal government debt crowds out private investment” (emphasis added).[6]
  • In 2004, Brookings Institution economist William Gale and then-Brookings economist (now CBO director) Peter Orszag examined the effects of extending the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts without offsets. They concluded that making the tax cuts permanent without paying for them would be “likely to reduce, not increase, national income over the long term.”[7]
  • University of California Berkeley economics professor Alan Auerbach simulated the economic effects of the 2001 tax cuts under various assumptions. He found that the only scenario under which the tax cuts increased the size of the capital stock and thus increased long-term economic output was one in which they were fully paid for with spending cuts at the time they were enacted.[8] Fully offsetting the cost of the tax cuts would require cuts in government programs equal to the entire annual budgets of the Departments of Education, Homeland Security, State, and Veterans’ Affairs combined

End Notes:

[1] For further discussion, see Aviva Aron-Dine, Chad Stone, and Richard Kogan, “How Robust Is the Current Economic Expansion?” Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, revised January 14, 2008, http://www.cbpp.org/8-9-05bud.htm.

[2] Congressional Budget Office, “Options for Responding to Short-Term Weakness,” January 2008.

[3] Douglas W. Elmendorf and Jason Furman, “If, When, How: A Primer on Fiscal Stimulus,” Brookings Institution, January 10, 2008, http://www.brookings.edu/papers/2008/0110_fiscal_stimulus_elmendorf_furman.aspx.

[4] For further discussion, including discussion of claims that extending the tax cuts would boost “confidence” and thereby boost the economy, see Aviva Aron-Dine, “Another Misdiagnosis: Marginal Rate Reductions and Extensions of Tax Cuts Expiring in 2010 Not the Right Medicine for the Economy’s Short-Term Ills,” Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, January 15, 2008, http://www.cbpp.org/1-15-08tax.htm.

[5] The $4.3 trillion figure includes $3.6 trillion in lost revenues and $700 billion in debt service costs. We include the cost of AMT relief because if AMT relief is not extended, the AMT will take back a quarter to a third of the value of the tax cuts. See Aviva Aron-Dine and Robert Greenstein, “Why the Cost of AMT Relief Should Be Included in Estimates of the Cost of Extending the President’s Tax Cuts,” Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, revised February 20, 2007.

[6] Joint Committee on Taxation, “Macroeconomic Analysis of Various Proposals to Provide $500 Billion in Tax Relief,” JCX-4-05, March 1, 2005.

[7] William Gale and Peter Orszag, “Bush Administration Tax Policy: Effects on Long-Term Growth,” Tax Notes, October 18, 2004.

[8] Alan J. Auerbach, “The Bush Tax Cuts and National Saving,” National Tax Journal, September 2002.

South Side fan kicked out of SoxFest for wearing sleeves - TheHeckler.com Chicago White Sox news

South Side fan kicked out of SoxFest for wearing sleeves - TheHeckler.com Chicago White Sox news
An overdressed White Sox fan was kicked out of this weekend's 2008 SoxFest for wearing sleeves, a major faux pas in Sox Nation. Joe Malonecki refused to honor the event's dress code and insisted on wearing a shirt with sleeves, rather than the preferred wife beater-style. Malonecki blamed a simple misinterpretation for the mistake.

"They said the event was supposed to be classy this year," said Malonecki while pacing back and forth outside the Palmer House Hilton, host of this year's SoxFest. "So I wore my T-shirt that looks like a tux. I didn't know it was supposed to be sleeveless casual like all the other years."

Malonecki also said he didn't ask for a refund for his admission.

"Kenny Williams needs the cash more than I do," Malonecki said. "All the die-hards know that."

To avoid similar confusion at next year's SoxFest, Malonecki plans to leave several wardrobe changes in his El Camino, which he usually parks about a mile away at a discounted lot.

By Brad Zibung, editor in chief. Click here for a radio version of this breaking news.

Williams doesn't need bullet proof vest at SoxFest after all - TheHeckler.com Chicago White Sox news

Williams doesn't need bullet proof vest at SoxFest after all - TheHeckler.com Chicago White Sox news

The Official Site of The Boston Red Sox: Official Info: Press Release

The Official Site of The Boston Red Sox: Official Info: Press Release
Red Sox acquire righthanded pitcher David Aardsma from Chicago White Sox for righthanders Willy Mota and Miguel Socolovich

AlterNet: Blogs: PEEK: Sen. Boxer Slams EPA Administrator for Redacting Documents With Duct Tape

AlterNet: Blogs: PEEK: Sen. Boxer Slams EPA Administrator for Redacting Documents With Duct Tape: "'This is information the people deserve to have. And this is not the way we should run the greatest government in the world,' said Boxer."

AlterNet: Blogs: PEEK: Top Climate Expert: Bush White House Edits Testimony of Government Scientists

AlterNet: Blogs: PEEK: Top Climate Expert: Bush White House Edits Testimony of Government Scientists

By Amanda Terkel, Think Progress
Posted on January 28, 2008, Printed on January 28, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.thinkprogress.org//75172/

In 2006, the government's top global warming researcher, James Hansen, revealed the government's efforts to muzzle him from speaking out about climate change. NASA political appointees reviewed all his lectures, papers, and requests for interviews from journalists.

In a new e-mail, Hansen reveals that the censoring is not only happening to him, but to all government scientists. He writes that the White House Office of Management and Budget reviews all scientific testimony to make sure that it's "consistent with the President's budget":

Do you know that before a government scientist testifies to Congress his/her testimony is typically reviewed and edited by the White House Office of Management and Budget? When I asked for a justification, I was told that a government scientist's testimony "needs to be consistent with the President's budget".
Huh? There have never been any budget numbers in my testimony or in the testimony of most scientists. And OMB's editing of the scientific content is invariably designed to make the testimony fit better with the position of the political party in power (yes, it is a bi-partisan problem). Where is it stated or implied in the Constitution that the Executive Branch should have such authority? (Actually, does the Constitution not vest control of the purse strings to Congress?) Why does not Congress get incensed about this and fight back?

In October, Dr. Julie Gerberding, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, had her congressional testimony on the "Human Impacts of Global Warming" "eviscerated" by the OMB. The final version had almost no references to the impacts of global warming.

In Jan. 2007, a survey found that 46 percent of government scientists "personally experienced pressure to eliminate the words 'climate change,' 'global warming,' or other similar terms from a variety of communications."

Amanda Terkel is Deputy Research Director at the Center for American Progress and serves as Deputy Editor for The Progress Report and ThinkProgress.org at the Center for American Progress.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.thinkprogress.org//75172/

AlterNet: Water: Fabled Vacationland on the Verge of Water Collapse

AlterNet: Water: Fabled Vacationland on the Verge of Water Collapse: "Across the Mediterranean, water is being pumped out of the earth at an unsustainable pace."

AlterNet: Environment: Eating As If the Climate Mattered

AlterNet: Environment: Eating As If the Climate Mattered: "Changing what we eat can help alleviate one of the most serious global environmental problems."

AlterNet: Water: China's Unquenchable Thirst

AlterNet: Water: China's Unquenchable Thirst: "Freshwater is the resource most strained by China's staggering growth over the last 20 years."

» Text messages bust mayor for adultery, perjury | ZDNet Government | ZDNet.com

» Text messages bust mayor for adultery, perjury | ZDNet Government | ZDNet.com
If this was not already clear, the message is coming through loud and clear today. If you’re the mayor of a major American city or, say, his chief of staff … if you’re a public employee using government-supplied computers, pagers, cellphones, cybersex is just a bad idea.

In a special investigation, the Detroit Free Press has exposed Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick as not only a text-happy horndog but also a perjurer. The paper got ahold of some 14,000 text message exchanges between Kilpatrick and chief of staff Christine Beatty. The contents of those messages has set Detroit abuzz.

The two testified in a whistleblower trial that they were not having a relationship and that they did not fire deputy police chief Gary Brown in 2003. The IMs expose both of these assertions as lies.

It seems Brown and mayoral bodyguard Harold Nelthrope were part of an investigation into the mayor’s security team, an investigation that could have exposed the affair. They were fired — Beatty recalls the “decision that we made to fire Gary Brown” in one IM — before they got too close.

But onto the love chat.

April 8, 2003: Beatty: “And, did you miss me, sexually?” Kilpatrick: “Hell yeah! You couldn’t tell. I want some more. ”

Oct. 16, 2002: Kilpatrick: “I’ve been dreaming all day about having you all to myself for 3 days. Relaxing, laughing, talking, sleeping and making love.”

The paper said many more of the messages were very sexually explicit but declined to release most of those.

Kirkpatrick has fought like hell to stop these messages from getting out. The city fought in court to keep them out of the hands of the former cops’ lawyers and went back to court to block a subpoena by the Detroit Free Press.

The two could be charged with felony perjury and if convicted would face a maximum of 15 years in prison. Kilpatrick could also face disbarment by the state Bar Association for lying under oath.

The city eventually settled with the cops for $9 million, which the paper said is a financial blow to a struggling city with huge unemployment, especially since the suit might have been settled for a quarter of that years ago.

During the trial, Kilpatrick expressed outrage that an affair was alleged:

I think it was pretty demoralizing to her — you have to know her — but it’s demoralizing to me as well,” he said. “My mother is a congresswoman. There have always been strong women around me. My aunt is a state legislator. I think it’s absurd to assert that every woman that works with a man is a whore. I think it’s disrespectful not just to Christine Beatty but to women who do a professional job that they do every single day. And it’s also disrespectful to their families as well.

The ultimate blow to taxpayers: Because they were sued in their official capacities, Kilpatrick and Beatty didn’t have to pay a penny of the settlement. If convicted of perjury, though, the mayor, not the taxpayers, will do the prison time.

» Judge says Patriot Act allows warrantless phone, email taps | ZDNet Government | ZDNet.com

» Judge says Patriot Act allows warrantless phone, email taps | ZDNet Government | ZDNet.com

Hassan Abu-Jihaad was a sailor who allegedly leaked a Navy document to a suspected terror group in London. He’s currently on trial in federal court in Connecticut for disclosing national-defense information and his trial is slated for Feb. 25. His lawyers attempted to argue that the evidence should be suppressed because it was obtained by intercepting his phone calls and obtaining emails, pursuant to the USA Patriot Act.

Abu-Jihaad argued that those portions of the Patriot Act are unconstitutional, citing a ruling by an Oregon district court which struck down key provisions.

U.S. District Court Judge Mark Kravitz, said he disagreed with that decision, and found that the Act strikes a “reasonable” balance “between an individual’s important interest in privacy and the government’s legitimate need to obtain foreign intelligence information.” Thus the Act complies with the Fourth Amendment, the judge ruled, the Associated Press reported.

Kravitz said the law remains focused on foreign intelligence gathering, but defines a foreign power to include groups engaged in international terrorism. He said the law still has numerous safeguards, including the need for an independent judicial officer to approve surveillance.

As far as that Oregon decision goes, the administration is appealing U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken’s decision that the Patriot Act’s authorization of secret searches and wiretapping to gather criminal evidence violates the Fourth Amendment.

» US Government seeks to invest $6 Billion in security by obscurity | Threat Chaos | ZDNet.com

» US Government seeks to invest $6 Billion in security by obscurity | Threat Chaos | ZDNet.com

According to the Wall Street Journal this morning the Bush administration is pushing to spend $6 billion on cyber security in one year! They claim that US telecom systems are not adequately protected and that they need to spend this money to protect it. Just one problem, the government is not revealing to Congress just how these funds will be spent.

First of all let’s put some perspective around the size of this budget. $6 billion is larger than the entire industry for firewalls. That’s right, the total sales of firewalls from Check Point, Cisco, Juniper, Watchguard, Sonicwall, and twenty other vendors, world wide, is less than $6 Billion. The entire security industry for products is less than $24 Billion.

So just how could the Federal Government spend $6 Billion on cyber security? They are not saying. They are asking Congress to buy a pig in a poke. Of course you will see the DHS claiming that these new investments must remain secret to be effective. I beg to differ. There is *no* security in secrecy when it comes to effective cyber defenses. Just as the best security in cryptography is to use almost impossible to break but completely transparent encryption schemes, the best security for networks and systems is that which can not be penetrated even if every detail is published and open.

Congress should stick to their guns and refuse to grant funds for secret cyber defense solutions. Yes, investment is needed - more in new policies and rigid enforcement that anything else. But granting a carte blanche to the Department of Homeland Security for $6 Billion a year in budget will result in only one thing: a new cyber bureaucracy.

Transparency is good for security. The administration should earmark these funds for specific departments and specific security measures. Otherwise there will be no metrics, no accountability, and they will be back at the trough next year asking for money to accomplish more secret goals.

» Here’s why I predict iPhone will come down to $299 within a few months | IP Telephony, VoIP, Broadband | ZDNet.com

» Here’s why I predict iPhone will come down to $299 within a few months | IP Telephony, VoIP, Broadband | ZDNet.com

With his customary deftness, my CNET colleague Tom Krazit mashes up some numbers from AT&T’s earnings call this week with other numbers from Apple iPhoneiphone23.jpg sales and projected sales reports.

Tom’s conclusion: iPhone sales are slowing, especially in AT&T’s sales channels.

OK, let us take that as fact. Where does this lead us?

First it would be helpful to understand why this appears to be happening.

I think that in terms of iPhone sales, Apple is right at a “crossing the chasm” moment. First coined in 19 by author Geoffrey Moore, “crossing the chasm” can refer to the place in a tech product life cycle where the early adopters have all bought the product and now said product must cross over to the mainstream.

The iPhone is right at that point. Most everyone who simply had to have an iPhone now has one. But to vigorously expand its user base, iPhone needs to harvest users who aren’t tied down to AT&T and are a while from cycling out of their two-year agreements.

And in an economy that appears to be headed for megastress, Apple will need to lessen the $399.99pain of buying an iPhone.

The pump needs to be primed.

We’re talking simple economics, here, people. iPhone will come down to $299.00. And I am saying sooner rather than later. A few months at most-no later than late May of this year, which would mark a year from iPhone’s crazed debut.

Greece arrests man suspected of major data hacks | Tech News on ZDNet

Greece arrests man suspected of major data hacks | Tech News on ZDNet: "Greek police said on Friday they have arrested a man suspected of selling corporate secrets from France's Dassault Group, including data on weapons systems."

Babe Ruth's Nephew Convicted in IRS Tax Scam - TaxProf Blog via MySpace News

Babe Ruth's Nephew Convicted in IRS Tax Scam - TaxProf Blog via MySpace News: "George Herman Ruth, 54, the nephew and namesake of baseball Hall-of-Famer Babe Ruth, was convicted by a federal district court jury in New Jersey of scheming to defraud the IRS of $360,000 by preparing fictitious tax returns while already serving a prison sentence. The jury found that Ruth and his co-defendant prepared false tax returns in their and others' names, including those of other inmates, used third parties to deposit the refunds into various bank accounts, and transferred the funds into their prison commissary accounts."

Scam Artists Jump on Tax Rebate Plan

Scam Artists Jump on Tax Rebate Plan
Con artists in Missouri are exploiting consumers' hopes of receiving hundreds of dollars in tax rebates -- proposed under last week's federal economic stimulus package -- in their latest scheme.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) today warned taxpayers that scam artists are contacting consumers at home and claiming to be with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The con artists tell consumers they need their Social Security and bank account numbers to send their rebate checks.

But this is simply a ploy to steal consumers' identity, FBI officials said.

"They're calling people on the phone and asking for their personal information, and the people are thinking they're going to get some money quicker than they normally would," Special Agent Jeff Lanza, spokesman with the FBI Bureau in Kansas City, told WDAF-TV.

Lanza said four Kansas City consumers have received these calls – and his office is worried some unsuspecting taxpayers might fall for this scam.

"It's got credibility because it's been in the news," Lanza told reporters. "Everyone is talking about the rebate. They'll probably get more people to respond because of that."

Lanza, however, said the IRS would never ask consumers for such personal information over the phone or through e-mail. Neither would any other governmental agency.

And Congress has not yet approved the tax-rebate plan.

Consumers who receive these calls should immediately hang up, FBI officials said.

IRS: Social Security tax fraud hits Georgia - Atlanta Business Chronicle:

IRS: Social Security tax fraud hits Georgia - Atlanta Business Chronicle:

The Internal Revenue Service has discovered a scam in Georgia involving filing a federal income tax return to get a refund on Social Security taxes paid.

The IRS said the scheme usually works by the victim paying the scam operator a fee for preparation of a false refund claim and possibly a percentage of any refund received. This hoax fleeces the victims for the up-front preparation fee. Plus, the law does not allow such a refund of Social Security taxes paid, so participants could be subject to a penalty for filing a false tax return.

"The IRS is very concerned that some people in the metro Atlanta area have fallen for this scam," said IRS spokesman Mark Green. "If something sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Getting a refund of Social Security taxes is generally not an option and, in this case, it's not legal."

The federal government discovered the scam when workers in the Atlanta IRS office noticed several people coming in and asking for copies of their Social Security income statements. When questioned, some of the people explained a person was preparing refund claims for them.

The IRS said it is still gathering information and working to stop the scam. But taxpayers who got a refund from one of the false claims before the scam was detected must return the funds. If they have cashed the check, the IRS said it will usually work with them to arrange an immediate return of the funds.