Art Link![]() The Dark Side of Redworld
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Please join us inside to celebrate our various muses…
Apr 14 2008
Art Link![]() The Dark Side of Redworld
|
Please join us inside to celebrate our various muses…
Apr 14 2008
Sign up for their Newsletter or just save their site as a favorite and visit each week to find just abit of the Real History that helps bring about needed Change and Corrective Direction of a Country, World, and Democracies, forcing Democracies to become so and maintain their Freedoms.
You can find this weeks newsletter here of which I’ve borrowed a few moments of to pass on to you, below.
Apr 14 2008
Excerpted from Burning the Midnight Oil for Progressive Populism,
in the Burning the Midnight Oil blog-within-a-blog, hosted by kos,
though to the best of my knowledge he doesn’t know it.
So, how is our fight going a Progressive Populist People’s Chamber?
I did a round up before the Ohio primary … and Ohio is where I live, so I naturally start here (TGAL) … Burning the Midnight Oil for Edwards’ Victories in the Fall
Two of these are listed among some MSM lists of House Races most likely to flip:
John Boccieri, Democratic Challenger for OH-16
John Boccieri’s “Get Involved” page
and
Mary Jo Kilroy, Democratic Challenger for OH-15
Join Team Kilroy Sign-Up Page
If you are of a mind to be pushing now in the most marginal races, those are two good ones to support.
Also requiring mention when thinking of flipping seats from Actual Republicans to Actual, Real Deal Democrats, friend of the EENR, Larry Kissell, Democratic Challenger in NC-08.
But the list, as the cliche tells us, goes on.
Apr 14 2008
One would think that a person who has lived through as much history as John McThuselah would know a bit more about it, but as we are all too painfully aware, historical savvy isn’t exactly a wingnut strong suit. It’s thus sorta-understandable – even as it remains completely unforgivable – that Angry Gramps would be unable to distinguish between Sunnis and Shias, Arabs and Persians, or really, anyone east of the Ural Mountains. To the bomb bomb bomb, bomb bomb Iran set, “they” are all the same anyway, so any historical evidence that might indicate an outcome (of say, an invasion) other than their liberators-and-roses predictions can be safely disregarded.
Thankfully, we here in the reality-based community know better. Join me, if you will, in the Cave of the Moonbat, for a look at Iran in the 20th century – and hopefully a slightly better explanation for why the US government is not particularly loved in that part of the world than that old patriotic pabulum, “they hate us for our freedoms.”
Apr 14 2008
There are some pretty graphic descriptions in here. I put them in to show just what resulted from the discussions and decisions of top administration officials, and how it is a big fucking deal.
**********
Besides the fact that the media here in the United States doesn’t seem to think it is important that Bush, Rice, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Tenet (not to mention Gonzales, Yoo, most likely Miers and others) spent way too much time discussing, debating, justifying and approving how much torture is too much torture, it is pretty damn important.
It also matters that it is not being confronted forcefully and with more than just mere “strongly worded letters” amongst this shockingly blanket burying this atrocity that the world now knows runs straight to mister Bush himself. No matter how many times the euphemistic “enhanced interrogation techniques” is used by the same people who applaud a fictional “badass” like Jack Bauer for doing “whatever it takes” to stop that ticking time bomb from going off.
Apr 14 2008
For the sixth year in a row, the percentage of uninsured Americans is on the rise. Just in 2006, 2.2 million Americans joined the ranks of the uninsured. Back in 2002, The Institute of Medicine released its second installment of a six part report on what happens to thousands of Americans who lack health care coverage in America. The result was shocking, 18,000 Americans die every year because they lack health care coverage.
Apr 14 2008
“What are you writing about, Honey?”
“I’m writing about what separates man from beast.”
“Really? Well… I’m going out to feed our live horses while you beat that dead one.”
She has a point.
Just as I once learned that I was not, in fact, the inventor of the ham and cheese sandwich, I find once again that I am late to the party. The search for profound and essential differences between man and beast is not new.
Should that stop me from flailing about? Should that stop me from flopping around in the mud, gasping for air like a dying guppy? Where some see a dead horse, I see a piƱata.
If you want, grab a stick, step around the dead horse, and we’ll see if we can’t whack a little candy loose.
Apr 14 2008
I knew it, I just knew it. When you have a really good day and create some of that White Magic in the world, Satan’s minions seek you out. Being pretty sure I would owe tribute to the fuehrer this year I put it off the extraction of funds from my account to the account of Satan’s minions. The sum came to more than I have and it contained yet another evil twist to boot.
Apr 14 2008
Apr 14 2008
The pictures that zozie linked to in the diary “Photos from Iraq” brought back memories of Desert Storm. One memory, in particular, still haunts me. I’d like to share it with you…
I served on the ground there, flown in with one of the first units to deploy to Saudi Arabia. When we got off the plane, we didn’t know what to expect. We thought we would be shot at immediately. We soon discovered that our worst enemies were going to be the insane heat, dehydration, and boredom.
When the ground war finally began, my unit was in a task force that breached through a belt of landmines. The day was black as night, thick with smoke from burning oil rigs.
Apr 13 2008
Weekend News Digest is an Open Thread
| From Yahoo News Top Stories |
1 Hadley: `Cop-out’ to skip Olympics start
Associated Press
8 minutes ago
| WASHINGTON – It would be a “cop-out” for countries to skip the opening ceremonies at the Beijing Olympics as a way of protesting China’s crackdown in Tibet, President Bush’s national security adviser said Sunday.
The kind of “quiet diplomacy” that the U.S. is practicing is a better way to send a message to China’s leaders rather than “frontal confrontation,” Stephen Hadley said. President Bush has given no indication he will skip the event. “I don’t view the Olympics as a political event,” Bush said this past week. “I view it as a sporting event.” The White House has not yet said whether he will attend the opening ceremony on Aug. 8. |
Apr 13 2008
cross posted from The Dream Antilles
The IOC (the “International Olympic Committee”), the group that runs the Olympics, has figured out how to prevent participating athletes from demonstrating for Tibetan freedom and displeasing their Chinese hosts. The age old tactic: a “chilling effect” on free speech.
It’s relatively simple: the IOC tells athletes that they have a right to free speech, but they don’t have the right to make “propaganda.” IOC won’t define line between the two. But if an athlete so much as steps even with one toe into the latter, s/he’s out. of. here. Goodbye. Put simply, the IOC doesn’t need explicitly to forbid certain kinds of free speech. It can accomplish the same, desired result by harshly and intentionally chilling it.
A definition of “chilling effect”:
A chilling effect is a term in United States law that describes a situation where speech or conduct is suppressed or limited by fear of penalization at the hands of an individual or group.
And that, folks, is precisely what’s going on with athletes’ free speech at the Beijing Olympics.
The Times reports:
Athletes who display Tibetan flags at Olympic venues – including in their own rooms – could be expelled from this summer’s Games in Beijing under anti-propaganda rules.
Jacques Rogge, the president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), said that competitors were free to express their political views but faced sanctions if they indulged in propaganda.
Got that? Expression of political views: good. Indulging in propaganda: bad.
But, you’re asking, is there a difference between the two? How does one know if one is expressing free speech or propagandizing? What’s the difference?
The question of what will constitute propaganda when the Games are on in August and what will be considered opinion under IOC rules is one vexing many in the Olympic movement. The Olympic Charter bans any kind of “demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda” in any Olympic venue or area. /snip
The IOC did not specify whether a Chinese athlete or a foreign competitor of Tibetan origin flying the Tibetan flag would be regarded as patriotic or propagandist. A spokeswoman said that there had been no discussion internally or with the Chinese authorities about use of the Tibetan national flag. Asked whether athletes would be allowed to hang the flag in their rooms, she said: “The village is an Olympic venue so it falls under the same rules and regulations of any venue which would mean that anything in there would be judged on whether it was a provocative propaganda initiative.”
The fact that the IOC has still not qualified the exact interpretation of “propaganda” means that some athletes remain confused about what they can say during the 16-day event without being sent home or stripped of a medal.
Unfurling Free Tibet banners or wearing Save Darfur T-shirts at Olympic venues are acts likely to be regarded as a breach of the charter, which was introduced after the American athletes Tommie Smith and John Carlos gave the Black Power salute on the podium at the 1968 Games in Mexico City.
So, as of right now, there’s no official definition of what constitutes “propaganda” and how propaganda might be distinguished from “free speech.”
The consequences of uttering or otherwise expressing “propaganda,” however, are quite dire. This means that as things stand now, there is an enormous “chilling effect” repressing legitimate, free speech.
No athlete who has trained for his/her entire life is going to jeopardize participation in the Olympics by testing the definition of “propaganda” by hanging a Tibetan flag in a dorm room, by waving the flag on a victory lap, by speaking out about Tibet to the press, by showing a picture of the Dalai Lama, by wearing Tibetan malas, by wearing a Tibet hat or headband or t-shirt. Why? Because that might be considered to be propaganda by the IOC.
So far, the IOC has been very much China’s lap dog. As the Times reported:
A spokeswoman said that there had been no discussion internally or with the Chinese authorities about use of the Tibetan national flag.
You might wonder what this question of definition in the IOC rules has to do with China. In fact, it has everything to do with it. The IOC does not dare to step on China’s sensitivities about the topic. In these circumstances, the message to athletes is incredibly simple. STFU about Tibet. Or go home. Free speech be damned.
The IOC doesn’t need to enact a gag rule for its athletes. That would be assailed as a “prior restraint” on free speech. No, when the stakes are this high, a harsh “chilling effect” accomplishes precisely the same goal. So much for the so-called “Olympic ideal.”