October 9, 2008 archive

Docudharma Times Thursday October 9



They Are Not Terrorist And Never Have Been

So, Why Not Let Them Go?

Because Bush Wants Them To Be Terrorists

Innocence Be Damned.




Thursday’s Headlines:

Appeals court blocks release of Guantanamo detainees

Medvedev promotes new security pact

Ukraine’s Orange revolution victors to become election rivals after coalition collapses

Criticism of perks provokes uproar in Iranian parliament

As violence drops, Iraqi tribes begin to make amends

Holy war strikes India

Leaders of Thailand’s anti-government movement will surrender

Sudan makes case abroad while still bombing Darfur

Zimbabwe inflation hits new high

Rampant violence is Latin America’s ‘worst epidemic’

U.S. May Take Ownership Stake in Banks

 

By EDMUND L. ANDREWS and MARK LANDLER

Published: October 8, 2008  

WASHINGTON – Having tried without success to unlock frozen credit markets, the Treasury Department is considering taking ownership stakes in many United States banks to try to restore confidence in the financial system, according to government officials.

Treasury officials say the just-passed $700 billion bailout bill gives them the authority to inject cash directly into banks that request it. Such a move would quickly strengthen banks’ balance sheets and, officials hope, persuade them to resume lending. In return, the law gives the Treasury the right to take ownership positions in banks, including healthy ones.

China’s small dairy farmers caught in milk scandal

Consumer anxiety and stricter milk collection rules are threatening their livelihoods. Analysts say it’s unlikely small farmers were involved in the melamine scandal.  

By John M. Glionna, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

October 9, 2008  

PANZHUANGZI, CHINA — Before dawn each day, Gao Penghong and his wife join scores of other farmers in this dairy-rich village who must walk their cows to a local milk collection station because of new safety requirements.

A byproduct of China’s deadly tainted-milk scandal, the mile-long walks to the station come as officials push for more critical supervision of dairy farmers. Only weeks ago, farmers were free to milk their cows at home and deliver the product in heavy metal containers.

But now some observers see dairy farmers, who exist at the lowest level of the milk production cycle, as having the most financial incentive to spike milk to boost protein readings. Other food safety experts say it’s unlikely that small-time farmers are behind the scandal, because they generally lack the knowledge to cause such widespread contamination.

 

USA

U.S. Urgently Reviews Policy On Afghanistan



 By Karen DeYoung

Washington Post Staff Writer

Thursday, October 9, 2008; Page A01  


The White House has launched an urgent review of Afghanistan policy, fast-tracked for completion in the next several weeks, amid growing concern that the administration lacks a comprehensive strategy for the foundering war there and as intelligence officials warn of a rapidly worsening situation on the ground.

Underlying the deliberations is a nearly completed National Intelligence Estimate on Afghanistan and the Pakistan-based extremists fighting there. Analysts have concluded that reconstituted elements of al-Qaeda and the resurgent Taliban are collaborating with an expanding network of militant groups, making the counterinsurgency war infinitely more complicated.

States’ Actions to Block Voters Appear Illegal

By IAN URBINA

Published: October 8, 2008


Tens of thousands of eligible voters in at least six swing states have been removed from the rolls or have been blocked from registering in ways that appear to violate federal law, according to a review of state records and Social Security data by The New York Times.

The actions do not seem to be coordinated by one party or the other, nor do they appear to be the result of election officials intentionally breaking rules, but are apparently the result of mistakes in the handling of the registrations and voter files as the states tried to comply with a 2002 federal law, intended to overhaul the way elections are run.

Muse in the Morning

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
Muse in the Morning

A Transition through Poetry XXVI

Art Link

Mouth

The Mind’s Mouth

After the eyes

look inward

the voice must

speak outward

Introspection begets conception

Reflection instigates creation

The soul must speak

its truth

–Robyn Elaine Serven

–January 6, 2006

“We will no longer be a party to something that’s so unjust.”

 

We will no longer be a party to something that’s so unjust,” Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart said in a news conference on Wednesday.

Chicago’s Daily Herald reports that Dart cited the “economic crisis” as the reason he has called a halt to evictions until lenders can prove the foreclosed home’s occupant has been notified.

“We have to be sure that when we are doing this – and we are destroying some people’s lives – we better be darned sure we’re talking about the right people,” Dart was quoted saying in the AP story.

Dart explained that he ordered his deputies to stop evicting people from homes in foreclosure because many of the people ordered evicted are renters who have paid their rent and have done nothing wrong. He explained that tenants with their rent fully paid, go to work in the morning and then return to discover they have been evicted. The authorities cart the possessions of renters of foreclosed homes out to the curbside and by the time they return home, everything has disappeared.

“The meager possessions they have are gone,” he said. “This is happening too often.”

Overnight Caption Contest

Why the panic won’t stop

Original article, by Lee Sustar, via socialistworker.org:

Tomorrow, tomorrow

I love ya, tomorrow

You’re always

a day away!



– From the Broadway show Annie

SO MUCH for that $700 billion bailout that was supposed to save world capitalism.

Romance Language Pony Party

Because I’m tired of English.

Pony Party is an Open Thread.  Please Do Not Rec the party.

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