Hate. And Terrorism.

(6PMish – promoted by On The Bus)

The Department of Defence defines Al Qaeda as “a radical Sunni Muslim umbrella organization established to recruit young Muslims into the Afghani Mujahideen and is aimed to establish Islamist states throughout the world, overthrow ‘un-Islamic regimes’, expel US soldiers and Western influence from the Gulf, and capture Jerusalem as a Muslim city.”

They’re probably right. I think that’s a good assessment. But, it’s pretty much on a par with defining the objectives of groups like Fred Phelps and his band of christian(?) nutbars, or Aryan Nation, or Ann Coulters or Pat Robertsons followers, and bears no relation to these groups status or non-status as representative of the thinking and intentions of all people in their respective societies – Al Qaeda in Islamic countries, and the groups I mentioned in western Christian societies.

There are crazy fringe fanatics in every society. Al Qaeda is probably a little bigger that the three I just mentioned, but is probably not anywhere the size of the group that supports bush’s hegemonic fanaticism. There are no hordes of billions of insane Islamic killers out there about to wash over us in a tidal wave of massacre.

Maintaining some  perspective is important here, I think. There is a fringe group of fanatics, called Al Qaeda. That is what we are dealing with.

So, what are some things we as a society can do about them? How can we stop them and live peacefully with Islamic countries?

On June 23, 2006 author Salman Rushdie (“The Satanic Verses”) was interviewed by Bill Moyers. The video is here. Transcript here. Rushdie drew a very apt and instructive analogy to the long history of ‘terrorism’ troubles Britain had to deal with from the IRA that can be of help in understanding what we are dealing with when considering how to deal with Al Qaeda:

SALMAN RUSHDIE: There are people, as I say, you have to defeat, you know. But I’m talking about the enormous culture of which they’re the pimple on the nose of it. And I think in the end the way in which radical Islam will be defeated is when ordinary Islam, you know, when the regular world of the Muslim faith comes to reject the idea that they will be represented by, defined by that kind of extremist behavior.

BILL MOYERS: But many people say that that kind of extremist behavior is part and parcel of the ideology of the heart of Islam. What do you–

SALMAN RUSHDIE: I don’t think necessarily. I mean, the IRA was not intrinsically– was not somehow arising from something intrinsic to Catholicism. And actually the IRA is a relevant example. Because when the Catholics of Northern Ireland became disillusioned by being represented by the IRA that is what brought the IRA to the peace table. At that moment their power disappeared. And that’s why I’m saying that it is in a way incumbent on the Muslim world to reject Islamic radicalism, because that is what will remove the power of Islamic radicalism.

BILL MOYERS: Is America doomed to live under a fatwah as you did? Under the threat of terrorism for a long time, as you did?

SALMAN RUSHDIE: Yes, I think. But I mean, I think everywhere is dangerous now. You know the world is not a safe place; and there are no safe corners of it. And actually, there probably never have been. I think, in a way, America was insulated from that for awhile by the enormous power of America. But even that no longer insulates. So I think we do have to accept that the world is like that now. And I think  ‘ one of the reasons I can say this is that, having lived in England during the years of the of the IRA campaign  ‘ it became something that people, in a way, came to accept. That every so often a bomb would go off in a shopping mall, shopping center, and in the end, people refused to allow that to change their daily lives and just proceeded. And I think that refusal to be deflected from the path of normality also played a great deal of the role in the defeat of the IRA, that they didn’t achieve their goal. And I think it is, I mean, it’s something I’ve written quite a bit about, that the answer to terrorism is not to be terrorized, and it becomes important to continue–

The craziness that’s been quoted from the Koran by many about ‘Islamofascists’ with the goal of either converting the world to Islam or killing all infidels is just that, craziness on a par with nutty stuff in the bible, and is no more representative of the thinking or of the intentions or of the desires of the average person in Islamic countries than Phelps’ or Pat Robertsons’ or Aryan Nations’ or Ann Coulters’ idiotic interpretations of the bible are.

Stephen M. Walt – professor of international affairs at Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, writing for the Boston Globe in his article Misreading the tea leaves: US missteps on foreign policy on October 5, 2006 observes that:

JUST WHEN YOU think that US foreign policy couldn’t possibly get worse, the Bush administration manages to take it down another notch…. These setbacks occurred because the Bush administration’s foreign policy rests on a deep misreading of contemporary world politics. Conducting foreign policy on the basis of flawed premises is like designing an airplane while ignoring gravity: it won’t get off the ground, and if it does, it is bound to crash.

Independent surveys of global opinion and separate studies by the Defense Science Board and the State Department showed that anti-Americanism is primarily a reaction to specific US policies. Yet Bush and his advisers never considered whether a different set of policies might reduce global opposition and enhance US security.

To reiterate Rushdies point: “…it is in a way incumbent on the Muslim world to reject Islamic radicalism, because that is what will remove the power of Islamic radicalism”, but if our foreign policies, taken beyond all reason by bush, continue to drive the average person in Islamic societies to supporting Al Qaeda because they see them as opposing the bush administration and US foreign policies pursued by all administrations left or right, democrat or republican, of the past half century, then it is going to take them that much longer to “reject Islamic radicalism”.

The Council on Foreign Relations recently commented that:

The declassified judgments from the National Intelligence Estimate on terrorism caused a stir in the political world this week, but for most ‘we would guess almost all’ scholars of jihadist terrorism, they are largely uncontroversial. The war in Iraq, the lack of reform in the Muslim world and anger at its endemic corruption and injustice, the pervasiveness of anti-Western sentiment ‘all these have long been identified as major drivers of radical Islamist terror.

In fact, you don’t need an NIE to demonstrate the most controversial judgment ‘that the war in Iraq has worsened the terrorist threat. The official coordinated evaluation by Britain’s domestic security and foreign intelligence services noted that the conflict in Iraq has exacerbated the threat from international terrorism and will continue to have an impact in the long term. This conclusion is echoed by interior ministries, law enforcement agencies and intelligence services in every part of the world.

All of which leads inescapably to a rather uncomfortable and paradoxical conclusion:

It’s been said many times that they attack because “they hate us for our freedoms”.

Not only is that a ridiculous statement on its face. It is absolutely untrue and misleading, and in fact is in diametric opposition to reality:

They attack us because they want the same freedoms we enjoy.

Or used to enjoy. Until lately. Until the dismantling of those freedoms began under the current administration.

As Rushdie observed: ‘the answer to terrorism is not to be terrorized, and it becomes important to continue’. Dismantling freedoms here is not the way.

Working together peacefully with the enormous Islamic societies is the way to live peacefully with those societies.

Far from appeasing Al Qaeda and terrorism, doing so would eliminate Al Qaeda.



And not engaging in terrorism would be an important first step towards eliminating terrorism.

—————————-

Action: Helping Families Harmed in Iowa Immigration Raid

(2:00pm EST – promoted by Nightprowlkitty)

Over at Standing Firm you can read the terrible story of how our federal government is dealing with the problems of immigration — by coming into small towns and raiding them, tearing families apart, and terrorizing an entire community.

On Monday, May 12, federal immigration authorities raided the Agriprocessors, Inc. meat packing plant in Postville, Iowa. This massive raid led to the arrest of more than 300 workers and quickly threw this small town of less than 3,000 people into chaos.

Throughout the last week family members have been desperate to get information about their loved ones, children are staying away from school for fear of leaving their homes, attorneys have been attempting with limited success to gain access to workers being detained by federal authorities, and the entire town faces an uncertain future. Fears are growing that the detained workers will soon be shipped across the country to be prepared for deportation without being able to speak with attorneys or family members.

Before I go any further into this story, there’s something we call can do to help:

The community of Postville is also organizing a humanitarian response to the raid. Please spread the word to individuals or institutions that would be willing to send donations to support families impacted by the raid. Donations should be sent to:

St. Bridget’s Hispanic Ministry Fund

c/o Sister Mary McCauley

PO Box 369

Postville, IA 52162

(mark “Postville Raid” in the memo)

For further information about providing material or monetary support, please call Sister Mary McCauley at (563) 537-0002.

For some context, here’s an editorial from the Lancaster Eagle Gazette.  Regardless of your views on illegal immigration, the actions of our federal government are nowhere near the best we can do in dealing with this issue:

ENFORCEMENT alone won’t solve problems. The repercussions of the workplace raid in Postville, Iowa, this past Monday, the largest single-site raid in the nation, are wrenching on so many levels.

Federal immigration agents and other law officers who descended on Agriprocessors Inc., the kosher slaughterhouse in Postville, were doing their jobs. They executed search warrants related to criminal activity, as well as a civil search warrant for people believed to be in the country illegally.

But that does not diminish the painful fallout from escalating raids resulting at least in part from the failure of Congress and the president to repair the nation’s broken immigration system. Such raids, though record in size, ultimately do little to resolve how this nation should sensibly regulate immigration levels or how it should address the 12 million illegal immigrants already in the U.S., many with children who are U.S. citizens. Voters should make it clear in the 2008 elections that they expect their elected representatives to pass practical, humane reforms.

Although a lot is left to be sorted out, consider:

The detention of hundreds of people has created turmoil for their families. Frightened residents of the northeast Iowa town gathered at St. Bridget’s Catholic Church for assistance. Children, picked up after school by relatives, don’t know the fate of their parents. Relatives and friends anxiously await word about those detained.

The future of some businesses seems uncertain. While rabbis told the Register on Monday that they were confident the plant, opened in 1987, would continue to operate, the raid disrupted business at least temporarily. Meanwhile, Hispanic businesses in downtown Postville were shuttered on Monday, including a grocery store and restaurant.

The community might lose vitality if it ends up with fewer residents and places of employment. Some of its ethnic diversity might be lost as well. Most of the detainees have said they are Guatemalans. Others are from Mexico, Israel and Ukraine.

It’s time to look at immigration reform as more than a political problem. It’s an economic and a social problem, as Postville illustrates. The U.S. work force needs the labor of new immigrants as it faces a shortage with baby-boomer retirements. The country needs the vitality that new immigrant bring to communities.

There’s a lot of problems that need solving.  Our wretched and broken immigration laws are one of them.  There were big problems at that meat-packing plant.  Because undocumented workers have to live in the shadows, they are often victim to horrible labor practices.  Strengthening our labor laws and unions would help in this area.  Finding a humane and reasonable policy to deal with the alleged 12 million undocumented workers in this country would help as well.

But raiding towns like this, terrorizing families, Halliburton built detention centers where folks not only do not receive medical care but are actually dying is not the answer.

From the New York Daily News:

The human rights scandal that immigration has become gets worse with every new revelation of official abuse, neglect and lack of accountability.

Over the last couple of weeks, it has become clear that the scandal goes beyond the raids that terrorize thousands of immigrant families, or the hodgepodge of local – and often racist – anti-immigrant laws that have emerged after Congress failed to pass a rational immigration law.

Recent revelations have exposed the blatant disregard for the lives of those detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and its private subcontractors around the country. What goes on inside immigration detention centers points to a moral crisis that threatens to shred the nation’s basic values.

On May 5, New York Times reporter Nina Bernstein told the horror story of mistreatment, neglect and subsequent death of Boubacar Bah, who had been imprisoned at the Elizabeth Detention Center in New Jersey.

The 52-year-old tailor from Guinea, who had overstayed his tourist visa, became one of 66 immigrants who have died – several of them in murky circumstances – while detained in immigration jails.

Shockingly, between January 2004 and November 2007, more detainees have perished while in custody of ICE than in Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo combined.

(emphasis mine)

It’s no different than how we are treating detainees at Gitmo.  We are treating these families as though they are hardened criminals bent on destroying our communities when in fact they work hard and are good neighbors.

Please support the citizens of Postville and please call your Congressional rep to demand we no longer turn away from this issue for fear of alienating voters … that we all deserve good immigration laws and that no one deserves the kind of treatment we are seeing in Potsville, Iowa.

We can do better.  All it takes is for us to come together and demand it.

McCain. Vice Presidential thoughts. Would he? Could he? Maybe… Part 2

I have a question for Dharmite’s everywhere.  As we are all well aware, since WE don’t even have the DNA to think like Republicans, we have to seriously think outside the possible VP contender list, because Republicans may not be able to hit a curve ball but they sure have been really good at throwing them.  Democrats aren’t exactly batting 1.000 against that pitch, either.

We can speculate until the cows come home, (as to why the cows ever left home is something I’m still speculating on, too) but how does one think like a Republican?  How to get inside the insipid mind of the Party of Greed?  Who would want to?  I mean, the pure filth that could stick to you and never wash off might send a mere mortal screaming into the abyss…

If you dare, join me below. Even with the thought that there could be much possible damage inflicted upon myself, I feel someone has to try.  

I’m going in…..

We are all aware that the Neo-Con wing of the Far Reich isn’t particularly enamored with John McCain as their presumptive Presidential Candidate in 2008.  Yet, the voters have had their say and it would seem that Senator McCain will go forward and carry the Republican torch for the 2008 election.

This turn of events has left the Republican brain trust trying their damnedest to find a chink in the armor of the Democratic Candidates.  Even Mr. 28 percent, George W. Bush got in on the act this last week in the now well documented and still playing itself out speech before the Israeli Knesset where our not-so-esteemed President tried to call Democratic Candidates terrahrist appeasers.  

Of course, nothing they have thrown up against the wall at this point is sticking, and their usual slash and burn tactics aren’t getting the attention they were hoping for (yes, even the Republicans are the party of hope this election cycle.  They hope they can survive as a party).  In fact, it’s kind of making them look even more stupid and more out of touch with Americans and by extension, the world than usual.

What to do?  I mean, what would a group of Wingnut Welfare financed think tanks, along with Rove and the once named Stupidest-F**king-Man-in-the-Universe, Douglas Feith come up with to offset the fact that their base simply despises their presumptive Presidential Candidate?  

Here is where it all gets mind numbingly crazy.  However, it might just work…

Here is the list of Republican’s that I listed as possible VP running mates in Republican VP Contenders – Get to know the Enemy – Part 1

Condi Rice

Joe Lieberman

Tom Coburn

Sarah Palin

Tim Pawlenty

Kay Bailey Hutchinson

Jim DeMint

Mitt Romney

Rudy Giuliani

Mike Huckabee

Tom Ridge

Charlie Crist

Colin Powell

Mark Sanford  

Duncan Hunter  

Now, that is a list of some seriously ugly critters (in the world of Democrats), however to Republicans, is there anyone there that inspires the Get-Off-My-Ass-And-Vote-for-McCain-in-November kind of rallying point?

I say No.  Not really.  So, what is missing?

A hero.  A true to life (for Republicans, of course) HERO!

Dare I think this?  Will I continue to be sane once I type the following?  Considering I wasn’t that sane to begin with, I’m going for it.

A military man!  One that has proven he will lie like a rug for the Neo-Con cause!  OF COURSE!

General David Petraeus!  

IRAQ Hero!  Stay the course, etc.  Surge.  We are winning.

The Republican bumper sticker boy himself!

It’s all so greasily ugly on the surface that there has to be something to it! The thought is so completely scummy and vapid that it fits the square peg smoothly into the round hole of Republican emotion.

Have I discovered the Rovian plan?  Has the mindset of the Republican Neo-Con horror been cracked by a mere Progressive?

You tell me.  What do you think?

I’ll be back in a bit.  I think I’ll just go blubber and sputter in the corner for a few.   😉

.

x-posted at eenrblog

Special Treatment For The Royal Lady

Any mention of “For the first time in my adult life, I am really proud of my country.” is ‘low class’. The candidate for change is planning an end-run around Dem primary voters this week. A 41% whipping in West Virginia, a close race in a former stronghold, and sure defeat in Kentucky, probably by double-digits, has the candidate for change spooked.  

 Eight years of George Bush taught me that America is strong enough to survive nearly a decade of inexperience and incompetence. I’m less convinced America can survive another four years of foolishness, and that’s precisely what I see from the Dems.

Eight years too late, the scales have finally fallen from the eyes of many Americans when it comes to the Republican Party. I don’t believe that the current gang is any more ineffective than the last gang. Richard Luger impressed me with his work on non-proliferation. But for the most part Republicans are bums, hypocrites and thieves.

Which brings me to the current crop of Dems. I was thrilled when Jim Webb beat George Allen, but I still think his plan to improve recruiting is second best to that of John McCain. Military families prefer the Webb plan for a variety of reasons, but that doesn’t make the Webb plan better.

Eight years ago I found all talk of a ‘dangerous world’ farcical. After eight years of George Bush, however, the world is indeed much more dangerous. Which is why I and all the folks I know are hoping that Americans do not elect anyone with less management experience than the current clown.

The notion that quoting anti-American statements by the nominee’s wife is somehow ‘off-limits’ is absurd. The candidate for change has been running a campaign against the spouse of his opponent, as much as he has against the candidate herself. How often do we see headlines  screaming about ‘Bill Clinton’ in the press and on blogs?

Michelle Obama campaigns on behalf of her husband every chance she gets. She’s pitching for the job of first lady, yet somehow the candidate wants a press black-out on Michelle’s bizarre remarks.

Frankly, I find Michelle Obama even more cynical and manipulative than her husband. Her statements on camera are not ‘off-limits’ to the media, to the press or to her political opponents. How could they be?

I fully expect to see every McCain blooper and idiotic remark plastered all over the airwaves. Why not? It’s called free speech.

Bill Clinton is fair game; so is Cindy McCain. Suggesting that Michelle Obama isn’t capable of standing up to the scrutiny of the campaign is both insulting and condescending; it speaks volumes about the double-standards the Obama folks are going to demand for themselves in the future.

There’s a mighty shit-storm waiting out there. Many unable to vote in US elections very much hope that you folks will elect someone who doesn’t demand special treatment from the press or opponents. Experience would be a real asset, too.

The Weapon of Young Gods #23: Salvage Some Dignity

You know the kid lied to you today.

About precisely what, now, that’s the trillion-dollar question. Of course at this point, with the case blown wide open again, any new testimony is merely more potentially twisted, invented material. Reed’s will merely top off the vast, pre-existing repository of fiction in the mammoth case file. Hell, what good was interviewing a functioning amnesiac, anyway? Sure, the kid was calm enough, and he seemed genuine most of the time, but the rambling and the monotone were damn near unendurable at best. Completism isn’t professionalism. You need to remember that.

Previous Episode

Not to mention that doing this shit in other jurisdictions is something you’ve never handled well. You saw it coming, though; you knew what making detective meant, and it wouldn’t involve being left the fuck alone to do your job, no matter how often you tried to tell yourself that. You’re not even looking to solve the damn puzzle anymore. You’re just scrounging for the random, bent, unused pieces of indeterminate shape. Collection isn’t investigation, though. You need to remember that, too.

So yes, this was an inconvenience forced on you, thanks in no small part to the unconquerable vagaries of familial connections, naked avarice, egomaniacal entitlement, and crazed addictive personalities. Not to mention the crap-shoot of navigating turf wars between local, state, and federal agencies in the wake of a devastating county-wide bankruptcy.

And yet somehow, this carnival of ineptitude still managed to land at your feet, crawl up your paralyzed pant legs, coil around your neck, and shit its festering best right in your face. Naturally, the most appropriate thing for you to do was share it with someone, so you hustled to finish up at the downtown station, said your seeya-laters to the local Santa Barbarians, and went back to the hotel so you could call Arroyo and unload some of this weirdness on him and pass it off as essential, illuminating material. And why not? It involved his family, doesn’t it?

Yes, it was illegal, Your Honor. I read the fucking textbook, sir, but I claimed the maximum allocation of Extenuating Extra-Legal Circumstances, because even though I was sick to death of this fucking case, it wasn’t in my nature, sir, to let it go cold. I spared you the details, until they become necessary, but I couldn’t spare Officer Arroyo.

So yes, you went right back to your room, even though it was only two-thirty, ordered the required liquid refreshment from room service, and when it came you touched the cool glass container against your forehead as you dialed your own precinct of the Orange County Sheriff’s station and was patched through to your silent junior partner.

“Arroyo.” He sounded tired, though he’d never been the model of attentive gratitude on phone duty. “Mike, it’s Jim. I just sent the Reed kid home.”

“Detective Kelley! Nice to hear from you, sir. You sound, uh, finished for the day.”

“Hardly. You know I’ve got the report and the notes to keep me up all night.”

“What, no pounding State Street? You disappoint me, sir.”

“Get used to it, señor. On my cases there are no perks. Anyway, I assume you’d like to consider the cornucopia of valuable and insightful facts I’ve gleaned from our young friend Roy, wouldn’t you?”

“Sí claro, jefe. How you doin’ back there on Square One?”

“Don’t know yet. How ’bout I run it by you and get a second opinion?”

“Shoot.”

So you told Arroyo everything about the interview, about how the kid was nervous at first, but settled in well. About how Reed tried his best to answer every question concerning the party, concerning the Haynes kid, concerning the violence that allegedly occurred. About how this was difficult because the kid’s memory was an empty alcohol-buggered blank for the most important ten hours in the timeline. About how most of the kids you’d interviewed up to that point had that problem, to varying degrees, especially concerning Reed’s actual presence at the hotel.

“What? No one had previously confirmed he was even there?”

“You read the case notes, Mike. The kids all clammed up.”

“Yeah. Well, good thing my baby sister was so forthcoming then, huh?”

“Uh-huh. Thanks again for making that happen, by the way.”

“Sure thing, sir, but we can’t work with his stuff if he can’t remember anything, can we?”

“Come on, Mike. You know that depends on how it fits into what we’ve already got.”

“Okay, so I haven’t read them all. Those case notes are thicker than Tolstoy.”

“Mike, if you know who Tolstoy is then your reading comprehension skills should be better. But fine, sure. From the top.” You took a quick sip and coughed before rewinding everything.

“We know there was rohypnol present, but we knew that going in. We know our boy was a target in there, too, but whether or not his cover was actually blown is a moot point, since we have no case against the guys he was watching for us. We know that Reed and Haynes left the hotel in Haynes’ car. We know that Reed was unconscious in the back seat, from some combination of controlled substances.”

You paused for a good long swig of beer before going on. “We know that Reed woke up at his dorm three hours away from his last known location. We know that Haynes’ car was parked way out on the quiet side of Isla Vista. Reed just told me that the only thing he remembers is someone helped him a) into the car at the hotel, and b) out of the car at the dorm.”

“Well, they both must have made it back up there, sir. I mean, no way Reed ever got lucid enough to walk, let alone drive. Our witness-my sister again-confirmed he was blind drunk at the hotel, and she will testify that Haynes was at the wheel when they left.”

“Yeah,” I replied, “and the guy has a mild history of violence to boot. Remember that Olivia also confirmed that Reed and his ex-girlfriend were on the outs and fighting verbally at the party. Reed himself hinted just now that earlier this year-February, I believe-both he and his brother roughed up Kyle Addison near South Coast Plaza.”

Arroyo snorted. “My chickenshit little cousin will deny that, sir.”

“Uh-huh,” you sighed. “So what we’ve got is either an inside, inebriated hijacking, which considering what we know, is relatively unlikely, or we’ve got some kind of hostile interception by perps unknown.”

“Plus that fire, sir.”

“What, now they’re dumping the arson case on us, too?”

“No, no sir. I just thought, well…based on the fire department’s guesses about when it started, it was in our timeline, so…”

“Nah, Mike, let’s take care of the less-impossible case first, okay?”

“What do you want to do now, sir?”

“I think I have to talk to the kid’s stepdad. Andrew Reuss. A psychiatrist. I used to know him.”

“You tell the kid that?”

“No.”

“Well, are you gonna? Sir?”

“What, implicate the man’s kids? Both Reed brothers fell well short of total recall, Mike.”

“They ain’t his kids, Jim. You said ‘stepdad.'”

“Technicality.”

You didn’t know where to begin with that one. Arroyo wouldn’t really understand the startling way that Reed had adopted his stepfather’s clinical tone- sort of an instant, respectful formality- that nevertheless seemed a little too superior. You were more than a little thrown by it, to tell the truth. Those sessions with Dr. Reuss were a long time ago, weren’t they, but everything came rushing back on the notes of his stepson’s voice, didn’t it? Your fight-or-flight kicked in and your guts felt like they were infested with tapeworms. Hell of a thesis for that shrink, wasn’t it? All of the fear and pain and loss and disorientation and fucked up shit you wished you’d been able to ditch, to leave behind in the hell where it belonged, back in Beirut.

Beirut. The less said about it the better. Arroyo wouldn’t fucking get that trip, and you’re sure of that. He wouldn’t comprehend the oppressive funk of heat and the epic finality of death, the hopeless tragedy of ancient beauty brought low in destruction for the umpteen-thousandth time, the broken bodies of all those Marines, just like you in every way except they no longer breathed and their hearts no longer beat. Thirteen years and layers of post-trauma therapy were vaporized by Reed’s relentless intonation back there in the downtown station, and you had to actually tell yourself that he was the nineteen-year-old kid, not you, that your nineteenth year was stolen by a bomb.

“‘Technicality?’ Sir?”

“Well, he raised ’em, anyway. Besides, once upon a time that guy Reuss gave me my sanity back. Not long after that he lost his wife. Their mother. Am I supposed to remove even more crumbling bricks from that demolition job they call a family?”

“It’s just a case, sir.”

“In case you hadn’t noticed, Mike, your family’s all wrapped up in it too. One sister in rehab, one throwing underage parties….”

You didn’t mean it as a rip on him, but he chose to take it that way, laughing it off.

“Right, sir. Don’t forget my trio of asshole cousins and their whole gringo side of the family. And yeah, Elisa’s in a tough spot too, but Liv’ll be okay if I keep an eye on her.”

“Why’s that?”

“Because she knows what she wants, and she always gets it.”

You’d chuckled a little at Arroyo’s grim, knowing tone, but in the next five minutes you’d managed to prop up enough professionalism to placate him into feeling you both had resolved something, and he hung up. You actually convinced yourself that it wasn’t a total loss in Santa Barbara. You might still be able to salvage some dignity from this stinking mess of a case. You feel less intimidated, less inept. You know a lotta things.

But you also know the kid lied to you today.

Pony Party, Playoff updates

The Pens won the series 4-1, and move on to the Stanley Cup Finals

In the west, game 6 is tonight, the Wings lead the series 3-2.  Be ready to make your finals pick….  ðŸ˜‰  

The Celtics and the Pistons move on to play each other in the Eastern Conference Final.

The Lakers advance to the the Western Conference Final, waiting for the winner of Hornets/Spurs, which is tied at 3 games apiece.  Game 7 is tonight.

Your Accu-Blog Five Day Weather Forecast!

Morning Dharmenizens, Skip Sunshine here with the weather for the week…

Monday morning expect a 70% chance of “early work avoidance” with scattered “excited publishing of diaries written over the weekend” and, out west, a trace of “surreal typo-laden rantings of a sleepless writer whose daughter has taken his spot in the bed.”

By mid-day we’ll see heavy doses of “angry reaction to some crap the President said” with highs of “new superdelegates” and lows ranging from “revelations about the war” to “recently discovered abuses of the American Constitution.”

This evening were looking at mostly “prediction threads” with pockets of “hand-wringing and molar gnashing about upcoming primaries” and some “pony parties”, followed by a 93% chance of overnight “ek hornbeck.”

Weather Boner

As you can see by the radar image, in the south on Tuesday morning the National Weather Bureau has issued a “why the fuck won’t they vote for the black guy” warning, while in the northeast we’re predicting “Prius-driving recyclers fretting about whether the vegetable-based ink they used to address their ballot was dark enough for the post-person to read.”

Tuesday evening will be dominated with mixed “poll results”, turning inclement with the likely late arrival of a “why isn’t this fucking over” nor’easter as well as strong patches of “somebody’s got to get Hillary Clinton to drop out.”

In the mountains on Wednesday look for exceedingly high-levels of “what Barack Obama MUST do immediately” while the low-lying areas try to dig out from “unpleasant flames directed at fellow bloggers in drunken fits of anger” as well as some possible patchy outbreaks of “monosyllabic troll from Little Green Toe Cheese.”

Thursday will be dominated by a relentless string of “unbelievably geeky but incredibly smart analysis of block-by-block voting trends in Puerto Rico” along with dense “meta”, record setting levels of “hostility toward John Sidney McCain.”

Look for a slight lull after lunch on Thursday as some areas are hit with a torrent of “how is it possible that I’ve not actually done anything other than blog this week.”

Finally, on Friday, morning “mojo storms” will be followed by patches of “actual citizen journalism,” along with more widespread, “bug-eyed, slack-jawed stares,” as most are hit by with a wave of “realization that the general election is still months away.”

Friday evening shows a “100% chance of leaving work early” as well as “uncomfortable conversation with super-hot co-worker with mostly-hidden lower-back tattoo while riding the elevator down to the parking lot.” So… don’t forget to wear your rubbers!

Docudharma Times Monday May 19



Seeking More Oil

Bush Leaves With A Fruit Basket

Monday’s Headlines:  McCain to Rely on Party Money   Medical marijuana and organ transplants don’t mix    Burma neighbours in cyclone talks    The last photo of Zhou Yao, 14 – one of thousands of children killed at their desks    Royal seeks second chance in battle to depose Sarkozy     Car bomb explodes in Basque town in Spain    South Africa gangs kill foreigners    Could unity government talks eclipse Zimbabwe runoff vote?    Gulf states may soon need coal imports to keep the lights on    US: 500 youths detained in Iraq; 10 in Afghanistan   Heart of Quito gets an urban revival

China Faces Economic Aftershocks

Fearful After the Quake, People Shun Jobs, Homes

SHIFANG, China, May 18 — Statistically speaking, Zhang Zhengjie and his factory are fine.

Number of workers injured: zero. Number dead: zero. The factory’s steel-reinforced walls shook but held during last week’s massive earthquake. After it was over, the only evidence that something nightmarish had taken place in other parts of the city was the presence of minor fractures in pipes that were easily fixed.

USA

McCain to Rely on Party Money

Pivoting toward the general election, Senator Barack Obama is turning again to his history-making fund-raising machine, which helped to anoint him as a contender against Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton and then became a potent weapon in their battle for the Democratic nomination

To confront the Obama juggernaut, Senator John McCain, whose fund-raising has badly trailed that of his Democratic counterparts, is leaning on the Republican National Committee. Mr. McCain’s efforts to raise money suffered a blow this weekend when a key fund-raiser, Tom Loeffler, resigned because of a new campaign policy on conflicts of interest.

Medical marijuana and organ transplants don’t mix

Patients who have used doctor-prescribed pot are being turned away from hospital transplant programs.

SEATTLE — Should using doctor-prescribed marijuana be a deal-breaker for someone needing an organ transplant? It is not a theoretical question but a pressing and emotional one confronting hospitals and patients in states where medical use of marijuana is legal.

This month, Timothy Garon, 56, a Seattle musician, died after being turned down for a liver transplant. He was rejected partly because he had used medical marijuana.

Now, a second critically ill patient in Washington state says he has been denied a spot in two organ transplant programs because he uses doctor-prescribed marijuana.

Jonathon Simchen, 33, of Fife, a town south of Seattle, is a diabetic whose kidneys and pancreas have failed.

Asia

Burma neighbours in cyclone talks

The Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean) is holding urgent talks to discuss ways of helping Burma’s cyclone victims.

Foreign ministers meeting in Singapore hope Burma’s military rulers – who have so far blocked most large-scale foreign aid offers – will accept Asean help.

But correspondents say the grouping cannot force a solution on a member, as decisions are only made by consensus.

Burma says some 78,000 people have died since the cyclone hit on 2 May.

The last photo of Zhou Yao, 14 – one of thousands of children killed at their desks

Zhou Yao, aged about six, beams at the camera as she poses in a garden. Then she is a confident nine-year old, hands on hips, head cocked. At 14, she is deliberately pensive, with the self-consciousness of a girl who knows she will soon become a woman.

That photograph is the last one in her mother’s pile. There will be no more.

Yao’s casket of ashes now stands in her parents’ home in Dujiangyan. They found her body hours after the Juyuan Middle School collapsed in an earthquake last Monday. Like families across the province of Sichuan, her parents are angry and disbelieving.

Almost 7,000 classrooms across the quake zone were destroyed, the government has acknowledged.

Europe

Royal seeks second chance in battle to depose Sarkozy

The struggle to become the Next Big Thing on the French left wing exploded into open warfare at the weekend as the defeated presidential candidate Ségolène Royal announced a bid to become the First Secretary, or leader, of the Socialist Party.

On Thursday, the Paris Mayor Bertrand Delanoë, who is likely to be her main rival, will publish a book called De l’Audace! (Courage!), setting out his political philosophy and ambitions. With six months to go before the Socialists choose their new leader at a conference in Reims, the pair have, in effect, joined battle for the right to be both the party chief and the candidate-elect for the presidential elections in 2012.

Car bomb explodes in Basque town in Spain

MADRID, Spain – Suspected members of a Basque separatist group allegedly exploded a car bomb in a northern Basque town Monday causing considerable damage but no injuries, police said.

The blast, which happened in the early morning hours, followed an attack last Wednesday on a police barracks housing officers and their families in the Basque town of Legutiano. That bombing left one police officer dead and four wounded.

Monday’s explosion outside a nautical club in the town of Getxo, near the Basque port of Bilbao, came after a warning call, claiming to be from the ETA separatist group, to road traffic authorities, a police spokesman said. The spokesman spoke on condition of anonymity in keeping with department regulations.

Africa

South Africa gangs kill foreigners

Mobs rampaged through poor suburbs of Johannesburg in a series of attacks against foreigners, mainly Zimbabweans, over the weekend, killing seven people, injuring at least 50 and forcing hundreds to seek refuge at police stations.

Two of those killed were burned to death and three beaten to death. The injured suffered gunshot and stab wounds. Johannesburg police were warning motorists to avoid the city’s business district. “It’s spreading like a wildfire and the police and the army can’t control it,” said Emmerson Zifo, a Zimbabwean.

Could unity government talks eclipse Zimbabwe runoff vote?

Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai was invited for talks with President Robert Mugabe, says a top official. Would the talks negate a runoff presidential election scheduled for June 27.

Johannesburg, South Africa – Zimbabwe’s opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai canceled a trip home from South Africa this weekend, citing a rumored assassination plot against him.

The trip was timed for a celebration of his party’s gaining a parliamentary majority in the March 29 elections and to gear up for the newly announced June 27 presidential runoff vote.

But a senior member of President Robert Mugabe’s ZANU-PF party tells the Monitor that he had met with Mr. Tsvangirai over the weekend in Johannesburg, and that Tsvangirai had indicated that he had been invited back to Harare to begin power-sharing talks with Mr. Mugabe himself.

Middle East

Gulf states may soon need coal imports to keep the lights on

They are countries so rich in oil and gas that they would never want for fuel to drive their booming economies and the lavish lifestyles of their rulers.

Now, however, in a role reversal that makes selling sand to Saudi Arabia look like a sensible business transaction, the oil-rich Gulf states are planning to import coal.

An acute shortage of natural gas has led to the city states of the United Arab Emirates seeking alternative fuels to keep the air cool, the lights on and the water running.

US: 500 youths detained in Iraq; 10 in Afghanistan

NEW YORK – The U.S. military is holding about 500 juveniles suspected of being “unlawful enemy combatants” in detention centers in Iraq and has about 10 detained in Afghanistan, the United States has told the United Nations.

A total of 2,500 youths under the age of 18 have been detained, almost all in Iraq, for periods up to a year or more in President Bush’s anti-terrorism campaign since 2002, the United States reported last week to the U.N.’s Committee on the Rights of the Child.

Civil liberties groups such as the International Justice Network and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) denounced the detentions as abhorrent, and a violation of U.S. treaty obligations.

In the periodic report to the United Nations on U.S. compliance with the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the United States confirmed that “as of April 2008, the United States held about 500 juveniles in Iraq.”

Latin America

Heart of Quito gets an urban revival

Ecuador’s capital, home to colonial-era churches and historic treasures, had been beset by crime and urban flight. But a revitalization program has paid off

QUITO, ECUADOR — Once a jewel of the Spanish colonial empire, the historic core of this capital city spent decades in a downward spiral, reeling from urban flight, high crime and official neglect.

By day, the narrow cobblestone streets were clogged with legions of sidewalk vendors who harassed pedestrians and blocked traffic. By night, thugs and prostitutes lurked among the colonnades and alleyways. *

Tourists risked their lives and wallets by strolling after dark through San Francisco plaza, which, with the baroque facade of its namesake church, the cordon of 17th century buildings and the majestic Mt. Pichincha looming overhead, is one of Latin America’s most breathtaking tableaux.

Muse in the Morning


The Lure of the Gold

Entitlement

Shouldn’t entitlement

be an increasing function?

Should not our children

be entitled

to more freedom

liberty, joy

and happiness

than we were?

Shouldn’t their children

if they have any

deserve still more?

Or do you speak

of material things?

Do you look to me

as the reason

you don’t have more?

–Robyn Elaine Serven

–March 14, 2008

Please join us inside to celebrate our various muses…

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
Muse in the Morning

The muses are ancient.  The inspirations for our stories were said to be born from them.  Muses of song and dance, or poetry and prose, of comedy and tragedy, of the inward and the outward.  In one version they are Calliope, Euterpe and Terpsichore, Erato and Clio, Thalia and Melpomene, Polyhymnia and Urania.

It has also been traditional to name a tenth muse.  Plato declared Sappho to be the tenth muse, the muse of women poets.  Others have been suggested throughout the centuries.  I don’t have a name for one, but I do think there should be a muse for the graphical arts.  And maybe there should be many more.

I know you have talent.  What sometimes is forgotten is that being practical is a talent.  I have a paucity for that sort of talent in many situations, though it turns out that I’m a pretty darn good cook.  ðŸ™‚  

Let your talent bloom.  You can share it here.  Encourage others to let it bloom inside them as well.

Won’t you share your words or art, your sounds or visions, your thoughts scientific or philosophic, the comedy or tragedy of your days, the stories of doing and making?  And be excellent to one another!

New Reports: U.S.-South Korean Killing Fields, 100,000+ Executed

( – promoted by buhdydharma )

Associated Press is reporting shocking news of mass graves being uncovered in South Korea. The expose is partly due to the work of a South Korean Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

The mass executions of many tens of thousands took place in 1950, only weeks after North Korean armies invaded the South. One mass grave was exposed by a typhoon a few years ago. Recently declassified U.S. documents showed the Americans had taken pictures of a mass killing outside Daejeon. As reported at ABC News:

With U.S. military officers sometimes present, and as North Korean invaders pushed down the peninsula, the southern army and police emptied South Korean prisons, lined up detainees and shot them in the head, dumping the bodies into hastily dug trenches. Others were thrown into abandoned mines or into the sea. Women and children were among those killed. Many victims never faced charges or trial….

Hundreds of sets of remains have been uncovered so far, but researchers say they are only a tiny fraction of the deaths. The commission estimates at least 100,000 people were executed, in a South Korean population of 20 million.

That estimate is based on projections from local surveys and is “very conservative,” said Kim. The true toll may be twice that or more, he told The Associated Press.

There are supposedly an estimated 150 mass graves around the country, yet to be unearthed. And while U.S. military and CIA documents discuss the killings, officially, the U.S. maintained executions were reportedly the work of the “murderous barbarism” of the North Koreans. But evidence now suggests the executions were ordered by U.S.-installed puppet President Syngman Rhee. (Rhee was the OSS’s man in Korea during World War II. The OSS was the precursor to the CIA.) General MacArthur, leading “allied” forces in Korea, called the mass executions an “‘internal matter’, even though he controlled South Korea’s military.

The Cover-Up, and What We Must Do Now

How could this have been covered up so long, you ask? A former Air Force intelligence officer tried to tell the story in a 1981 book. The late Donald Nichols told of witnessing “the unforgettable massacre of approximately 1,800 at Suwon,” 20  miles south of Seoul.” Another story on the subject by AP describes how reporters tried to tell the story back in 1950, only to have it denied and covered up.

British journalist James Cameron wrote about mass prisoner shootings in the South Korean port city of Busan – then spelled Pusan – for London’s Picture Post magazine in the fall of 1950, but publisher Edward Hulton ordered the story removed at the last minute.

Earlier, correspondent Alan Winnington reported on the shooting of thousands of prisoners at Daejeon in the British communist newspaper The Daily Worker, only to have his reporting denounced by the U.S. Embassy in London as an “atrocity fabrication”….

Associated Press correspondent O.H.P. King reported on the shooting of 60 political prisoners in Suwon, south of Seoul, and wrote in a later memoir he was “shocked that American officers were unconcerned” by questions he raised about due process for the detainees.

These mass killings were goddamned war crimes of an immense, killing fields nature. The South Korean government and army of that time were basically creations of the United States. U.S. officers were present at some of these killings (that we know about already), and covered up what they knew — covered up mass murder!

After “shock and awe” in Iraq, the carpetbombing of Vietnam, the mass executions of the Phoenix Project, and the thousands imprisoned and untold tortured at Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo, and other “global war on terror” U.S. prisons (including the detention of thousands of minors), after these revelations and many, many more, it is time that Americans woke up and began to accept the reality of their history. That history is far bloodier than they care to imagine, and the fact that atrocities of this magnitude were done by or under the guidance of Americans is a hideous truth that we must not hide from.

More importantly, we should not let those implicated in crimes past and present escape without accountability. A civil commission of the most respected Americans — none of whom should be from government or the military, as they are too tainted — should be assembled to investigate the full extent of U.S. involved war crimes. This should include the evidence about use of biological weapons by the United States, as well, during the Korean War. The use of torture post-9/11 should also top the agenda.

We cannot have a clean start, a la Obama, without facing the truth, as ugly as it may be. I ask all of you: are we really a genocidal country? Do we let mass murder go unpunished? How has it come to this, that one has to even ask such questions in this day and age? Speak out now. U.S. militarism has led us to the gates of a moral holocaust. It is happening now.

Also posted at Daily Kos and Invictus

New Reports: U.S.-South Korean Killing Fields, 100,000+ Executed

Associated Press is reporting shocking news of mass graves being uncovered in South Korea. The expose is partly due to the work of a South Korean Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

The mass executions of many tens of thousands took place in 1950, only weeks after North Korean armies invaded the South. One mass grave was exposed by a typhoon a few years ago. Recently declassified U.S. documents showed the Americans had taken pictures of a mass killing outside Daejeon. As reported at ABC News:

With U.S. military officers sometimes present, and as North Korean invaders pushed down the peninsula, the southern army and police emptied South Korean prisons, lined up detainees and shot them in the head, dumping the bodies into hastily dug trenches. Others were thrown into abandoned mines or into the sea. Women and children were among those killed. Many victims never faced charges or trial….

Hundreds of sets of remains have been uncovered so far, but researchers say they are only a tiny fraction of the deaths. The commission estimates at least 100,000 people were executed, in a South Korean population of 20 million.

That estimate is based on projections from local surveys and is “very conservative,” said Kim. The true toll may be twice that or more, he told The Associated Press.

There are supposedly an estimated 150 mass graves around the country, yet to be unearthed. And while U.S. military and CIA documents discuss the killings, officially, the U.S. maintained executions were reportedly the work of the “murderous barbarism” of the North Koreans. But evidence now suggests the executions were ordered by U.S.-installed puppet President Syngman Rhee. (Rhee was the OSS’s man in Korea during World War II. The OSS was the precursor to the CIA.) General MacArthur, leading “allied” forces in Korea, called the mass executions an “‘internal matter’, even though he controlled South Korea’s military.

The Cover-Up, and What We Must Do Now

How could this have been covered up so long, you ask? A former Air Force intelligence officer tried to tell the story in a 1981 book. The late Donald Nichols told of witnessing “the unforgettable massacre of approximately 1,800 at Suwon,” 20  miles south of Seoul.” Another story on the subject by AP describes how reporters tried to tell the story back in 1950, only to have it denied and covered up.

British journalist James Cameron wrote about mass prisoner shootings in the South Korean port city of Busan – then spelled Pusan – for London’s Picture Post magazine in the fall of 1950, but publisher Edward Hulton ordered the story removed at the last minute.

Earlier, correspondent Alan Winnington reported on the shooting of thousands of prisoners at Daejeon in the British communist newspaper The Daily Worker, only to have his reporting denounced by the U.S. Embassy in London as an “atrocity fabrication”….

Associated Press correspondent O.H.P. King reported on the shooting of 60 political prisoners in Suwon, south of Seoul, and wrote in a later memoir he was “shocked that American officers were unconcerned” by questions he raised about due process for the detainees.

These mass killings were goddamned war crimes of an immense, killing fields nature. The South Korean government and army of that time were basically creations of the United States. U.S. officers were present at some of these killings (that we know about already), and covered up what they knew — covered up mass murder!

After “shock and awe” in Iraq, the carpetbombing of Vietnam, the mass executions of the Phoenix Project, and the thousands imprisoned and untold tortured at Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo, and other “global war on terror” U.S. prisons (including the detention of thousands of minors), after these revelations and many, many more, it is time that Americans woke up and began to accept the reality of their history. That history is far bloodier than they care to imagine, and the fact that atrocities of this magnitude were done by or under the guidance of Americans is a hideous truth that we must not hide from.

More importantly, we should not let those implicated in crimes past and present escape without accountability. A civil commission of the most respected Americans — none of whom should be from government or the military, as they are too tainted — should be assembled to investigate the full extent of U.S. involved war crimes. This should include the evidence about use of biological weapons by the United States, as well, during the Korean War. The use of torture post-9/11 should also top the agenda.

We cannot have a clean start, a la Obama, without facing the truth, as ugly as it may be. I ask all of you: are we really a genocidal country? Do we let mass murder go unpunished? How has it come to this, that one has to even ask such questions in this day and age? Speak out now. U.S. militarism has led us to the gates of a moral holocaust. It is happening now.

Also posted at Daily Kos and Invictus

Happening Now

Mudslide Buries 200 Relief Workers in China Earthquake Zone

BEICHUAN, China –  A state news agency says more than 200 relief workers have been buried by a mudslide in Sichuan province.

Updates To Follow As They Become Available

Times London

More than 200 earthquake relief workers have been buried by mudslides in China over the last three days, it was announced today.

The state Xinhua news agency said the workers from the Transport Ministry were buried while repairing damaged roads. It did not give a figure for the number of people killed.

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