Advertising OUTRAGE!

So here I was, sitting down with my bowl of Kashi and organic soy milk, ready to read one of my favorite PROGRESSIVE blogs and what do I find in the advertising section but THIS!

Fred Thompson ’08

Fred Thompson is running for President. Share your support at www.Fred08.com

What’s Going on in Iraq?

Get an In-depth Understanding of the Dynamics of the War in Iraq
www.upi.com

Retire on US Gov loophole

New “SRI” Income Program Could Enable You to Retire Immediately
www.DailyWealth.com/Income

Thompson for President?

Is he your leading candidate? Vote now in this urgent poll.
www.newsmax.com

TWO (count ’em) TWO ads for Fred Thompson, ReTHUGlican presidential candidate, one at the hateful NewsMax, another for Moonie owned UPI, and finally some kind of Amway late night infomercial pyramid scheme (it can hardly be anything else given it’s companions).

I am outraged!

ek hornbeck- delete my fucking account!

Request for Information

I received a sneaked phone call yesterday from a person really in need.  He is one of my daughter’s friends.  He is gay.  He will be eighteen in January and has been under house arrest since he came out to his parents two years ago meaning no use of HIS car, no seeing friends outside of school, no cell phone and no unsupervised phone use.  He graduated high school when he was a junior and he is starting at the junior college in January but he’s really university material.  His grandfather is a fundy minister here 🙁

He says he can’t continue to live this way and I’m pretty sure he can’t either.  Teenagers are usually miserable but seeing this kid from time to time around town with his mom has redefined it.  I received two phone calls actually, the first one asking if he could stay here and promising that he wouldn’t be too much trouble or overstay his welcome and then the second one just a kid sobbing because if he does this he has been told he loses his family forever.  He must remain under house arrest with his parents or his grandparents forever I guess or until he outgrows this gay thing and then he can have a family.  I have no words for him other than he is safe here but perhaps some of you do.  I seek some writings and maybe a book or two that could feed his young soul enough to make this transition bearable and light the way for him into his future because he is traveling very alone in what right now is pretty dark.  Much love in advance to all of you who may have traveled this road and know where the healing springs are to feed the wounded being.  He does have a guy who lives pretty far away and is in college.  I’m to be getting a phone call from him tonight and I didn’t understand why at first but hell I can just go with the flow until this boy in need said into the phone, “I just need someone’s approval right now Miss Tracy.”  I love young guys in the South, I’m going to be someone’s grandmother pretty soon and I can still get called Miss Tracy 😉

Pony Party, NFL Roundup


For more widgets please visit www.yourminis.com

As much as I have come to love making HTML tables, this ‘widget’ copied from CBS Sports goes far and beyond anything I could ever offer.  Please let me know in the comments whether its a keeper.  I just adore it..but that’s me. 😉

I’ll probably be using it for the next 2 weeks while my schedule focuses on some physical, occupational, speech, and academic therapy for my child, but can switch back to the ‘old’ way after that if there are objections.

Please don’t recommend the Pony Party.  Thanks!

Without further ado, the floor is yours…

~73v

“You Are What You Eat”

So many people understand now that the food they put into their bodies becomes an integral part of them that “you are what you eat” has become a slogan. It is experientially logical that putting something into your system makes that something become a part of you and science has also proven this to be the case in detailed (and often alarming) ways. Therefore, many people also now agree, at least in theory if not in practice, that we should only put natural and healthy foods into our systems.

However, “you are what you eat” has a much broader meaning for our health than just whether or not we should eat an apple instead of a candy bar. What is less well known and much less accepted is that all of our experiences, thoughts, feelings, reactions, the energy or condition at the places we frequent, TV shows, what we read, all of our interactions, everything we say, think, do, inhale, watch, hear, smell and taste also become a part of us and leave a trail within us.

Cross posted at Pockets of the Future and Dkos

Update I left out this video

From seven years of waiting tables, I learned firsthand that the energy and atmosphere in restaurants, particularly in the kitchen where the food is prepared, is full of stress at best and worse is often full of hostility and malevolence. (Hell’s Kitchen the TV show which pushes for hostile behavior actually is an exaggerated version of the condition of the kitchen at many restaurants.) In the restaurants where I worked, kitchen staff was forced to put out sometimes as many as 400 meals in a short period of time while working in extreme heat and with burns and cuts on their fingers. The pace and pressure were crushing. Many kitchen staff used rage and blame as a way to cope. I have since learned that the condition the cook is in when preparing food leaves an indelible stamp on the food itself because our internal states have an effect on the quality of our food. Food cooked in a loving atmosphere in which the cook is connected to their divine essence while cooking is the most desirable. Eating food prepared in such a way and in such an atmosphere and enjoyed by an eater with the same peaceful orientation is also optimal for health on all levels. It has the best effect on our systems and contributes greatly to our personal growth and development. 

Given that the majority of us are fed on food that is toxic from how it is grown, what it is made of, and the attitudes and condition of those handling it, it is no wonder that we live in a hostile and deteriorating society. When most of our food is full of unnatural toxins (both material and subtle) and generated in factories and the pills we take to redress the imbalances caused by toxic food and water are chemicals themselves which cause further imbalances, then we are living with a constant and undesirable cascade of chemical reactions which are causing human beings to break down from malnutrition and toxic intake. When we turn on the TV, we view hostile people spitting venom at one another in sitcoms, or the lying, plotting and unholy alliances formed by reality TV contestants, or the sex and violence that make up the rest of the programming, or the stomach turning twists and turns of the nightly news. The internet is no better with hostile outbursts and constant conflict appearing on even the mildest, non-political message boards and open forum discussion groups. Everything else you may analyze is the same whether it be Hollywood, Madison Avenue or many workplaces. Everywhere we go, we are being saturated with toxins and toxic behaviors. This constant toxic assault is worsening the current negative condition of the modern human being.

Given the sensitive nature of the human being and all organic matter, it is time to start eating healthy in the truest and broadest sense. We have to start perhaps with our physical food, looking to buy local and organic both because such foods are in their natural state and because they are usually handled by very few people (most often only by the farmer who cares deeply about the quality of the food and about the quality of the relationship with you). We also have to look beyond just our physical food and look for healthy conditions in our environment, our thoughts, our interactions, the people we do business with, whatever we read and watch and so on.

For years it has been our focus here at home to treat our home as the ashram type environment it is meant to be, i.e. a place where the material world meets the divine world. It has been our great fortune that over the past two and half years we have been able to turn our family home into a family homestead where we are growing, making and harvesting more and more of our own food. Gathering the food graciously bestowed upon us by our two dairy cows, our twenty five laying hens, our wild blackberry bushes and now our two chestnut trees and then preparing and eating that food in a meditative state of gratitude has had a profoundly positive affect on all members of our family.

A while back I posted videos of us milking our cows and picking from our blackberry bushes. Here is a new batch of three sets of videos of us opening up a new pasture for our grass-fed cows, planting blueberry bushes, and gathering chestnuts and making them into a delicious soup.

The first set of videos is about pasture management. There is serious drought here so our cows have eaten away at our barely growing pasture and we are having trouble finding hay. We were in a difficult situation but our neighbor graciously rented us an adjoining pasture. These videos are about putting in barb wire fence and trying to get the existing electric fence to work as well as a related homeschooling video about connectivity and the circular nature of things.

  part2
  part3

The second video documents our family planting blueberries along our front fence in our quest to expand our edible landscaping and add another nutrient dense food to our diets.

The chestnuts are the latest gift for us. We purchased our old farm house without knowing that the two large trees in the back were Chinese chestnut trees. We had only a little experience eating chestnuts as my wife had occasionally made a delicious chestnut soup over the years. As we have been gathering the falling chestnuts, we have also been gathering information about them. It turns out that they have long been valued as an important resource in other countries but due to chestnut blight the American and European chestnut trees have all been almost completely wiped out here and Americans don’t really know much about them or how to eat them. Luckily the Chinese chestnut tree is blight resistant and thrives in most locations in the US. Due to containing only 1% fat, having a soft, starchy meat and providing nutrition similar to that of brown rice, chestnuts are often referred to as “the grain that grows on trees”. In addition to being used in soups, stuffing’s and side dishes, chestnuts can be dried and ground into flour for making breads and polenta type foods. This ability makes chestnuts a valuable and nutritious addition to gluten free diets. Chestnuts are sweet, beautiful and just fall from the trees which makes harvesting them pretty easy. The two videos here are about harvesting, de-shelling and making them into a soup. For links to recipes and American chestnut growers, click the Recipe button on our family web site, Pockets of the Future

Part2

Monday Morning News

Ostentatious Magnificence Thread
US

Democrats See Wedge Issue in Health Bill
By CARL HULSE
Published: October 8, 2007
WASHINGTON, Oct. 7 – Representative John R. Kuhl Jr. of New York received just his second telephone call ever from his state’s Democratic governor, Eliot Spitzer, last week and was not surprised at the topic: children’s health insurance.
“He said, ‘I am calling you to come over to the dark side,’ ” said Mr. Kuhl, who was urged by the governor to drop his opposition to health care legislation and join the effort to override President Bush’s veto of the bill.

It’s too bad they don’t see anything else as a Wedge Issue.

Christian nation? Not now, not ever
By Tom Blackburn

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Monday, October 08, 2007

Sen. John McCain spoke in religious code. Sadly for him, he didn’t know the code.

First, in an interview on Beliefnet, he tried this: “I would probably have to say, yes, that the Constitution established the United States of America as a Christian nation.” Self-selected spokesmen for Jews, Muslims and atheists expressed shock and dismay even as they added Sen. McCain’s name to the text of their next fund-raising letters.
He tried to chip out of the rough last week by saying that he meant to say that this is a “Judeo-Christian nation.”

Smog Traps Calif. Community
Arvin’s Bad Air Blamed on Geography, Weather Patterns

By Sonya Geis
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, October 8, 2007; Page A03

ARVIN, Calif. — This small farming community at the southern end of the San Joaquin Valley has a distinction that often brings tears to the eyes of its residents. It is the smoggiest place in the United States.

Arvin averages 73 “bad air days” per year — more than any other city in the country. On those days, to drive over a mountain pass and into the city is to cross a brown line into a smelly, stinging haze. Schools hold recess in the gym. Wheezing children crowd the waiting room at the health clinic.

Asia

S.Korea sure of early nuclear settlement
By HYUNG-JIN KIM, Associated Press Writer
SEOUL, South Korea – The South Korean president said Monday the global standoff over North Korea’s nuclear weapons programs will soon be resolved, as U.S. experts prepared to travel to Pyongyang to form a plan for disabling the country’s reactors.
“I’m confident the North Korean nuclear issue will rapidly arrive at a complete resolution,” South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun said, citing a detailed multilateral agreement aimed at the North’s denuclearization that was approved by the leaders of the two Koreas.

India holds key in NATO’s world view
By M K Bhadrakumar

Summing up the 10-year ties between Russia and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), a Russian military analyst wrote, “Relations between the two are a marriage of convenience, where husband and wife live together, often socialize with others as a couple, and show every sign of respect for each other.

“At the same time, they sleep in different rooms, and have separate households and personal expenses.

Japan mourns journalist killed in Myanmar

4 hours ago

TOKYO (AFP) – Mourners paid their final respects Monday to a Japanese freelance journalist shot dead by troops in Myanmar while covering mass pro-democracy demonstrations last month.

Kenji Nagai, 50, was killed on September 27 in Yangon as he filmed the crackdown on protesters by Myanmar’s junta after demonstrations led by Buddhist monks.

He appeared to have been shot at close range by security forces, according to television footage. Nagai’s family members, journalists and refugees who fled the junta lamented his death at the funeral held in Tokyo.

“Journalists keep records and report at the sites of news, and that’s their job,” said Jiro Ishimaru, the chief editor of Asia Press International, a Tokyo-based cooperative of Asian photo and video journalists.

“He was killed doing his job. This very fact breaks my heart and makes me feel frustrated,” said Ishimaru, who met Nagai when reporting at the border between China and North Korea.

Police said Nagai died of massive blood loss after a bullet pierced his liver.

Myanmar insists the killing was an accident but Japan is sceptical of the explanation and has set up a taskforce to investigate whether the shooting was deliberate.

Nagai was employed by APF News, a small agency based in Tokyo that specialises in reports from countries where most Japanese television networks dare not tread.

Much of mainstream Japanese media stay away from combat zones, but a small group of Japanese independent journalists is famed for heading on tough assignments.

Americas

PATAGONIA ANTI-DAM CAMPAIGN DRAWS SUPPORT IN SOUTHERN CHILE

“We Want A Different Future For Patagonia,” Say Citizen Groups

(Oct. 8, 2007) More than 100 demonstrators marched through downtown Aysén last Friday to protest the planned US$4 billion HidroAysén dam electricity generation project slated for Chile’s Patagonia region. They group also aimed to draw attention to this Wednesday’s launch in Coyaique of a book opposing dam construction in Patagonia, “Patagonia Chilena Sin Represas.”

Africa

Egypt plan to green Sahara desert stirs controversy
By Will Rasmussen
CAIRO (Reuters) – It looks like a mirage but the lush fields of cauliflower, apricot trees and melon growing among a vast stretch of sand north of Cairo’s pyramids is all too real — proof of Egypt’s determination to turn its deserts green.
While climate change and land over-use help many deserts across the world advance, Egypt is slowly greening the sand that covers almost all of its territory as it seeks to create more space for its growing population.

No male rulers please — there’s a curse on them
by Aminu Abubakar Sun Oct 7, 7:11 PM ET

KUMBWADA, Nigeria (AFP) – In six generations no man has ever spent more than a week as ruler of Kumbwada, a kingdom in Muslim northern Nigeria. All have died mysteriously just after ascending to the thone.
The father of Hadiza Ahmed, the current female monarch, was no exception.

“My father decided to see if he could break the spell but he failed.

Muse in the Morning

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.

Please join us inside to celebrate our various muses…

[Inside: Part III of America the Ugly]

State of the Onion XX

America the Ugly

Purple Mountains

Gold in Them Thar Hills

Purple mountains
or any color
once majestic
now leveled
rock crushed
for oil
or hollowed out
emptied of coal
except where it burns
or blown apart
in the search
for fancy rocks

America Amerika

The weapon
that destroys the mass
is fueled by the lives
of men too poor
badly educated and so ill-treated
lubricated by the greased palms
of partisan self-interest
and naked incivility
of so-called servants
and dangerously driven
by the avarice
of men too rich

–Robyn Elaine Serven
–March 24, 2006

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.  🙂 

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!

The 2nd Half of the Equation!

A paraphrase:


—With the splitting of the atom, everything has changed save man’s way of
  thinking; and thus we drift toward unimaginable peril…

  paraphrase of Albert Einstein


With the splitting of the atom, humans took on the technological power which was once attributed only to the gods.  But the second part of the equation, man’s way of thinking, did not make a similar leap. 


Thus we are involved in balancing the second part of the equation.  We are involved in the evolution of consciousness.  This evolution is imperative

for the survival of the species. 


Survival depends on adaptation to this evolutionary imperative. 


Will we make it? I don’t know. 


Yet I do know that this is the challenge.


I will contribute more of my ramblings on this subject soon.  Thanks

Krugman: “My God, what have we done?”

Crossposed from the orange place

No, not a question for us, but Conservatives for themselves, at least, according to Paul Krugman.

Krugman’s provocative conclusion:

Mr. Bush is movement conservatism’s true, loyal heir.

This has been my opinion for some time, and today’s column gives every indication that Krugman’s next book will be a must read.

more

What are the roots of this, Krugman asks? Try Barry Goldwater:

People claim to be shocked by the Bush administration’s general incompetence. But disinterest in good government has long been a principle of modern conservatism. In “The Conscience of a Conservative,” published in 1960, Barry Goldwater wrote that “I have little interest in streamlining government or making it more efficient, for I mean to reduce its size.”

In other words, as many people on Daily Kos have been saying for some time, Grover Norquist’s admonition that government must be small enough to be drowned in a bathtub is both the method and the goal of modern Conservatism.

As for the media strategy? There’s nothing new under the Conservative sun:

People claim to be shocked at the Bush administration’s attempts – which, for a time, were all too successful – to intimidate the press. But this administration’s media tactics, and to a large extent the people implementing those tactics, come straight out of the Nixon administration. Dick Cheney wanted to search Seymour Hersh’s apartment, not last week, but in 1975. Roger Ailes, the president of Fox News, was Nixon’s media adviser.

I won’t exceprt any more, as Times Select is gone (dead baby!), and you really ought to read the whole thing. I see Krugman is an exceptional ally in cataloguing the abuses of Bush and his movement; he has been doing so at least since The Great Unraveling (I was given a signed copy as a gift several years ago).

I also see this column as an excellent corollary to Kid Oakland’s latest diary: beyond left and right, which you should also go read. (I command!)

  eugene (over orange way) echoes a thought I had but didn’t write myself: 

This is largely a response to David Brooks (1+ / 0-)
Who argued last week that Bush was simply someone who strayed from basic conservative principles. What Krugman has done is to tell Brooks he is full of shit; that Bush has governed EXACTLY as the conservatives wanted him to.

Folks like Brooks believe that because they broke America…we should turn to them to fix it. A complete crock .

I’m not part of a redneck agenda – Green Day

by eugene on Mon Oct 08, 2007 at 12:35:28 AM EDT
[ Reply to This |Recommend  Troll ]

  Quite.

Blackwater Accountability Act Passes: Camoflage No More

blackwatercamoflage1000fr t

The Blackwater Accountability Act (HR 2740) has passed! To read about it, go here:

http://price.house.g…

http://www.democrats…


For this graphic, I played a bit with the Stroop effect:
http://en.wikipedia….


Hidden inside lettering that *says* AMWAY is a different *content* – the Blackwater logo. It is dark, obscure and and distorted – like camoflage. But we can *see* what’s there.
I anticipate reworking and developing this concept through more versions until it has many layers of meaning.

The Blackwater layer is taken from a graphic I made after Katrina had hit the Gulf Coast and the levees  – and our hearts – had broken.  Everything was wrong: help was late in coming or was turned away, and the “soldiers” who arrived to rescue people abused and shot them. Black, red and alligators in this image express the danger and treachery that we now know came from on high. The “soldiers” were mercenaries from Blackwater. Pilger helped us to understand what was going on there in FROM BIG EASY TO BIG EMPTY, as did coverage by Democracy Now.

blackwatergators900

How American democracy was betrayed will be revealed as facts about Blackwater, and its connections to Amway and other groups, continue to emerge.


I’ll close with a quote that seems right for this time of citizen surveillance and corporate privacy:
“For now we see in a mirror, dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part, but then I will know fully, even as I was also fully known.”
1 Corinthians, 13:12
http://bible.cc/1_co…

The Urge to Kill With Words

For years now, I’ve been watching people who post on blogs try to maim and kill each other with words. I’ve done the same thing, more often that I care to admit.

Many times, I’ve been flat out astonished at the depth of the viciousness: the no holds barred attempts to truly cause each other serious harm, in every way harm CAN be caused via the written word.  And I’ve been more than appalled to feel it within myself, on more than one occasion.

It happens so lighting fast sometimes: depending on my own stress levels, I can log on, read one comment from a total stranger, and feel an explosion of anger so huge it demands immediate release, and finds
it in ten angry fingers pounding on a keyboard, and in that satisfying moment of hitting “Enter” to launch that word bomb at what I HOPE is the most vulnerable part of my target.

Other times, I am much more controlled about it, and instead of exploding, I bide my time, and choose what is usually a more effective weapon: biting sarcasm designed to make my target look, and hopefully feel, like a fool, knowing full well that public humiliation is a deadly weapon. This has the added advantage of course, of having others who read it applaud my brilliance. Two birds, one stone.

Sometimes, this ends up being a totally satisfying experience for me: I come away feeling pretty powerful, even righteous. I did not silently comply with a wrong: I spoke up and I spoke out. Good for me. Yet, under that, was discomfort I like to ignore.

But sometimes, I end up with a strong urge to go take a shower. On the inside, I mean. And a curious sense of sadness: an emptiness of some sort.

It was time once again, for me to go weed my own garden. To see what was growing there that I did not plant, and do not wish to feed.

I know I have never been a vindictive person who ENJOYS causing pain to anyone, not even an attacker. I may have to cause the pain, because I take stands and fight hard when I need to, to defend myself or those more vulnerable than I am, but I have never “enjoyed inflicting pain” before, like I saw myself “enjoying it”,  as a blogger.

That was the weed I found that I did not like at all. I do not wish to become a person who derives pleasure from causing pain to anyone, not even those who do it to me. I may have to cause them pain, to convince them I have boundaries that I will not allow them to breach without consequence.  But I do NOT want to ENJOY watching them bleed.

So what were the roots of this? Why has this aspect of myself  revealed itself, in this written medium, at this point in my life, when it hadn’t in face to face life? (This quick, reactive “strike back now” kind of anger. This desire to hurl sharp edged lethal word swords at people I didn’t know and had never met?)

And why in the HELL had I become so eager for this kind or “battle ground” I’d practically go into withdrawal if I wasn’t engaged in one kind of blog battle or another, or at least have one to WATCH?

So I grabbed my “WHY?” shovel, and began digging for the root beds of this damned ugly weed.

Here’s what I’ve found so far:  I don’t know if it’s true for anyone else or not, but I believe it is true for me.

For a long time now, ever since discovering the blogosphere and alternative new sources, I have willingly been subjecting myself to MASSIVE daily doses of the harshest of realities: proof positive of the depth of corruption of every  single man made system I had ever been told I could trust. Every single day I saw pictures of bloody children, starving bodies, dismembered bodies, cities full of people just like me blown to bits in their beds. Horrors like Katrina. Neighbors who choose food or groceries, because they can’t afford both. There isn’t an end to it.

Suffering. MASSIVELY PERVASIVE human suffering, in living color and sound, day in day out, blasting into my eyes and ears, my mind and spirit. SO much, so much. Unbearable to anyone with a sentient heart and spirit.

So the terrible feelings of powerlessness grew and grew, in direct proportion to the anger and rage at those who knowingly caused this suffering. And no where to put it where it could change anything I could identify as change.

And this, I have come to see, is a large part of how I  had become a person, who, far to often, derived pleasure from causing pain to others I met on blogs. Or watching them inflict pain on each other.

When I am in battle mode, I feel quite powerful. Anger is a “powerFUL” emotion.

When I simply sit with the pain, the rage, and FEEL it, I can end up feeling completely powerLESS.

When I can find blog battles to watch, (mindflash..of the Romans in the stands applauding the lions snacking on christians), I find my distraction and entertainment: a handy insulation.

So I am left wondering, especially after the threads of yesterday, just how much of our  apparent inability to stop focusing on each others faults and failures, and on trying to hurt each other, in the lefty blogosphere, might just stem from that overwhelming sense of powerlessness, and a seriously backed up supply of anger and rage than has no real place to go where it could be harnessed and put to USE, since the Dem Party has clearly abandoned us.

We’re sittin here alone with all these horrors unfolding before our eyes, horrors we can’t NOT see, and NO PARTY and no LEADERS, AND NO WAY TO DO MUCH OF ANYTHING ABOUT IT that we can agree on. Full of frustration, pain, anger, sadness, and yes, grief.

Because we are still human, those of us who gather on blogs like this. We have not yet been plasticized or robot-o-sized, and we have refused all offers of mind-deadening kool aid offered. We’re still fully human and that means we feel, we bleed, we suffer, for each other, not only for ourselves. We suffer for all our relations, everywhere.

  When humans build up enough of a backlog of pain, anger, loss, and  fear that has no outlet, pressure builds, and we often project it on whoever is closest: each other. Psych 101.

Try as I might to come up with a QUICK fix for all of us here on these blogs, I cannot see any. I can only see these truths:

I cannot weed anyone else’s garden but my own.
I will not weed my own garden, until I SEE it needs weeding.
I will never see it needs weeding unless I spend time in it.
I will not have time to spend in my own garden, if I spent all my time in yours,  pointing out the ugly weeds you have allowed to sprout.

And until I AM ready to spend the necessary time to weed my own garden, not only to remove the weeds, but to see the power in the stalks and stems and rootbeds of what I have planted there and cared for long, I will be subject to more feelings of anger, frustration, rage, and powerlessness, and I will no doubt continue to project them on whoever is close.

I am not powerless. I have been made to feel that way, but I am NOT powerless. Not over my own life, my own consciousness, my own internal expansion, and my own choices of who I am and how I act in every moment I still breathe.

Since I am naught but a  puny piece of work in progress, this is nothing I can or will do perfectly. But I want to try to do it better.

I don’t want to be a person who ENJOYS watching others be eaten up alive, and I don’t want to ENJOY inflicting intentional harm on others. No matter what they’ve done.

There’s my working hypothesis for this moment, anyway, as to one possible reason for some of the chaos and warfare in the lefty blogosphere.

I’d enjoy hearing yours…

(Crossposted from PFF)

Big Oil in Burma: A Primer

Note: A more finely tuned version of this essay is now crossposted over at The Environmentalist here

This essay will provide an overview of the four, perhaps five, American big oil related companies that are still operating in Burma, which by their continued operation are assisting the oppressive and brutal junta, The State Peace and Development Council.

Only a few days ago Reuters published an article here that said, “U.S. energy companies are shrugging off pressure to end operations in Myanmar that critics contend help prop up the military junta and its hold over the country.” So far, the protesting on line and on the street is not moving them to change their policy and tactics.

Based on some discussions here about Chevron and other oil companies operating in Burma I ended up with several questions. This essay attempts to answer them.
It ends asking you the readers to come to some conclusions and share them. So keep that in mind as you scroll through this. 

Burma and Oil: Some background and facts

In 1988 the military junta known as the State Peace and Development Council overthrew the Burmese government and has been in power ever since, in spite of the election won by Aung San Suu Kyi in 1990. Prior to the 1988 uprising and overthrow, the oil and gas industry had been  nationalized after a socialist-leaning military regime seized power in 1962.

As the SPDC junta assumed power, the same year the country was opened up to foreign investment with the passage of the The Union of Myanmar Foreign Investment Law

Sectors eligible for foreign investment include manufacturing, oil and gas exploration and development, mining (except gold and precious stones), jewelry production, and agriculture.

As of January 2001, foreign investment under the liberalized regime of 1988 totaled about $7.4 billion. Of that amount, investment from the US totaled only $582 million, with the majority, 51.35%, coming from ASEAN countries, including $1.5 billion from Singapore, $1.2 billion from Thailand, $597 million from Malaysia, $240 million from Indonesia, and $147 million from the Philippines. The United Kingdom, however, was the second-largest source of approved investments, at $1.4 billion. Investments from France and Japan totaled $470 million and $233 mil, respectively. 
source

The CIA World Factbook provides the following statistics about Burma’s oil and gas resources:

Oil Production: 9,500 bbl/day (2006 est.)
Oil Consumption: 20,460 bbl/day (2006 est.)
Oil exports: 5,000 bbl/day (2006 est.)
Oil imports: 19,180 bbl/day (2004 est.)
Oil proved reserves: less than 50 million bbl (1 January 2005)
Natural gas production: 10.2 billion cu m (2004 est.)
Natural gas consumption: 2.7 billion cu m (2004 est.)
Natural gas exports: 7.5 billion cu m (2004 est.)
Natural gas imports: 0 cu m (2004 est.)
Natural gas proved reserves: 283.2 billion cu m (1 January 2005 est.)

To explain what these numbers could mean in terms of dollars, here is a brief translation.

Myanmar’s proven gas reserves were 19 trillion cubic feet at the end of 2006, according to BP PLC’s World Review of Statistics. While that’s only about 0.3 percent of the world’s total reserves, at current production rates and Thailand’s contract price for gas, the deposits are worth almost $2 billion a year in sales over the next 40 years. source

These resources are still rich enough to be enticing new investment in the country in spite of the human rights crisis. Even as the Saffron Revolution was underway and protesters were being maimed and murdered, the Indian Oil Minister Murli Deora was signing new oil and gas exploration contracts between state-controlled ONGC Videsh Ltd. and Myanmar’s military junta. source

If possible, I’m sure Mahatma Gandhi was screaming from his grave.

Who Are the Bad Guys? errr Oil Companies?

Chevron Corporation

Chevron Corp
6001 Bollinger Canyon Rd.
San Ramon, CA  94583
P: +1 925.842.1000
Chevron’s website

Chevron, formerly the oil company known as Standard, is today one of the world’s largest energy companies. The realm of its business includes: petroleum operations, chemicals operations, mining operations of coal and other minerals, power generation and energy services. Chevron operates in more than 180 countries, including Burma. It is a mega corporation that has merged with several other companies, including, Gulf in 1984, Dynegy in 1998, Illinova in 2000, Texaco in 2001 and Unocal (76) in 2005. It was the merger with Unocal that brought Chevron into Burma.
source

Unocal was one of the companies that built the Yadana Pipeline, initiated in 1995  to provide power to Thailand. Unocal was sued for being complicit in human rights abuses involving forced labor and other violations with regard to the construction of the pipeline. You may read a transcript about the trial here on Bill Moyers Now and read about the ultimate legal settlement in this story from the LA Times, Myanmar: Unocal to Settle Rights Claims.

Chevron has an approximately 28% percent stake in the Yadana project and acts as an investor, not an operator. The project is operated by Total, a French oil company.

In spite of recent calls for Chevron to withdraw its interest in Burma, it has no intention of doing so.  Here are some snips from a recent San Francisco Chronicle article, which summarizes Chevron’s response.

“Chevron is maintaining its interest in the … project,” said spokesman Alex Yelland.
The company has been trying to build up its portfolio of oil and natural gas projects in Asia, where energy demand is growing fast. Chevron also has a history of working under difficult political circumstances. In some cases, that history involved countries with questionable human rights records or nations that ran afoul of the U.S. government. In other cases, the company’s own actions have been called into question.

~snip

Chevron has denied any part in any human rights abuses. Its executives argue that staying in troubled countries – even pariahs such as Burma – does more good than harm by employing locals and funding health and education programs.
“I’m convinced that hundreds of thousands of people in Burma have benefited,” said Chevron Vice Chairman Peter Robertson, who pointed to the community doctors and teachers his company has paid for. “They benefit from us being there.”

The following text is from Chevron’s own website with a statement, posted 10/2/07 addressing its continued investment in Burma.
link

Chevron supports the calls for a peaceful resolution to the current situation in Myanmar in a way that respects the human rights of the people of Myanmar. Chevron’s minority, non-operated interest in the Yadana Project is a long term commitment that will help meet the critical energy needs of millions of people in the region. Our community development programs also help improve the lives of the people they touch and thereby communicate our values, including respect for human rights.

The remainder of the statement includes the touting of several of their “Myanmar Community Development Programs” highlighting how much good they believe they are doing for Burma. I expect they want us to believe the same thing here at home with their  “Human Energy” advertising campaign.


Out of interest, Total Oil also has a statement on its website regarding its operations in Burma with similar highly concerned language. link

First of all, the Group would like to express its deep concern over the present situation, which it is monitoring very closely. Under these particular circumstances, Total is deploying heightened vigilance to ensure the safety of its employees. We hope that the current tensions facing the country will quickly subside and that solutions will be found in order to safeguard the population and protect human rights.

We are convinced that through our presence we are helping to improve the daily lives of tens of thousands of people who benefit from our social and economic initiatives. By promoting responsible behavior, our local teams can serve as a model for business and political leaders looking for ways to address the country’s human rights issues.We would like to thank all those who have encouraged us to pursue our actions to help the local people and enhance their well-being through the defense of common values. To those who ask us to leave the country, we reply that far from solving Myanmar’s problems, a forced withdrawal would only lead to our replacement by other operators probably less committed to the ethical principles guiding all our initiatives. Our departure could cause the population even greater hardship and is thus an unacceptable risk.

Here is another article from the International Herald Tribune that discusses France’s extensive business involvement in Burma.

Baker-Hughes Inc.

Baker Hughes Inc
2929 Allen Parkway
Suite 2100
Houston, TX  77019
P: +1 713.439.8600

Baker Hughes website

Deaton, Chadwick  Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer
Clark, James  President, Chief Operating Officer
Ragauss, Peter  Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President


Baker Hughes is the third largest oil services company in the world, behind Schlumberger and Halliburton. It provides the worldwide oil and natural gas industry products and services for drilling, formation evaluation, completion and production and operates in over 90 countries providing products and services to international oil companies, independent oil and gas companies and national oil companies. In 2006 it had a revenue of $9 billion and in 2007 employed 34,600 people worldwide. source

Here is more detailed information about the company.

Baker Hughes Incorporated (Baker Hughes) is engaged in the oilfield services industry. The Company is a supplier of products and technology services and systems to the worldwide oil and natural gas industry, including products and services for drilling, formation evaluation, completion and production of oil and natural gas wells. Baker Hughes operates in three segments: Drilling and Evaluation, Completion and Production, and WesternGeco. The WesternGeco segment consisted of the Company’s 30% interest in WesternGeco, a seismic venture with Schlumberger Limited (Schlumberger). On April 28, 2006, Baker Hughes sold its 30% interest in WesternGeco to Schlumberger. The Drilling and Evaluation segment consists of the Baker Hughes Drilling Fluids (drilling fluids), Hughes Christensen (oilfield drill bits), INTEQ (drilling, measurement-while-drilling and logging-while-drilling) and Baker Atlas (wireline formation evaluation and wireline completion services) divisions. The Completion and Production segment consists of the Baker Oil Tools (workover, fishing and completion equipment), Baker Petrolite (oilfield specialty chemicals) and Centrilift (electrical submersible pumps and progressing cavity pumps) divisions and the ProductionQuest business unit. The Company operates in over 90 countries worldwide. In January 2006, Baker Hughes acquired Nova Technology Corporation (Nova), which is a supplier of permanent monitoring, chemical injection systems and multi-line services for deepwater and subsea oil and gas well applications.
source

According to this article dated March 29, 2000  Baker Hughes was pulling out of Burma, transferring its interest in the Mann oil fields to Myanmar Petroleum Resources Limited (MPRL). Yet, it is in fact still operating in the country today.  The author of this article published just last week, contacted the company about the recent unrest and wrote,  “Baker Hughes said it supplied products to customers in Myanmar, although it did not have an office or operations there and it was constantly reviewing its presence in nations around the globe.”  It is not completely clear whether Baker Hughes has divested its interests from Burma or not. It still maintains an office in Myanmar on its website.

BJ Services Co

4601 Westway Park Blvd.
Houston, TX 77041
Phone: +1713.4624239
BJ Services website 

Stewart, J. W.  Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Smith, Jeffrey E.  Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President – Finance
Dunlap, David D. Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President
Yust, Paul  Vice President, Chief Information Officer


BJ Services Company is a Fortune 500 company in the oilfield services industry. It is a provider of pressure pumping for the petroleum industry. It was founded in 1872 as the Byron Jackson Company and now operates in more than 50 countries worldwide. Its revenue in 2006 was $4.367 Billion

source

Here is more detailed information about the company’s products and services:

BJ Services Company is a provider of pressure pumping and oilfield services for the petroleum industry. Pressure pumping services consist of cementing and stimulation services used in the completion of new oil and natural gas wells, and in remedial work on existing wells, both onshore and offshore. Oilfield services include completion tools, completion fluids, casing and tubular services, production chemical services, and precommissioning, maintenance and turnaround services in the pipeline, and process business, including pipeline inspection. The Company conducts its operations through four principal segments: U.S./Mexico Pressure Pumping Services, International Pressure Pumping Services, Canada Pressure Pumping Services and Oilfield Services Group. During the fiscal year ended September 30, 2006 (fiscal 2006), the Company generated approximately 85% of its revenue from pressure pumping services and 15% from the oilfield services group. Over the same period, it generated approximately 60% of its revenue from United States operations and 40% from international operations.
source

In 2003 an stockholding investment group called Trillium Investments issued a proposal to BJ Services asking that the company divest it’s operations in Burma. The proxy may be found as a pdf on BJ’s site or as html on  Trillium’s site

Here is some of the content of the Proxy statement:

In the summer of 2003, Congress overwhelmingly passed and President George W. Bush signed into law new restrictions banning imports of goods produced in Burma to the U.S.;

Secretary of State Colin Powell wrote in a column in The Wall Street Journal, calling the ruling government of Burma “thugs” and wrote, “We also should further limit commerce with Burma that enriches the junta’s generals.”; 

BJ Services Company provides pipeline service operations in Burma and maintains a district office in Rangoon, Burma; and

BJ Services Company also does business in other countries with controversial human rights records, including Angola, Cameroon, and Nigeria;

~snip

THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that shareholders request that the Board of Directors prepare a report to shareholders, at reasonable cost and omitting proprietary information, evaluating financial risks posed by company operations in countries with a pattern of ongoing and systematic violation of human rights (including Burma) and the financial impact to the company of divesting from these countries. 

~snip

Given this context, we believe that B.J. Services’ operations in Burma face significant new financial risks and could damage our company’s reputation.  A report outlining the company’s assessment of the financial risks of continued operations in Burma and other countries with systematic patterns of violating human rights would help shareholders better assess how human rights controversies may affect the company’s future growth and how the Board and management are managing risks associated with this issue.

Needless to say, at a January 2004 stockholders meeting BJ Services voted against this proposal and still operates in Burma today. The Board of Directors rationale for their rejection of the proposal included the following:

*The Company believes that management currently has in place a system and procedures to adequately evaluate and manage risks, including general political and social conditions, associated with conducting its operations in all of its locations.

*The Company believes that the subject of the proposal does not provide sufficient guidance as to how it should be implemented.

*The Company’s activities in Burma, Angola, Cameroon and Nigeria, the countries named in the proposal, represent a small fraction of the Company’s financial position and results of operations.

~snip

Regarding allegations of  violations of human rights by the government of Burma, the Company believes that decisions as to the nature of such governments and their actions are better made by governmental authorities and international organizations such as the United Nations, as opposed to individual persons or companies. Where the United States government has mandated that United States companies refrain from commerce, the Company has complied.
 

Alrighty then. BJ doesn’t think that stockholder’s opinions, US sanctions, that UN sanctions mean much at all then. Got it. Fuck them.

Schlumberger Ltd

Schlumberger Ltd
5599 San Felipe
17th Floor
Houston, TX  77056
P: +1 713.513.2000
Schlumberger’s website 

Gould, Andrew F. Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer
Ayat, Simon  Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President, Treasurer
Sbiti, Chakib  Executive Vice President
Boutte, Dalton  Executive Vice President

Schlumberger Limited is the world’s largest oilfield services company. It supplies products and services relating to seismic acquisition and processing; formation evaluation; well testing and directional drilling to well cementing and stimulation; artificial lift and well completions; and consulting, software and information management. It had an operating revenue of $19.23 billion in 2006 with a market capitalization $74.5 billion in January of this year.. The company employs 70,000 people and operates in 80 countries worldwide.  source

Here is more detailed information about the company’s products and services.

Schlumberger Limited (Schlumberger) is an oilfield service company supplying a range of technology services and solutions to the international petroleum industry. The Company consists of two business segments: Schlumberger Oilfield Services and WesternGeco. The Oilfield Services segment provides virtually all exploration and production services required during the life of an oil and gas reservoir. WesternGeco, wholly owned by Schlumberger, is an advanced surface seismic company. The principal owned or leased facilities of Oilfield Services in the United States are located in Boston, Massachusetts, and Houston, Rosharon and Sugar Land, Texas. Schlumberger’s products and services include the evaluation and development of oil reservoirs (controlled digging, pumping and testing services), well construction and production consulting, and sale of software programs. The Company also offers storage tank and seismic monitoring services. The principal owned or leased facilities of Oilfield Services outside the United States are located in Beijing, China; Clamart, France; Fuchinobe, Japan; Oslo, Norway; Singapore, and Abingdon, Cambridge and Stonehouse, United Kingdom. The principal owned or leased facilities of WesternGeco are located in Bergen and Oslo, Norway; Gatwick, United Kingdom; Houston, Texas, United States, and Mumbai, India.

In May 2007, the Company acquired Insensys Oil & Gas Ltd. On April 28, 2006, Schlumberger acquired the remaining 30% interest in WesternGeco from Baker Hughes Incorporated, thereby making it a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company. During the year ended December 31, 2006, the Company acquired 49% of PetroAlliance Services in Russia; TerraTek, which is engaged in the geomechanics measurements and analysis; Odegaard, which is engaged in advanced surface seismic data inversion software, and Reslink, which is a supplier of advanced completion solutions, which offer a spectrum of engineering applications and products for sand management, zonal isolation and intelligent well completions.

According to the Reuters article referenced earlier,

“Schlumberger is very concerned about the developments in Burma, but views its presence as positive — particularly for the Burmese people that it employs. Wherever it operates, the company follows business practices that conform to internationally accepted standards of behavior,” Schlumberger spokesman Stephen Harris said in an e-mailed statement.  source 

In other words, Scumbooger is concerned, but isn’t going to one damn thing differently.

Halliburton?

Halliburton has not been noted in any of the lists I’ve seen about companies currently involved in Burma, and yet… I came across this VERY interesting article by Peter Waldman in the Wall Street Journal dated, October 27, 2000 and titled,  Pipeline Project in Myanmar Puts Cheney in the Spotlight , which should be read in its entirety. Here are some juicy tidbits:

The announcement, in December 1996, trumpeted the “success story” of a Halliburton joint venture that builds undersea pipelines, unveiling several large contracts in Asia and Europe for the London-based operation. Missing from the rundown, however, was any mention of one of the venture’s biggest contracts that year — in Myanmar, formerly known as Burma.

Halliburton’s Myanmar connection is a potentially embarrassing episode for Mr. Cheney, now in the final stretch of his campaign as the Republican vice presidential candidate. Since 1988, when Myanmar’s army killed thousands of pro-democracy protesters to stay in power, the country’s military junta has been widely condemned as one of the world’s most brutal violators of human rights. The U.S., which withdrew its ambassador and suspended aid to Myanmar a decade ago, banned new U.S. investment in the country in 1997 and has led international efforts to isolate the regime.

The sanctions don’t cover service contractors such as Dallas-based Halliburton and the energy-services giant’s subsidiaries, nor do they affect U.S. investments in Myanmar prior to 1997. Hence, Halliburton, which today remains one of the last U.S. companies to keep an office in Myanmar, doesn’t appear to have violated any laws by working there. Most U.S. companies, including oil giants Texaco Inc. and Atlantic Richfield Corp., pulled out of Myanmar years ago.

Notice my bold of that sentence of the third paragraph. This explains how the companies above, outside of Chevron, are able to continue to legally operate in Burma. I will address this further in the next section.

Mr. Cheney, according to his press secretary, was kept “generally aware” of Halliburton’s foray into Myanmar to work on a major pipeline project. He has long opposed unilateral U.S. business sanctions on the grounds that they put American businesses at a disadvantage to foreign rivals and that the U.S. can influence a foreign government best by doing business with the country, rather than placing embargoes on it. Mr. Cheney’s position dates back at least to his years in Congress, when he opposed such actions against South Africa’s apartheid regime. After taking the helm of Halliburton, he became one of corporate America’s most vocal opponents of sanctions.

“I personally have spoken many times that unilateral sanctions, I think, are a mistake. They almost never work,” he said in March when asked if he supported easing sanctions against Iran. In an antisanctions speech in 1996, he also cited restrictions on business in Libya and Nigeria. “We seem to be sanction-happy as a government,” he said in 1997, according to an oil-industry newsletter. “The problem is that the good Lord didn’t see fit to always put oil and gas resources where there are democratic governments.”

Ahhh, Darth, how well you express your true feelings. Do read the whole thing, y’all.

Interestingly enough, as with BJ services, in 2001 some Halliburton stockholders proposed the company divest from Burma as well. The text of the proposal is available here:

Here is some of the text:

RESOLVED: The shareholders of Halliburton Company (“Halliburton” or the
“Company”) urge the Board of Directors to create a committee of independent
directors to prepare a report at reasonable expense that describes projects
undertaken by the Company or any subsidiary in Burma, with an emphasis on what steps have been and are being taken to assure that neither Halliburton nor any of its subsidiaries is involved in or appears to benefit from the use of forced labor or other human rights abuses in Burma.

Halliburton participated in constructing the Yadana pipeline. According to an
October 2000 Wall Street Journal article, European Marine Contractors, a
Halliburton subsidiary, contracted in 1997 to lay 365 kilometers of the
pipeline undersea. A report by the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Burma
found that Burmese villagers were forced to work on offshore portions of the
Yadana project. EarthRights International, a human rights organization,
reported that “from 1992 until the present, thousands of villagers in Burma
were forced to work in support of these pipelines and related infrastructure,
were raped, tortured and killed by soldiers hired by the companies as security guards for the pipeline.” The Journal reported that Halliburton refused to comment on whether it was aware of human rights concerns in Burma.

And here is some of Halliburton’s Board’s response:

The Board of Directors recommends a vote AGAINST this proposal for the
following reasons:

.  Halliburton’s activities in Myanmar (Burma) represent a tiny fraction of
Halliburton’s overall business operations.

.  Halliburton’s limited operations in Myanmar have been performed primarily
by personnel sourced from outside Myanmar.

Halliburton’s operations in Myanmar are immaterial. For the fiscal year ended
December 31, 1999, Myanmar represented approximately $21 thousand of
Halliburton’s total assets of $10.7 billion or 0.0002%; approximately $120
thousand of Halliburton’s net earnings of $438 million or 0.03%; and
approximately $1.1 million of Halliburton’s gross sales of $14.9 billion or
0.007%.

Halliburton employs only one Myanmar national in its limited operations in
Myanmar. All other personnel on Halliburton projects come from outside the
country. Therefore, there is absolutely no basis for attributing human rights
abuses to Halliburton’s activities.

While the Board shares the Proponent’s concern about human rights abuses in
countries such as Myanmar, Halliburton has not engaged in, or condoned, such
conduct. Thus, the requested report will serve only to increase administrative burdens and costs.

How are they able to operate in Burma?

This section explains further how these companies continue to operate in Burma in spite of the US Embargos.

First a little more background on foreign trade and the oil industry in Burma.

Since Myanmar liberalized its investment code in late 1988, it has attracted its largest foreign investments in the energy sector. It has signed oil and gas exploration contracts with France’s Total SA, Unocal Corp. of the United States, Malaysia’s Petronas, Thailand’s PTT Exploration & Production PCL and Daewoo of South Korea.

It also has deals with companies from India, Australia, Canada and Indonesia.
New contracts continue to be signed despite condemnation of the ruling military regime by Western nations for its poor record on human rights and failure to hand over power to a democratically elected government. The United States and the European Union have imposed economic sanctions on Myanmar in recent years as a result.

Myanmar’s current junta took power in 1988 after crushing the pro-democracy movement led by Aung San Suu Kyi. In 1990, it refused to hand over power when Suu Kyi’s party won a landslide election victory.  source

Here is the some relevant text from the summary of the Executive Order 13310 of July 28, 2003 “Blocking Property of the Government of Burma and Prohibiting Certain Transactions” (pdf)

On May 20, 1997, in response to the Burmese Government’s large scale repression of, and violence
against, the Democratic opposition, President Clinton issued Executive Order 13047 declaring a national emergency with respect to these actions and policies of the Government of Burma. The order, issued under the authority of section 570(b) of the Foreign Operations, Export Financing and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 1997 (Public Law 104-208) and the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701- 1706)(IEEPA), prohibits new investment in Burma by U.S. persons and U.S. persons’ facilitation of new investment in Burma by foreign persons.

On July 28, 2003, the Burmese Freedom and Democracy Act of 2003 (BFDA) was signed into law, to restrict the financial resources of Burma’s ruling military junta, the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC). The BFDA requires the President to ban the importation into the United States of products of Burma, beginning 30 days after the date of enactment of the BFDA, as well as to consider blocking the assets of certain SPDC members and taking steps to prevent further financial or technical assistance to Burma until certain conditions are met.

Here is the section that deals with restrictions for new investments. I bolded the section that relates to how Chevron is able to continue to operate in the country. Chevron, unlike the other companies listed above is not an oilfield services company, but a full fledged oil company.

NEW INVESTMENT – The sanctions prohibit new investment in Burma by U.S. persons on or after May 21, 1997, unless such investment is pursuant to an agreement in place prior to May 21,1997. A number of criteria are used to determine whether or not a specific activity is “grandfathered.” Factors taken into account include the clarity of the scope of the agreement, the degree of specificity with which the activity is described, and the extent to which the terms of the agreement are legally enforceable. New investment in Burma is defined as a contract with the Government of Burma or a nongovernmental entity in Burma for the development of resources (including natural, agricultural, commercial, financial, industrial and human resources) located in Burma. The prohibition includes purchasing a share of ownership (an equity interest) in a project or entering into an agreement that provides for a participation in royalties, earnings, or profits from the economic development of resources located in Burma. Executive Order 13047 and the BSR also prohibit a U.S. company from entering into a contract that provides for the general supervision and guarantee of another person’s performance of an agreement for the economic development of resources located in Burma. U.S. persons with pre-May 21, 1997 agreements for the economic development of resources located in Burma should contact the Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control for a determination as to whether or not their project is exempt from the sanctions.

source


Here are a couple more handy links regarding US sanctions in general and in Burma specifically.

OFAC  Office of Foreign Assets Control

OFAC, Burma Sanctions

More information

Business & Human Rights Resource Center

The Business & Human Rights Resource Centre has become the world’s leading independent resource on the subject.  Our website is updated hourly with news and reports about companies’ human rights impacts worldwide – positive and negative.

The site covers over 3600 companies, over 180 countries.  It receives over 1.5 million hits per month.  Topics include discrimination, environment, poverty & development, labour, access to medicines, health & safety, security, trade.

Earth Rights International
ERI Burma Project

ERI is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit group of activists, organizers, and lawyers with expertise in human rights, the environment, and corporate and government accountability. ERI has offices in the U.S. and Southeast Asia. Their activities include documenting human rights and environmental abuses, organization of activist communities, litigation, education, and advocacy.

US Campaign for Burma

The United States Campaign for Burma is a U.S.-based membership organization dedicated to empowering grassroots activists around the world to bring about an end to the military dictatorship in Burma. Through public education, leadership development initiatives, conferences, and advocacy campaigns at local, national and international levels, USCB works to empower Americans and Burmese dissidents-in-exile to promote freedom, democracy, and human rights in Burma and raise awareness about the egregious human rights violations committed by Burma’s military regime.

Description of Yadana Pipeline Project


Conclusion

I leave the conclusion to all of you. Given all the information you now have at your disposal about these American companies operating in Burma, do you believe divestment and further sanction is the best approach? Boycotts? New government policy?

Clearly the junta needs to stop making money so that it loses power so the rightful leader of Burma can resume her seat of leadership.

Here are links to a two part article that argues against divestment for you to consider.

Trade and Security Trump Democracy in Burma – Part I

Trade and Security Trump Democracy in Burma – Part II


 

I hope this monster is a useful resource to those interested.

Pony Party: Sunday music retrospective

Jimi Hendrix


Are you Experienced?

When I lived in the Haight with some people, we did have a record player.  We had two albums and one single (Green Tambourine, which I hate to this day).  One of those albums was Are you Experienced?  I limit myself to 5 cuts.  Some people will disagree with me since I chose not to include Hey Joe, Love or Confusion or Fire.  My mileage often varies from that of others.


The Wind Cries Mary


Foxy Lady


Purple Haze

Please do not recommend a Pony Party when you see one.  There will be another along in a few hours.

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