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Thompson and his ideas are now online – Politics – MSNBC.com
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Thompson and his ideas are now online – Politics – MSNBC.com
Military and Security Spending, April 26 | Foreign Policy In Focus released its fourth annual Unified Security Budget report. discussed in this TomPaine.com commentary by report co-author Miriam Pemberton, as well as on Marketplace and in the Inter Press Service.
Nuclear Power, April 23 | This report from IPS, Friends of the Earth and the Government Accountability Project, directed by Robert Alvarez, revealed that the Department of Energy’s plans to recycle spent fuel from nuclear power plants could cost tens of billions of dollars and pose unprecedented potential hazards. Read about it in a Huffington Post blog by Alex Raksin.
CEO Pay, April 23 | IPS Fellow Sarah Anderson calls on Congress to rein in executive compensation in this Hartford Courant op-ed.
Climate Change, May 3 | IPS Fellow Daphne Wysham is quoted in this Reuters article about the shortcomings of the U.S. Climate Action Partnership, a corporate alliance that has proposed ways that companies can curb greenhouse gas emissions.
Politics, May 3 | Rev. Lennox Yearwood, Jr., whose Hip Hop Caucus partners with the Institute’s Cities for Progress project, is quoted in this Washington Post article about Barack Obama’s comments on the African-American community.
I R A Q //
Hired Guns, April 25 | IPS Fellow Sanho Tree is quoted in this Dissident Voice article about the growth of mercenary recruitment in Latin America, including thousands of "contractors" now deployed in Iraq.
War Policy, April 30 | IPS Research Fellow Erik Leaver is quoted in this TomDispatch.com commentary by Jeremy Scahill about a glaring loophole in the recently vetoed Iraq spending bill. Its restrictions on troop deployment did not apply to military contractors, giving the Bush administration room to escalate the use of mercenaries.
April 27 | IPS Fellow Phyllis Bennis and University of Texas at Austin professor Robert Jensen call on the movement against the Iraq War to move beyond this conflict and "advocate for an entirely new foreign policy based on opposition to the long U.S. drive toward empire" in this Common Dreams commentary.
April 26 | In this AlterNet commentary, IPS Research Fellow Erik Leaver explores what’s likely to happen following Bush’s veto of the Iraq and Afghanistan supplemental spending bill.
I N D I A //
Environment, April 21 | IPS fellow Daphne Wysham warns in this AlterNet commentary of escalating violence in India where villagers are resisting plans by South Korean steelmaker Posco to build a massive complex.
IDEAS INTO ACTION
For a Balanced Security Budget
Our four-year effort to draft a Unified Security Budget has finally begun to bear fruit. For the first time the Congressional Budget Office will pull together information on the relative balance of military and non-military security spending in the budget materials it presents to Congress.
MedWatch – The FDA Safety Information and Adverse Event Reporting Program
ApothéCure and FDA notified all healthcare professionals of recent deaths associated with the use of compounded injectable Colchicine .5mg/ml, 4ml vials, lot number 20070122@26. The company issued an immediate drug recall for all strengths, sizes and lots of compounded Injectable Colchicine sold within the last year. Customers are asked to examine their stock for ApothéCure compounded Colchicine on hand and to discontinue use immediately and prepare the product to return to the company.
Read the complete 2007 MedWatch 2007 Safety summary, including a link to the Manufacturer’s Recall Notice and Return Fax Cover Sheet regarding this issue at: http://www.fda.gov/medwatch/safety/2007/safety07.htm#Colchicine
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Veteran has wrong testicle removed – Men’s Health – MSNBC.com
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4 Filipinos killed in Green Zone attack – Conflict in Iraq – MSNBC.com
President Bush statement of May 1, 2007
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/05/20070501-6.html
Response by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
http://www.newsvine.com/_news/2007/05/01/695727-reid-pelosi-on-bush-veto-of-iraq-bill
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White House 2008 rankings: The Democrats – National Journal – MSNBC.com
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White House 2008 rankings: The Republicans – National Journal – MSNBC.com
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WP: In Baghdad, commuters take to water – washingtonpost.com Highlights – MSNBC.com
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 30, 2007
Media Inquiries:
FDA Media Relations Office, 301-827-6242
Consumer Inquiries:
888-SAFEFOOD
WASHINGTON, April 30, 2007 – The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) have learned that byproducts from pet food manufactured with contaminated wheat gluten imported from China have been used in chicken feed on some farms in the state of Indiana. This information came to light as part of the continuing investigation into imported rice protein concentrate and wheat gluten that have been found to contain melamine and melamine-related compounds.
At this time, the investigation indicates that approximately 30 broiler poultry farms and eight breeder poultry farms in Indiana received contaminated feed in early February and fed it to poultry within days of receiving it. All of the broilers believed to have been fed contaminated product have since been processed. The breeders that were fed the contaminated product are under voluntary hold by the flock owners.
As with exposure from hogs fed contaminated pet food and for similar reasons related to the dilution of the contamination, FDA and USDA believe the likelihood of illness after eating chicken fed the contaminated product is very low. Because there is no evidence of harm to humans associated with consumption of chicken fed the contaminated product, no recall of poultry products processed from these animals is being issued. Testing and the joint investigation continue. If any evidence surfaces to indicate there is harm to humans, the appropriate action will be taken.
Because the poultry being held have been fed adulterated products, USDA cannot knowingly approve products derived from these poultry for human consumption. USDA is offering to compensate producers who euthanize this poultry. USDA is also offering the expertise and assistance of Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) personnel in carrying out depopulation activities, to ensure adherence to Federal and State laws.
FDA and USDA anticipate that as the investigation continues additional farms will likely be identified that received contaminated feed. As indicated in previous updates, FDA and USDA have also traced contaminated feed to swine farms in several states. The same procedures are being followed in relation to both swine and poultry; animals are being quarantined by state order or voluntarily held by the owners and USDA is offering compensation for depopulation and disposal of both swine and poultry that have been fed contaminated products.
USDA and FDA continue to conduct a full, comprehensive examination to protect the nation’s food supply and will provide updates as new information is confirmed.
####
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Sharp rise in terrorist attacks in 2006 – International Terrorism – MSNBC.com
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U.S. April death toll in Iraq passes 100 – Conflict in Iraq – MSNBC.com
Labor is treated as just another commodity. Buy it as cheap as you can. Replace it with machines wherever you can, and get rid of it when it’s no longer needed. Keep your eye on that bottom line at all times.
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WP: Foreign Katrina aid rejected, unused – washingtonpost.com Highlights – MSNBC.com
Time to turn the wheel the other way — cut the tax-cuts for the rich and Big Bidness and start adding jobs.
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More oil leases sold off Alaska coast – Environment – MSNBC.com
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Bush lifts drilling ban in Alaska fishery – Environment – MSNBC.com
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EPA proposes controversial energy rule – MSNBC Wire Services – MSNBC.com
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Expanded offshore drilling plan set – Environment – MSNBC.com
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WP: Aid chief quits over call-girls, sources say – washingtonpost.com Highlights – MSNBC.com
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WP: Tenet says White House eyed Iraq from start – Politics – MSNBC.com
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Suicide blast kills 9 U.S. soldiers – Conflict in Iraq – MSNBC.com
There’s news about the dollar taking a pounding. There’s also a lot of M&A going on — merging and acquisitions. Companies going private, stock being bought and swapped to make deals.
I can’t remember the DOW high before the crash after Bush slithered under the back door of the White House. But the figure 11,722 comes to mind. Then it took a nose dive after 9-11, and now it’s close to 13,000. Going from the peak, 11,722 to 13,000 in six years really isn’t that big a deal.
I think it’s about time for the Dow to shed a few hundred points — again.
As far as being elected president goes, a black man probably has a better chance than a woman.
I have lots of great ideas every day — and some of them are pretty funny. Send me money.
Gonzales wasn’t able to give any reasons. One thing that was clear from his hearing is that he wasn’t the one to make the decision to fire them. He didn’t even know who was on the list!
His, "I don’t recall what I remember" is Saturday Night Live material!
Same thing in politics. The rest of us, even though there are more of us, just don’t all think the same way.
Thanks to the complete nervous breakdown of the US media, it’s been a long, hard six years for those of us who believe that journalism exists for one reason only — to hold those in power to account, and to speak truth to that power.
Today, Paul Wolfowitz is embroiled in a really slimy, immoral sex scandal at the World Bank … Rove/Bush/Cheney "ordered" the RNC not to release to the House Judiciary Committee any emails related to their involvement in the attorney firings that have not been cleared by the White House … little Alberto Gonzales has painted himself into a corner and "can’t recall" how he got there … and the White House has admitted our flag-wavin’, foot-stompin’ commander-in-chief was "unaware of defense plans to immediately extend Army combat tours when he criticized Democrats’ budget plans as potentially forcing troops to spend more time in Iraq."
But, perhaps the most explosive news not covered this week is the announcement of Ohio Democratic Rep Dennis Kucinich that he would file articles of impeachment against Dick Cheney. Here is a copy of his letter to members of Congress that was leaked to the Washington Post’s "Slueth," Mary Ann Akers…
| April 17, 2007
Dear Colleague: This week I intend to introduce Articles of Impeachment with respect to the conduct of Vice President Cheney. Please have your staff contact my office . . . if you would like to receive a confidential copy of the document prior to its introduction in the House. Sincerely, |
However, Kucinich’s action appears to have been quickly shot down, as Akers reported that, "Sources tell the Sleuth that in light of the mass killings at Virginia Tech Monday, Kucinich’s impeachment plans have been put on hold. There will be no action this week, they say."
Akers writes that Kucinich shouldn’t hold his breath on getting anywhere with his impeachment plan because a Democratic aide quipped, "We’ll see a Kucinich Administration before we’ll see a Cheney impeachment."
Looks like Cheney has low friends in high places, doesn’t it? Kucinich’s office had no comment…
ALL media, print and electronic, are obscenely obsessed with the shooting at Virginia Tech — none more so than CNN, the most "twisted" name in news. CNN anchors are on the scene in full investigation mode, mercilessly interrogating university officials, police officials and friends of those murdered — "how did it feel?…how will this affect your life?…should someone have seen Cho Seung-Hui’s "break" coming?…Who’s responsible?…tell us — tell us how you feel…What is it like — to see your friends in the hospital?…What are you going to do next? How are you going to move on?
CNN then went on to go down a list of victims, giving their names and airing interviews with family members who were asked how it felt to lose their children…
Meanwhile, the 40 faceless, nameless, family-less American soldiers and marines killed last week — the 10 killed on Monday of this week — were not important enough to get CNN’s attention. The 157 (reported briefly by the NYT — or 127 reported just as briefly by the WaPo) human beings killed in Baghdad today as a result of four car bombings weren’t even a blip on CNN’s TV screen. There were also at least 150 injured in those blasts.
Maybe CNN should ask these survivers how they "feel"…
Time goes by quickly, and it is now 1972, the year that Richard Nixon won in a landslide over George McGovern, carrying every state except — you guessed it — Massachusetts. Not long afterward, Fort Devens was closed by Executive Order of the President and was made a federal penal institution.
The Wall Street Urinal makes a big point — often — about how much of the tax burden is paid by the rich. I don’t know anybody who won’t swap his income with someone who is rich and be happy to pay more taxes. I will be first in line if I can get there. If you know anybody who is rich who will swap his income so that he won’t pay so much in taxes, please notify me at once.
Call collect.
I have the "Mission Accomplished" issue of Time with all the gushing oohs and ahs that this Bush photo op produced. It made me sick to read it then, but I’m still waiting to read something in Time about how wrong they were about Bush and his war in Iraq. Magazines and newspapers continue to lose readers, and they wonder why. They keep dumbing down, thinking that’s going to help. Not likely — the people they’re writing for don’t — and can’t — read.
$10,000 to insure a family X 1000 equals one million X 1000 = $1 billion. So, you can insure one million families with a billion dollars, but this is still a long, long way from covering the 47 million who have no health coverage.
All Bush schemes barely tinker around the edges and have something to do with tax cuts. Cutting taxes never paid for anything. One thing universal health care would do is create jobs in this country for people in this country. It’s not likely you will be sent overseas for your doctor’s visit.
Supposedly, the revenue that this plan would generate would/could be used to provide coverage for those without it. How far would $33.3 billion a year go to do that? Make the math easy. If each family got $10,000 worth of coverage, it would cost $10 billion just for 1,000 families! In other words, we’re talking about drops in a bucket!
Another typical "nothing" Bush idea!
The American people will know WHO to hold responsible….
Americans are big sports fans – billions and billions of dollars are spent each year on baseball, football, hockey, golf, racing, boxing, basketball, soccer – you name it and we’ll find a team to play it. Whether the team is good bad, or indifferent, we are stuck like glue to sports channels and winners become our heroes.
The American people have heroes in the making in the 110th Congress where the score is now 269-259. Two-hundred sixty nine members of Congress have joined forces and voted to set a timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq.
The House vote came on March 23, 2007 with a score of 218-212 on H.R. 1591 as follows:
The Senate vote came on the morning of March 29, 2007 with a score of 51-47. Republicans Chuck Hagel of Nebraska and Gordon Smith of Oregon joined forces with the Democrats providing them with the necessary majority.
President Bush, during an address to the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, stated “I have made it clear for weeks, if either version comes to my desk, I’m going to veto it,”
President Bush believes the end result of his action will lead Americans to blame Congress for failure to fund the troops, but there is no failure. H.R. 1591 “Making emergency supplemental appropriations for fiscal year ending September 30, 2007, and for other purposes” contains adequate provisions to support our troops. If President Bush vetoes the bill, he will be the one person that is solely responsible for cutting off funding to our troops, no one else.
A new report, published in the March 12 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine, indicates the incidence of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder is running at 31% for troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. The lead researcher, Karen H. Seal, San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center, believes the number of veterans suffering from PTSD and/or mental disorders is actually much higher. Many of the cases diagnosed during the study of 104,000 veterans were diagnosed by primary care physicians during primary care appointments, rather than by mental health professionals.
The fact that VA physicians are actively looking for PTSD symptoms in returning vets is good news. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder was not added to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders until many years after the Vietnam conflict was over and most Vietnam veterans were subjected to many years of suffering before they were able to obtain treatment from the Veterans Administration.
Prior to the attack on Iraq we were told, by our President, that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction that could be turned against us in a matter of hours. Now we are being told, by this same President, the situation in Iraq is improving on a daily basis.
The following chart indicates major attacks over the past 70 + days. It does not include attacks that occur daily in various areas throughout the country of Iraq.
Is this what our government considers an improvement in conditions in Iraq?
Source: Reuters
The new bomb of choice in Iraq is filled with chlorine and causes breathing problems, nausea, skin irritation and vomiting. On March 28, 2007 one of these bombs was detonated wounding 15 U.S. and Iraqi forces. This is the eighth chlorine bomb used by the insurgents since January 28, 2007.
Our Commander-in-Chief may not recognize when it’s time to pull our troops from a war zone, but members of Congress do and our hats should be off to each and every member that voted YEA for this bill.
Passing a bill that the President of the United States has threatened to veto is certainly not an easy decision for members of Congress to make, but they made it and the support of the people of the United States should be behind them 100%.
The media may be calling this a war between the Whitehouse and the Democrats, but the fact is it’s a continuation of the war that began with the 2006 election. The American people want members of our military back home; if members of Congress can recognize that fact why can’t the Commander-in-Chief?
My friend Bernie says ever since the Bush gang stormed the White House in 2000, then stormed the World Trade Center in 2001, we’ve done nothing but run in circles like a bunch of terrified chickens with our heads chopped off. "We have no sense of direction," Bernie said, "we’re staggering around in a jungle of lies, deceit, and scandal with no way out — and that’s the way they planned it."
"You’re kidding!" I exclaimed, astonished. "You mean they planned this mess? It’s nothing but bloody chaos out there –"
Bernie nodded. "You got that right. Bloody chaos is the best — the only — way to get what they’re after. Don’t be fooled by those little American flags stuck in the lapels of this bunch," Bernie continued. "The people in this nation, the hungry and homeless, the ill, the elderly, displaced Katrina victims, and especially those returning from war’s inferno either in body bags or maimed physically, psychologically, and spiritually aren’t even blips on their New World Order radar screen. They suffer at the pleasure of the president."
Bernie reminded me that shortly before the 2000 presidential campaign, when Dick Cheney was CEO of Halliburton, he made a speech to the Institute of Petroleum in London where he complained that oil producers "had to deal with the pesky problem that once you find oil and pump it out of the ground you’ve got to turn around and find more or go out of business."
Cheney went on to say, "That means by 2010 we will need on the order of an additional fifty million barrels a day. So where is the oil going to come from? Governments and the national oil companies are obviously in control of about ninety per cent of the assets. Oil remains fundamentally a government business…the Middle East with two thirds of the world’s oil and the lowest cost, is still where the prize ultimately lies…"
Bernie grinned. "If that didn’t set off alarms, especially in Iraq, you gotta know they started going off when, a year later, with his eyes on the prize, Cheney appointed himself vice president, put himself in charge of the nation’s energy policy, based that policy on the location of oil fields — not only in Iraq and Iran but throughout the Persian Gulf — then mounted up and headed out to solve big oil’s ‘pesky’ problem."
I have to agree with Bernie. Cheney and his bumbling bunch of neo-conservative henchmen are obsessed with this really crazy "vision" that they can control the world. Flip through their chilling masterpiece and you’ll see that they believe the world is theirs — everything, including space and cyberspace — all theirs. And, it’ll hit you right between the eyes that every one of these suckers is a flaming psycho. If it takes lies, they’ll lie. If it takes imprisonment, torture, mass murder, either at home or abroad — they’ll do that too.
Bernie says folks in this country have no idea what they’re up against. In spite of the draconian USA Patriot Act, they still hang onto the illusion that their freedoms are protected by the US Constitution; yet they emerge from each succeeding crisis with fewer and fewer freedoms. "If Americans were willing — or capable — of reading and thinking," Bernie said, "they’d know that the war being waged throughout the world began here at home, and the US Constitution and Bill of Rights were its first victims."
Can’t argue with that. The truth’s been out there for years. In December 2002, before the Washington Post drank the Stepford Kool-Aid, it published a riveting piece, "In Terror War, 2nd Track for Suspects," in which writer Charles Lane exposed Bush’s executive power grab to strip courts of all oversight or authority. Lane sounded the alarm on the "parallel legal system in which terrorism suspects — U.S. citizens and noncitizens alike — may be investigated, jailed, interrogated, tried and punished without legal protections guaranteed by the ordinary system."
Lane went on to say the administration, with approval of the "special" Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, could "order a clandestine search of a U.S. citizen’s home and, based on the information gathered, secretly declare the citizen an enemy combatant, to be held indefinitely at a U.S. military base." If the courts were aware of this activity at all, they would have "very limited authority to second-guess the detention." .
Lane’s article is no longer available on the WaPo site (surprise!), but can be found on Common Dreams.org, as can Jonathan Turley’s August 2002 article,"Camps for Citizens: Ashcroft’s Hellish Vision," originally published in the LA Times, but alas, is also no longer there.
Turley, a straight-talking professor of constitutional law at George Washington University, exposed then Attorney General John Ashcroft’s "hellish vision" to incarcerate citizens he decided were "enemy combatants," i.e., all who were disloyal to Bush or dared to resist his "smoke-em-out" war on terror. According to Turley, in Ashcroft’s America, "security precedes liberty." Liberty is nothing more than a "rhetorical justification for increased security," and citizens have a choice — accept autocratic rule and surrender their rights peacefully, or be labeled enemy combatants and be held indefinitely by the government, without charges, a hearing, or access to a lawyer.
The camps are there, fully staffed and ready. In the absence of the US Constitution, Bush’s Executive Orders are in place. Everything needed to keep this country running has been contracted out. Halliburton has left the building. Those in our society still having bragging rights to civil liberties are illegal aliens, whose growing numbers give new meaning to the word, "surge." One swipe of Bush’s pen will inflict martial law and we will discover, too late, that we live in a police state patrolled by jackbooted Blackwater USA mercenaries who will, indeed, serve at the pleasure of the president..
Blackwater is in place to become this nation’s shadow police force and is its current shadow army. Go back to the "dry run" of Katrina and take a look at the heavily armed force that laid seige to New Orleans, that sped through the streets rounding up hurricane victims, packing them into a "detention" arena where they were forced to stay for days without food or water or assistance. Go back even further — the bodies hanging from the bridge in Fallujah were not US soldiers, but Blackwater mercenaries — death squad troops 100,000 strong who roam the Iraqi streets at will and stir up violence and hatred against the uniformed US military.
We are awakening to find ourselves in a dark evil tangle, a "puling sample jungle of woods." Reminds me of the helplessness I felt on that bright, sunshiny day when I pulled over at a roadside park near Atlanta to take a short nap. When I awoke two hours later, it was pitch dark — and it was only noon! Then, I realized with horror that I was covered with Kudzu — I could hear it relentlessly growing, munching, crunching around me!
I was faced with a choice. I could hunker down in fear and hope someone else would save me, or I could at least make the effort to get out of the mess I had gotten myself into. Armed with only a dull pocket knife, I managed to slice my way out of the jungle by cutting frantically for a few minutes and then "inching" the car forward. Finally, after a three-hour battle with the stuff, I was free! I sped toward the state line with the carniverous vines hot on my tail. I have never been back to Georgia. Only the Devil goes down there…
It doesn’t matter if that actually happened. The important thing is that we are now faced with a choice. We can hunker down and hope for the best, or we can rise up and take our country back. Texas Republican Congressman Ron Paul says we must act before it is too late and we find ourselves being herded into camps. Paul says we must contact every single member of congress and demand "a repeal of freedom-crushing legislation such as the Patriot act and the Military Commissions Act and the Defense Authorization Act which essentially wipes out Habeas Corpus."
They must be forcibly stopped. We must impeach this unholy gang of war criminals because they have no intention of leaving office in 2008, or ever, if they are left unchecked. We must not allow ourselves and our children to be forced to live in a Kudzu World — to survive only at the pleasure of the president.
By Richard E Walrath and Patricia L Johnson
Lawrence Lindsey, an early economic adviser to Bush, lost his job when he estimated the cost of the war between $100 and $200 billion. The war costs are now over $500 billion and they talk of it as "only" 1% of GDP, and easily affordable.
If the United States has $500 billion to waste in Iraq, how come everyone in this country doesn’t have health insurance? Why are the schools holding bake sales to raise money?
Sane, The Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy said it best in a leaflet prepared for their First Annual Pentagon Bake Sale "The ultimate goal of all this, a leaflet says, is to see the day ”our schools get all the money they need and the Air Force has to hold a bake sale to buy a bomber.”
See complete quote: New York Times May 23, 1985
The cost of the war plus the amount in the defense budget is now greater than the amount spent on World War II, adjusted for inflation. The war in Afghanistan could be all over by now. Instead, it is expanding after five years, and there is no end in sight for the Bush war in Iraq.
Since 9/11 Congress has already approved $510 billion dollars for the following operations. These appropriations include funding for military operations, base security, foreign aid, embassy costs and veterans’ health care.
OIF – Operation Iraqi Freedom [Iraq]
OEF – Operation Enduring Freedom [Afghanistan]
ONE – Operation Noble Eagle – [Enhanced military base security]
Although the Department of Defense has not provided Congress with operational costs for previously allocated funds, CRS is estimating 74% for Operation Iraqi Freedom, 19% for Operation Enduring Freedom, 5% for Operation Noble Eagle, and 1% unallocated.
CRS goes on to state that generally 90% of funds are for the Department of Defense, 7% for foreign aid and embassy operations, with less than 1% allocated for medical care for veterans.
Columns may not add due to rounding
When we add the 2007 supplemental request to the mix, we’re looking at more than $600 billion in war costs and we don’t even have an exit plan.
Why is there so much money to waste and so little for what we need?
I hope Senator Leahy has the subpoenas served.
I mean the hearings going on as shown on C-Span make just about as much sense. A member of Congress (R) or the media wants you to believe the CIA informs people about who is a covert CIA operative? The agent wouldn’t be covert if everybody knew s/he was now, would s/he?
If I can’t get the list of covert CIA operatives, maybe I could get a list of the non-covert or "uncoverted" agents and work backwards. As they say, you can’t tell the players unless you have a program.
The UAE is one of the few places in the world where Cheney is less unpopular than he is in the United States. His move is more like deportation than it is outsourcing. Through clenched teeth — VP Cheney always talks through clenched teeth — he’ll say, "They’ll never get me now…"
The first nine correct answers correctly identifying above unnamed specimen will be eligible for entry to the final round.
Hint — John Edwards did not tell me to write this.
Now that Libby has been convicted, the right-wingers, the Wall Street Urinal, the National Standard and the National Review are huffing and puffing with indignation. These are the same specimens that were dancing in the streets over the impeachment of Bill Clinton.
Speaking from FBI headquarters, Robert S. Mueller, III told reporters “I am to be held accountable,” Apparently being responsible for misuses of national security letter authorities doesn’t involve resigning as Mueller went on to state he would not resign his position as FBI Director.
Director Mueller’s comments were in response to questions about the 199-page report “A Review of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Use of National Security Letters” issued in March 2007.
The report indicates during calendar year 2003 through 2005 a total of 143,074 National Security requests were issued. Since one NSL to a third party can contain numerous requests for information, i.e., a NSL to a telephone company may request information on six or seven different telephone numbers, the actual number of National Security Letters to third parties during this period may be significantly lower.
A National Security Letter (NSL) is a letter requesting information from a third party, sent by the FBI or other government agency, having authority to conduct a national security investigation. FBI NSL’s are sent to telephone companies, internet service providers, credit bureaus and banks requesting the following information:
Four separate statutes grant five provisions for this authority as follows:
The OIG review of 77 investigative files and 293 national security letters in 4 FBI field office identified the following failures: NSL approvals were not reviewed and initialed by required field supervisors or Division Counsel, NSL approved memoranda did not contain all required information, and NSL’s did not contain required recitals or other information as required by statute.
46 of the 77 files reviewed (60 percent) contained more than one infraction of the rules, yet the NSL’s were still approved.
Although the OIG found numerous areas of serious concern and deficiencies, it must be noted that the OIG found no indication that the failures were intentional or deliberate.
When used appropriately, national security letters contribute to both counterterrorism and counterintelligence investigations and are vital tools in the war on terror. These same tools however, when not used in accordance with applicable laws are a direct abuse and violation of our civil liberties.
The OIG report made 10 recommendations for improvement and Director Mueller, in a March 6, 2007 letter to the OIG, agreed with implementing all recommendations.
The most serious rule violation appeared to be with the 739 CAU ‘exigent letters’ that did not provide all the information necessary to satisfy the ECPA NSL Statute, the Attorney General’s NSI Guidelines, or internal FBI policy.
An ‘exigent’ letter is a letter giving the reader the impression emergency conditions are in place that require immediate attention.
The OIG recommended taking steps to ensure these letters are not improperly used in the future and Director Mueller went one step further and has barred the use of exigent letters by the FBI.
No one appreciates having their privacy invaded and given a choice most of us would not want the FBI, or any other government agency, to have the means available to obtain our personal information.
Unfortunately, we’re no longer in a position where we can do too much complaining. We went out into the night and attacked two separate countries, Afghanistan and Iraq and for the next several decades we are going to have to be on guard against retaliation for these attacks.
Information is the key to our future safety. The more the authorities know about people coming in and out of this country, as well as those living here, the better prepared they will be to ensure our safety.
The OIG review covered a very small percentage of files, yet uncovered an exceptional number of serious rule violations. When there are that many infractions within a small number of case studies, perhaps it’s time to change the rules.
Do we really want FBI personnel spending their time dotting ‘I’s” and crossing “T’s” or do we want them out looking for the bad guys?
Patricia L Johnson is a writer residing in Northeastern Illinois
Now that Libby has been convicted, the right-wingers, the Wall Street Urinal, the National Standard and the National Review are huffing and puffing with indignation. These are the same specimens that were dancing in the streets over the impeachment of Clinton.
| Quote: |
| "A lost infant in the ashes, lost faces in the dust, a lost finger in the garbage dumps, a lost mother in the debris, a nation lost in the fire, a country lost in the greed…and eyes lost in that endless tunnel of helplessness, anguish and despair…lost in the total emptiness, in the void of the living dead."~~Layla Anwar, "Ashes & Dust" |
Sometimes I wonder if Americans are unaware of the malicious devastation the Bush administrtion is wreaking upon this good earth and its inhabitants, or if they just don’t give a damn. I wonder if they ever put a "face" on even one of the hundreds of thousands of innocent men, women and children who are lost forever — victims of arrogance, lust for power, insatiable greed. And lies .. all lost because of evil, deliberate lies.
I wonder why so many denizens of this Christian nation seem unable or unwilling to wrap their minds around the reality that Iraqi people are human beings just as they, themselves, are — not rabid dogs to be hunted down and slaughtered. Perhaps it’s because, in order to remain sane or to avoid being targeted by the Bush administration, they traded their Christianity for Religion, their Love for Hate — their Life for Death. For protection from the Butcher of Baghdad, far too many Americans far too easily traded their souls to the Werewolf of Washington.
They don’t want to know what it’s like for families to cower in terror as their doors are kicked in, mothers and daughters raped, fathers and sons dragged off, never to be seen again. They don’t want to know about prisoners being humiliated and tortured, secretly "rendered" to countries for more torture, held captive for endless years without charges, without hope, without life. They don’t want to know about Iraq’s rich culture, its secular society, its formidable institutiions of learning. According to the late Columbia University professor Edward Said, all of this, along with Iraq’s "long-suffering people were made invisible, the better to smash the country as if it were only a den of thieves and murderers." (Al-Ahram Weekly, 24 – 30 April 2003)
Even if it were possible to know how many innocent civilians have been needlessly murdered, it wouldn’t matter. Because America’s leaders don’t know and they don’t care. As General Colin Powell, then Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, retorted to an April 1991 question about Iraqi casualties — "That’s not really a number I’m terribly interested in." And, following the assault on Afghanistan, General Tommy Franks, CENTCOM commander and architect of both the Afghanistan and Iraqi killing sprees, quipped at a March 2002 news conference at Bagram Air Base — "We don’t do body counts."
Even President George Bush, the commander-in-chief — the Energizer Bunny Decider — pleaded ignorance and apathy when asked on Dec. 12, 2005 about the number of iraqi civilians slain since the March 2003 invasion. "How many Iraqi civilians have died…in this war?" he asked. "Um…I would say about 30,000 — more or less…"
Reporters in the room knew that more than a year before, the British medical journal, The Lancet, had reported for the period March 2003 – Sept. 2004, an excess mortality of nearly 100,000 civilian deaths. Yet none dared challenge Bush then nor in October 2006 when the journal released an indepth study that an estimated 655,000 Iraqis had died since the invasion, with more than 600,000 due to violence.
Is Politics really more important than life? Of course, when you consider the gandy-dancing, moon-walking and flip-flopping that’s gone on within the political axis — the administration, the Congress and the media — since the November elections.
If there were doubts that this axis considers the nation’s military anything more than "dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns for foreign policy," the spectacle that has unfolded since Bush was backed into a corner with the release of the James Baker/Les Hamilton Iraq Study Group (ISG) report put them to rest. Its 84 pages boiled down to one sentence in the Executive Summary — "The United States has long-term relationships and interests at stake in the Middle East, and needs to stay engaged," which was another way of telling Bush not to cut and run until the oil law was passed which will legalize US corporate plunder of Iraq’s oil fields via 35-year contracts.
The ISG was nine months in the making, March through October 2006, during which time 556 coalition "troops" were killed — 515 of them American. For political reasons, Baker and Hamilton waited until after the election to release it, hardly noticing that 77 servicemen and women were killed in November. On Dec. 13, when Bush tossed the report on the table with the rest of the options and announced he’d make his decision after Christmas, US casualties stood at 2,937. On Christmas Day, when he bowed his head to thank God for making him The Decider, 2,975 Americans would never open another present.
The overwhelming vote in November 2006 was a national demand to stop the war. Bush responded in January 2007 by announcing not only that he was staying the course, but that he was "surging" an additional 21,500 military in a "New Way Forward" plan. Since that time, with the surge underway, Democrats and Republicans have sparred in a shameful display of shadow-boxing oratory and endless debates on debates, resulting in a single limp, non-binding resolution designed to do little more than give political cover to those voting for it. With the surge nearly complete, House Democrats now say they’re working on a plan to restrict Bush’s ability to wage war, with the stipulation, of course, that he can continue to kill if he "publicly justifies" his position
With cruel indifference this pack of werewolves, led by a creature who deserted his post in a time of war, continue to fund a surge they claim they are against while shouting, "Support the troops!" They neither know nor care that, above all things, support means full force protection — sufficient training, proper equipment — and medical care for those who return broken in body, mind and spirit.
Like their more than 650,000 Iraqi counterparts, the 3,185 US victims of the Iraqi inferno have no individual form or substance in the minds of the general public — certainly not in those of the media or the Congress. One is merely "collateral damage," the other a heap of body bags labeled "troops."
Senators John McCain and Barack Obama were exactly right when they said that so many lives in this illegal war have been "wasted," rather than sacrificed. Victims of this war — Iraqi and American — are little more than debris scattered in the wake of the werewolves’ lust to dominate the world and control its resources.
They are, as described so eloquently by Iraq’s Layla Anwar — "lost faces in the dust."
Sheila Samples is an Oklahoma writer and a former civilian US Army Public Information Officer. She is a regular contributor for a variety of Internet sites. Contact her at rsamples@sirinet.net
So, the supine court put him in office in 2000, and the media hid the Walter Reed Medical Center scandal, among others, so Bush the Second could get a second term, aided and abetted by all those who voted for him.
They say people get the government they deserve. The problem with that is the people who voted against Bush — twice — are getting the same government as those who voted for him.
We can’t afford war anymore, and we can’t afford corporate welfare and tax-cuts for the rich anymore. Put more money in the pot and tell Walker to take a walk.
It’s time for a little humor. Business Section of the Sunday paper ran a big piece on the AMT — Alternative Minimum Tax. Gotta do something about this, said the story, because middle-class families are affected — those with incomes from $75,000 to $500,000!!!!
I said a little humor — very little. Close to half of the households in this country don’t have incomes equal to HALF of $75K! But it is nice to know that if you’re in a household with an income of $75,000, you’re being lumped together with those whose income is $500,000.
What a joke!
All the people who wanted to sell their stock yesterday found buyers who were happy to buy — at a lower price. Houses around the country are sitting waiting for buyers who will be happy to buy at a lower price. I think there are going to be a lot of houses sitting waiting for buyers.
"Well, your stock is down," said the broker. "But you know how it is–the market fluctuates."
Another week went by, and Mr. Lee called his broker again to see how his investment was doing. "It went down a little further," said his broker. "But the market fluctuates."
Ten days later, Mr. Lee called his broker for the third time. "It’s really down today," said his broker. "But the market fluctuates."
Mr. Lee had had enough. "You tell me three times," said Mr. Lee, "that the market fluctuates. Now I’m telling you — Fluck you!"
No, you don’t. I have a Home Equity Line of Credit. Money, as defined by M-1, is currency, coin, and demand deposits which we know as checking accounts. I keep as little money as possible — cash, checking accounts — because they pay very close to nothing. What do I do If I need to buy or pay for something? I use a credit card or my Home Equity Line of Credit on which I can write a check which becomes "money" when I pay for something.
If people decide they don’t want to buy or spend, the effect becomes noticeable right away. That’s because the number of transactions slows down, or as the economists like to say, PT = MV — where P = Price…T = Transactions…M = Money…V = Velocity
Liquidity is very high now — people are still spending. But if they decide not to, or are unable to, spending slows, liquidity disapears, and a recession appears. I think we’re close to one now, but then, I don’t see how we got this far without one.
Check out all the banks near you. You may have to move from one to another to keep the highest rate. That’s easy to do in clummus, ahia because there are so many. CD’s are fine if you’re not going to need the money until they mature. But I’d check to see what the penalty s for early withdrawal. Even if you need the money before maturity, they may still pay a decent rate.
How much better off are these people? Having a job is better than having nothing at all to do except sit around and watch TV. But forcing people to work while taking
away benefits has added millions to the poverty level.
The next big move will be to take away or reduce Social Security and Medicare benefits. The Repugnants could probably have got this done if Bush had not invaded Iraq and become a lame-duck as well as the most unpopular president in years — maybe ever.