Google
Web The Cat's Dream

Thursday, March 31, 2005

Hypocrisy

A report made public this morning concludes that American intelligence agencies were "dead wrong" in almost all of their prewar assessments about the state of unconventional weapons in Iraq, and that on issues of this importance "we simply cannot afford failures of this magnitude." It adds, "The harm done to American credibility by our all too public intelligence failures in Iraq will take years to undo."

U.S. Was 'Dead Wrong' in Prewar Assessments, Commission Says
By DAVID JOHNSTON and SCOTT SHANE
The New York Times
Published: March 31, 2005


Bullshit! Everybody knew Iraq had no WMD. HYPOCRISY is the real goddess of the Western civilization (sic!) - which has always been used to hide and justify colonialism, racism, genocide, homophobia, exploitation, capitalism...

BBC ( or Goebbels' Children - Part IV )

Dear David Cromwell,
Thank you for your further email. However, I do not believe that further dialogue on this matter will serve a useful purpose.
Yours sincerely
Helen Boaden
Director, BBC News (Email, 21 March, 2005)

MEDIA ALERT: "NO GREAT WAY TO DIE" - BUT THE GENERALS LOVE NAPALM
Exchange With the BBC's Director of News
By: David Cromwell
Wednesday, March 30, 2005

MEDIA LENS: Correcting for the distorted vision of the corporate media

Read also Goebbels' Children - Part I, II, and III

Scott Ritter on Iran

(...) President Bush himself followed up on Rice's statement by stating that 'This notion that the United States is getting ready to attack Iran is simply ridiculous.' He quickly added, 'Having said that, all options are on the table.' (...) The American media today is sleepwalking towards an American war with Iran with all of the incompetence and lack of integrity that it displayed during a similar path trodden during the buildup to our current war with Iraq. (...)

Sleepwalking to disaster in Iran
By Scott Ritter
Aljazeera

The Neo-Con Revolution

(...) The appointment of John Bolton as the US ambassador to the United Nations and the nomination of Paul Wolfowitz as president of the World Bank reveal a determination to place the cadres of the neocon revolution in key positions of power and influence and thereby create the conditions for its continuation and expansion. This was heralded almost immediately after the presidential election with the decision to replace Colin Powell, a man of very different political hue, with Condoleezza Rice as secretary of state. (...) The restless determination of the Bush administration to reorder global affairs is well-illustrated by a classified document prepared by the US defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld as a prelude to a massive review of Pentagon spending. It requires the military to build a far more proactive force focused on changing the world rather than responding to specific conflicts such as the Korean peninsula. It sees the development of very differently trained troops who would be able to intervene on a much more widespread basis. "The idea is that you would have lots of teams operating in lots of places throughout the world," a senior defence official was reported as saying. At the same time, there is an absolute belief that the US must maintain such a large lead in crucial technologies that growing powers - in other words, China - will decide that it is simply too expensive to try to compete. Welcome to the new world order as seen from Washington.

The neocon revolution - US unilateralism was a means of breaking the old order. Now it is building new alliances
Martin Jacques
The Guardian
Thursday March 31, 2005

LIFE ON EARTH

A landmark study released today reveals that approximately 60 percent of the ecosystem services that support life on Earth – such as fresh water, capture fisheries, air and water regulation, and the regulation of regional climate, natural hazards and pests – are being degraded or used unsustainably. Scientists warn that the harmful consequences of this degradation could grow significantly worse in the next 50 years. “Any progress achieved in addressing the goals of poverty and hunger eradication, improved health, and environmental protection is unlikely to be sustained if most of the ecosystem services on which humanity relies continue to be degraded,” said the study, Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA) Synthesis Report, conducted by 1,300 experts from 95 countries. It specifically states that the ongoing degradation of ecosystem services is a road block to the Millennium Development Goals agreed to by the world leaders at the United Nations in 2000.

Experts Warn Ecosystem Changes Will Continue to Worsen, Putting Global Development Goals At Risk
Millennium Ecosystem Assessment
March 30, 2005

The Pink Triangle

International gay leaders are planning a 10-day WorldPride festival and parade in Jerusalem in August, saying they want to make a statement about tolerance and diversity in the Holy City, home to three great religious traditions. Now major leaders of the three faiths - Christianity, Judaism and Islam - are making a rare show of unity to try to stop the festival. They say the event would desecrate the city and convey the erroneous impression that homosexuality is acceptable. "They are creating a deep and terrible sorrow that is unbearable," Shlomo Amar, Israel's Sephardic chief rabbi, said yesterday at a news conference in Jerusalem attended by Israel's two chief rabbis, the patriarchs of the Roman Catholic, Greek Orthodox and Armenian churches, and three senior Muslim prayer leaders. "It hurts all of the religions. We are all against it." Abdel Aziz Bukhari, a Sufi sheik, added: "We can't permit anybody to come and make the Holy City dirty. This is very ugly and very nasty to have these people come to Jerusalem." (...) Interfaith agreement is unusual in Israel. The leaders' joint opposition was initially generated by the Rev. Leo Giovinetti, an evangelical pastor from San Diego who is both a veteran of the American culture war over homosexuality and a frequent visitor to Israel, where he has formed relationships with rabbis and politicians. Organizers of the gay pride event, Jerusalem WorldPride 2005, said that 75 non-Orthodox rabbis had signed a statement of support for the event, and that Christian and Muslim leaders as well as Israeli politicians were expected to announce their support soon. They said they were dismayed to see that what united their opponents was their objection to homosexuality.

Clerics of 3 Faiths Protest Gay Festival Planned for Jerusalem
By LAURIE GOODSTEIN and GREG MYRE
The New York Times
Published: March 31, 2005


Someone should remind these religious immoral clowns about the PINK TRIANGLE.
Here more information about:

- The Pink Triangle: The Nazi War Against Homosexuals by Richard Plant

- Holocaust Teacher Resource Center

- The History of the Gay Male and Lesbian Experience during World War II

Wednesday, March 30, 2005

EUROPE

The EU gave the nod today to the contentious appointment of Paul Wolfowitz, the US deputy defence secretary, to head the World Bank. European commissioner Olli Rehn "was satisfied with everything he heard from Mr Wolfowitz concerning free trade and also on poverty reduction and development policy," a spokeswoman told reporters.

EU backs Wolfowitz as World Bank chief
Mark Tran and agencies
The Guardian
Wednesday March 30, 2005


To all those Europeans who still think Europe is better than USA: THINK AGAIN!!!

RALPH NADER

The current illegal war and occupation have devastated the country. Therefore, the US has a responsibility to the Iraqi people so Iraq can become a functioning nation again. However, we should not allow U.S. oil and other corporations to profit from the illegal invasion and occupation of their country. Control over Iraqi oil and other assets should be exercised by Iraqis. There may be light at the end of the tunnel. The anti-war movement can have a larger impact soon. It is time for us to redouble our efforts to ensure a complete and responsible U.S. withdrawal from Iraq. We have the power to make this happen.

Is the End of the Iraq War-Occupation Near?
by Ralph Nader
ZNet


Ralph Nader is a consumer advocate, former presidential candidate and advocates an end to the war and occupation of Iraq. You can comment on this column by visiting the Nader blog at www.DemocracyRising.US

Tuesday, March 29, 2005

NOAM CHOMSKY

COCA-COLA

THE TWO FACES OF COCA-COLA

Isidro Segundo Gil, an employee at a Coca-Cola bottling plant in Colombia, was killed at his workplace by paramilitary thugs. His children, now living in hiding with relatives, understand all too well why their homeland is known as "a country where union work is like carrying a tombstone on your back.

Douglas Daft, former Chairman and CEO of the Coca-Cola Co., raked in more than $105 million in compensation for 2001. He owns 3.5 million Coke shares and 9,413 shares of SunTrust, where he sits on the Board of Directors.

Dear Brothers and Sisters,
We need your help to stop a gruesome cycle of murders, kidnappings and torture of SINALTRAINAL (National Union of Food Industry Workers) union leaders and organizers involved in daily life-and-death struggles at Coca-Cola bottling plants in Colombia...


To know more about the CAMPAIGN TO STOP KILLER COKE click here

Naomi Klein on Giuliana Sgrena

Naomi Klein Reveals New Details About U.S. Military Shooting of Italian War Correspondent in Iraq - Three weeks after being shot by US forces in Iraq, veteran Italian war correspondent Giuliana Sgrena is released from a military hospital. New details are emerging about the killing of the Italian agent who saved her life. We speak with independent journalist Naomi Klein, who just returned from meeting with Sgrena in Rome.

Read the transcript on DEMOCRACY NOW! with Amy Goodman

The New York Times

At a news conference last week, Mr. Bush joked that he did not have the time "to sit around and wander, lonely, in the Oval Office, kind of asking different portraits, 'How do you think my standing will be?' " And at the end of an interview with a Belgian television correspondent last month, Mr. Bush blurted out to the young woman that she had "great eyes," glanced away slyly and then a little sheepishly, but for the most part seemed sorry that the session was over. Is this a new George Bush?

President Bush's New Public Face: Confident and 'Impishly Fun'
By ELISABETH BUMILLER
The New York Times
Published: March 28, 2005

Bush's Dictionary

Negroponte, John: Good diplomat, in the sense that Pol Pot is a good family-planner.

Democracy n:
A country where the newspapers are pro-American.

Shock and Awe:
A classic combination like "surf and turf"; special effects produced at missile point by the U.S. military. (See, State Terrorism).

Free Press: 1. Government propaganda materials covertly funded with a quarter of a billion dollars of taxpayer money but given out for free to the press and then broadcast without any acknowledgment of the government's role in their preparation. 2. Newspapers that obscure the truth on behalf of corporate and government interests for free.

Peace n: What war is for.

Entries for a Devil’s Dictionary of the Bush Era
TomDispatch.com

Sunday, March 27, 2005

NOAM CHOMSKY

Matthew Rothschild on Ward Churchill

I saw Ward Churchill speak on March 1 at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, which bravely (and that shouldn’t need to be said in America) let him come, despite denunciations by the rightwing and by members of the Wisconsin state legislature. The school’s chancellor, Jack Miller, showed real backbone. "It is still my belief that the academy is at its best when it functions as a place for the free exchange of ideas," he said on stage before Churchill spoke. "I do not share the fear of words apparently becoming more prevalent in our society." Churchill spoke for more than an hour, and at the end, he got a partial standing ovation. And that’s pretty much how I felt. Half of what he said I wholeheartedly supported, and the other half I vehemently opposed.

The Tragedy of Ward Churchill
Matthew Rothschild
The Progressive

HOWARD ZINN

As I write this, the day after the inauguration, the banner headline in The New York Times reads: "BUSH, AT 2ND INAUGURAL, SAYS SPREAD OF LIBERTY IS THE 'CALLING OF OUR TIME.' " Two days earlier, on an inside page of the Times, was a photo of a little girl, crouching, covered with blood, weeping. The caption read: "An Iraqi girl screamed yesterday after her parents were killed when American soldiers fired on their car when it failed to stop, despite warning shots, in Tal Afar, Iraq. The military is investigating the incident." Today, there is a large photo in the Times of young people cheering the President as his entourage moves down Pennsylvania Avenue. They do not look very different from the young people shown in another part of the paper, along another part of Pennsylvania Avenue, protesting the inauguration. I doubt that those young people cheering Bush saw the photo of the little girl. And even if they did, would it occur to them to juxtapose that photo to the words of George Bush about spreading liberty around the world? That question leads me to a larger one, which I suspect most of us have pondered: What does it take to bring a turnaround in social consciousness--from being a racist to being in favor of racial equality, from being in favor of Bush's tax program to being against it, from being in favor of the war in Iraq to being against it? We desperately want an answer, because we know that the future of the human race depends on a radical change in social consciousness.

Changing Minds, One at a Time
by Howard Zinn
The Progressive

American settlements

The U.S. ambassador to Israel reaffirmed Washington's support for Israel to retain major West Bank settlements under any Middle East peace deal days after Israel announced plans to expand a settlement outside Jerusalem, a move which angered Palestinians.

U.S. supports Israels West Bank settlement expansion
Aljazeera.com

Bush's Democracy

Damning evidence of American soldiers abusing detainees at another prison in Iraq was made public yesterday. It details how prisoners were "systematically and intentionally mistreated" at a military base in Mosul, culminating in the death of one. Nobody was court-martialled over the abuse.

Fresh details emerge of Iraqis' abuse by American soldiers
By David Randall in London and Andrew Buncombe in Washington
The Independent
27 March 2005

Friday, March 25, 2005

Bush and the Chess Champion

Chess whiz Bobby Fischer, 62, now a citizen of Iceland, arrived in the island nation Thursday after nine months of detention in Japan. The former world champ had much to say: He was "kidnapped" in Japan, and President George W. Bush and Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi were in cahoots to deprive him of freedom and return him to the United States, where he is wanted on criminal charges. "Bush does not respect law. It's like in the comics, like Billy Batson used to say 'Shazaaam!' and he becomes Captain Marvel." Bush "just says 'Enemy Combatant! Now you have no legal rights.' It's a farce."

Ex-chess champ rips Bush, Japan, Israel and America
Landing in Iceland as citizen there, he's still wanted in U.S.
March 25, 2005
BY MILES EDELSTEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Thursday, March 24, 2005

JOHN PILGER

(...) Honourable exceptions aside, supine journalists, like cynical opposition politicians, like corporate academics, represent unaccountable, violent power and a corrupt democracy that today offers us no more choice that between a McDonalds and a Hungry Jack's. But they do not represent us. And they do don't speak for us. And they don't speak for humanity. And they don't speak for democracy. And they don't speak for all the moral decencies by which most people live their lives. In fact, they speak for the very opposite. (...) it's our job to help people understand the great crime committed in their name, and how those who claim to speak for us, such as the media, have normalised the unthinkable: as if no crime has been committed, as if thousands of people have not been murdered, as if it was all merely a respectable adjustment of the 'world order'. My point is, they are not respectable; they may wear the suits of respectability and travel with their fawning courts, but they are prima facie criminals, be assured. (...) The time is long overdue. That time is for journalists to break ranks and speak up. It's time for teachers to write on their blackboards that great truism of Milan Kundera: "The struggle of people against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting." (...) Above all, never forget how important and right you are. It is you, in company with millions all over the world, who have taught again the great lesson of democracy. You didn't stop the invasion of Iraq, but you, and the millions like you, in Spain and Britain and France and Italy and Brazil and the United States, have alerted the world to the true darkness of the regime in Washington and its collaborators. (...) Had it not been for you and your movement, I believe Iran and North Korea would have been attacked by now, and in the case of North Korea, nuclear weapons might have been used. Be proud of these achievements: be proud that the seedy, violent power of Bush and Blair and Hoaward has been exposed by you and that behind their bravado, they are afraid of you, and of the millions like you, so, in the words of the song, why the hell should we be afraid of them?

JOHN PILGER TO ANTIWAR RALLY: 'BE PROUD OF WHAT YOU'VE ACHIEVED'
Sydney Hyde Park, 20 March 2005

BONO

But the end of innocence with respect to my childhood rock band of choice, the ubiquitous Irish rock group U2, has been a more prolonged and painful process, which culminated last week – on Saint Patrick’s Day, in fact. On March 17, incoming head of the World Bank Paul Wolfowitz and Bono had “enthusiastic and detailed” telephone conversations.

Bono stage right: Empire moves and co-opts in mysterious ways
March 22, 2005
Derrick O'Keefe
Seven Oaks

Wednesday, March 23, 2005

AFRICA

A major feature of the invasion of Iraq was media commentators falling for obvious government propaganda. Without such complicity, the invasion would have been politically impossible. Yet this willful self-deception is now being repeated in another area, where government propaganda is approaching the same depths as on Iraq. The current Big Lie is that 2005 is to be the Year of Africa.

Britain and Africa: The new propaganda
by Mark Curtis
ZNet
March 21, 2005


Mark Curtis is Director of the World Development Movement and author of Unpeople: Britain's Secret Human Rights Abuses - Vintage, 2004

Tuesday, March 22, 2005

American Empire

(...) Some critics oppose Mr. Wolfowitz on the grounds that he was responsible for so many military and political failures in Iraq. (...) But these were questions of means, not motive. His motives were laudable and in line with a tradition of foreign policy idealism that both parties have supported at different times: the use of American power to fight tyranny and support democratic values. Mr. Wolfowitz was one of the few Republicans who supported President Clinton's interventions in Bosnia and Kosovo. (...) But at the World Bank, he will be leading not an army but a painstaking campaign to build respect for the rule of law, openness and good governance through development projects and international cooperation. He will be doing something that Democratic presidents from John F. Kennedy to Bill Clinton have supported - and that today's Democrats should support, too. (...) If he becomes president of the bank, he has said that his job will be to see if he "can shape a consensus on these things" not push the American view. By most accounts, during his time as United States ambassador to Indonesia, he was an effective diplomat and consensus-builder. (...)

Lending the Good Loan
By JAMES P. RUBIN
The New York Times
Published: March 22, 2005

James P. Rubin, assistant secretary of state under President Bill Clinton, was an adviser to Senator John Kerry during the 2004 presidential campaign.

Once again, we are reminded that there is no real difference between the two factions of the same business party. Wolfowitz and Rubin have the same view on Israel, the Middle East and on any other important foreign policy issues of the Empire. As William Blum reminds us “Those who intensely despise the leaders of the Bush administration are convinced that they are uniquely vile in American history. I would maintain, however, that there's very little of what we've come to fear and loathe about the Bushgang that can't be found in many previous administrations, and that if George W., on a purely personal level, were not such a crass, ignorant, dishonest, and insufferably religious jerk, his policies would be much more readily excused by liberals (though not by radicals) as they excused similar policies under Clinton and other Democrats going back to Truman.” (William Blum, The Anti-Empire Report, No. 19 - March 21, 2005)

Monday, March 21, 2005

WILLIAM BLUM

(...) As to what happened in Iraq in January ... Imagine if during the Cold War, Hungary had held an "election" under Soviet occupation, in which the voters did not know the names of the candidates or what they stood for, and no candidate or party called for the withdrawal of Soviet troops. The American media would have had a field day poking fun at this farce. Even more farcical was the presidential election in Afghanistan shortly before -- May I have the envelope, please ... The winner is Hamid Karzai, long-time resident in the United States, Washington's hand-picked, packaged, and groomed candidate, described by the Washington Post as "a known and respected figure at the State Department and National Security Council and on Capitol Hill." (...)

The Anti-Empire Report, No. 19
March 21, 2005
by William Blum

CUBA & DEMOCRACY

During the Clinton administration, the sentiment has been proclaimed on many occasions by the president and other political leaders, and dutifully reiterated by the media, that the thesis "Cuba is the only non-democracy in the Western Hemisphere" is now nothing short of received wisdom in the United States. Let us examine this thesis carefully for it has a highly interesting implication. During the period of the Cuban revolution, 1959 to the present, Latin America has witnessed a terrible parade of human rights violations -- systematic, routine torture; legions of "disappeared" people; government-supported death squads picking off selected individuals; massacres en masse of peasants, students and other groups, shot down in cold blood. The worst perpetrators of these acts during all or part of this period have been the governments and associated paramilitary squads of El Salvador, Guatemala, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Peru, Mexico, Uruguay, Haiti and Honduras. Not even Cuba's worst enemies have charged the Castro government with any of these violations, and if one further considers education and health care -- both of which are guaranteed by the United Nations' "Universal Declaration of Human Rights" and the "European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms" -- areas in which Cuba has consistently ranked at or near the top in Latin America, then it would appear that during the near-40 years of its revolution, Cuba has enjoyed one of the very best human-rights records in all of Latin America.

U.S., Cuba and Democracy
by William Blum
ZNet


William Blum
is the author of "Killing Hope: U.S. Military and CIA Interventions Since World War II and "Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower." The book has been endorsed by Gore Vidal, Noam Chomsky, Oliver Stone, A.J. Langguth (former NY Times Bureau Chief), Thomas Powell (Pulitzer Prize winning journalist) and Dr. Helen Caldicott (international leader of anti-nuclear and environmental movements)

Robert Fisk

So now they have struck in Qatar. Nice, friendly, liberal Doha, with its massive US air base and its spiky, argumentative al-Jazeera television, its modern shops and expatriate compounds and luxury hotels. Ever since al-Qa'ida urged its supporters to strike around the maritime Arab kingdoms of the Gulf, the princes and emirs have been waiting to find out who's first. Saturday's suicide bomber - and the killing of a Briton - gave them their answer.

The impact of the Iraq war is now being felt across Middle East
Robert Fisk
The Independent
21 March 2005
Read the whole article on Global Echo

Palestine

Palestinian officials and Israeli peace campaigners accused Ariel Sharon's government of undermining peace efforts by expanding West Bank settlements even as it hands control of Arab towns to the Palestinian security services. (...) At the same time, however, the liberal daily paper Ha'aretz reported that an aerial photography survey, commissioned by the Defence Ministry, revealed extensive building since last summer in existing settlements, thus violating Israel's commitments under the international road map for peace. A ministry spokeswoman would only confirm that they were trying to increase their knowledge of what was going on.

Israeli photographs show extensive new illegal settlements
By Eric Silver in Jerusalem
The Independent
21 March 2005

Friday, March 18, 2005

Silvio Berlusconi

ROME (Reuters) - Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi on Wednesday appeared to back track from his proposal of withdrawing troops from Iraq starting from September, saying the date was only his hope and could be changed. Berlusconi, one of President Bush's most vocal supporters, shocked friend and foe on Tuesday when he said Italy would start pulling out its troops in September, adding he was in talks with Britain's Tony Blair about a total exit. "There's never been a fixed date," Berlusconi said. "It was only my hope ... If it is not possible, it is not possible. The solution should be agreed with the allies." (...)

Italy's PM Back Tracks on Iraq Withdrawal
By Rachel Sanderson
Reuters

Gorge F. Kennan

Gorge F. Kennan, the American diplomat who did more than any other envoy of his generation to shape United States policy during the cold war, died on Thursday night in Princeton, N.J. He was 101.

George F. Kennan Dies at 101; Leading Strategist of Cold War
By TIM WEINER and BARBARA CROSSETTE
The New York Times
Published: March 18, 2005


(...) George Kennan, who was one of the most thoughtful, humane, and liberal of the planners, and in fact was eliminated from the State Depatment largely for that reason. Kennan was the head of the State Department policy planning staff in the late 1940s. In the following document, PPS23, February 1948, he outlined the basic thinking: "We have about 50 percent of the world's wealth, but only 6.3 percent of its population.... In this situation, we cannot fail to be the object of envy and resentment. Our real task in the coming period is to devise a pattern of relationships which will permit us to maintain this position of disparity.... We need not deceive ourselves that we can afford today the luxury of altruism and world-benefaction.... We should cease to talk about vague and..., unreal objectives such as human rights, the raising of the living standards, and democratization. The day is not far off when we are going to have to deal in straight power concepts. The less we are then hampered by idealistic slogans, the better."

Click here to read "American Foreign Policy" by Noam Chomsky, Harvard University, March 19, 1985

Thursday, March 17, 2005

La Règle du Jeu

Plaid Cymru MP Adam Price, who is leading the campaign to impeach Tony Blair, was today ordered out of the Commons chamber after refusing to withdraw comments that the prime minister had "misled" the house over the war in Iraq. (...) Adam Price said afterwards: "Most people now believe that the prime minister deliberately deceived parliament and the people. He even deceived members of his own cabinet in taking us to war two years ago. But the rules of the game in Westminster mean we cannot say what most of us think. The prime minister misled us and MPs must be able to debate the issue.

Anti-Blair jibe leads to Commons expulsion
Staff and agencies
The Independent
Thursday March 17, 2005

Arctic National Wildlife Refuge

WASHINGTON, March 16 - President Bush's long-stalled plan to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling cleared a major hurdle on Capitol Hill on Wednesday, when the Senate voted to include the proposal in its budget, a maneuver that smoothes the way for Congress to approve drilling later this year.

Senate Votes to Allow Drilling in Arctic Reserve
By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG
The New York Times

Mr. WOLFowitz at the World Bank

WASHINGTON, March 16 - President Bush said Wednesday that he planned to nominate Paul D. Wolfowitz, the deputy secretary of defense and one of the administration's earliest and most outspoken advocates of using American influence to spread democracy around the globe, to become the next president of the World Bank.

Wolfowitz Gets Bush Nomination for World Bank
By ELIZABETH BECKER and DAVID E. SANGER
The New York Times
Published: March 17, 2005


DEMOCRACY? Read more about Mr WOLFowitz and his friends!!!

Wednesday, March 16, 2005

Counter-recruitment

The military recruitment debate is heating up. With unemployment for Black men currently standing at 50 percent in New York, Harlem -- and CCNY in particular -- is bound to be a priority target for military recruiters. “Counter-recruitment” has become a national issue (see “Counter-Recruiters Shadowing the Military,” USA Today, March 7), and it’s working. Between these efforts, and widespread anger about the war, recruitment is down. According to a March 6 Reuters report, “The regular Army is 6 percent behind its year-to-date recruiting target, the Reserve is 10 percent behind, and the Guard is 26 percent short.” The military newspaper Stars and Stripes reports that African-American recruitment is down 41 percent since 2000. (...) Bush claims that his occupation of Iraq represents “democracy is on the march” in the Middle East. Will that include the right to protest? Certainly not for the 100,000 Iraqis killed by the U.S. since the March 2003 invasion, or the more than 1500 dead American soldiers. Blood and oil don’t mix and they don’t create democracy. Here in the U.S., high school and college student activists all over the country can take up the fight for peace and democracy and organize to kick recruiters out of their schools. Like the lunch counter sit-ins in Greensboro 45 years ago that challenged segregation in dozens of communities across the nation, you can get started opposing the recruiters at your school with just a few friends. Getting the military out of our schools and replacing them with real educational opportunities is our generation’s fight. No one will do it for us. We owe it to ourselves, the Iraqis, and the American soldiers dying for a lie.

To find out what you can do to help, write to cityfreespeech@earthlink.net and SFSUfreespeech@gmail.com or go to CAN’s website www.campusantiwar.net

Military Recruiters Target Campus Activists
by Hadas Thier and Katrina Yeaw
March 16, 2005
ZNet

Walden Bello

Europe and the world have witnessed over the last few days the unfolding of a diplomatic offensive that is designed to convince Europeans, "to put Iraq behind them." The effort is, in fact, geared to persuade not only Europeans but also the world that with the recent elections in Iraq, there is a new game that must be played, and the name of that game is democracy. The reality is that the old game of domination and occupation continues, and the US is not winning. The triumphalism that accompanied George W. Bush's tour of "Old Europe," with his brand new Secretary of State, Condoleeza Rice, at his side, was a public relations effort to counter the reality of the spread of a wide and deep resistance in Iraq. There is not only the military resistance that we witness day-to-day on television. There is also a political resistance that is broader than the military resistance. There is, as well, massive civil resistance-which encompasses not only trade union opposition but all those acts ordinary citizens engage in day-to-day to deny legitimacy to the occupation that James C. Scott calls the "weapons of the weak."

Desperate Martians Now Wooing Venusians
By Walden Bello

Adapted from the author's speeches during an anti-war tour of Italy, Feb. 22-27, 2005

Australia and East Timor's Oil

“We went to East Timor to help those people, and now we are slapping them in the face and stealing their oil.” This is what Chip Henriss-Anderssen, a former major in the Australian military who served with the International Force for East Timor, told reporters on March 7. “We thought we were doing something decent. Now we have to ask the very real question of whether or not we went to East Timor to secure oil assets that aren’t ours.”

Howard’s attempted bribery to steal Timor oil
Jon Lamb
Green Left Weekly
March 16, 2005

RESISTANCE

“When are the Iraqis going to fight for their own country? … We want to know when the Iraqis are going to go out there and shed their blood, as American service men … are willing to shed theirs”, a plaintive Democrat Senator Edward Kennedy asked a US Senate armed services committee hearing on February 3. Kennedy missed the point: thousands of Iraqis are fighting for their country — but they are taking up arms against the US-led occupation, not in support of it. (...) As British leftist Tariq Ali noted in July: “It is the Iraqi resistance that will determine the future of the country. It is their actions targeting both foreign soldiers and corporate mercenaries that has made the occupation untenable. It is their presence that has prevented Iraq from being relegated to the inside pages of the print media and forgotten by TV. It is the courage of the poor of Baghdad, Basra and Fallujah that has exposed the political leaders of the West who supported this enterprise.”

Iraq: The Right To Resist
by Rohan Pearce
Green Left Weekly
March 15, 2005

Tuesday, March 15, 2005

Goebbels' Children - Part III

A Spinwatch investigation has revealed that journalists working for the Services Sound and Vision Corporation (SSVC) have been commissioned to provide news reports to the BBC. The BBC has been using these reports as if they were genuine news. In fact, the SSVC is entirely funded by the Ministry of Defence as a propaganda operation, which according to its own website makes a 'considerable contribution' to the 'morale' of the armed forces.

BBC broadcast 'fake' news reports
David Miller, 15 March 2005
SpinWatch


Read also Goebbels' Children - Part I and II

MARCH 19-20

“First they came for the Communists, but I was not a Communist so I did not speak out. Then they came for the Socialists and the Trade Unionists, but I was neither, so I did not speak out. Then they came for the Jews, but I was not a Jew so I did not speak out. And when they came for me, there was no one left to speak out for me.”

Martin Niemoeller

Let's think of Martin Niemoeller's words when we look at what George W. Bush and Tony Blair and their associates are doing in our name and with our tax-money.

"To initiate a war of aggression, therefore, is not only an international crime; it is the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole." - Judgment of the International Military Tribunal for the Trial of German Major War Criminals - Nuremberg, Germany 1946

Ken Livingstone, the Mayor of London, said "Ariel Sharon, Israel's Prime Minister, is a war criminal who should be in prison not in office."

If a 12-year-old boy who raped his teacher has been jailed for life, what about those who have on their hands the blood of hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians? The genocide of Iraqi children? The murder of children, women and men in their own country? Will we, the ordinary people, be able to speak out and stop these mass murderers?

LET'S SPEAK OUT on MARCH 19-20 and after...

More info: UK USA CANADA AUSTRALIA EUROPE and all over the world

Monday, March 14, 2005

Goebbels' Children - Part II

Under the Bush administration, the federal government has aggressively used a well-established tool of public relations: the prepackaged, ready-to-serve news report that major corporations have long distributed to TV stations to pitch everything from headache remedies to auto insurance. In all, at least 20 federal agencies, including the Defense Department and the Census Bureau, have made and distributed hundreds of television news segments in the past four years, records and interviews show. Many were subsequently broadcast on local stations across the country without any acknowledgement of the government's role in their production.

Under Bush, a New Age of Prepackaged TV News
By DAVID BARSTOW and ROBIN STEIN
The New York Times
Published: March 13, 2005


See also Goebbels'Children - Part I

ISRAEL, ZIONISM AND JEWISH VALUES

(...) As for what was lost in acquiring a homeland, it is important to recognize that Zionism is a form of nationalism like any other, and nationalism – as even sympathetic observers like Albert Einstein were forced to recognize – always has its price. While every Jew knows that Einstein was offered the presidency of the newly independent Jewish state, few understand why he turned it down. In contrast to Berlin, who wanted Jews to become a “normal” people like the others, Einstein wrote, “My awareness of the essential nature of Judaism resists the idea of a Jewish state with borders, an army, and a measure of temporal power, no matter how modest. I am afraid of the inner damage Judaism will sustain – especially from the development of a narrow nationalism within our own ranks, against which we have already had to fight strongly, even without a Jewish state.” Who can doubt that Einstein was right to worry? (...) Furthermore, if Zionism is indeed a particularly virulent form of nationalism and, increasingly, of racism and if Israel is acting toward its captive minority in ways that resemble more and more how the Nazis treated their Jews, then we must also say so. For obvious reasons, the Zionists are very sensitive about being compared to the Nazis (not so sensitive that it has restrained them in their actions but enough to bellow "unfair" and to charge "anti-Semitism" when it happens). Yet, the facts on the ground, when not obscured by one or another Zionist rationalization, show that the Zionists are the worst anti-Semites in the world today, oppressing a Semitic people as no nation has done since the Nazis. No, the Zionists are not yet quite as bad as the Nazis, not yet, but isn't the world witnessing a creeping ethnic cleansing against the Palestinians at this very moment? If Zionists (and their supporters) find this comparison unduly insulting and unjust, they have only to stop what they are doing (and supporting), but I fear that the logic of their position will only drive them to committing (and supporting) even greater atrocities in the future, including genocide - another Nazi specialty, than they have up to now. What, if anything, has such Zionism got to do with traditional Jewish values? As far as I’m concerned, the comedian, Lenny Bruce, provided the only good answer to this question when he said, "Dig, I'm Jewish. Count Bassie’s Jewish. Ray Charles is Jewish. Eddie Cantor is goyish… Marine Corps – heavy goyish… If you live in New York or any other big city, you’re Jewish. If you live in Butte, Montana, you’re going to be goyish even if you’re Jewish… Kool-Aid is goyish. Evaporated milk is goyish even if Jews invented it… Pumpernickel is Jewish and, as you know, white bread is very goyish.… Negroes are all Jews… Irishmen who have rejected their religion are Jewish… Baton twirling is very goyish”. To this I would only add, “Noam Chomsky, Mordechai Vanunu and Edward Said are Jewish. Elie Wiesel is goyish. So, too, all ‘Jewish’ neo-cons. Socialism and communism are Jewish. Sharon and Zionism are very goyish”. And, who knows, if this reading of Judaism were to take hold, I may one day apply for readmission to the Jewish people.

Letter Of Resignation From The Jewish People
by Bertell Ollman
March 13, 2005
Tikkun
READ THE WHOLE ARTICLE ON ZNET

Sunday, March 13, 2005

CIVILIZATION

(...) Gareth Peirce, the leading human rights lawyer who is acting for most of the former detainees, said the process had been "a sham from start to finish". "They appear to be making it up as they go along," said Ms Peirce. "It is a state of complete and utter confusion and it is terrifying for the individuals concerned." (...)

Police: we can't guarantee safety of Belmarsh suspects
Release arrangements chaotic, say senior officers. Lawyers say control orders are 'unworkable'. Opposition denounces Government lack of plans
By Sophie Goodchild, Andy McSmith and Steve Bloomfield
The Independent
13 March 2005

Bird Flu

Two million Britons could die in the bird flu pandemic that experts warn is both imminent and inevitable, one of the country's leading authorities has told The Independent on Sunday. Professor Hugh Pennington, the president of the Society for General Microbiology and professor emeritus of bacteriology at Aberdeen University, also criticised the the Government's "optimistic" attitude to a potentially devastating pandemic, likening it to official complacency over BSE a decade ago. (...) The World Health Organisation said: "The world is now in the gravest possible danger of a pandemic."

Bird flu could kill 2 million Britons
By Geoffrey Lean, Environment Editor
The Independent
13 March 2005

Saturday, March 12, 2005

Goebbels' Children

WASHINGTON, March 11 - President Bush will nominate one of his closest confidantes, Karen P. Hughes, to lead an effort at the State Department to repair the image of the United States overseas, particularly in the Arab world, administration officials said Friday. She will also be a leader in publicizing the president's campaign for democracy in the Middle East. Ms. Hughes, 48, is to be named next week as Mr. Bush's choice to be under secretary of state for public diplomacy and public affairs, a position that requires Senate confirmation. Ms. Hughes, who has been a major influence in producing the message Mr. Bush presents to the public, will now tackle what administration officials say is the extremely difficult job of selling the United States and its policies to the world after the anger over the American-led invasion of Iraq.

Bush Picks Adviser to Repair Tarnished U.S. Image Abroad
By ELISABETH BUMILLER
The New York Times
Published: March 12, 2005


To know more about Joseph Goebbels, Reichsminister for Propaganda and National Enlightenment, click here

Friday, March 11, 2005

ILLEGAL BLAIR

Britain went to war on the basis of a single piece of paper setting out the legality of invading Iraq, the country's most senior civil servant has revealed. The Government's case for war appeared to be in tatters last night after the Cabinet Secretary admitted that a parliamentary answer from Lord Goldsmith, the Attorney General, was the final legal opinion on the case for war. In an astonishing admission, Sir Andrew Turnbull disclosed that no "full" legal advice on an invasion of Iraq has ever existed.

Iraq war revelation: There was no full legal advice
Cabinet Secretary admits invasion based on single page of A4
By Marie Woolf, Chief Political Correspondent
The Independent
11 March 2005

Thursday, March 10, 2005

CORPORATE AMERICA

In a decision that could close a controversial Vietnam-era chapter of American history, a federal judge in Brooklyn today dismissed a damage suit filed on behalf of millions of Vietnamese that claimed American chemical companies committed war crimes by supplying the military with the defoliant Agent Orange. The civil suit, filed last year, had sought what could have been billions of dollars in damages and the environmental cleanup of Vietnam. The suit drew international attention for its claims about Agent Orange, which was widely used by the American military to clear the jungle until 1971. The suit claimed that the defoliant, which contained the highly toxic substance dioxin, left a legacy of poison in Vietnam that caused birth defects, cancer and other health problems and amounted to a violation of international law. But Judge Jack B. Weinstein of the United States District Court sided with the chemical companies and the Justice Department, which argued that supplying the defoliant did not amount to a war crime. "No treaty or agreement, express or implied, of the United States," Judge Weinstein wrote, "operated to make use of herbicides in Vietnam a violation of the laws of war or any other form of international law until at the earliest April of 1975." Because of sovereign immunity, the United States government was not sued. In 1975, President Gerald R. Ford adopted a national policy renouncing the first use of herbicides in warfare. Also in 1975, the Senate ratified an international Geneva accord dating from 1925, which outlawed the use of poisonous gases during war. The suit claimed that because of the dioxin in Agent Orange, spraying it amounted to the use of poison during war. But Judge Weinstein concluded in a 233-page decision that even if the United States had been a Geneva signatory during the Vietnam War, the accord would not have barred the use of Agent Orange. "The prohibition extended only to gases deployed for their asphyxiating or toxic effects on man," said the decision, issued in response to a motion for dismissal by the defendants, "not to herbicides designed to affect plants that may have unintended harmful side-effects on people." (...) The companies have long said that dioxin was an unwanted byproduct of the manufacture of Agent Orange, but claimed that there was no conclusive link to the many serious health problems blamed on Agent Orange. Over many decades, American veterans of the Vietnam War filed suits making health claims similar to those now being pressed by the Vietnamese. Judge Weinstein also handled those cases. Seven American chemical companies settled the veterans' cases for $180 million in 1984. The same chemical companies, including Dow, Monsanto and Hercules, were sued in the Vietnamese case. Spokesmen for some of the companies applauded the decision today. "We believe the defoliant saved lives by protecting allied forces from enemy ambush and did not create adverse health affects," said Scot Wheeler, a spokesman for the Dow Chemical Company.

Agent Orange Case for Millions of Vietnamese Is Dismissed
By WILLIAM GLABERSON
The New York Times
March 10, 2005

The only 'democracy' in the region?

The army decided not to prosecute the soldier believed responsible for the death of a British filmmaker in the Gaza Strip, the victim's family said Wednesday, vowing to seek a court review of the findings. The family of James Miller said military prosecutor-general Avihai Mandelblitt told them the soldier would not be indicted in connection with the cameraman's death but would be disciplined for changing his story during the investigation. The army said military police had carefully investigated the incident and had been unable to establish the soldier's guilt. "The findings of the military police show that an Israel Defense Forces lieutenant, the commanding officer of the IDF force at the site, allegedly fired his weapon in breach of IDF rules of engagement," a statement said. "However, it is not legally possible to link this shooting to the gunshot sustained by Mr. Miller."After meeting with Mandelblitt, Miller's sister, Katie, said the fact that the soldier would not be indicted was "very difficult to take." Miller was gunned down in May 2003 while making a documentary about the impact of regional violence on children. He and his colleagues were leaving a Palestinian family's home in the Rafah refugee camp after dark when the shooting occurred. Miller's group carried a white flag and called out to troops that they were British journalists, but as they walked toward an Israeli armored personnel carrier, an Israeli soldier opened fire and shot Miller in the neck, the family said.

Israel Will Not Indict in Filmaker's Death
Wednesday, March 9, 2005
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP)

Bush vs. the rest of the world

The Bush administration has decided to pull out of an international agreement that opponents of the death penalty have used to fight the sentences of foreigners on death row in the United States, officials said yesterday. In a two-paragraph letter dated March 7, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice informed U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan that the United States "hereby withdraws" from the Optional Protocol to the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations. The United States proposed the protocol in 1963 and ratified it -- along with the rest of the Vienna Convention -- in 1969. The protocol requires signatories to let the International Court of Justice (ICJ) make the final decision when their citizens say they have been illegally denied the right to see a home-country diplomat when jailed abroad.

U.S. Quits Pact Used in Capital Cases
Foes of Death Penalty Cite Access to Envoys
By Charles Lane
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, March 10, 2005; Page A01



The nomination of John Bolton to be US ambassador to the United Nations is a resounding declaration of American contempt for the organization and the rest of the world.

Bush's Perverse UN Pick
by Ian Williams
The Nation



If you were sitting in the Oval Office and George W. Bush asked, "Hey, tell me, who could we appoint to the UN ambassador job that would most piss off the UN and the rest of the world," your job would be quite easy. You would s