“To them, I said, the truth would be literally nothing but the shadows of the images.” — Socrates, Plato’s Republic
28 July 2006
3,700 pissed off soldiers
progress in the WOT
"We have written to the West Bengal government to gather knowledge about religious tolerance practiced in the madrasas, the curriculum and the successful reforms program," he said.
27 July 2006
NEWSWEEK: Making Enemies
"lefty spook du jour"
fraud, waste and abuse
26 July 2006
Was your motorcycle stolen from your California home?
“The National Insurance Crime Bureau today announced the top ten states for motorcycle thefts in 2005. They are, with theft totals in parentheses, as follows:”1. California (9,110) 2. Florida (6,324) 3. Texas (5,755) 4. North Carolina (3,053) 5. Ohio (2,573) 6. Arizona (2,464) 7. New York (2,195) 8. Indiana (2,186) 9. Georgia (2,159) 10. Pennsylvania (2,021)
25 July 2006
Judge: enough crying wolf about National security
200 year old whales
Rare Whales Can Live to Nearly 200, Eye Tissue Reveals Scientists have looked into the eyes of rare bowhead whales and learned that some of them can outlive humans by generations—with at least one male pushing 200 years old. "About 5 percent of the population is over a hundred years old and in some cases 160 to 180 years old," said Jeffrey Bada, a marine chemist at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California.
cool
blast from the past
FAS: DOD DOCTRINE ON MILITARY DECEPTION
23 July 2006
new DHS authorization requires establishment of "comprehensive information sharing network"
22 July 2006
yep
WAR IS THE ultimate sire of unintended consequences. And there is no reason to believe that what has been true of past wars will not be true of the current Mideast war -- a conflict in which Iranian and Syrian missiles fired by the Lebanese Shi'ite militia Hezbollah are landing in Israeli towns while Israel's air force drops bombs not only on Hezbollah positions and weapons but on Lebanon's infrastructure and on the civilian population.
The sooner the bombs and rockets are stopped, the better for all concerned. [more at The Boston Globe]
good point
medical journals as BigPharma propaganda tools
21 July 2006
Chicago Tribune makes an excellent point
20 July 2006
report: US Government Health Care Spending is Unsustainable
19 July 2006
primum non nocere
"This is not euthanasia. This is homicide," Attorney General Charles Foti told reporters. "We're talking about people that pretended that maybe they were God."
18 July 2006
FEMA to Lousiana: "This hurricane season, we will do your jobs for you...
straight shootin Putin
The Washington Post: 'Democracy,' Russian-Style Bush: "There will be a Russian-style democracy... I don't expect Russia to look like the United States." When Mr. Bush recommended democratic reform for Russia, Mr. Putin went for the jugular: "We certainly would not want to have the same kind of democracy as they have in Iraq," he said. When questioned about Russia's rampant corruption, Mr. Putin suggested that the British were the experts, and he invoked a campaign finance scandal that has tainted Mr. Blair.Is Bush capable of calculating anything correctly? This man is dangerously ignorant.
17 July 2006
no shit Sherlock
NYT: The Real Agenda
16 July 2006
WaPo: Wiretap Surrender
13 July 2006
tell me about it
"This is an economy-driven insurgency,"
By using the vague acronym AIF ("anti-Iraqi forces"), the military concedes that there is no single, clear-cut enemy in Iraq. Sometimes the enemy is surprising.
Turnbow has a good idea who tried to blow him up last year in northern Iraq--and it wasn't someone on the usual list of Al-Qaeda, Ansar al-Islam, Islamists, jihaddis, Wahabbis, Baathists, Saddam loyalists or common criminals. His hunch is: "Colonel Faisal of the Iraqi Army. He's the battalion commander at Taza and an individual I worked very closely with," Turnbow says. "I was never able to substantiate that with enough proof to reel him in, but I think I came close."
As a former member of the Iraqi special forces, Faisal had the know-how to set up a car bomb; he had knowledge of Turnbow's movements; and, after two quick disputes with Turnbow involving a contract to feed the local Iraqi troops for a year, Faisal may have had sufficient motive. Turnbow says that Faisal created a side company and put in a bid, which was rejected because it wasn't competitive. Then Turnbow learned Faisal was strong-arming the winning bidder.
"First, I reject his bid on the food contract, then I have the nerve to inquire why my contractor is being shook down after leaving the gate and being paid. I think these factors led to his desire for my life," Turnbow says. ~~~~~~
"I went over there expecting Fallujah every day. [But] a lot of the job is a humanitarian mission," Kish says. "When we trained to go to Iraq, we trained to fight in the streets every day ... which gives you the expectation everyone you meet wants to kill you. And that's not true."
"The situation over there changes so much. It's so fluid." That training was outdated by the time they arrived, Kincheloe says. ~~~~~~
"This is not a war, it's a police action," Turnbow says. "We [National Guardsmen] tend to talk more to people. Active duty rolls into town and they lay down the law. I think it gives more of an occupation feel ... I don't think the populace felt so occupied when we were there."
Yet noting the bomb attack on himself and the 900-plus against Task Force Griz, Turnbow says, "No matter how much good you do, you're always the Sheriff of Nottingham." ~~~~~~
Is There Progress?
"You ask me a question I ask myself every day. I want to know how my story ends," Turnbow says. "To be honest, I'm not sure how to answer."
There may no longer be a nation of Iraq, he senses, noting that Iraqis cheer the misfortune of countrymen from a different sect or ethnicity. "It took a tyrant like Saddam to hold it together," he says.
After a year of funding Iraqi Army and police projects, Turnbow believes nothing will change until Americans take their checkbook and leave, forcing Iraqis to act on their own.
"We are treating this like a colonial power," Kincheloe says. "Drop the lines and let the people split up into three states."
hallelujah!
12 July 2006
Halliburton's feast at the Iraq trough is over
she said it
11 July 2006
passing thought: on hackishness in the echo chamber
Robert Novak Acknowledges Confidential Administration Sources
10 July 2006
Fear as a Weapon
09 July 2006
Bush quickly losing support of fellow republicans
quote of the day
Christian Science Monitor: The government's current war with the free press
08 July 2006
CRS: U.S. Democracy Promotion Policy in the Middle East: The Islamist Dilemma
07 July 2006
they're not gonna just 'go away' people
Maryland's embarassing drunken uncle
Polls suggest Mr. Schaefer is vulnerable this fall. He faces credible opponents in the Democratic primary. These bizarre State House episodes, Wednesday's deliberate demeaning of women and immigrants being only the most recent example, go well beyond the pale. People are openly wondering if Mr. Schaefer's health or mental state is sound. It's hard to blame them. What a tragic denouement to a remarkable career of public service. And what a shame that the rest of us must bear witness to it.
06 July 2006
Vladimir Putin - bonafide freak
peace in the Middle East
I'm pretty sure there's a law against this
DOD Spying on Student Protest Groups Extended to Monitoring E-Mail
The Chronicle of Higher Education is reporting that the DOD monitored e-mail messages from college student who were planning protests against the war in Iraq and against the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy against gay and lesbian members of the armed forces, according to surveillance reports released last month per a FOIA request by the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network. The FOIA request covered government surveillance at the State University of New York at Albany, Southern Connecticut State University, the University of California at Berkeley, and William Paterson University of New Jersey. [JH]
its your birthday!!
05 July 2006
the halls of the Pentagon
read every single word
DEADLINE: July 14th
"perception management"
indeed
The North Korean have now blown it by actually testing a system that was always worth much more as a bargaining chip than as a military capability. Continued attempts to hype the threat (by either the DPRK or the National Missile Defense Agency) will now be much harder to make with a straight face. (Good thing the Senate added funds to the anti-missile program last week, before it became clear Kim was drawing to an inside straight). Finally, all those reporters and analysts who have been talking about both the North Korean missiles and the US anti-missiles as if both were proven capabilities should slap themselves in the face and snap out of it.
david ignatius to Bush administration: TRUST MUST BE EARNED
The administration should be working carefully with Congress to build a permanent legal framework -- rather than using anti-terrorist agitprop against the New York Times in an effort to patch together the old scaffolding. The government needs a new legal structure partly to help keep its secrets. "Trust us" is not a winning argument in America -- either with newspaper editors or the public at large. Trust in government is earned by a pattern of trustworthy action, not by secrecy, evasion and partisan division. And the best way to rebuild lost trust is informed public debate.
04 July 2006
Balt. Sun - Celebrate the patriotism of dissent
To the faux-patriotic pomp and bombast we have come to associate with this day of celebration-cum-commemoration have now been added the devil's ingredients of indefinite post-9/11 security paranoia and militaristic arrogance.
We have taken too much to heart, too unthinkingly, John Adams' vision for the day, described in a July 3, 1776 letter to his wife Abigail: "I am apt to believe that [Independence Day] will be celebrated, by succeeding generations, as the great anniversary festival. ... It ought to be solemnized with pomp and parade, with shews [shows], games, sports, guns, bells, bonfires and illuminations from one end of this continent to the other from this time forward forever more."
Sadly, we have ignored the vision expressed by Thomas Jefferson 50 years later. In his last letter before he and Adams died July 4, 1826, he declined an invitation to come to Washington to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, saying of the document and the day set aside to commemorate it: "May it be to the world, what I believe it will be ... the signal of arousing men to burst the chains ... and to assume the blessings and security of self-government. That form, which we have substituted, restores the free right to the unbounded exercise of reason and freedom of opinion. All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. ... For ourselves, let the annual return of this day forever refresh our recollections of these rights, and an undiminished devotion to them."
another evacuation drill planned for tonight
definition of insanity: Adam Isacson reminds us
Crooks 'R Stupid: Cynthia Donovan
CHERRY HILL, Md. -- A suspected ice cream thief was easily caught by authorities - she was sitting behind a convenience store counter eating the ice cream. Harford County woman Cynthia Tykson Donovan, 47, was arrested last week at High's convenience store. Sheriff's deputies responding to a store alarm found Donovan sitting behind the cashier's counter eating an ice cream cone. She was charged with second-degree burglary, theft, and malicious destruction of property over $500, the Cecil Whig reported. Cecil County Sheriff's Sgt. Dennis Campbell said a large rock was used to shatter the store's front door.
Sore Loserman
Murray Wass' latest at National Journal
this may explain a lot
If only gay sex caused global warming Why we're more scared of gay marriage and terrorism than a much deadlier threat.
03 July 2006
when 'winning' actually isn't
CSM: Are all lives equal?
some deterrent
Hersh's New Yorker article is now online here.WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Top Pentagon officers have told the Bush administration that bombing Iranian nuclear facilities would probably fail to destroy that country's nuclear program, the New Yorker magazine reported on Sunday.
The senior commanders also warned that any attack launched if diplomacy fails to end the standoff over Iran's nuclear ambitions could have "serious economic, political, and military consequences for the United States," the article said, citing unidentified U.S. military officials.
Bill Arkin: campaign consultant and general hater of all things Rand Beers
A far more consequential and appealing Democratic Party argument would be: America does not need more national security spending at home; it doesn't need to create a lock-down in its cities. What it needs is a more sensible and less fearful view of the terrorist threat.There. I just saved you the trouble of reading it.

