Uncommon Thought Journal: November 2003 Archives

November 2003 Archives

Desperate Measures - suicide or terrorism?

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By Rowan Wolf

The world, and particularly the people of the United States, are told that we are involved in a global "war on terrorism." We are led to believe that this war is focused in ideological differences and envy. In the US in particular, we are told that terrorism is driven by hatred of "of our way of life." What is left out is any statement of what that "way of life" is. We are left to believe that it is our "freedom," our "democracy," or even the "Christian" basis of US social society. I don't believe that is the case. I believe that the US is seen, and promotes itself as the "world leader" economically, politically, and socially. Our foreign policy for decades (perhaps since the beginning) has centered on maximizing the interests of the US at the expense of all other competing groups. We are the leaders of a globalization based on exploitation of peoples, expropriation of natural resources, and structuring the global stage to tilt in our favor. To this end, we have paid little attention to the weight of our foot on other peoples of the world. In fact, we have frequently contributed to tyrannic governments and massive hardship and death of populations to maximize US benefit and control. While virtually all inside the US have benefited to some extent with a purported higher standard of living, the true beneficiaries have been corporations and monied interests.

Death of students and climate of hate

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By Rowan Wolf

The US is not alone when it comes to white supremecist groups and acts of deadly hate violence. Like the US, parts of Europe have experienced dramatic shifts to anti-immigrant sentiment. This sentiment is raising its head in Russia with threats and attacks on immigrants and foreign college students. This last week a fire occurred Moscow Russia where an arson fire in a university dorm killed at least 38 students (Moscow Talking of Arson as Fire Toll Climbs to 36, Kishkovsky, NY Times, 11/25/03 see also Hostel's 'horrible nightmare' BBC, 11/24/03).

Silence is repression - ignorance is bliss


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By Rowan Wolf

My emotional responses to the current US regime run from laughter to rage. The shut up disent, coerce through economics, and suppress through force approaches are the standard tool box of the times. The US corporate media generally complies by looking the other way and by spinning away what they have to report. In the Uncommon Thought piece Bush "I love Democracy" I talked about the president's recent trip to the UK where he asks the protests be banned and canceled his speech to Parliament. These are only the tip of the iceberg.

The Doomsday Machine

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THE DOOMSDAY MACHINE

By guest author John Chuckman
[John's pieces appear in Counterpunch, Online Journal, Yellow Times, Media Monitors, Scoop, and many other sites. This was sent as a guest submission to Uncommon Thought. John Chuckman can be reached at [email protected], [email protected], or [email protected].]

It occurred to me to write a satire about Osama and the boys sitting around in the mountains somewhere holding a conference about the worst possible damage they could inflict on the United States and deciding that it would be whatever act got Bush re-elected.

But retired American General Tommy Franks came along and spoiled the fun. General Franks has followed the advice of the fictional Doctor Strangelove by announcing to the world what he believes will happen if the United States is attacked by terrorists using strategic weapons: he says Americans will scrap the Constitution and set up a military government.

UN World Hunger and AIDS Reports: Monopoly Capitalism at Work


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By Rowan Wolf

The UN has released statements on its latest findings on the global AIDS crisis (HIV/AIDS deaths and new infections highest in 2003, says UNAIDS UN News Centre 11/26/03), and hunger (Hunger increasing around the world after earlier decline - UN food agency UN News Center 11/26/03). The bottom line? AIDS infections and deaths are up, and efforts to dramatically reduce world hunger are failing. While they try to look at the positive side -- the gains made -- the reality is that these statistics are a direct consequence of political decisions and globalization.

10 Preliminary Actions to Defeat Bush in 2004

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The Saudis, the Bushs, and the investigations into September 11, 2001


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By Rowan Wolf

There was an interesting piece on the relationships between the Bush family and the Saudis (particularly the bin Ladens) done by CBC News (Canadian Broadcast Company - Coincidence or Conspiracy - first aired 10/29/03.

It traces a rather intricate series of relationships from 1968 to September 11, 2001. It then goes into a number of various explanations and interpretations, and then into additional events which have happened since. If you are interested in the topics and depths of the relationships of the Bush family to the Saudis, and how that plays out in 9/11/01 and beyond, this is certainly a credible piece of investigation.

Someone Noticed

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By Rowan Wolf

I'd like to send a special thank you to Mark Woods of ::wood s lot:: for noticing that this month is the one year anniversary of Uncommon Thought. If you haven't spent any time over at his site, I recommend it without reservation. ::wood s lot:: is a site that both informs and touches the reader. Mark brings a lot of creativity to his site as well as a good heart and mind.

Child Abuse Study

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By Rowan Wolf

There is an interesting report out but the Massachusetts Family Institute on child abuse in different family configurations (11/24/03 Mass. Family Institute, Issues in Focus, Child Abuse Report)

Having lived through an abusive childhood, I am interested in such reports. This is especially true given the idea that "intact" families are considered both safer and healthier for children. If the study is accurate then there is perhaps some margin of "safety" for children in intact, biological families which have never been separated.

Redeploying US Global Military Force


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By Rowan Wolf

Two different reports today point to massive US troop redeployments:
11/26/03 ChannelNewAsia - US to move troops from South Korea to Iraq, Afghanistan
11/26/03 Bender, Boston GLobe -Shift Begins For Military Overseas Large-Scale Redeployment Around World

This is not exactly new news (see Uncommon Thought article Expanding US Military Reach 7/5/03). It does sound like the moves might start soon however. The NewChannelAsia article states that the troops from South Korea are likely to end up in Afghanistan and Iraq. The Global Security article points to placements globally - including East Asia, and various parts of Africa.

Another Action Figure

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By Rowan Wolf

Well folks, there is another action figure to join George and Arnold. Who is it? Ann Coulter. Yes that darling pundit of the right has her own little business suited action figure. She even talks. Ann has recorded a number of messages for the "children" on your holiday gift list:

# "Liberals can't just come out and say they want to take more of our money, kill babies, and discriminate on the basis of race."

# "At least when right-wingers rant, there's a point."

# "Swing voters are more appropriately known as the 'idiot voters' because they have no set of philosophical principles. By the age of fourteen, you're either a Conservative or a Liberal if you have an IQ above a toaster."

# "Why not go to war just for oil? We need oil. What do Hollywood celebrities imagine fuels their private jets? How do they think their cocaine is delivered to them?"

And there is more.
Best of all, this neocon brain in "beautiful" package "incredibly lifelike" action figure is yours for only $29.95 from the Conservative Book Service. (who claim this as a "collectable)

US paying damages in Iraq


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By Rowan Wolf

One has to wonder why this is being kept quiet in the US press - US pays up for fatal Iraq blunders, McCarthy, Guardian/UK, 11/26/03). According to the report, the US military has paid 10,402 claims to Iraqi's who have lost family members, been seriously injured, or lost property in non-combat related incidents. These settlements are not for damages during combat, but in the pursuit of other activities.

The military is not giving out figures on how many claims have been filed, nor how many of those filed have been accepted. According to the military, payments are only made "for non-combat related activities and instances where soldiers have acted negligently or wrongfully."

USWA Calls for Congressional Investigation into Police-State Assaults in Miami


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By Rowan Wolf

Thanks to Jeremy at Biohabit for sending this notice along.

USWA Calls for Congressional Investigation into Police-State Assaults in Miami

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE November 24, 2003

Union condemns use of federal Iraq reconstruction funds to subsidize "homeland repression" at FTAA meetings

PITTSBURGH The United Steelworkers of America (USWA) is calling for a Congressional investigation into "a massive police state," created in part with federal funds, to intimidate union members and others critical of the proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) and limit their rights during FTAA meetings in Miami last week.

"Last week, the fundamental rights of thousands of Americans were blatantly violated, sometimes violently, by the Miami police, who systematically repressed our Constitutional right to free assembly with massive force, riot gear and armaments," said Leo W. Gerard, USWA international president, in a letter to Congressional leaders.

Confusion over death of soldiers


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By Rowan Wolf

On Sunday, two soldiers were attacked and killed in Mosul. THe original reports were that they had been traveling in private transport and were shot, dragged from their vehicle, and beaten by a crowd of folks. While this is still the story (as of Monday night) being reported by Canadain Broadcasting, it is interesting that the Army is revising their report of events (Filkins, NY Times, 11/25/03). According to the revised reports, the two soldiers were shot and robbed., but they were not "mutilated."

Freedom?

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By Rowan Wolf

We hear the word "freedom" a lot. In the US it (or a variant of it) it used many times a day. It is used so frequently, that I think we have lost any understanding of the concept. We are even told we have "freed" the people of Iraq, and the people of Afghanistan. "Freed" in what sense?

Democracy in action? Regime change in the Republic of Georgia.

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By Rowan Wolf

If you have watched the news - particularly the international news - then you could not have missed the drama of the forced resignation of President Eduard A. Shevardnadze of Georgia. (Georgian Leader Agrees to Resign, Ending Standoff Mydans, NY Times, 11/24/03) Thus far, this has been a peaceful ousting. After claims that the most recent elections were rigged, tens of thousands of protestors took to the streets demanding that Shevardnadze step down. Police and miltary stepped aside to allow the protestors to act peacefully. It is virtually impossible to imagine a similar scene in the United States ("Democratic leader of the "free" world") where virtually every major protest has been marred by the presence of Darth Vader gardbed riot police wielding pepper mace, guns, and batons.

Back to Government Sponsored Enterprizes


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By Rowan Wolf

I thought it might be of some interest to follow up a bit on GSEs - Government Sponsored Enter"prizes." It is amazingly difficult to find current information on exactly what "enterprises" we are discussing, and the latest relatively complete report that I could locate was from 1995. Some folks may be wondering why this is a big deal. I believe it is a big deal for several reasons.
1. GSEs touch our daily and national life in a multitude of ways.
2. They are private corporations guaranteed by the federal government, therefore, they are backed by our tax dollars.
3. The implications of failure, scandal, and bankruptcy are enough to sink the economy of the United States.

Freddie Mac scandal

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By Rowan Wolf

It is a sad statement on the intertwining of business and government when one of the largest Government Sponsored Enterprises (GSE) - Freddie Mac - is on the front pages as understating their earnings by $5 billion (Glater, NY Times, 11/22/03). Apparently, " Former executives apparently manipulated Freddie Mac's earnings in an effort to meet investors' expectations." Interestingly, Glater offers to explain away all of the corporate accounting scandals by stating:

The details of the accounting at Freddie Mac offer a glimpse into the difficult issues facing executives confronted with complex reporting requirements and pressed to meet goals of smooth earnings growth. The restated financial statements show that the company did not simply understate net income consistently; it fluctuated sharply from quarter to quarter.

Are we back to "shock & awe?"


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By Rowan Wolf

With the renewed bombing of "suspected" terrorist areas in Iraq, one has to wonder if we have returned to the "shock and awe" approach. It worked so well the first time that the assumption seems to be that it will effective this time as well. Over the last week the US has started two aggressive bombing campaigns in Iraq. Operation Ivy Cyclone, and Operation Iron Hammer. Ivy Cylcone is taking place in north central Iraq (around Tikrit) and Iron Hammer in and around Baghdad. [By the way, Iron Hammer was a code name first used by the Nazis for an operation to destroy Soviet electric plants.(Nazi code name used by US military, NZ Herald, 11/20/03)] The US military is using 500-2000 pound bombs, guided missles, and other munitions in the largest offensive since the last bombing campaign of the "war" ended. It is somewhat questionalble whether such a tactic will be effective against "terrorists."

Amazingly little on Miami

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By Rowan Wolf

There is amazingly little that is coming over the corporate media on the protests in Miami. What I have seen on the international channels is frightening. It looks as if the $8 million in extra dollars sent to Miami for "security" for the FTAA talks is being "well spent." I have seen numerous protesters sprayed and beaten by phalanxes of police in the now customary Darth Vader get up. Apparently arrest numbers are high as well. The best up-to-date- source for news on the Miami protests is FTAA Indy Media. The site has both written and streaming audio reports.

A BIG Thanks to all those in Miami who are risking life and limb to stop global inequality through such vehicles as FTAA.

Yes Nov 19th disappeared


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By Rowan Wolf

You may have tried to access the two entries from 11/19 (Gay Marriage? and Are we back to "Shock & Awe?") and can't find them. My host lost their hard drive and Uncommon Thought lost November 19th. I will be rewriting those two entries, as well as redoing Uncommon Thought News for yesterday. Sorry for the inconvenience.

Perle admits invasion of Iraq was illegal

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By Rowan Wolf

For those of you who have been reading Uncommon Thought awhile, you may remember a great discussion we had last March about whether the US invasion of Iraq violated international law (Why do we believe 3/28/03). Well yesterday Richard Perle was speaking at an event in London and stated: "I think in this case international law stood in the way of doing the right thing." Somewhat later he stated: "international law ... would have required us to leave Saddam Hussein alone" ( War Critics Astonished as US Hawk Admits Invasion was Illegal, Burkeman & Borger, Guardian/UK, 11/20/03).

This means that even at the time, the Administration knew it was violating International Law and proceeded anyway - rebuking those nations that refused to break the law with them.

Gay Marriage?


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By Rowan Wolf

The Massachusetts Supreme Court Ruling is all over the news. The court stated "We declare that barring an individual from the protections, benefits, and obligations of civil marriage solely because that person would marry a person of the same sex violates the Massachusetts constitution." (Court Affirms Dignity and Equality of All Individuals in the Commonwealth US Newswire, 11/18/03)

At the crux of this issue is that in the United States "marriage" can be two different things. On one hand, it is a civil recognition for which all who want to be "legally married" must have a marriage license. On the other hand is a religious recognition of the joining of two people. As this second part happens under the auspices of religion, it sanctifies the marriage. However, a religious ceremony alone does not make a marriage legal. This is why most ministers, priests, rabbis, etc. are also "Justices of the Peace." Holding this government certification allows for the performance of one ceremony rather than one government and one religious.

Different Glimpses, Different Worlds - Part 2

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The Interrogation
By Mathew Maavak
Mr. Maavak can be reached at [email protected]
(This part deals with my ordeal at the Forth Worth/Dallas airport. The racial profiling continues. This time, things weren’t funny. My reaction wasn’t either).

As I boarded my America Airlines flight to Dallas, I had a premonition that something will go wrong. Maybe, it was the story of a Muslim woman, and many others like her, who were strip-searched at US airports. It didn’t raise the same indignation as the pre-terror era detention of an ethnic Chinese tycoon, who turned up on national TV mocking all that ‘freedom’ in the US. The unverified story was - and such things couldn’t be officially verified then - that he kicked a guard at the US airport before a diplomatic offensive secured his release. He is now a corporate criminal on the lam, and all enquiries in the Malaysian parliament were stonewalled until everyone lost interest. Now, we are keeping all our finger and toes crossed, regarding our brand new leader with cautious optimism.

The AA flight was a thorough disappointment for one used to hearing about the consumers’ paradise yonder. The interior and flight service was as good as the legendary Aeroflot. Yup! Come to think of it, the premonition must have been sparked by the old battle-axes on board, who, with the exception of a tall Japanese American and a Southern belle on the wrong aisle, seemed impatient for Halloween. It’s easy to peal your eyes away in such situations and find a 1,000-page book more seductive throughout a 12-hour journey.

Bush "I love democracy"


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By Rowan Wolf

President Bush is once again trumpeting his love of democracy - this time on his trip to the UK. When asked about protesters, Bush consistently replies that he is happy that there is democracy. During the protests in Washington, DC prior to the invasion of Iraq, Bush was asked how he felt about the protests. He replied that he was glad there was democracy, then added that lots of people had protested in Washington since he came into office and that he didn't let any of them influence him.

Bio-tech and the "arms race"


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By Rowan Wolf

In my perusal of my usual sites hunting down the events of the day, I came across The Sunshine Project (thanks to Center for Globalization Research for the lead). It is not what you might expect - namely some uplifting program, or even a solar energy site. Nope, the Sunshine Project is a bioweapons research expose site. One of their publications is Emerging Technologies: Genetic Engineering and Biological Weapons. In reading through the report, I was immediately cast back to the US National Security Strategy (2002) and the Pentagon's Quadrennial Review and like documents that brought out the Bush Regime's plan of preemption and use of weapons of mass destruction.

Pandering, Profiteering, or Prostitution?


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By Rowan Wolf

November 17, 2003 is the 10th anniversary of the introduction of NAFTA. This agreement, along with its siblings (GATT, CAFTA, FTAA, etc), are symbolic of a process that has evolved to epic proportions - not just in the US, but globally. They are symbolic of growing corporate power, and they are symbolic of greed. While the dollars (or their national equivalent) flow copiously from peoples and nations into the grabbing hands of a few, the other piece is about power and control. We see this in terms of the privatize (meaning corporatize) everything mentality. We see it in the battles over Indian farmers' intellectual property rights, and cities and nations sovreignity rights. We see it in South American and African corporatization of fresh water supplies, and we see it in the corporatization of the criminal justice (sic) system in the US. Watch the news for contract awards in Iraq. Watch the news for the "energy" bill. Watch the news for the latest corporate/financial scandal. It is coming to light in the US and elsewhere, and we get apologist reports like Laxity of SEC, staff shortage led to the chaos from the Times of India - 11/17/03.

Perhaps particularly in the US, the linkage between politics and media has been the most obvious and the least challenged by the public. From the 1950s onward were the warnings of the Military-Industrial Complex. Smack in the middle, and in from the 1980s onward, was our elected representatives who have become increasingly dependent on corporate aid and have paid off at the expense of both the people and nation they represent. Laws have been loosened or eliminated, organizations meant to guard and protect (such as the EPA and SEC) have been underfunded, short staffed, or just blocked from pursuing their mandates. Under the Bush regime, the blatant placement of people who are vehemently against the very missions of the departments they head have been placed in power with a wink and a nod. The goal seems to be to get rid of the "impediments" to corporate rule.

Forty Years of Lies

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By: John Chuckman
[John's pieces appear in Counterpunch, Online Journal, Yellow Times, Media Monitors, Scoop, and many other sites. This was sent as a guest submission to Uncommon Thought. John Chuckman can be reached at [email protected], [email protected], or [email protected].]

Bertrand Russell's penetrating question, one of sixteen he asked at the time of the Warren Commission Report, remains unanswered after forty years. That should trouble Americans, but then again there are many things around national secrecy today that should trouble Americans.

The most timely lesson to be taken from the fortieth anniversary of President Kennedy's assassination concerns secrecy and the meaning of democracy in the world's most powerful nation. Perhaps no event better demonstrates the existence of two governments in the United States, the one people elect and another, often far more influential, as capable of imposing false history about large events as the fabled Ministry of Truth.

Since the time of the Warren Commission we have had the investigation of the House Select Committee and, in the last decade, the release of truckloads of previously-secret documents.

These documents were suppressed originally in the name of national security, but the fact is, despite their release, much of their content is heavily blacked out, and dedicated researchers know many documents remain unreleased, particularly documents from the CIA and military intelligence. Would any reasonable person conclude anything other than that those documents are likely the most informative and sensational?

A "new" direction in Iraq


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By Rowan Wolf

One might think that so many lies have been floated, that the regime might want to just keep it simple and tell the truth. Apparently not. All over the news is the big Iraq policy shift to accelerate the transfer of Iraq to the Iraqi's. Really? The CPA (hand picked by the US) is a being labeled a failure, so now the process will be somehow be sped up. It is not clear what that might look like at this point. However, a political transition speed up is not the only one in place. We have also sped up and then sped up again, the training of Iraqi's to take over police, border, and military efforts.

One can view these changes in a variety of lights, all of which might be somewhat accurate. We could say that this is showing the success of the anti-war groups pressure, reinforced by Democratic political campaigning which has resulted in a massive slip in the polls for Bush. One might say that the escalation of violence in Iraq with the consequence of increasing loss of US troops increases the urgency (even though Bush still shys away from acknowledging it). One could say that it is the fact that the "coalition" is falling apart and that the international community is not stepping in to save the bacon (so to speak). But waht is clear is that even in the face of all the bad news, the regime is continuing to down play the issues.

Pacifica Radio Benefit


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By Rowan Wolf

Pacifica Radio is opening their archives in a fund raising effort. They will broadcast from the archives messages courage, resistance, and vision. For the scheduled broadcasts, and to donate go to Pacifica Radio Benefit

No wonder the polls are weird

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By Rowan Wolf

I just spent a couple of days in Grants Pass Oregon at a conference. While I was there I had the opportunity to try and find some news worth watching. What I found was truly unsettling.

The news that I saw, even from the cable news channels, was different from what I am used to seeing in Portland. Maybe it was a freak event, but what I saw (over and over) was 1) food, 2) sports, 3) Kobe Bryant trial, 4) Victoria's Secret fashion show, 5) combinations of the above. For example, on the local news their was a 10 minute piece on the football team's annual pig out (or something to that effect).

As I bemusedly flipped through the various channels available, I thought "surely something must be happening out there besides this stuff." Most of what I saw was fluff not substance. The "local" channel had a variety of purchased clips that are sold to all the channels (the recreated studies and "medical" information). There were lots of info-mercials.

After watching this stuff for a while, it became obvious why more folks in the US aren't in an uproar over what is happening in the world - they don't know it is happening. Or they may be numbed out by what is being passed off as "news." Maybe, it was just a fluke? I could hope so, but I know that there was really major stuff happening in the world. As far as the "news" went in southern Oregon, it was all quiet everywhere ... oh yeah those are some models they had for the Victoria's Secret fashion show.

Other Fears: The Naming of Our Disconnect

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By Rowan Wolf

We live in frightening and unstable times. War with deadly weapons may start at any moment and spiral out of control. Plagues can emerge from nowhere and travel the globe in two or three days. The earth shudders on the verge of being unable to support its inhabitants.

Is this a natural consequence - a time that has run its course? Is it the action of a divine power that has decided to clean house? Is it a predictable consequence of patterns of thought and behavior? Or is it the result of manipulation by some with ulterior motives?

My guess is that it is in part a predictable consequence and in part a manipulation. At base is the seemingly human ability to disconnect ourselves from each other and from the world in which we live. Humans are capable of incredible levels of compassion and selflessness. We are also capable of unbelievable levels of brutality.

Ranting - opinions and constructed opinions

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By Rowan Wolf

Do you get tired of the comment "it's all a matter of opinion?" Sometimes it's an attitude and comes out differently. It has become such a pervasive response, the sociologist in me is intrigued. Is there something else underlying this attitude that nothing is real, it's only what we think about it that counts? And if it's only what we think about it that counts and everybody has "their own opinion" then the conversation becomes rather circular. Don't you think?

Is this a reflection of the blurring between reality and fiction that seems to have happened in the media? You know, where the news becomes entertainment and entertainment apes the news? Where "reality TV" seems focused on people vomiting, or reenactments of police raids? Where a movie is seen as truth (such as "Wag the Dog") and news is now an opinion (such as O'Reilly Factor)? I even heard a pundit say in response to CBS pulling the Reagan mini-series something to the effect that "today's youth are so media savvy that they know not to believe anything they see on tv." I wish I thought that were true, but my faith in the "savviness" of the population - young or old, rich or poor, with college degrees or without - is at an all time low. I think that people believe what they hear and what they see and that is why manipulation and misinformation is such a BIG DEAL.

To Bloggers - spam notice


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THose of you who are bloggers may be using MT Blacklist to help protect your sites from being spammed (I am). Anyway, Jay Allen the creator of MT-Blacklist has put out a request for help with the Spam Clearing House. Below is the text of his message:

Hello MT-Blacklist users,

I am writing this email to ask for your help in publicizing the Comment Spam Clearinghouse (http://www.jayallen.org/comment_spam/).
It seems that since moving all of the MT-Blacklist and comment spam discussions off of my main blog and into it's new home, I have accidently lost people who were looking for updates in the old place.

Currently, I am seeing signs of comment spam picking up just in the last week and unfortunately, there are many spam URLs being plastered all over websites that are not currently on the master blacklist. As I have stated, while I maintain this central blacklist, I will not be reckless and add new domains without several
direct submissions from users.

Therein lies the problem as I have outlined on
http://www.jayallen.org/comment_spam/2003/11/submit_your_spam


Hence, I ask your help to publicize the Comment Spam Clearinghouse,
especially regarding these three points:

1) Submitting your spam strengthens the protection for everyone.
Spam submission can be done here:
http://www.jayallen.org/comment_spam/submit

2) There are RSS feeds that you can (and should) subscribe to that help you stay updated on changes. Alternatively, you could simply refresh your list periodically with the master blacklist entries.

3) The Comment spam clearinghouse is NOT Movable Type specific. Spam is a community-wide problem and the blacklist can be used by anyone on any platform. More will follow in the coming weeks regarding an effort to broaden the base of protection to other weblogging platforms.

Veterans Day 2003 and the Rancid Meat in the White House

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The following article is posted on BuzzFlash today. I am posting the first part, and encourage you to follow the link to the article to finish it. It is written by a Vet disabled in the Persian Gulf War.

Veterans Day 2003 and the Rancid Meat in the White House
By: Sean Lewis
Contemporary observance of Veterans Day started as "Armistice Day," November 11, 1918, in celebration of the end of World War I, "the war to end all wars," as it was known at the time. After the second "war to end all wars," the U. S. Congress changed this annual recognition of World War I veterans, and tribute to the Peace they secured, to "Veterans Day." In its present form, Veterans Day is intended to honor and show respect for all American veterans, from all wars, as well as from times of peace, though we have seen too few of those. In short, it is a day of thanks. This Veterans Day, 2003, is to be a most solemn observance; perhaps the most solemn in the memories of many young people. Certainly for me it is the saddest Veterans Day since I was discharged from the Army in 1993.

As has been the tradition since the days of Harry S. Truman, the President is scheduled to visit Arlington National Cemetery to place a wreath at The Tomb of the Unknowns. Undoubtedly, he will make some remarks from a prepared statement, serving up platitudes to the country, to veterans, to those presently serving, and to the honored dead. the words "service," "sacrifice," and "patriotism" are sure to pepper his speech; seasoning for the palate of a nation at war and hungry for leadership. But for many, this seasoning shall be like too much salt on already rancid meat, unable to cover up the sour, acrid taste that lies beneath. Under this conjured spice of rhetoric and platitude, a personal and political history of contempt for this nation and her military belie the true taste of this putrid meal being served to the American People.

To sample this spoiled meat, dear reader, one need but continue on.

continue reading at BuzzFlash

Today is Veterans Day


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By Rowan Wolf

Over 7500 soldiers have been wounded since April in Iraq is the well written story at TruthOut in a piece by Esther Shrader (NY Times, 11/09/03) on the wounded and their reception at US Military hospitals. The average age of the wounded is 23 years old. The death toll would be higher if not for the Kevlar protective vests, but burns and amputations are still a problem. The article is good, but it also made me angry. Not just angry because of the number of dead and wounded in our little attempt at colonization, but what was left out of the story.

Your voice needed on energy legislation

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By Rowan Wolf

Let's talk energy shall we? Right now The Energy Policy Act of 2003 (H.R.6), is in committee. As might be expected it moves down the same path the US has been traveling for decades in terms of oil policy - namely making us increasingly more and more dependent on petroleum. It travels down an equally long path of transferring money, public lands, and control to oil companies. It travels down a more recent path of transferring power to corporations. True Majority has a fax campaign going for us to contact our legislators about the current bill. Fax your representatives on this issue.

There is tons of information available. Energy Bill comparison in pdf. format. Public Citizen also has links to about 15 different documents for more information - Learn More About the Energy Bill

Ammunition for the condition of the economy argument

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By Rowan Wolf

I have commented earlier (several times) on the questionable nature of the US economic "recovery." The Economic Policy Institute has a great analysis by Lee Price and Yulia Fungard, Understanding the severity of the current labor slump (11/07/03). It lays out all the stats of the current slump and compares the current situation all the way back to other slumps from the 1930's onward. It is an excellent piece of work.

The major finding, in my opinion, is the massive number of workers "missing" from the official figures - the growth in the working age population since March 2001 (roughly 2.3 million people). This jumps the job gap migures to close to 7 million short. The Conclusion of the report is in the extended entry.

The (growing) Gap


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By Rowan Wolf

We are living through a growing gap between those who (think they) rule and those who (think they are) ruled. According to data from The Economist made available through NOW Economic Issues the US leads by a factor of 10 other nations in the disparity between CEO pay and floor worker pay. The figures stand for the number of times more CEO pay is incomparison to worker pay for the following nations: Japan 11, Germany 12, France 15, Italy 20, Canada 20, S. Africa 21, Britain 22, Hong Kong 41, Mexico 47, US 475, Venezuela 50.

And from the same site, workers in the US put in more hours for our CEO's paycheck: Japan 1842, Germany 1467.1, France 1602, Italy 1606, Canada 1779.5, Britain 1711, Mexico 1863.1, US 1979.

Parallel Universes

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By Rowan Wolf

I saw a Nova special the other night on string theory. It is another attempt to explain everything and essentially posits multiple universes wrapped around each other as "strings." I know nothing about either the physics or the mathematics of string theory, but it captued something that I've been thinking about for a while. So I am going to wax metaphysical for this post.

For years I have felt that we (humans) were facing a closing "window of opportunity" to turn things around. I watched the changes (and escalating pace of change) in the US consumer, individualistic, egocentric, poltically apathetic society. I watched the corporations gain power and then the passage of the first global corporatizations with NAFTA and GATT. I watched the pressures towards corporatization both in terms of privatizing public arenas (the commons) and in public institutions (education for example) taking on the corporate language, trappings and mind set. I felt things accellerating and heading in a destructive direction. I watched the eco-system failing, unbelievable increases in auto-immune disorders, new antibiotic resistant diseases, and old friends like e-choli turn deadly. We were definitely sliding cheerfully down some very slippery slope. Was I feeling a string convergence? Some corallary universe passing much to close to ours, effecting us with its energy like the flux lines of a powerful magnet? I don't know.

Different Worlds, Different Glimpses – Part 1

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DIFFERENT WORLDS, DIFFERENT GLIMPSES – PART 1
Kuala Lumpur to Tokyo – The Asian Express
By Mathew Maavak
Mathew Maavak is a journalist from the Far East and can be contacted at qannai@ho[email protected]

(This is the first part of a series of commentaries based on the author’s recent travels. Since it’s commonplace to charge the West with all forms of imperialism, let’s see how the other side behaves, often)

Airports have always been a problem for me; the security checks unfailingly sparking an awareness of how hollow certain denunciations are in reality. I have been mistaken for a lot of things I am not. So inevitably, this commentary is about ethnic fallacies. Since Sept 11, we have been hearing about the Clash of Civilizations and how tectonic plates are sending shudders up the international Richter scale. If you look at a parochial newspaper in Asia – the same ones that condemn Huntington’s work - you’d discover his thesis well justified. If you find this ironic, you will have to understand Asian dichotomy – a phantasmagoria difficult for some to digest. I am Asian.

The first part of this journey went without a hitch. All new Malaysian passports can be electronically screened at the awesome Kuala Lumpur International Airport without a single hand or eye needing to examine them. It’s like punching in your card, and I am not aware of any other passport with this facility. Your identity, income tax and criminal records, are all checked within seconds. But before boarding my plane for Tokyo, I was, as usual, stopped for a closer scrutiny while Caucasian passengers were waived through. This time, I was probably mistaken for (a Muslim) from Aden or Dhaka. If I had a copy of any local daily that morning, I would, as usual, find some infantile rant about the latest, recycled Western conspiracy. This is where Asian ideals and practice find no confluence. A joke delivered in a good diction usually solves this problem, at least in Kuala Lumpur, and I was waived through for my flight to Japan.

Bush the immoral


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By Rowan Wolf

GW Bush and crew think that God put him in the White House. It is hard to imagine what "god" that might be, because the man's morality is in the toilet. It is ok to lie for your "cause." It is ok to kill for your "cause." The ends (whatever they are is a frightening guess at this point) justify any means for the "cause."

Bush signed an atrocious ban on "partial birth abortions" claiming a victory for "children." Thankfully two different federal courts have temporarily blocked the bill as unconstitutional. One might wonder exactly what country we are living in when the health of the mother is no consideration compared to the health of a fetus. Let's talk about so called "primitive" societies shall we? Are women simply brood mares of some champion stud? (Not that I support this perception for mares either) Mere wombs and cocoons for a more valuable life than their own? What is the value of a woman in Bush Land? Not much apparently. Of course, the bill did pass both the Senate and the House to get to Bush's desk, so he can't bear all the blame. However, his glee in signing the bill sickened me.

More education deception in Houston


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By Rowan Wolf

Wouldn't you hate to have the job of being GW's official presidential historian? Unless that historian is also a premier fiction writer she or he is out of luck. Not only are the facts about everything since GW came into office constantly changing, but so are the ones from when he was Governor of Texas. It is widely known now that the Rod Paige (Secretary of Education) miracle in the Texas educatiion system was (literally) a paper tiger, but the deception goes on with new attempts to make Houston schools a model of "success." In today's NY Times, Sam Dillion has a piece - School Violence Data Under a Cloud in Houston. According to the article, there is a discrepancy of 2330 violent incidents between the Houston School District's reports and the Houston Police Department's reported school violence incidents. (Houston is not alone in its deception as the article notes that both the Roanoke, Va and Gwinnett County, Ga schools have gotten significant press for similar under-reporting.)

Are we headed toward renewed conflict with Russia?


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By Rowan Wolf

Russia's name is popping up all too frequently for comfort - allied against the US. What have we got? Well, we have Russian made weapons in Iraq. We have Russia standing by Iran (and purportedly giving them nuclear advice). We have Russia voting against the US actions and plans in Iraq on the UN Security Council. And now we have this report by Richard Ehrlich US Selling High Tech Missiles To Thailand (Scoop, 11/06/03).

What direction is Dean going

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By Rowan Wolf

My guess is that like many of you, I have been supporting multiple candidates for the 2004 elections. One of those I have been supporting has been Howard Dean. I got an email yesterday that maybe some of you got as well. It has an invitation to a "VIP Reception" which will cost you $1000 or more. Or you can go the the "General Reception" for $100 ($$25 with student ID). This smacks of the same old process of "buying access and voice" to me. It seems like politics as we have come to detest it. I am sorely disappointed and have informed the campaign of that fact. The entire invitation is in the extended entry for your information, or if you have the bucks to buy access to the VIP reception.

Special Iraqi Squads Formed


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By Rowan Wolf

News is starting to get out on special squads that the US military is forming in Iraq. They are recruiting former Ba'athists to place into "hit-squads" to go after those who are attacking US forces and Iraqi's percieved as collaborating with the US (most frequent targets seem to be police and politicians). [10/27/03 Freedberg, GovExec, Iraqi security forces risky, but vital part of reconstruction]. Back in April 03, James Conachy at WSWS had a piece about this as well - Expand |

If things are so good, why are they so bad?

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By Rowan Wolf

The Corporate Media and the Bush Administration are cooing and gooing over the (supposed) 7.2% growth rate for the last quarter. They point to it as a "sign" that the economy is not just in recovery, but a period of growth. Might I recommend a deep breath?

We have (supposedly) been in a "recovery" (jobless) for virtually the full time that Bush II has been in office. I have bemoaned to anyone who would listen that a "jobless" (and indeed job LOSS) recovery wasn't going to help out the overwhelming majority of the population. While the banners are flown for how well we are doing, somehow jobs are not among those good things. More people are in poverty. More people are hungry. This is a three year trend of growing job loss, poverty, and hunger. One must ask, "Who is recovering?"

New Recycling Intiative


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Emily at Strangechord happened upon a new recyling initiative Freecycle. These are community based groups where if someone has something they no longer need then they post it, and if you need (or are looking for something) you post it. The aim is to increase the circulation of goods within the community reducing both waste and consumption. It is a great idea and there are a number of cities in the US involved (including several Oregon cities). So check it out, bookmark it, participate as you see fit, and share the site around.

p.s. When I checked the Portland, Oregon group there were over 1300 people signed up.

Want to watch government at work? Iraq CPA Website

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By Rowan Wolf

Just thought folks might be interested. Here is the link to the Iraq Coalition Provisional AuthorityWebsite. Just out of curiosity I checked the site ownership and it is registered to Defense Technical Information Center at Fort Belvoir, VA. It also has its own name server in case anyone is interested. It is interesting that so little of the site is in Arabic. One might think that would be a natural assumption . Perhaps more interesting is that the Iraqi Busisness Center is also all in English. Hmmm

Why are these groups getting input?


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By Rowan Wolf

Ok. I'll keep this brief. But why in the world is the Traditional Values Coalition prompting NIH to create a "hit list" of AIDS and HIV research projects (250 of them so far)? This is being interpreted as "scientific McCarthyism." Here, you take a look:

Inside Politics (Pierce, Wa. TImes, 10/28/03).

The Big Chill at the Lab (Herbert, NY Times, 11/03/03).

Is the Draft Coming Back?


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By Rowan Wolf

Is the draft about to be reinstated? It certainly looks like it. Jeremy at Biohabit sent me a heads up on the latest draft news.

9/11 Citizen's Watch Request


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By Rowan Wolf

The editor of The 9/11 Citizen's Watch Newsletter has requested help in getting out the request below.

You can visit 9/11 Citizen's Watch for information and to subscribe to their newsletter.

Letter from the Editor (of 9/11 Citizen's Watch Newletter):

All business this glorious day after Halloween!

I Encourage all of you to forward this email or snippets of it to your friends, family and colleagues and to begin to call the White House to ask them to turn over requested documents and to call your Representatives to encourage them to put pressure on the White House and have hearings on the this issue (before voting to extend their deadline if requested) and others including:

1) de-classifying the 90-95% of the 28 redacted pages in the Joint Inquiry Report that Senator Shelby said could be revealed to the American people without compromising our National Security.

2) the lack of investigative rigor and 'issues' within the 9/11 Commission (ie. no testimony being taken under oath, the presense of minders during 'interviews', Dr. Zelikow's conflict of interest with the NSC he is investigating, the need to turn over non-classified evidence, hold more public hearings, issuing regular finding of fact, etc).

3) Asking what else is hidden from the American people regarding what happened on 9/11: in the immediate aftermath the Administration said there were no warnings. Now we know there were. Later the Administration said 'no one could have imagined planes being hijacked and crashed into buildings.' Now we know this was, at least in the case of the G-8 meeting in Genoa in the spring of 2001, something the Secret Service and the military actively prepared for. Later it was insinuated that Saddam and Iraq had something to do with 9/11. Now, since President Bush's statement setting the record straight, we know differently. (though the VP continues to differ).

So, it begs the question, what other surprises might be lurking within and between the lines of the documents various government agencies are so reluctant to turn over to the Commission? And what might other government whistleblowers reveal if they followed in the footsteps of FBI field agents Colleen Rowley and Robert Wright (whose own book on his FBI HQ undermined investigation has been 100% redacted)? If the truth is to be told and the application of accountability in a government culture that denies it is to be effected then we bring sunlight to this investigation.

Kyle F. Hence
9/11 CitizensWatch

Dept. of Justice releases censored internal diversity study

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By Rowan Wolf

Jeremy at Biohabit has a piece on the notorius Dept of Justice report that was released with half the pages blacked out. See Justice Department has significant diversity issues. Thanks to The Memory Hole for making the full document available to the public.

The first question that arises is why would so much of this document have been "redacted" (meaning blacked out for public release)? As far as I can tell from the full report, the DoJ is not any more racist or sexist than many organizations. In other words, they have the same discrepancies in climate, retention, and placement of women and racial/ethnic minorities as other predominantly "white" organizations. Those issues are that women and racial/ethnic minorities are more represented in lower grades; do not advance the same way in the organization as white males, perceive a more hostile climate than white males, and are more likely to leave the organization.

Bush pays his debts

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By Rowan Wolf

Would it be worth it to go into major debt to contribute to GW's campaign? It sure looks like it might give returns much higher than most investments. According to a new report by The Center for Public Integrity, seventy companies and individuals who gave about $500,000 to the Bush campaign have received over $8 billion in contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan (10/30/03 CPI, Winning Contractors - U.S. Contractors Reap the Windfalls of Post-war Reconstruction). Further, the report states that:

"... nearly every one of the 10 largest contracts awarded for Iraq and Afghanistan went to companies employing former high-ranking government officials or individuals with close ties to those agencies or Congress.

In addition, those top 10 contractors were established political donors, contributing nearly $11 million to national political parties, candidates and political action committees since 1990, according to an analysis of campaign finance records. "

And more money, the $87 billion additional request is close to approval. Not only was the $10 billion loan turned back into a grant, but the amendment to outlaw war profiteering was deleted. It was replaced by a "watchdog" position(Spending Bill Nears Passage in the Senate, Firestone, NY Times, 11/01/03).

Help w/ Rowan's Transplant

Your assistance in helping me raise funds for a transplant are greatly needed and appreciated. To make a tax deductible monetary contribution, please go to My page at NTAF. To help via volunteering, please email Rebecca Carr at NTAF [email protected]. THANK YOU!!!

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