"> !!!'>]>
NIE—gold standard of intel reports
—says Saddam
has never been connected to any terrorism against US, does not work with
al Qaeda, would do so only if provoked—eg, invaded by the US—and
even then it's unlikely.
WND
Rice addresses Manhattan Institute for Policy Research at Waldorf Astoria. `The Manhattan Institute concerns itself with such things as welfare reform (dismantling social programs), faith-based initiatives (blurring the distinction between church and state), and education reform (destroying public education).' For disorwellianisation of her speech, see CP. (She quotes Shultz: `If there is a rattlesnake in the yard, you don't wait for it to strike before you take action in self-defense.' This is true; but it wants trouble no more than you do, hence its name. The best action is not to piss it off and wait for it to go away. Of course, that's a boring and unAmerican approach. She says `The US will fight poverty, disease, and oppression because it is the right thing to do;' but the US has said this a bajillion times before and never done it. It's not even doing it at home. `[We] resolve to stand on the side of men and women in every nation who stand for…free speech, equal justice, respect for women, religious tolerance and limits on the power of the state' except here and in Saudia Arabia.)
Iraqi VP Taha Yassin Ramadan suggests Bush and Saddam settle their differences with a duel; the Whitehouse declines. CNN (That's not nearly enough expensive shedding of foreigners' blood to appease the US, it would get them no oil, and would their dopefiend drydrunk aspartame-poisoned combat-dodging generally addled Resident have any chance against someone like Saddam anyway?)
13-a-old Elizabeth Rangel distributes a few personal effects to her San Antonio schoolmates then puts a 9-mm slug through her head. JR (Couldn't possibly be because her instinct knows perfectly damn well where the world's headed despite the lies of opiate media.)
The Media, never much good at analysis, is more and more breathless and incoherent. On CNN, even the stolid Jim Clancy started to hyperventilate when an Indian academic tried to explain how Iraq was once our ally andfriendin its war against our Satanic enemy, Iran.None of that conspiracy stuff,snarled Clancy. Apparentlyconspiracy stuffis now shorthand for unpeakable truth. [Vidal Dreaming War p50]
Amnesty International criticises Israel for failing to protect the rights of
foreign women smuggled into the country to work as prostitutes, and treated as
criminals rather than victims.
BBC
(Lev 25:44ff, NKJV:
And as for your male and female slaves whom you may have—from the
nations that are around you, from them you may buy male and female slaves.
Moreover you may buy the children of the strangers who dwell among you, and
their families who are with you, which they beget in your land; and they shall
become your property.
And you may take them as an inheritance for your children after you, to inherit them as a possession; they shall be your permanent slaves. But regarding your brethren, the children of Israel, you shall not rule over one another with rigor.)
Red Cross calls on US to immediately resolve legal status of its Guantánamo prisoners. NM (Almost forgot about them, din't ya?)
Two more provocations. Minor, Al Jazeera has audio tape of more threats on the US allegedly from bin Laden. Major, explosion and fire on French supertanker Limburg at Yemen. The French seem determined it's Cole-style terrorism (even though it's unlikely a dingyful of conventional explosive floating against the hull could do the damage done to Cole), the Yemenis are sure it's just an accident (but later concede attack MSNBC). Paris seems to be willing to wait for an investigation. [BBC radio] HC
Ministers have tried to spin—or indeed lie—their way out of this in much the same way that they misled the press over my disclosure that MI5 had failed to react to reliable intelligence warning of an attack on the Israeli Embassy in 1994. When I made the disclosure in the Mail on Sunday, Jack Straw tried to deny it. It was only when the authorities were obliged to disclose a summary of the report to the Appeal Court that I was vindicated. Where there is the slightest risk of embarrassment and bad publicity, Tony Blair and his government cannot be trusted to protect fundamental human rights like the right to life and the right to security of person, both guaranteed under the Human Rights Act.
Israel fires missile into crowd of Gazans, killing 10 (14 altogether die in the raid). Israel `regrets the civilian deaths' (But what compensation does it pay?). US continues to mumble `Israel has a right to defend itself.' Y! The attacking helicopters were Apaches. [BBC radio] (And I don't deny anyone the right to defense. But Israel is the invader, and funded Hamas—the probable target, but this article isn't clear on that—in the first place.)
CBS admits the American people are in no hurry for a war with Iraq. They aren't even keen on preëmption; countries should not be able to attack each other unless attacked first—and less than half of Americans think the US, in particular, has the right to make preëmptive strikes against nations it thinks may attack in the future.
Wanted proof Hamas isn't Arafat's? `Gunmen believed to be linked to Hamas reportedly tortured and killed the head of the Palestinian riot police, triggering deadly gun battles between police and supporters of the radical Islamic group which resulted in four deaths…The Palestinian fighting began, according to police, when about 20 armed Hamas members disguised as national security officers set up a road block in Gaza City to intercept Brigadier General Rajeh Abu Lehya, the 55-year-old head of the West Bank and Gaza riot police…Abu Lehya was taken with his two bodyguards to the Nusseirat refugee camp, south of Gaza City, tortured and shot 10 times, police said…Police and witnesses said the Hamas members then announced by loudspeaker that they had killed Abu Lehya in revenge for the deaths of two Islamist demonstrators who died in clashes with riot police in anti-US demonstrations one year ago.' NCAU
UK support for whacking Iraq reaches 5-week low of 32%, while undecideds increase to 27%. `The slight fall will prove a disappointment to Tony Blair…' (Why? If he's working for the British people, he should just shrug and say `so be it.' If he's disappointed, for whom is he working?) On the other hand, opposition to the war has also decreased, from 46% 3 weeks ago to 41%. And a senior cabinet minister believes Labour could lose ¼ of of its roughly 300000 members if the UK goes with the US. G
Meanwhile, GWB gives much-hyped big speech in Cincinnatti; nothing new or substantive in it. (eg—Hussein gassed 40 Iraq villages? Names and dates please, Mr. Bush, so we can verify. Satellite photos show whatnot? Coordinates, please.* No, I don't trust you one barleycorn, Mr. Rezeedint. He whines about the US-UK planes being fired upon some 750 times in their 48000+ sorties dropping hundreds of tons of bombs on Iraq—of course, omitting to mention that latter part. He repeated the lie that Iraq kicked out the inspectors just before Desert Fox. He claims an al Qaeda leader got medical treatment in Iraq, but fails to remind us of Osama's stay in an American hospital in Dubai a few months before his big scene. `An Iraqi regime faced with its own demise may attempt cruel and desperate measures.' Isn't that a damn good reason not to attack him? Wasn't that the US' own cold-war MAD strategy? Isn't it, indeed, tha main reason noöne's taken out your regime? You want inspectors to go anywhere in Iraq, unannounced, unfettered? Let 'em do as much in the US, Mr. Bush. See also IPA.) LAT · G · SMH Whitehouse apparently had trouble getting coverage; ABC, CBS, NBC refused to carry it live, perhaps because the Bears-Packers game was on and it'd've cut into their audience. Phil Bohman: `This is Wisconsin, and the Packer game is on…[attacking Iraq would be a] waste of time and money. I think our military is spread too thin and there are so many other things we could be spending money on in this country.' Carol Floodstrand would've liked to watch, `but the major networks aren't even covering it live.' (Take that, CNN & FOX.) WI (I caught an interesting thing on CNN Crossfire just before the speech: the Left guy said the inspectors had been kicked out of Iraq; the Right guy corrected him, they'd `left.' Anyhow, as far as I'm concerned, the US and UK created the mess in Iraq, beginning with their paying Hussein to return after that coup attempt, continuing through their supplying his WMD and the sanctions, up to the present bombing runs. They made the mess without the world's help or consent—although we did go along with the sanctions for awhile—if they wanna fix it they can bloody well go it the same way.)
*I see on CNN, that a couple of photos are going to be released. I'm eager to read what critics say about them.
24-a-o South Korean's death is blamed on too much internet. SMH (This is way too easily spun into a call for gov't control of the 'net, something the BushBlair wants desperately.)
intelligence,[but] it insults our intelligence by recycling old, discredited propaganda and presenting it as fact. The same canards have recently reappeared in The New Yorker—but The New Yorker is simply a magazine that lives on advertising. When lies appear in an official Government report to a sovereign Parliament, well then you have to ask yourself just what is going on.' JR
Rep. Pete Stark: `I rise in opposition to this resolution [#114, Authorization for Military Force Against Iraq]…The bottom line is I don't trust this President and his advisors.…It sets a precedent for our nation—or any nation—to exercise brute force anywhere in the world without regard to international law or international consensus. Congress must not walk in lockstep behind a President who has been so callous to proceed without reservation, as if war was of no real consequence.' PS
Egypt rebukes Straw for trying to get the rules of the Iraq game rewritten. T
CNN reports on `training-exercise accident' killing a Marine in Kuwait, soon revises story to `al Qaeda! al Qaeda!' Maine Gambit, or Gulf of Tonkin ploy? Kuwaiti interior minister denies al Qaeda link. BBC (But notice the BBC's spin, continuing blithely to reïnforce the idea aQ did it.)
Another illegal US attack on northern Iraq, destroying defensive SAM site. TBO
I have an `aha!' moment—Saddam is merely the Angloamerican `Hitler Project II.' Both were put into and supported in power by powerful but shady angloamerican interests. Both invaded neighbours with clear if false assurances his angloamerican backers wouldn't mind. All for the sake of sparking splendid little wars to make the angloamerican wealthy and powerful more powerful and wealthy while most of the rest of humanity went to hell. Personally, I think it's time the BushBlair types got a taste of what happens to bloodthirsty fascists, by their own people reduced to a ditchful of cinders or disembowelled and hung by their heels at their local gas station. (Hitler and Mussolini, respectively, BTW. The latter I'd find a beautiful irony, since they're doing it all for the gas stations in the first place; but I hope in the former case the cinders are irrefutably identified as a former major evildoer.)
Speaking of gas stations, Dean Meyers of Gaithersburg MD becomes the sniper's 7th kill at one in Manassas. ABC
probability of [Saddam] initiating an attack…in the foreseeable future, given the conditions we understand now, the likelihood I think would be low—but on the other hand, if attacked, would
exact vengeance by taking a large number of victims with him.G (In other words, Whack Iraq is a doubly bad idea.)
US bombs Basra International again, destroying a civilian radar system and inflicting damage on the passenger terminals and service buildings. CNA
Congress announces decision to create an `independent' commission to probe 9/11, then withdraws it after Whitehouse fusses. One demand; that GWB appoint the commission chair and that a majority vote be required to subpoena witnesses or documents. ND Cheney's fine meddling hand is suspected. MSNBC
Westerners tour the Nassr industrial site, subject of Bush's satellite photos; find nothing untoward. Russia's probably holding out for a guarantee of the G$7 Iraq owes it. S4
Media showing biases in reporting a Palestinian suicide bombing that kills two (bomber and 71-a-o Israeli). You have to get way down in th article to get any hint this bombing, first since Sep 19, is motivated by the Oct 7 Israeli raid on Gaza.) [ABC quoting Reuters] (My body-count in this one article is 22 Palestinians, 7 Israelis. These things seem to come out consistently about 3-1; yet Israel stills gets away with calling it defense. 'Course the US does 1/3 of the worl'ds military spending, and also calls it defence. C'est la guerre.)
Frontline premiers Missile Wars. And y'know, watching it, it's so damn obvious the whole missile shield project is a boondoggle to further enrich the likes of Bush, Clinton, Cheney, & Rumsfeld without regard to the true threat modes faced by the people of the US or consideration of the motivators generated by the likes of Bush, Clinton, Cheney, & Rumsfeld for those threats—and that even the clear goal of global dictatorship is secondary to lining the BCCR crowd's pockets with the last tatters of wealth in the people's hands—I dunno. What's it going to take to get the American people to take back their country?
At the 4-Mile Fork Exxon near Massaponax, Kenneth Bridges becomes 8th kill, within 50 m of a state trooper (who heard the shot). FB
Putin (a fmr intel officer): `Russia does not have in its possession any trustworthy data which would support the existence of nuclear weapons or any weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and we have not received from our partners such information as yet.' G
Israel restricts access to al Aqsa moaque, `3rd holiest site in Islam.'
TI
(`Israel restricts access to Lourdes, can't understand Catholic outcry.'
No, scratch that; when Israel beseiged the Church of the Nativity there
was no outcry.)
Carter is awarded the Nobel Peace Prize (for starting the Afghan War? I grant, he's a more-plausible choice than Kissinger. But at this moment, could it be anything but a US `See? We're the good guys' ploy?) (I wrote that before knowing the Nobel selection c'tee says that's the opposite of what it is. Well, that they deny it just proves it =) Rivero: `Did Dubya really think he had a chance?' (See Feb.)
Tremendous blast beneath Sari Nightclub in Bali, wrecks 47 buildings
and 100 vehicles, leaves crater.
Possibly a µnuke
intended to align Aussie public opinion in favour of TWAT.
(But will it succeed? 30k protest in Melbourne, express sympathy for Bali,
say `the tragedy reïnforced the need for a different approach to
conflict resolution rather than further violence and war.'
SM)
Straw's office had warned `important' Britons about it but kept it quiet
from the general public.
G
(Indonesian officials claim to have found C4 residues
BBC
which might kill the nuke idea.
I don't know if anyone thought to check for radiation.
Nor have I gotten around to figuring whether nukes can be made small.)
This happened just when Londington wanted it to; Indonesia had been very
balky at all levels about TWAT.
[LF
citing Washington Post]
`US ambassador to Jakarta Ralph Boyce had warned the Indonesian government
only a few days [ago] that unless it acted against terrorist groups posing
a threat to westerners, America would begin to withdraw its diplomatic
staff…The CIA had even presented Indonesian officials with evidence of
an Al-Qaeda plot to assassinate President Megawati Sukarnoputri. But US and
British officials have openly admitted their frustration as the Indonesians
failed to arrest individuals they believe are directly involved in planning
and committing terrorism.'
[PM
citing
LT]
(If that evidence is of the same quality as that against Iraq…)
`The Bush administration's frustration with Indonesia's reluctance to recognize
the extent of terrorism in the country boiled over with Saturday night's
carnage. We hope this sends a message to the Indonesians that terrorism is
not just an American problem, but an Indonesian one as well,
a senior Bush
administration official said.'
BA
`World oil prices stayed firm Monday, hovering just below $30 a barrel, as
brokers speculated the weekend bombing in Bali would bolster international
support for President George Bush's stance against Iraq.'
R
And from the other direction: `Just what sort of
Muslim Terrorist
threatens to bomb the persons and interests of people
who are basically for Human Rights in Palestine and against the US Dubya Bush
plans for an invasion of Iraq? What sort of idiot would then do so
and thereby ruin this genuine grass roots support for their cause within
Germany, France, Britain, Holland etc, and Australia? Strangely unlike the
Northern Irish or Basque terrorist actions these latest bombings of people
and assets have not been followed by any public claims of authorship.'
CSO
Indeed, the Indonesian Muslim militants are blaming it on the US;
`The incident could be used as reason for the US and its allies to justify
their accusations that Indonesia is a terrorist network base.'
JP
·
I
Some `mainstream' already doubt the story: `a Bali nightclub is an unlikely
target for al-Qaeda. It has no strategic value, it does not hurt a Western
government, and it was not a favoured haunt of al-Qaeda's preferred targets:
Americans and Jews.'
BBC
The FBI and Scotland Yard, with no jurisdiction, immediately muscled into
controlling the investigation, outraging the natives
SM
and leading to a deadend.
G
Taiwan had warning, but the US asked it to be keep secret.
`According to Lee [Chuan-chiao], the worst part is that the government did
not issue a warning because the US government asked it not to disclose the
information.'
[SNZ
copying
ETN]
`A report in the Washington Post [Oct 15] quoted intelligence officials
who said Bali was mentioned in an intelligence report warning of the possible
attack. The US previously denied receiving any intelligence of a specific plan
to target Bali. [Australia's] Federal Government has refused to say what it was
told about possible attacks against tourist sites in Indonesia, repeating that
it had no warning of a specific attack in Bali.'
TA
Educated Balinese think it was CIA; US ambassador says `Nono, look over there!'
NYT
Think. Who has the motive and the means?
And just in time for the mid-term Congressional elections we were presented with the [Bali Bombing]. It seems likely that this was the work of the same people who carried out the attacks of September 11th. It was a psychological operation directed mainly against the people of Australia, most of whom were opposed to their government's shameful support of America's plans to wage war on Iraq. S
The fact is that only six US citizens were killed in the Kuta bombing, not because there were so few Americans in Kuta but because the Americans there tended not to hang out at the Sari Club…Everyone in Kuta knew where the Americans preferred to gather [eg Peanut Club] and where the Australians did, or if not, could find out in five minutes…Most of the population of Australia was opposed to the intentions of the leading Australian politicians to participate in America's plans for an invasion of Iraq. From the Arab point of view it would be foolish to inflame anti-Arab and anti-Muslim sentiment among the Australian people, thereby strengthening the hand of those politicians. But from the point of view of those who wanted America to wage war on Iraq (i.e., Israel and the Neocon clique) it made good sense to try to turn the Australian people against Arabs and Muslims. S
Iraq seems willing to give inspectors unlimited access. R US stubbornly refuses to take yes as an answer. ABC
This Gurdian piece is very like a call to Americans to rein in their madman.
Authorities in Baltimore, meanwhile, seized a white van and found an assault rifle, sniper manual, and ammunition similar to the .223 bullets used in attacks that have killed eight people and wounded two others. A tarot card was found in the van and a sign on the dashboard readGihad in America.The van's owner was questioned Monday night by police and released with no charges filed. [Y! citing WBAL-TV and MSNBC]
President Bush seems to think bullying is the only way to deal with dissent. Bush has so much trouble articulating a defense for his own policies, so little capacity to formulate a reasoned response, that he resorts to shibboleths, name-calling, or, worse, using authorities to shut down his critics. Classic Bush was his attack on Senate Democrats who refused to go along with his plan to strip workers at the new Department of Homeland Security of civil service rights. He quipped that senators were `not interested in the security of the American people.'…Daschle made quick work of Bush's scurrilous claims, pointing out to the former Texas National Guardsman that a number of Senate Democrats were actually injured fighting for the security of our country. StPT
extract scentfrom the year-old anthrax letters and get three bloodhounds from CA to meander eventually to Steven Hatfill's apartment. ABC (No chain-of-evidence problem there. How, for instance, has it been shown that this supposed scent-extraction process pulls out something that smells precisely the same to a bloodhound!??! Were the handlers ignorant of the suspect and where he lived?)
I'm neither fish nor fowl. That is, I believe that [Saddam Hussein] is very bad. We have a lot to answer for, and he is basically partly our creature. I'm not criticizing President Bush on this because I did the same thing. I've sat there and pontificated about how [Saddam] is the only guy to use chemical weapons on his own people.* Yeah he did it, and the Reagan Administration was for him when he did it. Nobody raised a peep then, because he was against Iran. We now know that he got his anthrax strain from an American company while we looked the other way.* An interesting claim, considering his gov't gassed and immolated a small church congregation in southern TX.…So I think we have to try to give the sanctions one more chance. He's not going to live forever, there are options for regime change short of bombing the living daylights out of them. [ICH citing Atlantic Monthly Oct 21]
…many dentists who oppose fluoridation fear American Dental Association reprisal if they say so publicly, according to a poll conducted by the Unified Health Alliance of Reno, Nevada, and reported by Unified Health Alliance former editor Lois Eckroat in the Reno Gazette-Journal [today]…The following, as reported by Eckroat, lists reasons given for objecting to mandated fluoridation in this poll:S101 citing RGJ
- Violation of freedom to choose: Most felt that sodium fluoride is a poisonous chemical and strongly expressed having a choice in what
to put in their bodies.- Health threat: In general it is believed that limiting daily sodium fluoride intake to 1 ppm (parts per million) is impossible, since collectively, cereals, canned/bottle juices, other foods, toothpaste etc. easily exceed the danger level of 4 ppm.
- Most believed the overfluoridation leads to fluorosis, brittle bones, I.Q. lowering and cancer.
- Frustration with elected officials, who seem to represent the views of industrial power, the FDA (Food and Drug Administration), AMA (American Medical Association) and ADA (American Dental Association) rather than the people of Nevada.
- Cost: Most felt mandatory fluoridation to be an unnecessary tax burden.
- Bad personal experiences with fluoridation: Many included horror stories with their responses, some from local dentists.
- Feeling of deception: Many questioned the integrity and motives of health professionals in not explaining the difference between calcium fluoride and sodium fluoride. Calcium fluoride occurs naturally in water in minute quantities and is believed to be beneficial or at least harmless. Sodium fluoride, most felt, is a dangerous toxic by-product of chemical processing.
Four Canadian `journalists' get a we-like-you-type award from B'nai B'rith. Guest speaker World Net Daily editor Joseph Farah. BB (One is Marcus Gee, whom I already marked as unreliable for his attempt to convince us the US would stop at Iraq.)
The Duluth News Tribune featured a column by Jim Fetzer, a University of Minnesota-Duluth philosophy professor and author, [who] wrote that an FBIrecovery teamheaded out to investigate the Wellstone plane crash before the plane went down.I calculate that this team would have had to have left the Twin Cities at about the same time the Wellstone plane was taking off,Fetzer wrote. [He] also noted that Wellstone's plane wasexceptional, the pilots well-qualified, and the weather posed no significant problems…An abrupt cessation of communication between the plane and the tower took place at about 10:18 am, the same time an odd cell-phone phenomenon occurred with a driver in the immediate vicinity. This suggests to me the most likely explanation is that one of our new electromagnetic weapons was employed.CP
GWB: `The vitality of America's democracy depends on the fairness and accuracy
of America's elections.' Meanwhile, he was signing a bill to give the states
nearly G$4 to eliminate the embarassing paper trail of American elections.
RMN
(Hitler's method for eliminating elections was too obvious.)
They didn't understand what they were doing.I'm afraid that'll be on the tombstone of the human race.
US incinerates 5 Yemeni and one of their own in a car in the desert with a
Hellfire from CIA drone; a multiple extrajudicial summary execution
7.9 quake 66 km ESE of McKinley Park AK. USGS (US seems to be cranking up its Tesla seismotoy.)
US elections. Remember, remember the fifth of November
gunpowder treason and plot.
Republicans take over the Hill while Britons burn Dubya guys.
(If y'dunno WTF is Guy Fawkes Day,
PoisonedMinds
had a purty good synopsis last year.)
Hitler made away with elections, and so have the Bushmen.
They had to be a littler subtler about it, but the effect is the same.
To stop a repeat of the 2000 mess, all-digital machines were
introduced—there's now no potentially embarassing hardcopy trail.
The proprietary software cannot be inspected. Even the exit polls were
done away with, probably because they diverged too far from what the
machines were saying for even statisticians to explain.
JR
Watching the television coverage of Jeb Bush's victory in Florida was stomach-turningly unpleasant. George senior, `Poppy,' embraced his son in a godfather-like embrace. The gangster comparison would be apt but for its unfairness to organised crime. At least the mafia's drug-dealing murderers do not pretend to be anything else. In the images off the satellite from Florida, Sludge could see arguably the most ruthless and successful drug-dealing murderer of all time—former CIA don, Iran-Contra architect, and bin Laden's recruiter—Poppy Bush embracing his second small-minded, bigoted, deceitful, and corrupt son. And all the time posing as the defenders of democracy and world peace. You only need to look at Jeb's squinty eyes and slimy grin to know that he is a person who deserves about as little trust as any politician alive.A sampling of how `they' did it: Broward Co FL `lost' 104000 votes through programming `errors' and other shenanigans. Although this was 10% of the electorate it `didn't affect the outcome.' MH (In Canada, votes are marked on paper and counted by hand.*) Over 90000 Floridians, mostly black Democrats, improperly blocked from the 2000 election were still blocked despite an NAACP lawsuit. (It is alleged the problem will be fixed sometime next year.) JR · GP (In Canada, you don't have to be on a list to vote.* It speeds things up if you're on the enumeration, but so long as you can satisfy the clerk, the DRO, and the agents that you have a vote you get one.) Elsewhere, there were ballot shortages in San Francisco: it was over 3 hr past closing when some got a ballot, and they were then told it wouldn't be counted. KRON (In Canada, if you got in the poll before the doors were locked, and are otherwise eligible, you get a vote and it counts.* In polls I've worked, the initial ballot supply met at least 90% of the enumeration.) In MI, `printer's error' caused severe ballot shortage. Z4 Mess in Pulaski Co. Arkansas prompts Democrats to petition for extended hours, granted by local judge, overthrown on Republican suit to supreme court. And somehow Pulaski knows which votes to discard. KARK `A switch of roughly 29,000 votes in Minnesota, 11,500 in Missouri and 9,500 in New Hampshire would have produced a Democratic Senate and gobs of stories about how the White House blew it.' WP (Did WP pick those states simply because they're close? NH is infamous in Bush history. [GBUB]Which begs the question, how could the people of Florida and America have done this? Again? SNZ
Perhaps the greatest vote-fixing story of the computer age occurred in the 1988 Republican primary in New Hampshire, where it is likely that a notoriously riggable collection of `Shouptronic' computers `preordained' voting results to give George Bush his "Hail Mary" victory in New Hampshire. Nobody save a small group of computer engineers, like John Sununu, the state's Republican governor, would be the wiser.' DMN was Wellstone: Wellstone absentee ballots were ignored EZB; persons in line past 8pm were turned away, contrary to law CTV · UPI; 100000 absentees were required to hand-deliver their Mondale replacemenet ballots, assuming they even recieved them DNW; `faulty, unreadable' ballots, some with both Wellstone and Mondale, were rewritten by election workers TC. In MO, state law requires certified software (it wasn't); absentee ballots must be publicly counted (they weren't) EZB; 1 in 6 voters turned away because of precinct changes KC; Black/Democratic St. Louis had punchcard shortage CNN; counting could take days. KOLR · SLT In Baldwin Co. AB, a GOP stronghold, Democrat Siegelman suddenly lost 7000 votes and the election to a `computer glitch.' Supposedly the GOP DA in charge threatens to jail anyone attempting a recount; none is ever done. CNN Sequoia Voting Systems executive Phil Foster is under indictment for money laundering and corruption, and the simpleservant that signed the contract, Elections Supervisor Theresa LePore, didn't think it was relevant. SPT Now go buy Votescam and read it.
*Me, speaking as sometime agent, poll clerk, and deputy returning officer. The victory statement from JEB that I found most interesting, caught in passing on CNN, was something like `we'll find ways to protect Americans you never even dreamed of.' In Comal Co TX, three races were won by exactly the same margin: county judge Scheel, Sen. Wentworth (R), and Rep. Casteel (R) all won by 18181 votes. ABC
A Texas-sized lack of curiosity about discrepancies: The uncanny coincidence of three winning Republican candidates in a row tallying up exactly 18,181 votes each was called weird, but apparently no one thought it was weird enough to audit. Conversion to alphabet: 18181 18181 18181 ahaha ahaha ahahaNo one at the voting machine company can explain the mystery votes that changed after polling places had closed, flipping the election from the Democratic winner to a Republican in the Alabama governor's race.
Something happened. I don't have enough intelligence to say exactly what,said Mark Kelley of ES&S. Baldwin County results showed that Democrat Don Siegelman earned enough votes to win the state of Alabama. All the observers went home. The next morning, however, 6,300 of Siegelman's votes inexplicably had disappeared, and the election was handed to Republican Bob Riley. A recount was requested, but denied.Voting machine tallies impounded in New York: Software programming errors hampered and confused the vote tally on election night and most of the next day, causing elections officials to pull the plug on the vote-reporting Web site. Commissioners ordered that the voting machine tallies be impounded, and they were guarded overnight by a Monroe County deputy sheriff.
Election officials lost their memory: Fulton County [GA] election officials said that memory cards from 67 electronic voting machines had been misplaced, so ballots cast on those machines were left out of previously announced vote totals. No hand count can shine any light on this; the entire state of Georgia* went to touch-screen machines with no physical record of the vote. Fifty-six cards, containing 2,180 ballots, were located, but 11 memory cards still were missing two days after the election: Bibb County and Glynn County each had one card missing after the initial vote count. When DeKalb County election officials went home early Wednesday morning, they were missing 10 cards. SNZ
*Heavily favoured Democrat Roy Barnes outspent his Republican opponent, Sonny Purdue, six to one. Diebold's AccuVote, with its potential paperless, virtually inauditable system, helped Purdue pull an upset victory and become the first Republ;ican governor of Georgia in 130 years…we'd like to know why Diebold parked sensitive election computer files on an unprotected Web site, then changed the code on 22,000 machines in Georgia right before the vote. LFRiverside County (CA?) has 4250 machines for 650000 voters. [BBV quoting AOL] (153 voters per machine. In Nova Scotia, we run about 400 voters through a single, paper, human-counted poll. And DRO+PC costs about $215. NSG You can get an awful lot of DROs+PCs for what one of those machines costs.)
I'm in a choir; I refuse to sing `Land of Hope and Glory'
at the Remembrance Day service. 1) it promotes expansionist empire,
which causes all the big wars. 2) it promotes the British empire,
which was heavily involved in starting WW2 and probably WW1.
3) it contains a line about freedoms built on truth, which I felt
to be inconsistent with the UK's present attempt to suppress MI5/6's
funding of al Qaeda. (Setting aside the fact British imperial freedom for
most subjects is freedom to pay tax and die in the expansionist imperial
conquests.)
NYT claims Saddam trying to buy atropine, a nerve-gas antidote, from Turkey; Turkey denies it. KXAN
UN GA votes 173–3 against the US embargo of Cuba. (US, Israel, Marhall Is against. Ethiopia, Nicaragua, Malawi and Uzbekistan abstain.) F
Feds begin random vehicular stop-n-search in MI. DFP
USDA quarantines M$2.7 of soya beans found mixed with maize GMed by Prodigene to produce a pharmaceutical. The mélange is later destroyed. AA
Saddam overrides his parliament and agrees to the new UN resolution.
Having made much fanfare about the parliament's rejection of the resolution,
the media are notably untrumpetive of his pro-Western dictation.
Concordia obtains an injunction against MP Svend Robinson and Judy Rebick speaking there re the Palestine-Israel conflict. Rebick (a Jew) points out that Zionist organisations do not speak for all Jews; Robinson suggests Concordia's afraid of losing money from Zionist sources. TS · G&M (A sample of `open society' according to Netanyahu, see Sep 9)
Concordia students, the university's staff, the faculty, and the administration conducted a vote through the university's senate and voted to lift the moratorium. The Board of Governors, all corporate appointees dancing the jig of corporate donors, overruled. BI(G&M runs straw poll `Is free speech losing ground in Canadian universities;' I vote Yes, along with about 64% at the time. IMO Acadia's getting oppressive, too. I've heard about the chaplain, perhaps, making a straight-arm salute in reference to the dictatorial behaviours of the BoG or Ogilvie, and some Zionists demanded an apology for the Nazi reference. Or something. Anyhow, Ogilvie's been a petty (small-domain) fascist (big-business-loving) dictator and the sooner he's gone the better. Under his leadership Acadia's been no more a unversity for education and personal growth than is an automobile assembly line.)
I dunno if the US is going to hand over the evidence, but they're sending celebrity lawyers like Johnny Cochran to Saudi to see what they can do for W'm Sampson. CTV (I'd love to know what Graham told Powell the other day.)
Inspectors arrive in Iraq. A
Rumsfeld exhorts South Americans to help combat terrorism and drug trafficking, S apparently forgetting he's talking to the very people enduring the Ft. Benning GA-trained terrorists and death squads, and the Langley VA-based drug runners. Gladys Marin of Chile: `The main goal of the so-called war on terrorism is to guarantee the US hegemony over mankind.'
Oho: they do try to press the matter; Annan blows his top (for Annan) and the US gets no support on the Security Council, not even from Britain. Meanwhile, the inspectors have had full cooperation from Iraq and expect no diffculty meeting the Dec-8 deadline. G (Washington Times spins it as a softening of the US `0-tolerance' position.)
Most informed people on the planet would classify her observation in about the same category as "sugary cereal makes a terrible breakfast," but it is so rare to hear even the slightest truth expressed regarding America's pathetic chief executive that a bit of a flap has arisen…Any politician with some effective intelligence would allow the matter to pass, calling upon a quality variously called grace or largesse or class, but don't waste your time looking for that quality in America's `neocon' crowd. YTThe remark was supposed to be off the record, but the greasy yellow Asper-owned National Post broke the rules and printed it, US officials and media acted very childish and moronic, and other Asper-owned rags badgered Canadians into making Chrétien accept her resgination. (Why is it we must foster good relations with them, but never vice-versa? Why is every little bit of criticism of the US, no matter how well-grounded, is `anti-Americanism' while their perpetual snottery on us—Communists, socialists, laughingstocks,* wimps, etc—is never anti-Canadianism? And if we're such laughingstocks, why in the world does the US want us to play in Iraq?) The American at U of T that made the Bushisms book figures he's not a moron—but a sociopath, incapable of empathy with an inordinate sense of his own entitlement (which is consistent with Tarpley and Chaitkin's read of Poppy, and these things tend to be inherited). `He has no trouble speaking off the cuff when he's speaking punitively, when he's talking about violence, when he's talking about revenge…It's only when he leaps into the wild blue yonder of compassion, or idealism, or altruism, that he makes these hilarious mistakes.' Does that make you feel better? CD · OLJ
In mid-November, Greenspan stated that, `there's virtually no meaningful limit to what we could inject into the system were that necessary'. He commented that he would release unlimited dollars into our banking system by acquiring among other things, long term Treasuries if he deemed it advisable. About a week later, Governor Bernanke confirmed and reinforced Greenspan's testimony. He stated that, `the US government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many US dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost. By increasing the number of US dollars in circulation, or even by credibly threatening to do so, the US government can also reduce the value of a dollar in terms of goods and services, which is equivalent to raising the prices in dollars of those goods and services.' He went on to say that, `If we do fall into deflation, however, we can take comfort that the logic of the printing press example must assert itself, and sufficient injections of money will ultimately always reverse a deflation'. KC(Did this work for Gernamy c1922?)
The scene? The recently-concluded NATO meeting in Prague.The news item:
US war planes circled the city throughout the two-day gathering.Yes, the President of the US showed up at an international meeting with the ability to obliterate the gathering (not to mention the city) at a moment's notice. Just a little accompanying luggage, that's all.
Imagine if the news were
Iraqi war planes circle New York throughout the two-day UN debate.No big deal, right?By the way, good luck finding the citation (deliberately not given here) on the genuine story from Prague. Seems that the newsminders finally realized that this was (duh) something not to publicize, even deeply buried in reports on the NATO meeting. A six-pack of Leinenkugel for anyone who can unearth the original in less than 15 minutes. SR, PA
South Koreans biff Molotov cocktails at US military base in Seoul, upset over
the predictable acquittal of US soldiers that killed two girls.
JR
Dubai customs officer fires on US military helicopter. `…trying to determine the motive' which obviously has nothing to do with `anti-American sentiments are running high in the Middle East over US support of Israel and the standoff with Iraq.' USAT (Just as Chomsky says, the media must act totally befuddled as to why `they hate us' even when the answer is in the g*d*n article.)
Army of Palestineclaimed responsibility…in a faxed statement via a Lebanese media organization. There was no confirmation.' [W quoting Reuters] `Die kenianische Polizei hat nach den Anschlägen auf israelische Touristen in Kenia zwölf Verdächtige festgenommen, darunter ein Paar mit amerikanischen Pässen.' 20m (Kenyan police arrest 12 including 2 with US passports…police instructed the hotel to inform them if guests try to leave; only the arrested pair tried to leave.' G) There are claims about missiles being fired at an Israeli jet; but there's apparently nothing about it on the ATC tapes, the supposed launch tubes have no propellant residues, and the Israeli pilot's statement of seeing something `behind us' is patently bogus, the 757 not having tail radar or rearview mirrors. SS (Those launch tubes—why would you want to abandon such valuable weapons if you had a getaway vehicle, which they supposedly did?) The Kenyans doubt the links to al Qaeda despite US-Israeli pressure. FB
The Lausanne-based Dalle Molle Institute for Perceptual Artificial Intelligence said it is 95% certain the tape [first aired two weeks ago on Al-Jazeera] does not feature the voice of the long-absent terrorist leader. TS(Note tha in both that article and this BBC one, the US blithely continues to claim it's him, it's him.)
stolenfrom Halliburton Nigeria. [JR quoting CNN]
Take as much as you like, but you will take it for the rest of your life because some children suffer from tooth decay.It is a preposterous notion.' RFW
modernprotocols, unlike sendmail which is an antique shop; and it's generally wiser to run smaller programs as root than larger.)
Amnesty Int'l accuses Phony Tony of hypocrisy re Iraq's human-rights record. G AI sec'y gen'l: `This selective attention to human rights is nothing but a cold and calculated manipulation of the work of human rights activists.' Meanwhile Tony's PR stunt to generate war support blows up in his claws; dissident Hussain al-Shahristani denounced the war and pointed out Iraq's British-made torture instruments. T
IDF shoots 95-a-old Palestinian woman. AN (After all, she could remember that Palestine existed before Israel.) Shooter gets a whole 65 days' sentence. JR
UN staff petition Israel to stop beating and killing them. I
US one of the handful of votes against 6 UNGARes against Israel. TB · JP (Notice how JP is raking US over the coals for merely abstaining in previous years.)
We'll do everything we can to remind people that we've never been a nation of conquerors.WH (We should do everything we can to remind him of the Spanish-American War, Mexican-American War, the War of 1812, the conquest of Hawai'i, the attempt on Vietnam. The Marshall Islanders, who've had a few of their islands vapourised and their genes ruined under the *cough cough* protection of the US, might also have a few things to tell Shrub Dubya on the subject.)
Lt.-Gen. Mike Jeffrey, commander of Canada's army, tells Commons defence c'tee we should pull out of Bosnia and temporarily halt all overseas deployments. CBC
I discover Canada is also planning smallpox inoculations for `frontline emergency workers.' P If this expands to include me, and no science is forthcoming to show effectiveness and reasonable safety, I'm gettin me a gun, 'cause they aren't sticking me (again that is, since I already survived one; and if they work, why do I need another one?).
dozensof people died in the World Trade Center attacks.'
O'Neil instructed his team, led by Jagadeesh Gokhale, Federal Reserve senior economist, and Kent Smetters, then deputy assistant secretary for economic policy at the Treasury, to answer the following question: Suppose the government could, today, get its hands on all the revenue it can expect to collect in the future, but had to use it, today, to pay off all its future expenditure commitments, including debt service net of any asset income. Would the present value (the value today) of the future revenues cover the present value of the future expenditures?The answer is no, and the fiscal gap is the $44 trillion. Now, that is big bucks by anyone's definition. It's four times current GNP and 12 times official debt. Imagine everyone in the country working for four years and handing over every penny earned to pay this bill, and you'll grasp its size. BG
Iran's Ayatollah Khamenei says a US attack on any Islamic country harms Islam. IRNA (Whatever you may think of his logic and/or rhetoric, it's not seriously different from NATO's Article 5(?) which was used to make 9/11 an attack on all NATO.)
Wake up fools! Declare religious and medical exemptions from this mechanism of mass murder. Go into hiding, quit valued jobs, run the other way. Do anything and everything you need to do to avert this catastrophe. Do I make myself clear?T
to enlist or to accept any commission or engagement in the armed forces of any foreign state or other armed forces operating in that state.' Adam Slater, the Jew who wrote the motion against Hillel, said `It's morally outrageous to recruit people into an occupying army.' G&M
Sen. Landrieu retains Louisiana in runoff, 642974–603160, despite massive Republican campaign. TO
Israel refuses to extradite Solomon Morel to Poland as a possible war criminal (commander of prison camp at Swietochlowice, 1945 Feb to Nov) claiming the statute of limitations had run out.
(see JR citing Eye for an Eye)The Canadian government can denaturalize and deport people without even proving that these individuals committed any crime. But Israel has a statute of limitations for war crimes. Shame on Canada and shame on Israel,wrote Mary Radewych of Etobicoke, whose father Vasyl Odynsky faces deportation even though the government has not brought any charges of war crimes against him, in a letter to The Toronto Star.
How shocking that Israel would not allow for the extradition of a communist mass murderer but insists on the rest of the world bringing alleged Nazi war criminals to justice,echoed Dr. Jerry Grod, whose wife Olya is another daughter of Odynsky's, in another letter to The Star.
What a surprise to read about the double standard in Israel with respect to the extradition of alleged war criminals,wrote Stefan Lemieszewski of Coquitlam, BC in yet another letter.
Israel demands the extradition of Mr. John Demjanjuk from USA and proceeds with a show trial in a theatre court in Israel. But when it comes to alleged war criminals living in Israel, like Solomon Morel, Israeli statute of limitations result in harbouring alleged war criminals. And the Canadian government is pressured into spending millions on commissions and deportation and denaturalization policies because of alleged Nazi war criminals living in Canada. It just doesn't make sense!he said. UCCLA
United Airlines announces Ch11 filing. SMH
US manages to steal the sole copy of Iraq's declaration. `Deputy Russian Ambassador Gennady Gatilov said the US had taken the council's lone copy to Washington where it would make duplicates for distribution to the four other powerful council members.' AP/X! · AP/SFC This is supposedly because Washington has the best photocopiers. M · T Isn't it amazing how it went from something the US was never supposed to see to something only the US will see? It may be because Iraq listed its suppliers R and we all know the US was once Iraq's big supplier&mdahs;right though the Gulf War, according to a House C'tee investigation. Maybe the Bushmen need to cover some tracks. Like Reuters said, `names…that may be embarrassing for nations on the UN Security Council.' (US wanted to be only nation to get the uncensored declaration MD; I guess it got its wish.) Annan eventually admits letting the US steal the documents was an `unfortunate' f*kup. [JR copying SH]
Mitchell resigns vice-chair of 9/11 panel. CS
If Bush and the rest were standing on firm ground, they would fully support [a rigorous civilian investigation of 9-11]. Instead, they have worked to thwart both its formation and its progress, using every resource within their reach. [At some time] they seem to have realized they were only fueling suspicions this way, so Bush grudgingly approved anindependentinvestigation. The arrogance of this bunch is so disabling, however, that they actually [named] Henry Kissinger to lead it. This is a man whose dedication toUS interestsverges on [sic] homicidal psychosis…Ironically, even Henry had the sense to admit he was an inappropriate choice, thus resigning from this duty, whereupon Bush immediately returned to his original tactic… NYCI
The concept of `human rights' melts away when convenient. Even an assiduous reader of the US press would be surprised to run across some key provisions of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted by the UN more than 50 years ago and theoretically in force today. For instance, the document declares without equivocation that `everyone has the right to work, to free choice of employment, to just and favorable conditions of work, and to protection against unemployment.'(Well, you gotta remember the UN UDHR was written by one of those liberal bleedingheart commie socialist kooks from terrorist-loving Canuckistan.)Perhaps the Universal Declaration passage least likely to succeed with US news media appears in Article 25: `Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and the necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.'
Words expressing those kinds of ideas are scarce in our media lexicon. GO
Iron Triangleof aides who helped GWB win [sic] the presidency,' quits. [I quoting R]
For decades Americans have worried about nukes falling into the `wrong' hands—as if there were `right' hands for weapons of mass murder. Well, those weapons are in the wrong hands now: Bush's hands. Washington is in an uproar about Trent Lott's offhand compliment at Strom Thurmond's birthday party, but it has taken Bush's mad-dog threat in stride. What sort of `war on terrorism' is this, which terrorizes the whole world? S(The Lott kafuffel is probably distraction from Graham's revelation. HT)
The `Dr. Laura' show typifies the dangerous hypocrisy of those who build profitable and politically potent empires on the basis of claiming a monopoly on simplistic answers to complex problems. The guilt and shame they induce in those who might resist their nostrums is loathsome, made more so when they themselves so casually ignore them. LAT
Said the night wind to the little lamb,
do you see what I see
Way up in the sky, little lamb,
do you see what I see
A missile there, dancing in the night
With a tail as big as a kite
With a tail as big as a kiteSaid the little lamb to the shepherd boy,
do you hear what I hear
Ringing through the sky, shepherd boy,
do you hear what I hear
A lie, a lie, high above the trees
And the voice sayslet's go to war!
And the voice sayslet's go to war!Said the shepherd boy to the mighty king,
do you know what I know
In your west wing warm, mighty king,
do you know what I know
A Child, a Child shivers in the cold
War will only tear down his home
War will only tear down his homeSaid the king to the people everywhere,
with me or against me
Pray for peace, people everywhere!
with me or against me
The war, the war, for the sake of peace
It will bring us goodness and light
It will bring us goodness and light UKN
GWB goes to China. He dismisses his family's scandalous past re China with `That's old news. It's in the past.' USAT (So's grandpappy's megasupport for the Nazis, but its age doesn't comfort me one jot.)
The anti-science movement has also extended itself into the classroom. Last fall, the Texas Board of Education rejected several environmental science textbooks, including one entitled Environmental Science: Creating a Sustainable Environment. Critics forced the book ban primarily on ideological grounds, calling the textvitriol against Western civilization and its primary belief systems.Another science book was approved only after the publisher agreed to remove entire sections on climate change. HA
In late December 2002 the Australian Prime Minister confirmed his low opinion of the intelligence of the average Australian by running TV and newspaper ads urging them…to call a national hotline if they see anyone actingsuspiciously. What counts assuspiciousis not explained [beyond] the catchy slogan,If it doesn't add up, call up.The PM is thus urging all Australians to start spying on their neighbors…This is the sort of thing that happened in Nazi Germany in the 1930s, and in post-war communist East Germany under the Stasi secret police. Up until now, according to all reports, Australians have been an easy-going and friendly lot. Now that they know that their neighbors may call the federal police at the slightest hint that something doesn'tadd upin their neighbours' eyes you can be sure that social and personal relations are going to become corrupted by mutual distrust. Australian society is going down the tubes quicker than you can say1984. It is no longer a place where a freedom-loving person would (if they had the choice) choose to live. S
Nobel laureate Günter Grass names GWB a threat to world peace.
IO
`He compared the US president to a Shakespearean character who wants only to appear before his father, a dying king, and tell him: Look, I have accomplished what you wanted.
'
9MSN
This year's US corporate bankruptcies set a new record: G$386 in assets, up 42% over last year. BBC
British business failure at 8-year high; according to the former Dun & Bradstreet, 43500 went into liquidation or bankruptcy, 7.2% over last year. G
US Dep't of Labour terminates the Mass Layoff Statistics program.
This is the final news release for the Mass Layoff Statistics (MLS) program. Since 1994, the Department of Labor's Employment and Training Administration has funded the program. That funding will end on December 31, 2002. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) has been unable to acquire funding from alternative sources and must discontinue the MLS program. BLS(The news got so bad they decided to stop producing it?)