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April 30, 2010

Oil slick reaches Louisiana coast

Filed under: Uncategorized — Greg in cheeseland @ 6:31 am

Lousiana Oil Rig Explosion
210,000 feet, or approximately 40 miles of boons have been laid along the Louisiana coast thus far. How many miles long is that state’s coastline, and that of Mississippi, Alabama and Florida? I’ll bet it’s a lot longer than 40 miles…

Excerpt:
“It’s as though a diesel truck is parked in the front yard,” a resident of Bay Saint Louis in Mississippi, John Gerger, told the BBC as the smell of oil was becoming stronger along the Gulf Coast.

For those residing on the Louisiana coast today, the acrid smell of light sweet crude oil is probably stronger. It may not be long before residents along the pristine beaches of the Florida panhandle get a whiff of that odor. The edge of the over 600-mile in diameter oil slick began washing ashore along the coast of Louisiana on Thursday evening, 24 hours ahead of previous estimates by the Coast Guard.

President Barack Obama said “every single available resource” of government, including the military, would be used to help contain the oil spill. “The entire US government is doing everything possible…to respond to this incident” According to the New York Times, the Navy provided 50 contractors, 7 skimming systems and 66,000 feet of inflatable containment boom. About 210,000 feet of boom had been laid down to protect the shoreline in several places along the Gulf Coast. Rough seas, however, sent five foot waves of oily water over the top of the booms into the Mississippi delta.

MSNBC reported that Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) declared a state of emergency Thursday so officials could begin preparing for the oil’s impact. He said at least 10 wildlife management areas and refuges in his state and neighboring Mississippi are in the oil plume’s path. The declaration also noted that billions of dollars have been invested in coastal restoration projects that may be at risk. He also asked the federal government if he could call up 6,000 National Guard troops to help.

What was that you said in your State of the Union rebuttal in 2009, Gov. Jindal? Something about increasing offshore drilling, reducing government spending, keeping Washington out of your state’s affairs, and relying on private industries instead of government to create jobs? Be careful what you wish for.

British Petroleum (BP), the company that is supposedly responsible for the cost of the cleanup under U.S. law, has also requested more resources from the Defense Department, especially underwater equipment that might be better than what is commercially available. A BP executive said the corporation would “take help from anyone.”

After generating $6.1 billion in profits in the first quarter of 2010, much of it from sales to U.S. consumers, BP apparently has to turn to U.S. taxpayers for federally-funded hardware and manpower to help clean up its mess.

While there are many economic and political lessons that can be learned from this disaster, hopefully the focus for now will remain on stopping the leak, minimizing the damage and helping the people on the gulf coast that stand the most to lose.

Read more and get links here: http://www.examiner.com/x-38220-Orlando-Independent-Examiner~y2010m4d30-Oil-slick-reaches-Louisiana-coast-may-reach-Florida

April 29, 2010

Not wasted after all

Filed under: Uncategorized — Peregrin @ 10:40 pm

A McCain campaign bus
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Oswald’s miracle marksmanship: Dallas 47 years after

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , — Jane Stillwater @ 10:00 am

Almost everyone in America today remembers exactly where they were at the moment when they first heard about 9-11. I was at the dentist. And almost everyone from the baby-boomer generation also remembers exactly where they were at the moment when they first heard that President Kennedy was shot. For the baby-boomer generation, Kennedy’s assassination was like what 9-11 is to Americans today — in the sense that things have never been the same since either event.

In 1963 I was a junior in college, sitting in the front row of Professor James Pratt’s political science class and listening to his lecture on Eisenhower’s warning about the military-industrial complex. And who would have guessed back then that 47 years later I would finally actually get a chance to actually go visit Dallas, to actually go inside the Texas Book Depository and to actually stand right there on the Grassy Knoll, looking down on the exact spot where Kennedy was shot. Not me!

Here’s how it happened: I was down in Belize City and about to catch a plane home after having visited almost every Mayan ruin in a four-country radius (see http://jpstillwater.blogspot.com/2010/04/archeology-at-its-best-mayan-ruins.html for details), when it was announced over the loudspeaker that my flight was delayed. Rats. “Now I’ll never make my connection at DFW!”

“Not to worry,” said the gate person. “We’ll put you up at a hotel in Dallas and you can fly out to SFO the next day.” And American Airlines did just that, bless its heart. And that is how I actually got to spend a whole day in Dallas.

And what does one do when one goes to Dallas? Go to a Cowboys game? No! One visits the Grassy Knoll!

And gets to be amazed.

First I was amazed that, 47 years after Kennedy’s tragic death, the place where he was brutally assassinated was still a major tourist attraction. There were still tourists coming to that spot. And the sixth floor room where Oswald allegedly shot Kennedy is now a museum.

The second thing that amazed me was that I actually got to stand on the exact spot where Kennedy received his tragically-fatal shot to the head.

But the thing that amazed me most was that, after all this huge hype that’s been shoved down our throats for the past 47 years that Oswald, acting alone, killed Kennedy by firing just three shots, is really actually sort of hard to believe when you are actually there at the actual spot. Even the greenest kindergartner, standing where I stood 47 long years after the fatal event, could immediately see that, despite all the hype and the commission reports to the contrary, that it would have taken a miracle of marksmanship and accuracy for Oswald to have made those three direct hits. A freaking miracle!

Was Oswald that good of a marksman? Hardly. But if he was, then he must have been intensively well-trained by the best.

If, however, someone had made the shot that killed Kennedy from the Grassy Knoll, where eye-witnesses originally said that the shots came from, it would have been a relatively easy shot.

“But, Jane,” you might say, “if the shots had been fired from the Grassy Knoll, wouldn’t they have entered Kennedy’s body from a different angle and even injured Jackie as well?” Hmmm…

So I did some research. And according to autopsy photos at http://www.celebritymorgue.com/jfk/jfk-autopsy.html, we can clearly see that one bullet entered Kennedy’s head from the right — and one entered at the middle of his back. And a third one entered his neck from the FRONT. What’s with that? Oswald really did fire a miracle shot! Or else Kennedy was shot as he approached the Grassy Knoll, passed in front of it and was driven away from the shooter(s)?

I haven’t read all the voluminous literature regarding JFK and Oswald, but it seems to me from the perspective of a naive tourist just visiting the Grassy Knoll for a few minutes that If Oswald actually was the sole shooter, then he would have had to have started shooting Kennedy at least a half-football-field sooner than he did — if he was going to get in both his front and side shot.

And where was the Secret Service after the first shot was fired? Aren’t they spozed to throw themselves in front of the President at the first sign of trouble and protect him with their lives? Which brings up that old question of why weren’t Secret Service agents riding on the Cadillac’s rear bumper? Which they clearly were not. No wonder poor sweet Jackie got blood all over her pink suit and Caroline and John-John had to go fatherless!

“But, Jane,” you might remind me rather forcibly at this point, “all these are just conspiracy theories.” Yeah, well, tell that to the kindergartners — and us tourists at the Grassy Knoll.

Here’s a video I made of the scene of the crime: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JCSYfVepAYY

PS: It also seems to me that lurking behind the scenes during every major war and disaster in America since 1930 (or even actually on the scene), there has always been a member of the Bush family — with the possible exception of Korea. Prescott Bush was there egging on Hitler. George H.W. Bush was a high-ranking CIA official when Kennedy was murdered, thus paving the way for Vietnam. Then there was the Gulf War, invented almost singlehandedly by George Senior. And 9-11? According to George W. Bush’s terrorism adviser, Richard Clarke, GWB was warned about the possibility of that tragic attack at least a month before it happened — and yet Bush did nothing.

And how about Iraq and Afghanistan? Was a Bush behind those wars too? Yep.

And just think for a moment about how all these past 80 years of American “wars” have been very, very good for the Bush family — causing their stock in the weapons trade to zoom up. Which leaves me wondering which Bush will get us into America’s next war — in order to give the next generation of young Bushes a leg up in the family business?

Professor Pratt and President Eisenhower were right back in the day. “Beware of the military-industrial complex.” And nothing’s changed since — except for the worse. And while misguided Teabaggers are currently fretting their little hearts out over our government’s relatively minor healthcare expenditures, munitions manufacturers like the Bush family are still happily hijacking what is left of our treasury — and our souls.

PPS: Oh crap. I’m so tired of hearing about how Teabaggers, the NRA and “Christian” militias are out buying deadly weapons, arming themselves and then complaining that they need even MORE assess to weapons. If those people all want unlimited access to guns and warfare so badly, then they need to move to the Democratic Republic of Congo ASAP. They’d be much, much happier in the DRC. There’s no gun control there. You can shoot at people indiscriminately and nobody can stop you. Teabaggers could even own their own tanks!

PPPS: The bastards who killed Kennedy may still be feeling all smug with themselves that they got clean away with it and that they will never be caught. But all too many Americans know what really happened back then. You think not? Just go to YouTube, enter a search for “Kennedy Assassination” and watch how many VIDEOS come up. 7,880 videos come up. That’s videos, not hits (one video alone had 3,157,243 hits). Type in “Kennedy assassination conspiracy” and over TEN THOUSAND more videos will pop up.

Now take a few hours and watch some of those videos yourself. “You can fool some of the people all of the time….” Despite the fact that the perps outwardly seem to be getting away with their cover-up, they are not. Not really. Even 47 years after this tragic event, people are still not letting this issue fade.

Perhaps there is hope for America yet.

****

Here’s a home video taken in 2009, showing how tourists are still swarming the Grassy Knoll even now. According to this video, there was also a tree in the way of Oswald’s shot back in 1963. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZ9M_ByrEWI&feature=related

****

More than three bullets were shot? This video says yes: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UtFoPCKVp-8&feature=related

****

Here’s a video of an eye-witness who heard many shots. “The shots came from the [Grassy Knoll] and I saw a man running.” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5b0YcMYmweo&feature=related

****

Here’s the famous video of the Secret Service stand-down in Dallas: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XY02Qkuc_f8

****

And here’s a photo of George H.W. Bush at the Texas Book Depository after the shooting: http://www.freedomfightersforamerica.com/yahoo_site_admin/assets/images/BushJfkBookDepoT.324104116.jpg

McCain’s Enemy Belligerent Detention Act: Is SCOTUS keeping Richard Fine in jail for a reason?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , — Jane Stillwater @ 9:58 am

Well, the U.S. Supreme Court just reviewed attorney Richard Fine’s habeas corpus case and gave it a pass. Poor sweet attorney Fine has been held in the slammer on a bogus contempt-of-court charge for over a year now. Further, he’s being held in the Los Angeles County Central Men’s Jail, one of the violent and most overcrowded jails in the country. This man is 70 years old, in failing health and has never committed a crime in his life. What’s wrong with this picture?

About a year ago, attorney Fine challenged Superior Judge David Yaffe’s right to rule in a southern California land-use case — after Yaffe refused to recuse himself in the matter of Marina Strand Colony II vs County of Los Angeles. Yaffe, whose salary is being augmented by $46,436 each year by the County, then ruled in favor of L.A. County. Sounds fishy to me. They shoulda automatically given Fine’s client a change of venue. But I digress.

Aside from the disgustingly unfairness of attorney Fine’s contempt charge and his subsequent brutal incarceration, however, the main problem here seems to be that if attorney Fine actually IS finally released, almost everyone who knows him (including the FBI, the CIA and other persecutorial types that we on the Left are all-too-familiar with), also knows that the number one thing that attorney Fine will do upon his release is to mount a huge campaign to stop Senator John McCain’s latest enthusiastic assault against the U.S. Constitution, S.3081 — the Enemy Belligerent, Interrogation, Detention, and Prosecution Act of 2010.

S.3018 is a nasty Senate bill that hands over even more power to the powers-that-be in Washington who are already far too powerful. And this act of almost dictatorial proportion could easily backfire on the rest of us — and put ANYONE that Washington power-brokers determine to be “enemy belligerents” in jail, even patriotic Americans such as you and me; perhaps even in a cell next to attorney Fine’s.

So getting Richard Fine out of jail is of paramount importance to you and to me as well as to him.

PS: Richard Fine is a respected and well-known 70-year-old California attorney who the U.S. Supreme Court has just sentenced to what will probably prove to be a life sentence (or even death sentence) in one of the worst jails in America — just for standing up for his belief in American citizens’ rights to a fair hearing and a fair trial. But aside from the fact that every American who loves justice should be appalled by this latest SCOTUS decision (why aren’t the Teabaggers and Fox News out picketing the streets over this issue?), we also need to consider that bit in the Constitution about such type of cruel and unusual punishment being illegal.

Er, duh.

And also, why isn’t attorney Fine simply being released into a house-arrest program? We all watch “The Good Wife” on TV. We all keep up with Paris Hilton. We all know that house arrest is a definite possibility — especially if you are 70 years old, in ill health and facing a life sentence unless you sell out your principles, cry “uncle” and let Judge Yaffe get away with his apparent conflict of interest.

And what about all those old guys who have been in jail forever for committing horrendous murders and such, but who are released from jail simply because they are old and sick? Attorney Fine is old and sick. Release him too. “Attica! Attica!”

Not only that but in the past year alone, hundreds of prisoners — and we’re talking about hundreds of mean guys, evil-doers and blatant criminals here! — have been released from the same jail that attorney Fine is now being held in, in order to alleviate overcrowding. So why doesn’t Los Angeles release attorney Fine too? The jail would be far less crowded without him hogging up a cell.

And what about that time when someone in my neighborhood who committed a white-collar crime, embezzled some money and was sentenced to two years in jail? She got into a work-furlough program and only had to spend weekends in jail. Why can’t attorney Fine get released on a work-furlough program too — so that he can continue working and also not lose his home?

And, better yet, why can’t attorney Fine be released on said work-furlough program so that he can help defeat John McCain’s horrendous, scary and un-American Senate bill S-3081?

PPS: I’m not the only one that’s pissed off on attorney Fine’s behalf. Here’s what the National Review has to say about this case:

On April 23, 2010, the Supreme Court of the United States denied the petition for “stay of execution” (of coercive confinement for civil contempt of court) by attorney Richard I. Fine in the case of Richard Fine v. Leroy Baca, Sheriff of Los Angeles County (09-1250). In doing so, the highest court of the land has refused to rectify a clear-cut case of judicial corruption in the state of California.

So who’s Richard Fine and how did he run afoul of the law? A distinguished attorney with a doctor of law degree from the University of Chicago Law School and a Ph.D. in international law from the London School of Economics, Mr. Fine has practiced law in government service and private practice for 42 years and achieved considerable distinction in both. He has served in the antitrust division of the Justice Department, founded the Anti-Trust Division in the Los Angeles City Attorney’s Office and was awarded the prestigious “Lawyer of the Decades” award in 2006. He has also won numerous cases on behalf of California taxpayers in state courts, including a 2003 California Supreme Court lawsuit that stopped salary payments to the governor and the legislators if they were unable to pass the budget.

Yet this distinguished 70-year-old attorney in poor health has been sitting in solitary confinement in “coercive incarceration” in the notorious Los Angeles County Men’s Central Jail without being charged, tried, or convicted of anything since March 4, 2009. In effect, he was thrown in jail for an indefinite period with no bail or hearing set for blowing the whistle on judicial corruption in California.

The chain of events that led to his incarceration was set in motion in 2000, when Richard Fine became aware that L.A. superior court judges were receiving illegal “judicial benefits” payments from Los Angeles County, despite the fact that lawsuits against that county were often adjudicated by these same judges, thus creating clear conflict of interest problems. By 2007 these payments amounted to $46,436 per year on top of their state salary of $172,000, making L.A. superior court judges among the highest paid in the country. Not only was this a blatant conflict of interest but also unconstitutional, insofar as the California constitution states clearly (in Article VI, Section 19) that “the legislature shall prescribe compensation for judges of courts of record.”

In Richard Fine’s opinion, these payments were illegal if not criminal, and in 2000 he began challenging them in various appellate briefs and lawsuits against several judges, thus making himself extremely unpopular with the superior court bench and also with the county supervisors who had authorized the payments. The usual justification the supervisors give for extending these payments to the judges is the ostensible need to attract qualified jurists in a high-cost-of-living area like Los Angeles. Less well publicized is the possibility that by granting the judges such payments, the supervisors may be voting themselves a pay increase as well. Article II, Section 4 of the Los Angeles County Charter states that the supervisors’ compensation “shall be the same as that now or hereafter prescribed by law for a judge of the Superior Court in and for the County of Los Angeles.”

Not surprisingly, since the initiation of these “judicial benefits” in 1988 — at a cost to L.A. taxpayers of some $300 million to date — the county is reported to have seldom lost a lawsuit in superior court. It also appears to be the case that Los Angeles County is not the only California county which provides such payments and, according to one estimate, 1,500 out of a total of 2,000 superior court judges in the state are allegedly implicated in receiving the illegal payments, as are five of the state’s Supreme Court justices.

Mr. Fine’s current misfortunes stem from his demand at a contempt hearing on March 4, 2009, that Judge David P. Yaffe of the Los Angeles Superior Court, a recipient of such illegal payments, recuse himself from the case in front of him, in which L.A. County was a party. Judge Yaffe had Mr. Fine handcuffed and thrown in jail for civil contempt of court for an indefinite period. Judge Yaffe was later to explain that “the intent of the (non-criminal) solitary confinement was to coerce Richard Fine into submission.”

Yaffe’s unusually confrontational behavior was preceded by events that must have given him and his colleagues assurance that they had nothing to fear on account of these illegal payments. The first such event, paradoxically, was a decision by the California Court of Appeals for the Fourth Appelate District in Sturgeon v. County of Los Angeles (BC351286, filed 10/10/2008) that payments to the judges were not permissible and that the legislation’s responsibility to prescribe compensation “is not delegable.” Alarmed by this decision’s implication of potential criminal liability for judges and politicians alike, California’s political and judicial powers that be moved quickly and quietly to rectify the situation legislatively. As California grappled with the huge budget-deficit crisis afflicting the state in early 2009, the Judicial Council of California, chaired by the Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court, quietly drafted, the legislature approved, and the governor signed a senate bill (SBX2-11, enacted February 20, 2009) giving retroactive immunity from criminal prosecution, civil liability, and disciplinary action to “judges that had received payments from a governmental entity prior to the bill’s effective date.” In doing so, the legislature and the governor essentially admitted that the payments had indeed been illegal and very likely criminal.

Emboldened by the granted immunity, the judicial machine moved to get rid of Fine once and for all by having the California State Bar disbar him for “moral turpitude,” a course of action reminiscent of the Soviet Communist regime’s practice of declaring political dissidents criminally insane and locking them up in psychiatric wards.

In the meantime, Mr. Fine’s jailer, L.A. county sheriff Lee Baca, has started releasing hundreds of convicted criminals from Men’s Central Jail because of overcrowding. Overcrowding is evidently not an issue for Richard I. Fine, now serving his second year of an indefinite solitary confinement term as an American prisoner of conscience.

— Alex Alexiev is a visiting fellow at the Hudson Institute in Washington, D.C. The views expressed here are his own. http://bench.nationalreview.com/

Oil leak 5 times larger than initial estimate

Filed under: Uncategorized — Greg in cheeseland @ 4:17 am

With 4 robotic submersibles on the scene, BP had to know this leak was worse than initially revealed. Makes me wonder what else they haven’t revealed…

oilspillnasa

Excerpt:
In a press conference late Wednesday, government officials revealed that oil is leaking into the Gulf of Mexico at a rate five times higher than initially estimated.

According to the New York Times, Rear Adm. Mary E. Landry of the Coast Guard said a scientist from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration had concluded that oil is leaking at the rate of 5,000 barrels a day, not 1,000 as had been estimated.

At midday Wednesday, the edge of the approximately 600-mile in diameter spill was 23 miles off the Louisiana coast near fragile estuaries and swamps teeming with shrimp, oysters, birds and other wildlife. According to Reuters, the Coast Guard said that the oil sheen and emulsified crude slick is slightly larger than the state of West Virginia. It is currently about 60 miles from the nearest Florida beaches in Pensacola.

Americans, who consume approximately 21 million barrels of oil per day, have been sold the idea that off shore drilling will drive prices down by generously increasing supply. That has never been and never will be the case. Assuming that every offshore area is made available for drilling, the added production would have little or no effect on the market. An Energy Information Administration study conducted during the Bush administration pointed out that opening up every offshore area not already available for drilling at the time would add a total of 18.17 billion barrels of oil to the market by 2020. That may sound like a lot, but at the current rate of consumption that amounts to a little under an 87-day supply for the U.S.

More Americans on the Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana coasts may soon begin questioning the benefits of offshore drilling when oil washes up on their beaches destroying wildlife, commercial fishing, shrimping and their quality of life. Unless technology is perfectly foolproof – and it never is – oil spills are not a matter of if, but when…and how bad.

Read more here: http://www.examiner.com/x-38220-Orlando-Independent-Examiner~y2010m4d29-Oil-leak-5-times-larger-than-initial-estimate-Could-reach-FL-beaches

April 25, 2010

Obama administration may be risking nuclear war

Filed under: Uncategorized — Greg in cheeseland @ 9:07 pm

Excerpt:
The New York Times reported on friday that the Obama administration is considering arming intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) with conventional warheads to provide a “Prompt Global Strike” option, enabling targets anywhere on the globe to be hit in as little as an hour.

There is, however, one “small” problem with that idea. The launch of any ICBM could trigger a nuclear war. There is no way for nuclear-armed nations such as Russia and China to distinguish the launch of a conventionally-armed ICBM from that of a nuclear-armed one.

This half-baked idea is not new. The Bush administration and the Rumsfeld-era pentagon proposed it several times, and each time congress shot it down because of the inherent risks involved.

Donald Rumsfeld’s comment in a 2006 press conference inadvertantly accentuated the risks involved in the launch of an ICBM when he said, “some countries might not know whether it was a conventional weapon or a nuclear weapon….And everyone in the world would know that it was conventional after it hit within 30 minutes, or 10 minutes.” In other words, “trust us – that ICBM we just launched in your direction is not nuclear-armed.”

It is a very risky assumption…

Read more here: http://www.examiner.com/x-38220-Orlando-Independent-Examiner~y2010m4d25-Obama-administration-may-be-risking-nuclear-war

April 24, 2010

Gov. Jan Brewer’s New AZ Fashion Police

cartoon-az-fashion-police1

April 22, 2010

Filed under: Uncategorized — Peregrin @ 5:04 pm

teabagger
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April 19, 2010

Open letter from soldiers regarding Apache gun cam video

Filed under: Uncategorized — Greg in cheeseland @ 11:11 pm

Excerpt:
Two soldiers that were deployed with the Army unit involved in an incident recorded by an Apache gun cam have issued an open letter of apology to the families of Iraqis that were killed.

Earlier this month Wikileaks, a whistleblower web site, released an unedited video taken by an Apache helicopter gunship operating over Baghdad, Iraq.

The video shows the indiscriminate slaying of over a dozen people in the Iraqi suburb of New Baghdad, including two Reuters news staff. Two young children involved in the rescue were also seriously wounded.

While news of the video was largely ignored by the corporate media in the U.S., two individuals have recently acknowleged it and responded with an open letter. Former specialists Josh Stieber and Ethan McCord, who were deployed in Iraq at the time with the unit involved in the incident, have this to say in open letter published on truthout.org:

An Open Letter of Reconciliation and Responsibility to the Iraqi People: From Current and Former Members of the US Military

Peace be with you,

To all of those who were injured or lost loved ones during the July 2007 Baghdad shootings depicted in the “Collateral Murder” Wikileaks video:

We write to you, your family, and your community with awareness that our words and actions can never restore your losses.

We are both soldiers who occupied your neighborhood for 14 months. Ethan McCord pulled your daughter and son from the van, and when doing so, saw the faces of his own children back home. Josh Stieber was in the same company but was not there that day, though he contributed to the your pain, and the pain of your community on many other occasions.

There is no bringing back all that was lost. What we seek is to learn from our mistakes and do everything we can to tell others of our experiences and how the people of the United States need to realize we have done and are doing to you and the people of your country. We humbly ask you what we can do to begin to repair the damage we caused.

We have been speaking to whoever will listen, telling them that what was shown in the Wikileaks video only begins to depict the suffering we have created. From our own experiences, and the experiences of other veterans we have talked to, we know that the acts depicted in this video are everyday occurrences of this war: this is the nature of how U.S.-led wars are carried out in this region.

We acknowledge our part in the deaths and injuries of your loved ones as we tell Americans what we were trained to do and what we carried out in the name of “god and country”. The soldier in the video said that your husband shouldn’t have brought your children to battle, but we are acknowledging our responsibility for bringing the battle to your neighborhood, and to your family. We did unto you what we would not want done to us.

More and more Americans are taking responsibility for what was done in our name. Though we have acted with cold hearts far too many times, we have not forgotten our actions towards you. Our heavy hearts still hold hope that we can restore inside our country the acknowledgment of your humanity, that we were taught to deny.

Our government may ignore you, concerned more with its public image. It has also ignored many veterans who have returned physically injured or mentally troubled by what they saw and did in your country. But the time is long overdue that we say that the value of our nation’s leaders no longer represent us. Our secretary of defense may say the U.S. won’t lose its reputation over this, but we stand and say that our reputation’s importance pales in comparison to our common humanity.

We have asked our fellow veterans and service-members, as well as civilians both in the United States and abroad, to sign in support of this letter, and to offer their names as a testimony to our common humanity, to distance ourselves from the destructive policies of our nation’s leaders, and to extend our hands to you.

With such pain, friendship might be too much to ask. Please accept our apology, our sorrow, our care, and our dedication to change from the inside out. We are doing what we can to speak out against the wars and military policies responsible for what happened to you and your loved ones. Our hearts are open to hearing how we can take any steps to support you through the pain that we have caused.

Solemnly and Sincerely,
Josh Stieber, former specialist, U.S. Army
Ethan McCord, former specialist, U.S. Army

No commentary is necessary. Josh and Ethan speak for themselves.

Read more here: (full, unedited video posted)
http://www.examiner.com/x-38220-Orlando-Independent-Examiner~y2010m4d19-Open-letter-from-soldiers-regarding-Apache-gun-cam-video

April 18, 2010

SEC files lawsuit against Goldman Sachs for financial fraud

Filed under: Uncategorized — Greg in cheeseland @ 1:28 am

Excerpt:
On Friday, almost two years after the financial meltdown that began on Wall Street and reverberated throughout the U.S. economy, a lawsuit has been filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) against Goldman Sachs, alleging that the behemoth financial institution engaged in financial fraud.

According to the AP, the charges against Goldman relate to a complex investment tied to the performance of pools of risky mortgages known as collateralized debt obligations (CDOs).

In a complaint filed Friday, the Securities and Exchange Commission alleged that Goldman marketed the package to investors without disclosing a major conflict of interest: The pools were picked by another client, a prominent hedge fund that was betting the housing bubble would burst.

Goldman then sold the package to investors like foreign banks, pension funds and insurance companies, which would profit only if the bonds gained value.

The SEC said Goldman failed to tell investors that Paulson & Co, one of the world’s largest hedge funds, paid Goldman Sachs to structure a transaction in which it could take speculative positions against mortgage securities chosen by the fund, the commission said in a statement.

The focus of the SEC case, an investment vehicle called Abacus 2007-AC1, was one of 25 such vehicles that Goldman created so the bank and some of its clients could bet against the housing market. The deal, which took place during a massive mortgage meltdown in 2007 and as the country was about to fall into a brutal recession, was said to have cost investors around $1 billion. Paulson in turn bought insurance against the deal and when the securities later tanked, losing almost all of their value, Paulson has acknowledged reaping a $3.7 billion profit by betting against the housing market as it nose dived in 2006 and 2007.

The charges may unleash a torrent of lawsuits, and signal that the government is prepared to file more lawsuits related to the overheated market that preceded the financial crisis, experts said.

“This is just the tip of the iceberg,” said James Hackney, a professor at Northeastern University School of Law. “There are a lot of folks out there in different deals who played similar roles, and once it starts building steam, plaintiffs’ lawyers will figure out this is where the money is and there should be a lot of action.”

Part of the action in the coming months may come in the form of a financial reform bill that President Obama and congress is preparing to push through the House and Senate in what looks to become a heated battle on the scale of health care insurance reform.

Read more here: http://www.examiner.com/x-38220-Orlando-Independent-Examiner~y2010m4d18-SEC-files-lawsuit-against-Goldman-Sachs-for-financial-fraud

April 17, 2010

Sarah Palin in ‘Curse of the Snake Woman’

cartoon-palin-snake-woman

April 16, 2010

Osama, where are you?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Greg in cheeseland @ 2:03 pm

Excerpt:
As President Obama escalates the war in Afghanistan, and anywhere between 24 and 53 percent of your federal tax $’s are spent on defense, let’s not forgot about one of the boogeymen that got us in this mess in the first place. Where’s Osama Bin Laden?

Besides a tape that Bin Laden supposedly made a few months ago that was so poorly produced that even the corporate media gave it little attention, we have not heard much from the arch-nemesis of western capitalism. Thus far in 2010, a nuclear arsenal, 11 aircraft carrier strike groups, 14 Trident-class nuclear submarines, 21 B-2 stealth bombers, a $75+ billion intelligence network and about 100,000 troops on the ground in Afghanistan have failed to flush Bin Laden and his dialysis machine out of a cave.

Last November, staff members for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee’s Democratic majority prepared a report at the request of the chairman, Sen. John Kerry. According to MSNBC, the report states categorically that bin Laden was hiding in Tora Bora when the U.S. had the means to mount a rapid assault with several thousand troops.

The report, however, seems to overlook the fact that bin Laden was suffering from diabetes, Hepatitis C, and an “untreated lung complication” and would have had to have “walked unmolested” out of the rugged mountains of Afghanistan under the surveillance of “thousands” of special operations troops with at least one kidney dialysis machine in tow. The report also does not mention that electricity to power a dialysis machine may be difficult to generate on the move through the mountains of Afghanistan.

The latest report also ignores numerous reports in both mainstream U.S. media and international media that bin Laden is probably dead. In Jan. 2002, Pakistani president Gen. Pervez Mushharraf said in an interview with CNN, “I think now, frankly, he is dead for the reason he is a … kidney patient.” The BBC reported on July 18, 2002 that the FBI’s counter-terrorism chief, Dale Watson, says he thinks Osama bin Laden is “probably” dead. Afghan president Harmad Karzai concurred when he said on CNN’s Late Edition on Oct. 8, 2002, “I would come to believe that [bin Laden] probably is dead.” Before Benazir Bhutto was assassinated, she also said bin Laden is dead. Janes reported in Dec. 2002 that “bin Laden was never on the annual list of Islamist extremists issued by the espionage and security services” of Israel.

With our economy in shambles, our deficit and national debt skyrocketing, our infrastructure crumbling and our military stretched to the limits, Americans must ask themselves: Is this one man really worth it, especially considering the real possibility that he may already be dead? Why is our military really in Afghanistan? Is it because of “terrorists” like Bin Laden or because of an oil and natural gas pipeline that was being planned when Harmed Karzai was a Unocal consultant? Is it possible that the U.S. government, with the help of the mainstream media, is scaring the American people into prolonging a war that can only have one outcome – exiting Afghanistan?

One thing is certain, if Osama bin Laden’s intent was to destroy this nation, he did a nice job of it – thanks to shortsighted leaders in this country that failed, and continue to fail to see the long term implications of a perpetual war for private energy company profits, or chasing what may amount to be nothing more than a long-dead boogeyman.

Read more here: http://www.examiner.com/x-38220-Orlando-Independent-Examiner~y2010m4d16-Osama-Bin-Laden-where-are-you

April 13, 2010

Tax Day 2010: Most of every dollar you pay in federal taxes is spent on…

Filed under: Uncategorized — Greg in cheeseland @ 6:11 am

Hint: This won’t come as a surprise to most bartcop readers.

Excerpt:
Health care? Social Security? An economic stimulus bill? Wars? Bailing out Wall Street banks? Education? Our nation’s infrastructure? Each may be a good guess based on the issues that get attention in the mainstream media.

The correct answer may be that 53% of the federal tax being collected in 2010 has already been allocated for defense spending.

According to Philadelphia investigative journalist Dave Lindorff, writing for OpEdNews:

The 2011 military budget, by the way, is the largest in history, not just in actual dollars, but in inflation adjusted dollars, exceeding even the spending in World War II, when the nation was on an all-out military footing. Military spending in all its myriad forms works out to represent 53.3% of total US federal spending.

That would mean the military’s share of the approximately $3 trillion 2010 budget is about $1.6 trillion.

On the other hand, anyone can find a handy fact sheet posted on the white house’s web site that puts the department of defense’s share of the budget at a “mere” $708 billion, seemingly bringing the cost down to about 24 cents on the tax dollar.

So, who’s telling the truth? The answer is that both are, depending on how one looks at federal budget allocations.

Just like banks, airlines or a sleazy car dealer, the pentagon and white house’s invoice does not include hidden costs and amenities, but the final bill does. One of those is called supplemental spending.

A closer look reveals that the 2010 defense budget also does not include: spending on veterans affairs – that means VA hospitals, benefits, etc., for any ex-military personnel that are no longer on active or reserve status. The bill for that is $60 billion. That $60 billion does not include any public funds spent on veterans or immediate family that collect public benefits, such as social security.

Homeland security, judging by the title, can be added to the defense part of the check for approximately another $4.3 billion, bringing the bill to approximately $878.3 billion. So can NASA, for another $19 billion, since their primary function is deploying military satellites. And the National Intelligence Program for another (classified) amount, estimated at about $75 billion. Even the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers gets billed separately at about $5 billion.

Without even considering the costs of foreign military aid to nations such as Israel, Pakistan, Egypt and Columbia, or the costs of purchasing services from private contractors such as Xe (formerly Blackwater) to provide security in occupied countries, or Halliburton to rebuild them, defense spending is already well over $900 billion.

Like all government spending, of course, the defense portion has to be financed, so when money is borrowed from whomever or wherever to pay for the $900+ billion check, add more interest to the approximately $250-400 billion in interest already owed through debt created by defense spending. The huge sum will be borrowed, mostly from China and Japan, to which the U.S. already owes $1.5 trillion.

Having trouble keeping up with your bill yet? That’s because it is designed that way. It gets even more complicated when you have to consider that Social Security expenditures are included in the overall budget, even though it is a trust that is raised and spent seperately from income taxes. What you pay by April 15, 2010 goes to the federal funds portion of the budget. That makes military spending seem smaller in comparison to overall government spending. That also easily puts the figure at about 53 percent.

No matter which figure you want to believe – the $1.6 trillion or the $708 billion, it may be enlightening to put that in two other perspectives.

Read more here: http://www.examiner.com/x-38220-Orlando-Independent-Examiner~y2010m4d13-Tax-Day-2010-Most-of-every-dollar-you-pay-in-federal-taxes-is-spent-on

April 10, 2010

Obama’s Guantanamo

Filed under: Uncategorized — Greg in cheeseland @ 8:17 am

Excerpt:

Over a year ago the Obama administration made headlines by announcing that the prison for detainees in Guantanamo Bay would be closed. Many organizations thought that signaled a reversal of the human rights and legal policies of the Bush administration.

In Sept., 2009, a NYC human rights attorney, Tina Foster, warned “the Obama administration has completely failed in delivering the change that was promised.”

Today, Guantanamo remains open and there is a new and improved version of a world where legal and human rights do not exist. It is known as Bagram air base in Afghanistan and President Obama received a warm welcome when he “rallied the troops” there last month.

With the recent expansion of the war in Afghanistan, Bagram will get busier, but not all will receive as warm of a welcome as the President did.

One of the detainees that died at Bagram after being tortured by U.S. interrogators was strung up by his wrists, and then beaten until his legs were “pulpified,” according to the military’s own autopsy reports obtained by the ACLU.

Opinion polls show support for Obama in waning, even in the wake of the passage of a compromised health care reform bill. The corporate media spins those poll results as a reaction from the right to Obama’s “far left” agenda. The truth is that most conservatives or Republicans never have, and never will, support anything that Obama does or does not do.

Obama’s dip in support more likely comes from the Democrats and progressives that voted for him, but are now disillusioned with the reality that the “change we can believe in” is really more of the same Washington politics. People like Tina Foster, who said last fall:

I voted and campaigned for Obama, like all the other folks here in the US who wanted to see this country recover from the illegal and unjust policies of the Bush administration. When I heard Obama’s announcement to close Guantanamo, I breathed a sigh of relief that perhaps this extremely ugly chapter of American history was finally being put to an end. Unfortunately, since then, the Obama administration has completely failed in delivering the change that was promised. For a time, we believed that perhaps it would just take the new administration time to shift its policies. The reality is that the Bush and the Obama administrations have the same position on the rights of detainees in Bagram.

The detention facility at Bagram is a clear example that little has changed in terms of human and legal rights since the Obama administration was elected. “The American way” once was that the guilt or innocence of any detainee can only be determined with a fair trial. It seems that no longer is and may never be the case again…with either political party in power.

Read more here: http://www.examiner.com/x-38220-Orlando-Independent-Examiner~y2010m4d10-Obamas-Guantanomo

Obama’s Radical Liberal Socialist Agenda Revealed

Is this his horrible liberal socialist agenda laid bare?

“The legitimate object of Government is to do for a community of people whatever they need to have done but cannot do at all, or cannot so well do, for themselves in their separate and individual capacities. But in all that people can individually do as well for themselves, Government ought NOT to interfere.”

“In all those things which deal with people, be liberal, be human. In all those things which deal with people’s money, or their economy, or their form of government, be conservative.”

“The purpose … is to establish and maintain a peaceful world and build at home a dynamic prosperity in which every citizen fairly shares. We shall ever build anew, that our children and their children, without distinction because of race, creed or color, may know the blessings of our free land.”

“We believe that basic to governmental integrity are unimpeachable ethical standards and irreproachable personal conduct by all people in government. We shall continue our insistence on honesty as an indispensable requirement of public service. We shall continue to root out corruption whenever and wherever it appears.”

“We are proud of and shall continue our far-reaching and sound advances in matters of basic human needs—expansion of social security—broadened coverage in unemployment insurance —improved housing—and better health protection for all our people. We are determined that our government remain warmly responsive to the urgent social and economic problems of our people.”

To find out what left-wing radical wrote this socialist manifesto, read below.

(more…)

April 6, 2010

Anti-Obama urologist interviewed by Colmes

Filed under: Uncategorized — Greg in cheeseland @ 11:02 am

This may be a boring topic, but I do have to write some local articles. You may have heard about the urologist in Mt. Dora, which is near where I am in FL (for now), who posted an anti-Obama sign in his office. The local Orlando Sentinel made a huge deal out of this and totally obscured it to the right, citing their push polls as an example of Florida voters turned off by “Obamacare.” The truth is, I don’t think anyone really gives a damn around here.

Anyway, here’s an excerpt:

The Mt. Dora urologist, Dr. Jack Cassell, who posted a sign stating that, “If you voted for Obama…seek urologic care elsewhere,” was interviewed by Fox New’s Alan Colmes on Friday.

The Orlando Sentinel made much ado about Cassell’s sign, running stories last week and touting polls that showed support of the urologist. It appears, however, that it did not occur to any reporters or editors for the paper to ask Dr. Cassell how much he actually knows about “the changes to your healthcare [that] begin right now.”

In the Colmes interview, Dr. Cassell revealed the extent of his knowledge of the changes in healthcare when he said, “I can’t tell you exactly what the deal is.”

Colmes: But if you don’t know what the deal is why are you speaking out against something you don’t know what the deal is?
Cassell: What I get online, just like any other American. What I’m supposed to understand about the bill should be available to me.
Colmes: It is; it’s been online for a long time; it’s also been all over the media…

It may be rare when anyone from Fox News gets anything right, so Colmes must be given credit in that he pointed out to Dr. Cassell that the Home Care Association of Florida praised the new healthcare legislation and that the entire Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act has been posted online since at least August of ’09 for any American to read.

Aside from an assertion, of course, that common sense may suggest that anyone or anything like Dr. Cassell and his sign do not deserve national media attention….Would common sense tell you to trust a doctor that is opinionated about anything that he admittedly knows little about, with information at hand that he failed to research?

I hope for the sake of all the patients that continue to purchase services from Dr. Cassell that he was able to find and read his medical textbooks, journals and online publications with more aptitude than he was able to find and read the health care bill.

And thanks to the Orlando Sentinel for more remarkable journalism – the kind that is used is universities as an example of how journalism should not be done. Nice work! Getting scooped by Fox News is not a great selling point.

Read more here: http://www.examiner.com/examiner/x-38220-Orlando-Independent-Examiner~y2010m4d6-AntiObama-Orlando-urologist-interviewed-by-Colmes

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