Thursday, August 30, 2007

The Rip-off in Iraq: You Will Not Believe How Low the War Profiteers Have Gone


In Iraq, private contractors are guaranteed huge profits no matter how badly they fuck things up.

You've done such a terrible job, in fact, that when auditors from the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction visit the college in the summer of 2006, their report sounds like something out of one of the Saw movies: "We witnessed a light fixture so full of diluted urine and feces that it would not operate," they write, adding that "the urine was so pervasive that it had permanently stained the ceiling tiles" and that "during our visit, a substance dripped from the ceiling onto an assessment team member's shirt." The final report helpfully includes a photo of a sloppy brown splotch on the outstretched arm of the unlucky auditor.

When Congress gets wind of the fiasco, a few members on the House Oversight Committee demand a hearing. To placate them, your company decides to send you to the Hill -- after all, you're a former Air Force major general who used to oversee this kind of contracting operation for the government. So you take your twenty-minute ride in from the suburbs, sit down before the learned gentlemen of the committee and promptly get asked by an irritatingly eager Maryland congressman named Chris Van Hollen how you managed to spend $72 million on a pile of shit.

You blink. Fuck if you know. "I have some conjecture, but that's all it would be" is your deadpan answer.

The room twitters in amazement. It's hard not to applaud the balls of a man who walks into Congress short $72 million in taxpayer money and offers to guess where it all might have gone.

Read the story

Deadly cholera outbreak in Iraq


An outbreak of cholera in two northern Iraqi provinces has killed eight people and infected 80 others, the Kurdistan Regional Government has said.

Kurdish Health Minister Zeryan Othman said local health authorities were also treating 4,250 suspected cases of the disease in Sulaimaniya and Tamim.

Specialist teams and emergency aid have been sent to the affected regions.

Serious problems with water quality and sewage treatment, worsened by crumbling local infrastructure, are being blamed.

A report by the UK-based charity, Oxfam, and the NGO Co-ordination Committee in Iraq (NCCI) last month warned that 70% of Iraq's population did not have adequate water supplies and that only 20% had access to effective sanitation.

Another Person Arrested for “Impeach” Sign

Watching Melissa Etheridge on TV at the Live Earth concert persuaded Jonas Phillips and his wife, Kindra, to go out and do something about the Bush Administration’s abuses.

So they made a cardboard sign with “Impeach Bush Cheney” on it...

...Within a couple of minutes, Sergeant Randy Riddle did arrive.

“These were the first words out of his mouth: ‘Put down the sign. Put your hands behind your back. You’re under arrest.’

“I asked him why was I being arrested.

“He said, ‘I’m sick of this shit, you’re going to get your 15 minutes of fame, now, buddy.’ ”

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Senator Larry Craig (R-ID) Chastises Bill Clinton


Meet the Press, January 24, 1999

How did we not know he was gay?

I'm beginning to think the reason the republicans were so upset with Clinton, was because he was with a woman.


ABC News, 1982

Two years after Katrina and thousands are still w/o homes



Read more about the video at http://whenthesaints.org/

Study: US preparing 'massive' military attack against Iran

The United States has the capacity for and may be prepared to launch without warning a massive assault on Iranian uranium enrichment facilities, as well as government buildings and infrastructure, using long-range bombers and missiles, according to a new analysis.

Read the story

Monday, August 27, 2007

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Quebec police admit agents posed as protesters

Deny role of undercover officers was to provoke violence at summit of North American leaders.

Read the story






Aaron Russo dies at 64


February 14, 1942 - August 24, 2007

Patriot Hero Aaron Russo Passes Away
America: Freedom to Facism

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Iraq Body Count Running at Double Pace

BAGHDAD — This year's U.S. troop buildup has succeeded in bringing violence in Baghdad down from peak levels, but the death toll from sectarian attacks around the country is running nearly double the pace from a year ago.

Some of the recent bloodshed appears the result of militant fighters drifting into parts of northern Iraq, where they have fled after U.S.-led offensives. Baghdad, however, still accounts for slightly more than half of all war-related killings _ the same percentage as a year ago, according to figures compiled by The Associated Press.



Read the story

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Is It Time to Legalize Drugs?

The United States has spent hundreds of billions of dollars trying to stop the flow of drugs into the country. But many of these substances are now easier to get than ever.



Read the story

Two Years After Katrina, Billions in Relief Funds Are Missing

The federal government has promised more than $116 billion in recovery aid, but residents of the still-devastated Gulf Coast wonder whether the check bounced.

  • Washington set aside $16.7 billion for Community Development Block Grants, one of the two biggest sources of rebuilding funds, especially for housing. But as of March 2007, only $1 billion -- just 6 percent -- had been spent, almost all of it in Mississippi. Following bad publicity, HUD spent another $3.8 billion on the program between March and July, leaving 70 percent of the funds still unused.

  • The other major source of rebuilding help was supposed to be FEMA's Public Assistance Program. But of the $8.2 billion earmarked, only $3.4 billion was meant for nonemergency projects like fixing up schools and hospitals.

  • Louisiana officials recently testified that FEMA has also "low-balled" project costs, underestimating the true expenses by a factor of four or five. For example, for 11 Louisiana rebuilding projects, the lowest bids came to $5.5 million -- but FEMA approved only $1.9 million.

  • After the failure of federal levees flooded 80 percent of New Orleans, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers received $8.4 billion to restore storm defenses. But as of July 2007, less than 20 percent of the funds have been spent, even as the Corps admits that levee repair won't be completed until as late as 2011.
Read the story

This article is taken from the new report compiled by the Institute for Southern Studies called, "Blueprint for Gulf Renewal," giving a voice to grassroots advocates calling for greater federal accountability in the Gulf Coast rebuilding process. The report is available at: http://www.southernstudies.org/BlueprintShort.pdf.

Universal Health Care for Wisconsin?

Combining features of “single-payer” proposals that make a public plan the universal insurer with elements of market-oriented “managed competition” proposals, Healthy Wisconsin would cover virtually every state resident not insured under a public program, like Medicare. According to projections by the Lewin Group, a prominent health care consulting firm, it would also save individuals, employers and governments an estimated $13.8 billion on health insurance over the next decade.

A median income household, earning about $45,000 a year, would pay about $750 less per year for insurance, and employers who now provide employee health insurance would on average pay 15 percent less than they do now, allowing for workers to negotiate pay increases.

Read the story

U.S. report sees precarious Iraqi government

Intelligence analysts say ‘leaders remain unable to govern effectively’

WASHINGTON - The Iraqi government will become more precarious over the next six to 12 months and its security forces have not improved enough to operate without outside help, intelligence analysts conclude in a new National Intelligence Estimate.

Despite uneven improvements, the analysts concluded that the level of overall violence is high, Iraq's sectarian groups remain unreconciled, and al-Qaida in Iraq is still able to conduct its highly visible attacks.

"Iraqi political leaders remain unable to govern effectively," the 10-page document concludes. A copy was obtained by The Associated Press in advance of its release Thursday.

Read the story

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Former CIA officer: US to attack Iran within 6 months

Fox News asked former CIA field officer Bob Baer on Tuesday whether the US is "gearing up for a military strike on Iran." Baer has written a column for Time indicating that Washington officials expect an attack within the next six months.

Read the story

Gov't argues for withholding records

Justice Department Says White House Administration Office Not Subject to Open Records Law

Opening a new front in the Bush administration's battle to keep its records confidential, the Justice Department is contending that the White House Office of Administration is not subject to the Freedom of Information Act.

Read the story

Monday, August 20, 2007

Jailing Nation: How Did Our Prison System Become Such a Nightmare?

With five percent of the world's population, the U.S. has close to a quarter of the world's prisoners. How did the American criminal justice system go so wrong?

How can you tell when a democracy is dead? When concentration camps spring up and everyone shivers in fear? Or is it when concentration camps spring up and no one shivers in fear because everyone knows they're not for "people like us" (in Woody Allen's marvelous phrase) but for the others, the troublemakers, the ones you can tell are guilty merely by the color of their skin, the shape of their nose or their social class?

Questions like these are unavoidable in the face of America's homegrown gulag archipelago, a vast network of jails, prisons and "supermax" tombs for the living dead that, without anyone quite noticing, has metastasized into the largest detention system in the advanced industrial world. The proportion of the US population languishing in such facilities now stands at 737 per 100,000, the highest rate on earth and some five to twelve times that of Britain, France and other Western European countries or Japan. With 5 percent of the world's population, the United States has close to a quarter of the world's prisoners, which, curiously enough, is the same as its annual contribution to global warming.

Read the Story

Nancy calls for impeachment

The Winner of the Dump Dick Contest



A close second


Two other finalists




Also visit impeachcheney.org

Feds Train Clergy To "Quell Dissent" During Martial Law

Shocking KSLA 12 news report confirms story we broke last year, Pastors to cite Romans 13 as reason for public to obey government orders, relinquish guns and be taken to camps during state of emergency



Read the Story

Also...
Romans 13 KJV NIV
Posse Comitatus Act
The Militarization of our Police

Saturday, August 18, 2007

'What's Wrong with America?'

John Sweeney on Huffingtonpost

Earlier this month, Steve Skvara, a disabled, retired steel worker who can't afford his wife's health care, shook the AFL-CIO's Presidential Candidates Forum by asking tearfully, "What's wrong with America?"

We should all be asking that question today.

We've got six coal miners trapped beneath more than 1,500 feet of Utah coal and rock, three brave men who struggled to rescue them are dead and six more are injured.

And it's not because of an act of God. It's because of the acts of man.


Read the story

Lie, Lie, Lie, Lie, Lie, Lie: Gonzales' Top Six Fibs

The verdict is clear: Alberto Gonzales is the lying-est attorney general in recent history. "I don't trust you," Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-VT) told him last month. Ranking member Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA) sounded him out for his "lack of credibility." "He tells the half truth, the partial truth and everything but the truth," said Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) said that Gonzales. “He’s one sneaky, lying S.O.B., to put it bluntly" is Rep. David Obey's (D-WI) frank take.

But even though we've been cataloging the troubles, and Gonzales' dwindling credibility, at the Justice Department for the past several months, we hadn't yet done a rundown. So we've collected below what are, as far as we can tell, Gonzales' six most brazen public untruths.

Read the Story

Friday, August 17, 2007

An Aha! Moment

Harry Shearer at the Huffington Post

For those who've kept insisting, during the past two years, that somehow the federal government isn't responsible for the disastrous flooding of New Orleans, and have proposed other miscreants -- the State, the City, Mother Nature -- here comes an Aha! moment from, of all people, an officer of the U.S. Department of Justice, Robin Smith. Smith, appearing in court to oppose a citizens' lawsuit against the Corps of Engineers, said it in the plainest English possible yesterday, according to the Times-Picayune:

Those structures that failed were federal structures through and through

Now, of course, those are words spoken in the midst of litigation, but issue at hand was not federal responsibility, but rather whether part of the failed "system" was or was not covered by the rubric of flood control (if it were, the Corps would have sovereign immunity). What Ms. Smith said in that sentence should, as the lawyers say, be dispositive as to the federal responsibility. We'll see.

See Who's Editing Wikipedia - Diebold, the CIA, a Campaign

The result: A database of 34.4 million edits, performed by 2.6 million organizations or individuals ranging from the CIA to Microsoft to Congressional offices, now linked to the edits they or someone at their organization's net address has made.

Some of this appears to be transparently self-interested, either adding positive, press release-like material to entries, or deleting whole swaths of critical material.

Voting-machine company Diebold provides a good example of the latter, with someone at the company's IP address apparently deleting long paragraphs detailing the security industry's concerns over the integrity of their voting machines, and information about the company's CEO's fund-raising for President Bush.

Read the story

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Stephen Colbert Goes Undercover As a Daily Kos Blogger

CIA, FBI Edited Wikipedia Entries About Iraq And Gitmo

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - People using CIA and FBI computers have edited entries in the online encyclopedia Wikipedia on topics including the Iraq war and the Guantanamo prison, according to a new tracing program.

Read the Story

U.S. Defends Surveillance to 3 Skeptical Judges

“Is it the government’s position that when our country is engaged in a war that the power of the executive when it comes to wiretapping is unchecked?” Judge Harry Pregerson asked a government lawyer. His tone was one of incredulity and frustration.

Read the Story

Why We're in Iraq

Jim Hightower taps into the real reason for the US involvement in Iraq: it's about a new law requiring Iraq to open up it's oil reserves to privatization, making room the Big Oil corporations to plunder Iraq.

Rove's Science of Dirty Tricks

As Rove joins the ranks of discredited politicians who resign "in order to spend more time with family," a retrospective of his dirty tricks is in order.

Read The Story

Army suicides highest in 26 years

Failed personal relationships, legal and financial problems and the stress of their jobs were factors motivating the soldiers to commit suicide, according to the report.

"In addition, there was a significant relationship between suicide attempts and number of days deployed" in Iraq, Afghanistan or nearby countries where troops are participating in the war effort, it said. The same pattern seemed to hold true for those who not only attempted, but succeeded in killing themselves.


Read the story

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Government Spy Satellites To Be Used On Americans

U.S. to Expand Domestic Use Of Spy Satellites

Read the Story

The Mercenary Revolution: Flush with Profits from the Iraq War, Military Contractors See a World of Business Opportunities.

U.S. contractors in Iraq reportedly have their own motto: “What happens here today, stays here today.” International diplomats say Iraq has demonstrated a new U.S. model for waging war; one which poses a creeping threat to global order.

During the 1991 Gulf War, the ratio of troops to private contractors was about 60 to 1. Today, it is the contractors who outnumber U.S. forces in Iraq. As of July 2007, there were more than 630 war contracting companies working in Iraq for the United States. Composed of some 180,000 individual personnel drawn from more than 100 countries, the army of contractors surpasses the official U.S. military presence of 160,000 troops.
Read the story

Blackwater private security contractor



Iraq Contractors Go On Shooting Spree
Warning: This is Disturbing

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Learn from the fall of Rome, US warned

The US government is on a ‘burning platform’ of unsustainable policies and practices with fiscal deficits, chronic healthcare underfunding, immigration and overseas military commitments threatening a crisis if action is not taken soon, the country’s top government inspector has warned.

David Walker, comptroller general of the US, issued the unusually downbeat assessment of his country’s future in a report that lays out what he called “chilling long-term simulations”.

These include “dramatic” tax rises, slashed government services and the large-scale dumping by foreign governments of holdings of US debt.

Drawing parallels with the end of the Roman empire, Mr Walker warned there were “striking similarities” between America’s current situation and the factors that brought down Rome, including “declining moral values and political civility at home, an over-confident and over-extended military in foreign lands and fiscal irresponsibility by the central government”.


Read the Story

Oil Companies Are Using a Simple Trick to Bilk Consumers out of Billions

It's probably intuitive to most people that the gasoline in their fuel tank expands in the heat -- just like doorframes and cookware and everything else on the planet. What's probably less intuitive is that, in the United States, this physical phenomenon pumps a nearly $2 billion annual windfall out of consumers' pockets and into oil company coffers, according to numerous calculations, including a recent House of Representatives study.

Read the Story

Made in America

Garment Workers on U.S. Saipan

A disturbing expose on the plight of exploited garment workers on US Saipan. Video courtesy of Witness.org.


US doles out millions for street cameras

WASHINGTON -- The Department of Homeland Security is funneling millions of dollars to local governments nationwide for purchasing high-tech video camera networks, accelerating the rise of a "surveillance society" in which the sense of freedom that stems from being anonymous in public will be lost, privacy rights advocates warn.
...technicians are developing ways to use computers to process real-time and stored digital video, including license-plate readers, face-recognition scanners, and software that detects "anomalous behavior.

"Being able to collect this much data on people is going to be very powerful, and it opens people up for abuses of power," said Jennifer King, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley who studies privacy and technology. "The problem with explaining this scenario is that today it's a little futuristic. [A major loss of privacy] is a low risk today, but five years from now it will present a higher risk."
Read the Story

Battle at Kruger

And now for something completely different

Monday, August 13, 2007

Impeach Now

Or Face the End of Constitutional Democracy

Unless Congress immediately impeaches Bush and Cheney, a year from now the US could be a dictatorial police state at war with Iran.

Bush has put in place all the necessary measures for dictatorship in the form of "executive orders" that are triggered whenever Bush declares a national emergency. Recent statements by Homeland Security Chief Michael Chertoff, former Republican senator Rick Santorum and others suggest that Americans might expect a series of staged, or false flag, "terrorist" events in the near future.

Many attentive people believe that the reason the Bush administration will not bow to expert advice and public opinion and begin withdrawing US troops from Iraq is that the administration intends to rescue its unpopular position with false flag operations that can be used to expand the war to Iran.

Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration, often referred to as the father of "Reganomics". He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page and Contributing Editor of National Review. Clearly not a liberal.

Read the Story


Here is and audio interview with Paul Craig Roberts on the Thom Hartmann show.

And here is the executive order that Thom is reading at the beginning of the above audio.

Fatigue cripples US army in Iraq

Exhaustion and combat stress are besieging US troops in Iraq as they battle with a new type of warfare. Some even rely on Red Bull to get through the day. As desertions and absences increase, the military is struggling to cope with the crisis

The anecdotal evidence on the ground confirms what others - prominent among them General Colin Powell, the former US Secretary of State - have been insisting for months now: that the US army is 'about broken'. Only a third of the regular army's brigades now qualify as combat-ready. Officers educated at the elite West Point academy are leaving at a rate not seen in 30 years, with the consequence that the US army has a shortfall of 3,000 commissioned officers - and the problem is expected to worsen.


Read the Story

Dick Cheney '94: Invading Baghdad Would Create Quagmire



3689 Deaths in Iraq over 4 and a half years. Cheney was right.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

The Ministry of Rudy

from Daily Kos by Devilstower <rss@dailykos.com>

There has to be an Orwell Corollary to Godwin's Law, one that says any discussion of today's Republican Party will invariably lead to comparisons with 1984. That's the easy place to run when trying to sum up the miasma of misdirection and jingoism that passes for Republican speech. But, damn it, when the candidates insist on treating the utterances of the Ministry of Truth as a textbook, what can you do?

Orwell

Freedom is Slavery

Giuliani

"Freedom is not a concept in which people can do anything they want, be anything they can be. Freedom is about authority. Freedom is about the willingness of every single human being to cede to lawful authority a great deal of discretion about what you do."

Freedom is about authority. Rudy not only follows the dissimulations of Orwell's fictional ministry, he exceeds them.

By the way, the other two pithy sayings on the side of the Ministry of Truth? "War is Peace" and "Ignorance is Strength."

Bush on track to become the vacation president

The presidential vacation-time record holder is the late Ronald Reagan, who tallied 436 days in his two terms. At 418 days, and with 17 months to go in his presidency, Bush is going to beat that easily.

A recent survey by Yahoo Hot Jobs found nearly half of American workers did not take all of their vacation days last year.

Read the Story

Hey, no one's home, now's are chance.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Big Easy to Big Empty

Part 1


Part 2


Part 3

The Army Knew Iraq … About 60 Years Ago


A War Department handbook published in 1943 stressed that respect for a people and their culture was a key to victory.

...the people who wrote the 1943 booklet—and by extension the government behind them—wanted two things: they wanted to win the war and they wanted to do it honorably. That is, they did not want to sacrifice or shortcut American values, and if we thought we were better than the Nazis, we had to prove it to our allies.
“It is almost impossible,” Nagl writes, “when reading this guide, not to slap oneself on the forehead in despair that the Army knew so much of Arabic culture and customs, and of the importance of that knowledge for achieving military success in Iraq, six decades ago—and forgot almost all of those lessons in the intervening years.”


Read the Story

The Militarization of Our Police



More info...
Active Denial System (ADS)

Say Hello to the Goodbye Weapon

Bring The Pain


Long Range Acoustic Device - LRAD
RNC to Feature Unusual Forms of Sound

Sound Cannon in Place in NY Pointed at Protesters


Posse Comitatus Act

Waco: The Rules of Engagement

Is the G.O.P. trying to rig the 2008 election in California?

Hot women are now into politics.

U.S. ranks just 42nd in life expectancy

Lack of insurance, obesity, racial disparities to blame, experts say


Read the Story

Giuliani says he misspoke when he compared his exposure to ground zero workers

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Republican presidential hopeful Rudy Giuliani is backing off comments he made that struck a nerve with some of ground zero's first responders.

Giuliani says he misspoke when he claimed he spent as much time, if not more, at the site and was exposed to the same health risks as workers.

The former New York mayor told reporters yesterday he "was there working with" police and firefighters.

The backlash was swift, with one firefighter saying Giuliani was grasping to "portray himself as the hero of 9/11."

Giuliani told radio host Mike Gallagher he was trying to empathize with them and tell them "I'm there with you."

A deputy fire chief, who spent months digging for his son at the site called Giuliani a liar and said "the only time he was down there was for photo ops."

With FISA Law, Democrats Give Bush a Blank Check for Domestic Spying

Responding to fear-mongering by the Bush administration, the Democrat-led Congress put its stamp of approval on the unconstitutional wiretapping of Americans.

Read More

Phoney populist fears have gripped America

A spectre is apparently haunting America - the spectre of "populism". "New populism spurs Democrats on the economy," cried the front page headline in The New York Times the other day. Republicans rail against unseemly "class warfare", while centrist Democrats fret that hard-edged populist appeals will spook suburban voters.

"It is not unusual," The New York Times explained, "for candidates seeking the Democratic presidential nomination to move left in the primary season." However, rhetoric aside, there is little reason to view today's supposedly wild-eyed Democrats as "populist" or "leftwing" at all.

Read More

The Warrantless Surveillance and State Secrets Act of 2007

Whether you, I, our friends, neighbors, acquaintances, or complete strangers are ever subjected to surveillance -- wiretapping of telephone lines and the intercept of cellular calls, email, and old-fashioned postal services -- by agencies of the U.S. Government, we may never know. Nor, they instruct us, do we have the right to know. The reason? It is a state secret. So, too, is any question about whether the Government -- our Government, allegedly -- acquired a warrant to engage in its surveillance activities; whether it showed probable cause before an impartial judge prior to eavesdropping on us; and whether its invasion of the spaces that our person inhabits might be unreasonable, in the Fourth Amendment sense of these terms. Nor need the Government confirm or deny these facts -- like just about everything else in contemporary America, if the Government says that it's a "state secret," it is a state secret. And it never has been otherwise. Until such time as the Government says something different. Divulging more might be damaging to Homeland Security. To the programs that protect us from the terrorists. The Commander-in-Chief's "most solemn obligation." And all of that.

Read More
of David Peterson's story from Z-net Blogs

Friday, August 10, 2007

Memory Problems?

Problem:


Solution:

Project Hostile Intent

Security firms working on devices to spot would-be terrorists in crowd

The plans describe how systems based on video cameras, laserlight, infra-red, audio recordings and eye tracking technology are expected to scour crowds looking for unusual behaviour...

...lie detector-type test that can be used remotely - an advantage because it would not interfere with the flow of a crowd and it could be used without the target's knowledge.
Ok, this is getting a little spooky.

If you were a terrorist?

Steven D. Levitt, of the Freakonomics Blog, asks "If You Were a Terrorist, How Would You Attack?" and follows up with "Terrorism, Part II."


Thursday, August 9, 2007

Rigged elections in the US

This isn't good.

Ron Paul 0wnz the Federal Reserve



See also...
America: Freedom to Faciscm
You can watch this movie for Free on Google here.

Zeitgeist

Olbermann: the beginning of the end of America



Go Olbermann!

What is Habeas Corpus?

When Will Americans Have Had Enough



The tragedy of our day is the climate of fear in which we live, and fear breeds repression. Too often sinister threats to the Bill of Rights, to freedom of the mind, are concealed under the patriotic cloak of anti-communism.
-
Adlai Stevenson 1952
Here is the full text of that speech

And if you haven't read this one in a while, it is probably time to read it again.

How to Create an Angry American

There are a lot of people who lie and get away with it.

Historian Zinn: "Governments lie or they wouldn't last long"

Howard Zinn tells it like it is.


Rudy Giuliani Exposed by Firefighters