Monday, May 31, 2004

The Draft



there's an article in the guardian about the coming draft.

choice quote:

He's right. There is pending legislation in the American House of Representatives and Senate in the form of twin bills - S89 and HR163. These measures (currently approved and sitting in the committee for armed services) project legislation for spring 2005, with the draft to become operational as early as June 15.

.... snip ....

Draft-dodging will be harder than in the 1960s. In December 2001, Canada and the US signed a "smart border declaration", which, among other things, will prevent conscientious objectors (and cowards) from finding sanctuary across the northern border. There will be no deferment on higher-education grounds. Mexico does not appeal.

gee, just a few months after 911, the us signed an agreement with canada to prevent people from dodging the draft. this could indicate two things: they knew that iraq was going to be harder than they said. or they had grander plans for military adventures other than the invasions of afghanistan and iraq.

thanks to commentor TheaLogie at the eschaton for the link.

Facts From Air America



the us government did not want to be bound by any international agreement that prohibits executing anyone under the age of 18. the only other country that raised the same objection is somalia.

We Are Fucked



that country of origin of most of the 911 hijackers is facing an increasingly serious stability problem. one of the militants involved in the attacks on employees of foreign oil companies said:

.... snip ....

At about the same time as the high-rise was being stormed, a man who claimed to be Abdul Aziz al-Moqrin, identified as the chief of al-Qa'ida in Saudi Arabia, claimed responsibility for the attack in a tape posted on the internet on a a website noted for militant Islamic comment. He identifies by nationality the foreigners who were killed, although he says it was an American whose body was dragged through the streets. Moqrin denounces the Saudi government for selling out to the US and providing "America with oil at the cheapest prices ... so that their economy does not collapse".
thanks to P Glass from tabletalk for the link.

Is It Just Me...



or is this really bizarre? it just seems like a weird thing to do. it makes me think that getting saddam was on some level about settling a personal score.

weird. weird. weird.

more than 800 dead american soldiers and counting.

Sunday, May 30, 2004

You Said It Girl!



browsing the comments at the eschaton, i came across this kick ass comment from mistress lee:

Notice how many prominent pro-family fucks don't even have families (i.e. Ann Coulter--bitch is 43, never married, no kids; and Pat Buchanan--only child is illegitimate, and other than paying off the mother, he never sees him or her). Then there is thrice-married, childless, drug-addicted Rush Limbaugh (probably gay himself, if you believe the rumors). I guess being 'pro-family' provides an excellent cover for wingers.
word again.

Word



atrios, who got it via unqualified offerings, has an incredibly moving letter from the mother of a gay son.

Design Issues and CSS



i'm just beginning to venture into the fabulous world of web design. what a headache it is.

aside from the problems associated with Internet Explorer 6's buggy implementation of css, i have no access to a mac. so, i can't troubleshoot the design for mac browers easily. i don't want to give any visitors to the new site for this blog the technological finger. plus, i like macs and wish i had one.

i'm a bit of a control freak where the design is concerned. i'd like the majority of visitors to the soon-to-be new home for this blog to see the design as i envision it when they load the page. hence, i'll do some ugly html hacking in combination with browser sniffing to make it work in as many cases as i can.

then, there are the cases where this will not be possible, mostly for people with old browsers. i know some designers choose to ignore anything prior to Internet Explorer 5.x and Netscape 5.x, but what the fuck is up with that? some people can't afford to upgrade their ancient hardware to run modern browsers. i take the technological divide seriously. so, i'm going to uphold the ideals of the school that believes content is more important than presentation and that accessibility trumps all.

since i went back to school for a computer science degree, i have come to appreciate backwards compatibility. i just finished a hardware architecture class about intels' 80386 processor, the 32 bit wonder. they designed it so their chip could run older software designed for 16 and 8 bit systems. this design decision was probably responsible for intel's astounding commercial success. it made it less cumbersome and expensive to upgrade from older hardware, a natural incentive to purchase their chips.

the whole point of HTML and the web was to make it easy to share information. web design has certainly come a *long* way since i first encountered it ten years ago. the focus then was on content. when the web became commercial, everyone went gaga for visually appealing, complex designs. i love a good, sleek professional design, but design shouldn't get in the way of the content. so, i think just for the sake of being a geek, i'll even make the new site accessible for text-only browers like lynx. i mean, how can i develop an enormous and adoring fan base that lives for my every word of wit and wisdom if i don't put the welcome mat out for everybody?

Thursday, May 27, 2004

Biofuel Home Heating



great article about using biodiesel blends in heating systems that use heating oil. one of the reasons for not using 100 percent biodiesel is that traditional burners have pipe seals made from natural rubber, which biodiesel degrades. so, the real challgence is transitioning to a new generation of heater that doesn't have this problem, and voila -- 100% biodiesel heating oil would be a reality.

it's more expensive than traditional heating oil right now, but that's because economies of scale haven't had a chance to play a role in this market.

Fuel-Efficient Cars



despite my belly-aching about how far behind we are with respect to europe, there is a promising market for fuel-stingy cars here in our own gasaholic culture. the toyota prius, an electric hybrid, has been enormously popular. there are long waiting lists of eager buyers around the country. given the recent troubling spike in gas prices, interest in this car will intensify greatly. it gets an impressive 50 miles per gallon in the city and 60 on the highway. better yet, it is a four-door, four-seater, and a new one costs just $20,450. there is an even more miserly hybrid on the market, the honda insight. it gets 66 miles per gallon on the highway, and 60 in the city. it's a two-seater, however, making it a very niche market car. it also sells for a price similar to that of a prius.

i did some web-searching on SUVs after discovering the lupo and becoming obsessed with cars. the top ten list of most popular SUVs at yahoo autos is an eye-opener. first, the SUV market is a high-end auto market. five of the autos on yahoo's list cost $35,000 or more. them's yuppie prices. of course, the used market puts these cars within the reach of people who can not afford them new. however, a number of SUV owners, in response to the spike in gas prices, are trading those vehicles in for less gas greedy cars. i imagine this represents no small portion of people in the can't-afford-them-new category. the popularity of the prius and the insight indicates that the middle class market for new cars is very concerned with fuel efficiency. they are more sensitive to gas prices after all. the upper middle class market for new SUVs will likely remain that way -- those are the people who can afford to waste gasoline.

the worst guzzler of all, the hummer, costs $50,000. that makes it a luxury vehicle. it's number six on yahoo's list. this is balanced somewhat with the fact that the most popular SUV at yahoo autos, el numero uno, is the scion, a 5 door wagon that gets 31 miles per gallon in the city and 35 on the highway. it costs less than $15,000. i conclude that in the lower end of the SUV market, fuel efficiency is a top consideration for the buyer. in this story, one car salesman said that people trading in their SUVs were looking for cars that get 30 or more miles per gallon. i remember when a car that got more than 35 miles per gallon was exceptional. the geo metro was a fuel efficiency breakthrough because it could squeeze out 50 miles per gallon on the highway ten years ago.

in car-choked california, some people actually want to ban SUVs, but this is a misguided effort that is doomed to failure. fuel efficient standards don't actually doesn't have to spell the end of SUVs. apparently, some forward-looking auto makers are taking the backlash against their popular gas guzzlers seriously. ford is planning to offer a compact, electric hybrid SUV, which will get up to 38 miles per gallon. considering that my little 1991 geo storm clocks in at around 33 miles per gallon, that's no small feat. it's also really good news. the SUV market is a bit more diverse than i thought. if american auto makers made use of volkswagon's super fuel-efficient diesel technology, it would be possible to have SUVs that get 70 or more miles per gallon. this would triple the average highway efficiency of the most popular SUV models. focus on the fuel efficiency, not the size. if these monsterfucks could get 70-80 miles per gallon and produce next to no emissions, i'd be happy as a pig in shit.

super efficient diesel cars can easily and inexpensively be converted to burn biodiesel -- essentially grease. if a company or companies began producing biodiesel via changing world technologies' process, or simply by filtering and refining used oil from restaurants, there were be a ready market for the fuel already. the fact that such cars will be miserly in the use of fossil fuels in the meantime is no small mark in their favor.

Lupos Do Run On Biodiesel



i'm drooling to own one of these cars! according to this article, it can be converted to burn biodiesel.

Holy Fucking Cow



volkswagon sells the lupo, a small diesel powered car that gets 90 miles per gallon.

they are planning to introduce a new model in europe that gets 190 miles per gallon.

what the fuck are we doing here in the US buying cars that get 11 miles per gallon?

can this type of car run on used vegetable oil? will there be an even more efficient electric diesel hybrid? why can't i buy one of these cars in the US? WHY??

Fundamentally Awesome Software



holy cow. i wish my company used this software.

Wednesday, May 26, 2004

Tinfoil Hat News



slashdot again:

an article about motion sensors around area 51 really raises some questions about the potential abuses of all of this increasingly sophisticated surveillance technology. damn. i just got some orwellian chills.

The Future of Programming



another gem from slashdot:

Extensible Programming for the 21st Century

In his OOPSLA'98 keynote Growing a Language [Steele], Guy L. Steele Jr. said, "From now on, a main goal in designing a language should be to plan for growth." Functions, user-defined types, operator overloading, and generics (such as C++ templates) are no longer enough: tomorrow's languages must allow programmers to add entirely new kinds of information to programs, and to control how that information is processed.This article argues that next-generation programming systems will accomplish this by combining three specific technologies:

  • compilers, linkers, debuggers, and other tools will be plugin frameworks, rather than monolithic applications;

  • programmers will be able to extend the syntax of programming languages; and

  • programs will be stored as XML documents, so that programmers can represent and process data and meta-data uniformly.
These innovations will change programming as profoundly as structured languages did in the 1970s, objects in the 1980s, and components and reflection in the 1990s. To see why, we must first examine the shortcomings of the systems programmers use today. We begin with two of the most popular: the Unix command line, and Microsoft's Component Object Model (COM).

more ...

egads. this is a rather sweeping pronouncement. i haven't had time to wade through the slashdot thread about this paper. i will have to do so at some point.

Open Source Content



slashdot is rocking today:

BBC Creative Archive licensing to be based on Creative Commons

In a significant step forward towards the opening of a portion of the BBC's archives, the BBC today made their intentions for the Creative Archives clearer to other UK broadcasters and public sector organisations. The Creative Archive, originally announced by Greg Dyke in 2003, plans to offer the British public free access to some of the BBC's audio and video programming.

This afternoon the first meeting of an external consultative panel, which included many UK media holders, heard the BBC's decision that it will base the Creative Archive usage licence on the Creative Commons (CC) model. This confirmation follows some speculation on the subject. The CC model turns copyright on its head by explaining the ways that the content can be used rather than saying it cannot - or Some Rights Reserved as they put it. By happy coincidence, Creative Commons 2.0 was released yesterday.

By applying a CC-type license to the content, the BBC will enable individuals in the UK to download released content to their computers, share it, edit it and create new content. Commercial reuse of the content will not be allowed.

more...


open source: it's not just an idea. it's a way of life.

Intellectual Property



another from today's roundup at slashdot:

Clear Channel Limits Live CDs

Company to block bands from selling instant albums

In the past few years, fans leaving some concerts have discovered a souvenir far better than a T-shirt: a live recording of the show they just attended. Bands including the Allman Brothers, moe. and Billy Idol have sold instant concert discs, and the Pixies and the Doors plan to launch similar programs this summer. The recording-and-burning company DiscLive estimated on April 12th that it would gross $500,000 selling live discs this spring alone.

But in a move expected to severely limit the industry, Clear Channel Entertainment has bought the patent from the technology's inventors and now claims to own the exclusive right to sell concert CDs after shows. The company, which is the biggest concert promoter in the world, says the patent covers its 130 venues along with every other venue in the country.

more ...

so, basically, once it became clear how profitable instant live concert recordings could be, clear channel decides to get into the market and crush all potential competition. i dunno if it's just me, but it seems there is something very slippery about their argument for exclusive rights to sell CDs after concernts. i suppose that according to patent law, they have the right to control the use of the technology covered under the patent they bought. however, i don't see why other companies couldn't independently develop similar technology for instant CD recordings. it would be interesting to see clear channel's response to that. the article implies that their legal argument rests on their ownership of a specific patent for a technology used by a single company, DiscLive. DiscLive uses the technology covered under the patent, now owned by clear channel. clear channel is not willing to license the technology to them. ergo, they no longer have the right to sell CDs made with that technology.

however, i'm not convinced that their ownership of this patent gives them exclusive rights to sell instant live CD recordings after shows. this is a separate intellectual property issue. the matter of the patent pertains to clear channel's right to control over a technology for making instant live recordings on CD. this doesn't logically extend to exclusive rights to sell instant CD recordings of live musical performances.

Piracy



via slashdot:

the senate is voting on The Pirate Act -- a bill that will allow the federal government to file civil charges against file-swappers. apparently the burden of proof is too high for criminal charges, allowed under the No Electronic Theft Act.

Tuesday, May 25, 2004

Gazillion Pound Gorilla



i've been slashdotting again, which explains today's obsession with operating systems. in an ideal world, OSSoftware and commercial software would have a mutually beneficial symbiotic relationship. i've read my fair share of slashdots from professional programmers who work on open source projects during off-work hours. a lot of programmers have had more time for open source projects in recent years. they lost their jobs in droves after the tech bubble burst and during the jobloss recovery that followed. i often read tales of paid work that is sporadic and sans benefits. some of them are experiencing rather severe middle class economic anxieties.

it's depressing when one realizes how many programmers despair of ever obtaining steady, well-compensated employment in the industry again. nevertheless, they still love programming. i think their devotion to open source software is motivated on some level by a desire for revenge. they view OSSoftware 'movement' as an 'attack' on the commercial software 'system'. this meme has materialized most concretely in the rising showdown between microsoft and linux.

lemme see if i can outline the linux groupies' Manifesto Against Micro$oft.

thesis:

microsoft embodies everything that is wrong with the current commercial software market.

claims against microsoft:

  1. microsoft has an unwarranted monopoly

  2. microsoft's monopoly threatens the security of networks and personal computers around the globe

  3. microsoft's monopoly stifles competition

  4. microsoft's monopoly stifles innovation

  5. microsoft's monopoly allows it to get away with illegal business practices

  6. microsoft's monopoly allows it to get away with blatant attempts to stifle free expression
summary of arguments:

microsoft products' highly publicized, painfully costly vulnerability to viruses, trojans, and worms highlights the profound flaws in microsoft's source code. yet, microsoft has an iron grip on the desktop market, the office software market, the internet browser market, and a lesser, but still considerable grip on the server market. additionally, their popular email service, hotmail, is notorious for its vulnerability to spam and hack attacks.

microsoft has acquired enormous resources through their dominance in the aforementioned markets. it is now using those resources to plunder smaller companies of their innovative technologies, often incorporating them into their own products in blatant violation of copyright and patent laws. microsoft not infrequently abuses collaborative efforts with smaller companies to gain access to their source code in order to steal it.

however, microsoft does not have to resort to illegal means to stifle competition. it does that because it can. the company also can and often does make use of its vast fortunes to buy smaller companies with innovative products in order to remove those products from the market or to sell the products itself. some innovative technologies therefore never reach the market, and those that do are controlled by a monopoly, with its consequent costs for the consumer who faces fewer choices and higher prices in addition to the security risks inherent in a software market dominated by one company.

microsoft is extremely hostile to the open source software community, particularly the contingent of linux enthusiasts and developers. it has viewed the growing popularity of linux as a threat and has set its sights on the entire open source software community. microsoft's mounting attacks on the open source software community are nothing less than an attack on free speech. their tactics are quickly leading us to a business and social environment that threatens what is good about capitalism -- competition, innovation, efficiency, and best of all, progress.

wow. this post is much longer than i originally intended. i will stop here for now. this subject requires more extended exploration. later, i'll address the individual claims and the relevant supporting and opposing evidence.

Grease Cars On Air America



i just heard an ad on air america about recycling vegetable oil for diesel cars.

i think the average citizen is thinking more about our economic dependence on the middle east. i wish i saw more initiative on the part of our elected officials to spearhead a concerted effort to transition to a renewable energy economy.

judging from the increasing media coverage of alternatives to fossil fuels and the fact that every tenth discussion about the economy touches on the problem of developing cheap renewable fuels, people are ready for action.

what's fantastic about alternative fuel is that there's something for everybody. it makes environmentalists happy. one can sell it to the business community as a way to reduce waste management costs. the rich should be happy because a successful market in renewable fuels represents one of the greatest investment opportunities of the new century. it would also reduce the risk of terrorists attacks as well as the potential impact of successful attacks.

renewable fuels: good for the environment, good for business, and good for national security.

Monday, May 24, 2004

Activist Zealotry



Christian Exodus is considering a takeover of alabama, mississippi, or south carolina.

thanks to commentor Anonymous from the eschaton for the link.

I Love The Web



i have discovered open source shakespeare thanks to Leobinus from slashdot.

Grease Cars



another interesting fact from eco-energy crowd:

you can use old vegetable oil to run a diesel powered car. yet another opportunity to turn the waste products of industry into economically useful energy sources. a restaurant giving it away for free cuts costs because they normally have to pay someone to haul it away as trash. the person who takes it saves money in fuel costs and helps minimize the damage that our car culture does to the environment.

i am betting that the economies of scale in densely populated cities with lots of restuarants would make it possible to support a business that specializes in collecting and refining the oil for re-sale.

Sunday, May 23, 2004

Onward Christian Soldiers



commentor erwill at the eschaton notes that the christian zealot website also contains a screed that states islam is a warlike religion. the author cites thousand year old examples of religious persecution of jews and christians at the hands of muslims as 'proof' of her claim. i could go through the christian bible and quote tracts that contain instructions on selling one's wife and daughters into slavery. i could even cite the part where god's chosen are instructed to murder all the men, male children and non-virgin women of a conquered people and take the virgin females as war booty, but i did my time in the christian ghetto of appalachia and don't want to relive that right now. another time maybe.

the idiocy of all this self-righteous christian victimhood is that they want to use examples of massacres that were motivated as much by ancient, violent tribal law as they were by religious zealotry. the ancient texts of judaism, christianity, and islam reflect the social conditions of that time. so do the historical events they document. but i suppose that trying to teach children the practice of critical thinking and interpretation of history is 'propaganda' and 'brain-washing'.

Apocalypse Management



the web is the most fascinating thing. i love the way it mirrors the psychology of our social systems.

today, atrios blogged an article in the washington post and another article in the washington monthly about the people who are running the nation building department in iraq: fresh faced young republicans right out of college. ideologically pure, inexperienced, young republicans who had all submitted their resumes to the heritage foundation were shouldered with the responsibility of managing a multi-billion dollar enterprise in the midst of a quickly deteriorating security situation in the midst of a war zone. just effing beautiful. this war has not only been an election campaign from the start, it has been a hideously managed election campaign.

atrios also blogged an essay by one of these young, fresh-faced reincarnations of alex keaton.

commentor joe briefcase notes that this tract regarding the dangers of eternal hellfire is hosted on the same website. note that the url is 'somebodycares4u' and it has a horribly designed homepage that reeks of christian zealotry. it also hosts an essay that takes a mealy-mouthed non-committal stance on the authenticity of various signs of the end times, at the end of which is a link to an animation of the second coming of christ.

and the final kicker is that there is an essay about how to 'reach muslims.' so, there you have it. at least one of the Inexperienced Fresh-Faced Ideologically Pure Young Republicans charged running with the nation building department of Iraq War, v 2.0 is associated with christian zealots who hint that our troubles in the middle east could be a sign of the end times, but they could also be sign of a great and wonderful flourishing of christian capitalism in the middle east. you sure can't fault these folks for not trying to cover all the bases.

be ready for the end-times, but keep an eye on the big picture, guys! this could also represent a fantastic opportunity to 'reach' the muslims.

yes, this whole endeavor has all the rotten ingredients we suspected it contained: fanatic, religious GOP apparatchiks and the crony capitalists are in cahoots with one another. i don't know that they share all the same goals. i think the whole mess is a loosely organized, badly run coalition of the craziest elements in the republican party. for some reason, there is something in the iraq war that animates their various naive, blind ambitions for glory. there is one goal they all have in common however -- to re-elect george bush. he's another empty canvas for these vastly different elements in the GOP to illustrate their own version of the 'grand plan' for american greatness.

Information Management



how many lifeboats do we have again?

thanks to Susie Dow from tabletalk for the link.

Saturday, May 22, 2004

Em. 0 is a Few Sandwiches Short...



Humbly your em. 0 admits to idiocy for not realising the previous link leads to the lovely .ORG version of the WhiteHouse. Not the real one, which ends in .GOV.

Forgive her, she must be tired.

More About the 1981 proto-Lesbian Novel by Lynne Cheney



Well. I guess the Occupation Gov't has decided to try to dodge the flak (what flack? no one has frelling HEARD of this before!) on Sisters, the 1981 novel by em'ly Lynne Cheney, wife of our valiant Vice-President-Unelect.

Em. Marcia Ellen Beevre of BellaOnline quotes the novel at one point in her commentary on the issue:

The women who embraced in the wagon were Adam and Eve crossing a dark cathedral stage -- no, Eve and Eve, loving one another as they would not be able to once they ate of the fruit and knew themselves as they truly were. She felt curiously moved, curiously envious of them. She had never to this moment thought Eden a particularly attractive paradise, based as it was on naiveté, but she saw that the women in the cart had a passionate, loving intimacy forever closed to her. How strong it made them. What comfort it gave.

The young woman was heavily powdered, but quite attractive, a curvesome creature, rounded at bosom and cheek. When she smiled, even her teeth seemed puffed and rounded, like tiny ivory pillows.

Let us go away together, away from the anger and imperatives of men. We shall find ourselves a secluded bower where they dare not venture. There will be only the two of us, and we shall linger through long afternoons of sweet retirement. In the evenings I shall read to you while you work your cross-stitch in the firelight. And then we shall go to bed, our bed, my dearest girl.

That crappily-written drivel is hard to ignore given the Cheney family's central role in The Government, but I guess since earlier this year when I first mentioned it things have changed. For example, Marcia Ellen Beevre's article follows up the lurid prose quote with these notes:

Sisters was penned in 1981. It’s hard to find a copy today, but Amazon says they will give it a shot for you if you want a copy. It’s been said the Repubos are buying them up to keep the 2nd lady from having to admit to this embarrassment. The Canadian publisher was going to issue a second printing this year, but when the Mrs. got wind of it she called it to a screeching halt.

Like most of the indiscretions of the Bush administration that they don’t want you to know about, “Sisters” will be kept from public scrutiny wherever possible. Odd. Don’t they think we know that Repubos enjoy sex too? Even lesbian sex? Like most women, thoughts about gay sex have obviously crossed this author's mind.

Ya, maybe. Like mother, like daughter, I guess.

But apparently the Occupation Gov't has decided to take the advice of their favourite hero, the brave and masculine and wonderous protagonist of most of Tom Clancy's novels, and simply bite the bullet. When asked about a sensitive issue, don't resist. It draws attention & the media wants attention. No drama, no problem.

What am I jabbering on about?

This.

Sinking Ship



another jumps from the bushCo titantic.

thanks to GRW from tabletalk for the link.

Friday, May 21, 2004

Unbearable Cuteness



a fine substitute for kevin drum's regrettable abandonment of friday cat blogging.

thanks to signet for the link.

Suppressing Dissent



hesiod posts about our current 'free speech management' policies. i wonder how long before we have a kent state moment. instahack is hinting darkly about a take-over of the media by an organized minority. sorry, but he doesn't merit a link. go to the eschaton and read about it.

Patent Law And Genetically Modified Foods



an article in salon raises one of the questions i've had about the patent liabilities of genetically modified seeds. what happens when crops cross-pollinate and someone is found 'guilty' of patent infringement in cases of cross-pollination? are we headed towards a future in which everyone who tries to grow anything anywhere has to pay tribute to the owner of a patented gene?

it's not like you can control nature. cross-pollination is inevitable.

Turkey Guts As Fuel



changing world technologies' carthage plant is now selling the oil it produces. i picked up this article via slashdot, and as usual, the naysayers are out in force.

a bunch of uninformed people hurried to erroneously claim that using the oil from the plant is just as bad as using fossil fuels. news flash people -- the carbon dioxide released from burning this oil comes from a CLOSED CARBON CYCLE. got that? it is not nearly as polluting as the use of fossil fuels.

others immediately started bitching that the 500-600 barrels of oil that the plant in question could produce at maximum capacity wouldn't 'make any difference' in our dependence on foreign oil. granted one pilot commercial facility cannot achieve this aim. however, there is enormous promise here. bigger plants attached to municipal sewage facilities, for example, could produce a *lot* more than 500-600 barrels a day.

i don't get all the negative reactions to this technology. even replacing five percent of our imported oil needs is a impressive accomplishment when you consider that we import around 4 billion barrels of oil every year. better yet, we have a great way to efficiently and even profitably cope with the enormous waste management problems that face industrial societies.

i get the sense that people think that we need a quick, 100 percent solution to our energy needs. that's just fucking stupid. why not take a diversified approach? and who said that we could replace fossil fuels overnight or even within 5-10 years. this is not a fifth grade science project for fuck's sake. we're talking about an enormous investment in both private and public infastructure.

it's an incremental process of transition and the longer we bicker over the finer points, the closer we are to hubbert's peak. it will get harder and more expensive to make this transition the longer we wait. even a goal of replacing 1 percent of our imported oil needs every year would be a step in the right direction. this doesn't necessarily have to happen through alternative energy sources. conservation is still a viable means of coping with a dwindling supply of fossil fuels. wind and solar energy are great for electricity and heating needs. they do not solve our transportation needs. one of the benefits of a diversified energy base is that a supply shortage of a single energy resource does not have to cripple our economy.

the fact that changing world technologies' process is 80 percent efficient at its pilot facility is really quite amazing. i imagine that there are a lot of out of work engineers who would be delighted to have jobs improving on their process. not to mention the job generation factor of constructing more plants like the one in carthage all over the country.

i believe that a well-designed policy that encourages both fuel efficient standards and the development of renewable energy resources could place us in the enviable position of actually *exporting* biofuel technology right now and exporting actual biofuel within 20 years, all the while lowering the costs of waste management and reducing pollution. what's not to like about that?

Wednesday, May 19, 2004

Subliminal Messages To Microsoft



a reuters article in salon states that business executives are criticizing the 'technology industry' for the lack of good security in their products. apparently, they're upset with the financial damage wrought by a recent string of nasty viruses. however, most of these security hazards cost the average mac-head or linux-geek nada because the vast majority of these costly security flaws have been found in windows software.

i should know. i have windows 98 SE. every time i give my computer its quarterly enema and re-install that old creaky OS, i have to download about sixty 'critical updates' from the microsoft website. note that i have the second edition of windows 98. the original win98 was so buggy that they actually had to re-release it. i suppose the last umpteeth million security patches didn't merit a third and fourth edition.

visual basic viruses abound. they range from mildly annoying such as the type that disables or hides menu options in microsoft office applications to the destructive type that can wipe out a corporate network's connectivity for hours.

at least xp has a built-in firewall. i have to download zone alarm and run it on my five-year-old win98/linux computer.

must. re-install. suse. linux.

i installed red hat a while back because i wanted to explore other flavors of linux after a pleasant six-month stint with suse. i just don't like red hat. in fact, since i installed it, i have not used my linux partition at all. prior to replacing suse with red hat, linux was my main OS. i used windows only for photoshop and microsoft office.

suse is a more programmer-oriented distro, but i found that it ran slowly on my 500 mhz machine, even with 256 megabytes of ram. the thing i dislike most about the gnome and kde desktop systems is that they eat ram on toast for breakfast. otherwise, they're a good step in the right direction.

the whole point of this long ramble is that the article elides the role of microsoft's market dominance in corporate network security problems. it's not a good idea to place all one's eggs in a single basket. i think a good trust busting is in order. we might not even need that. reverse engineering is slowly severing the ties between microsoft office and windows. the windows emulators are getting better by the day.

in the meantime, these dudes could use linux server software even if they want to keep windows on their desktop systems. it would help diversify their technological base so to speak.

Those Fucking Texans are at it Again



Today the Ft. Worth Star Telegram reports - thanks, Boing-Boing - Unitarian Group Denied Tax Status

I repeat the article herein because it requires registration.

Fucking Texans.

AUSTIN - Unitarian Universalists have for decades presided over births, marriages and memorials. The church operates in every state, with more than 5,000 members in Texas alone.

But according to the office of Texas Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn, a Denison Unitarian church isn't really a religious organization -- at least for tax purposes. Its reasoning: the organization "does not have one system of belief."

Never before -- not in this state or any other -- has a government agency denied Unitarians tax-exempt status because of the group's religious philosophy, church officials say. Strayhorn's ruling clearly infringes upon religious liberties, said Dan Althoff, board president for the Denison congregation that was rejected for tax exemption by the comptroller's office.

"I was surprised -- surprised and shocked -- because the Unitarian church in the United States has a very long history," said Althoff, who notes that father-and-son presidents John Adams and John Quincy Adams were both Unitarians.

His church is just one of several Unitarian congregations in North Texas, including churches in Fort Worth, Arlington and Southlake.

Strayhorn's ruling, as well as a similar decision by former Comptroller John Sharp, has left the comptroller's office straddling a sometimes murky gulf separating church and state.

What constitutes religion? When and how should government make that determination? Questions that for years have vexed the world's great philosophers have now become the province of the state comptroller's office.

Questions about the issue were referred to Jesse Ancira, the comptroller's top lawyer, who said Strayhorn has applied a consistent standard -- and then stuck to it. For any organization to qualify as a religion, members must have "simply a belief in God, or gods, or a higher power," he said.

"We have got to apply a test, and use some objective standards," Ancira said. "We're not using the test to deny the exemptions for a particular group because we like them or don't like them."

Traditional faiths

Since Strayhorn took over in January 1999, the comptroller's office has denied religious tax-exempt status to 17 groups and granted them to more than 1,000, according to records obtained by the Star-Telegram. Although there are exceptions, the lion's share of approvals have gone to groups that appear to have relatively traditional faiths, records show.

But of the denials, at least a fourth include less traditional groups, the records show. In addition to the Denison Unitarian church, the rejected groups include a Carrollton group of atheists and agnostics, a New Age group in Bastrop, and the Whispering Star Clan/Temple of Ancient Wisdom, an organization of witches in Copperas Cove.

Some of the denials occurred because of missing paperwork or other problems, according to the comptroller's office. A few, like the denial for the New Age group and the witches group, were decided because their services were closed to the public, according to documents.

But the denials of the Red River Unitarian Universalist Church in Denison and the North Texas Church of Freethought in Carrollton, as well as an earlier denial by Sharp for the Ethical Culture Fellowship of Austin, were ordered because the organizations did not mandate belief in a supreme being.

The disputed tax dollars don't amount to much, but the comptroller has taken a stand on principle, Ancira said.

"The issue as a whole is, do you want to open up a system where there can be abuse or fraud, or where any group can proclaim itself to be a religious organization and take advantage of the exception?" he said.

Those who oppose the comptroller's "God, gods or supreme being" test say that it can discriminate against legitimate faiths. For example, applying that standard could disqualify Buddhism because it does not mandate belief in a supreme being, critics say.

Opponents note that the federal government applies less stringent rules for federal tax exemptions, yet manages to discourage fraud and abuse. They also question whether the comptroller's office has formulated excuses to discriminate against nontraditional groups, such as those that include witches and pagans.

But Ancira says it's up to the comptroller's office to interpret state law, which he describes as rather vague. He insists the comptroller never favors one religion over another.

"This comptroller, in particular, wants everybody on a level playing field," he said.

'Creedless' religions

The comptroller's office has not always barred "creedless" religions from tax exemption, said Douglas Laycock, a University of Texas law professor who specializes in religious liberty issues.

That standard first came up in 1997, when then-Comptroller Sharp ruled against the Ethical Culture Fellowship of Austin. In making that decision, Sharp overturned the recommendation of his staff.

The Ethical Culture Fellowship sued, claiming that Sharp overstepped his authority. Allied with the group in the ongoing lawsuit are pastors from a broad range of faiths, including Baptists, Lutherans and Mennonites.

Both the lower court and the Texas Supreme Court have ruled against the state's decision. In one opinion, an appeals court said the comptroller's test "fails to include the whole range of belief systems that may, in our diverse and pluralistic society, merit the First Amendment protection."

Strayhorn vows to continue the legal fight to the U.S. Supreme Court, if necessary. "Otherwise, any wannabe cult who dresses up and parades down Sixth Street on Halloween will be applying for an exemption," she said in a April 23 news release.

The Red River Unitarian Universalist Church, the 50-member congregation whose tax application was rejected by Strayhorn's office, has held services in Denison for the seven years. Althoff said his group includes "hard-core atheists" as well as "New Agey-type people."

But the lack of a single creed is a hallmark of Unitarianism, Althoff said. Instead, Unitarian Universalists have seven guiding principles, including "respect for the interdependent web of all existence of which we are a part," according to the Unitarian Universalist Web site.

The group also draws from various religious and philosophical traditions, including Jewish, Christian, humanist and Earth-centered teachings, but promotes individual freedom of belief, according to the Web site. It notes that Unitarians and Universalists have operated in the United States for at least 200 years, although the two groups did not merge until 1961.

It now includes about 40 congregations in Texas, and more than 1000 in the United States, Canada and Mexico.

Despite its lack of a specific creed, Unitarian Universalism is as much a religion as any other, Althoff said. From his perspective, religion is not just about the answers to life's big questions, but also calls on people to evaluate the questions themselves.

"It seems to me that any [group] that is specifically organized to address and explore the issues of what constitutes the good life, both here and perhaps in the afterworld, would qualify" as a religion, Althoff said.

The Rev. Anthony David, lead pastor of Pathways Church in Southlake, said he is disturbed by the comptroller's decisions because it ignores Unitarian Universalists' belief that spiritual fulfillment can emerge in "different ways at different levels."

"It reflects an incredible misunderstanding of what a church needs to look like," David said.

Pathways teaches that God is a term that describes the source of ultimate meaning and purpose, but the church does not advocate a one-size-fits-all theology, David said.

"Creedlessness doesn't mean no belief or anything goes," he said.

Craig Roshaven of Fort Worth's First Jefferson Unitarian Universalist Church said he has followed the comptroller's decisions with growing dismay.

His group has tax-exempt status, but he wonders what's to prevent Strayhorn from revoking it.

"The comptroller's logic could be applied to any of us," he said.

Ancira said the comptroller's office has no plans for such reversals. But then again, said Ancira, "There's nothing preventing us from doing so."

Staff Writer Darren Barbee contributed to this report.

Online:

Unitarian Universalist Association

Pathways Church

Texas Comptroller

Tuesday, May 18, 2004

OS X Makes PC Début



Wired News reports:

Developed by Sebastian Biallas and Stefan Weyergraf, a pair of 23-year-old computer students from Aachen, Germany, PearPC re-creates in software the PowerPC architecture, the hardware used in Apple's Macs.

The free, open-source software allows Intel- and AMD-based PCs to run several operating systems compatible with the PowerPC, including Mandrake Linux, BSD, Darwin and, most importantly, Apple's Mac OS X.

Users can download and install a copy of PearPC, and then install a boxed copy of OS X, which can be purchased from Apple for $130.
Word.

a Personal Letter from Jack Chick



Jack Chick, famed author of those insane Christianazi pamphlets you find everywhere, has written us a lovely personal letter.

A personal message from Jack Chick

Back in 1943 I was drafted into the Army. I was completely naïve. I heard about homosexuals but didn’t understand or care about what they did. There was almost an air of innocence, because it wasn’t discussed.

Years later, after my daughter was born, a neighbor told of a sailor who raped a man in our town – I was shocked to say the least! I spent 3 years in the military and never even knew this went on.

Well beloved, times have changed. The sodomites went on the offensive and Christians, being polite, kept quiet, hoping they would go away. They didn’t! This godless crowd got louder and louder and grew in numbers.

After 1965 the Ten Commandments were gone and kids were taught that evolution was true. Across the country, pastors in thousands of churches stopped preaching about God’s fiery judgment. They feared even to mention the word hell – it was the H-word, to be avoided at all costs, lest someone be offended!

So with hardly any opposition, the sodomites and their aggressive gay machine became a force to control politicians, judges, the media and finally our school systems. Their weapon was a single word, tolerance, and all opponents were put to flight.

In 1940 who on earth would even dream the day would come when a flaming sodomite would sit in front of a first grade class, reading a book for 3-7 year-olds, entitled, Gloria Goes to Gay Pride? Our godless school system intends to push the gay agenda from kindergarten through college. And it’s already happening.

Our television is an open sewer, glorifying the homosexual lifestyle, making the “straights” (non-gays) look like a bunch of idiots.

Satan has the backing of the courts, trying to shut the mouths of God-fearing pastors, who still have the courage to preach about it from the book of Romans, who show what God thinks of homosexuality and what He did to Sodom and Gomorrah. I believe the time will soon come when godless judges will close churches that call being gay a sin.

But what about our children being brainwashed and force-fed the lie that “gay is good?” What can be done to block this gay wave rolling into our classrooms?

I never dreamed that we would need a tract to help stem this tide in our schools. But I believe God has given us the perfect tract for kids. It’s simply called Birds and the Bees. Beloved, most people have no idea what schools are teaching our kids. Don’t think that children shouldn’t read this. They already know about it. It’s going on behind your back, on your TV and in your school. So please, let the kids read The Birds and the Bees. It could save them from a homosexual nightmare in the future.

Your brother in Christ,

Jack

Man, he's as fucking crazed & evil as ever.

Friday, May 14, 2004

die puny humans



[ die puny humans ] is currently experiencing fAST fICTION fRIDAY & Adi Tantimedh's story is my favourite so far.

I'm sorry it's come to this.

I'm sorry I showed you around the lab.

I'm sorry I let you see the alien spores we harvested.

I'm sorry you were so desperate you stole and swallowed some.

I'm sorry the only part of the report you paid attention to was 'aphrodesiac properties', and not 'sentient', 'parasitical', 'infectious'. You could've stuck to Spanish Fly, or Rohypnol if you were really desperate, you dick.

I'm sorry It happened on the Subway when you were making out with that girl.

I'm sorry the critters erupted from your testicles and your vitals at Time Square, spattering everyone in the station with your blood and giblets.

I'm sorry you're the Patient Zero in this Global Body Horror Apocalypse we have on our hands. Those ugly fuckers look like you, and I'm going to jail for this, dammit.

I'm sorry we'll be making vaccines from crunching your DNA. I've always wanted to win the Nobel Prize, but I didn't think you'd be the cause.

I'm sorry you're in pieces on this table, split up into varying sizes, and a lot of them in Ziplock baggies.

I'm sorry you can still hear me.

I'll autopsy you Monday, okay?

Mm, zombie stories. Yummy.

Thursday, May 13, 2004

Traitor!



Rangel Introduces Impeachment Articles Against Rumsfeld

thanks to commenter Rrose Sélavy from the eschaton.

Protest



JuliusBlog has photos of protestors reenacting torture in front of rumsfeld's house.

We Were Once Heroes



not that anecdotes prove anything, but they are fun to share.

remember all that anti-french bullshit that was going on full tilt when france dared to criticize the invasion of iraq? all the right-wing talk about 'cheese-eating surrender monkeys' displays nothing but the sheer depths of their ignorance of history. france, along with the rest of europe, endured both world wars on their home turf, unlike the united states.

the last major war that the united states endured on its own soil was the civil war. that alone goes a long way to explain how people here so casually propose war as a solution to just about every act of aggression.

my younger sister went to france on a school trip when she was in high school. during that trip, an elderly couple approached her, smiling and gracious, and very eager to talk to her and her classmates. my sister's high school-level grasp of french didn't allow for much communication, but she did her best.

the couple expressed their love and admiration for americans. although my sister was only 17, they wanted to offer their thanks for america's decision to enter world war I, which provided the decisive turning point for that awful conflict. despite the emnity that developed between their country and hers after the end of the second world war, they still held in their hearts a love for america and its people for their aid some eighty years before.

an honorable, good deed can go along way to cultivate good relations.

the reason why the people of iraq are turning against america is not because they hate americans. they hate the dishonesty, brutality and cynicism with which our government has conducted itself in their country.

even with revelations of abuse and torture of innocent iraqis swept up in random arrests, i think we could still salvage our reputation. we did away with saddam, and many iraqis will never forget that. if our country takes serious action against the people who enacted torture as a policy, not merely the soldiers we saw in the photographs, it would go a long way to making amends for those crimes. it would demonstrate that we do have some honor.

please read a view from a broad. her blog contains scores of stories about ordinary iraqis she encounters daily. even now, she encounters friendly iraqi civilians who marvel at being able to say in public, without fear, anything they like about saddam.

Big Hair, Big Trucks, Big Guns, and Big Religion



damn fine column (via Fergus at tabletalk):

Remember......we are in Bushworld. And in Bushworld, war is peace, dumb is smart, fear is freedom, black is white, and stop is go. More importantly, Jesus is American - and he is on our side and we are on his side and everyone who is not with us is on the side of the evildoers. George Orwell has got to be spinning in his grave.

I hate this bunch of fanatical, nutcase, wackos....They are taking us down a hole. The world is witnessing Texasization.... big hair, big trucks, big hats, big steaks, big religion, big politics, big guns, and big lies. Texasization is talking about God, but loving an execution. Texasization is delighting in squashing like bugs anyone who is not deemed fit to live in the world of the Saved. Remember that commercial a few years ago, "Texas. It's a whole other country"? Well, they were right. And unfortunately, we have the President of Texas running America. God help us.

more ...

Wednesday, May 12, 2004

Why Does KBR Hate America?



"You're just a Reservist ..."

from a view from a broad:

I noticed a couple people pointed me at some posts that actually used me as a source---and drew some of the wrong conclusions. In no particular order, here are the corrections:

The soldiers here as far as I know, never hooked up an internet café using KBR’s signal. There were some soldiers here who got extended abruptly, came here to rescue us, and got sent somewhere else. Some of them died. The KBR guy who told me I was ‘just a Reservist’ also talked gleefully about how KBR would soon cut off the internet access that some KBR people are surreptitiously providing some soldiers. Some of the KBR guys are nice, but it frankly confuses me. If there were no internet access at all here, there would simply be no issue. None. But everyone here has it except for the soldiers. We have Army access, which is ridiculously slow and blocks all civilian email sites---because of viruses, is the excuse.

more ...

Hope For A Moderate Iran



there is an intriguing editorial in the new york times today about political change in iran.

the iron rule of the mullahs may be doomed. i think perhaps that iranians, like the afghans, do not really like theocracy. the afghans celebrated the brief respite they enjoyed from the taliban's rule by whipping out the radios and dancing in the street, both forbidden under taliban rule.

the other point to take away from this editorial underscores the reality that true political change must come from within. university students in iran have been agitating for reform for a long while now. this agitation is less likely to be resented by the ruling class when it comes from their own children. such a call for reform carries more legitimacy than one forced by an invading force, which will always have over its head the suspicion of ulterior motives. if anything, an occupying force that demands less religious extremism will probably only encourage it. most people as individuals do not like having others tell them what to do. an invading force seeking to change a society's political system will inevitably be regarded as a threat to the culture and values of that society.

what i fear now is that the united states will start poking its long nose into the affairs of iran and do damage to this fragile movement for an more open society. at this time, with fundamentalist terrorists such a clear and present danger, we can ill afford to set off a new wave of fundamentalism in iran.

Tuesday, May 11, 2004

Please More Letters Like This



boston globe has a letter from john heffernan who works with Physicians for Human Rights.

Monday, May 10, 2004

Allow Them To Be Damned By Their Own Words



comment from joe schmoe at the washington monthly. i don't think there's any commentary needed:

I've had my ups and downs with respect to the Iraq war. The Falujah incident really shook me. I hadn't realized just how primitive the Middle East is, nor the level of savagery to which our enemies are used to resorting. It made me wonder whether the place really can be democratizd.

I mean, if the place has deterorated into a state where the mutilation of corpses is a political statement, maybe a leader like Sadaam really is the best that can be hoped for. Maybe the views attribted to the State Department Arabists, and those expressed by old-school conservatives like Scowcroft, were right after all.

Actaully, to be a little more precise, I am still sure that the Middle East can be democratized. I just don't know whether I want to do it any more. I mean, we've done a lot for the Iraqis. A whole lot. And, contrary to the beliefs expressed in the leftist press, we haven't hurt too many Iraqis. Yet they still flock to disgusting "leaders" like Sadr. The good people of Fallujah are still willing to fight and die for a cause which, befrit of ideology, basically amounts to "let's murder and torture our way to the top, and exploit those below."

Do I want American soldiers to die in order to bring democracy to the people of Fallujah? No. I'd rather nuke the fucking place. It's sometimes hard not to extend this sort of thinking to all of Iraq. I know that my views are wrong, but man, it's hard to stay the course when our eneimes are dancing around mutilated corpses. On a side note, the funny thing is, they think it will frighten us. It makes me want to kill them all, collteral damage be damned. If only they knew, we might see them reciting the Pledge of Allegance.

I have also had my doubts about the conduct of the war. Do we need more troops? Maybe, I really don't know. And I am really getting sick and tired of our weak responses to various events. When Sadr and his millita were hiding in that mosque, we should have bombed the damned thing into dust. I don't care if it's a holy site or not. If the Muslims will be angry, screw them. It's time for them to start acting like civilzed people, and we need to stop catering to their paranoia. Again, I know that this is an emotional response. We must keep the final objective -- a free and democratic Iraq -- in mind, and everything must be subordinated to that goal. If this means staying our hand in the short term, I understand. But it's hard.

So yes, I have had my misgivings. But then I realize two things:

First, we couldn't just leave Iraq, or any of those countries, alone. The nations of of the Middle East are deteriorating. They are getting worse. This is something that both leftists and paleocons never seem to grasp. Sadaam wasn't going to reform anything. The Saudis, bad as they are, will only be replaced by something worse. GDP is falling, infant mortaility is rising, literacy rates are declining. Hatred is growing. Weapons inspectors and the like change none of this. We can't leave the region alone. And yes, these nations will acquire WMD eventually. They've certainly been trying to do so. And we don't need that.

Second, the leftists aren't offering any viable alternatives. The UN is not an answer. Nor is more money for homeland security. Maybe these things will help, but it really is crazy to place all of our reliance in them.

For these reasons, I am sticking with Bush. I hope that the Democrats do produce a viable alternative strategy. I haven't seen one from Kerry, or anyone, and don't expect to see one during election season. But I hope I do, really. This is a serious issue, and all of our best people should be devoted to finding a solution to it.

We Have Truly Entered The Twilight Zone



sheer desperation.

i think this makes a good case for arguing that the decision to cut off 'non-essential' email access for the GIs in iraq is likewise a desperate attempt to keep the rest of those videos and photos (and perhaps evidence of torture in other prisons) from getting out to the press.

i think it's time to start the countdown to the impeachment proceedings.

Sunday, May 09, 2004

There's A War On!



hack!

"And that ought to remind us that -- while in America far too many politicians and journalists are positioning themselves politically -- there's still a war on, in Iraq and elsewhere. That should encourage the degree of seriousness and restraint that is customary in wartime, but I'm afraid that the current generation of politicians and journalists isn't very good at self-restraint."

shorter glenn reynolds:

the press shouldn't be covering this because there's a war on, dammit! you can't hold your leaders responsible for war crime committed under their watch because there's a war on dammit! if you dare to think they knew and ignored the war crimes, you're a crazen, partisan animal. there's a war on dammit!

my take -- you can't possibly talk about the war in iraq without discussing the miserable failure of leadership that allowed and encouraged this to happen. to deny, obsfucate, and minimize is born of a craven, partisan desire to protect your dear leaders at all cost. go get stuffed, you pompous windbag.

Must Be Southerners



okay, this is totally silly to point out, but i want to post at least once today before i descend into Programming Assignment From Hell:

Eschaton:

"'There was like a big disconnect at every level,' said the other. 'Guys were given jobs they had never done, contractors [working as interrogators] are in there acting like they're in the movies. The whole operation was like a chicken with its head cut off.'"

i know this phrase! my mom used to say this all the time. as a fellow a southerner, i am proud they tried to do the right thing.

Saturday, May 08, 2004

They. Them. Not Us.



i've been sparring with bush supporters over the torture revelations for the last two days. i've also strolled through several forums and blogs popular with them. to be truthful, the response to this horrific news hasn't been one of universal denial, but i think i can honestly state that attempts to deny or minimize the torture are a dominant theme in the staunchly pro-bush camp's reaction.

a lot of them seemed more disappointed that the photos and the as yet unrealeased videos gave liberals something to throw in their faces. i'll admit that i liked throwing it their faces. many of us who opposed this war said that it would make us more vulnerable. we said that there would be war crimes.

now we know that we were right. our country is going to pay a heavy price for this. our soldiers are going to pay for this. iraq will pay for this.

too many americans think that legitimacy can be assured through superior fire power. i think that nothing else highlights more the disjoint reality between actual moral behavior and the appearance of moral behavior that characterizes the neocon ideology. in this case, our country has failed in both. it's going to be a long time before america can claim any moral authority where human rights are concerned.

in anger, i posted a comment at political animal to the effect that america really needed its face rubbed in the reality of what we've done over there. i said that i wanted every last one of the people who gave support for the war to have to sit at the dinner table and answer their child's question, "Is this what the good guys do?" i wanted them to know exactly what they were flying all those damn flags for.

the conservative response was, "i question your patriotism."

have we gotten to the point where americans care more about how it will hurt our national pride to acknowledge without reservation, without equivocation, the atrocities that were committed in our names, by our troops than they do about the atrocities themselves? bush is infamous for his inability to admit mistakes and to apologize. it seems that a large contingent of his supporters also suffer from this failing of character. it's as if they think this is all about them.

the conservative websites i visited over the last week are rife with statements like, "this will give our enemies ammunition against us." the militarized vocabulary is striking... and chilling, because i don't that 'enemies' means just 'terrorists.' it means 'muslims,' and even more frightening, it also means 'liberals.'

this war isn't just a war of america against terrorists. it's a crusade against muslims, and it is also an internal war.

why is that right wingers hate the government so much when it comes to social spending that benefits american citizens, but it can do no wrong when it engages in military actions that result in tens of thousands of deaths on foreign soil? why?

more comments from the bush supporting contingent over at political animal: "the middle east needed cleaning up. who cares what the arab street thinks? how can you call for rumsfeld to resign when you don't know the whole story. most of the prisoners probably weren't innocent. our culture is superior and they know it. this is world war three. they are coming for us."

they. them. not us.

another commenter from political animal trotted out the following, "no one has apologized for 911. palestinians danced in the street when they heard about 911. palestinians blow up innocents in israel. the taliban!"

again, the war supporters define this war as a war against muslims, whom they see as an undiffereniated brown horde of murderers and barbarians at our gate. i can't count the number of people who still seem to think that iraq was an islamic dictatorship akin to the taliban. saddam's government was a brutal and bloodthirsty regime, but it was not a theocracy. women were allowed to work, drive, go to school, and walk down their streets unaccompanied.

jay severin recently advocated genocide against muslims, and there was hardly a peep in the press.

they. them. not us.

Orcinus Nails His Ten Theses to the Church Door



amazing post from orcinus:

Media Revolt: A Manifesto

Introduction

Journalism is kind of like the weather. We all like to complain about it, but none of us ever do anything about it.

Oh, many of us point out the problems. Some of us are even very good at it. But at what point does our criticism finally coalesce into action?

As a longtime journalist and sometime editor, I love to read the Daily Howler almost daily. There really is no one on the Web as good at eviscerating bad reporting as Bob Somerby. His Webzine is a big regular stop in my daily rounds.

But lately, he's been even more on-point than usual, which is saying something. In one of his recent pieces, Somerby pointed with a kind of savage finality to the bottom line of the media's flagrant frivolousness and demeaning of the national discourse: It puts us all at serious risk.

What does Dowd have on her mind today? George Bush can't answer questions about 9/11. And John Kerry doesn't make his own sandwiches!

Of course, inanity has been this corps' stock-in-trade over at least the last dozen years. When you read your paper each day, you read the work of a vacuous press which is happy to display its Millionaire Pundit Values -- a press corps addicted to trivia and inanity. While Osama plotted in the summer of 2001, they rubbed their thighs about Chandra Levy. Meanwhile, they've turned your elections into trivia festivals, built around earth tones, Love Story, dog pills, blow-jobs. Now we're handed our current fare. What is the headline on Dowd's piece? "Guns and Peanut Butter," it says.

Somerby displays an unusual amount of passion in this piece. In fact, it might even seem a little over the top, except for two things: 1) he's exactly right, and 2) what he's saying should indeed make us all very, very angry.

more ...

Preach It!



another great link from the anti-war blog:

Primal Scream

“Stop with the hindsight”, says one writer. “Be patient,” says another.

Oh, no, let’s not stop with the hindsight. Not when so many remain so profoundly, dangerously, incomprehensibly unable to acknowledge that the hindsight shows many people of good faith and reasonable mien predicting what has come to pass in Iraq. Let’s not be patient: after all, the people counseling patience now showed a remarkable lack of it before the war.

One of my great pleasures in life, I am ashamed to say, is saying “I told you so” when I give prudential advice and it is ignored. In the greatest “I told you so” of my life, I gain no pleasure at all in saying it. It makes me dizzy with sickness to say it, incandescent with rage to say it. It sticks in my throat like vomit. It makes me want to punch some abstract somebody in the mouth. It makes me want to scrawl profane insults in this space and abandon all hope of reasonable conversation.

That’s because the people who did what they did, said what they said, on Iraq, the people who ignored or belitted counsel to the contrary, didn’t just screw themselves. They screwed me and my family and my people and my nation and the world. They screwed a very big pooch and they mostly don’t even have the courage to admit it. They pissed away assets and destroyed tools of diplomacy and persuasion that will take a generation to reacquire at precisely the moment that we need them most.

more ...

Proud Americans



linked from the anti-war blog:

Good ol' girl who enjoyed cruelty

Pointing crudely at the genitals of a naked, hooded Iraqi, the petite brunette with a cigarette hanging from her lips epitomised America's shame over revelations US soldiers routinely tortured inmates at Abu Ghraib jail near Baghdad.

Lynndie England, 21, a rail worker's daughter, comes from a trailer park in Fort Ashby, West Virginia, which locals proudly call "a backwoods world".

She faces a court martial, but at home she is toasted as a hero.

At the dingy Corner Club Saloon they think she has done nothing wrong.

"A lot of people here think they ought to just blow up the whole of Iraq," Colleen Kesner said.

"To the country boys here, if you're a different nationality, a different race, you're sub-human. That's the way girls like Lynndie are raised.

"Tormenting Iraqis, in her mind, would be no different from shooting a turkey. Every season here you're hunting something. Over there, they're hunting Iraqis."

more ...

Freepers Won't Face Up To The Truth



comment from Anonymous at the eschaton:

Sick. I just ventured over to freeperville to see if they were eating their own with these new accusations.

Someone had just posted Drudge's lead into this story. Within 2 minutes it had been pulled by the moderator of freeperville.

They can only deny this for so long.
I think there tightly wound fundy heads are going to explode.

i'm sure this was all about 'protecting the children.'

Friday, May 07, 2004

I Retract My Earlier Call For Mercy



after reading this comment from john at the eschaton, i've changed my mind. since the story is that some of the torturers were prison guards, i think we should throw the motherfucker in jail where he can experience some of that old-fashioned skull and bones fun.

Torture



from den valdron:

The depiction of prisoners is also fascinating. There's a recurrent theme of sexual degradation here. Forced nudity, forced poses of homosexual coupling. Hooded nudity. Arrangement of bodies. This is serial killer pathology, presented without a trace of self consciousness or guilt and played for laughs. There is a very weird kind of distancing going on, the prisoners are being visually emasculated and dehumanized, hooding them, posing them suggests that on critical levels the jailers are not regarding them as human beings. Now, its played for fun in the pictures, but it suggests that underneath the 'fun' there is a real pathology going on, a fundamental inhumanity.

emphasis mine.

Interesting Thoughts On the Cheney Energy Commission



from commenter defjef at political animal:

Remember the undisclosed Cheney energy policy task force? They probably concluded that oil, the life blood of the US economy was in the hands of unreliable OPEC states... and that our policy should be to stabilize and have control over the flow of oil. Even tho the 7 sisters (how many oil majors are their now?) don't control the fields, they make their bucks from getting it to market, refining and selling.

From a larger economic standpoint, all their operations, and profits were beholded to the OPEC cartel. A good bet is that the USA energy task force considered a policy of grabbing control of the Iraqi oil fields, the second largest proven reserves. This would have a calming and stabilizing impact on USA energy/economy for the near future.

Next would be Iran and finally Saudi Arebia. Of course we are extremely pissed at Venezuela for wanting complete control over their energy resources. The former regimes were in the pockets of the US energy companies.

Can the US compete in free market oil market? Not the way they would like with crony capitalizsm, where absence of control of the market is not present. As the world's energy needs increase competition for oil WILL drive the price of oil up... and without a completely different source for our energy, it will create havoc in our economy. We have been coddled with cheap energy since we began extracting it from PA. We have shown no will to develop alternate energy sources and systems... And the marge oil companies are like the dinosaurs facing extinction for their failure to evolve and adapt. They see the end and and they want to make it while they can...

That is how I see it.

Baghdad Burning Speaks



from riverbend, an iraqi blog:

I sometimes get emails asking me to propose solutions or make suggestions. Fine. Today's lesson: don't rape, don't torture, don't kill and get out while you can- while it still looks like you have a choice... Chaos? Civil war? Bloodshed? We’ll take our chances- just take your Puppets, your tanks, your smart weapons, your dumb politicians, your lies, your empty promises, your rapists, your sadistic torturers and go.

The White Power Collection



who would have guessed that this piece of trash would actually be a frigging collector's item.

from the reviews:


The Truth About Our World, July 7, 2003
Reviewer: eigthlegion from Queensland, Australia.


Ben Klassen has done a brilliant job in expanding on his ideas from his previous book, Nature's Eternal Religion, into a fully comprehensive lifestyle and religion.

He incorporates all aspects of life, from the food we eat, how we grow them, medical misnomers and truths, societal needs, historical aspects relating to today's events, the essential truths behind Christianity, as well as, the solutions to the problems mentioned.

If you are looking for a faith or an all-encompassing life-view to based yourself upon, then you cannot go pass this book. With it, you do not need to worry about your future, as you know how to plan it and live fully.

tired of of all the mental excercise involved in thinking for yourself? does your head ache at the prospect of independantly digesting information and forming opinions for yourself? does the endless rows of philosopical and historical texts on your local library's shelves get you down? we understand that in today's world, people are too busy to engage in lifetime learning. don't despair. we here at white power corp can provide you with a ready-made, out-of-the-box crackpot ideology for you to live by. start burning crosses in other people's yards today!


A profound book!, May 12, 2003
Reviewer: A reader from Alsip, IL United States


The White Man's Bible could conceivably be the most profound book written in the 20th Century. The other would be Nature's Eternal Religion by the same author, Ben Klassen. Every American of European descent needs to get their hands on this book. A real page turner. Be ready to have the blinders removed and a lifetime of media induced guilt lifted from your spirit. This book will change your life.

did the fact that the girl you liked in high school dated the black football quarterback still make you burn with rage? does it stick in your craw that baseball replaced lynching as america's favorite pasttime? did your homoerotic feelings towards the aforementioned black football player disturb you deeply? is that chip on your shoulder becoming too heavy to bear? don't worry. we'll help you carry it. buy the honky bible today!


A True Bible For The European Peoples, June 9, 1999
Reviewer: An Amazon.com Customer


A stunning book. It follows well in the footsteps of Klassen's first book, Nature's Eternal Religion. I would recommend that Nature's Eternal Religion be read first. It is a shocker and contains so much "popularly unknown" history about the European people that it is actually a very good primer for coming up with ideas for further research.

The White Man's Bible adds to this, for example, with chapters on the Mexican War, Queen Isabella of Spain, traiters among us, and additional information on the future use of the Latin Language. This is a book to make one truly "born again."

The World Church of the Creator has a couple of winners here. Read them yourself and find out why.

Thank You. Tacitus

there's nothing more fun than nostalgia for a fantasized historical construction straight from the mind of a mentally deranged heretic. don't allow yourself to be left out of excitement of a shared psychosis. join our cult today!

Whose Fucking Business Is This?



Teresa Heinz Kerry nearly had abortion

And They Want Us To Vote Electronically?



Hackers access data on nearly 400,000

Just Damn



Man loses, finds $11,000 in one day

Thursday, May 06, 2004

Utter Bullshit



link from Kalinakka at table talk:

Ney says Iraq prison abuse hearing would hurt morale

An upcoming Senate hearing on Iraq prisoner abuse will hurt troop morale and benefit America's enemies, an Ohio Republican said Wednesday.

"The last thing our nation needs now is for others to inflame this hatred by providing fodder and sound bites for our enemies," said Rep. Robert Ney of St. Clairsville.

... snip ...

A Senate hearing likely would turn into a media event where both Republicans and Democrats posture to score political points, he said. Instead, the Pentagon should investigate the incidents and soldiers and contractors who mistreated prisoners should face a court-martial or be prosecuted in court.

"I think we need to trust that Secretary Rumsfeld will do a top-to-bottom look at this," Ney said.

And the outrage over American abuses is biased, Ney said. When an Iraqi mob murdered, burned and hung American contractors in March in Fallujah, he said he saw no similar reaction.

"Where was this collective world outrage when the mass graves of Saddam Hussein's regime were uncovered?" Ney asked.

this is just indefensible. publicly owning up to what those assholes did over there is the *ONLY* and i mean *ONLY* acceptable response there is. it is neither good nor wise to present the image to the world that all we want to do is cover this up. by hiding behind closed doors and minimizing what happened, we endanger other soldiers who are completely innocent of this heinous behavior. that's going to hurt troop morale more than forcing them to acknowledge that some of their own are war criminals. we also don't want to send the message one can get away with sexually abusing and torturing prisoners of war.

Blast From The Past



link from Kalinakka at table talk:

The Choices Made: LESSONS FROM MY LAI ON DRAWING THE LINE

Gunners Larry Colburn, left, and John Wennergren flew in gunships like this, or low and fast in OH23s, where they drew fire to identify enemy targets.

Thirty-four years ago this coming Saturday, more than 500 unarmed women, children and old men were raped, mutilated and killed by American soldiers on a rampage in the Vietnamese hamlet known as My Lai.

The massacre was stopped when a 24-year-old American helicopter pilot landed in the line of fire between the U.S. troops and Vietnamese civilians. While his 20-year-old crew chief and 18-year-old gunner covered his back, the pilot confronted one of the leaders of the massacre, then evacuated 10 villagers from a bunker. The crew also rescued a child clinging to his dead mother in a ditch.

more ...

The Aftermath Of Six Morons



link from Doxieone at table talk:

Arabiya TV Airs Videotape of 'American Hostage'

Dubai-based Al Arabiya television aired on Thursday what it said was a videotape showing an American engineer working for the Pentagon held hostage in Iraq.

The network said it had received the tape from a group calling itself The Islamic Rage Squadrons which said it had kidnapped the man on May 3. He was shown blindfolded with a checkered Arab scarf and wearing a jacket.

"My name is Aban Elias from Denver, Colorado," an Arabiya transcript quoted the man as saying.

"I am a civil engineer working in Baghdad...and we are working with the Pentagon... I was kidnapped and I call upon Muslim organizations to interfere to release me."

The network said a copy of the man's U.S. passport showed he had been born in Iraq. Arabiya said the kidnappers had not made any demands.

Dozens of Westerners have been kidnapped in Iraq recently. Some have been released and others killed by their captors.

Amazon Recommendations



i've finally gotten around to adding amazon recommendations to WFD. world war one heralded the advent of modern warfare in all its ugly reality. my first job out of college was writing online study guides for english language literature.

writing the guide for all quiet on the western front was emotionally draining. what makes this book even more compelling is that it was written from the perspective of a german soldier, but it could have been written by any common combat soldier. the novel viciously tears to shreds the romantic myths of warfare.

we need to question the desire to create 'heroes' out of people like pat tillman and jessica lynch. one of the most poignant scenes in remarque's novel takes place when the narrator visits his family while on leave. he is unable to tell them and other civilians the awful truth about his experiences on the war front.

it's time to stop boxing soldiers into ideologically comfortable myths. let them and their experiences speak for themselves because neither belongs to us. if you can't face the whole ugly truth about war, then you shouldn't support it. no more minimizing the catastrophic effects of combat on our troops or the prisoners of war that some of them torture, humiliate and abuse.

Primary Sources



got this link from commenter anonymous in nc at the eschaton.

Making Young Americans Into Monsters



i order you to read this now.

now, i order you to read this. nothing about war has changed in the last 9 decades. we just have bigger guns.

Such Fine Americans



link from suburban guerrilla:

The torture victim

... snip ...

Speaking through a translator, Mr Abd explained that as an Arab, perhaps the most degrading aspect of the abuse was the sexual humiliation. During one session of abuse, he and six other prisoners who had been involved in a fight were stripped naked, forced to straddle each other's backs and then made to simulate oral sex.

Mr Abd said he recalled having his hood removed and being told by the soldiers' Arabic translator to masturbate as he looked at Ms England. "She was laughing and she put her hands on her breasts," he told the newspaper. "Of course I couldn't do it, so they beat me in the stomach and I fell to the ground. The translator said, 'Do it, do it. It's better than being beaten.' I said 'How can I do it?' So I put my hand on my penis, just pretending."

At this point, one of the other prisoners ­ a friend of Mr Abd's identified as Hussein ­ was pushed towards his genitals while the hood was put back over his own head.

"They made him sit next to me. My penis was very close to his mouth. I did not know it was my friend because of the hood. It was humiliating. We didn't think that we would survive. All of us believed we would be killed and we would not get out alive," said Mr Abd. One of the photographs appears to show this precise moment.

more ...

at first, i was stunned that the soldiers had so little understanding of the strict physical modesty that is so important to devout muslims. after reading this, i conclude that this behavior was in fact designed to show an utter lack of respect for the importance of physical modesty. they knew that for devout muslims, this behavior would have a special character of shame and humiliation.

after all the fuss about gays in the military, here we have young, red-blooded, heterosexual soldiers forcing prisoners of war to simulate homosexual sex for their amusement. on american soil, this kind of behavior would constitute a hate crime, and that is exactly what this sort of abuse was. a hate crime rooted in both homophobia and hatred of muslims.

Hack



link from commenter Holden Caulfield at the eschaton:

Greenspan Says Soaring Budget Deficits Are Long-Term Threat

America's soaring federal budget deficits represent a major obstacle to the country's long-term economic stability, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan warned on Thursday.

Greenspan told a banking conference that the federal budget deficit was a bigger worry to him than America's soaring trade deficit or the high level of household debt because those two problems can be corrected by market forces.

more ...

greenspan is a crock. he supported the tax cuts that created this deficit. he's lost all credibility. what can you expect from a former(?) ann rand devotee.

The Twilight Zone



if i were supersticious, i'd say that there is more than mere coincidence in the convergence of controversy over kerry's vietnam service and and the revelations of abuse of iraqi prisoners of war. one of the key factors in the uproar over kerry's past military service is his testimony regarding war crimes committed by american soldiers in vietnam.

i don't understand how right wingers can call kerry a traitor for publicizing the horrible things americans did abroad, yet still express outrage at what today's soldiers are doing in iraq. neither do i understand the frequent rebuttal they employ -- 'saddam was worse.'

intellectual dishonesty at its worst.

i wonder if they'd call the soldier who reported the abuse to his superiors a traitor too?

this whole mess has the character of a greek tragedy.

Ex-Detainee Speaks



Ex-Detainee Tells of Anguishing Treatment at Iraq Prison

Hasham Mohsen Lazim traded used tires for a living in the Shiite slum of Sadr City. He had been in trouble only once in his life, he said, a desperate time six years ago when he deserted Saddam Hussein's army to support his wife and four small children.

... snip ...

"Something awful happened to me," Lazim said during a two-hour interview broken by long pauses of silent despair. "I will never forget it until the day I die."

... snip ...

Lazim said he was arrested last August after a taxi, in which he and a neighbor were riding, broke down on Canal Street in Baghdad, just a few blocks from the off-ramp that would have taken them home. U.S. soldiers approached and searched the taxi. In the trunk, they discovered a pistol and other weapons that Lazim said he could not see.

Soldiers placed hoods and handcuffs on the men, then took them to a former cigarette factory being used as a military base.

... snip ...

Still hooded, Lazim was then inspected by the U.S. soldier, who opened Lazim's shirt and examined his arms. Lazim said the soldier was looking for the telltale tattoo of an eagle worn by members of Saddam's Fedayeen, a militia loyal to Hussein. He found instead a tattoo that said: "I Love You Mom." But Lazim said the soldier kept asking him: "Why were you trying to shoot Americans?"

"I said I wasn't, that the taxi driver had already said the guns were his," Lazim said. "And no one was shooting at Americans. At the time, we liked them."

more ...

New Reason For The Iraq War



another comment from little green footballs:

... snip ...

"Yes, there's a war going on right now, a war which is ultimately fighting for our freedom and must not lose."

oh, so it wasn't about liberating iraq. we invaded iraq to fight for our freedom.

more:

"It will be a long time before the west truly understands the Arab psychology... hopefully it won't be too late. We MUST hold these people to the same moral standards that we hold ourselves to, otherwise they'll never learn."

excuse me? the arab psychology? what the fuck is this person saying? i thought we went to war to liberate iraq from saddam's tyrannical, bloodthirsty reign. isn't that holding a middle eastern government to a moral standard that despises 'rape rooms' and 'torture.' it would appear then, that we are failing to live up to the standards hinted at here.

translation:

the arab world needs to be taught a lesson, and we are the ones to teach them.

"The feeding frenzy demonstrates that even those who hate America and the UK - and never miss a chance to express that hatred - expect us all to adhere to a certain standard of moral decency."

okay, i'm really getting lost in this rather tortured logic. people who expect american troops to abide by the geneva convention (ie, expect us to live up to a 'certain moral standard' that includes not torturing prisoners or war) 'hate america.'

"It is useful to remember these incidents and compare the near indifference they have elicited from those same "human-rights" organizations, media outlets and America/UK-bashers involved in the feeding frenzy accompanying the Abu Ghraib prison and Iraqi prisoner abuse scandals. The disparity of outrage is quite revealing."

actually, the only thing revealed is this person's complete ignorance of the efforts that human rights organizations have made to raise consciousness about human rights abuses all over the world. it's just that a lot of bush supporters didn't really give a shit about human rights abuses until this war happened.

"The press were quiet when our boys were, in many cases ambushed by terrorists in civilian clothes and murdered. There was a 24 hour outrage when the 4 US civilians were murdered in Fallujah, their bodies subsequently burnt and mutilated, by people who have no respect for the fallen."

actually, i remember this being all over the news. so, i call bullshit. whereas the abuses of detainees by american soldiers was first reported in the media months ago, but only recently got wide coverage.