|
|||
Proudly afflicting the comfortable [and collecting shiny things] since March 2003 | |||
Send Magpie an email! RSS Feeds Click button to subscribe. Need a password? Click the button! Cost of the Iraq War [US$] (JavaScript Error)
[Find out more here]BLOGS WE LIKE 3quarksdaily Alas, a Blog alphabitch Back to Iraq Baghdad Burning Bitch Ph.D. blac (k) ademic Blog Report Blogs by Women BOPNews Broadsheet Burnt Orange Report Confined Space Cursor Daily Kos Dangereuse trilingue Echidne of the Snakes Effect Measure Eschaton (Atrios) feministe Feministing Firedoglake Follow Me Here gendergeek Gordon.Coale The Housing Bubble New! I Blame the Patriarchy Juan Cole/Informed Comment Kicking Ass The King's Blog The Krile Files Left Coaster librarian.net Loaded Orygun Making Light Marian's Blog mediagirl Muslim Wake Up! Blog My Left Wing NathanNewman.org The NewsHoggers Null Device Orcinus Pacific Views Pandagon The Panda's Thumb Pedantry Peking Duck Philobiblon Pinko Feminist Hellcat Political Animal Reality-Based Community Riba Rambles The Rittenhouse Review Road to Surfdom Romenesko SCOTUSblog The Sideshow The Silence of Our Friends New! Sisyphus Shrugged skippy Suburban Guerrilla Talk Left Talking Points Memo TAPPED This Modern World The Unapologetic Mexican New! veiled4allah Wampum War and Piece wood s lot xymphora MISSING IN ACTION Body and Soul fafblog General Glut's Globlog Respectful of Otters RuminateThis WHO'S IN CHARGE HERE? Magpie is a former journalist, attempted historian [No, you can't ask how her thesis is going], and full-time corvid of the lesbian persuasion. She keeps herself in birdseed by writing those bad computer manuals that you toss out without bothering to read them. She also blogs too much when she's not on deadline, both here and at Pacific Views. Magpie roosts in Portland, Oregon, where she annoys her housemates (as well as her cats Medea, Whiskers, and Jane Doe) by attempting to play Irish music on the fiddle and concertina. If you like, you can send Magpie an email! WHO LINKS TO MAGPIE? Ask Technorati. Or ask WhoLinksToMe.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. |
Saturday, November 26, 2005
Burning Taliban bodies was 'poor judgment.'
About six weeks ago, we blogged about how US troops burned the bodies of Taliban dead outside a village in Afghanistan and, as the bodies burned, broadcasting taunts at Taliban fighters believed to be hiding in the village. [See posts here and here.] As we noted at the time, Muslims believe that a body must be buried within 24 hours of death, so the burnings caused more than a bit of consternation in Islamic countries. The burnings also appeared to violate the Geneva Conventions, which require that the burial of people killed in a war 'should be honourable, and, if possible, according to the rites of the religion to which the deceased belonged.' The US military has completed its investigation into the incident and, as we certainly expected, the findings are pretty much a whitewash. According to investigators, the troops committed no crime and the claims of the unit's officers that the bodies were burnt for hygienic reasons have been upheld. Speaking at a news conference in Kandahar, the US-led coalition's operational commander, Maj-Gen Jason Kamiya, said the soldiers involved had not been aware that what they were doing was wrong. Four soldiers are being reprimanded for their roles in the incident: The two officers who ordered the burnings for 'poor judgement and lack of knowledge and respect of Afghan culture and customs,' and two NCOs for making the taunting broadcasts in violation of military rules. Can we say 'Sweep the incident under the rug'? Via BBC. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:31 PM | Get permalink
Editors have so much to answer for.
We recently suggested that Mark Twain stopped too soon when he said that there were two processes that nobody should ever see: making sausage and making laws. To us, at least, the process of writing and publishing is equally as nasty. As if to prove our point, author John Scalzi shows us the terrible things that editing has done to his current book project. Definitely not for the weak-stomached. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:26 PM | Get permalink
Who gets to be an 'enemy combatant'?
And get packed off to indefinite imprisonment, without charges? As far as outsiders can tell, it's anyone that Dubya's administration feels like putting on ice. Via NY Times. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:22 PM | Get permalink
Friday, November 25, 2005
How would you like your laptop?
Rare or well-done? So was tragedy averted? And how did Lucky White Girl's laptop get into that oven anyway? Go here to find out. Via Philobiblon. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:09 PM | Get permalink
From the 'Life after Death' Department.
From another story that we couldn't make up if we tried: Former FEMA Director Michael Brown, heavily criticized for his agency's slow response to Hurricane Katrina, is starting a disaster preparedness consulting firm to help clients avoid the sort of errors that cost him his job. Via AP. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:00 AM | Get permalink
Thursday, November 24, 2005
Greenhouse gases are at 'unprecedented' levels.
The current levels of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the atmosphere are at their highest point in the last 650,000 years, according to new data from scientists studying Antarctic ice. They've also found that, during the past 50 years, carbon dioxide levels have risen 200 times faster than during any other time over the last eight ice ages. These disturbing new findings come from ice cores taken from the Antarctic, which go back 210,000 years further into the past than any cores previously available. Air bubbles preserved in these cores give snapshots of what the earth's atmosphere was like when the ice formed. [Photo: British Antarctic Survey] What's causing the jump in greenhouse gas levels? According to Thomas Stocker of the University of Bern [Switzerland], the burning of fossil fuels by industry is the culprit, raising the levels of greenhouse gases far higher than anything that could be accounted for by natural causes. Says Stocker, who led the team that analyzed the Antarctic ice: "This is really something unprecedented." After searching ice spanning the period of 390,000?650,000 years before present, Stocker's team has discovered that carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere did not exceed 290 parts per million during that time. Today, that figure is around 375 parts per million. Via news@nature.com. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:03 PM | Get permalink
'Dirty bomber' turns into a bit player.
And a critical constitutional question that of whether Dubya or any other US president can order a citizen held indefinitely and without charges remains undecided. Or, as some hold, worse than undecided. Faced with a looming deadline in a Supreme Court case that could have decided whether Dubya has the legal power to hold as 'enemy combatants,' the feds earlier this week decided to finally charge Jose Padilla with a specific crime. In taking this change of direction, however, the Justice Department has given up on its portrayal of Padilla as a hard-core al-Qaeda loyalist who planned to set off a 'dirty bomb' in a US city. Instead, this dangerous man has been reduced to being a minor player in the schemes of others to support Islamic terrorists outside the US. Those four others were indicted last year on conspiracy to further murder and kidnapping outside the United States and to provide material aid to terrorists; and with directly providing material aid to terrorists. Padilla faces the same charges, but is now being portrayed as a sort of terrorist wannabee and gofer. According to a story earlier this week from Knight Ridder's Washington Bureau, the change in the government's approach to dealing with Padilla is another example of how Dubya's administration talks big about its summary powers of detention, but shies away from any Supreme Court test of those powers in part because a Supreme Court hearing of the issue could expose matters that the administration would rather keep secret. Scott Silliman, an expert on national security law at Duke University, said the administration's decision on Padilla "clearly is an exercise in damage control to avoid an adverse legal decision." The feds' decision to charge Padilla doesn't just avoid a Supreme Court decision on the question of a president's power to hold citizens indefinitely, without charges. It also leaves intact a decision by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals that Dubya can indeed hold Padilla or other citizen as an 'enemy combatant.' As Jack Balkin points out, this is not good: That result is particularly worthy of note, for the Fourth Circuit opinion may yet come in handy if the Administration needs to hold another U.S. citizen within the geographical boundaries of that circuit. [Go here for a map showing which states are in the 4th Circuit.] The Administration now knows that the Fourth Circuit is a Constitution-free zone. It can, if it needs to, declare someone an enemy combantant, thrown them into a military prison, and interrogate them at its leisure. It will take years for a citizen to exhaust his appeals and reach the Supreme Court; and when the citizen finally gets to the Supreme Court, the Administration has the option to indict and moot the case (as it did with Padilla) or, if the Court's personnel have changed sufficiently in the interim, risk an appeal to the Supremes. The lack of a Supreme Court ruling on the question of 'enemy combatants' poses even broader problems. According to former civil liberties litigator Glenn Greenwald, the power claimed by Dubya's administration threatens the very foundations of a democratic state. Critically, the Administration has not just decreed that they have the power to imprison U.S. citizens without due process, but they are actively exercising this power. No matter how many times one says it, it never ceases to amaze and disgust: There are two U.S. citizens (that we know of) Jose Padilla and Yaser Esam Hamdi who have now spent years languishing in military prisons, put there by a U.S. Federal Government which has refused to even charge them with a crime. They have been kept in solitary confinement and, worse, imprisoned indefinitely, for months even denied the right to speak with any lawyers. Greenwald has much more to say about this subject. We highly recommend reading his entire post, and this later post. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:21 AM | Get permalink
After three years in a US Navy brig ...
... that infamous 'dirty bomber' Jose Padilla finally gets charged with something. And, as Ted Rall points out, Padilla will get to meet with a lawyer, too. You can see the rest of Rall's cartoon here. And Rall's website is full of more of his political cartoons. Via Association of American Editorial Cartoonists. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:02 AM | Get permalink
Los Angeles on two wheels.
'Bicycles' and 'Los Angeles' aren't two words usually found in the same sentence. But over at Slate, Andy Bowers puts them together a whole bunch as he describes what a bicycle commuter's life is like in the City of Angels. Instead of the major thoroughfares I use when driving, I cycled quiet back streets the kind that infuriate me in a car because of all the stop signs and the impossibility of crossing major streets without a signal. I found my commute so easy that I soon started looking for other short trips I could make on the bike picking up a few groceries, going to the gym, returning library books then longer ones. I plotted new stealth routes no driver would ever take. (Tip: The satellite photos on Google Earth are much better for doing this than a road map, because you can see exactly what the streets look like.) Bowers' article brings back memories of our own bike commuting in the early 1970s in the San Gabriel Valley, a big mess of suburbs east of downtown LA. We rode our bike to work at the phone company and to classes at community college, sometimes covering 50 miles a day if we had to go to school more than once. Even using the main streets, as we were often forced to do, our commute was much nicer than the same trip in a car. We actually got to see the neighborhoods we rode through, and if something really caught our eye, it was easy to stop and look at it. And, as Bowers has also discovered, the time it took to get from one place to another when bikings wasn't much differnt than the time it took driving: Our 8-mile trip to school, for example, took fewer than 10 minutes less than driving, largely because we didn't have to circle the college's parking lots looking for a place to put the car. There were down sides to the bike commute. Drivers weren't much friendlier to bicycles then than they are now. And riding a bike on a smoggy LA day is no fun, let us tell you. But all of that was easily offset each time we rode by those cars waiting in long gas station lines during the first 1970s oil shock. We've gotten much lazier over the years, sadly, and even though we live in a city that's very bicycle-friendly Portland, OR we don't get on our bike that often. We really should change that. Via Slate. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:00 AM | Get permalink
Wednesday, November 23, 2005
In living color.
There's a new set of SurveyUSA polls for all fifty states, and Dubya's popularity continues to sag. What's really interesting, though, is if you put all of the polling data into a map of the country. As you can see, there are only eight states where Dubya's approval rating even cracks the 45% barrier. While there's still a year to go until the 2006 midterm elections, and the Democrats have lots of chances to bungle things between now and then, this map can't be good news for the GOP. The data used for the map is here. The map itself comes from dreaminonempty's diary at Daily Kos. | | Posted by Magpie at 7:21 PM | Get permalink
Curiouser and curiouser.
Sometimes those stories that we decide not to blog come back and make us reconsider. The one that's doing it to us this time appeared in Tuesday's UK Daily Mirror. The story cited a secret memo from PM Tony Blair's office containing the record of an exchange in which Blair attempted to talk Dubya out of bombing the main offices of Aljazeera in Qatar. A source said: "There's no doubt what Bush wanted, and no doubt Blair didn't want him to do it." Al-Jazeera is accused by the US of fuelling the Iraqi insurgency. We passed on the story because, to put it bluntly, the Daily Mirror is not the most reliable source of news in the world. Since the story didn't quote the memo directly, but only talked to anonymous sources who claimed to have seen the memo, the story's credibility was, in our opinion, pretty low. Come today and it may be another matter. The UK Guardian is reporting that Tony Blair's government is threatening any newspaper that publishes the memo with prosecution under the Official Secrets Act. Richard Wallace, editor of the Daily Mirror, said last night: "We made No 10 fully aware of the intention to publish [the memo] and were given 'no comment' officially or unofficially. Suddenly 24 hours later we are threatened under section 5 [of the secrets act]". According to the Guardian, Dubya's alleged threat to bomb Aljazeera took place during a conversation in which Blair expressed anger over certain aspects of US operations in Iraq especially the assault on Fallujah, which was going on at the time the memo was written. So it appears that the story we dismissed yesterday has more to it than we'd thought. We have to wonder:
Inquiring magpies want to know. More: Aljazeera has responded to the Daily Mirror report on the Blair-Dubya memo. "Before making any conclusions Aljazeera needs to be absolutely sure regarding the authenticity of the memo and would hope for a confirmation from Downing Street as soon as possible. | | Posted by Magpie at 11:33 AM | Get permalink
The rich aren't like the rest of us.
They don't worry much about how much their health care costs. Via NY Times [original here]. Thanks to The Big Picture for the pointer. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:03 AM | Get permalink
US indy magazines in trouble.
We don't usually filch an entire post from another blog, but we don't figure that we could do any better than Jaclyn Friedman already has. Hey! You! Read Indy Mags? Via PopPolitics.com. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:01 AM | Get permalink
Is France is 'back to normal'?
Well, the French ambassador to the US thinks so. According to ambassdor Jean-David Levitte, religion had little to do with the rioting that swept his country for three weeks. Instead, he told Reuters, the mostly young rioters were angry because of discrimination and lack of economic opportunities. "We know that jihadists are recruiting teenagers, but this has nothing to do with the general unrest in those neighborhoods," he said. The teenagers want to be considered 100 percent French, he said. "They want full equality. Levitte's words about the unrest in France are more sensible than much of what has come from the government in Paris, where [among other things] the Interior Minister called the rioters 'scum.' Levitte's characterization of France's current state as 'normal' is dead-on, although not in the way that the ambassador meant. According to journalist Doug Ireland, the right-center French government has responded to the riots by doing nothing to deal with the problems that caused them, much as the Socialist government that preceded it was content to ignore the inequalities and discrimination faced by citizens of African and Mideastern origin. The Chirac-Villepin government's response to the root causes of the rebellion was pitiful -- and reflected [conservative essayist] Guy Sorman's diagnosis that, as he put it, the French political classes "believe that nothing should change because France is perfect as she is and perfect as she was." The centerpiece of the paltry social measures announced with great fanfare by Prime Minister Villepin was lowering the legal age for apprenticeships in manual technical trades -- to only 14 (multiple police reports at the height of the violence suggested the average age of arrested rioters was 16). This age-lowering Jules_ferry twist shredded a century and a half of formal French educational policy, which has always been to maximize the educational experience of children; and it now gives an official imprimatur to permitting kids to end their schooling just when it becomes most crucial. Ireland's comments above are part of an excellent article describing how the riots ended, what the French government has been doing since the rioting stopped, and how the riots may affect the electoral fortunes of the opposition Socialist party. We highly recommend reading the whole piece, which you can find here. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:00 AM | Get permalink
Tuesday, November 22, 2005
Don't whine about all those lemons!
Mikhaela shows us how we can make a sea of lemonade if we just realize that tax cuts for the rich are good for everyone! Check out the rest of the cartoon here. If you want to see more of Mikhaela's political cartoons, take a look over here. | | Posted by Magpie at 4:23 PM | Get permalink
No, it won't make hair grow on your palms.
Your fate will be far, far worse. You can read the whole sordid tale of woe if you go here. Via Neatorama. | | Posted by Magpie at 3:39 PM | Get permalink
How intelligent is your design?
Find out by answering these suggested questions for the new Kansas science exam, courtesy of commentary writer Eric Ringham of the Minneapolis Star Tribune:
You'll find the full exam over here. Via Pharyngula. [Broken links fixed 11/22] | | Posted by Magpie at 12:01 AM | Get permalink
Mamas, don't let your kids grow up to be authors.
Mark Twain once said that there were two things that you never wanted to see being made: sausages and legislation. We suspect that there were originally three on Twain's list, but that he dropped the third writing and publishing books in order to protect the sensibilities of his posterity. Here's a case in point: One of the most enjoyable books we've read in the past few months is The Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists by Gideon Defoe. It's a Python-esque tale of Charles Darwin's fateful encounter with a shipload of pirates, after the buccaneers attack the Beagle [Darwin's ship] in the mistaken notion that it's full of royal bullion. [If you haven't read it yet and have a taste for the very silly, we commend the book to your attention.] In the UK Guardian, Oliver Burkeman has the tale of how the book went from being a joke between Defoe and some drunken friends to finding a publisher to showing up in bookstores in the US and UK. It's not pretty. In the months since Pirates was published, Gideon Defoe has come to loathe in his characteristically jovial way a novel called Ireland, by Frank Delaney. It is bigger than his, and on alphabetically ordered shelves it is always stacked close by, face out. Defoe, who is hardly unique among authors in keeping a close personal watch on the physical placement of his book, admits he has been known to loiter in bookshops, surreptitiously moving it into more attention-grabbing spots. "But you can't do that for more than two months, or you start to get sick of it," he says. "I'm sure bookshops are massively used to that. They probably just sit there, watching the really obvious author skulking around." Last September, in a further effort to promote the book, Orion's publicity department also made Defoe dress as a pirate and tour London bookshops by rickshaw, autographing their stock. "It was," he recalls, "the most mortifying day of my life." In poking around the web, we've discovered that Defoe has written a sequel. We've already put it on hold at our library. Via LISNews. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:00 AM | Get permalink
Monday, November 21, 2005
Supporters of the Iraq invasion are getting pretty desperate, aren't they?
Here's how Alaska senator Ted Stevens defended Dubya's decision to invade Iraq on the US Senate floor last Thursday: "Our troops found 30 Iraqi planes buried in the sands of the al-Taqqadum airfield, west of Baghdad -- 30 planes!" he said in a speech on the Senate floor in which he defended the prewar intelligence and the decision to go to war. "If Saddam Hussein's troops buried one-tenth of their combat aircraft in the desert, who is to say there were no weapons of mass destruction similarly buried?" Stevens is correct that several Iraqi planes were buried at the al-Taqaddum airbase in 2003. [Go here to see photos of US troops digging some up.] However, it's never been proven that any of the buried planes were still operational. Photos of the planes being unearthed show that no precautions had been taken to protect them from the sand, which couldn't have been good for the aircraft. Their burial probably speaks more to the desperation of the regime hiding them than to any real likelihood that the planes would fly again. As to whether Saddam buried WMDs in somewhere in the desert, we'll just let the fact that no WMDs have been unearthed in almost three years speak to Sen. Stevens' charges. Besides, we're sure Saddam had a better plan for all those WMDs, anyway. From what we've heard, he had friendly space aliens carry away the WMDs in their flying saucers. Perhaps we should give Sen. Stevens a call and let him know? Via Anchorage Daily News. | | Posted by Magpie at 3:13 PM | Get permalink
No comment.
CIA director Porter Goss on the his agency's treatment of prisoners: "This agency does not do torture. Torture does not work. We use lawful capabilities to collect vital information, and we do it in a variety of unique and innovative ways, all of which are legal and none of which are torture." Via USA Today. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:38 AM | Get permalink
That nonexistent global warming.
What's it going to be bringing to your neck of the woods? Nature's Michael Hopkins has a continent-by-continent look at the climatic challenges in store as the planet's average temperature goes up. Europe Via News@nature.com. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:11 AM | Get permalink
Sunday, November 20, 2005
Ladies and gentlemen ....
... the President of the United States! Now, we could just leave this as a cheap shot at Dubya and given the total lameness of his expression in the photo, we gotta tell you that taking the cheap shot is really tempting but there's a story behind this photo. First, here's the wire service caption: U.S. President George W. Bush reacts as he tries to open a locked door as he leaves a news conference in Beijing [on] November 20, 2005. Washington and Beijing will cooperate towards making the yuan's exchange rate more responsive to market forces of supply and demand, visiting U.S. President George W. Bush said on Sunday. What the caption doesn't tell you is that Dubya had just cut that press conference short because of the following exchange: "Respectfully, sir -- you know we're always respectful -- in your statement this morning with President Hu, you seemed a little off your game, you seemed to hurry through your statement. There was a lack of enthusiasm. Was something bothering you?" he asked. If you go to the White House transcript of the exchange, you'll notice that the reporter's attempt to ask a follow-up question and Dubya's refusal to answer it have been left out, hiding the fact that the press conference ended abruptly. Via Reuters. | | Posted by Magpie at 10:14 AM | Get permalink
Do the math.
What do you get when you put together years of underfunding of the National Park Service, even more years of overfunding the increasingly ineffective drug war, and the increased security and militarization along the US border with Mexico? Illegal marijuana farms in California's national parks, national forests, and other federal lands. The shift to growing dope on public lands has taken place over the past decade. Previously, almost all of California's massive marijuana crop was grown in the 'traditional' areas on the North Coast: Trinity, Mendocino, and Humboldt counties. In the last few years, however, illegal farms have turned up in federally protected lands including Sequoia and Yosemite National Parks, the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area, the Point Reyes National Seashore, the Whiskeytown National Recreation Area, and the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. Mexican drug cartels now are seizing on the state's mild climate and vast stretches of remote lands to set up pot farms across California. Tightened security on the U.S.-Mexico border has also convinced many drug gangs it is easier to grow marijuana in the state than to smuggle it into the country. An obvious [and cheap] way to deal with the problem would be to legalize marijuana, cutting out much of the financial motivation for the illegal dope farms in national parks. Sadly, National Park Service and law enforcement officials seem to be viewing this problem as another reason to increase drug war and border funding. Via San Francisco Chronicle. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:28 AM | Get permalink
Another great moment in corporate courage.
Today in New York, a major exhibit about the life and work of Charles Darwin opened its doors for the first time at the American Museum of Natural History. Mounted in cooperation with four other science museums in the US, Canada, and UK, the exhibit is one of the most comprehensive presentations of the development of Darwin's theory of evolution and how that theory continues to affect the way that scientific research is done. Given the current possibility of an avian flu pandemic and how evolutionary theory both explains how the flu virus mutates and guides the research into making a vaccine the Darwin exhibit could hardly come at a better time. Unfortunately, potential US corporate sponsors haven't been enthusiastic about the exhibit at all. Unlike most museum offerings of its size and scope, the Darwin exhibit doesn't have a single corporate sponsor. Instead, the US$ $3 million cost of the exhibit is coming out of the pockets of individuals and foundations. Why have there been so many cases of corporate cold feet? Because US corporations are afraid of retaliation from religious fundamentalists if their corporate name is associated with Darwin and evolution. The AMNH is coy about its failure to find corporate money to mount the exhibition, which will tour the US before moving to London's Natural History Museum in 2009 to mark the bicentenary of Darwin's birth. That's right: Not only are corporations afraid to sponsor an exhibit about Darwin out of fear for their bottom lines, but they're getting away with their cowardice because museum officials are afraid of risking future funding. It's nice to know that intellectual freedom is on such solid footing in the US, isn't it? The AMNH has put up a great website to go with the Darwin exhibition. You'll find it here. We especially recommend the short film [RealVideo] about the importance of evolutionary theory to modern science. Via UK Sunday Telegraph. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:00 AM | Get permalink |
NEWS HEADLINES Mail & Guardian [S. Africa] NEWS LINKS BBC News CBC News Agence France Presse Reuters Associated Press Aljazeera Inter Press Service Watching America International Herald Tribune Guardian (UK) Independent (UK) USA Today NY Times (US) Washington Post (US) McClatchy Washington Bureau (US) Boston Globe (US) LA Times (US) Globe & Mail (Canada) Toronto Star (Canada) Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) AllAfrica.com Mail & Guardian (South Africa) Al-Ahram (Egypt) Daily Star (Lebanon) Haaretz (Israel) Hindustan Times (India) Japan Times (Japan) Asia Times (Hong Kong) EurasiaNet New Scientist News Paper Chase OpenCongress COMMENT & ANALYSIS Molly Ivins CJR Daily Women's eNews Raw Story The Gadflyer Working for Change Common Dreams AlterNet Truthdig Truthout Salon Democracy Now! American Microphone rabble The Revealer Current Editor & Publisher Economic Policy Institute Center for American Progress The Memory Hole IRISH MUSIC Céilí House (RTE Radio) TheSession.org The Irish Fiddle Fiddler Magazine Concertina.net Concertina Library A Guide to the Irish Flute Chiff & Fipple Irtrad-l Archives Ceolas Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eireann BBC Virtual Session JC's ABC Tune Finder SHINY THINGS alt.portland Propaganda Remix Project Ask a Ninja grow-a-brain Boiling Point Bruno Cat and Girl Dykes to Watch Out For Library of Congress American Heritage Dictionary Dictonary of Newfoundland English American's Guide to Canada Digital History of the San Fernando Valley MetaFilter Blithe House Quarterly Astronomy Pic of the Day Earth Science Picture of the Day Asia Grace Gaelic Curse Engine Old Dinosaur Books ARCHIVES |