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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. |
Saturday, February 25, 2006
Iraq: 'On the edge of a hot knife.'
That's the word from journalist Chris Albritton in his latest update from Baghdad. An unidentified relative mourns in the front of the coffins of his family members, in Baqouba, 60 km [35 mi) northeast of Baghdad, on Saturday. Provincial police said an unidentified gunmen broke into a house of a Shiite family killing 13 members. The name of a local mosque is written on the side of the coffin. [Photo: Mohammed Adan/AP] We have reached a point where the facade of the "political process: has been shredded. The real power lies and has always lain in the hands of the sheikhs, the clerics especially Moqtada and the gunmen. The politicians in Baghdad can continue their silly little exercise in government building and the Americans and the foreign diplomatic corps can tell their audiences in their home countries how much progress Abdul Aziz al-Hakim is making at building bridges with Saleh Mutlak. But we on the ground know the truth. We're on the edge of a hot knife, and it's getting hotter. There may be a pause now, but only for now. And we might have pulled back from the abyss just in time. This might end soon after all and my doom-saying will be proven wrong. Albritton has sometimes had a more positive outlook on events in Iraq than this magpie thought was warranted, so his taking such a dark view of the current situation carries added weight. You can read his full post here. Via Back to Iraq. | | Posted by Magpie at 3:27 PM | Get permalink
No comment needed.
Chris Albritton [who is reporting from Baghdad] says it all: Unbelievable:In Washington, the State Department insisted that US policy in Iraq was succeeding and denied that political negotiations had collapsed, only that they had paused. "Come on, let’s not blow this out of proportion," said spokesman Adam Ereli. He denied reports of widespread violence, speaking of "some incidents". Via Back to Iraq. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:34 AM | Get permalink
Yes, I really do post about Irish music here.
And to prove it, here's a link to a really cool interview that NPR's Melissa Block did with one of this magpie's fave fiddlers, Liz Carroll of Chicago. [Photo: Magpie] Block was curious about that 'stuttery, fluttery' thing that she's heard Irish fiddlers play which is, of course, a bowed triplet. To explain, Carroll played a whole mess of different bowed triplets at different speeds, including the 'scrunch' known as a 'crunchy' triplet around our parts. And, later on in the interview, Carroll did pretty much the same type of demonstration of the current bane of this magpie's existence: the roll. So, essentially, you can get a fast lesson in how Liz Carroll does the most common Irish fiddle ornaments by listening [and re-listening] to the story. Block later asked Carroll how she goes about composing a tune and, in particular, whether she thinks about the tradition of Irish fiddle tunes as she composes: A lot of people will tell me that a lot of them [Carroll's compositions] do sound traditional. And they're like, wow, that's old, that's always been around. And I've definitely made up tunes where at the end of it I go 'Wow, I just can't believe that doesn't already exist.' It just fits in [to the tradition], but it's not, it's not another tune.... It's an excellent interview with some great music in it as well. You can hear the whole thing if you go here. [RealPlayer or Windows Media Player req'd to listen.] | | Posted by Magpie at 12:21 AM | Get permalink
It really is a whole new world.
We posted yesterday about how one of the facts at the root of the controversy over an Arab-owned company operating US ports is how dependent the US has become on foreign money largely because of Dubya's spiraling deficit. As if to prove the point, take a look at this editorial from a Dubai newspaper: The US interest groups may have worked themselves up over the Dubai Ports World's winning bid for the P&O that allows the Dubai and UAE to control some of the most important ports around the world including those in the US. But other big markets elsewhere such as the growing economies of China, India and Far East are only too willing to welcome investments from this part of the world. Translation: You need our money. We know you need our money. If you let domestic political considerations quash our bid to run your ports, we'll take our money elsewhere. These words from David Ignatius come to mind: Here's how bad it is: The worst thing that could happen to the United States, paradoxically, would be for Arab and other foreign investors to take us at our xenophobic word and decide that America doesn't really want foreign investment. If they pulled out their money, U.S. financial markets would plummet in a crash that might make 1929 look like a sleigh ride. That's what five years of Dubya's presidency has done to the US. Welcome to the future. Via Khaleej Times. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:10 AM | Get permalink
Ooooooh, shiny!
They aren't real orange crate labels, but they should have been: 281 paintings by Ben Sakoguchi! From Sakoguchi's website: From the 1880's to the 1950's, California oranges were sent to market packed in wooden crates with big, multi-colored labels pasted on the ends. Among Ben Sakoguchi's early influences were the bold graphics and fanciful images on the orange crates that were stacked behind his parents' grocery store. You can view the 218 paintings that Sakoguchi made between 1994 and 2003 if you go over here. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:03 AM | Get permalink
Those commies teaching our students.
They can be pretty hard to ferret before they get a chance to fill impressionable young minds with disrespect for authority and notions of radicalism, subversion, and sexual perversion. Luckily, a group of upstanding citizens have published Classroom Bias for Dummies, which gives all of us an easy-to-use test for finding those socialists and homosexuals who are trying to lead our youth astray. Teaching style You can get the whole enchilada over here at Circle Jerk at the Square Dance. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:00 AM | Get permalink
Friday, February 24, 2006
By the way ...
That UAE-based company isn't taking over the operation of six ports in the US. It's going to be operating 21 ports. Via UPI. | | Posted by Magpie at 6:21 PM | Get permalink
Who at Fox News got the lobotomy?
This magpie has nothing against looking for that proverbial silver lining. Even I do it sometimes. But don't you think that the pro-Dubya spin at Fox News got a wee bit out of control yesterday during this segment of Your World with Neil Cavuto? Media Matters has more details on the segment, plus another screen grab that's just as bad as the one above. [Personally, this magpie would be far more interested in knowing more about the sheep in the garbage can mentioned in the crawl than I would in knowing how Fox finds a bright side to the possibility of civil war carnage in Iraq.] | | Posted by Magpie at 1:49 PM | Get permalink
The port takeover: It's not the Arabs, stupid!
A couple of days ago, we posted links to a couple of articles pointing out how the real problem with the takeover of major US ports by a Dubai-based corporation isn't related to national security. In one of the articles, John Nichols said that what's wrong with the port deal has more to do with corporate ownership of infrastructure that should continue to be owned by the public:
The U.S., EU and Japan the dominant service economies have been pushing hard to get a deal done on government procurement that would bring public purchasing of goods and services into the WTO framework. Their goal is to give foreign-based multinationals "national status," meaning that governments couldn't favor domestic firms over foreign firms for any reason (except for security issues, and this case wouldn't be likely to qualify as such). As good as both Nichols' and Holland's reasoning is, there's a still a piece missing from the picture: Why is the US having to deal with the question of foreign ownership [or in the case of the port deal, quasi-ownership] of important assets and infrastructure, anyway? According to David Ignatius, the blame for the nation's predicament can be laid at the door of the White House and Congress. It's the GOP's penchant for cutting taxes and running up deficits that have made the US beholden to foreign creditors to a degree not seen since the 19th century: The best quick analysis I've seen of the fiscal squeeze comes from New York University professor Nouriel Roubini, in his useful online survey of economic information, rgemonitor.com. He notes that with the U.S. current account deficit running at about $900 billion in 2006, "in a matter of a few years foreigners may end up owning most of the U.S. capital stocks: ports, factories, corporations, land, real estate and even our national parks." Until recently, he writes, the United States has been financing its trade deficit through debt namely, by selling U.S. Treasury securities to foreign central banks. That's scary enough as it has given big T-bill holders such as China and Saudi Arabia the ability to punish the U.S. dollar if they decide to unload their reserves. So the real threat to the US isn't the supposed security problems that would result if an Arab-owned company took over some US ports. The real threats to the nation come from how Dubya and the GOP-controlled Congress are cutting taxes and busting the budget. And from how, in the name of 'free trade,' the prez is willing to sign away the government's ability to use business contracts as a tool of public policy. This magpie suggests that the issues dealt with in this post corporate ownership of infrastructure; the use of contracts to further public goals; foreign debt are the ones that progressives should be using in the argument over the port contract, not the Arab-bashing rhetoric that is too often coming even from people on the left. Let's leave the Arab bashing for the Bushies and the right wing xenophobia doesn't look good on us. Via Washington Post. | | Posted by Magpie at 11:51 AM | Get permalink
How bad are things getting in Iraq?
A couple of paragraphs in this story should give anyone chills: As Iraqi politicians took to the airwaves to calm the populace, many in the nation said they'd lost confidence that the government and its security forces could protect them. Residents from Baghdad to the southern city of Basra said it was now up to private citizens to take up arms. Via Knight Ridder Washington Bureau. | | Posted by Magpie at 2:17 AM | Get permalink
Saving democracy in the US.
Bill Moyers is giving one hell of a speech on his current speaking tour out on the West Coast. If you don't already understand how corrupt the current US government is now, you'll get the picture after reading what Moyers has to say:
Via Doc Searls. | | Posted by Magpie at 1:06 AM | Get permalink
Ooooooh, shiny!
Photos of kids dressed up as cowpokes! At this writing, there are 79 photos in this Flickr exhibit. Lots of them are at least as good as the one above. Via Boing Boing. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:39 AM | Get permalink
Pop quiz!
Compare and contrast Curious George and Brokeback Mountain. Here's something to get you started: Although Curious George and Brokeback Mountain share many similarities, they also share many differences. Both involve men in hats, but the meaning of the hat changes. From Confessions of a Community College Dean, via Blog of a Bookslut. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:23 AM | Get permalink
Looking back from 2153.
Imagine this: The Second World War was fought to a draw, ending around 1947. For close to two centuries afterwards, an authoritarian German Empire ruled Europe from the Pyrenees to the Urals. It was replaced by a democratic regime in the 2120s, and all of the German 'protectorates' became independent. Thirty years later, 'revisionist' historians are looking back at the Empire's first years under Hitler and Speer. "Everyone knows there were blots on the empire's record," [mid-23rd century history Gregor] Metzger says. "No one today would countenance, say, the early Reich's treatment of the Jews or the excesses in putting down the Muslim Rebellions in the Caucasus. But neither should we impose our modern values on the people of those times. Rather, we should try to understand them in their own context -- and appreciate their many accomplishments." This scenario forms the basis for a rather discomforting future-history article by Chris Floyd in the Moscow Times. Check it out. Via Uchronia. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:02 AM | Get permalink
No comment.
Dubya, speaking on Wednesday about why outsourcing US jobs isn't really a problem: India's middle class is buying air-conditioners, kitchen appliances and washing machines, and a lot of them from American companies like GE and Whirlpool and Westinghouse. And that means their job base is growing here in the United States. Younger Indians are acquiring a taste for pizzas from Domino's, Pizza Hut ... Today, India's consumers associate American brands with quality and value, and this trade is creating opportunity at home. Via San Jose [CA] Mercury News. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:00 AM | Get permalink
Thursday, February 23, 2006
Slow posting again.
Yes, it's another job interview that'll be keeping me offline this afternoon. And no, we don't know how Tuesday's interview came out yet. More posts this evening, hopefully. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:03 PM | Get permalink
What's wrong with radio and TV in the US?
Is it the poor quality of much of the programming? Is it the concentration of station ownership into fewer and fewer hands? Is it the lack of balance in which political views are presented? Is it the glorification of violence in some programs? The continuing underrepresentation of women and people of color among station owners and broadcasting decisionmakers? Or maybe it's the total lack of news or public affairs programming on most US stations? No, the really big problem facing the broadcasting industry won't be found on that list. The real danger to the nation is all those bad words going out over the air. According to the Washington Post, the Federal Communications Commission is about to come down hard on a number of broadcasters who have broadcast indecent language mainly the word shit. In one case, the FCC is expected to rule against News Corp.'s Fox for an incident in which actress Nicole Richie uttered the vulgar term for excrement, a finding that may dissuade broadcasters from airing the term even in isolated instances. This magpie is oh so happy that the feds are looking out for our tender sensibilities. The lovely little logo above, by the way, comes right off one of the FCC's web pages. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:30 AM | Get permalink
Make the world go away.
Or at least make those damned reporters with their hard questions go away. In the current issue of The Hill, Betsy Rothstein has a great article on the tactics that Another way to deal with tricky matters is quickly moving on background with a reporter. A Senate Republican press secretary stammered something about "playing things straight with everyone" and how "there's no tricks" before going on background for this story. I especially liked Rothstein's shortlist of common tricks:
This magpie encountered all of those tactics and more during out years as a reporter. Our favorite counter-strategy was to say: I've already talked to [fill in name of opponent] and I really wanted to get a statement from you before we print the story. It worked like a charm. The PR flacks who could resist the possibility of getting in the last word were few and far between. [And yes, I sometimes said I'd talked to the other side when I hadn't.] Via Romenesko. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:03 AM | Get permalink
'Things are not good in Baghdad.'
Riverbend says that people in Baghdad are nervously waiting to see whether the bombing of Samarra's Golden Mosque was the spark that ignites an Iraqi civil war: There has been gunfire all over Baghdad since morning. The streets near our neighborhood were eerily empty and calm but there was a tension that had us all sitting on edge. We heard about problems in areas like Baladiyat where there was some rioting and vandalism, etc. and several mosques in Baghdad were attacked. I think what has everyone most disturbed is the fact that the reaction was so swift, like it was just waiting to happen. Via Baghdad Burning. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:00 AM | Get permalink
Wednesday, February 22, 2006
Carnival of Feminists 9.
It's that time of the month again, and the 9th Carnival of Feminists is available for your reading pleasure here at Mind the Gap. As usual, this edition is just loaded with cool stuff. If you haven't caught the Carnival before, it's a roundup of the best feminist posts from around the web, appearing twice a month. Like the preceding carnivals, the posts in the 9th edition go all over the place. This time, I've chosen to sample the section on the body: Stella from 'Where the Cornflakes are' explains why it's the gynocologists that have a problem: "She's such a twit that I really shouldn't have been surprised when I read the letter that began "Stella has severe Osteogenesis Imperfecta and is wheelchair-bound. Surprisingly, however, she is sexually active and requires contraception." Read the rest and be outraged. There's a mess of other feminist bloggy goodness in the 9th Carnival if you go over here. The 10th Carnival is coming up on Wednesday, March 8th, and it will be hosted by Indian Writing. If you want to nominate a post and it's definitely okay to nominate one of your own send the nomination to indianwriting AT gmail DOT com by March 5th. Or, if you prefer, you can use this submission form at the Blog Carnival home page. And if you want to keep posted on what's up with the Carnival of Feminists, bookmark the home page. | | Posted by Magpie at 4:22 PM | Get permalink
Very bad news from Iraq.
Earlier today, men in uniform planted two bombs inside the Golden Mosque [shrine of Imam Hasan al-Askari] in Samarra. Both bombs exploded, devastating one of the most holy shrines of Shi'a Islam. Iraq has erupted into violence, and there are fears that a long-feared civil war will begin. [AP photos: Khalid Mohammed, Hameed Rasheed] Reporter Chris Albritton is in Iraq, and posted the following to his blog earlier today: If this doesn't spark a much-feared civil war, we'll be lucky. This is the tensest Baghdad has been in two years, and this attack is especially provocative coming as it does during Arba'een, the 40-day mourning period for Imam Hussayn that follows the Shi'ite commemoration of Ashura. And from a later update to the post: Moqtada al-Sadr is holding takfiris (those who call others infidels, i.e., the Salafists and Wahabists), Ba'athists and the "occupation" responsible for the shrine attack. "It was not the Sunnis who attacked the shrine of imam Al-Hadi, God's peace be upon him, but rather the occupation; the takfiris, al-nawasib (a derogatory term the Shiites use to refer to Sunnis), God damn them; and the Ba'thists. We should not attack Sunni mosques. I ordered al-Mahdi Army to protect the Shi'ite and Sunni shrines and to show a high sense of responsibility, something they actually did." Moqtada has also called for a vote in parliament on expelling "foreign forces," the rascal. Via Back to Iraq and Reuters. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:40 PM | Get permalink
The real problem with the US port takeover.
It's the corporations, not the Arabs, says John Nichols. His post is short and sweet. And a definite must-read. Via The Nation. More: And when you're done reading Nichols, check out this longer piece in the same vein by Joshua Holland at the Gadflyer. | | Posted by Magpie at 11:45 AM | Get permalink
What's wrong with this picture?
Those kids over at Worth1000 are photoshopping away, moving today's high-tech products back into times where they don't belong. You can view all of the entries in the current Worth1000 contest here. [I really liked this one.] | | Posted by Magpie at 11:26 AM | Get permalink
Of course the Pentagon has been lying.
Since early January, human rights groups and lawyers for Guantánamo prisoners have reported that the US military has been dealing with a hunger strike by strapping prisoners into chairs and force-feeding them. And, during the time since then, US authorities have consistently denied these reports. Well, guess what? The military commander responsible for the American detention center at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, confirmed Tuesday that officials there last month turned to more aggressive methods to deter prisoners who were carrying out long-term hunger strikes to protest their incarceration. Via NY Times. | | Posted by Magpie at 10:44 AM | Get permalink
About turning those US ports over to the Dubai outfit.
Dubya didn't know a thing about it until after the deal had been approved. But that doesn't worry this magpie. Nosirree. We're absolutely certain that the prez's minions had already taken this stuff and this stuff into consideration. So of course Dubya is confident that the deal is good for America. Right? | | Posted by Magpie at 10:10 AM | Get permalink
Be very afraid.
Via Making Light, this magpie has learned that The Internationale can be sung to the tune of I'm a Yankee Doodle Dandy. Even worse, the comments to this post at Making Light is full of similar earworms. I had to stop reading after finding out that 'In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida' can be sung to the tune of 'Take Me Out to the Ballpark.' Someone, please get it out of my brain ... [whimper] | | Posted by Magpie at 12:22 AM | Get permalink
How the US and Iran stopped cooperating in Afghanistan.
For awhile in 2001 and 2002, during the aftermath of 9/11, the US and Iran were beginning to cooperate in an effort to clean the Taliban and al-Qaeda out of Afghanistan. According to historian and national security analyst Gareth Porter, however, that US-Iran cooperation was quickly scuttled by defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld and other Washington hardliners both for ideological reasons and because Dubya's administration was shifting its attention to the upcoming Iraq invasion. In October 2001, as the United States was just beginning its military operations in Afghanistan, State Department and NSC officials began meeting secretly with Iranian diplomats in Paris and Geneva, under the sponsorship of Lakhdar Brahimi, head of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan. Leverett says these discussions focused on "how to effectively unseat the Taliban and once the Taliban was gone, how to stand up an Afghan government". Porter goes on to describe how hardliners in Dubya's administration torpedoed this tentative cooperation between the US and Iraq including a 2002 Iranian offer to help supply 'training, uniforms, equipment, and barracks' for a significant part of the new Afghan government's military. This story of lost opportunities for cooperation between the US and Iran is particularly sad given the current bad relations between the two countries. Perhaps if US hardliners hadn't been so focused on the upcoming [pointless] Iraq invasion, the early cooperation in Afghanistan could have led to significantly better Iran-US relations in other areas. Maybe the Khatami presidency wouldn't have failed. Perhaps the Iranian hardliners wouldn't have won the last national election. But we'll never know. And, this magpie suspects, no one in the White House or Pentagon are losing any sleep over that fact. Via Inter Press Service. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:01 AM | Get permalink
Why the veto threat from the prez?
I mean, it's not like Dubya has so much political capital to burn that he can afford to dig in his heels on the proposed takeover of several US ports by a Dubai-based corporation. Even members of his own party are demanding that the deal be put on hold. This magpie suspects that Dubya's veto threat has less to do with any matter of principle or international politics than with the likely fact that some of the prez's backers and/or political cronies stand to make a lot of money on the deal. Via NY Times. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:00 AM | Get permalink
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
Slow posting for most of the day.
I actually have a job interview today, which will be taking up my time until late this afternoon. Expect more posts sometime this evening [US Pacific time]. | | Posted by Magpie at 8:39 AM | Get permalink
Controlling the past.
Dubya's administration has quietly reversed the de-classification process for thousands of documents in the National Archives. Under this new regime, the nation's various intelligence agencies have been going through the collections and pulling documents out of circulation many of which had already been published by the State Department and others for which there is no rational reason for keeping them secret until quite recently. Even worse, the existence of this re-classification program was itself classified information. Among the 50 withdrawn documents that [intelligence historian Matthew] Aid found in his own files is a 1948 memorandum on a C.I.A. scheme to float balloons over countries behind the Iron Curtain and drop propaganda leaflets. It was reclassified in 2001 even though it had been published by the State Department in 1996. Via NY Times. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:02 AM | Get permalink
[Almost] no comment.
Stills from a promo video for FCUK's current women's clothing collection. You can watch the entire video here. Yes, FCUK has both men's and women's clothing lines. And yes, the only still images for the current FCUK collection that show models fighting or partially clothed depict women, not men. Via The Consumerist. Thanks to Coloribus for the screen grabs. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:02 AM | Get permalink
Monday, February 20, 2006
Warning to aspiring journalists!
If you want to do an internship at the NY Times, don't use someone who's criticized the paper as one of your references. Allan Wolper tells what happened when one of his journalism students at Rutgers applied for an internship: Kejal Vyas ... was in Delhi completing some academic work when he received this Feb. 1 e-mail from Nancy Sharkey, senior editor/recruiting for the New York Times, responding to his inquiry about an internship: You can read the rest of the story here. What's sad here is how the attitude of the Times' editor mirrors that of Dubya's administration: Either tow our line or hit the road. Of course, I'm sure no one at the Times sees it that way. Via Editor & Publisher. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:17 PM | Get permalink
Where are the mensches when you need them?
Don't look for them in Dubya's administration, says economist Paul Krugman in his latest New York Times column: "Be a mensch," my parents told me. Literally, a mensch is a person. But by implication, a mensch is an upstanding person who takes responsibility for his actions. The people now running America aren't mensches. Reprinting a whole column is normally a no-no around here, but this magpie couldn't figure out a way to cut Krugman's colunm without diminishing his argument. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:02 PM | Get permalink
The five most dangerous children's books ever written.
Every day, there's news of another children's book being challenged by concerned parents, and for good reason. Sean Hannity [as channeled by Brian Danilo], fills us in on this insidious threat to the well-being of the nation's youth. 3. Goodnight Moon by Margaret Wise Brown The other four books are equally dangerous. Beware! From McSweeney's, via Blog of a Bookslut. | | Posted by Magpie at 10:05 AM | Get permalink
Ask a complicated question ...
... get a simple answer. Tom Tomorrow shows us why we really shouldn't worry our pretty little heads about all that stuff. You can see the rest of the cartoon here. Via Salon. [Paid sub. or ad view req'd.] | | Posted by Magpie at 9:41 AM | Get permalink
More on the Mora memo.
Yesterday, we posted about how the Pentagon had been warned in 2002 that it was on a slippery slope by trying to circumvent international laws against torture of prisoners [such as those then at Guantánamo]. That warning was given in a 22-page memo written by Alberto Mora, then the general counsel for the US Navy. As the recently released batch of new pictures showing Iraqis tortured by their US captors at Abu Ghraib [see earlier posts here and here] reminds us, Mora's warning should have been heeded. Since our original post, the New Yorker has posted Jane Mayer's piece about Mora's memo, which you'll find here. Here's how Mayer frames the story: The memo is a chronological account, submitted on July 7, 2004, to Vice Admiral Albert Church, who led a Pentagon investigation into abuses at the U.S. detention facility at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. It reveals that Mora's criticisms of Administration policy were unequivocal, wide-ranging, and persistent. Well before the exposure of prisoner abuse in Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison, in April, 2004, Mora warned his superiors at the Pentagon about the consequences of President Bush's decision, in February, 2002, to circumvent the Geneva conventions, which prohibit both torture and "outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment." He argued that a refusal to outlaw cruelty toward U.S.-held terrorist suspects was an implicit invitation to abuse. Mora also challenged the legal framework that the Bush Administration has constructed to justify an expansion of executive power, in matters ranging from interrogations to wiretapping. He described as "unlawful," "dangerous," and "erroneous" novel legal theories granting the President the right to authorize abuse. Mora warned that these precepts could leave U.S. personnel open to criminal prosecution. That's right: Dubya's administration not only lied about how they've treated prisoners captured in the 'war on terrorism,' but they've lied about whether anyone inside the government was advising them not to play fast and loose with the Geneva Conventions and other international law regarding the treatment of prisoners. Go read the whole New Yorker story. Now. And then read Mora's memo, which the New Yorker has posted here [PDF file]. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:26 AM | Get permalink
We don't usually gush over bike racks.
But this Swiss-designed rack has to be the coolest one we've ever seen. The rack's designer is Adrien Rovero in Lausanne. We should all be lobbying our local governments to get some of these beauties. Via BikePortland.org. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:02 AM | Get permalink
Sunday, February 19, 2006
Yet another warning ignored by Dubya's administration.
Not only could the torture of prisioners at Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo have been avoided, but it would have been avoided if the US military and Dubya's administration had paid attention to the warnings of Alberto Mora in 2002 warnings given well before the worst of the abuses had occurred. Then the Navy's general counsel, Mora presented Pentagon officials with a a 22-page memo[a copy of which as been obtained by the New Yorker magazine] warning them that trying to evade international rules on torture and the treatment of detainees would lead to abuse of prisoners. He also objected to legal theories being floated in the Justice Department, which said that Dubya had the power to authorize the violation of the Geneva Conventions. More called those theories illegal and dangerous. Mora said Navy intelligence officers reported in 2002 that military-intelligence interrogators at the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, were engaging in escalating levels of physical and psychological abuse rumored to have been authorized at a high level in Washington. A story about Mora's warning to the Pentagon will appear in the Feb 27 issue of the New Yorker. Via Washington Post. | | Posted by Magpie at 5:09 PM | Get permalink
I don't know what I ate ...
... but it's sure roiling up this magpie's innards. Posting will be slow to nonexistent for the rest of the day, most likely. | | Posted by Magpie at 3:56 PM | Get permalink It's not just the US that's become a nastier place to live since the mid-1990s, according to a new poll:
It's the economy, stupid. The Sydney Morning Herald's longer article on the poll here explains why the state of Aussies' pocketbooks seems to outweigh almost every other issue. Via ABC News [Australia]. | | Posted by Magpie at 3:15 PM | Get permalink |
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