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[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, June 10, 2006
Carnival of Feminists 16!
We almost forgot to point out that the lastest Carnival of Feminists is up over here, compiled this time by Welcome to the Nuthouse. As usual, there's lots of smokin' hot feminist blogging on offer. Here are some sample items to pique your interest: On the issue of disability and coming into puberty, maman poulet writes beautifully of her own experiences. The lack of a period that usually enables us to distinguish between the transition from girlhood to womanhood was lacking in her life and she tells us why it really is a big deal. I think it goes well with the debate at Alas a blog and Pandagon with regards to "natural" vs. "unnatural". [...] There's a whole lot more to look at if you go look at the rest of the 16th Carnival over here. The 17th Carnival is coming up on Wednesday, June 17th, and it will be hosted by BitchLab. To nominate a post, and it's definitely okay to nominate one of your own 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 in general, bookmark the home page. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:53 PM | Get permalink
Can someone please tell me why this isn't terrorism?
On Thursday, Maryland police arrested a young man by the name of Robert F. Weiler Jr. on charges of (among other things) of making and possessing an illegal explosive device. Weiler's 'device' was a pipe bomb which he intended to use to attack a family planning clinic in College Park, Maryland. If you read this story in the Baltimore Sun, you won't find a single mention of 'terror' or 'terrorism.' And if you go search Google News, you won't be able to find those word in any of the 137 current stories about Weiler and his 'device.' You better bet that if Weiler's target had been, say, an army recruiting office or a federal building, the press would be screaming 'terror' in the headlines. Especially if, instead of Weiler, the accused bomber's had a Middle Eastern name. But I guess since Weiler's target was an abortion clinic and those evil doctors and clinic personnel who kill babies, the word 'terror' just doesn't apply. It's very sad sign of how far to the right this country has been dragged. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:38 PM | Get permalink
Ooooooh, shiny!
Brazilian director Guilherme Marcondes brings us Tyger, a short film loosely based on William Blake's poem, 'The Tyger.' Marcondes' film depicts a gigantic tiger stalking the streets of Sao Paulo, bringing amazing changes in its wake. You can watch Tyger here [QuickTime movie]. Screen grab from Tyger. You can read Marcondes' explanation of how the film came to be if you go here. Via MetaFilter. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:09 PM | Get permalink
Friday, June 9, 2006
Forget about that anti-flag burning amendment to the US Constitution.
There's absolutely no need for it, as a super-duper, top secret, eyes-only Justice Department memo obtained by consitutional lawyer Jack Belkin explains: Indeed, it is well established under the laws of war -- including those laws of war which the President, as Commander-in-Chief, has plenary authority to completely ignore or declare "quaint" -- that the President, as Commander-in-Chief, may detain persons who have taken up arms against the United States until such time as hostilities are completed. The President may reasonably determine that any person who burns an American flag is hostile to the United States. By definition, a person who is "hostile" to the United States may be prepared at some point in the future to engage in "hostilities." Therefore the President has sole authority to detain any person suspected of conspiring to burn a flag in the future -- or to defend or otherwise assist such a person -- until such time as the President may be assured that the person will not, upon release, "return to the battlefield" by threatening an American flag or otherwise defending those persons who would threaten an American flag. Since the President, as head of the Unitary Executive, may execute enemy combatants on the battlefield, it follows that he may take the lesser step of arresting them and detaining them indefinitely. The scariest thing about this 'memo' is that Belkin's pseudo-constitutional nonsense is almost indistinguishable from the legal justifications for Dubya's trashing of the Consitution that keep coming from the real US Justice Department. You can read the whole thing here. Via Belkinization. | | Posted by Magpie at 1:13 AM | Get permalink
And while we're on the subject of flag burning.
I dug up this Ted Rall cartoon from last year. I guess those right-wing backers of the anti-flag burning amendment oughta think twice. [Cartoon: © 2005 Ted Rall] You'll find a big mess of Rall's more recent cartoons here. Thanks to the excellent Mikhaela Reid for having the only link I could find to this particular Rall cartoon. (Make sure to check out some of Mikhaela's cartoons, too.) | | Posted by Magpie at 1:11 AM | Get permalink
Iraqi women get trampled as 'freedom marches on.'
I'm sure that Dubya's supporters couldn't care less about what's happening to Iraqi women in Basra. After all, the US effort in Iraq has passed yet another turning point with the death of al-Zarqawi and the prez continues to spread freedom and democracy in the Mideast. Under Saddam, women played little part in political life but businesswomen and academics travelled the country unchallenged while their daughters mixed freely with male students at university. Via UK Independent. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:54 AM | Get permalink
The DeLay Principle.
Former US House majority leader Tom DeLay may have left Congress to go fight the various legal charges against him back home in Texas, but his way of doing things is still alive and well on Capitol Hill. As Paul Krugman notes in his latest column, the federal estate tax originated almost a century ago as a way to raise money as it became obvious that the US would soon be entering the First World War. The notion then was that the people in society with the most privileges should also bear a substantial part of the war's financial burden. But today's Congressional leaders have a very different view about wartime priorities. "Nothing is more important in the face of a war than cutting taxes," declared Tom DeLay, the former House majority leader, in 2003.... The estate tax repeal went down to defeat in Congress yesterday, but as Krugman points out, we can probably expect the GOP to take another try at providing a massive give-away to just eighteen wealthy families. If you have a NY Times sub, you can read Krugman's full column here, behind the pay firewall. Otherwise, we suggest taking a peek at this. A big Magpie thank you goes this time to Tennessee Guerilla Women. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:20 AM | Get permalink
Thursday, June 8, 2006
Grrrrr!
Blogger was down all day. Again. Obviously, it's back up as I write this, but I won't be surprised if it goes down again. | | Posted by Magpie at 10:46 PM | Get permalink
Does it matter much that Zarqawi is out of the Iraq picture?
Mideast expert Juan Cole weighs in on the significance Zarqawi's death. Zarqawi had been a significant leader of the Salafi Jihadi radical strain of Islamist volunteers in Iraq, and had succeeded in spreading his ideas to local Iraqis in places like Ramadi. He engaged in grandstanding when he renamed his group "al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia," even though he had early been critical of al-Qaeda and had a long rivalry with it. For background, see the Zarqawi file. Via Informed Comment. | | Posted by Magpie at 6:36 AM | Get permalink
Great balls of fire!
Scientists create ball lightning in the lab. (Or something a lot like it, anyway.) German scientists say they've created glowing plasma clouds that resemble what ball lightning is supposed to look like. These clouds are up to 20 cm/7.8 inches across and last for almost half a second. Plasma ball created by German researchers. Ball lightning has puzzled scientists for centuries. Though little reliable data exist, there have been many anecdotal sightings, with people as diverse and famous as Charlemagne, Henry II and the physicist Niels Bohr all claiming to have seen it.... I saw ball lightning once, during an electrical storm in California. It was more white-orange than what the Max Planck researchers have come up with, but otherwise looks rather similar. Let me tell you, it was very strange watching a glowing ball drift down the other side of the street for several seconds before disappearing. Wikipedia has more on ball lightning here. Via New Scientist. | | Posted by Magpie at 6:07 AM | Get permalink
Anti-gay ballot measure dies in Washington State.
Because of Blogger's technical problems yesterday, we couldn't report that an effort to get an anti-gay measure onto Washington's November ballot has failed. Tim Eyman announces that his anti-gay ballot measure is dead before arrival. Boo-hoo. Back in January, Washington's legislature added sexual orientation to the categories of people protected from discrimination by the state's civil rights law. Under that law, the phrase 'sexual orientation' was added to the list of classes of people protected against discrimination in housing, lending, and employment. That legislature's decision was immediately denounced by religious-right groups, including the Christian Coalition, which then joined with referendum maven Tim Eyman in an attempt to qualify Referendum 65 for the November ballot. If passed by voters, that meausure would have rescinded the changes to the civil rights law. As of Tuesday, however, petition backers didn't have enough signatures to get on the ballot: 112,400 were needed; only 105,103 had been collected; and at least 130,000 signatures were needed to offset possible invalid signatures. With the failure of the initiative campaign, the revised civil rights law goes into effect as scheduled on July 1 making Washington the 17th state to extend protection from discrimination to its lesbian and gay citizens. Via Seattle Post-Intelligencer. | | Posted by Magpie at 4:38 AM | Get permalink
35 years later, I'm still sick of Eric Clapton's song, 'Layla.'
Or I was until I saw this video clip of Clapton playing the song sometime recently. (If anyone knows the time and date of the video, I'd love to get the info.) It's a very interesting, very rhythmic re-working of the tune that pretty much brings it out from under the long shadow of slide guitarist Duane Allman. And yes, that is Dr John on the keyboard. Via The Sideshow. | | Posted by Magpie at 3:37 AM | Get permalink
The tangled web of CIA prisons and renditions.
A much-awaited report from the Council of Europe charges that the US has created 'a clandestine "spider's web" of disappearances, secret detentions and unlawful inter-state transfers' and that member states of the European Union have aided in that effort, or just refused to acknowledge what the US was doing on or in the skies above their territories. The report from European senator Dick Marty of Switzerland says that the CIA has moved hundreds of people through this web of prisons, some of whom had little proven connections with terrorist organizations. According to the report, European nations cooperated with the US covert effort by 'secretly detaining a person on European territory, capturing a person and handing them over to the US or permitting unlawful ?renditions? through their airspace or across their territory.' Perhaps the most useful part of the report is the best map I've seen to date of the secret network. (A larger, much more legible version is here.) CIA prisons and prisoner transfer routes. View a larger version here. From the Boston Globe's story on the Council of Europe report: The 67-page report specifically accused Poland and Romania of allowing the CIA to use their territory to transfer secret prisoners from plane to plane. At least 12 other European nations allowed refueling stops, "pickup points," or "staging centers" for controversial CIA undertakings, the report stated. While the Council of Europe report relies largely on information previously available, its endorsement by such a prestigious European body will put additional pressure on Dubya's administraton to abandon its policy of abducting terror suspects and holding them in secret prisons. | | Posted by Magpie at 3:04 AM | Get permalink
Zarqawi dead in US air strike.
The Iraqi government and US military officials report that Sunni insurgent and al-Qaeda leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi has been killed. "Today we have eliminated Zarqawi," Mr Maliki said, sparking sustained applause.... US officials and journalists on the ground in Iraq are warning that Zarqawi's death may mean little in terms of the strength of the insurgency and the level of day-to-day violence in Iraq. Given how little difference the much-ballyhooed capture of Saddam Hussein made, I'm inclined to agree. In addition, there are interesting questions about how Zarqawi was found by US forces. From CNN: [General] Casey provided details about the strike that killed al-Zarqawi. Got that? Zarqawi was turned in by his own people. Now here's where it gets really interesting. Check out this post at Strategy Page, which predicted Zarqawi's imminent death about a day before the air strike that killed him: The relationship between terrorist leader Abu Musab al Zarqawi and and the mainline al Qaeda leadership continues to deteriorate. Zarqawi's recent audio messages have not only attacked the U.S. and the Shia-dominated government in Iraq, but also Iran. He's even claiming that the U.S., Iran, and Shia in general, are in cahoots to destroy Islam. He has also called for continued attacks against Shia. I can't vouch for the accuracy record of Strategy Page, but it sure looks like they called this one. And they certainly aren't the only one to report apparent tensions between Zarqawi and Iran. What I have to wonder is:
Those are just my immediate questions about Zarqawi's death. I'm sure there are more to be asked. And that answers will, as they say, be revealed in the fullness of time. Via BBC, CNN, Aljazeera.al-Zarqawi | | Posted by Magpie at 2:17 AM | Get permalink
How come 'real' journalists don't do this?
I'm not Jon Stewart's biggest fan. I mean, he's funny, but I have no trouble living without watching the Daily Show, and I have no illusions that watching someone getting skewered by Stewart is a replacement for political action. That said, I really have to admit that Stewart's grilling of right-wing blowhard Bill Bennett on Wednesday night is an object lesson to 'real' journalists about the kind of questioning that they should routinely be giving to opponents of lesbian and gay rights. YouTube has the video here. Are you paying attention, NY Times? How about it, CNN? Via MetaFilter. | | Posted by Magpie at 1:59 AM | Get permalink
Bloggered.
Blogger decided not to work for a good chunk of yesterday, leaving me with plenty of material but no way to get it online. I took Blogger's downtime as an omen that I should go outside and play. Which I did. As you can see, however, I'm back. Look out, world! | | Posted by Magpie at 1:51 AM | Get permalink
Wednesday, June 7, 2006
Ooooooh, The eruption plume from Alaska's Mt Cleveland volcano, as seen from the International Space Station. Since the volcano is located in a remote part of the Aleutian Islands, no one had known it was erupting until a report from astronaut Jeffrey Williams. The eruption occurred two weeks ago. [Photo: Jeffrey Williams/ISS/NASA] To get a sense of the photo's scale, Mt Cleveland sits on Chuginadak Island, which is 14 miles/23 km long and 8 miles/12.9 km wide. The volcano itself is 5,675 ft/1,730 m high. NASA's Earth Observatory has more background about the eruption and photo here. And for a really big version of the photo, x marks the spot. You can find more information about Mt Cleveland here and here. Via Astronomy Picture of the Day. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:53 AM | Get permalink
Norway to Wal-Mart: Drop dead.
The Norwegian government has excluded Wal-Mart's stock from its Petroleum Fund a US$ 240 billion investment fund that pays for health and pension benefits for the country's citizens. According to Norway's finance ministry, Wal-Mart is unsuitable for investment beause of its 'serious/systematic violations of human rights and labour rights.' As a result of that finding, the Petroleum Fund has sold off Wal-Mart stock worth US$ 414 million. This action against Wal-Mart is not just political posturing: Norway's oil fund is the largest pension fund in the world, with assets that have a value almost equal to Norway's entire economy and that more than twice as big as the largest US pension fund, the Californial Public Employees Retirement System. Norway's divestiture of its Wal-Mart holding will most definitely be noticed by managers of other pension funds. The [finance] ministry said [its ethics council] had found "an extensive body of material" that indicated Wal-Mart had broken norms, including employing minors against international rules, allowing hazardous working conditions at many of its suppliers and blocking workers' efforts to form unions. Wal-Mart now joins 18 other companies that have already been excluded from Norway's investment fund for ethical reasons. Companies previously rejected include manufacturers of land mines, cluster bombs, and nuclear weapons. Wal-Mart is apparently the first retailer to be rejected. Via UK Guardian. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:12 AM | Get permalink
How much we must love our children.
So much that they've become little more than another market that we can sell to advertisers. A Massachusetts company wants to beam commercial radio broadcasts into school buses every morning and afternoon, the latest mingling of education and commerce to spark outcry as the firm lobbies school districts across the state to sign contracts for the fall. What I especially love is the reasoning of the advertising company: Put our music and ads on the buses and the children will behave. Of course, if schools were funded sufficiently, there wouldn't be any trouble paying an adult monitor to ride on buses so that the bus driver doesn't have to simultaneously drive and attempt to keep order. And if we taxed ourselves enough to support our schools well, school districts wouldn't be so anxious to sell their students' ears to advertisers in order to gain a few bucks. But then financially starving the ublic schools has always been part of the US right wing's game plan, hasn't it? Via Boston Globe. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:03 AM | Get permalink
Tuesday, June 6, 2006
Yay!
Fafblog is back from ... well ... wherever it is that they were. | | Posted by Magpie at 11:27 PM | Get permalink
Update on the new, lesbian Batwoman.
The Onion nails it, as usual. I applaud DC Comics for taking the bold step of introducing a voluptuous, beautiful, girl-kissing superheroine. I only hope DC's legion of chronic masturbators will accept her. If you don't know what I'm talking about, see this earlier post. | | Posted by Magpie at 4:05 PM | Get permalink
A really, really bad day in Iraq.
Riverbend has a new post up. Things in Baghdad are bleak: There's an ethnic cleansing in progress and it's impossible to deny. People are being killed according to their ID card. Extremists on both sides are making life impossible. Some of them work for 'Zarqawi', and the others work for the Iraqi Ministry of Interior. We hear about Shia being killed in the 'Sunni triangle' and corpses of Sunnis named 'Omar' (a Sunni name) arriving by the dozen at the Baghdad morgue. I never thought I'd actually miss the car bombs. At least a car bomb is indiscriminate. It doesn't seek you out because you're Sunni or Shia. Meanwhile, Dubya and his administration keeps throwing out that same old lie about how how the Iraq war has reached yet another 'turning point.' I'm sure that turning point was real noticeable to each and every Iraqi. Via Baghdad Burning. | | Posted by Magpie at 3:54 PM | Get permalink
Busy day, little time at the computer.
But I'm working on some posts now. Honest! | | Posted by Magpie at 3:39 PM | Get permalink
Monday, June 5, 2006
US military to drop torture ban.
The beginning of this story says it all: The Pentagon has decided to omit from new detainee policies a key tenet of the Geneva Convention that bans "humiliating and degrading treatment," according to military officials, a step that would mark a potentially permanent shift away from strict adherence to international human rights standards. This decision is a big win for VP Dick Cheney and his chief of staff, David Addington, who have been pushing since 9/11 for the use of torture and abuse against US 'detainees.' Their back-stage victory isn't going to help the international standing of the US, which is already suffering from revelations of the torture at Abu Ghraib and the masscre at Haditha (to name only a few examples). The question raised by the decision to drop the Geneva Convention language from the Army field manul is obvious: If the US military isn't torturing people, or isn't planning on using torture in the future, why is it so important to get the Geneva language out of the manual? Inquiring magpies want to know. Via SF Chronicle. | | Posted by Magpie at 2:36 PM | Get permalink
Omigawd, I'm so confused!
Given all the gender panic in Washington today (see here, for example), I got panicked about my own gender. Luckily, my good pal alphabitch found a test that made it possible for me to sort out whether I'm a boy or a girl. You scored as Female. Being mostly female by thought, is even though (still) considered inferior to masculinity in Western culture, a good thing in many ways: It means that you are more creative, and sensitive towards your environment, enabling you to express yourself freely and multitask. Gee, I feel so much better now! If you're panicking about your gender, too, you can go take the test here. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:30 PM | Get permalink
Sunday, June 4, 2006
Pop quiz!
Quick! Give me one reason why Republican politicians and right-wing political positions always get better treatment in US mass media than anyone else. Here's a subtle hint: [Source: Ben Bagdikian, The New Media Monopoly] And an even subtler hint: Do huge corporations benefit from GOP administrations and right-wing politics? Thanks to Ian Welsh at BOPNews for finding the graph. He has a longer post on media consolidation that you might want to look at. | | Posted by Magpie at 4:26 PM | Get permalink
Freedom continues to march on in Iraq.
Just before the Iraq war and during the early days of the US-led occupation, one of the best sources for what was really going on in Iraq was a blog by Salam Pax. These days, Pax is a Baghdad-based news producer, and he posts from time to time at a new blog. Right now, Pax is trying to put together a couple of stories, but he's having trouble getting anyone to talk to him. It seems that people are afraid that if they speak on camera, they'll wind up being the next target of one of the country's many death squads. A friend of mine, after seeing how desperate and frustrated I was getting trying to get someone to talk on camera, said that I should go to the Kadhimiya district. People will talk there he said. Right. I haven?t been there for ages and I had no reason to believe that it will be different there, but I was getting desperate. I decided to go there the day after a bomb exploded by a bus in that neighbourhood and killed 13 people. Any further comments from me would be redundant. Via War and Piece. | | Posted by Magpie at 1:03 PM | Get permalink
The world's most significant drum break.
It's called the 'Amen Break,' and it's six seconds of drumming that originally appeared in a song called 'Amen Brother,' the B-side of a 1969 single by the Winstons. Without that break, hip-hop, jungle, and present-day commmercials (to name just a few examples) would be very different. The mother lode. A 2004 video by Nate Harrison gives the history of the Amen Break, and ties its use in to the whole controversy over copyright and the ownership of culture. Trust me: The video is way more interesting than my last sentence makes it sound. Via YouTube. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:05 PM | Get permalink |
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