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Saturday, June 17, 2006
Maybe there is hope.
In the long run, anyway. Go read this, and then follow Jeanne's link. Via Body and Soul. More: And then, of course, there is this, via WCCO-TV. (Warning: High cuteness and saccharine content.) | | Posted by Magpie at 1:16 PM | Get permalink
All hail the king.
In the current issue of the New York Review of Books, Elizabeth Drew has an excellent article about Dubya's unprecedented expansion of presidential power. Drew's article outlines the ways in which the White House has 'systematically attempted to defy, control, or threaten the institutions that could challenge it: Congress, the courts, and the press.' Even worse, she points out, is that this expansion of presidential authority has taken place in secret, and that & until very recently the US press hadn't bothered to report on it. Drew's NYRB piece won't help you sleep better at night if you live in the US. Or dangerously close to the US, for that matter. Drew's explantion of how Dubya justifies his usurpation of judicial and congressional authority is probably the best I've read: Bush has cited two grounds for flouting the will of Congress, or of unilaterally expanding presidential powers. One is the claim of the "inherent" power of the commander in chief. Read it all here. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:29 PM | Get permalink
Friday, June 16, 2006
Mental health day.
I just can't make myself write anything today. Even these few sentences are a second draft. See y'all tomorrow, hopefully. Meanwhile, check out those fine blogs listed over on the left. | | Posted by Magpie at 3:30 PM | Get permalink
Thursday, June 15, 2006
Out on the ocean.
But not far enough. [MP3 file] The aggrieved party. Dave Lewicki, Eliot Jacobsen, and Barbara Price assault the old Irish session warhorse on flute, fiddle, and saxophone. I'll never hear 'Out on the Ocean' the same way again. Ever. Via TheSession.org. | | Posted by Magpie at 6:16 PM | Get permalink
Feeding the addiction to small arms and light weapons.
As this article in Le Monde Diplomatique points out, there's a worldwide fraternity of arms 'pushers' and 'fixers' make sure that whoever wants weaponry countries under economic or arms embargoes, insurgents, criminals, terrorists can get all the weaponry they want. Those fixers are skilled at getting around national laws and international rules to connect suppliers and buyers, and to arrange the transfer of arms from one place to another. World small arms trade, 2005. It is clear that robust regulation and restraint based on a consistent international legal framework to protect human rights has not kept pace with the ever-expanding global supply chains. One indicator of this is the pervasiveness of grey markets in arms and military and security equipment. Another is the ability shown by traffickers to deliver arms to areas with active conflicts, even where these are subject to international embargoes. The use of commercial methods of supply chain management is not limited to defence logistics and the legal arms trade. Shippers, brokers and importers involved in illegal transfers have adopted similar methods and have established some networking and cooperation to ensure that the volumes of cargo and cash flow are enough to maintain the economic viability of the specialised carriers, port facilities and agents that they use. This enables some to mix legitimate business (including, astonishingly, the supply of humanitarian aid to conflict zones) and grey market business with illegal trafficking, to minimise the risk of seizures and law enforcement actions. Via NewsHog. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:02 AM | Get permalink
Wednesday, June 14, 2006
Dubya's daytrip to Iraq.
The visit was so obviously driven by low poll numbers and worries about GOP fortunes in the November US elections that I really don't need to comment further. But I will point out this little fact about the trip, gleaned from a Reuters story: [Iraq prime minister Nuri al-Maliki] was told about the trip only five minutes before meeting Bush ... The leader of Iraq's government found out that the prez was not only in Iraq, but right there in Baghdad, only five minutes before meeting him? I think the fact that Dubya could show up unannounced and waltz right into a meeting with the prime minister speaks volumes about the real status of Iraq's government vis-a-vis the US. Can we say 'puppet government'? Or 'client state'? I knew we could. But there are other question to be asked about Dubya's Iraq jaunt and, thanks to a tip from Doug Krile, I see that NewsHog has asked a bunch of them, including this one: While we're on the subject of security could someone please ask why the new leader of al Qaida in Iraq seems to be totally unknown to the security forces? What this suggests to me is that this guy is not only good enough to beat those we thought were the main candidates for the job but also good enough to impress the hells out of his terrorist and insurgent pals while staying below US intelligence' radar. That kinda worries me. It suggests we may have swapped a Haig for a Rommel. Could someone ask, maybe? Pretty please? We highly recommend reading the whole post. | | Posted by Magpie at 1:47 AM | Get permalink
There's nothing that'll raise a magpie's spirits like a really cheap shot.
Especially when Ann Coulter is the target. The full-sized cartoon is here. You can see more of Sherffius' cartoons over here. Via Association of American Editorial Cartoonists. | | Posted by Magpie at 1:31 AM | Get permalink
I didn't know they were putting LSD into coffee these days.
But apparently Folgers does. {QuickTime movie] I was going to include a screen grab, but this one's better if you get the full assault without any warning. Via MetaFilter. | | Posted by Magpie at 1:17 AM | Get permalink
Tuesday, June 13, 2006
No trickling down going on around here.
Hale Stewart has a very interesting post about the latest Flow of Funds statement from the US Federal Reserve. That statement is basically a snapshot showing the comings and goings of all the money in the US and is far too complicated for a poor magpie to navigate unaided. While Stewart points out a number of disturbing economic and financial trends, a couple things really stood out from the others:
What this means, as Stewart points out, is that big corporations have been raking in the bucks and not passing any of their obscene profits on to their workers. And, as he also points out, they haven't been using that amazing amount of cash on hand to create new jobs, even though they could easily afford to do so. These figures reminded me of some graphs I'd seen recently, and I finally found them in this April post from Billmon about why most people in the US think the economy sucks. [Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics] The graphics help make Stewart's points much clearer, don't you think? You'll learn many more interesting numbers if you read Stewart's whole post, which you'll find here. Via BOPNews. | | Posted by Magpie at 3:08 PM | Get permalink
There but for fortune.
Back in early May, our good friend alphabitch was complaining about the mockingbird that was hanging around outside her house and imitating car alarms in the early morning hours. alphabitch should count her lucky stars. It could be a lyrebird that was hanging around outside. Car alarms are only a very small part of the lyrebird's repertoire, as this video clip featuring David Attenborough shows. You gotta love a bird that imitiates chainsaws as part of a mating display. By the way, alphabitch has been in something of a posting frenzy for the past few days. You might want to give her a visit and take a look around. Via Devil Ducky. | | Posted by Magpie at 2:03 PM | Get permalink
Karl Rove won't be indicted for his role in Plamegate.
Dammit. While Dubya's political guru is now off the hook, Dan Froomkin reminds us that the White House shouldn't be: The White House has long maintained -- spuriously, I might add -- that the ongoing criminal investigation precluded them from answering any questions even vaguely related to Rove's conduct. Via Reuters and Washington Post. | | Posted by Magpie at 11:31 AM | Get permalink
Putting the online readers first.
In US journalistic circles, one of the big arguments is whether mass-market print newspapers will survive for long. Newspapers have faced stiff competition from TV news for decades, and newspaper circulation peaked over 15 years ago. As online versions of newspapers appeared, the circulation slide for print papers accelerated, with readership now down to numbers last seen in the late 1970s. Web readership, however, continues to climb, with 28 percent of the US public now getting their news online. The changing nature of the news audience is shown well by the NY Times. While the printed version reaches an average of 1.1 million readers per day, the online daily readership is over 13 million. Newspapers in the UK are facing the same circulation problems, and two of the country's major papers are taking opposite paths to ensure their economic health. One, the Telegraph, has decided to hold back breaking news stories from its website in order to increase the sales of the print paper. The Guardian, on the other hand, has decide to become(I think) the first major English-language newspaper to decide that its primary audience is its online readers, not the people who read the printed version. From tomorrow, the main task of the Guardian's editors and reporter will be to feed stories to the website: Some of these developments became inevitable the moment the Daily Telegraph became the first British paper to publish to the web 12 years ago. The internet is not a static medium. There's not much point in a website with a newspaper headline "Troops poised to go in" once soldiers are engaged in hand-to-hand fighting. News sites had to update, which is why they were soon ordering live agency feeds for breaking news. Then it seemed a good idea to get specialist correspondents to offer fast analysis on breaking stories, then it seemed strange to wait for the paper to print when the copy was already available ... Via UK Guardian. | | Posted by Magpie at 10:34 AM | Get permalink
Hmmmm.
I like to look at Magpie's logs to see where visitors have been coming especially those from outside the US and Canada. When perusing the logs just now, I noticed that someone in Vatican City came by a couple of hours ago. But what was really interesting were the search terms that brought them here: i fell for you like a child oooooh but the fire went wild Looks like someone at the Vatican might be caught up in a burning ring of fire. | | Posted by Magpie at 3:05 AM | Get permalink
Those abstinence-only folks are so funny.
When they're not being dangerous, that is. Take this, for example. And I didn't get the really big laugh until I noticed what flavor it comes in. Via Lab Kat. | | Posted by Magpie at 2:22 AM | Get permalink
It's a sing-along!
Join those tuneful guys at the National Security Agency as they tell you all about what they've been hearing in your phone calls! [Flash req'd] [Image: Walt Handelsman/Newsday] Via Follow Me Here. | | Posted by Magpie at 1:48 AM | Get permalink
Dubya, the death of Zarqawi, and those ever-shrinking poll numbers.
Almost immediately after the news broke that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi was dead, many US pundits began asking the question, How much will the 'good news' from Iraq help Dubya's abyssmal approval ratings? According to a new CBS News poll, the answer to that question isn't 'Not at all.' It's worse than 'Not at all': [Graphic: CBS News] If Dubya's approval drops by 2 percent after gettting the best news from Iraq in a long time, I have to wonder what some really bad news comes around, such as when the whole truth about the Haditha masscre emerges. And in the longer term, the reaction to Zarqawi's death has to call into question the expectations that an 'October Surprise' involving Osama bin Laden will be enough to save the GOP's political fortunes. If voters didn't care much about Zarqawi after all the effort Dubya's administration went through to make him Terrorist Enemy #1, perhaps the time is past when pulling Osama out of a hat will work political magic. Some other tidbits from the poll: Fifty-five percent of Americans still say the war in Iraq is going badly for the United States, while an overwhelming majority, 82 percent, describe the situation in Iraq as a civil war between Iraqis. Via CBS News. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:17 AM | Get permalink
Monday, June 12, 2006
Putting human rights violations right into your face.
That's what a new publicity campaign from the Swiss branch of Amenesty International is doing. It could happen here. The French on the poster translates to: This is happening. Not here, but now. Amnesty has put the ad shown above and 11 others dealing with human rights issues on the streets of several Swiss cities. Notice that the location shown in each ad is the very same site where the ad is being displayed. Intense, huh? TalkLeft has more on Amnesty's campaign here. Thanks to The Sideshow for pointing us to the campaign in the first place. | | Posted by Magpie at 4:09 PM | Get permalink
Beware of "The Some"!
As if we don't have enough to worry about, Paul Krugman warns us about another scary threat in his latest column. Back in 1971, Russell Baker, the legendary Times columnist, devoted one of his Op-Ed columns to an interview with Those Who as in "Those Who snivel and sneer whenever something good is said about America." Back then, Those Who played a major role in politicians' speeches. The problem with "the Some" and especially with "Some Democrats" is that they are mighty hard to find. And that characteristic, says Krugman, is exactly why 'the Some" is such a useful tool for right-wing propagandists who're trying to call attention away from all of Dubya's failures. If you have a NY Times sub, you can read Krugman's full column here, behind the pay firewall. Otherwise, I'd like to direct your attention to this. Yet another big Magpie thank-you goes to the Peking Duck. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:15 AM | Get permalink
The neverending war in Iraq.
Dubya's administration is making plans to keep tens of thousands of US troops in Iraq for decades: Mr. Bush on Friday made clear that the American commitment to [Iraq] will be long-term. Officials say the administration has begun to look at the costs of maintaining a force of roughly 50,000 troops there for years to come, roughly the size of the American presence maintained in the Philippines and Korea for decades after those conflicts. Via NY Times. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:05 AM | Get permalink
I do like those Dixie Chicks.
And I sure did enjoy watching this live performance, which includes their current single, 'Not Ready to Make Nice' [Flash req'd] Still not ready to make nice. I saw links to the video on lots of blogs, but thanks to The Dees Diversion for giving me that push I needed to finally go look at the video. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:02 AM | Get permalink
The real reason same-sex marriage is so dangerous.
As Ted Rall reveals, married lesbians and gay men are behind all of the problems faced by the US. If you want to know the true extent of the gay marriage threat, take a look at the full cartoon over here. And if you want to see more of Rall's stuff, check out his website. Via Association of American Editorial Cartoonists. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:00 AM | Get permalink
Sunday, June 11, 2006
Playing with the lives of young women and poor women.
Last week, the US Food and Drug Administration approved the use of Gardasil, a vaccine that kills many forms of human papillomavirus (HPV). HPV is the leading cause of cervical cancer, which kills about a 240,000 women worldwide each year; 4000 of these deaths are in the US. About 20 million people in the US carry the virus. One would think that the HPV vaccine would be welcomed as a valuable public heath measure, and would get added immediately to the array of vaccinations given to schoolchildren in the US. Since HPV is transmitted sexually, however, that's not happening. Instead, the HPV vaccine has become a political football for the religious right, who maintain that if girls are vaccinated against HPV, they'll be more likely to have sex. That specious argument, says Shark-fu, hides the real agenda of the religious right: The current social conservative effort to keep the new HPV vaccine from being required for all school age girls and young women is an act of aggression in the war against America's founding beliefs...a war in which poor and/or minority women being used as human shields during battle. It's good to read someone who doesn't mince their words in describing the despicable tactics of the religious right regarding the HPV vaccine. Go read the rest of the post here. Via AngryBlackBitch. | | Posted by Magpie at 4:25 PM | Get permalink
Not the best-ever version of 'Johnny B. Goode.'
But it sure is fun to watch Chuck Berry and John Lennon on the same stage, playing the same song. Watch it here. John Lennon & Chuck Berry on The Mike Douglas Show, 1972.] Via Grow-a-Brain. | | Posted by Magpie at 3:52 PM | Get permalink
Sanity is in short supply in Washington, too.
If the quote in the post below wasn't enough, check out these remarks about the suicides at Guantánamo from Colleen Graffy, Dubya's deputy assistant secretary of state for public diplomacy: Ms Graffy told the BBC the deaths were "a tactic to further the jihadi cause". No further comment is needed. Via ABC News (Australia). | | Posted by Magpie at 3:04 PM | Get permalink
Sanity clause? There ain't no sanity clause!
At least not at the Guantánamo prison camp, anyway. Faced with the suicide deaths of three Guantánamo 'detainees,' what does the camp commander have to say? "They [the prisoners] are smart, they are creative, they are committed," Admiral [Harry} Harris said. "They have no regard for life, neither ours nor their own. I believe this was not an act of desperation, but an act of asymmetrical warfare waged against us." That's right. Harris said nothing about the conditions that the 'detainees' are being held in. Nothing about the effects that being held essentially incommunicado for years, generally without charges, might have on prisoners. No. Admiral Harris accuses the dead prisoners of making war on the US. Talk about going off the proverial deep end. Via Knight Ridder Washington Bureau and NY Times. | | Posted by Magpie at 2:10 PM | Get permalink
Wanted: New scapegoats.
For most of Dubya's term in office, one of the easiest and most reliable way to deal with sliding poll numbers was to play the gay card. Just mention gay marriage, and the GOP's most fervant supporters would flock to the polls to keep the homosexual menace at bay. Unfortunately for the bigots, their failure to get the anti-gay marriage amendment onto the floor of the US Senate shows that this strategy may finally be outdated. Polls that show public support for same-sex marriage has increased substantially since Dubya was re-elected, which makes it unlikely that the amendment will re-appear in Congress any time soon. At least as a tactic in national politics, it looks like the persecution of the country's lesbian and gay citizens has probably passed its high-water mark. That's why the right wing needs a new set of scapegoats. And, as Frank Rich explains, the new target of right-wing bigots is Latino immigrants: The most pernicious demagogues on immigration often invoke national security as their rationale, but no terrorist has been known to enter the United States from Mexico. Even the arguments about immigrants' economic impact are sometimes a smokescreen for a baser animus. As John B. Judis of The New Republic documented in his account of Arizona's combustible immigration politics, the dominant fear in that border state has less to do with immigrants stealing jobs (which are going begging in construction and agriculture) than with their contaminating the culture through "Mexicanization." It's the same complaint that's been leveled against every immigrant group when the country's in this foul a mood. If you're a NY Times subscriber, you can read the full column here, behind the pay firewall. Otherwise, we suggest heading over here. The usual big Magpie thank you to the Peking Duck. | | Posted by Magpie at 1:37 AM | Get permalink
What's going on out there on the Great Plains?
They certainly do seem to have some interesting public works projects. Our first exhibit comes via Susie at Suburban Guerrilla, who kindly pointed me to an interesting photo that appears at the top of this article in the Des Moines Register. Anything you see in the photo is all in your dirty mind. Here's how the Register dealt with the photo: The nearly four-acre basin was constructed about two years ago and "took some of the load off of the pipe downstream" and helps prevent flooding, according to Des Moines City Engineer Jeb Brewer. The flood basin in Des Moines immediately made me think of something I'd seen only a few hours' drive from Des Moines: Ditto with this photo, you pervert! The first time I saw Nebraska's rather singular capitol building, I was driving into Lincoln from the south during a trip from California to Minnesota. Even having been warned about the building by a friend who grew up in Lincoln, I have to admit that I started laughing out loud when I came over a rise and saw the capitol in all its phallic glory. I don't know the story about how Nebraska got a such an, uh, upstanding building for its state govenment, but I've always suspected that some smart-ass Eastern architect decided to put one over on the hayseeds. And I figure that the Nebraskans got the the joke from the first moment they saw the architectural drawings, but figured the building would be good for tourism. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:49 AM | Get permalink
'Meet the Press' in Hell.
This week, Tim Russert's guests are Jesus, Satan, Michelle Malkin, and Ann Coulter.
It's stunning. Read it all here. Via World O'Crap. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:27 AM | Get permalink
It's not surprising when the US 'mainstream' media misses an important story.
But what is surprising is when that fact is noticed by someone in the mainstream media. It's been 10 day since Robert F. Kennedy, Jr's article on the stealing of the 2004 presidential election appeared in Rolling Stone. And in those ten days, the silence of US 'mainstream' media on the allegations made in Kennedy's story has been deafening. That silence has also been noticed by Seattle Post-Intelligencer, associate publisher Kenneth Bunting. In Friday's edition of the P-I, Bunting takes his journalistic colleagues to task for ignoring Kennedy's story: The blogosphere has been abuzz. But in the days since Rolling Stone magazine published a long piece that accused Republicans of widespread and intentional cheating that affected the outcome of the last presidential election, the silence in America's establishment media has been deafening. You really should go read it all, since it'll be a long time until you see another article like it in a mainstream US newspaper. Via Suburban Guerrilla. | | Posted by Magpie at 12:12 AM | Get permalink |
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