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July 31, 2005

Gloria Steinem Singlehandly Subverting Civilization?

From Catch.com

"Rick Santorum was on George Stephanopoulos' This Week this morning promoting his new book It Takes a Family and, man, was it a horrible performance. After a brief discussion about Bill Frist's flip-flop on stem cell research, George read the following passage from the book:

"Respect for stay-at-home mothers has been poisoned by a toxic combination of the village elders' war on the traditional family and radical feminism's misogynistic crusade to make working outside the home the only marker of social value and self-respect."

And then the fun began:

STEPHANOPOULOS: Let's get specific here, name one or two of these radical feminists who are on this crusade.

SANTORUM: Well, I mean, uh, you know, you have, you go, you go back to, um, ah, what's her name, well, Gloria Steinem, but I'm trying to remember, ah, [tsk], eh, can't remember the woman's name. That's terrible—anyway...

STEPHANOPOULOS: Well, that's kind of an important point. You point this broad brush ... radical feminists, village elders ... name one.

SANTORUM: (talking over Stephanopoulos) There's lots of, there's lots of, well, Gloria Steinem, there's one.

So I'm trying to research Gloria Steinem's "misogynistic crusade to make working outside the home the only marker of social value and self-respect," but I keep getting bogged down (Googled down?) with sites that reference things like Ms. Magazine, her books, her introduction to "Free To Be You and Me," her expose about the poor and oppressive working conditions of Playboy bunnies, and her efforts to draw attention to the issue of underrepresentation of women in politics. I never thought she was particularly radical, but if she scares Rick Santorum that much, she must be doing something right.

Update from Dr. Bitch: *Actual quote by Gloria Steinem:

"We also have to re-define work, so that the work of caring for children and doing human maintenance in the home is counted as productive work, has attributed value."

EFF's Legal Guide For Bloggers

Honoring the Flag, Or Desecrating It?

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Only your local law enforcement officials will know for sure. Hopefully party affiliation will not be a relevant consideration.

Silence!

From McSweeney's: Things Heard During John Cage's Folsom Prison Performance of "4'33".

Oddbooks

Here.

July 30, 2005

Credit where credit's due

Like the Clinton administration before it, the Bush administration has walked an uncomfortable path with the brutal government of Uzbekistan, headed by President Islom Karimov. I've been one of the critics of the Bush administration's support for the government, even as it has become clear that some units that received US antiterrorism assistance training may have been involved in a brutal massacre in Andijon earlier this year.

But the Bush administration may have been cooperating behind the scenes with a United Nations mission to rescue refugees from the massacre, and that decision may cost the US its military base in Uzbekistan. So far, the Bush administration is saying that political and economic reform in Uzbekistan is more important to us than keeping the air base. Good for them.

What Would You Ask Judge Roberts?

You can suggest questions here, to Sen. Barbara A. Mikulski, Sen. Barbara Boxer, Sen. Patty Murray, Sen. Mary L. Landrieu, Sen. Debbie Stabenow, Sen. Maria Cantwell, and Sen. Hillary Clinton.

July 29, 2005

Women's Homeland Security

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Via Guerrilla Girls.

Preacher Feature

Do you need a Holy Ghost Enema? Yikes. Via Oliver Willis.

A Call for Government-Sponsored Blacklists

According to a July 27, 2005, Action Alert from FAIR (Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting):

"New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman has urged the U.S. government to create blacklists of condemned political speech--not only by those who advocate violence, but also by those who believe that U.S. government actions may encourage violent reprisals. The latter group, which Friedman called 'just one notch less despicable than the terrorists,' includes a majority of Americans, according to recent polls. . . ."

To read the entire Action Alert, go to http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2598

To read Friedman's Op-Ed piece, go to http://tinyurl.com/7hpwh

The 2004 Elections Again

Matt Taibbi:

.... "Here's the thing about Ohio. Until you really look at it, you won't understand its significance, which is this: the techniques used in this particular theft have the capacity to alter elections not by dozens or hundreds or even thousands of votes, but by tens of thousands.

"And if we ignore this now, we're putting proven methods for easily ripping off major elections in the hands of the same party that had no qualms whatsoever about lying its way into a war in Iraq. In the hands of a merely corrupt political party, a bad election or two would be no big deal. But these clowns we have in power now imagine themselves to be revolutionaries, and their psychology is a lot like that of the leadership of Enron, pre-meltdown—with each passing day that they get away with it, they become more convinced by a delusion of righteousness.

"Obviously people who have followed this story before know the basic facts already, but for those who ignored Ohio until now, here's a very brief greatest hits of Ohio irregularities:

• As was the case in Florida, the secretary of state (Kenneth Blackwell, in Ohio), who is in charge of elections, was also the co-chair of the state's Bush-Cheney campaign.

• In a technique reminiscent of the semantic gymnastics of pre-Civil Rights Act election officials, Blackwell replaced the word "jurisdiction" with "precinct" in an electoral directive that would ultimately result in perhaps tens of thousands of provisional ballots—votes cast mainly by low-income residents—being disallowed.

• Blackwell initially rejected thousands of voter registrations because they were printed on paper that was, according to him, the wrong weight.

• In conservative, Bush-friendly Miami County, voter turnout was an Uzbekistan-esque 98.55 percent.

• In Warren county, election officials locked down the administration building and prevented reporters from observing the ballot counting, citing a "terrorist threat" (described as being a "10" on a scale of 1 to 10) that had been reported to them by the FBI. The FBI made no such report. Recounts conducted during this lockdown resulted in increased votes for Bush.

• In Franklin County, 4,258 votes were cast for Bush in a precinct where there were only 800 registered voters.

"And so on. There are dozens more such glitches, which taken together suggest that the exit polls in Ohio, showing Kerry the victor, were probably accurate." ...

Via Echidne of the Snakes.

Ed Felten on "Harry Potter and the Half Baked Plan"

"Despite J.K. Rowling’s decision not to offer the new Harry Potter book in e-book format, it took less than a day for fans to scan the book and assemble an unauthorized electronic version, which is reportedly circulating on the Internet.

"If Rowling thought that her decision against e-book release would prevent infringement, then she needs to learn more about Muggle technology. (It’s not certain that her e-book decision was driven by infringement worries. Kids’ books apparently sell much worse as e-books than comparable adult books do, so she might have thought there would be insufficient demand for the e-book. But really — insufficient demand for Harry Potter this week? Not likely.)

"It’s a common mistake to think that digital distribution leads to infringement, so that one can prevent infringement by sticking with analog distribution. Hollywood made this argument in the broadcast flag proceeding, saying that the switch to digital broadcasting of television would make the infringement problem so much worse — and the FCC even bought it.

"As Harry Potter teaches us, what enables online infringement is not digital release of the work, but digital redistribution by users. And a work can be redistributed digitally, regardless of whether it was originally released in digital or analog form. Analog books can be scanned digitally; analog audio can be recorded digitally; analog video can be camcorded digitally. The resulting digital copies can be redistributed." ....

Read the whole thing here.

July 28, 2005

Northern Ireland Mural

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Hope

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Portrait of Ann McGivigan, a 14 year old schoolgirl shot by the British Army, painted by the Bogside Mural Artists, Derry, Northern Ireland.

From today's NYT:
"The Irish Republican Army declared an end on Thursday to a 36-year campaign of violence against Britain that was aimed at unifying Northern Ireland with the Irish Republic.

"The long-awaited announcement was viewed in London and Dublin as a profound turning-point that could bring an end to a bloody and painful chapter, possibly shifting in Northern Ireland's destiny away from the sectarian strife that accompanied the Republicans' opposition to British rule and that claimed more than 3,500 lives on both sides."

Goodbyes

Just after 9/11, New Yorkers spontaneously filled Union Square Park with flowers, cards, drawings, notes, and mementos to those lost in the attacks. It was an amazing and touching gesture, and one that Londoners have adopted as well.

There is a section of Russell Square, just feet from the Underground stop that saw the worst destruction and death on 7/7, where friends and neighbors have done the same thing.

We went there today.
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Update from Iraq

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Note from a friend stationed in Iraq:

"Weather still freakin' hot. It was about 118 today, but we had a nice breeze...with the wind chill, it felt like it was down to a balmy 115.

"So, they had this citizenship ceremony here the other day. 140 foreign nationals who had enlisted in the Army had been granted citizenship. I think there were folks from about 35 countries represented here. All Americans now. Pretty cool stuff. Pic enclosed."

Why Being a School Librarian Sucks

There's a reason I chose academic librarianship. School librarianship is definitely a calling. The following article appeared in the July 22nd issue of the online Christian publication AgapePress.

"'Arkansas Parents Uncover Volumes of Vile Literature in School Libraries' By Jim Brown July 22, 2005 (AgapePress) - An Arkansas mother who succeeded in getting three sexually explicit books removed from Fayetteville school libraries says she has found there are more than a hundred books of that nature in the school district. Now a mental health counselor is recommending a parental audit of all the books in the city's school libraries. . . . 'The majority of these ... are fiction books,' the Arkansas mom notes, 'so there's no educational value in them outside of the fact that they're literary -- and I hesitate when I say "works" -- but they're literary works that have been put into our library system to, in my opinion, desensitize and indoctrinate our kids to thinking that sex with whoever, whenever, whatever you want to is okay.' . . ."

The entire article can be found at http://headlines.agapepress.org/archive/7/222005a.asp. For a real treat, click on the WPAAG link to the titles of some of these shocking, pornographic books, including Love in the Time of Cholera and Beloved. I love the fact that the "titillating" excerpt from Alice Sebold's Lucky is a RAPE SCENE. I'm assuming that no one bothered to read the excerpt, much less the book.

The Ongoing Threat to America's Libraries

Utne Librarian Chris Dodge's recent article "Knowledge for Sale: Are America's Public Libraries on the Verge of Losing Their Way?" is smart and thoughtful. I'd like to add one additional resource to his list -- ALA's Office of Intellectual Freedom.

War Has New Trademark

The Bush administration has begun downplaying the phrase "war on terror" in favor of a new slogan, "a global struggle against violent extremism," according to this UPI story. No word yet on whether the Department of Homeland Security will be replacing the dull red, orange, yellow, blue, and green of its current "Color-coded Threat Level System" with the more aesthetically appealing vermillion, apricot, goldenrod, turquoise and emerald. Or maybe even some plaids, stripes or tweeds.

Looks like we are back already!

The techsters at NYU did a great job installing the new MT software. Blogging here will be much better now.

Melissa and I are in London right now and guess what: it's raining here. Yep. In all my visits to London I have yet to see the sun shine.

We will post some stuff over the next few days about the state of the city. It's pretty tense here, as you would imagine.

The Biggest Problem with Roberts

As Talking Points Memo reports, Roberts played a much bigger role in the election theft of 2000 than he or the White House has previously admitted.

If stealing an election does not disqualify one from serving on the Supreme Court, I don't know what does.

July 26, 2005

See You Friday!

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Happy travels to Siva and Melissa!

Stay Cool

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AG "Open" to Patriot Act Revisions

". . . 'To take it [the library provision] away as a tool for law enforcement, I think would be counterproductive and would make America less safe,' he said.

Gonzales said would be open to changes that would clarify the 'relevant standard' in seeking a court order for library records in a terrorism investigation.

He also said he is open to changes that would allow business owners to consult with an attorney and challenge in court an order seeking their records.

'But we can't have a situation where we provide a blanket safe haven for terrorists, that they can go to a library computer and communicate with their colleagues.

'It's absolutely essential that we have the ability to go after records that are related to a terrorism investigation,' he said.

'We have no interest in perusing the library records of average Americans,' Gonzales said."

For the complete article, go to - http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/07/24/gonzales.patriot/

And who are these average Americans?

The Campus Progress Inexcusable Misquote Contest!

Information (and misinformation?) here. Via Xoverboard.

Potato-Powered Web Server

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If my employer got one of these, it would be an upgrade.

Post-It Lamp

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Per the author: "i dressed up my old ikea lamp with some leftover post-it notes. just make sure you use a cool bulb, like a flourescent."

The Unheard Beethoven

This site "endeavors to make all of Beethoven's unrecorded music readily accessible to the public. "

As an unexpected plus, the website also illustrates that copyright laws can be asserted in reasonable and socially useful ways:

"While the Unheard Beethoven website is dedicated to the dissemination of Beethoven's work as widely as possible, the content of this site and all MIDI files contained on this site are copyrighted by Mark S. Zimmer and/or Willem (aka xickx). Fair use of these MIDI files is encouraged; we ask, however, that in connection with any such use that the arranger of that particular MIDI file be credited and the URL of the Unheard Beethoven website be listed. Bulk download and copying and/or distribution of the MIDI files on this site is strictly prohibited. No more than 25 MIDI files may be downloaded or copied in any one day by one entity without the permission(s) of the copyright holder(s).

July 25, 2005

My Goodness

This site is hard to explain, you must see it and do some downscrolling with the sound up.

Grammar Quiz

To boldly go and split infinitives...

Sivacracy takes a short break

Sivacracy will be idle on Wednesday and Thursday. Due to tremendous demand, NYU techies have informed me that they have to move the blog to another part of the system. This will allow faster uploads etc.

It will take at least a day to complete this. So please expect no posts Wednesday and Thursday.

Melissa and I are off to the UK on Tuesday evening. We will post from London on Friday.

Meanwhile, here is a picture of our painfully cute dog, Ellie. We put her in Pet Camp today. We miss her terribly already!

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Google Moon

Cheesy.

More About Supreme Court Nominee Roberts

The DC Circuit Court of Appeals, on which Roberts currently serves, issued an opinion in a Fourth Amendment case last Friday concerning the circumstances under which the police may search the trunk of a car. The panel majority held that the search at issue violated the Fourth Amendment, but Judge Roberts dissented. The text of the opinion is available here.

Roberts May Have Been Caught Lying Already

Or maybe it is just the Bush adminstration lying again. From Americablog:

"Someone is lying -- either the White House or Roberts. When [his nomination] was announced, it was immediately mentioned by some press outlets that Roberts belonged to the Federalist Society, a far right group devoted to attacking what it saw as "liberalism" on the bench. It is certainly a sign of someone who belongs on the fringes of judicial philosophy.

"Here's the problem. We were immediately told Roberts wasn't a member and -- taking the White House at its word -- numerous media outlets ran corrections. Per USA Today:

"Roberts has acknowledged participating in Federal Society events and giving speeches for the organization. But on Monday, presidential press secretary Scott McClellan said, "He doesn't recall ever paying dues or being a member."

That's Scotty in another tight bind and saying the info came directly from Roberts.

But the Washington Post reported this:

"The Washington Post reported Monday that it had obtained from a liberal group a 1997-98 Federalist Society leadership directory listing Roberts, then a partner in a private law firm, as being a steering committee member in the group's Washington chapter."

Confederate States of America: The Movie

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The trailer for Kevin Willmott's Confederate States of America is now available on IFILM. CSA is a mockumentary (man, I hate that word) of what the U.S. might look like if the South had won. The film was well-received at Sundance in 2004. As a white, liberal Southerner, I am outraged...entertained...no outraged...no entertained.

Orphan Works Comments

Information about the Copyright Office's "roundtable" hearings here.
Initial Comments here.
Reply Comments here.

If you can only sample a few comments and/or replies, and you want a variety of viewpoints, I'd recommend those by: Allan Adler, Sarah Andrews, Jonathan Band, June Besek, James Boyle, Carol Fleishauer, James Fruchterman, Jane Ginsburg and Paul Goldstein, Peter Jaszi, Michael Keller, Lawrence Lessig, Doris Estelle Long, Annette Melville, Mary Minow, Miriam Nisbet, and Jennifer Urban. That is not to dismiss any of the comments or replies; just to highlight a few that are thoughtful and articulate, which uncoincidentally includes a lot of folks who work with libraries.

Orphan Works

Fron today's Chron:

Whose Work Is It, Anyway?
The use of 'orphan works' of art and literature, whose creators cannot be identified, puts scholars and artists at odds over changes in copyright law
By SCOTT CARLSON

"Like many other scholars across the country, Joseph Siry might have broken the law to illustrate an article he wrote for an academic journal -- by including an illustration without obtaining permission to do so from its copyright holder.

"Mr. Siry, who is usually meticulous about clearing copyrights, says he did his best to get permission for the illustration -- a sketch of a building, drawn by a collaboration of architects at several firms, that had influenced a Frank Lloyd Wright design some 50 years ago.

"But Mr. Siry, a professor of art history at Wellesley College, hit a series of dead ends: The architecture firms involved were out of business, and their onetime principals could not be found. The rendering had appeared in Life magazine, but staff members there told him that the magazine did not own the images. Nor did Life's archives have any record of people connected to the design.

"With no apparent owner to approve its publication, the image was stuck in copyright limbo, a prime example of what legal experts call an "orphan work." Mr. Siry made a difficult decision: He cited the little information he had about the design and used it in his article anyway, despite the risk of being sued for infringement if an architect turned up later with a legal claim to it. He was assured by the academic journal, he says, "that this risk was minimal." Still, he expresses discomfort over the choice he made.

"Many scholars, archivists, and librarians have stories like Mr. Siry's. Orphan works have led to complications not only in publishing but also in digitizing projects, preservation efforts, and the creation of works like film and video documentaries.

"This week, at the urging of prominent legal scholars, academic-library organizations, technology companies such as Google and Microsoft, and many other interested parties, the U.S. Copyright Office is holding a series of hearings to determine whether copyright law should change to allow for more liberal use of orphan works."

"Scholars and others weighed in earlier this year, filing comments on the issue with the copyright office in anticipation of the hearings. The American Historical Association, for example, noted that orphan works had become a problem for scholars, "hampering the historian's ability to work with the raw materials of history."

"The comments reveal that even frequent adversaries on copyright issues agree that changes are needed in how the law governs orphan works. But few people agree on what those changes should be.

"Many issues surrounding orphan works -- how they should be defined, vetted, and used, and how much a user should pay if a work's "parent" turns up later -- remain subject to vigorous debate, with various groups looking out for their interests. The music-licensing organizations Broadcast Music Inc. and Ascap have proposed that any orphan-works exemptions should not include music. Other parties have suggested that changes in law should apply only to domestically published works, while foreign works and unpublished works should remain strictly protected. (Foreign works must be protected to avoid violating international agreements, some lawyers say, and unpublished works may need to be off limits to protect the privacy of owners who might have preferred that the works remain unpublished.)

"And some groups -- in particular visual artists like photographers and illustrators -- strongly oppose any loosening of the law for orphan works, seeing it as an assault on copyright that will deprive artists and creators of their due.

Many Ways to Orphan

"An orphan work can be a film, a book, a private letter, a painting, or any other creative work covered by copyright, in which protection, through the complexity of the law, can extend as far back as 1923. A work can become orphaned in any number of ways: For example, an artist can die, and the heirs may not know about the artist's copyrighted work. A company that published a novel might go out of business or fall into the hands of another company that does not maintain publication records. It is particularly hard to figure out who took a photograph, unless the name of the photographer or studio is cited somewhere on the print.

"Works like those add up to a great deal of published material, according to studies conducted by research libraries. Five years ago Carnegie Mellon University's library studied a sample of about 270 items from its holdings; librarians could not find the owners of 22 percent of the works.

"In response to the U.S. Copyright Office's request for comments, Cornell University librarians added up the money and time spent clearing copyright on 343 monographs for a digital archive of literature on agriculture. Although the library has spent $50,000 and months of staff time calling publishers, authors, and authors' heirs, it has not been able to identify the owners of 58 percent of the monographs.

"In 47 cases we were denied permission, and this was primarily because the people we contacted were unsure whether they could authorize the reproduction or not," says Peter B. Hirtle, who monitors intellectual-property issues for Cornell's libraries. "Copyright is supposed to advance the sciences and arts, and this is copyright becoming an impediment to the sciences and arts."

"Restrictions on using orphan works, often imposed by risk-averse lawyers at colleges and museums, affect scholarly work in ways large and small.

"Wendy Katz, an assistant professor of art history at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, had trouble finding the copyright owner of a painting she wanted to reproduce in a book. The museum that provided a picture of the painting could offer no help, and her search led only to another scholar who had published the painting without permission, after also failing to find the copyright owner.

"Ms. Katz, too, eventually published the painting, hoping that the owner would not turn up. The decision bothers her, as she is normally a supporter of copyright for artists, but she believes that scholars should get special consideration in cases like these.

"I don't see publication harming the value of the objects," she says. "I'm not making any money from it, and the press is breaking even, if they are lucky."

"In its comments to the copyright office, the Center for the Study of the Public Domain, at Duke Law School, said whole generations of movies are at risk because of their orphan status. Film deteriorates more rapidly than other media, such as paper. Digitization projects could help preserve the films, but the center notes that donors are not inclined to pay for the costly digitization of movies that the public cannot see because of copyright restrictions.

Model Proposal

"Those are the sorts of problems that Peter Andrew Jaszi, a law professor at American University, heard about at copyright conferences and meetings several years ago, before abandoned works were commonly known as "orphans." He encouraged his students at the law school's Glushko-Samuelson Intellectual Property Law Clinic to propose a solution.

"The clinic's response, filed with the copyright office this year, has come to be seen by many libraries and publishers as a model solution. Its basic points: An orphan work is any for which an owner cannot be found, regardless of how recently it was published or whether it was published at all. People should be able to use an apparently orphan work after "reasonable effort" to search for its owner, but the law should not spell out what that effort entails. If an owner turns up after a supposedly orphan work has been used, the owner should be able to collect a small amount -- from $100 to $500 -- but not obtain statutory damages, attorneys' fees, or injunctions.

"The Glushko-Samuelson proposal does not advocate establishing a registry of orphan works, but some copyright experts do. Lawrence Lessig, a Stanford University law professor, recommends requiring authors, musicians, and others to register their work within 25 years of publication. Software developers would get less time -- five years -- because software becomes obsolete much more quickly. A search of the government-supported registry would be enough to determine whether or not a work was an orphan.

"Proposals by other organizations diverge wildly, but most of them disagree on two main points: how an orphan work should be defined, and what a user should pay if an owner comes along after a work has been used.

Of the two, the issue of payment is simpler.

"Some organizations, such as museums, have recommended paying nothing at all. The J. Paul Getty Trust, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation have suggested a "safe harbor" of five years after the use of an orphan work, beyond which point the owner of a work would not receive payment, although he or she could negotiate for its continued use.

"On the other side, comprising mainly groups that represent publishers and authors, some have proposed that a user should pay a "reasonable licensing fee" to the owner, based on what the user might have paid if the owner had been found before publication. By contrast, paying a small, fixed amount of only $100 to $500 "would cause a real unfairness for copyright owners," says Allan R. Adler, a lawyer for the Association of American Publishers, which filed comments jointly with the Association of American University Presses and a software-industry group. "If the user of the work refused to pay even that small amount," he says, "it wouldn't be worth going to court to collect it."

"Mr. Jaszi, the law professor, contends that stipulating only that a fee be "reasonable" is too vague a standard to be useful. "The problem with that proposal is uncertainty," he says.

"The reason that people do not use orphan works now, he argues, is that "they don't know what their exposure might be if they use something and end up with a cease-and-desist letter."

'It's a Pain'

"When hearings convene this week in Washington and on August 2 in Berkeley, Calif., the copyright office might hear far more wrangling over what types of works could be used as orphans -- or whether the issue is as pressing as some say it is.

"Jane C. Ginsburg, a professor of law at Columbia University, read through the comments submitted to the copyright office while she was submitting her own. "There are an awful lot of submissions that say, 'It's a pain in the butt to clear rights,'" she says. "That doesn't make a work an orphan work. Both internationally and domestically, you don't want this to be used as an excuse to screw individual authors."

"She is concerned that some of the proposed changes are inconsistent with international copyright agreements, such as the Berne Convention and the World Trade Organization's Trips agreement. As a result, she argues, international works should not be covered in any change of the rules.

"These international norms have teeth," she says. If the United States creates an exception to copyright that does not comply with the terms of international treaties, she says, aggrieved countries can go through the WTO to impose sanctions on the United States.

"Concerns about international law aside, Ms. Ginsburg worries that individual artists and independent writers, not big publishers, have the most to lose from any change in copyright law because they do not have the money or influence to advertise ownership of their work.

"Many of those who raise concerns about orphan works start from the premise that there are works that should be in the public domain because their authors don't care about them, and that they are clogging up the system and preventing subsequent authors and others from using them," she says. "That's not necessarily a correct premise."

"A group called the Illustrators' Partnership of America was formed on the basis of issues such as this. Illustrators, the group points out, are hard to trace if a picture appears uncredited in a book or online.

"Visual artists are particularly harmed by this concept of declaring orphaned any work where the author can't be located or identified," says Cynthia Turner, a medical illustrator who is part of the group. "That just about covers all of our work. We are already having a lot of difficulty with our work being separated from its original publication and being thrown up on the Web and disseminated without our permission."

"Ms. Turner and Brad Holland, an illustrator whose work has appeared in Time and The New Yorker, argue that publishers and others will use orphan-works exceptions to exploit artists' work.

"It would undermine our ability to control our rights and make a living from the work that we produce," Ms. Turner says.

'There Is a Market'

"Mr. Holland says he recently resold some illustrations that originally appeared in a book 30 years ago. "I never thought anyone would want to use them again," he says, "but it suddenly dawned on me that there is a market for these illustrations." Just because those illustrations were made long ago and were once thought unmarketable even by the artist, does not mean that he surrenders his rights to them, he says.

"Those illustrations would have been too old to register under Mr. Lessig's proposal, Mr. Holland notes. In general, he says, a registry requiring him to dig through and register thousands of illustrations is an unfair burden, and it is worse for photographers, who can take scores of pictures in a single year.

"Lessig wants to argue that I need to register everything that I do, or it's an indication that I don't see any commercial value," Mr. Holland says. A registry would require him to dig through and register thousands of illustrations.

"Peter Jaszi and Larry Lessig and these characters are all arguing that the purpose of copyright law is to bring work into the public domain as rapidly as possible," he says.

"The Illustrators' Partnership gathered the signatures of hundreds of artists and illustrators in the United States and other countries, including France, Ireland, and Mexico, and submitted them to the copyright office, along with a statement opposing orphan-works exceptions.

"Despite their opposition to mandatory registration, the illustrators are considering a voluntary registry using technology that can embed ownership information in a picture, to help people identify the owners of works.

"Mr. Jaszi sympathizes with those who worry about exploitation under new orphan-works rules, but he worries that various groups will pressure the copyright office and lawmakers to "peel off" the more challenging parts of orphan-works reform.

"In other words, the narrower the coverage, the more likely it will slide through without controversy," he says. "Anyone who is interested in orphan works should watch to make sure that big chunks of material don't get pushed aside in an effort to make something happen."

"One of those waiting for the outcome is Leslie Humm Cormier, who teaches art history at Emerson College.

"Recently she was working on an article about the Modernist architect Josep Lluis Sert, of the firm Sert, Jackson, & Associates. She acquired photographs of Sert's work from the 1950s and 60s from his partner, Huson Jackson. But she learned that the firm did not own the photographs; the photographer did, and he was nowhere to be found.

"I completed the work as well as I could, but I would have done much more in-depth work if I had a sense of freedom," she says. "It would have been a journal article. As it turned out, I put it in a lesser publication."

"Ms. Cormier, who recalls once being plagiarized by a newspaper writer, says the incident steeled her resolve never to use an item without permission. "It's severely limiting," especially for someone in her profession, she says. "It's a visual subject that I work in."

http://chronicle.com
Section: Information Technology
Volume 51, Issue 47, Page A33

July 24, 2005

The Roberts Paper Trail -- What Little There Is

From the Associated Press:

"Citing privacy and precedent, the Bush administration indicated Sunday it does not intend to release all memos and other documents written by Supreme Court nominee John Roberts when he worked for two Republican presidents. . . ."

"Fred D. Thompson, the former Tennessee senator who is guiding Roberts through the nomination process on behalf of the White House, said material that would come under attorney-client privilege would be withheld. He contended that previous administrations, both Republican and Democrat, have followed that principle. . . .

Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy, the senior Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, said other nominees, including Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, have provided material they wrote in confidence while working in the Justice Department.

'It's a total red herring to say, "Oh, we can't show this,"' Leahy told ABC's 'This Week.'

'And of course there is no lawyer-client privilege,' he said. 'Those working in the solicitor general's office are not working for the president. They're working for you and me and all the American people.' . . ."

How Amazon.com Looked 10 Years Ago

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Dang. Courtesy of the West Virginia Surf Report.

Women Celebrate Writing

Homepage here.

T-Shirt Commentary

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Available here.

Law School With The Fewest Female Faculty Members?

I don't have time to do an in-depth study, but the George Mason School of Law has to be a contender. Looks to me like only two tenured or tenure-track women (one of each, it appears) are currently teaching there full time.

The visitors and adjuncts are pretty heavily male too. Very surprising, given the pool of available talent in the DC area, where the school is located.

Hillary Clinton Accused of Being A Witch

From the Daily Howler:

"Just so we know who were talking about, lets visit cable talker Chris Matthews as he played some Hardball Monday night. The previous Friday, Hillary Clinton had criticized President Bush for cutting money from subway security. To Matthews, Clintons critique was in poor taste because of that days London bombings. Deborah Orin agreed with her hostand for about the ten millionth time, her host revealed his poor character:

ORIN (7/11/05): I agree with you, Chris, and I disagree with E. J. [Dionne]. I think that was notit was tone-deaf. It was a day of tragedy in London. And that`s not the day to immediately whack the president, you know, and "If it happens here, it will be your fault" sort of thing.

MATTHEWS: I hate to say thisI`m not going to hate to say it, it`s a fact. You look more witchy when you`re doing it like this.

Hillary Clinton was looking witchy, Chris said. The talker allowed himself to say it because it was a fact.

Three cheers to E. J. Dionne, by the way. Instantly, he responded: By the way, Chuck Schumer was there with her saying there`s a real problem with mass transit and security. And we don`t call him a witch. But we do call Hillary Clinton a witch because, wellbecause its Hillary Clinton. And we do it, of course, because its Chris Matthewsthe loud, bizarre, influential host who said of Al Gore, in the wake of 9/11, "He doesnt look like one of us. He doesnt seem very American, even (see THE DAILY HOWLER, 11/02/01). But you know Chris! Back in March, when Hillary Clinton got a bit of good press, he asked Cokie Roberts to explain it. Chris had old-fashioned hate on his mindand witchcraft was troubling him again:

MATTHEWS (3/3/05): "Everybody`s brain is being turned in a matter of two weeks from I hate that woman to wonderful woman. Is this witchcraft, do you think?"

No, I don`t think it`s witchcraft, Cokie said."

Screwing Lightbulbs

Knock-knock.

Who's there?

Under the Patriot Act, we don't have to tell you that.

This and other gratuitous and mean-spirited Bush jokes available at McSweeney's.

A difficult judgment

MTV2's "Video Mods" is now in its second season, and a couple of the new episodes have made me wonder once again whether it's the best show in history or a wasted opportunity. On the one hand, the show could be so much more. On the other hand, anyone who doesn't want to see famous video games used for music videos simply hasn't lived. Or, alternatively, if they have lived, they have done so with a rewarding personal life that makes attachment to video games seem vaguely "pathetic." Or they have lived past an emotional age of 14.

Anyway, consider me, at least, hooked. The show's concept is thrilling: take a popular song and, with some clever re-engineering, have the characters in a famous video game perform the song.

Sometimes it works brilliantly: having My Chemical Romance's "I'm Not Okay" set to Death Jr is remarkably entertaining, and watching Obi-Wan, Annakin, and Yoda (on drums) perform Franz Ferdinand's "Take Me Out" in the Star Wars Pissed-Off Sith game is a lovely journey into the completely surreal.

But do we need a mawkish Yellowcard song set to the overly moody Medal of Honor 3 game? And who needed to be convinced that the Beastie Boys would be NBA Street Vol. 3 fans?

The problems with the show really follow from its most inventive property: if you watch it with the sound off, it is impossible to tell where the show ends and the commercials begin. Because the show, in order to be profitable, has to work only with immediately popular songs and video games, it's wasting virtually all of its opportunities to be brilliant.

For example, having one of the video talking heads of Half-Life 2 sing Breaking Benjamin's "So Cold" hints at what might have been. If you're like me (and, if you've gotten this far in the post, you might actually be), you were enraged every time Raiden's girlfriend Rose popped up in Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty. But what if an entire video mod consisted of her performing Schoolly-D's "Signifying Rapper" from Smoke Some Kill? You wouldn't pay to see that?

Or Tracy Chapman's "Fast Car" set to Twisted Metal: Black?

But they won't do it, because neither the songs nor the games are current. Setting popular songs to the games they deserve -- after all, can anything capture the irritation one feels listening to Coldplay's "Speed of Sound" better than the breathtakingly weird Japanese video game "Mr. Mosquito," in which you buzz around a house, biting family members? -- would be a no-go, because MTV can't lose its pact-with-the-devil relationship with Coldplay, widely accepted as the world's "most insufferable band."

Sum 41's "Pieces" was pretty funny when set to Destroy All Humans, but Radiohead's "Subterranean Homesick Alien" or even "Paranoid Android" would have been funnier. And for old school, why not Dead or Alive's "You Spin Me 'Round" set to Tempest?

My usual reaction to anything on MTV2 is to reach for my gun and to shoot the TV, momentarily forgetting that I had done that the previous evening during a "Sex and the City" episode. But with "Video Mods," I smile sadly and wonder what might have been.

Kahlid Has Been Freed

Story at Raed in the Middle.

Update: See also Tell Me A Secret, and A Family in Baghdad.

Howdy from Deep in the Heart of Southeastern Pennsylvania

After a year of lurking on Sivacracy, I'm proud to be joining the team. Ann Bartow, you've set the bar high for the rest of us.

I'm a one-time bureaucrat, some time academic librarian, and full-time mother of two children under the age of two. Although I'm a native Texan, I relocated to Philadelphia from Dallas last fall in hopes that my vote might actually matter. I've decided to stick around for a while to screw with Rick Santorum's re-election plans and to root against the Flyers. My contributions to the blog will most likely deal with family issues, libraries, and Pennsylvania politics. Expect the occasional NHL post.

Catherine

July 23, 2005

John T. Scopes

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Taken in 1924, when Scopes was 24 years old. His courage is awe-inspiring still. Not sure what is with that UFO in the background. Story about Scopes trial photos at the Smithsonian here.

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Harry Potter and the Amazing Injunction

After a bookstore in Canada accidentally sold 14 copies of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince before the official release date, the book's publisher obtained a court order, which as Michael Geist explained, "compelled anyone with a copy of the book to return it to the publisher along with any notes and other descriptions of its contents. Moreover, it prohibited Canadians from reading or discussing any aspect of the book.

"This bears repeating. In a free and democratic society, a book publisher sought and obtained a court order banning reading and discussion of a childrens book. In fact, Raincoast had asked the court to go even further, by compelling purchasers to disclose the names, addresses, and other contact information of any other person with whom they discussed the books contents."

Full story here.

Huh.

MSNBC reports: Oil industry awash in record levels of cash

"When major oil companies report their quarterly profits next week, they're once again expected to post record numbers. With crude trading around $60 a barrel, the oil industry is enjoying one of the biggest windfalls in its history. But as the industry looks for places to put that cash, it's finding it harder and harder to put funds to work finding new deposits of oil and natural gas.

"By just about any measure, the past three years have produced one of the biggest cash gushers in the oil industrys history. Since January of 2002, the price of crude has tripled, leaving oil producers awash in profits. During that period, the top 10 major public oil companies have sold some $1.5 trillion worth of crude, pocketing profits of more than $125 billion."

Record oil prices. Record oil profits. Who would have ever guessed that there could be a connection? Although Iraq is not explicitly mentioned in the article, the very next paragraph says:

This is the mother of all booms, said Oppenheimer & Co. oil analyst Fadel Gheit. They have so much profit, its almost an embarrassment of riches. They dont know what to do with it."

"Mother of all booms..." Why does that sound strangely familiar? Oh yeah.

Enter the Rove-Bot

Night Light has developed an autonomous Internet program to write all future posts on the topic of Karl Rove. Via Pen-Elayne.

Plagiarism v. Copyright Infringement

So Ann Coulter was accused of plagiarism. Echidne of the Snakes had this interesting reaction:

"What is funny about this whole thing is that Coulter keeps saying the most atrocious things about groups which the mainstream media doesn't let defend themselves. She has also advocated hitting liberals with baseball bats and stated that she regards women to be more stupid than men. None of this can bite her back; all it does is fill her money bags. But plagiarism! Now that's a horse of a different color.

"The reason is that ownership rights are tightly defined for various material things and ideas that can be sold, and anyone who violates these rights is a thief. But a person who smears you, belittles you or advocates violence against you is just an interesting and outspoken columnist. These things hurt at least as much as plagiarism does but we have no ownership rights to our emotional and mental well-being."

Echidne is one of my favorite bloggers; she is very smart, funny and articulate. Here, however, she is conflating plagiarism and copyright infringement. It's certainly true that Coulter could be guilty of both - copying an "unfair" portion of copyrighted material without authorization from the copyright holder (that's copyright infringement), and passing off someone else's works as her own (that's plagiarism). But, we need to keep the two "offenses" distinct! Plagiarism strikes me as a whole lot worse. I'd fail one of my students for plagiarism in a heartbeat, and assert Honor Code violations as well; a mere putative copyright infringer, who borrowed lots of words from other sources but credited the sources accurately, would likely get off with a demand that she rewrite the paper in her own words.

July 22, 2005

Silliness

Starting today the New York Police Department began "random" searches (not really random, just not racially profiled) of bags being carried on subways.

This could not be more stupid. It's classic security theatre.

It will make no one safer. It wastes a tremendous amount of police time. I can't believe the police and the mayor are this dumb.

Here are the facts:

4.5 million people ride the NY subways every weekday.
There are 468 stations.
Each station has multiple entrances, so there are more than 1000 subway entrences.

The police are only searching at a few big stations at a time.

Ok. Imagine you are a terrorist, part of an effort to detonate six bombs at different places in the system. Do you really think these searches can stop you?

GOP Talking Points on Roberts Nomination

Get them here. Then sing along.

An Essay Question I wish I could assign

How has director Richard Linklater foreshadowed his new movie Bad New Bears in his other recent films?

"... you Americans cannot talk about Democracy."

As an Iraqi who supported the use of force to overthrow Saddam, I can tell you that as long as real democratic practices are not adhered to, you Americans cannot talk about democracy.
-- Ghassan Atiyyah, a secular Shiite from Baghdad who worked on the abandoned and ignored U.S. State Department plan to actually plan for the ramification of the invasion of Iraq.

The Bush administration can no longer credibly claim that it supports democracy in Iraq. Seymour Hersh has exposed the machinations to fix the elections of January 30, 2005.

We already knew that there were no international election observers present to certify a free and fair election. We knew that there was massive fraud in the Kurdish areas of Northern Iraq (sanctioned by the United States, Hersh reveals). And we knew that there was massive ballot-box stuffing all over the country.

Mostly, we knew that a third of the country boycotted the election because they saw it as a rigged affair.

But what we did not know, what Hersh reveals to us this week, is the extent to which the United States funded both campaign activities and outright fraud on behalf of its hand-picked torturer and murderer, Iyad Allawi.

Of course, Iraqis knew. They saw it first-hand. So they voted in huge numbers to keep Allawi out and to elect the Iranian-backed government that now rules Iraq (thus fulfilling two-thirds of the "axis of evil" that Bush warned us about but did not yet exist).

Still, Allawi's party should have received about two percent of the vote. Instead, he got an astounded nine percent of the vote!

Bush has already shown his disdain for democracy in his own country by assuming office against the wishes of the electorate and stifling a fair vote count in Florida in 2000.

Is it any wonder that no one takes him seriously when he talks about spreading democracy?

July 21, 2005

Lupe Valdez for President!

She is the Sheriff of Dallas County, Texas. She is out. She is proud. She is smart. And she is amazing. It's people like Valdez who make me believe that the future of Texas is bright blue.

Read the interview after the jump.

UPDATE: A friend from Dallas sent me this:

Dial it back a bit in the interview Lupe. For starters, Lupe and Dennise Garcia were far far from the first Hispanics elected county-wide in Dallas County. The unfortunately named Adolph Canales was elected to a civil district court bench in 1986. Manny Alvarez was elected to a criminal bench in 1996. And Carlos Lopez served on a county court at law bench and a district court bench 94 about 2000. Lupes story is no doubt inspirational. But her path to the sheriffs office was almost happenstance, given to her at the hands of a Republican meltdown, much like what happened to Ann Richards in 1990. Lupe stood back and watched as the Republicans fought it out hard for that office in the primary. Jim Bowles, who had been in that office since 1985 and was a famous idiot, was challenged by his slightly higher IQ former chief deputy Danny Chandler in the primary. But because Bowles got indicted for loaning himself money from his own campaign account and was on the front page of the Morning News doing something dumb every week, it made for some really ripe politics. A judge tossed out Bowles' indictment because in Texas, its unethical to lend yourself money from your own campaign account --- its just not against the law. But the damage was already done and Bowles got his ass handed to him in the primary. However, Bowles loyalists are fierce in that backwoods Deliverance kind of way. So in the general election, Bowles fans voted for Lupe instead of the turncoat deputy who took down their man. Combine that with a slightly rising voting Hispanic population in Dallas and Lupes in. And thats political back story of Lupe Valdez. Admire her, but feel sorry for her too. Bowles left behind a mess in the jail. He hired legions of knuckleheads to run it. The cheap ass county commissioners bought a new criminal justice computer system that doesnt work and tends to loses prisoners in the jail and forgets when to let them out after theyve done their time. Mentally ill prisoners have had their water turned off for two weeks at a time because they splash the guards during bed check ---- hello sustainable civil rights suit. Im not sure shell ever dig out. But at least Lupes had the good sense to work hard on the problem, stay out of the media and take care of business.
New Dallas Sheriff Takes Charge In Bush Country By Janice Hughes

Lupe Valdez wears a gun on her hip. And four stars on each lapel. Shes the sheriff of Dallas County the chief enforcement officer of a sprawling metropolis, smack in the middle of President Bushs backyard. Valdez, 57, is also a Democrat. A daughter of migrant workers. And an out lesbian. If anybody deserves to swagger, Lupe Valdez does.

But she doesnt. Instead, she talks quietly about being a public servant, and doing the best job she can. When pressed, she talks about her $90 million budget, 1,700 employees and her years as a corrections officer and federal agent. Valdez flashes a grin when asked about her faith, her family turning the corner every day after high school to see her mothers rose garden in one of the toughest neighborhoods in town.

Below are excerpts from Equalitys interview with Valdez.

Equality: What do you think first motivated you to work for a better society?
Valdez: Well, when I was young, I remember watching "The Martin Luther King Story" on TV. At some point, King says, "If we dont want to be second-class citizens, weve got to stop acting like second-class citizens." And that hit home.

Equality: When you won, The Dallas Morning News said in an editorial that it was "tickled that Dallas county voters managed to shatter at least four different stereotypes in one fell swoop."
Valdez: Well, 2004 was the first time that a Hispanic was elected to a county-wide office my election as sheriff and the Honorable Dennise Garcias in the 303rd District Court.

Equality: How do we help Americans across the country open their hearts and minds to GLBT Americans?
Valdez: The easiest way to do that is by being an example. Most of the people who are gay-friendly are so because they know somebody. Or theres someone they care about. And I think the best thing we can do is to let them know how much like them we are. Except in our sexual orientation.

Equality: Do people come up to you and say youre the first lesbian theyve ever met?
Valdez: What I have found is a lot of people will say, "Were so glad, my son is gay," or "My neighbor is gay, and theyre really good people." I think what Ive done is validate a lot of good gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people.

Equality: Im told that just about everyone in Dallas feels like they can approach you and talk to you.
Valdez: One of the most interesting things that happens when I go out and Ive gone to more black ties, fancy banquets and more lunches than I ever thought possible is that suddenly, I see the people who are serving staring at me. And I go, "Hello, Im Lupe Valdez." And they say, "We thought thats who you were!"

Equality: Do you always keep your sheriff badge on?
Valdez: No! For black ties, Im in formals!

Equality: So youre obviously a role model, whether you want to be or not.
Valdez: The only thing I can say is, "God help me to be a decent role model." ... That kills my personal life, by the way! No one wants to go out with someone who everybody recognizes. I cant go to a restaurant.

Equality: A colleague at HRC tells me her partner, who is a police officer, worries the most that one day she will be working a shift with someone who will be anti-gay and may not back her up on a dangerous call. Did you ever think about that?
Valdez: Oh yes, of course. But it wasnt only because of being gay. Now remember, Ive been in law enforcement 30 years. Thirty years ago, it was the same thing against women. Thirty years ago, I remember somebody would say, "Im going to do everything I can to get you fired." You have to hope that the people backing you are professionals and can look beyond their biases.

Equality: So its all about surviving.
Valdez: Exactly. You just work hard.

Equality: Im sure youre all too familiar with your state slogan, "Dont Mess with Texas." Do you have something you live by?
Valdez: It has always been, "Never stop growing." Learning, going back to Scripture.

Equality: Youve been a longtime lay leader at the Metropolitan Community Churches.
Valdez: Yes, I have a very strong spiritual side. I think many of us have made a mistake in pushing that out of our lives. When Im at home, away from the office, I find myself going to a little balcony in my house, looking out in the night and asking for strength for strength from outside of me. And I think what makes me so strong is the fact that Ive had a strong foundation in the church over 20 years. I honestly dont think I couldve come out if I didnt feel that God was OK with it.

Equality: Do you have a favorite saying in Spanish, en Espaol?
Valdez: "Dime con quin andas y te dir quin eres" or "Tell me who you hang around with, and Ill tell you who you are." Its not so much my favorite saying as something I heard my mom say over and over and over. In other words, if the people you are with are people who are seeking growth, youre going to seek growth, too. If these people are those who are going to run the streets, youre going to run the streets, too.

Equality: Your family finally settled in San Antonio after working in the fields?
Valdez: Yes. And it was a very poor area. We didnt have sidewalks, we didnt have paved streets. But the neat thing was that, I loved turning the corner to our block, because our house was always the one that was painted. It had cut grass. And the flowers there were always roses. In San Antonio, it never gets really cold, and I remember my mom rushing out and putting plastic over her roses, because it was going to get cold. Every time I came home from college, she would tell me what happened people went to jail, they were killed, somebody had gone to prison, somebody has been attacked. You know? All around us, thats the way it was. But right in the middle of all that, there were the roses.

Equality: Where do you see yourself 10 years from now?
Valdez: I have been a public servant all my life. So if Im not here, Im going to be serving someplace. You know, you just continue. Where am I going to be 10 years from now? Ill be 10 years


Again, I ask the Question ...

... who is less popular, W or Arnold?

Meanwhile, Sen. Clinton just keeps getting more and more popular. Things are going to get real fun, real fast.

Great Column on Pakistan, India, and the West

My pal Ethan Casey, a globetrotting journalist and author and/or editor of many, many books, has been writing a great column for The News of Pakistan.

Ethan's latest book is Alive and Well in Pakistan : A Human Journey in a Dangerous Time.

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Here is what some folks have written about it:

"Combines pathos with wit, accessibility with complexity, and empathy with
critical honesty. This book should be compulsory reading for anyone visiting
Pakistan." - Harvard International Review

"[Casey] lets the complexities of a nation whose well-being is a matter for
global concern speak for themselves. ... The author's real journey is a
search for common humanity." - The Daily Telegraph

Obama is a Genius

Barack Obama recently hired Pulitzer-prize winning writer and scholar Samantha Power.

This move alone sets Obama way ahead of his colleagues in terms of seriousness and focus. Power is brilliant. No one knows or cares more about human rights and preventing genocide than Power.

If you have not already, please read her book, A Problem from Hell.

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The 11 Percent Solution

Women are 51 percent of the American population. Yet they will soon constitute merely 11 percent of Supreme Court justices.

Let's face it: without visceral personal perspectives of particular justices, American jurisprudence (and American life) would be very different. Harry Blackmun was Justice Harry Blackmun because he worked for the Mayo Clinic. Earl Warren was Justice Earl Warren because he had run California during the boom years. William Rehnquist was Justice William Rehnquist because he had practiced voter intimidation to keep African Americans from voting in Arizona in the 1960s.

Experience matters. Perspective matters.

So when W -- over the pronounced preference of the First Lady and Justice O'Connor -- appointed a rich white man who had not done anything but government and corporate legal work his entire life to replace O'Connor, he was declaring that representing rich and powerful men matters more than the perspective of womanhood in modern America.

W is all about tokenism, grabbing credit for it when he can. But when he had a chance to appoint someone with real experience and expertise to replace the first woman ever appointed to the court, he balked. He was more personally comfortable with a football-playing prep-school-and-Ivy-League corporate guy than someone who might have raised a couple of kids while fighting off unwanted advances from creepy senior partners at some early 1970s law firm.

Political perspective mattered more than life perspective. And it will be decades before women are the majority of the Supreme Court, despite being the clear majority of law school graduates now.

Thinking about Kashmir

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Once again, events in London (terrifying, but ultimately minimal in terms of casualties) garnered constant news coverage in this country. Meanwhile, people are dying in terrorist attacks in India. And no one seems to care.

Today, terrorists killed four people in Kashmir.

Kashmir has been pretty peaceful of late. This event is horrifying.

Richard Raymond is Running for Congress!

Richard is an old friend of mine from my days at the University of Texas. We fought in the trenches back when Republicans were rare in Texas. He's a great guy.

Richard, a state representative from South Texas, is taking on turncoat Rep. Henry Cuellar. Cuellar is nominally a Democrat. But he votes and takes donations like a Republican. He is doing South Texas no good at all. Actually, Richard is running against Karl Rove and Tom DeLay.

Go Richard!

Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto?

Japan's aging society is a looming nightmare for the Japanese government and its largely busted pension system. One solution suggested in the past is to allow in a larger number of foreign workers capable of becoming nurses and other helpers. But at least some are now saying that the better plan is to develop an army of personal-care robots. I love Japan, but I'm a little creeped out by the suggestion that immigrants are so politically taboo that Rosie the Maid is a practical idea.

Why did W Appoint Roberts?

Jack Balkin explains in Newsday today:

A nominee after Bush's own heart

BY JACK M. BALKIN
Jack M. Balkin is professor of constitutional law and the First Amendment at Yale Law School. His latest book is "What Roe v. Wade Should Have Said."

July 21, 2005

President George W. Bush's selection of John Roberts sends a clear message for those willing to hear it: Roe v. Wade is here to stay. The real questions are whether Roe will be hollowed out and made irrelevant, and what other issues will dominate the future.

At his federal appeals court confirmation hearings in 2003, Roberts said Roe was "the settled law of the land" and he could "fully and faithfully" apply that precedent. I don't believe he was lying.

However, replacing Justice Sandra Day O'Connor with Roberts is likely to mean the Supreme Court will uphold many more laws restricting abortion. The list of such laws is endless, ranging from partial birth abortion bans to limits on abortions for minors. Courts now enjoin new abortion laws as soon as they are passed if they burden some women's right to abortion. But next term the court will decide whether to change that rule. If it does, states could pass stringent restrictions on abortion; these could remain on the books for years until lawsuits knock away the most blatantly unconstitutional features. That is not the same as overturning Roe v. Wade, but its practical effect is very similar.

Thus we may get a symbolic Roe v. Wade that prohibits outright criminalization but allows many practical obstacles. Something similar happened to another highly contested decision, Brown v. Board of Education. After years of fights over busing, our public schools are once again effectively segregated, even though schools can't deliberately assign pupils by race.

Because Roe won't be officially overruled, many Americans won't even notice its gradual erosion. Hence the biggest fights over social issues will lie elsewhere: stem cell research, genetic engineering and homosexuality. As with Roe, the court's 2003 opinion in Lawrence v. Texas striking down state sodomy laws can be read broadly or narrowly. With Roberts, it will probably be read narrowly. But the gay rights movement will make progress, with or without the court's help. The younger Americans are, the more likely they are to be tolerant of homosexuality and same-sex marriage. In the long run, demographics will resolve the issue, and the Supreme Court (and the Republican Party) will grudgingly go along.

Roberts will probably construe labor, civil rights and environmental laws narrowly, too. But like most establishment conservatives, he will prove a fair-weather federalist, invoking state's rights opportunistically to promote a pro-business agenda. As a D.C. Circuit judge, he expressed constitutional qualms about the reach of the Endangered Species Act.

Some conservatives hope (and some liberals fear) that Roberts will help bring back the so-called Constitution in Exile that would overturn the New Deal. That's not going to happen. Bush's party likes big government; it wants to grant favors to business interests through selective regulation, tax breaks and subsidies. Shifting tax burdens away from corporations and the rich, national tort reform, relaxing environmental and fair labor standards, and partial privatization of Social Security - all require federal regulatory power both robust and selective. Roberts is unlikely to get in the Republicans' way.

The most dangerous issue is presidential power. Bush has pushed the constitutional envelope, throwing U.S. citizens in military prisons without hearings, and demanding the right to search without judicial warrants. His lawyers claim Congress can't interfere with his interrogation practices, even if cruel, inhuman and degrading.

Absolute power corrupts absolutely, and courts are one of the few institutions with an interest in preserving the rule of law from an overreaching executive. Don't expect Roberts to stand up to Bush. Roberts will support the president.

And that's exactly why Bush chose him.

Yep. Rove Broke the Law

From today's Washington Post:

A classified State Department memorandum central to a federal leak investigation contained information about CIA officer Valerie Plame in a paragraph marked "(S)" for secret, a clear indication that any Bush administration official who read it should have been aware the information was classified, according to current and former government officials.

Plame -- who is referred to by her married name, Valerie Wilson, in the memo -- is mentioned in the second paragraph of the three-page document, which was written on June 10, 2003, by an analyst in the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR), according to a source who described the memo to The Washington Post.

The paragraph identifying her as the wife of former ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV was clearly marked to show that it contained classified material at the "secret" level, two sources said. The CIA classifies as "secret" the names of officers whose identities are covert, according to former senior agency officials.

Anyone reading that paragraph should have been aware that it contained secret information, though that designation was not specifically attached to Plame's name and did not describe her status as covert, the sources said. It is a federal crime, punishable by up to 10 years in prison, for a federal official to knowingly disclose the identity of a covert CIA official if the person knows the government is trying to keep it secret. ...

Something Good about John Roberts!

From Wired News back in 2003:

WASHINGTON -- A U.S. appeals court wrestled with questions Tuesday over whether the music industry can use special copyright subpoenas in its campaign to track and sue computer users who download songs over the Internet.

Judge John Roberts of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia challenged Recording Industry Association of America lawyer Donald Verrilli Jr. on whether computer users downloading music were any different from people who maintain libraries in their homes.

Roberts questioned whether the fact that copyrighted files were publicly accessible on someone's computer necessarily means the Internet user is illegally distributing those files. File-sharing software typically stores downloaded music in a computer folder that is freely available for other Internet users to browse.

"Isn't is equivalent to my leaving the door to my library open?" Roberts asked. "Somebody could come in and copy my books but that doesn't mean I'm liable for copyright infringement."
...

Why will the Bills will Win the Superbowl this season?

Because new QB JP Losman is the greatest.

... Losman graduated from high school a semester early and enrolled at UCLA, where he had always wanted to play. But dozens of friends and family would show up at practices, and he was expected back for birthday parties many weekends. He says he soon realized if he were going to grow up, he needed to go away to school.

Losman visited Tulane and Miami (Fla.) and liked the smaller school better than the powerhouse. He transferred and had a career good enough to be taken by the Bills in the first round of the 2004 draft.

But football was only part of his story at Tulane, where he found the personal growth for which he had longed.

"Athletes usually rely on academic advisers to tell them what courses to take, and I fell into that trap freshman year," Losman says. "It wasn't until sophomore year that I met this girl who just blew me away. I found out I didn't know anything. She loved me, but she made me feel not smart. I wanted to learn. I wanted to know what the other kids knew."

Losman says he began to select his courses and to find a circle of friends outside of the team. He says he finished with a 3.1 grade point average.

The bookcase next to his bed reflects the interests Losman cultivated in college: Novels by Herman Hesse and Henry Miller, classics such as Catch-22 and 1984, books on religion such as The Writings of St. Paul and Contemporary Perspectives on Religious Epistemology.

Bills coach Mike Mularkey suggested Losman read a book on George S. Patton to learn about leadership. "Then I said, 'You know what, rent the movie,' " Mularkey says. "Because I didn't know how much of a reader he was."

Losman rented Patton, the 1970 movie, and watched it that night. Later he also read the 2002 biography, General Patton: A Soldier's Life.

"J.P. is not a rah-rah type of leader," Tucker says. "But he got up in front of all of us, guys in our late 20s and early 30s, and said something like, 'I promise each of you that I will do everything I can to be the guy you need me to be. I know some of you might have reservations. There's nothing I can do about that. All I can do is show you every day.'

"To me, that's being a leader right there."

Losman and quarterbacks coach Sam Wyche studied together intensively throughout the offseason. "I had to encourage him to take time off," Wyche says.

Wyche compares Losman's toughness to Jim Kelly and Brett Favre and his quick feet to Steve Young and Donovan McNabb.

"I don't know if he'll be as good as those guys," Wyche says. "But he has a chance to be." ...

Ok. Sure. I say the Bills will win the Superbowl EVERY season. A boy has to dream!

July 20, 2005

Bush vs. Science: How to Make America Weak

Inside Higher Ed has the scoop on the dismal slide of the United States in producing scientists. Of course, it's not just Bush's fault. It's a the fault of a three-decade-long assault on public education and university funding. Just look at how California went from the best school system in the country to one of the worst in just one generation! Why? Proposition 13 and the Republican revolt of the late 1970s.

As I have been saying, make America stupider and the Republicans will be in power forever!

Hey, Mr. President ...

... when are you going to get the terrorists who killed people with anthrax back in 2001?

Or don't you care about fighting terrorism?

Still wondering if Iraq sought Uranium from Niger?

Of course you are not. You are too smart for that.

But in case you are just a little bit curious, check out the final report of the Iraq Survey Group:

ISG has not found evidence to show that Iraq sought uranium from abroad after 1991 or renewed indigenous production of such materialactivities that we believe would have constituted an Iraqi effort to reconstitute a nuclear weapons program.

Despite such truth, Republican talking heads, relying on those ridiculous talking points, will continue to spread the lie that Iraq sought yellow cake uranium from Niger.

Please keep this report close at hand. They will try to confuse Americans with their lies and obsfucations again soon enough. They will try to make us doubt the fact that Iraq was harmless and disarmed before this illegal invasion. You will need this report to show them that they are lying again.

Patriotic Public Servants vs. Rove and Republican Talking Heads

This memo from 11 former intelligence officers take the Republican hit squad to task for their cowardly anti-American defense of Rove and other traitors.

We, the undersigned former U.S. intelligence officers are concerned with the tone and substance of the public debate over the ongoing Department of Justice investigation into who leaked the name of Valerie Plame, wife of former U.S. Ambassador Joseph Wilson IV, to syndicated columnist Robert Novak and other members of the media, which exposed her status as an undercover CIA officer. The disclosure of Ms. Plames name was a shameful event in American history and, in our professional judgment, may have damaged U.S. national security and poses a threat to the ability of U.S. intelligence gathering using human sources. Any breach of the code of confidentiality and cover weakens the overall fabric of intelligence, and, directly or indirectly, jeopardizes the work and safety of intelligence workers and their sources. ...

Our friends and colleagues have difficult jobs gathering the intelligence, which helps, for example, to prevent terrorist attacks against Americans at home and abroad. They sometimes face great personal risk and must spend long hours away from family and friends. They serve because they love this country and are committed to protecting it from threats from abroad and to defending the principles of liberty and freedom. They do not expect public acknowledgement for their work, but they do expect and deserve their governments protection of their covert status. For the good of our country, we ask you to please stand up for every man and woman who works for the U.S. intelligence community and help protect their ability to live their cover.

The Sins of John Roberts

Apparently John Roberts was an important player in the efforts to undermine democracy in Florida in 2000 and steal the office of the president for the dude who is about to promote him. This could be his major sin. Is it too much to expect a Supreme Court Justice to respect voters wishes and the fair exercise of democracy?

Reagan vs. Rove

From Think Progress:

Whether you work in Langley or a faraway nation, whether your tasks are in operations or analysis sections, it is upon your intellect and integrity, your wit and intuition that the fate of freedom rests for millions of your countrymen and for many millions more all around the globe.

Like those who are part of any silent service, your sacrifices are sometimes unappreciated; your work is sometimes misunderstood. Because youre professionals, you understand and accept this. But because youre human and because you deal daily in the dangers that confront this nation, you must sometimes question whether some of your countrymen appreciate the value of your accomplishments, the sacrifices you make, the dangers you confront, the importance of the warnings that you issue.

And thats why I have come here today; first, to sign an important piece of legislation that bears directly on your work, an act of Congress whose overwhelming passage by the representatives of the American people is a symbol of their support for the job that you do every day. But even more than this, Ive come here today to say to you what the vast majority of Americans would say if they had this opportunity to stand here before you. Were grateful to you. We thank you. Were proud of you.

Damn. I miss the days when Republicans did not endanger the security of this country for personal political gain. In fact, Reagan said this stuff while signing into law the bill that Karl Rove violated. So back then, Republicans actually tried to make this country safer! Imagine!

Do we need another reason to Question Roberts?

Again, abortion is not the interesting question. The dude ain't going to be a friend of women, that's for sure. But we should hope he at least would be a friend of the rule of law.

Alas, there is strong reason to think he does not believe in the rule of law. He is a rampant right-wing judicial activist who believes that one president's whims should trump decades of international and human rights law.

Roberts concurred as one of the three judges who ruled last week that prisoners in Guantanamo are at the mercy and whim of the president and the Defense Department. They keep making stuff up about how these prisoners should be treated. A federal judge had ruled that the Geneva Conventions should apply to Guantanamo prisoners. However, Roberts and the others don't seem to care about the law of this country, which traditionally and appropriately grants basic rights to those imprisoned by the federal government. These are not crazy rights. We all sleep better knowing that we can't be kept in prison for three years without charge and that we will face a fair trial with competent legal counsel ... except when we can be kept without charge or trial. Consistently, the Bush administration has tried to assert that they should just be able to make suff up (what they heck is an "enemy combatant" besides someone we don't feel like dealing with legally) and treat prisoners (citizens and non-citizens) arbitrarily, in direct violation of the Constitution and binding treaties.

As Georgetown Law Professor Neal Katyal, the attorney for the prisoner in the case, said after the ruling:

The U.S. Court of Appeals ruling today is contrary to 200 years of constitutional law. We respectfully disagree with it. As the Supreme Court put it 9 years ago in an opinion authored by Justice Kennedy, 'the Framers harbored a deep distrust of executive military power and military tribunals.' Yet todays ruling places absolute trust in the President, unchecked by the Constitution, statutes of Congress, and longstanding treaties ratified by the Senate of the United States. It gives the President the raw authority to expand military tribunals without limit, threatening the system of international law and armed conflict worldwide. As many retired Generals and Admirals of our military have stated, the cavalier treatment of individuals at Guantanamo Bay, and the setting aside of the Geneva Conventions in the military commission process, threatens our troops, our interests, and our way of life. These issues demand finality, and we will be seeking appropriate review.

So it looks like the shameful erosion of American values will continue. Roberts will do nothing to uphold the law.

The Best Mashup I have Heard All Year

Run DMC's "Tricky" vs. the Ventures' "Wipeout." Check it out.

What the Heck is Judicial Activism?

If a conservative friend of yours drops lines into your conversations like "judicial restraint," "judicial activism," or "legislatating from the bench," ask her or him to define these terms. Push for precision. Then run some recent decisions by the current right-wing Supreme Court by her or him and ask if they count as "judicial activism."

I am confident that you will both agree that the current Court is about the most activist court in American history. That's not a value statement. I have other, perjorative value statements to make about this Court. No, I just think it's important for everyone to realize that when conservatives use this language they are being blind to the real situation and willingly ignorant about how law works.

As Mark Graber writes:

President Bush demonstrate his usual capacity for double-speak last night when he praised Judge John Roberts as a jurist who would "not legislate from the bench." As note on this blog and more extensively in Keck, THE MOST ACTIVIST SUPREME COURT IN HISTORY (mandatory reading during the confirmation hearings), the Rehnquist Court does nothing but "legislate from the bench" with Justices Thomas and Scalia being the most active judicial legislators. Consider the numerous areas in which they impose or would impose limits on state and federal officials.

1. They insist most campaign finance laws are unconstitutional.
2. They insist that most regulations of advertising are unconstitutional.
3. They insist that state legislatures can do little to protect abortion clinices from organized mayhem.
4. Thomas has suggested that elected officials have very limited capacity to regulate handguns.
5. They would use the fifth amendment to dramatically limit the capacity of local legislatures to pursue urban redevelopment.
6. They regard the fifth amendment as also limiting environmental regulations and limiting conditions that local legislatures can attach to private development.
7. They insist that affirmative action is unconstitutional, even though the persons responsible for the equal protection clause passed numerous laws providing special benefits to persons of color.
8. They insist on sharp limits on federal power to remedy 14th amendment rights, insisting for example that Congress may not punish rape or even pass laws ensuring that state courts are accessible to the handicapped.
9. They believe that states have an unenumerated right not to be sued, unless the law is a legitimate application of the 14th amendment (but see 8).
10. They believe that states employees have an unenumerated right not to help implement federal laws, even though the first congress repeatedly so conscripted state officials.
11. It is highly probably they believe that many federal spending programs are unconstitutional.
12. They insist that government officials must allow religious groups access to schools and programs aimed at securing secular goals.

The crucial points are, first, that no respectable historian believes that this catalogue of constitutional limitations reflect the original meaning of the constitution, and second, that many are, if anything, inconsistent with the constitutional text. Now, if one points out that liberal activism is no more rooted in text or history, fair enough. But the debate over John Roberts ought to be whether we want a conservative activist, who will legislate from the bench in ways approved by President Bush and his most conservative supporters.

If your conservative friend STILL won't concede that these guys are activist radicals, then ask where in the Constitution does it say that federal courts have jurisdiction over the vote-counting process in individual states. Ask how in the world a Court busy "restraining" itself could possibly justify appointing a president over the wishes of the American electorate and in direct violation of Florida law.

That should be fun.

How is Roberts different from O'Connor?

He is not so interested in proportionality. The law for him is black and white.

The big differences between O'Connor and Roberts probably have nothing to do with abortion or women's rights in general (BTW, I disagree slightly with Melissa on this: more than two thirds of Americans say abortion should remain safe a legal nationwide, so if anything a great number of the 51 percent of voters who supported Bush were voting against not only their best interests but their own beliefs). They have to do with fairness, procedure, and a realistic sense of life in America.

Sandra Day O'Connor is a real American who lived the challenging life of a pioneering professional woman, mother, and struggling, brilliant attorney before running for office as a Republican in Arizona. Roberts is a rich kid who had everything handed to him all the way up the Republican legal ladder. That's not to say he is not brilliant. He most definitely is. He might turn out to be an amazing justice. You can't always tell so early.

But as Kim Lane Scheppele explains, there was one significant issue that both Roberts and O'Connor dealt with in the past two years. They took very different approaches to it. O'Connor wrote the dissent in an important case about the police arresting people for minor infractions. Roberts cited this Supreme Court case in a case he ruled on. You decide which side better reflects real life in America:

Scheppele writes:

Ansche Hedgepeth was, at the time of her crime, 12 years old. She was waiting for a friend to buy a Metrocard at the Tenleytown/American University Metrorail station in Washington, DC when she committed the fateful act.

She opened the fast food bag she was carrying and ate one French fry in plain view of an undercover police officer.

The police officer placed her under arrest, handcuffed her and removed her shoelaces pursuant to established procedure, as the opinion tells us. She was held at the local police station for three hours until her mother could come to collect her.

Her offense? She violated a city ordinance against eating in Metro stations. The police had been instructed to adopt a zero tolerance policy in enforcing this ordinance, and Ansche Hedgepeth was one of 14 juveniles arrested for similar infractions during zero tolerance week.

The adults who ran afoul of the policy during zero tolerance week were merely given citations on the spot and were allowed to pay their fines later, as the local ordinance permitted. Minors were not eligible for such citations, however, and so were arrested because that was the only strategy available to police to enforce the ordinance. Given that police had been told that no infraction, however minor, was to be excused, any minor caught eating in the Metro was subject to mandatory arrest.

Her mother brought suit on Ansches behalf against the Washington Area Metropolitan Transit Authority asserting that Ansches arrest violated her equal protection right under the Fifth Amendment and her right to be free from unreasonable seizures under the Fourth Amendment. Both claims failed.

To the argument that age should be considered a suspect classification that would trigger heightened scrutiny in constitutional Fifth Amendment analysis, Judge Roberts wrote for a unanimous panel that it is not. As a result, the difference between the treatment of the adults and the treatment of children in the DC ordinance was subject only to a rational relation test, which Judge Roberts found it easily passed. ...

... But Judge Roberts seems determined to draw bright lines. Even though his statement of facts in Hedgepeth begins with a lament that No one is very happy about the events that led to this litigation, he did not let his unhappiness divert him from what, in his view, the law required. And the law allows of no exceptions, no room for common sense to modify the strict operation of a strict rule.

... Though many of us have railed against Justice OConnors fact specificity and her predilection to decide cases on the narrowest possible grounds, I suspect that we are going to very much miss her humanity. Ansche Hedgepeth may be the first visible victim of the future Justice Roberts strict constructionism.

Time to grow up

I do not see myself getting all worked up over the Roberts nomination.

This is hard for me to admit to myself or maybe just to my younger self. When I was in my early twenties, I marched in a lot of pro-choice rallies & volunteered at NARAL. I was once assaulted for doing nothing more than walking home from a rally with a coat hanger in my hand. (I was not hurt and the guy got probation). I spoke at catholic hospitals considering no longer offering their patients terminations even if the patient's health was in jeopardy. I lobbied the Yellow Pages to get them to do a better job of ensuring the abortion providers listed where legitimate. Once I even infiltrated one of these fraudulent abortion providers in order to collect evidence for a lawsuit that NARAL was preparing. A friend and I were locked inside an "exam room" while a video played on a TV over and over. We never saw a doctor or nurse although there were white coats hanging on hooks in the waiting room. It was a pretty horrifying experience and I was only pretending to be in trouble and in need of medical attention that I could afford.

I was more committed then, probably because I could so easily see myself as the kind of woman who would be impacted by the loss of Roe. But a lot has changed for me and for all of us since then.


Bush was pretty clear about the kind of jurist he would nominate. So Roberts is the kind of jurist the majority of my fellow citizens believe is best for our nation. Many, many young women voted for this. I disagreed and voted accordingly. But this is what happens when your side loses elections.

I want abortion to remain private, safe and legal but not because the Supreme Court says so by some slim margin that will eventually be flipped, but because my fellow citizens believe in that right.

My only wish now is that Democrats will use this confirmation process to delineate how a appointment by a Democratic president would have been different. This is a "teaching moment."

It is time to grow up.


Eric Alterman says it better than I...

Anyway, the Roberts nomination seems to mean we should plan on saying goodbye to thirty-two years of life under Roe which is not entirely a bad thing, even for pro-choice advocates. After all, Bush did terrific with unmarried women without college educations. It would be helpful, politically (and democratically) for them to learn just what it was they were voting for. There's a much longer argument to be made here, about how judicially-created and enforced liberalism has weakened its cause and alienated its potential supporters while not gaining terribly much in real world terms.

The whole post is at
Mission Accomplished - Altercation

July 19, 2005

And more grim news

Even Michael O'Hanlon -- hardly a leftist voice -- finds this report credible.

25,000 dead civilians. But who's counting? For the most part, not the US news media, which is weird, given the left-wing bias I keep hearing about.

Rocked!

Turns out I was wrong in my earlier post about Bush's likely nominee. Edith Brown Clement, who is (I think) a regular Sivacracy reader, is likely upset. I have also received a complaint from Tomas de Torquemada, who points out that although he has technically been dead for over 500 years, his spirit lives on.

My apologies to Judge Clement and the people of the United States for getting their hopes up. Incidentally, in 2001 Vice President Cheney took time from his busy schedule of drowning kittens and digging for oil to refer to Judge Roberts as "a lawyer of the highest reputation." Can't say if the shout-out helped, but Judge Roberts voted for the Vice President's position in his effort to avoid public disclosure of his energy task force's work, which almost certainly involved heavy involvement of oil firms, orcs, and quite possibly the offspring of the Grim Reaper and Satan. Fortunately, Cheney could count on the participation of Justice Scalia, which whom he had just been on a kitten-drowning trip.

Anyway, should be a great summer. Too bad I'll be in Japan! My soul hasn't been crushed in nearly a week now.

At Least he's from Buffalo

I have nothing much else to say right now about Judge John Roberts, the new nominee for the Supreme Court.


I will, though. Give me some time to get worked up.

A New Justice?

The New York Times reports that I was incorrect about President Bush's likely nominee for the Supreme Court. I had predicted Tomas de Torquemada, but it appears now that he has been dead for over 500 years. My mistake. Anyway, he may have gone in a potentially more moderate direction -- supposedly picking Edith Brown Clement, whose lack of a paper trail ought to make this a fun summer.

July 18, 2005

The Comments End

Ok. No more comments.

My decision comes not from any particular comment, although many have been demeaning, disrespectful, and derogatory.

We can take all that, up to a point. Besides, it's the price of liberalism. We have to be able to deal with those who disagree with us, even if they can't seem to get beyond insults.

Of course, over the past few months, as readership has grown, there have been several very helpful and insightful comments. Many of those took me to task over my opinions, assertions, and conclusions. But alas, the well-thought-out critical comment is the exception. We have been putting up with way too much irrelevant and thoughtless vitriol while waiting for a smart, insightful comment.

Those of us who blog here have tried to be as patient as possible. We have tried ignoring the worst comments. We have tried responding both on site and via e-mail. Nothing seems to change.

Still, I was not willing to take any steps to stem the comments. I thought it was my duty to put up with nastiness. And besides, nasty people quickly lose credibility in public discourse (unless they become political consultants, of course). They do their own side no good.

The last straws were a series of unfortunate e-mails I received from regular commenters, both left and right. They have been getting nasty e-mails from other people. Somebody has been seeking them out and telling them to stop posting here on Sivacracy.

That's outrageous. And it's scary.

If we have to stoop to harrassment, we are in bigger trouble than I thought.

So until further notice, we will be posting sans comments. Still, feel free to send me e-mails with comments. I will post and quote from some of the better ones, if they drive the conversation forward.

Thanks for your patience and understanding.

Siva

July 17, 2005

The Perils of Blogging

Much worse in Iraq than here, angry and abusive commenters notwithstanding.

July 15, 2005

The "We're Not Afraid" Shop

By Cafe Press. Proceeds go to the Red Cross London Bomb Relief Fund, or you can make a straight-up donation here.

A Place Where Women Rule

Umoja, Kenya.

One World

James Wolcott, excerpted from here:

.... "I was watching the news of the two minutes of silence held for the victims of the London bombings, a silent vigil held not just in London but across Europe.

"Britain's Queen Elizabeth stood in silence at Buckingham Palace. In London's Trafalgar Square, a giant banner declared 'One City, One World.'

"Taxis and buses pulled over, workers left their offices to stand in the street and financial markets paused to remember the dead.

"In Italy, government offices, railway stations and airports paused while television stations cut into normal broadcasting to honour the London dead.

"In Paris, President Jacques Chirac's annual Bastille day television address was put back so the French could mark the moment. Chirac stood silent on the steps of the Elysee Palace."

"Has the United States or even simply Washington, DC held a silent moment for the victims of the London bombings? Has any national gesture of solidarity been proposed?

"If so, I haven't seen or heard of it. We're just going about our business while insisting that the world perpetually acknowledge our scars and trauma from September 11th as our justification to wage whatever aggressive action we deem necessary to ensure it never happens again.

"For months, we've been hearing and reading that Brits no longer discriminate between average Americans and the policies of our government--that the reelection of Bush has made them hold us in something of the same contempt they hold him. Well, they have good reason, and we keep furnishing them with better reasons all the time."

July 14, 2005

Don't Torch That Flag!

It's a game.

Don't Tell our Instate Rival Clemson About This

cocksoup300.jpg

Go South Carolina Gamecocks! Stay out of the soup!

Dr. Bitch Has A Message For Rick Santorum

Read her open letter here.

Binti Pamoja

The Binti Pamoja (Daughters United) Center is a reproductive health and women's rights center for 13 to 18 year-old girls in Kibera, Kenya. Learn more here, and here.

To Live and Die in Iraq

James Wolcott's Vanity Fair column "To Live and Die in Iraq" can be read here. He points out how little press coverage the suffering of the Iraqis is receiving.

How much do you know about the situation there? If Iraq is too dangerous for reporters, shouldn't they be reporting that?

Rove's new defense: "Wilson has many wives!"

"I just said 'Wilson's wife,' not her name," Rove said.
"Could have been any one of them. It could have been the Canadian one, or the really tall one. No harm, no foul, eh?"

No, just kidding. I'm a kidder.

The squirming is getting more fun to watch, though. He he he.

Were the Republicans Lying Then, or now?

Back in July 2003 Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld answered this question from Sen. Mark Pryor:

Q: Secretary Rumsfeld, when did you know that the reports about [Iraq seeking] uranium coming out of Africa were bogus?

A: Oh, within recent days, since the information started becoming available.

Of course, Rumsfeld was lying about when he got the message that the intelligence was bad. The IAEA had issued its report on those claims in March of that year. So Rumsfeld, unless he is dumber than he looks, was lying about when he realized the yellow cake claim was false.

Now you can hear the faint whimper of those who are so used to telling whopper lies and having the press just nod along like good little puppies. They are actually trying to convince us that despite the complete and total lack of evidence, Iraq DID have a deal with Niger over uranium. Of course, Iraq would have to actually HAVE a nuclear weapons program post-1992 (again, no evidence) and Niger would have actually had to have control of its uranium exports. These RNC talking heads have actually been citing the Butler Report from the UK as evidence that the Iraq-Niger connection was "well founded!" Imagine anyone taking the Butler report seriously! No one in England did (except for Butler's best buddy Tony Blair, who has no credibility on matters of Iraq anyway).

Wait. Didn't the president AND the secretary of defense AND the then-national security advisor all concede that the Iraq-Niger claim was false?

It's getting hard to tell WHEN they are telling lies. But it's logically impossible for the Iraq-Niger claims to be both true and false. Right?

From WaPo in 2003:

The British panel said it was unclear why the British government asserted as a "bald claim" that there was intelligence that Iraq had sought to buy significant amounts of uranium in Africa. It noted that the CIA had already debunked this intelligence, and questioned why an official British government intelligence dossier published four months before Bush's speech included the allegation as part of an effort to make the case for going to war against Iraq.

The findings by the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee undercut one of the Bush administration's main defenses for including the allegation in the president's speech -- namely that despite the CIA's questions about the assertion, British intelligence was still maintaining that Iraq had indeed sought to buy uranium in Africa.

Asked about the British report, the administration released a statement that, after weeks of questions about the president's uranium-purchase assertion, effectively conceded that intelligence underlying the president's statement was wrong.

So, were they lying then, when they conceded they had lied before? Or are they lying now, in the process of trying to confuse people so much that Karl Rove can slip out without a stir?

Say, that reminds me. Remember "smoking gun/mushroom cloud?" That was a good one, Condi. You crack us up some times. Really.

We report. You decide.

Full WaPo story below.

White House Backs Off Claim on Iraqi


By Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, July 8, 2003; Page A01


The Bush administration acknowledged for the first time yesterday that President Bush should not have alleged in his State of the Union address in January that Iraq had sought to buy uranium in Africa to reconstitute its nuclear weapons program.

The statement was prompted by publication of a British parliamentary commission report, which raised serious questions about the reliability of British intelligence that was cited by Bush as part of his effort to convince Congress and the American people that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction program were a threat to U.S. security.

The British panel said it was unclear why the British government asserted as a "bald claim" that there was intelligence that Iraq had sought to buy significant amounts of uranium in Africa. It noted that the CIA had already debunked this intelligence, and questioned why an official British government intelligence dossier published four months before Bush's speech included the allegation as part of an effort to make the case for going to war against Iraq.

The findings by the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee undercut one of the Bush administration's main defenses for including the allegation in the president's speech -- namely that despite the CIA's questions about the assertion, British intelligence was still maintaining that Iraq had indeed sought to buy uranium in Africa.

Asked about the British report, the administration released a statement that, after weeks of questions about the president's uranium-purchase assertion, effectively conceded that intelligence underlying the president's statement was wrong.

"Knowing all that we know now, the reference to Iraq's attempt to acquire uranium from Africa should not have been included in the State of the Union speech," a senior Bush administration official said last night in a statement authorized by the White House.

The administration's statement capped months of turmoil over the uranium episode during which senior officials have been forced to defend the president's remarks in the face of growing reports that they were based on faulty intelligence.

As part of his case against Iraq, Bush said in his State of the Union speech on Jan. 28 that "the British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa."

The International Atomic Energy Agency told the U.N. Security Council in March that the uranium story -- which centered on documents alleging Iraqi efforts to buy the material from Niger -- was based on forged documents. Although the administration did not dispute the IAEA's conclusion, it launched the war against Iraq later that month.

It subsequently emerged that the CIA the previous year had dispatched a respected former senior diplomat, Joseph C. Wilson, to Niger to investigate the allegation and that Wilson had reported back that officials in Niger denied the story. The administration never made Wilson's mission public, and questions have been raised over the past month over how the CIA characterized his conclusion in its classified intelligence reports inside the administration.

The report by the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee followed weeks of hearings by the panel into two intelligence dossiers on Iraq's weapons programs -- one published in September and the other in January -- that the government of Prime Minister Tony Blair used to justify supporting the administration in going to war against Iraq.

Questions about the British government's handling of intelligence have mirrored many of the issues being raised in the United States. But they have created a far greater political uproar in London.

Parliament's response has been notably different than that of Congress. The House and Senate intelligence panels have moved cautiously, with Democrats and Republicans divided over the necessity of full-blown public hearings into the administration's use of pre-war intelligence. The House of Commons moved quickly to investigate the matter, with the Blair government battling accusations that it misled Parliament and members of the Labor Party in persuading them to support an unpopular war.

The commission's report issued yesterday found that Blair and his other key ministers "did not mislead" Parliament in describing the threat from Iraq's alleged chemical, biological and nuclear weapons programs. But the panel did find that the Blair government mishandled intelligence material on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction programs.

The panel said it is too soon to determine whether the government's assertions about Iraq's chemical and biological weapons programs will be borne out, but added that the government's actions "were justified by the information available at the time."

In a major political issue within Britain, the panel found that Alastair Campbell, Blair's communications chief, "did not exert or seek to exert improper influence" in drafting the September intelligence report or a key statement in the document that "the Iraqi military are able to deploy chemical or biological weapons within 45 minutes if ordered to do so."

The panel did find that this statement "did not warrant the prominence given to it" in the first pages of the dossier because it was based on "intelligence from a single, uncorroborated source." The panel asked the Blair government to explain why it was given such a prominent position in the report.

A senior administration official said yesterday that a classified version of a U.S. National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq's weapons programs, completed last September, contains references to intelligence reports that Iraq had attempted to buy uranium from three African countries, not just Niger. The other two countries are Namibia and Gabon, according to intelligence sources. The sources said the reports about other countries have not been confirmed and that some government analysts do not consider the information reliable.

A senior intelligence official said that there were reports of "possible attempts" by Iraqis or their agents to buy uranium, but that "they were all somewhat sketchy."

One Bush administration official said British and U.S. intelligence agencies got their Niger documents from the intelligence service of one country that he refused to name, but that others have identified as Italy.

"We both had one source reporting through some liaison service which said, 'Look what we found,' " this official said. "There were other [intelligence] reporting streams, but it may be that all streams are traced to the same source."


2003 The Washington Post Company

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July 13, 2005

You can see the RNC talking points on Rove and Wilson ...

... here.

Follow along with your friends as you watch Fox "news" together!

Whoops! The Truth really hurts

When you see this article in the Washington Post about the Senate Republicans' attacks on Joseph Wilson ...

Wilson said that a former prime minister of Niger, Ibrahim Assane Mayaki, was unaware of any sales contract with Iraq, but said that in June 1999 a businessman approached him, insisting that he meet with an Iraqi delegation to discuss "expanding commercial relations" between Niger and Iraq -- which Mayaki interpreted to mean they wanted to discuss yellowcake sales. A report CIA officials drafted after debriefing Wilson said that "although the meeting took place, Mayaki let the matter drop due to UN sanctions on Iraq."

According to the former Niger mining minister, Wilson told his CIA contacts, Iraq tried to buy 400 tons of uranium in 1998.

... make note of this little bitty correction that sits just to the right of it:

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Of course, we all know that ONE Moslem country in the Middle East that starts with an "I" actually HAS an active nuclear program AND supports radical Islamic terrorism around the world AND wishes to do us harm. But doing anything about THAT country wouldn't be prudent. It's so much better to invade the unarmed ones. Brilliant.

Santorum vs. Rape and Abuse Victims

Who do you think will win this battle?

What Poppy Said about Joe Wilson

Your courageous leadership during this period of great danger for American interests and American citizens has my admiration and respect. I salute, too, your skillful conduct of our tense dealings with the government of Iraq.The courage and tenacity you have exhibited throughout this ordeal prove that you are the right person for the job.

Joseph Wilson was the last U.S. ambassador in Iraq before the first Gulf War. While he was risking his life in Baghdad, and his wife was risking her life daily in the service of this country as a covert operative for the CIA, Karl Rove was throwing slime in minor judicial races in Austin, Texas and W was working yet another in a series of failing part-time jobs funded by his daddy's friends.

Who do you trust?

The State of Our Nation?

From Gawker:
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Anti-Immigrant Forces Getting More Creative ... or at least desperate

Now they are taking a federal matter to the state and local level. This should pose interesting Constitutional questions when it moves through federal courts. But more urgently, check out the level of panic! A $1000 fine is supposed to bolster national security?

This reminds me of when vagrancy laws were used to enslave Mexican Americans and African Americans during harvest season in South Texas. Pesky 13th Amendment!

The Truth Hurts

Just for the record, because there are so many lies flying around, below is what Ambassador Joseph Wilson wrote in The New York Times.

As you can clearly see after the jump, Wilson did NOT claim Cheney sent him to Niger, merely that Cheney had questions for the CIA and that the CIA sent him. Wilson never claimed he had seen the forged documents asserting that Iraq tried to buy yellow cake uranium from Niger. In fact, Wilson wrote in the article that he had not seen them.

Now the Republican talking points (echoed in some comments on this blog as well as the WSJ editorial page and CNN over the past few days) assert that Wilson DID claim that Cheney sent him. Damn. It must really suck when the text says otherwise. In fact, Wilson has said over and over and over in his book and in interviews that Cheney DID NOT ask him to go and probably knew nothing about the trip until he returned.

After Wilson came back and briefed the CIA and the State Department, of course, the big Republican lies really started flowing.

Despite knowing that yellow cake uranium could not have come from Niger and that there is absolutely no evidence that Iraq sought it for its non-existent nuclear weapons program, the president simply told the world that Iraq HAD sought such uranium (despite not having a nuclear weapons program) from some African country, later revealed to be Niger (despite not having any loose yellow cake to sell, because Niger does not control the mines).

So Joe Wilson wrote the op-ed in the Times.

As a confirmed and lauded (by President G.H.W Bush, in fact) opponent of Saddam Hussein and a life-long public servant devoted to this country, he had unassailable standing in this matter. That's why the CIA asked him to go. He had heard W lie outright to the American people to convince them to go to war. So it was his duty to tell the truth. Does anyone seriously believe it's better to lie that tell the truth? Apparently some people do.

After the op-ed came out proving that W lied to us all, Karl Rove got into action. He fell back on his old tactics, like the one that stopped John McCain's campaign dead in South Carolina: when the truth is not on your side, attack the wife!

Only this time, Rove was messing with a covert agent of the government. So Rove's attacks on Valerie Plame backfired immediately, getting all sorts of people (except Rove, at first) in big trouble.

Oh, and BTW, that Valerie Plame was married to Joe Wilson was no secret. That Valerie Plame worked for the CIA was a secret -- a very important secret. If it were not a big deal that she was outed, if she were not covert operative engaged in dangerous work, then the Republican special prosecutor would not be investigating this two years down the road. The investigation would have lasted two days (again, RNC talking points question Plame's role).

And, of course, later a red-faced CIA director (later decorated for his incompetence) and an oddly un-red-faced White House admitted that both claims about Iraq and Niger were false.

So when the CIA asked the Justice Department to investigate the outing of one of its covert agents, the White House stood up and said it agreed the investigation was necessary, the truth must come out, and that anyone found leaking would be fired and/or prosecuted. We are still waiting. Apparently, W lied about THIS too!

Still, today, it's JOE WILSON who has a credibility problem?

Please.

Sorry, folks. Rove and the RNC will have to do better than that. If you are going to spread more lies, make them doozies. The big ones are so much harder to debunk.

Every single pre-war claim about the weapons capacities of Iraq has been proven false (remember those mobile weapons labs!). Many of us had doubts before the war. We all SHOULD have had doubts, because lives were at stake. Doubt is healthy and necessary. Surety is murder-suicide. That's why most of the country and almost all of the world wanted the inspectors to continue their work toward finding the truth.

But the White House hates truth. The facts are biased, after all. So W pulled the inspectors out and claimed that Saddam did it! Amazing.

Documents show that Bush, Cheney, and the neocons in the DoD did not care whether weapons claims were true or false. They just wanted this war badly. As Paul Wolfowitz said, WMDs consituted the best argument to make for the war they already wanted. So they made it. They cooked what intelligence they could, ignored the intelligence that disproved their case, and made up some other stuff. They have wanted this war since the 1990s. They have said so again and again on the record and publicly.

They were so sure of themselves, regardless of the facts, that they revealed a covert operative, ended her career, and endangered the lives of her contacts. Then they went about destroying the reputation of two outstanding public servants who merely wanted the truth to get out.

Two indisputable facts remain: Wilson was right about the uranium and the White House exposed a covert agent of the United States government in retribution.

Go ahead. Sling the RNC talking points to try to obscure those two facts. I dare you. Americans are not that stupid, despite Republican policies designed to make them that way.

Published on Sunday, July 6, 2003 by the New York Times What I Didn't Find in Africa by Joseph C. Wilson 4th Did the Bush administration manipulate intelligence about Saddam Hussein's weapons programs to justify an invasion of Iraq?

Based on my experience with the administration in the months leading up to the war, I have little choice but to conclude that some of the intelligence related to Iraq's nuclear weapons program was twisted to exaggerate the Iraqi threat.

For 23 years, from 1976 to 1998, I was a career foreign service officer and ambassador. In 1990, as charg d'affaires in Baghdad, I was the last American diplomat to meet with Saddam Hussein. (I was also a forceful advocate for his removal from Kuwait.) After Iraq, I was President George H. W. Bush's ambassador to Gabon and So Tom and Prncipe; under President Bill Clinton, I helped direct Africa policy for the National Security Council.

It was my experience in Africa that led me to play a small role in the effort to verify information about Africa's suspected link to Iraq's nonconventional weapons programs. Those news stories about that unnamed former envoy who went to Niger? That's me.

In February 2002, I was informed by officials at the Central Intelligence Agency that Vice President Dick Cheney's office had questions about a particular intelligence report. While I never saw the report, I was told that it referred to a memorandum of agreement that documented the sale of uranium yellowcake a form of lightly processed ore by Niger to Iraq in the late 1990's. The agency officials asked if I would travel to Niger to check out the story so they could provide a response to the vice president's office.

After consulting with the State Department's African Affairs Bureau (and through it with Barbro Owens-Kirkpatrick, the United States ambassador to Niger), I agreed to make the trip. The mission I undertook was discreet but by no means secret. While the C.I.A. paid my expenses (my time was offered pro bono), I made it abundantly clear to everyone I met that I was acting on behalf of the United States government.

In late February 2002, I arrived in Niger's capital, Niamey, where I had been a diplomat in the mid-70's and visited as a National Security Council official in the late 90's. The city was much as I remembered it. Seasonal winds had clogged the air with dust and sand. Through the haze, I could see camel caravans crossing the Niger River (over the John F. Kennedy bridge), the setting sun behind them. Most people had wrapped scarves around their faces to protect against the grit, leaving only their eyes visible.

The next morning, I met with Ambassador Owens-Kirkpatrick at the embassy. For reasons that are understandable, the embassy staff has always kept a close eye on Niger's uranium business. I was not surprised, then, when the ambassador told me that she knew about the allegations of uranium sales to Iraq and that she felt she had already debunked them in her reports to Washington. Nevertheless, she and I agreed that my time would be best spent interviewing people who had been in government when the deal supposedly took place, which was before her arrival.

I spent the next eight days drinking sweet mint tea and meeting with dozens of people: current government officials, former government officials, people associated with the country's uranium business. It did not take long to conclude that it was highly doubtful that any such transaction had ever taken place.

Given the structure of the consortiums that operated the mines, it would be exceedingly difficult for Niger to transfer uranium to Iraq. Niger's uranium business consists of two mines, Somair and Cominak, which are run by French, Spanish, Japanese, German and Nigerian interests. If the government wanted to remove uranium from a mine, it would have to notify the consortium, which in turn is strictly monitored by the International Atomic Energy Agency. Moreover, because the two mines are closely regulated, quasi-governmental entities, selling uranium would require the approval of the minister of mines, the prime minister and probably the president. In short, there's simply too much oversight over too small an industry for a sale to have transpired.

(As for the actual memorandum, I never saw it. But news accounts have pointed out that the documents had glaring errors they were signed, for example, by officials who were no longer in government and were probably forged. And then there's the fact that Niger formally denied the charges.)

Before I left Niger, I briefed the ambassador on my findings, which were consistent with her own. I also shared my conclusions with members of her staff. In early March, I arrived in Washington and promptly provided a detailed briefing to the C.I.A. I later shared my conclusions with the State Department African Affairs Bureau. There was nothing secret or earth-shattering in my report, just as there was nothing secret about my trip.

Though I did not file a written report, there should be at least four documents in United States government archives confirming my mission. The documents should include the ambassador's report of my debriefing in Niamey, a separate report written by the embassy staff, a C.I.A. report summing up my trip, and a specific answer from the agency to the office of the vice president (this may have been delivered orally). While I have not seen any of these reports, I have spent enough time in government to know that this is standard operating procedure.

I thought the Niger matter was settled and went back to my life. (I did take part in the Iraq debate, arguing that a strict containment regime backed by the threat of force was preferable to an invasion.) In September 2002, however, Niger re-emerged. The British government published a "white paper" asserting that Saddam Hussein and his unconventional arms posed an immediate danger. As evidence, the report cited Iraq's attempts to purchase uranium from an African country.

Then, in January, President Bush, citing the British dossier, repeated the charges about Iraqi efforts to buy uranium from Africa.

The next day, I reminded a friend at the State Department of my trip and suggested that if the president had been referring to Niger, then his conclusion was not borne out by the facts as I understood them. He replied that perhaps the president was speaking about one of the other three African countries that produce uranium: Gabon, South Africa or Namibia. At the time, I accepted the explanation. I didn't know that in December, a month before the president's address, the State Department had published a fact sheet that mentioned the Niger case.

Those are the facts surrounding my efforts. The vice president's office asked a serious question. I was asked to help formulate the answer. I did so, and I have every confidence that the answer I provided was circulated to the appropriate officials within our government.

The question now is how that answer was or was not used by our political leadership. If my information was deemed inaccurate, I understand (though I would be very interested to know why). If, however, the information was ignored because it did not fit certain preconceptions about Iraq, then a legitimate argument can be made that we went to war under false pretenses. (It's worth remembering that in his March "Meet the Press" appearance, Mr. Cheney said that Saddam Hussein was "trying once again to produce nuclear weapons.") At a minimum, Congress, which authorized the use of military force at the president's behest, should want to know if the assertions about Iraq were warranted.

I was convinced before the war that the threat of weapons of mass destruction in the hands of Saddam Hussein required a vigorous and sustained international response to disarm him. Iraq possessed and had used chemical weapons; it had an active biological weapons program and quite possibly a nuclear research program all of which were in violation of United Nations resolutions. Having encountered Mr. Hussein and his thugs in the run-up to the Persian Gulf war of 1991, I was only too aware of the dangers he posed.

But were these dangers the same ones the administration told us about? We have to find out. America's foreign policy depends on the sanctity of its information. For this reason, questioning the selective use of intelligence to justify the war in Iraq is neither idle sniping nor "revisionist history," as Mr. Bush has suggested. The act of war is the last option of a democracy, taken when there is a grave threat to our national security. More than 200 American soldiers have lost their lives in Iraq already. We have a duty to ensure that their sacrifice came for the right reasons.

Joseph C. Wilson 4th, United States ambassador to Gabon from 1992 to 1995, is an international business consultant.

Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company

Why Wes Clark Should Be President or Something

Of course, he is another decorated veteran the Republicans love to hate. See a pattern?

From USA Today:

... Preventing attacks probably can't be accomplished by the administration's preference for taking out "state sponsors." And it's going to be very difficult to employ military means. National intelligence efforts, special police activities and local community policing efforts, which focus on identifying and targeting terrorist individuals and organizations, are required.

Defeat the ideology

But fighting terrorism at home isn't just a matter of "killing terrorists." Terrorists aren't born that way. They are created by their interaction with their surroundings. To win this war, we must defeat the ideology of terrorism, depriving angry young people of their ability to justify their hateful actions in the name of Allah.

This will require not only strong Islamic condemnation of terrorists and their acts, but also a winning dialogue within Islam to defeat Koranic interpretations seeking to justify the use of force against innocent people. We need to encourage "moderates" in Islam to debate, to proselytize and to win over potential terrorists. They are the only ones who can do it.

In the meantime, attention and resources must protect not just the airlines but also U.S. mass transit, rail and other infrastructure. Yet almost four years after 9/11, plans are late and resources lacking.

The latest example: directing the Department of Homeland Security to submit a national strategy for the protection of U.S. transportation by April 1, 2005. The strategy still hasn't been delivered. ...

... Both here at home and in the global community, there can be no spectators in winning the war against terror.

You can read the entire column after the jump.

Imagine this: A president who understands his enemy, has a plan to defeat his enemy, has the experience and knowledge to carry out the plan, and has the credibility to get others to go along with the plan. Imagine a president who has worked for a living, put his life on the line for his country, and tells the truth.

Some day, dignified, responsible, truthful public service will be back in vogue in this country. It can't happen soon enough.

Al-Qaeda has changed; Bush strategy also needs to shift

By Wesley Clark
USA Today
July 11, 2005
As the follow-up reports emerge from the strikes on the London transit system, it's not too early to begin drawing the implications for our own security efforts.
In the first place, whatever the merits of the war in Iraq, it should be clear that we still face a threat at home. Already there have been concerns that some terrorists have left Iraq to return to Europe. Moreover, Islamic anger about the U.S. actions in Iraq, as well as the continuing conflict between the Israelis and Palestinians, feeds terrorist recruiting worldwide.
But al-Qaeda has evolved since the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001.
Relentless pressure by the CIA, Special Forces and many other national intelligence and police efforts has made the old, centralized structure of al-Qaeda unworkable.
And we need to keep up the pressure. But al-Qaeda's new threat is decentralized. Thursday's attacks in London have all the earmarks of such a "franchise" operation, locally planned and resourced with relatively modest means, emulating al-Qaeda without the vulnerabilities of centralized resourcing and direction.
Preventing attacks probably can't be accomplished by the administration's preference for taking out "state sponsors." And it's going to be very difficult to employ military means. National intelligence efforts, special police activities and local community policing efforts, which focus on identifying and targeting terrorist individuals and organizations, are required.
Defeat the ideology
But fighting terrorism at home isn't just a matter of "killing terrorists." Terrorists aren't born that way. They are created by their interaction with their surroundings. To win this war, we must defeat the ideology of terrorism, depriving angry young people of their ability to justify their hateful actions in the name of Allah.
This will require not only strong Islamic condemnation of terrorists and their acts, but also a winning dialogue within Islam to defeat Koranic interpretations seeking to justify the use of force against innocent people. We need to encourage "moderates" in Islam to debate, to proselytize and to win over potential terrorists. They are the only ones who can do it.
In the meantime, attention and resources must protect not just the airlines but also U.S. mass transit, rail and other infrastructure. Yet almost four years after 9/11, plans are late and resources lacking.
The latest example: directing the Department of Homeland Security to submit a national strategy for the protection of U.S. transportation by April 1, 2005. The strategy still hasn't been delivered.
Look to civilians
And we are long overdue in forming a volunteer civil defense effort that would not only strengthen our security but also give Americans an opportunity to contribute. Volunteers would be recruited to serve part time on an unpaid basis. They would be trained in emergency response, security procedures and assist in a terrorist incident. By extending full-time emergency and response skills into every neighborhood, it would provide an "official" channel for education, warning and communications within each community.
In addition, the London attacks remind us how much more devastating even decentralized terrorist strikes could be were they to have employed biological, chemical or radiological weapons. The most profound threat we face is a nuclear weapon in the hands of terrorists. And yet, despite the president's call to "prevent the worst people from getting the worst weapons," efforts to halt the proliferation of weapons have received short shrift. The latest example has been the administration's failure at the recent review conference to strengthen the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
The United States should also intensify efforts to end the Iranian and North Korean nuclear programs, and bring increased resourcing to the control of Russian fissile materials. In addition, we should be working to develop and implement a verifiable biological weapons treaty and strengthen the Chemical Weapons Convention.
The United States will win the war on terror when we bring to bear all the elements of our power not just our military might, civilian workforce and diplomatic skills, but also the power to persuade our allies in general and those in the Muslim community specifically to engage the culture of hate and terror and change it to reflect the best in all of us.
Both here at home and in the global community, there can be no spectators in winning the war against terror.


What Poppy Believes

Even though I'm a tranquil guy now at this stage of my life, I have nothing but contempt and anger for those who betray the trust by exposing the name of our sources. They are, in my view, the most insidious, of traitors. - George H.W. Bush, April 26, 1999.

Got this from Kos.

The True, High Cost of Public Service

There is nothing the draft-dodgers in the Bush administration hate more than a public servant who loves her country and tells the truth. We have seen them try to butcher the reputations of decorated veterans and noble public servants like Richard Clarke and John McCain. And think of all the lies they spread about decorated war hero John Kerry.

It's just sick what they are doing to the reputations of Joseph Wilson and Valerie Plame. It's getting so bad that people are better off being cowards, liars, and crooks who play for the team rather than dignified public servants.

After all, George "Slam Dunk" Tenent got a medal from the president. What sort of person would award such incompetence with a medal? What an insult to those who deserved medals!

Remember when serving your country meant something? Now it gets you slandered on Fox "News" by people who don't deserve to shine a hero's shoes.

Here is former CIA Agent Larry Johnson:

The Big Lie About Valerie Plame

By Larry Johnson

The misinformation being spread in the media about the Plame affair is alarming and damaging to the longterm security interests of the United States. Republicans' talking points are trying to savage Joe Wilson and, by implication, his wife, Valerie Plame as liars. That is the truly big lie.

For starters, Valerie Plame was an undercover operations officer until outed in the press by Robert Novak. Novak's column was not an isolated attack. It was in fact part of a coordinated, orchestrated smear that we now know includes at least Karl Rove.

Valerie Plame was a classmate of mine from the day she started with the CIA. I entered on duty at the CIA in September 1985. All of my classmates were undercover--in other words, we told our family and friends that we were working for other overt U.S. Government agencies. We had official cover. That means we had a black passport--i.e., a diplomatic passport. If we were caught overseas engaged in espionage activity the black passport was a get out of jail free card.

A few of my classmates, and Valerie was one of these, became a non-official cover officer. That meant she agreed to operate overseas without the protection of a diplomatic passport. If caught in that status she would have been executed.

The lies by people like Victoria Toensing, Representative Peter King, and P. J. O'Rourke insist that Valerie was nothing, just a desk jockey. Yet, until Robert Novak betrayed her she was still undercover and the company that was her front was still a secret to the world. When Novak outed Valerie he also compromised her company and every individual overseas who had been in contact with that company and with her.

The Republicans now want to hide behind the legalism that "no laws were broken". I don't know if a man made law was broken but an ethical and moral code was breached. For the first time a group of partisan political operatives publically identified a CIA NOC. They have set a precendent that the next group of political hacks may feel free to violate.

They try to hide behind the specious claim that Joe Wilson "lied". Although Joe did not lie let's follow that reasoning to the logical conclusion. Let's use the same standard for the Bush Administration. Here are the facts. Bush's lies have resulted in the deaths of almost 1800 American soldiers and the mutilation of 12,000. Joe Wilson has not killed anyone. He tried to prevent the needless death of Americans and the loss of American prestige in the world.

But don't take my word for it, read the biased Senate intelligence committee report. Even though it was slanted to try to portray Joe in the worst possible light this fact emerges on page 52 of the report: According to the US Ambassador to Niger (who was commenting on Joe's visit in February 2002), "Ambassador Wilson reached the same conclusion that the Embassy has reached that it was highly unlikely that anything between Iraq and Niger was going on." Joe's findings were consistent with those of the Deputy Commander of the European Command, Major General Fulford.

The Republicans insist on the lie that Val got her husband the job. She did not. She was not a division director, instead she was the equivalent of an Army major. Yes it is true she recommended her husband to do the job that needed to be done but the decision to send Joe Wilson on this mission was made by her bosses.

At the end of the day, Joe Wilson was right. There were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. It was the Bush Administration that pushed that lie and because of that lie Americans are dying. Shame on those who continue to slander Joe Wilson while giving Bush and his pack of liars a pass. That's the true outrage.

Vintage Republican Jesus

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By Patriot Boy at Jesus' General.

Religion

I have said it before and I will say it again:

For the record, I have made plenty of fun of Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, etc. on this site. Everyone is fair game. In case you have not been following along lately, no faith has come up for more criticism from me than radical Islam or radical Hinduism.

I will do more of that if you want. I always enjoy it.

People of real faith are strong enough in their beliefs that they don't have to be so defensive about it.

If your religious sensibilities cannot stand the ribbing they get on this blog, then perhaps you have bigger problems than we could ever create.

You should be satisfied that at least I will burn forever in the fires of Hell or come back as a drosophila or slime mold or something. So take pleasure in my certain demise and be satisfied that your soul will enjoy a far better fate, black-eyed virgins or whatever you have convinced yourself is waiting.

I think we can all agree that no one should be killed or imprisoned because of their faith or lack thereof. All over the world, regardless of religious particulars, that's what's happening.

So forgive me if I can't take seriously people who complain about the harmless ribbing, questioning, or criticism that goes on on this blog. We are hardly the problem.

Yeesh. Get an afterlife, for heaven's sake.

Fun with Pennies

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More here!

Flagging

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Most of my neighbors brought flags out for the Fouth of July, and few have bothered to take them down yet, so between the fierce sun and soaking rains of a South Carolina July, they are starting to look shabby. The lawyer part of me would defend their right to treat the U.S. flag any way they like, but my inner Girl Scout isn't too thrilled about it.

Speaking of Translation Problems...

Here is one version of Deuteronomy 20:

20:10 When thou comest nigh unto a city to fight against it, then proclaim peace unto it.

20:11 And it shall be, if it make thee answer of peace, and open unto thee, then it shall be, [that] all the people [that is] found therein shall be tributaries unto thee, and they shall serve thee.

20:12 And if it will make no peace with thee, but will make war against thee, then thou shalt besiege it:

20:13 And when the LORD thy God hath delivered it into thine hands, thou shalt smite every male thereof with the edge of the sword:

20:14 But the women, and the little ones, and the cattle, and all that is in the city, [even] all the spoil thereof, shalt thou take unto thyself; and thou shalt eat the spoil of thine enemies, which the LORD thy God hath given thee.

20:15 Thus shalt thou do unto all the cities [which are] very far off from thee, which [are] not of the cities of these nations.

20:16 But of the cities of these people, which the LORD thy God doth give thee [for] an inheritance, thou shalt save alive nothing that breatheth:

20:17 But thou shalt utterly destroy them; [namely], the Hittites, and the Amorites, the Canaanites, and the Perizzites, the Hivites, and the Jebusites; as the LORD thy God hath commanded thee:

20:18 That they teach you not to do after all their abominations, which they have done unto their gods; so should ye sin against the LORD your God.

20:19 When thou shalt besiege a city a long time, in making war against it to take it, thou shalt not destroy the trees thereof by forcing an axe against them: for thou mayest eat of them, and thou shalt not cut them down (for the tree of the field [is] man's [life]) to employ [them] in the siege:

20:20 Only the trees which thou knowest that they [be] not trees for meat, thou shalt destroy and cut them down; and thou shalt build bulwarks against the city that maketh war with thee, until it be subdued.

Anyone want to reduce this to plain language? Two versions are probably required, one for the bible literalists and another for those who view the bible more as allegory and less as instructional text.

The Women's Review of Books Returns

More information here. Via Echidne of the Snakes.

New Feminist Blog

Per the site: "Our Word is a community where women's voices are valued and respected, a space for telling the truth of womens lives and working together to improve them. This site is owned by all members who post here. It is the aggregate of all of our words, all of our ideas, all of our experiences."

July 12, 2005

Touched By A Noodly Appendage

An alternative theory of Intelligent Design credits The Flying Spaghetti Monster.

Engrish.com

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English is pretty much the only language I can speak fluently, and even then my grammar and spelling get a little creative at times, so it is with the greatest admiration (when's the last time you have seen an American sign translated into Japanese?) and affection that I laugh at translation oddities like these; more here. Via Pen-Elayne.

Complaint From Seat 29E

Disgruntled Continental Airlines passenger lodges discontent.

Eminent Domain

Over at Balkinization, Mark Graber had this to say about the recent Supreme Court decision in Kelo v. City of New London:

"Consider the recent Kelo case, the one in which a narrow Supreme Court majority declared that localities could condemn land for economic redevelopment. Cries of oppression have gone up from the opposition. Lost in the debate have been two simple facts. First, the compensation paid to the homeowners was substantially more than their houses and land were worth on the market. Second, the vast majority of the homeowners voluntarily took the deal, preferred to buy bigger homes or homes in better neighborhoods to remaining where they were. So much for the nonsense in Justice Thomas's dissent about the policy being racist, when it turns out that the vast majority of persons of color living in the relevant neighborhood were pleased that the government paid a premium for the land and houses. Now, it may be unconstitutional for the government to do this or to require all homeowners to accept the deal (though the constant claim that they wanted to preserve their neighborhoods is, again, utter nonsense, since almost all of the neighbors preferred the government deal). Still, it is not oppressive for government to require people to sell land at above market prices when the vast majority of the neighborhood thinks they are getting a good deal."

Well, if the legal test for oppressiveness of future eminent domain actions is going to be whether or not the majority of the people whose land or homes are being condemned think they are getting a good deal, maybe he's correct. But that isn't how I expect things to unfold. Though my instinct is to feel that "absolutist" property rights of individuals should be subordinated to the greater good of a community, I dislike the Kelo decision because I think it gives political subdivisions too much latitude with respect to the need to justify their actions as "public use." I suspect municipalities will begin to condemn land for things like Wal-Marts and golf courses, and they will generally succeed, not because the actions are within Kelo necessarily, but because the people whose land gets targeted will be unable to afford the atttorneys fees to fight long enough or hard enough to prevail.

Eminent domain abuses certainly occurred before Kelo. I am familar with a case where a multiscreen movie theater owner got his town government to appropriate land ostensibly to widen a road, but actually so that he could expand his parking lots enough to get a zoning variance to expand his theater. After the town took title to the land, it turned around and sold it at cost to the theater owner, because "traffic studies" suddenly, miraculously demonstrated that the road didn't need widening after all. After several years and thousands of dollars in legal fees, the family that had its land taken got some justice in the form of some additional compensation, but it wasn't much more than what they had paid their lawyer, and they never got their land back. My fear is that Kelo will embolden government officials to do more of this kind of thing, (sample justification: movie theaters create jobs and are good for the life of a community), believing they can at least survive summary judgment, and maybe even win, if a condemnation is challenged in court. So, I guess mine is a practical rather than philosophical objection to Kelo.

Mind-boggling

What should the punishment be for a woman who has an abortion when abortion is made a criminal offense?

I'd have thought people who are working to make abortion illegal would have an idea.

Check out this video.

AtCenterNetwork.com Blog Archive 7/11/2005 - Feature - Libertyville Abortion Demonstration

Rove was fired before

President George H. W. Bush fired him in 1992 for -- get this -- leaking to traitor Robert Novak!

Of course, the son has none of the character and wisdom of the father. Poppy was always willing to pardon a criminal, especially when that criminal might reveal his involvement with criminal activities. But still, I miss the guy. He knew that invading Iraq without UN approval was a recipe for disaster and wrote it in his memoirs. And he knew when to fire a sleazoid who goes after people's wives when he can't touch their arguments and evidence.

Another Book to Check out

Henry Brighouse from Crooked Timber co-edited The Political Philosophy of Cosmopolitanism, new from Cambridge University Press.

Book Description Do national boundaries have fundamental moral significance, or do we have moral obligations to foreigners that are equal to our obligations to our compatriots? The latter position is known as cosmopolitanism, and this volume brings together a number of distinguished political philosophers and theorists to explore cosmopolitanism and the positive arguments that can be made for it. Their essays provide a comprehensive overview of the current state of the debate as well as the alternative visions of cosmopolitanism that will interest a wide range of readers in philosophy, political theory, and law.

About the Author
Gillian Brock is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Auckland. Harry Brighouse is Professor and Affiliate Professor of Education Policy Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

This should be a great introduction to cosmopolitanism and its frictions with nationalism and multiculturalism.

The Sinking Ship

Farhad Manjoo runs the FAQ on Rove, W, and the stunning failures of this administration.

How fast is the ship sinking? Check out the latest (as always, Republican-heavy) Gallup poll.

Google and the Wayback Machine

Remember when I mused in Salon.com that Google could be in copyright trouble some day (because of cacheing and the print project, which is proceeding sans permission from publishers)?

Well copyright expert William Patry reports that the wonderful Wayback Machine could be in big trouble for various complicated reasons. This could mean bad things for Google.

During the investigation of plaintiff's claims, a law firm for some of the defendants utilized the not-for-profit Internet Archive Wayback Machine. The Wayback Machine lets one access archived versions of websites. You type in the URL, select a date range, and presto, you can surf an archived version of the web page in question. It is a phenomenally important archive, useful to people throughout the world, including parties in lawsuits who want to find out what their adversary was saying in the past on a website that has been updated or revised potentially hundreds of times since the events in question. The Wayback machine contains about 1 petabyte of data, more than that in the Library of Congress, even though the archiving only began in 1996. The archiving is accomplished by the Alexa webcrawler.

Trying to be a Lawyer? Trying to Stop Being a Lawyer?

Two law professors, Michael Madison and Larry Solum have been using their blogs to give advice to incoming law students.

My cousin, Neeraja Viswanathan, is a lawyer in recovery. She is the brilliant author of the wonderful, witty, and helpful Street Law Handbook and several books that are forthcoming. And she has started giving advice on her blog about how to get out of the law world. Sandra Day O'Connor take notice!

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I have way many friends who got in and realized that the life was cruel and hard, despite the income. It ain't for everyone.

July 11, 2005

Is the U.S. Using Napalm in Iraq?

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This Znet article says so. Via Pandagon.
Update: Similar accounts here, here, and here.

Post-It Elvis

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DIY instructions here.

Compensating For Something?

Some people like large trucks, others prefer small gadgets.

Dog Retrofitting

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The site claims the dog was not hurt, but dang, the poor thing looks awfully humilated.

Astromony Picture of the Day

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Roof Over Kilimanjaro.

Banning the Crazies

Kos had to ban a bunch of conspiratorial commenters who suggested W was behind the London attacks.

This is the crap we have to put up with, people. At least on this blog we have yet to find that kind of crap in the comments. We have had hateful things directed at us and some crank attacks. And we are still on edge about it all. I am exploring ways to better manage comments. The last thing I want is a chilling effect on either Sivacracy team members or readers.

So please forgive me if I am harsh and blunt in my requests that we keep stuff civil.

About Us

For several weeks on this blog I have been asking a question (in several versions and forms) that tries to prompt creative, global thinking about our current threats and opportunities.

"What can we do now?"

or

"How can we stop this cycle?"

This is not a rhetorical question. Nor is it an idealistic one. It is one that we must answer or risk the loss of everything we hold dear -- especially hope.

Another way to think of it:

"If weapons are cheap, enemies innumerable and invisible, and vulnerabilities plentiful, how do we fight an ideology?"

Please note that I use the words "we" and "us" frequently. I mean it broadly. If you can read this (and even if you can't) I mean you.

"Us" is the most powerful word in political debate. It includes and/or excludes. When I say "us" I mean everyone. I mean every human on earth who despises the illiberal threats to life and liberty that generate massive slaughters like those we saw in London last week, India and Pakistan over the past 10 years, Iraq for the past 30 years (not just the convenient post-1991 era when the U.S. Republicans cynically switched sides on Saddam), Chechnya and Russia, Israel and Palestine, Kosovo and Bosnia in the 1990s, too many parts of Central Africa for too long, Afghanistan yesterday and today, and New York City in 2001.

Those who fail to despise or resist religiously or ethnically motivated violence and the dark visions that inspire it are not part of "us." Fortunately, these people are small in number. Unfortunately, they are large in motivation, creativity, patience, means, resources, and ruthlessness.

The real long-term problem is religious fanatacism of all flavors and colors. It does not matter what you call God: when you are convinced you have a direct and clear line to God, you have divorced yourself from the human family and exempted yourself from the concerns of others. Once you are convinced of your own cosmic infallability, anything goes. And people die.

I don't have easy answers. We should beware of people who do (that means you, Bush and Cheney).

I have some hard answers, but they are not great or clear. It's safer to say I have some places to start.

I believe real, long-term investments in enlightenment principles, universal education, universal human (starting with women's) rights, and high standards of justice are a start. But they are far from sufficient.

I also think we need strong, smart, high-minded professionals monitoring and at times (when we are sure) capturing or killing those who would do us harm. We need confidence that things that could blow up or poison us are secured from harm. We need widespread trust in our leaders -- trust they must earn by telling the truth and admitting when they make mistakes.

We are so far from any of these states that we can't really claim to be any safer or to have learned anything since 2001. The world is more dangerous today. Our enemies are more dispersed, more motivated, and larger in number than ever before. By every measure, fanatical killing is on the rise from Baghdad to Bombay to Broadway. If you need a shudder to convince you, I suggest reading a bit about those who champion the Ten Commandments in Uganda: The Lord's Resistance Army.

This terrifying story is from The Herald (UK):

Most common, though, are the stories of children who, once captured, are forced to kill classmates and even their own family members by way of grim initiation into rebel life. Flammontias Nyello, 46, a former abductee who now supervises the night commuters at Layibi, describes how one of his brothers was forced to kill the other: "They gave him a big stick and he was told to kill our brother, but he refused. Then they both had to lie down. Another woman was chosen to kill them both. When he realised that they were both going to die, he sat up and said, 'Give me the stick. I'll do it.' He was forced to beat his brother's head until the brain came out." The boy was 14.

The murderers read different books. But they have the same motivation: kill the apostates, the unbelievers, the secular, the kafir.

After Osama Bin Laden ordered the murder of 3,000 of my neighbors we had a chance to achieve something better, to unify against such brutality. We had a chance to make a global stand against religious fanaticism. The whole world stood behind efforts to bring Bin Laden to justice and move slowly and deliberatively to secure our lives.

But our leaders promptly betrayed the world's trust and exploited the moment for their own profit. We had a chance to avoid a religious war. Bush even mouthed the words meant to assure us that he would not launch a war against Islam (right after he said "crusade," as if he had never read a book about the Crusades ... uh, nevermind). It did not take long for the entire world, Islamic or not, too see that he was incapable of telling the truth or living up to his word.

We have yet to recover. And Osama Bin Laden remains free, eager to cheer on those who continue to murder in his name. And he is just one among dozens of fanatical religious leaders who would rather kill than enlighten.

The shame is deep. But the blame is not Bush's alone.

It's ours, too. We have yet to articulate a vision of a better, connected, humane world. We have yet to articulate a means toward global justice with global peace and security. We have yet to draw a picture of a connected world without "connective anxieties" so strong they drive people to murder in the name of a God.

We can't just declare peace and hope everyone agrees; just like we can't just declare war and hope everyone agrees. It does not work that way. In neither case will everyone agree. And more will die.

As someone more powerful once said, if you are not with us, you are against us.

If our government is not going to be bold and think long-term about the human condition, we must. Tom Nairn writing at openDemocracy has some appealing ideas, but I don't think they will get us very far right now.

So please take this opportunity to suggest a way to start. What should we know and understand to begin to map this better world? Let's start with an easy (and perhaps silly) exercise. I believe in researching questions before answering them. I'm a book guy. I can't help it. It's my weakness and my job.

Do you know that Richard Thompson song, "I Read About Love?" That's me. Sigh.

Step 1: What books should we be reading to understand the challenges ahead? I have some ideas and will post a list soon. But I want to know your ideas first.

Who Are You?

Michael Froomkin and Eric Muller have in past weeks asked their readers/commenters to reveal a bit about themselves so that we can all get a sense of the folks who dig this site.

If you prefer to remain anonymous, I understand, of course.

As big brother here, I know your e-mail and IP numbers. I never reveal them to anyone. And I have yet to block anyone from posting comments (please please please help me out on this!). And in the aggregate I can tell what city and country Sivacracy readers reside in.

But perhaps y'all would like a chance to reveal a bit about yourselves.

After all, those of us who blog here are putting ourselves out there. We are easy to track down, stalk, harrass, berate, etc.

So please do us the courtesy of letting us know about y'all. BTW, this site gets almost 10,000 unique visitors per month. Dig it.

What do you do for a living? Where do you live? How did you find your way to this blog? What is the best way to improve it?

Cheney Embarrasses Himself, Country

Our military is confronting the terrorists, along with our allies, in Iraq and Afghanistan so that innocent civilians will not have to confront terrorist violence in Washington or London or anywhere else in the world.

What are the chances he will apologize to the people of London for his ignorance and arrogance?

I guess W has to fire Rove now

This is hilarious. Check out what Scott McLellan said back in Sepember 2003:

The President has set high standards, the highest of standards for people in his administration. He's made it very clear to people in his administration that he expects them to adhere to the highest standards of conduct. If anyone in this administration was involved in it, they would no longer be in this administration.

What are the chances the White House will keep its word THIS time? Of course, its record of lies and obsfucation is unmatched in American history. So there is no reason to believe it will start behaving ethically now.

You can read more of this great briefing below or on the White House site (quickly, before they scrub it!). It's great stuff.

Of course, today McLellan is much more reticent about everything. He he.

MR. McCLELLAN: But we've made it very clear that anyone -- anyone -- who has information relating to this should report that information to the Department of Justice.

Q Does he doubt it came from the White House?

MR. McCLELLAN: I'm sorry?

Q Does he doubt?

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, there's been no information that has been brought to our attention, beyond what we've seen in the media reports, to suggest White House involvement.

Q Will the President move aggressively to see if such a transgression has occurred in the White House? Will he ask top White House officials to sign statements saying that they did not give the information?

MR. McCLELLAN: Bill, if someone leaked classified information of this nature, the appropriate agency to look into it would be the Department of Justice. So the Department of Justice is the one that would look in matters like this.

Q You're saying the White House won't take a proactive role?

MR. McCLELLAN: Do you have any specific information to bring to my attention suggesting White House involvement?

Q If you would --

MR. McCLELLAN: I haven't seen any.

Q Would you not want to know whether someone had leaked information of this kind?

MR. McCLELLAN: The President has been -- I spoke for him earlier today -- the President believes leaking classified information is a very serious matter. And it should be --

Q So why doesn't he want --

MR. McCLELLAN: -- pursued to the fullest extent --

Q Right, so why --

MR. McCLELLAN: -- by the appropriate agency. And the appropriate agency is the Department of Justice.

Q Why wouldn't he proactively do that, ask people on the staff to say that they had not leaked anything?

MR. McCLELLAN: Do you have specific information to suggest White House involvement? I saw a media report that said "senior administration officials." That's an anonymous source that could include a lot of people. I've seen a lot of "senior administration officials" in media stories.

Q Would they know -- to the White House?

Q Scott, when you say that it should be pursued by the Justice Department -- Justice has not said whether it actually is conducting an investigation. Does the President want the Justice Department to investigate this matter?

MR. McCLELLAN: If someone leaked classified information of the nature that has been reported, absolutely, the President would want it to be looked into. And the Justice Department would be the appropriate agency to do so.

Q And do you know that they are doing this?

MR. McCLELLAN: That's a question you need to ask the Department of Justice. My understanding is that if something like this happened and it was referred to the Department of Justice, then the Department of Justice would look to see whether or not there is enough information to pursue it further. But those are questions you need to ask the Department of Justice.

Q But, Scott, something like this did happen, right? Bob Novak had information he should not have had, that he was not authorized to have. So something --

MR. McCLELLAN: Terry, all I can tell you is what I've seen in the media reports. And I've seen different statements in the media reports from, the CIA hasn't confirmed or denied that this was a covert agent for the CIA; I've seen media reports to suggest that it was referred to the Department of Justice, and that -- and comments the Department of Justice would look into it.

Q So the President of the United States doesn't know whether or not this classified information was divulged, and he is only getting his information by reading the media?

MR. McCLELLAN: I'm sorry?

Q He does not know whether or not the classified information was divulged here, and he's only getting his information from the media?

MR. McCLELLAN: No, we don't know -- we don't have any information that's been brought to our attention beyond what we've seen in the media reports. I've made that clear.

Q All right. Let me just follow up. You said this morning, "The President knows" that Karl Rove wasn't involved. How does he know that?

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, I've made it very clear that it was a ridiculous suggestion in the first place. I saw some comments this morning from the person who made that suggestion, backing away from that. And I said it is simply not true. So, I mean, it's public knowledge. I've said that it's not true. And I have spoken with Karl Rove --

Q But how does --

MR. McCLELLAN: I'm not going to get into conversations that the President has with advisors or staff or anything of that nature; that's not my practice.

Q But the President has a factual basis for knowing that Karl Rove --

MR. McCLELLAN: I said it publicly. I said that --

Q But I'm not asking what you said, I'm asking if the President has a factual basis for saying -- for your statement that he knows Karl Rove --

MR. McCLELLAN: He's aware of what I've said, that there is simply no truth to that suggestion. And I have spoken with Karl about it.

Q Does he know whether or not the Vice President's Chief of Staff, Lewis Libby --

MR. McCLELLAN: If you have any specific information to bring to my attention -- like I said, there has been nothing that's been brought to our attention. You asked me earlier if we were looking into it, there is nothing that's been brought to our attention beyond the media reports. But if someone did something like this, it needs to be looked at by the Department of Justice, they're the appropriate agency charged with looking into matters like this --

Q Well, you do know that they are looking at it, don't you?

MR. McCLELLAN: -- and so they're the ones that should do that.

Q They're telling reporters that they're looking at it; haven't they told you that they're looking at it?

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, there you have it. There you have it.

Q Haven't they told you? Haven't you asked?

MR. McCLELLAN: We've seen the media reports. There has been no requests made of us at this time.

Q But, Scott, it gets to the question if you know, if the President knows that Karl Rove was not involved, then maybe you can tell us more about what the President specifically is doing to get to the bottom of this, or what has he ordered to be done within the White House to get to the bottom of this?

MR. McCLELLAN: The President wants anyone, anyone who has information relating to this to report that information to the appropriate agency, the Department of Justice. That's what the President wants, and I've been very clear about that.

Q Is the President convinced that there was no White House involvement in this?

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, if I could get "anonymous" to 'fess up, that would make my life a whole lot easier.

Q That's not the question. That's not the question.

MR. McCLELLAN: But there has been nothing -- there has been absolutely --

Q Does the President --

MR. McCLELLAN: I'm answering that.

Q Scott, does he know -- is he convinced that no one in the White House was involved with this?

MR. McCLELLAN: There has been absolutely nothing brought to our attention to suggest any White House involvement. All we've seen is what is in the media reports. The media reports cite "senior administration official," or "senior administration officials."

Q But they're wrong, as far as you're concerned?

MR. McCLELLAN: But I haven't seen anything before that. That's why it's appropriate for the Department of Justice, if something like this happened, to look into it.

Q Those media reports are wrong, as far as the White House is concerned?

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, we have nothing beyond those media reports to suggest there is White House involvement.

Q And the President is pretty passive on this, right?

MR. McCLELLAN: There's been no specific information brought to my attention to suggest --

Q He's not doing anything proactive?

Q Let me just -- let me follow up on one of the --

MR. McCLELLAN: He's making it clear that this is a serious -- through his spokesman, me -- that this is a serious matter, and if someone did this, it should be looked into and it should be pursued to the fullest extent.

Q But has he ordered an investigation inside the White House? If he thinks it's that serious, wouldn't you do that?

MR. McCLELLAN: Do you have specific information, Helen, to bring to my attention?

Q No. Are you --

MR. McCLELLAN: If you have specific information, bring it to my attention.

Q Scott, you are answering questions out there for a few days on media reports. I just wonder, isn't there an internal investigation going on to find out what's happened?

MR. McCLELLAN: The Justice Department would be the appropriate agency to look into this. And if something like this happened, the President believes it should be pursued to the fullest extent.

Q Why wouldn't this be the --

Q Can I follow --

MR. McCLELLAN: Ed. I'll come back to you in a minute.

Q Scott, this is clearly a serious matter, with possible penalties being going to jail. It's not going to go away. Why -- and as you said earlier, there probably is a limited number of people with access to this information. It doesn't take much for the President to ask for a senior official working for him to just lay the question out for a few people, and end this controversy today.

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, again, Ed, do you have specific information to bring to our attention?

Q No. But it's not --

MR. McCLELLAN: But are we supposed to chase down --

Q -- for me a big story --

MR. McCLELLAN: Let me finish. Are we supposed to chase down every anonymous report in the newspaper? We'd spend all our time doing that. That's what -- I think you need to --

Q The anonymous reports, though, allege criminal activity.

MR. McCLELLAN: You need to keep in mind that there has been no specific information, there has been no information that has come to our attention to suggest White House involvement, beyond what has been reported in the newspapers.

Q The implication you're leaving us with, I'm afraid, is that nothing is being done here at the White House to even look into this matter --

MR. McCLELLAN: Wait a second, I made it very clear that if something like this happened, the President believes the Department of Justice should look into it and pursue it to the fullest extent. Leaking classified information, particularly of this nature, is a very serious matter.

Q Do you see any need to appoint a special counsel for this case, as some Democrats are demanding?

MR. McCLELLAN: At this point, I think the Department of Justice would be the appropriate one to look into a matter like this.

Q Can I follow up on that? Does that mean that you would say to the Attorney General, whose responsibility it is to determine whether a special or outside counsel is necessary, that you believe it is not necessary at this point?

MR. McCLELLAN: There are a lot of career professionals at the Department of Justice that address matters like this. I have made it clear that they're the ones, that if something like this happened, should look into it. You need to direct that question to the Department of Justice. It would be a Justice Department matter; it wouldn't be our place to get involved in that.

Q But wouldn't you like to see all questions about the independence of any investigation taken care of by putting it in the hands of somebody who has no formal statements out there?

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, but I think we're assuming certain things have happened. That's why I said you need to direct a question like that to the Department of Justice, to find out what has happened here, or to get a response to that.

Q Well, clearly, there is, at least on a preliminary basis, an investigation going forward.

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, again, keep in mind what I said earlier, that it's my understanding that in a situation like this, that if information was forwarded to the Department of Justice, the first step would be to look at it to determine whether or not it warrants looking into further. So that's where -- that's what I understand the process is on something like this.

Q Scott, what do you say to people out there who are watching this, perhaps, and saying, you know, I voted for George Bush because he promised to change the way things work in Washington. And, yet, his spokesman --

MR. McCLELLAN: And he has.

Q -- and, yet, his spokesman is saying that there's no internal, even, questioning of whether or not people were involved in this and he's just letting that be handled at the Justice Department, and letting it be more of a criminal investigation, as opposed to almost an ethical --

MR. McCLELLAN: Dana, I mean, think about what you're asking. If you have specific information to bring to our attention --

Q No, but you say that --

MR. McCLELLAN: -- that suggests White House involvement. There are anonymous reports all the time in the media. The President has set high standards, the highest of standards for people in his administration. He's made it very clear to people in his administration that he expects them to adhere to the highest standards of conduct. If anyone in this administration was involved in it, they would no longer be in this administration.


The Talibanization of Pakistan Continues

Imagine what the world will be like when these folks control Pakistan's nuclear arsenal and huge army.

Again, what are we going to do about it?

I have no idea what to make of this ...

... except a hat, a broach, or a Pterodactyl:

Secret plan to quit Iraq

EXCLUSIVE
By Simon Walters, Mail on Sunday

Britain and America are secretly preparing to withdraw most of their troops from Iraq - despite warnings of the grave consequences for the region, The Mail on Sunday has learned.

A secret paper written by Defence Secretary John Reid for Tony Blair reveals that many of the 8,500 British troops in Iraq are set to be brought home within three months, with most of the rest returning six months later.

The leaked document, marked Secret: UK Eyes Only, appears to fly in the face of Mr Blair and President Bush's pledges that Allied forces will not quit until Iraq's own forces are strong enough to take control of security.

If British troops pull out, other members of the Alliance are likely to follow. The memo says other international forces in Southern Iraq currently under British control will have to be handled carefully if Britain withdraws. It says they will not feel safe and may also leave.

Embarrassingly, the document says the Americans are split over the plan - and it suggests one of the reasons for getting British troops out is to save money. Mr Reid says cutting UK troop numbers to 3,000 by the middle of next year will save 500 million a year, though it will be 18 months before the cash comes through.

The document, Options For Future UK Force Posture In Iraq, is the first conclusive proof that preparations for a major withdrawal from Iraq are well advanced.

The British Government's public position is that UK troops will stay until newly trained Iraqi forces are ready to take control of security. Less than a fortnight ago, Mr Blair said it was "vital" the US-led coalition stayed until Iraq stabilised, and Mr Bush endorsed his comments.

...

WTF?: W continues to say "we will fight them abroad ..."!

Just where is "abroad?"

Todd Gitlin asks:

When Bush declared about Iraq, on June 28, that there is only one course of action against [terrorists]: to defeat them abroad before they attack us at home, and then again, on July 6, on arriving in Scotland for the G-8 meeting, that the war in Iraq was laying the foundation for peace, he could not be faulted for failing to anticipate that a few hours later Islamist terrorists would commit mass murder in London, though it is certainly worthy of notice that he was uttering cant, for terrorists have not ceased attacking the West since the U. S. went to war in Iraqmost lethally in Madrid on March 11, 2004.

But when he repeated his phrase almost exactly, yesterday, two days after the London attacks ("We will stay on the offense, fighting the terrorists abroad so we do not have to face them at home," he said on his weekly radio broadcast), what could he possibly have meant? Presumably, since he was reading from a radio script, this was no accident, no slip of the tongue.

Parsing such statements requires the finesse of a philosophical brain surgeon. Did the president of the United States mean, in the very week of G-8, that London, like Madrid, is not us? Possibly soa recursion to fortress America thinking, the luxury of the parochial, though to put it mildly, this would fly smack in the face of solidarity with allies, the sort of expression we celebrated (briefly) when on September 12, 2001, Le Monde trumpeted, We are all Americans! and so it would not be an interpretation that would cast Bush in the glow of a leader of the free world.

More likely, Bush was using language in an uncanny, incantatory way. Phrases like before they attack us at home, so we do not have to face them at home, and laying the foundation for peace do not speakand may not even be intended to speaka truth that invites confirmation or refutation by events. They are not statements that correspond to reality, though they dosuperficially at leastemploy language that seems to invite inspection to see whether the statement is true or false.

Bush might have said, We will stay on the offense, and though terrorists may attack our people and our allies people, because they have no respect for human life, we shall prevail, or words to that effect. Such an affirmation might have been as close to the Churchillian mold as Bush gets, and would have committed no falsehood. But no: On June 28, Bush chose instead an affirmation that had already been falsified (in Madrid) and was almost immediately falsified again, and then repeated it, denying evident fact.

What shall we make of such statements? I can only think that they are meant both to obscure reality and to evoke the sort of sympathetic grunt that affirms, You know what he means, when what he means is to depart from meaning altogether. What he means is: It is what it is, I am who I am, fuck you.

Doesn't this guy read his own security memos? Oh yeah. That's right. Sorry.

How the Iraq War Endangers Us All

It's not just the brave American service people and innocent Iraqis who must pay the highest price for this stupid, counterproductive war. It puts us all at risk.

Daniel Benjamin explains:

... It is, of course, bad manners to point the finger at anyone but those responsible for the killings in London. They shed the blood; they must answer for it. But as the trail of bodies that began with the first bombing of the World Trade Center in 1993 continues to lengthen, we need to ask why the attacks keep coming. One key reason is that Osama bin Laden's "achievements" in standing up to the American colossus on 9/11 have inspired others to follow his lead. Another is that American actions--above all, the invasion and occupation of Iraq--have galvanized still more Muslims and convinced them of the truth of bin Laden's vision.

The conflict between radical Islam and the West, like all ideological struggles, is about competing stories. The audience is the global community of Muslims. America portrays itself as a benign and tolerant force that, with its Western partners, holds the keys to progress and prosperity. Radical Islamists declare that the universe is governed by a war between believers and World Infidelity, which comes as an intruder into the realm of Islam wearing various masks: secularism, Zionism, capitalism, globalization. World Infidelity, they argue, is determined to occupy Muslim lands, usurp Muslims' wealth and destroy Islam.

Invading Iraq, however noble the U.S. believed its intentions, provided the best possible confirmation of the jihadist claims and spurred many of Europe's alienated Muslims to adopt the Islamist cause as their own. The evidence is available in the elaborate underground railroad that has brought hundreds of European Muslims to the fight in Iraq. And the notion that the West would enhance its security by occupying Iraq has proved utterly illusory. Coalition forces in Iraq face daily attacks from jihadists not because Saddam Hussein had trained a cadre of terrorists--we know there was no pre-existing relationship between Baghdad and al-Qaeda--but because the U.S. invasion brought the targets into the proximity of the killers.

Those who bombed the Madrid commuter lines last year were obsessed with Iraq. They delighted in the videotape that showed Iraqis rejoicing alongside the bodies of seven Spanish intelligence agents who were killed outside Baghdad in November 2003; they spoke of the need to punish Spain (their adoptive country) for supporting America; they recruited others to fight in the insurgency. They began work on their plot the day after hearing an audiotaped bin Laden threaten "all the countries that participate in this unjust war [in Iraq]--especially Britain, Spain, Australia, Poland, Japan and Italy." It had been the first time Spain had been mentioned in an al-Qaeda hit list.

...

The Madness Continues

48 people died violently yesterday in Iraq.

Anti-Terror Laws

As Kim Lane Scheppele explains, not only do anti-terror laws in Europe looks and feel a lot like US laws, in many cases they go beyond them in terms of restricting civil liberties.

But, as she shows in her second post on the matter, you would not know that from the erroneous reporting in US newspapers. Recent reports have made it seem as if Europe is hung up on civil liberties etc. while the US is hard-headedly opting for security over liberty. Neither story is true.

From these two examples in the New York Times, however (and, as I have said, the examples could be multiplied from other news outlets), one can start to see that the general narrative taken for granted in some of Americas press that the US is willing to trade liberty for security while the Europeans are not is simply not true. In many cases, strict European anti-terrorism laws were already in place before 9/11 so that they did not have to be newly enacted after 9/11, as many of Americas laws were. In cases where European countries did not have aggressive anti-terrorism laws in place before 9/11, they changed their laws to comply with UN Security Council Resolution 1373.

Yes, there is still a difference between Europe and America in the way that they are waging the anti-terrorism campaign. But it is not the case that Europe has failed to enact tough domestic anti-terrorism laws. Much of Europe, however, believes that international law binds them too.

The real questions we must continue to ask: Which good moves have yet to be made and which of the past moves have done no good at all?

Strindberg and Helium

Hi everyone -

Currently writing from a costly wireless service while on the road, so just a quick hit here, figuring that by day's end Karl Rove will have managed to imprison the entire staff of Time magazine. Lots to blog about then, assuming we still can.

Before Rove shuts down the Internet as well, thought I'd pass along this great site. It's a couple of years old, but for those of you who never saw the Strindberg and Helium cartoons, this is a great chance to get caught up.

OK - gotta go. State-mandated daily prayer is right around the corner and I keep getting stuck at "Now I lay me down to sleep..." then some mumbling, so I need to study.

Letter To The Terrorists From London

From The London News Review, via Sisyphus Shrugged:

"What the fuck do you think you're doing?

"This is London. We've dealt with your sort before. You don't try and pull this on us.

"Do you have any idea how many times our city has been attacked? Whatever you're trying to do, it's not going to work.

"All you've done is end some of our lives, and ruin some more. How is that going to help you? You don't get rewarded for this kind of crap.

"And if, as your MO indicates, you're an al-Qaeda group, then you're out of your tiny minds.

"Because if this is a message to Tony Blair, we've got news for you. We don't much like our government ourselves, or what they do in our name. But, listen very clearly. We'll deal with that ourselves. We're London, and we've got our own way of doing things, and it doesn't involve tossing bombs around where innocent people are going about their lives.

"And that's because we're better than you. Everyone is better than you. Our city works. We rather like it. And we're going to go about our lives. We're going to take care of the lives you ruined. And then we're going to work. And we're going down the pub.

"So you can pack up your bombs, put them in your arseholes, and get the fuck out of our city."

July 10, 2005

Yep, It's Karl Rove

From Newsweek:

Cooper wrote that Rove offered him a "big warning" not to "get too far out on Wilson." Rove told Cooper that Wilson's trip had not been authorized by "DCIA"CIA Director George Tenetor Vice President Dick Cheney. Rather, "it was, KR said, wilson's wife, who apparently works at the agency on wmd [weapons of mass destruction] issues who authorized the trip." Wilson's wife is Plame, then an undercover agent working as an analyst in the CIA's Directorate of Operations counterproliferation division. (Cooper later included the essence of what Rove told him in an online story.) The e-mail characterizing the conversation continues: "not only the genesis of the trip is flawed an[d] suspect but so is the report. he [Rove] implied strongly there's still plenty to implicate iraqi interest in acquiring uranium fro[m] Niger ... "

We don't yet know whether Rove KNEW Plame was covert. If he did, he broke the law and betrayed the nation. Even if he did not, his sleaze strategy is in full display.

The Heart of the Threat

How clueless and useless has this administration's "war on terror" been? Well, the facts speak for themselves. Fundamentalist-inspired attacks proliferate all over the world. The people most responsible for attacking this city and this country continue to laugh at us while we pursue a military campaign in a country that had nothing to do with the attacks.

Meanwhile, people keep dying at the hands of a band of twisted religious fanatics. Where are their most noxious teachings coming? Where are they trained? Since the Taliban was driven into the hills, largely three places: India, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia. In fact, doctrines and instructors of the most horrid forms of Islamic fundamentalism come from these places. And the Madrassas remain open and full.

Every few months bombs go off somewhere in the world and slaughter innocent people. But every single day women in India and Pakistan get raped and no one gets punished. Both these forms of violence come from the same place. Neither government wants to stop the violence.

What has W done about these governments that harbor and encourage Islamist terror groups? Anything? Of course not. He talks a lot but does nothing. With Saudi Arabia, he does less than nothing. He continues to coddle Saudi leaders, even though they have funded and supported radical Islamic violence for decades and fund Madrassas around the world. And he continues to fund the Pakistani government, despite its role in killing innocent Indians, supporting the Taliban and shielding Osama Bin Laden. W has no influence over India. But he has never spoken out against the state-supported religious terrorism that Hindu fundamentalists engage in with alarming frequency.

W is not serious about saving lives and improving the conditions of innocent people who have to live under constant threat by these thugs (most acutely the women of India, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia).

Today's NYTimes has a powerful and revealing op-ed by Salman Rushdie. I have pasted the entire thing after the jump.

Here is an excerpt:

The "culture" of rape that exists in India and Pakistan arises from profound social anomalies, its origins lying in the unchanging harshness of a moral code based on the concepts of honor and shame. Thanks to that code's ruthlessness, raped women will go on hanging themselves in the woods and walking into rivers to drown themselves. It will take generations to change that. Meanwhile, the law must do what it can.

Please read the entire thing. You will see that the problems we face in this century are much deeper than our government pretends it to be.

July 10, 2005 India and Pakistan's Code of Dishonor

By SALMAN RUSHDIE
IN honor-and-shame cultures like those of India and Pakistan, male honor resides in the sexual probity of women, and the "shaming" of women dishonors all men. So it is that five men of Pakistan's powerful Mastoi tribe were disgracefully acquitted of raping a villager named Mukhtar Mai three years ago. Theirs was an "honor rape," intended to punish a relative of Ms. Mukhtar for having been seen with a Matsoi woman. The acquittals have now been suspended by the Pakistan Supreme Court, and there is finally a chance that this courageous woman may gain some measure of redress for her violation.

Pakistan, however, has little to be proud of. The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan says that there were 320 reported rapes in the first nine months of last year, and 350 reported gang rapes in the same period. The number of unreported rapes is believed to be much larger. The victim pressed charges in only one-third of the reported cases, and a mere 39 arrests were made. The use of rape in tribal disputes has become, one might say, normal. And the belief that a raped woman's best recourse is to kill herself remains widespread and deeply ingrained.

For every Mukhtar Mai there are dozens of such suicides. Nor is courage any guarantee of getting justice, as the case of Shazia Khalid shows. Dr. Khalid was raped last year in the province of Baluchistan by security personnel at the hospital where she worked. A Pakistani tribunal failed to convict anyone of the crime.

Dr. Khalid says that she was subsequently "threatened so many times" that she was forced to flee Pakistan. "I was hounded out," she says, expressing dissatisfaction that the government neither brought her attackers to justice nor protected her from the threats that followed.

That is the same government, led by President Pervez Musharraf, that confiscated Mukhtar Mai's passport because it feared she would go abroad and say things that would bring Pakistan into disrepute; and it is the same government that has allied with the West in the war on terrorism, but seems quite prepared to allow a war of sexual terror to be waged against its female citizens.

Now comes even worse news. Whatever Pakistan can do, India, it seems, can trump. The so-called Imrana case, in which a Muslim woman from a village in northern India says she was raped by her father-in-law, has brought forth a ruling from the powerful Islamist seminary Darul-Uloom ordering her to leave her husband because as a result of the rape she has become "haram" (unclean) for him. "It does not matter," a Deobandi cleric has stated, "if it was consensual or forced."

Darul-Uloom, in the village of Deoband 90 miles north of Delhi, is the birthplace of the ultra-conservative Deobandi cult, in whose madrassas the Taliban were trained. It teaches the most fundamentalist, narrow, puritan, rigid, oppressive version of Islam that exists anywhere in the world today. In one fatwa it suggested that Jews were responsible for the 9/11 attacks. Not only the Taliban but also the assassins of The Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl were followers of Deobandi teachings.

Darul-Uloom's rigid interpretations of Shariah law are notorious, and immensely influential - so much so that the victim, Imrana, a woman under unimaginable pressure, has said she will abide by the seminary's decision in spite of the widespread outcry in India against it. An innocent woman, she will leave her husband because of his father's crime.

Why does a mere seminary have the power to issue such judgments? The answer lies in the strange anomaly that is the Muslim personal law system - a parallel legal system for Indian Muslims, which leaves women like Imrana at the mercy of the mullahs. Such is the historical confusion on this vexed subject that anyone who suggests that a democratic country should have a single, unified legal system is accused of being anti-Muslim and in favor of the hardline Hindu nationalists.

In the 1980's, a divorced woman named Shah Bano was granted "maintenance money" by the Indian Supreme Court. But there is no alimony under Islamic law, so orthodox Indian Islamists like those at Darul-Uloom protested that this ruling infringed the Muslim Personal Law, and they founded the All-India Muslim Law Board to mount protests. The government caved in, passing a bill denying alimony to divorced Muslim women. Ever since Shah Bano, Indian politicians have not dared to challenge the power of Islamist clerical grandees.

In the Imrana case, the All-India Muslim Law Board has unsurprisingly backed the Darul-Uloom decision, though many other Muslim and non-Muslim organizations and individuals have denounced it. Shockingly, the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh, Mulayam Singh Yadav, has also backed the Darul-Uloom fatwa. "The decision of the Muslim religious leaders in the Imrana case must have been taken after a lot of thought," he told reporters in Lucknow. "The religious leaders are all very learned and they understand the Muslim community and its sentiments."

This is a craven statement. The "culture" of rape that exists in India and Pakistan arises from profound social anomalies, its origins lying in the unchanging harshness of a moral code based on the concepts of honor and shame. Thanks to that code's ruthlessness, raped women will go on hanging themselves in the woods and walking into rivers to drown themselves. It will take generations to change that. Meanwhile, the law must do what it can.

In Pakistan, the Supreme Court has taken one small but significant step in the matter of Mukhtar Mai; now it is for the police and politicians to start pursuing rapists instead of hounding their victims. As for India, at the risk of being called a communalist, I must agree that any country that claims to be a modern, secular democracy must secularize and unify its legal system, and take power over women's lives away, once and for all, from medievalist institutions like Darul-Uloom.

Salman Rushdie is the author of "The Satanic Verses" and the forthcoming "Shalimar the Clown."

Selling Car Seats

According to an article in today's NYT magazine, "The Seat Belt Solution," by Stephen J. Dubner and Steven D. Levitt, car seats and booster seats are not particularly useful in protecting children beyond the age of 2. They write:

"In recent crashes and old ones, in big vehicles and small, in one-car crashes and multiple-vehicle crashes, there is no evidence that car seats do a better job than seat belts in saving the lives of children older than 2. (In certain kinds of crashes -- rear-enders, for instance -- car seats actually perform worse.) The real answer to why child auto fatalities have been falling seems to be that more and more children are restrained in some way. Many of them happen to be restrained in car seats, since that is what the government mandates, but if the government instead mandated proper seat-belt use for children, they would likely do just as well without the layers of expense, regulation and anxiety associated with car seats."

It will be interesting to see how much traction this article and related research gets. Parents will buy almost anything if they believe it will keep their children safer, and there is a lot of money being made through sales of car seats and booster seats.

July 9, 2005

Fashion Highs and Lows of the Westboro Baptist Church.

Woooo-eeeeee is this snarkily hilarious. Via Dr. Bitch.

Oh, the joy!

It's a bit too early to predict, but I have a strong feeling that Karl Rove will be indicted soon!

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Of course, he will never serve time. Big-time Republicans never do when they commit crimes. Like his rich daddy, W will pardon and re-hire all the criminals who are close to him (see Elliot Abrams). Rove, of course, would be much more than a common criminal. He would be a traitor to the United States, just like Robert Novak is.

If Rove were to end up in prison, he would be the first one calling for "therapy and understanding."

The Failure Continues

The Republicans continue to make sure we are vulnerable to more terrorist attacks.

WASHINGTON - Three weeks before London's bus and subway bombings, a Senate committee voted to slash spending on mass transit security in the United States, a decision sure to be reversed when Congress returns next week.

So much for "fighting the terrorists over there." Next idea?

First armor and supplies for the troops, then Veterans Administration funding, then mass transit security: It seems that every time Democrats raise an issue that might matter to real peoples' lives, the Republicans slap it down while keeping their rich patrons happy. Then they get embarrassed and scramble to fix the problem they created.

Meanwhile, chemical and nuclear plants remain vulnerable because these Republicans don't want to do anything that these industries might not like -- once again revealing who they really work for.

Someday our government will learn to take terrorism seriously and do something about Al Queda. Until then, we will suffer more lies, more theatre, more empty talk, more needless deaths, and more "mission accomplished" banners.

Until then, we worry, stunned by the incompetence, corruption, and arrogance of these "leaders." I really wish I could trust my government to do the right thing to keep Americans safe. Is that too much to ask?

Something Else To Wonder About

Via Feministe: Whatever the merits may or may not be, this is certainly thought provoking. Update: This clip from CNN helped launch the project, apparently.

Addendum: I posted this because I thought it was culturally interesting, not because I thought it was correct. It has made the rounds on the Internet, where there are actually multiple alternative theories about what happened at the Pentagon. This particular one seems to endorse the possibility that a plane did hit the Pentagon, but one much smaller than a Boeing 757; "documentation" is available at a number of sites such as this one. Seems to lack a coherent explanation for what happened to Flight 77 if it didn't hit the Pentagon, though.

People have the right to ask questions, and it isn't surprising that they do, since as far as I can tell, no footage of the crash was publicly released that actually showed the plane, which contrasts dramatically with the WTC crashes. Washington DC was riddled with security cameras well before 9/11, so that does seem odd, though it certainly doesn't prove or disprove anything whatsoever.

Tin foil hat territory? Probably. But, there are several different mainstream narratives about the plane crash in Pennsylvania. Did Todd Beamer and compatriots heroically storm the cockpit and crash the plane in a rural area to protect people in populated areas? Did the hijackers crash the plane because they were inept pilots? Did military planes force the plane down? Did the military shoot the plane down? Was there a midair explosion? A midair collision? The 9/11 Commission report didn't provide a lot of clarity.

With recent events in London powerfully reminding us of the events of 9/11/01 and our continuing vulnerabilities, and we think anew about ways to discourage or thwart future terrorist attacks, it's reasonable to reflect and wonder how good a grasp we have on what actually transpired.

July 8, 2005

Rumors are flying....

that Rehnquist is retiring tonight. (This is via Wonkette via some very unreliable sources, so grain of salt.)

But just for fun, if this turns out to be so, this is setting up to play out like "THE SUPREMES" episode of THE WEST WING.

Except rather than getting an "unthinkable liberal" as Chief we are going to get an "unthinkable conservative" and hell will freeze over before W meets and then nominates a "bright but liberal judge."

Instead the liberals will get Alberto "Torture? YES!" Gonzales who is, from what I have heard, suddenly a disciple of Ted Kennedy.

And the conservatives will get someone who is definitively anti-choice.

And everything will stay the same.

Last Chance

Ok people. I hate to do this. I will have to turn off the comments if the name calling continues.

I like the informative stuff and I dig the arguments. Lately the smart, helpful comments have been crowded out by some nasty, thoughtless stuff.

If I turn off the comments because of a few visitors who call people ugly names, use profanity, and are generally disrespectful or bigoted to those of us who write on this blog, then the well-meaning commenters will suffer. That's not good for anyone.

I am responsible for the level of discourse on this blog. My employer hosts the site. I could get in trouble for having some of these comments on it.

More than that, some of these nastier comments have made me pay way too much attention to a couple of commenters at the expense of the larger readership (not to mention my day job). I don't have time to deal with all the trash.

We can have informed, enlightened, open discourse. But it would demand a certain level of mutual respect and basic manners.

We discuss life-and-death issues on this blog. And many of these issues understandably generate great passion. That's one of the nice things about being human and having free will. But let's please remember that being human means respecting others.

If these nasty comments continue y'all will be stuck with us liberals ranting all day and night with no way to respond. That's no good and no fun.

It's Friday. And out of respect for all the suffering we have witnessed this week, I am going to post no more today. There is nothing I could write that would make anyone feel any better or safer.

So I will leave y'all with a nice picture of the cutest, sweetest dog in the world. If you are still nasty and mean after seen this photo of Ellie, there is no hope for you.

Elstersun.jpg


As Ali G says, "Respec."

July 7, 2005

LA Times gets EVERYTHING Wrong in a story

Astounding.

This might be the worst reporting goof since Judith Miller reported in The NYTimes that Saddam had chemical and biological weapons!

At least this one is about something a little less important than war. It's about hockey.

Her Name is Molly Ivins And She Speaks For Herself

Below is a pretty large excerpt of this column:

.... "The latest and most idiotic statement yet comes from Karl Rove, who is not, actually, an objective observer. He is George Bush's hatchet man. Last week, Rove, in an address to the Conservative Party of New York, made the following claim: "Conservatives saw the savagery of 9-11 in the attacks and prepared for war; liberals saw the savagery of the 9-11 attacks and wanted to prepare indictments and offer therapy and understanding for our attackers."

"This seemed to the editorial writers at the San Diego Union-Tribune such a reasonable summary of the liberal position they couldn't figure out why Democrats were "hyperventilating" and getting "bent out of shape."

"What is harder to understand is how Democrats can think they can have it both ways," they wrote. "Even as they beat their chests and profess support for military action, they can't help but criticize the military and do everything they can to undermine the war effort."

"What a deep mystery. Let's see if we can help the San Diego thinkers solve it. On Sept. 14, 2001, Congress approved a resolution authorizing the president to take military action. The vote in the Senate was 98 to zero; the vote in the House was 420 to one. The lone dissenter was Democrat Barbara Lee of California, who expressed qualms about an open-ended war without a clear target.

"Find me the offer for therapy and understanding in that vote. Anyone remember what actually happened after 9-11? Unprecedented unity, support across the board, joint statements by Democratic and Republican political leaders. The whole world was with us. The most important newspaper in France headlined, "We Are All Americans Now," and all our allies sent troops and money to help. That is what George Bush has pissed away with his war in Iraq.

"The vote on invading Iraq was 77 to 23 in the Senate and 296 to 133 in the House. By that time, some liberals did question the wisdom of invasion because: A) Iraq had nothing to do with 9-11 and B) it looked increasingly unlikely that Iraq actually had great stores of weapons of mass destruction, since the United Nations inspectors, who were on the ground, couldn't find any sign of them -- even though Donald Rumsfeld claimed we knew exactly where they were.

"Since my name is Molly Ivins and I speak for myself, I'll tell you exactly why I opposed invading Iraq: because I thought it would be bad for this country, our country, my country. I opposed the invasion out of patriotism, and that is the reason I continue to oppose it today -- I think it is bad for us. I think it has done nothing but harm to the United States of America. I think we have created more terrorists than we faced to start with and that our good name has been sullied all over the world. I think we have alienated our allies and have killed more Iraqis than Saddam Hussein ever did.

"I did not oppose the war because I like Saddam Hussein. I have been active in human rights work for 30 years, and I told you he was a miserable s.o.b. back in the '80s, when our government was sending him arms.

"I did not oppose the war because I am soft on terrorists or didn't want to get Osama bin Laden. To the contrary, I thought it would be much more useful to get bin Laden than to invade Iraq -- which, once again, had nothing to do with 9-11. I believe the case now stands proved that this administration used 9-11 as a handy excuse to invade Iraq, which it already wanted to do for other reasons.

"It is one thing for a political knife-fighter like Karl Rove to impugn the patriotism of people who disagree with him: We have seen this same crappy tactic before, just as we have seen administration officials use 9-11 for political purposes again and again. But how many times are the media going to let them get away with it?

"The first furious assault on the patriotism of Democrats came right after the 9-11 commission learned President Bush had received a clear warning in August 2001 that Osama bin Laden was planning a hijacking.

"Batten down the hatches: This is the beginning of an administration push to jack up public support for the war in Iraq by attacking anyone with enough sense to raise questions about how it's going."

We're Not Afraid.

We're sad, and very angry, and we want justice in full measure, but we are not afraid.

Update - Here are two of my recent favorites:
hanschristiansaustrup.jpg

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And a couple more:
nono.jpg

yoda.jpg

scotland.jpg

danielrohrig.jpg

mobiletom.jpg

Probably Too Soon For Many

A few weeks after September 11, 2001 the satirical magazine The Onion published an edition with the headline: Holy Fucking Shit! Attack on America! This was pretty risky but the magazine struck the proper tone, and also made people laugh at a time when many really needed that kind of release. It's probably too soon for many of you, but if you are in the mood for a satiric (but not Onion) Bush-bashing take on today's bombings in London, click here.

About That G8

Here is a Quicktime movie by the "Camcorder Guerillas" called "Why Close The G8?" that provides an overview of some of the leftist positions on the G8. It can be played in several languages, and the English version comes with English subtitles for some reason. Worth a look if you are interested.

Equal Citizenship

Jack Balkin, as usual, says it brilliantly and wisely:

... The problem for a democracy like ours is accommodating these clashing views about morals, religion and politics, when they are made so fervently by people of such different prespectives. Some believe the country is falling into moral decay and can only be redeemed by their values; while others think government should impose their beliefs instead.

In Justice Sandra Day O'Connor's view, the key question was not whose values were right. It was how to preserve a deeper value in our constitutional tradition: equal citizenship. In a democracy, people may fight in the public square about the values government should uphold. But government must always treat its citizens as equal participants; it cannot favor one set over another because of their religious beliefs.

The principle of equal citizenship is often confused with separation of church and state, but the two are distinct. To secure equal citizenship, government need not cut itself off from religion or banish religious expression from the public square; what it must do is treat both the religious and the non-religious with an even hand. ...

London and Ayodhya

I spent the morning watching CNN International and listening to the BBC on the radio. It's amazing how well the people of London reacted to these attacks. They have had lots of practice, of course. But I was impressed nonetheless.

No one seemed to jump to conclusions about who did this. No one seemed to jump on Asian (what the Brits call South Asian) men and beat them to a pulp. No one ran through the streets in a fearful rage. People stayed off the streets and let emergency services work.

The justified rage will come out, of course. I just hope blind rage stays quelled.

The best moment: The chief of London Police said that he rejects any association of "Islamic" and "terrorist" because he does not consider terrorists to be true Moslems. I hope Jerry Falwell was watching that.

Melissa and I are going to London and Cambridge in two weeks. We will be staying in Central London, right on the Circle Line. So we are understandably concerned with conditions there and pleased with the depth of coverage so far.

But I am concerned. Two days ago, a potentially more dangerous terrorist attack happened.

But because no white people died, we barely heard about it. There was no 24-hour coverage from India. This one, in the powder keg known as Ayodhya, has the potential to spark another mass murder of innocent Moslems in India. What could be more terrible than bands of rabid Hindu fundamentalists running throught Moslem neighborhoods, raping, killing, and burning houses in revenge? Last time they did this, police and Army forces helped them. It was one of the most horrible examples of state-sponsored terrorism in many years.

Of course, the government in India has changed hands. But the Hindu fundamentalists still have much power and many mobs at their disposal.

Meanwhile, the terrorists who attacked Ayodhya in the first place will continue to plan and carry our more attacks because they wish to spark a religious war. And a religious war is what they will get.

How do we get ourselves out of this cycle?

Discovering What We Really Believe

Jane Addams, excerpted from "Democracy or Militarism," an address given at the Chicago Liberty Meeting, April 30, 1899:

"The political code, as well as the moral law, has no meaning and becomes absolutely emptied of its contents if we take out of it all relation to the world and concrete cases, and it is exactly in such a time as this that we discover what we really believe. We may make a mistake in politics as well as in morals by forgetting that new conditions are ever demanding the evolution of a new morality, along old lines but in larger measure. Unless the present situation extends our nationalism into internationalism, unless it has thrust forward our patriotism into humanitarianism we cannot meet it.

"We must also remember that peace has come to mean a larger thing. It is no longer merely absence of war, but the unfolding of life processes which are making for a common development. Peace is not merely something to hold congresses about and to discuss as an abstract dogma. It has come to be a rising tide of moral feeling, which is slowly engulfing all pride of conquest and making war impossible.

"Under this new conception of peace it is perhaps natural that the first men to formulate it and give it international meaning should have been workingmen, who have always realized, however feebly and vaguely they may have expressed it, that it is they who in all ages have borne the heaviest burden of privation and suffering imposed on the world by the military spirit."

Some Thoughts

I pulled these from a wide variety of sites and apologize for the lack of links and documentation. If any are inaccurate or misattributed, let me know and I'll try to fix them. (Has been updated):

"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable."
--John F. Kennedy

"One is left with the horrible feeling now that war settles nothing; that to win a war is as disastrous as to lose one."
--Agatha Christie

"If you want to make peace, you don't talk to your friends. You talk to your enemies."
--Moshe Dyan

"The more we sweat in peace the less we bleed in war."
--Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit

"An eye for eye only ends up making the whole world blind."
--Mahatma Gandhi, often quoted by Martin Luther King, Jr.

"Violence as a way of achieving racial justice is both impractical and immoral. It is impractical because it is a descending spiral ending in destruction for all. The old law of an eye for an eye leaves everyone blind. It is immoral because it seeks to humiliate the opponent rather than win his understanding; it seeks to annihilate rather than convert. Violence is immoral because it thrives on hatred rather than love. It destroys community and makes brotherhood impossible. It leaves society in monologue rather than dialogue. Violence ends by defeating itself. It creates bitterness in the survivors and brutality in the destroyers."
--Dr. Martin Luther King, jr.

"We must be the change we wish to see in the world."
--Gandhi

"It isn't enough to talk about peace. One must believe in it. And it isn't enough to believe in it. One must work at it."
--Eleanor Roosevelt

"Courage is the price that life exacts for granting peace."
--Amelia Earhart

"You cannot shake hands with a clenched fist."
--Attributed to both Golda Meir and Indira Gandhi

"Peace as a goal is an ideal which will not be contested by any government or nation, not even the most belligerent.
---Aung San Suu Kyi

"The best way to destroy an enemy is to make him a friend."
-- Abraham Lincoln

". . . Returning hate for hate multiplies hate, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out hate; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate, only love can do that. Hate multiplies hate, violence multiplies violence, and toughness multiplies toughness in a descending spiral of destruction. . . The chain reaction of evil -- hate begetting hate, wars producing more wars -- must be broken, or we shall be plunged into the dark abyss of annihilation."
--Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Strength to Love, 1963, p. 51

"As Americans, we must honor the victims of terrorism by upholding fundamental American ideals of freedom and democracy. We must not express our fears and anger by indiscriminately striking out against those with different names, skin color, religion, or origin."
--Barbara Lee

At the center of non-violence stands the principle of love."
--Martin Luther King, Jr.

"Peace is not merely a distant goal that we seek, but a means by which we arrive at that goal."
-- Martin Luther King, Jr.

"I object to violence because when it appears to do good, the good is only temporary; the evil it does is permanent."
--Mohandas K. Gandhi

"Civilization is a method of living and an attitude of equal respect for all people."
--Jane Addams

"You think that good is hating what is bad. What is bad is the hating mind itself."
--Bon Kai (Buddhist monk)

"People try nonviolence for a week, and when it 'doesn't work,' they go back to violence, which hasn't worked for centuries."
--Theodore Roszak

"A cornerstone upon which all great faiths are built is that compassion towards others is the truest expression of the divine."
--Marti Sinclair

Buddhism:

"Hurt not others in ways that you yourself would find hurtful."
--Udana-Varga, 5:18

Christianity:

"All things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them."
--Matthew 7:12

Confucianism:

"Do not unto others what you would not have them do unto you."
--Analects 15:23

Hinduism:

"This is the sum of duty: do naught unto others which would cause you pain if done to you."
--Mahabharata 5:1517

Islam:

"No one of you is a believer until he desires for his brother that which he desires for himself."
--Sunnah ["Sunnah" - the 13th of the 42 traditions, the sayings, actions and approvals of the Prophet Muhammad)

Judaism:

"What is hateful to you, do not to your fellow man. That is the law: all the rest is commentary."
--Talmud, Shabbat 31a

Native American:

"Respect for all life is the foundation."
--The Great Law of Peace, Six Nations to the Confederation
of Iriquois Nations

Unitarian Universalist:
"We affirm and promote respect for the interdependence of all existence of which we are a part."
--Unitarian principles.

July 6, 2005

Unlikely Phrases From Real Phrasebooks

Michael Froomkin of Discourse.net is conferencing and vacationing in Greece. He manages to rub our faces in this somewhat subtly by listing "Northern Crete Weather" on his lefthand scroll bar. A bit more ostentatiously, he posted about the odd choices his Institute for Language Studys Vest Pocket Modern Greek made, such as including translations for statements like: "Alice is less diligent than Barbara," "The girl with the big brown eyes was elected the queen of the ball," and "My brother-in-law has a new truck." You can read his post here. One of his commentors helpfully included this link to a web page chock full of "unlikely phrases from real phrasebooks." Now I know how to instruct someone to "clean and set this wig" in Swedish. Also, Jon Weinberg is guest blogging while Froomkin's away, check out his stuff here. I expect he'll be adding weather reports from Detroit or Ann Arbor to the blog any minute.

July 5, 2005

This Is How Much South Carolina Cherishes Its Children

From TheState.com:

Education officials trying to buy used buses

"State education officials have recently begun trying to buy used buses because the state doesnt have enough money to buy new ones.

"Last week, officials bid on 73 buses from 1993 that were being sent to the junkyard by a district in Louisville, Ky. The sale is still being finalized, so officials havent released the costs of the vehicles.

"The 12-year-old buses would be used to replace some of the oldest buses in the state fleet, some of which date to 1982 and have been driven more than 300,000 miles.

Were one of the few places that keeps buses as long as we do because we dont get any funding, said Don Tudor, director of transportation for the state Education Department.

"Most districts replace their buses after 12 to 15 years or 250,000 miles. Tudor said he didnt know of any other state that purchased used buses.

"South Carolina is the only state in the country that owns and runs its own school buses, and education officials said the bus fleet has shrunk because fuel and labor costs are up while funding from the Legislature is down."

"South Carolina needs to buy about 350 to 400 new buses each year, each costing about $60,000, to keep up with a typical 12-year replacement cycle, Tudor said. But the state has only bought a total of 300 new buses since 2002.

"Rising gas prices have forced officials to use lottery money intended for new vehicles to pay for gasoline instead, Tudor said."

Yep, we are buying school buses that Kentucky schools were sending to the junkyard, because they are far better than the buses many SC children are currently riding in.

Santorum's bright future

Reactionary, ill-informed, and determined to return America to the mores and laws of the antebellum South? I smell a Supreme Court nomination...

Since Melissa mentioned it in a comment to Siva's post, I thought I'd add a link to the Amazon page. It really is quite funny.

Oh, and an unrelated note: Billmon wrote a terrific, if terribly sad, 4th of July essay. Even when I don't agree with him, he's one of the reasons I'm grateful for the blogosphere.

Rick Santorum Jumps Shark!

His new book is certain to destroy any chance to win next year.

BTW, here you can find DumpSantorum.com!

I Need One Of These For My Office Wall

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If only my office was as large as a car. From here.

Pages Ripped From Children's Books...By Jay Pinkerton

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More here, but don't click if you are easily offended.

Intel Dump Blogger Phil Carter is Going to Iraq

Best of luck, Phil!

Carter is an excellent writer and fine thinker. He is undoubtedly a good soldier as well. He will be serving in the 101st Airborne. We all owe him for his service.

For those who are not familiar with Phil's writing, I suggest starting here:

The Road to Abu Ghraib: The biggest scandal of the Bush administration began at the top

By Phillip Carter

A generation from now, historians may look back to April 28, 2004, as the day the United States lost the war in Iraq. On that date, CBS News broadcast the first ugly photographs of abuses by American soldiers at Baghdad's Abu Ghraib prison. There were images of a man standing hooded on a box with wires attached to his hands; of guards leering as they forced naked men to simulate sexual acts; of a man led around on a leash by a female soldier; of a dead Iraqi detainee, packed in ice; and more. The pictures had been taken the previous fall by U.S. Army military police soldiers assigned to the prison, but had made it into the hands of Army criminal investigators only months later, when a soldier named Joseph Darby anonymously passed them a CD-ROM full of prison photos. The images aroused worldwide indignation, and illustrated in graphic detail both the lengths to which the United States would go to get intelligence, and the extent to which those efforts had been corrupted by the exigencies of the difficult war in Iraq. ...

Which State Has Sacrificed the Most for W's Lies?

It's Vermont. Seriously. Vermont has the higherst per-capita losses so far. I know. Surprised me, too. Of course, the numbers are small, so you can't make too much of them. But it's interesting.

I agree with the Radical Christian Right

Alberto Gonzales would be a very bad justice, despite the fact that he would be about the most liberal nominee Bush would consider for the Supreme Court.

[Matt's parsing of the Torture Memo has not convinced me otherwise. Although to be fair, Gonzales did not order torture. He merely tolerated it.]

This would make him less of a Justice, more of an Injustice. Basically, the guy is a bad lawyer who does not serve his clients well. A bad lawyer would certainly make a bad judge, as he was in Texas before coming to DC.

Why do I think he is a bad lawyer? Because no lawyer is supposed to advise his client to break the law. Gonzales, when counsel to the president, advised him to break U.S. treaty obligations, ignore the Military Code of Justice, and U.S. law on the treatment of prisoners.

To remind everyone what sort of human being Gonzales is, here is Mark Danner on the subject of his confirmation hearings for Attorney General:

Shortly after the 9/11 attacks, Americans began torturing prisoners, and they have never really stopped. However much these words have about them the ring of accusation, they must by now be accepted as fact. From Red Cross reports, Maj. Gen. Antonio M. Taguba's inquiry, James R. Schlesinger's Pentagon-sanctioned commission and other government and independent investigations, we have in our possession hundreds of accounts of "cruel, inhuman and degrading" treatment - to use a phrase of the Red Cross - "tantamount to torture."

So far as we know, American intelligence officers, determined after Sept. 11 to "take the gloves off," began by torturing Qaeda prisoners. They used a number of techniques: "water-boarding," in which a prisoner is stripped, shackled and submerged in water until he begins to lose consciousness, and other forms of near suffocation; sleep and sensory deprivation; heat and light and dietary manipulation; and "stress positions."

Eventually, these practices "migrated," in the words of the Schlesinger report, to Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, where for a time last spring the marvel of digital technology allowed Americans to see what their soldiers were doing to prisoners in their name.

Though the revelations of Abu Ghraib transfixed Americans for a time, in the matter of torture not much changed. After those in Congress had offered condemnations and a few hearings distinguished by their lack of seriousness; after the administration had commenced the requisite half-dozen investigations, none of them empowered to touch those who devised the policies; and after the low-level soldiers were placed firmly on the road to punishment - after all this, the issue of torture slipped back beneath the surface. Every few weeks now, a word or two reaches us from that dark, subterranean place. Take, for example, this account, offered by an unnamed F.B.I. counterterrorism official reporting in August, more than three months after the Abu Ghraib images appeared, on what he saw during a visit to Guantnamo:

"On a couple of occasions, I entered interview rooms to find a detainee chained hand and foot in a fetal position to the floor, with no chair, food or water. Most times they had urinated or defecated on themselves, and had been left there for 18-24 hours or more...When I asked the M.P.'s what was going on, I was told that interrogators from the day prior had ordered this treatment, and the detainee was not to be moved. On another occasion...the detainee was almost unconscious on the floor, with a pile of hair next to him. He had apparently been literally pulling his own hair out throughout the night."

This is a fairly mild example when judged against the accounts of the "abuses" that have entered the public record. I put quotation marks around the word "abuses" because most of these acts - as the F.B.I. agent acknowledged ("the interrogators from the day prior had ordered this treatment") - were in fact procedures, which would not have been possible without policies that had been approved by administration officials.

In the next few days we are likely to hear how Mr. Gonzales recommended strongly, against the arguments of the secretary of state and military lawyers, that prisoners in Afghanistan be denied the protection of the Geneva Conventions. We are also likely to hear how, under Mr. Gonzales's urging, lawyers in the Department of Justice contrived - when confronted with the obstacle that the United States had undertaken, by treaty and statute, to make torture illegal - simply to redefine the word to mean procedures that would produce pain "of an intensity akin to that which accompanies serious physical injury such as death or organ failure." By this act of verbal legerdemain, interrogation techniques like water-boarding that plainly constituted torture suddenly became something less than that.

But what we are unlikely to hear, given the balance of votes in the Senate, are many voices making the obvious argument that with this record, Mr. Gonzales is unfit to serve as attorney general. So let me make it: Mr. Gonzales is unfit because the slow river of litigation is certain to bring before the next attorney general a raft of torture cases that challenge the very policies that he personally helped devise and put into practice. He is unfit because, while the attorney general is charged with upholding the law, the documents show that as White House counsel, Mr. Gonzales, in the matter of torture, helped his client to concoct strategies to circumvent it. And he is unfit, finally, because he has rightly become the symbol of the United States' fateful departure from a body of settled international law and human rights practice for which the country claims to stand.

On the other hand, perhaps it is fitting that Mr. Gonzales be confirmed. The system of torture has, after all, survived its disclosure. We have entered a new era; the traditional story line in which scandal leads to investigation and investigation leads to punishment has been supplanted by something else. Wrongdoing is still exposed; we gaze at the photographs and read the documents, and then we listen to the president's spokesman "reiterate," as he did last week, "the president's determination that the United States never engage in torture." And there the story ends.

... By using torture, we Americans transform ourselves into the very caricature our enemies have sought to make of us. True, that miserable man who pulled out his hair as he lay on the floor at Guantnamo may eventually tell his interrogators what he knows, or what they want to hear. But for America, torture is self-defeating; for a strong country it is in the end a strategy of weakness. After Mr. Gonzales is confirmed, the road back - to justice, order and propriety - will be very long. Torture will belong to us all.

Mark Danner is the author of "Torture and Truth: America, Abu Ghraib and the War on Terror."

Basically, Alberto Gonzales has betrayed us. He is deeply immoral. He deserves to be in jail, not on the highest court in the land.

Forgive me if I take too much pleasure in this ...

... but Arnold's decline is too rich.

Apparently even 1/3 of California Republicans say they won't vote for the guy!

Let's face it. The era of the incompetent moderate Republican is over. Let's clean house! Pataki is next!

Immigrants In the U.S. Armed Forces

Full text of the story "Noncitizen soldiers: the quandaries of foreign-born troops," by Patrik Jonsson in today's Christian Science Monitor here, excerpt below:

...."Making up about 7 percent of America's active fighting force, immigrants with green cards - Mexicans the largest group among them - are risking their lives not just for advancement within the Army, but for a leg up on the road to US citizenship. As America celebrated its 229th year of independence this weekend, immigrants offered their own breed of patriotic sacrifice, and their numbers are rising even as the Army has struggled to meet recruiting goals.

"Their service is steeped in pride, but also in the paradoxes of allegiance inherent in serving under a foreign flag. "If I die over there, I'm not even dying for my own country," says Sergeant Escartin, who is based at Fort Bliss, Texas.

"To the public, the role of immigrant soldiers is equally complicated: Even as the nation honors their exemplary service, there is ambivalence over how big a role noncitizens should play. Even the Declaration of Independence, in its litany of complaints about England, railed against the use of "foreign mercenaries." Today, the notion that America may be, in effect, hiring foreigners to do its dirty work, is an ethical quandary exaggerated by the quiet loosening of requirements - and increasing of benefits - for immigrants who will shoulder rifles for Uncle Sam." ....

Yellow Elephants and Chickenhawk Rich Kids

The issue is duty. The problem is hypocrisy.

People who support a war have a duty to enlist in the arms service. As William James wrote, "a belief is that upon which you are willing to act." If our nation is so threatened that it is worth sacrificing the life of any of us, then it is worth sacrificing the lives of all of us. Anything less is a lie to yourself and others.

People who don't support a particular war probably should not enlist (they would make bad soldiers, and a bad soldier is worse than no soldier), but should contribute all they can to alleviate the suffering caused by the war while vocally opposing the war.

Of course, those who are already career soldiers and sailors must always be prepared to server, regardless of individual judgement. That's what we ask of our military personel. And it's the one area of American life where we ask people to suspend their political feelings and trust their superiors blindly. I don't think we would want it any other way.

Still, it is incumbent on our leaders to act truthfully and sincerely in matters of war, and best for them to be able to truthfully rally sustainable public support for an extended mission (see Afghanistan; compare to Iraq).

And all of us have a duty to generate and champion ways to get out of any war with dignity, honor, stability, and justice. The debate should be open, honest, and healthy, and should revolve around what we mean by dignity, honor, stability, and justice.

It's the American way.

Anything less is unpatriotic, inhumane, and immoral.

The current war is much, much less. This war, like the last big one, is a class war.

Military recruitment is based on cash bonuses, not duty or honor. Therefore, it works to attract those who have few options in life, the working poor. These are the same people Republicans are stealing from and poisoning in all other areas of life. This administration considers the working poor disposable. So they continue to shovel them into untenable situations while denying them basic services and opportunities and undermining any chance they have of building a better life.

Meanwhile we are failing to build the sort of military that can serve us well in the long term.

As Sen. Chuck Hagel (that's war hero Chuck Hagel) says:

But you aren't going to attract the kind of people we have been able to attract just by incentives. When you try to project military recruitment through bonuses, you are going to get people signing up for the wrong reasons.

You recruit good soldiers by asking them to risk their lives for a high and noble purpose, like pursuing those who attacked us, not some fictional threat manufactured (i.e. "fixed") to make a war of choice more palatable. You recruit the best possible armed forces by appealing to all walks of life, regardless of education and wealth. You can transform a balkanized society into one committed to the general welfare by asking those from every segment of life to unify and pursue a clear and just goal.

When the goal is nebulous, the plan nonexistent, the forsight lacking, the rhetoric slippery, the cost astronomical, the leadership vacant, the justification malleable or demonstrably false, and the recruitment entirely focused on those least able to leverage the powerful opportunities of the most powerful economy this species has ever produced, you are inviting humiliation.

I will not stand to see my country humiliated once again. I will not stand to see pampered rich kids laugh and drink while good Americans lose their lives and limbs and dreams for a pile of lies and empty promises.

This country cannot be as strong and just as it must be if we continue on this cowardly, hypocritical route. This is a prescription for decades of weakness -- deep, internal weakness. The world is too dangerous for such weakness.

When rich Republican men and women start acting on their beliefs instead of leeching off the work and dead bodies of the working poor in the this country, we will shut up about Yellow Elephants and the like.

It's not likely to happen. The Example-in-Chief is the king of the draft dodgers. He managed the unlikely feat of being BOTH a draft dodger AND a deserter. That sort of talent sets the standard of irresponsibility pretty high. It's no wonder that rich young Republicans run from service so eagerly.

It ain't that complicated. It's about duty.

BTW, check out the top Google hit for "hypocrisy."

TWINS

Here is an interesting article geared to the layperson from the Times, introducing the concept of epigenetics. That is a word you will hear a lot of in the future, since we are now in a post-genomic world.

Explaining Differences in Twins

Epigenetics explains why, in a given set of twins, one may be heterosexual and the other homosexual. If that is the kind of thing that keeps you up at night.

[ENTIRE TEXT PASTED AFTER THE JUMP]

July 5, 2005 Explaining Differences in Twins

By NICHOLAS WADE
Identical twins possess exactly the same set of genes. Yet as they grow older, they may begin to display subtle differences.

They may start to look different, develop different diseases or slide into different personalities. Women who are identical twins may differ in their fertility or in the age at which they reach menopause.

These discrepancies are usually attributed to ill-defined differences in environment.

But a whole new level of explanation has been opened up by a genetic survey showing that identical twins, as they grow older, differ increasingly in what is known as their epigenome. The term refers to natural chemical modifications that occur in a person's genome shortly after conception and that act on a gene like a gas pedal or a brake, marking it for higher or lower activity.

Identical twins have the same set of epigenetic marks on the genome when they are born. But differences in the epigenome emerge as the twins grow older and become greater the longer they live apart, say a team of researchers led by Dr. Manel Esteller of the Spanish National Cancer Center in Madrid.

Their report appears in today's issue of The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"This is one of the most fascinating things I have read," said Dr. Nancy Segal, a psychologist who studies twins at California State University at Fullerton and the author of "Indivisible by Two," a forthcoming book on twins. "By giving us a handle on something specific, it opens up many new avenues of inquiry as to why twins are different."

There are two possible explanations for Dr. Esteller's findings. One is simply the well- known fact that epigenetic marks are lost as people get older. Because the marks are removed randomly, they would be expected to occur differently in two members of a twin pair.

A second possible explanation is that personal experiences and elements in the environment - including toxic agents like tobacco smoke - feed back onto the genome by changing the pattern of epigenetic marks.

Dr. Esteller believes he is seeing both processes at work. The evidence for the second process, he said, is that twins who reported that they had lived apart the longest also had the greatest differences in their epigenome.

"This is a way for the genome to be responsive to the environment," he said, noting that it is easier for chemical marks on the genome to change than for the genome itself to mutate.

His study suggests that the epigenome may be involved in many diseases that can affect identical twins differently, like schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and cancer. Although schizophrenia evidently has a genetic component, the epigenome may hold the clue to its nongenetic aspects.

Differences between identical twins could also help pinpoint the epigenetic differences that contribute to cancer. "We think that epigenetic changes are very common in cancer," said Dr. Peter A. Jones, the president of the American Association for Cancer Research and a professor at the University of Southern California.

Dr. Jones said Dr. Esteller's finding "is exceptionally interesting in that it underlines the importance of epigenetic changes in human development and disease."

Dr. Jones recently convened a workshop to discuss starting an international human epigenome project. The proposal could rival the Human Genome Project in complexity because the human genome is the same in every cell of a person's body, while the epigenome is expected to be different for each of the 250 or so human cell types.

Among the most important components of the epigenome are small chemical handles known as methyl groups, which are added directly to the chemical units of DNA.

A wave of demethylation occurs in a sperm's genome shortly after an egg is fertilized, followed by the extensive readdition of methyl groups in early embryonic development.

These methyl groups, which generally inhibit the activity of the genes in which they occur, tend to be lost during aging. Dr. Esteller's team studied the total amount of methylation in the twins' genomes, as well as another kind of epigenetic modification, the addition of acetyl groups to the histone proteins that act as a scaffolding and as a control system for DNA.

The Next Supreme Court Justice

Michael Berube has the scoop here. He also has two accents marks in his last name over the e's that I can't reproduce. Oh well.

NY Times Goes All Foxworthy

It's already my practice to begin the day with a prayer, so my life won't dramatically change when the Supreme Court, with new justice Ralph Reed, makes it national law that all Americans do so.

In my case, the prayer is simple: "Dear God, please don't bring me into contact with anything involving Jeff Foxworthy today."

Normally, reading the New York Times in the morning is pretty safe, but in today's edition, the usually excellent Neil MacFarquhar writes about Iranian women playing golf, including the following lines:

You know you are playing golf in the Islamic Republic when:

1. The rule book starts, "In the name of God, the merciful, the compassionate."

2. There are only a dozen holes. Tehran's only golf course used to have the regulation 18 holes, but 6 were considered such prime real estate that the Revolutionary Guards confiscated them to build office blocks and residential complexes.

3. "Referees" are dispatched with nearly every golf party because players prefer to cheat rather than scavenge for their balls in the high grass, deep fissures and drifts of trash on the unkempt fairways.

Ah, the Hi-larious "You might be a redneck if..." routine. Aargh. Please, no front page stories about rebuilding Iraq with permutations of "Git-R-Done." Please.

Lift The Ban

A Moveable Beast has a great post up about the mistreatment of gays and lesbians in the military here. Sign a petition calling on Congress, the White House and the Pentagon to lift the ban on lesbian, gay and bisexual service members in our armed forces here.
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The Return of Robert Wiene

Let me say right off that I love Brooklyn. From my perspective, it's right up there as one of the best places in the world to live, alongside Tokyo's Ikebukuro, which (from me, anyway), is very, very high praise. By the way, the places I'd least want to live? Inside Vlade Divac's dirty laundry hamper, and Crawford, Texas.

Anyway, the New York Times has a story today about the development plans for the new stadium hosting the Nets. As the slideshow makes clear, the project is designed by Robert Wiene, director of the 1919-1920 silent classic, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. For evidence, click here and here, and here and here, and here and here.

Updated -- Sorry, replaced some of the Caligari photos. Tripod doesn't like direct file links. Anyway, the best Caligari photos are available here.

July 4, 2005

Need Something To Do Before It Gets Dark Enough For Fireworks?

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Credit The General.

Update: See also Tom Tomorrow.

Stop Ranting, Start Serving...

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Apologies if this has already appeared on the blog. You can buy "Operation Yellow Elephant" stuff here.

See also this Daily Kos post.

Strangest scene of all time?

While checking the copy-edited version of my book manuscript, I've got the TV on in the background. One of the half-billion HBO channels is currently showing The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. I mean, I could go on about the various problems of the movie, but why bother?

More interesting to me is that it may have the single oddest scene in film history. In 1899, legendary explorer Alan Quartermaine (Sean Connery) and his team are trying to stop some kind of shock wave that is toppling all of Venice. So Quartermaine and US Secret Service Agent Tom Sawyer (this is not a joke; if it were a joke, I would include some profanity) race through the streets of Venice in a convertible, trying to find a spot where Dr. Nemo can fire a guided missile from the Nautilus to destroy a bunch of buildings, thereby serving as kind of a firewall to protect the rest of Venice. I know what you're thinking: wouldn't this be extremely dangerous, with the army of snipers that the villains would have placed on rooftops trying to kill our heroes before they can carry out their mission? It's an excellent question, of course, but you've obviously forgotten about the sexy vampire (Peta Wilson) who summons her army of bats to provide aerial cover to the car.

I can think of worse films than this one -- I'd rather drink hemlock than watch A Beautiful Mind again -- but none with such a profoundly odd scene. Yes, I'm leaving out purposefully surreal films by directors such as David Lynch and Alain Resnais.

Anyone else know of any equally odd (by which I mean: professionally made, designed to be coherent, and yet utterly mystifying) scenes? Just a question.

Undermining Their Own Rhetoric

An article in today's NYT ("Hollywood Movie Studios See the Chinese Film Market as Their Next Rising Star" by David Barboza) suggests rather powerfully that even with a degree of "piracy," the entertainment industry recognizes that good content can generate a lot of money, even without high barriers domestic copyright laws:

.... "Drawn by China's fast-growing economy, inexpensive film production sites and its increasingly popular martial arts and feature films - most notably "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" in 2000 - Western studios are stepping up their presence here and looking to eventually turn China into a major film production base.

"China is going to grow, so a lot of companies want to come in here and produce films," said Li Chow, the general manager of Columbia Tristar Film Distributors, a division of Sony Pictures Entertainment. "Chinese films have done well internationally, ever since 'Crouching Tiger' came out. So this is a trend."

"The moves come as Hollywood officials are still fighting to get their own American-made movies shown here. And they are also putting greater pressure on the Chinese government to crack down on rampant film and DVD piracy, which costs Hollywood millions of dollars every year. But Hollywood executives also say they are making plans to produce and invest in movies with a Chinese theme or Chinese language movies that could later be exported to the rest of the world. And American studios are laying the foundation to produce movies solely for China's domestic film market.

"China's box office receipts are still small compared with ticket sales in the United States, where box office revenues were a record $9.4 billion in 2004, according to Exhibitor Relations. But analysts here say affluent Chinese are becoming avid movie-goers, particularly in big cities like Beijing, Guangzhou and Shanghai. The domestic market is expected to grow to $1.2 billion by 2007, from about $500 million in 2004, according to China E-Capital, a private investment bank in Beijing.

"Hollywood is also coming here to tap into China's growing television, Internet, gaming and mobile phone markets, which producers see as new and potentially lucrative outlets. A few weeks ago, Warner Brothers Online announced that it would team with Tom Online, an online and wireless service based in Beijing, to distribute Warner Brothers film content on the Internet and to mobile phone users across China.

"Perhaps more significantly, Hollywood executives recognize that China now has a collection of talented film directors who are breaking box office records at home and selling well overseas." ....

Fourth of July Revelry

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Is it me, or does this photo from today's NYT make Bush look like he is wearing a giant hoop skirt?

Tom Cruise Kills Oprah?

Turn up the sound and watch something very weird.

Ireland's Documents of Independence

Intellectual food for thought.

The 1916 Irish Proclaimation of Independence:
POBLACHT NA H EIREANN
THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT OF THE IRISH REPUBLIC TO THE PEOPLE OF IRELAND

IRISHMEN AND IRISHWOMEN: In the name of God and of the dead generations from which she receives her old tradition of nationhood, Ireland, through us, summons her children to her flag and strikes for her freedom.

Having organised and trained her manhood through her secret revolutionary organisation, the Irish Republican Brotherhood, and through her open military organisations, the Irish Volunteers and the Irish Citizen Army, having patiently perfected her discipline, having resolutely waited for the right moment to reveal itself, she now seizes that moment, and, supported by her exiled children in America and by gallant allies in Europe, but relying in the first on her own strength, she strikes in full confidence of victory.

We declare the right of the people of Ireland to the ownership of Ireland, and to the unfettered control of Irish destinies, to be sovereign and indefeasible. The long usurpation of that right by a foreign people and government has not extinguished the right, nor can it ever be extinguished except by the destruction of the Irish people. In every generation the Irish people have asserted their right to national freedom and sovereignty; six times during the last three hundred years they have asserted it to arms. Standing on that fundamental right and again asserting it in arms in the face of the world, we hereby proclaim the Irish Republic as a Sovereign Independent State, and we pledge our lives and the lives of our comrades-in-arms to the cause of its freedom, of its welfare, and of its exaltation among the nations.

The Irish Republic is entitled to, and hereby claims, the allegiance of every Irishman and Irishwoman. The Republic guarantees religious and civil liberty, equal rights and equal opportunities to all its citizens, and declares its resolve to pursue the happiness and prosperity of the whole nation and all of its parts, cherishing all of the children of the nation equally and oblivious of the differences carefully fostered by an alien government, which have divided a minority from the majority in the past.

Until our arms have brought the opportune moment for the establishment of a permanent National, representative of the whole people of Ireland and elected by the suffrages of all her men and women, the Provisional Government, hereby constituted, will administer the civil and military affairs of the Republic in trust for the people.

We place the cause of the Irish Republic under the protection of the Most High God. Whose blessing we invoke upon our arms, and we pray that no one who serves that cause will dishonour it by cowardice, in humanity, or rapine. In this supreme hour the Irish nation must, by its valour and discipline and by the readiness of its children to sacrifice themselves for the common good, prove itself worthy of the august destiny to which it is called.

Signed on Behalf of the Provisional Government.

Thomas J. Clarke, Sean Mac Diarmada, Thomas MacDonagh, P. H. Pearse, Eamonn Ceannt, James Connolly, Joseph Plunkett
*All signatories were executed by the British Government for their efforts in trying to secure a free Ireland.

**************************************************************

The Irish Declaration of Independence, 21st January 1919, First Dail Eireann
Enacted by the Parliament of the Republic of Ireland

'Whereas the Irish People is by right a free people:

'And whereas for seven hundred years the Irish People has never ceased to repudiate and has repeatedly protested in arms against foreign usurpation:

'And whereas English rule in this country is, and always has been, based upon force and fraud and maintained by military occupation against the declared will of the people:

'And whereas the Irish Republic was proclaimed in Dublin on Easter Monday, 1916, by the Irish Republican Army, acting on behalf of the Irish People:

'And whereas the Irish People is resolved to secure and maintain its complete independence in order to promote the common weal, to re-establish justice, to provide for future defence, to ensure peace at home and good will with all nations, and to constitute a national policy based upon the people's will with equal right and equal opportunity for every citizen:

'And whereas at the threshold of a new era in history the Irish electorate has in the General Election of December, 1918, seized the first occasion to declare by an overwhelming majority its firm allegiance to the Irish Republic:

'Now, therefore, we, the elected Representatives of the ancient Irish People in National Parliament assembled, do, in the name of the Irish Nation, ratify the establishment of the Irish Republic and pledge ourselves and our people to make this declaration effective by every means at our command:

'We ordain that the elected Representatives of the Irish People alone have power to make laws binding on the people of Ireland, and that the Irish Parliament is the only Parliament to which that people will give its allegiance:

'We solemnly declare foreign government in Ireland to be an invasion of our national right which we will never tolerate, and we demand the evacuation of our country by the English Garrison:

'We claim for our national independence the recognition and support of every free nation in the world, and we proclaim that independence to be a condition precedent to international peace hereafter:

'In the name of the Irish People we humbly commit our destiny to Almighty God Who gave our fathers the courage and determination to persevere through long centuries of a ruthless tyranny, and strong in the justice of the cause which they have handed down to us, we ask His Divine blessing on this the last stage of the struggle we have pledged ourselves to carry through to freedom.'

(Dail Eireann: Minutes of the Proceedings of the First Parliament of the Republic of Ireland, 21st January 1919.)

July 3, 2005

Happy Independence Day!

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Church, State and Blog

This is satire.
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From Apropos of Something.

An article (excerpted from a book) in today's NYT Magazine by Noah Feldman, entitled "A Church-State Solution," on the other hand, is apparently not satire, despite the visuals accompanying the online version of the article, which I have reposted below. After framing the issue, Feldman writes:

"Despite the gravity of the problem, I believe there is an answer. Put simply, it is this: offer greater latitude for religious speech and symbols in public debate, but also impose a stricter ban on state financing of religious institutions and activities."

I read this to mean, "it's all about money." He later explains:

"From this logic, it follows that a moment of silence to begin the school day should not be invalidated just because it is intended to let children pray if they wish. Though it will never be easy to determine when schoolchildren are being coerced by peer pressure, at least some older students at optional events like a Friday-night football game surely are not being forced to pray when others are doing so voluntarily. Intelligent-design theory, itself a product of the ill-advised demand that religion disguise itself in secular garb, should be opposed on the educational ground that it is poor science, not on the constitutional reasoning, which some secularists have advanced, that it is a cover for religious creationism. If its advocates can persuade a local school board to put it in the curriculum, the courts need not strike it down as an establishment of religion."

So if I am understanding this correctly, under his view, religious symbols may appear, indeed proliferate, in public spaces as long as they are privately funded. So, displaying bible verses that endose slavery (see e.g. Leviticus 25:44 in the King James Bible) in schools and government buildings would be constitutional (at least with respect to the First Amendment) as long as, say, one of the white supremacist Christian churches paid for the posters. And all you have to do to get Intelligent Design into a public school curriculum is convince the school board that it is good science.

Feldman also writes:

"Most Americans are still Christians who celebrate Christmas, and the state acknowledges that fact, just as the culture does through the songs on the radio and the merchandise in the stores. The celebration may not always be deeply religious, but the atmosphere corresponds to the realities of the Christian majority. Just what is threatening to religious minorities about Christians celebrating the holiday or singing carols in school? What, exactly, is the harm in being wished Merry Christmas even if you're not celebrating? The state has not made Christianity relevant to citizenship nor has it spent taxpayers' money to advance the cause of the church. It has simply acknowledged the preferences of a majority."

If governments close schools and offices and suspend most governmental services on Christmas Day, I'm having a hard time understanding how observing Christmas could NOT "make Christianity relevant to citizenship," and represent an expenditure of "taxpayers money." His larger point seems to be that the majority should prevail on this issue. So I'm thinking mandatory school prayer, not much of a jump from some of the Christmas carols that get sung currently, is also a "majority rules" proposition, in contravention of fifty years or so of Supreme Court decisions that are mostly to the contrary. And hey, if a school board can be convinced that studies touting the beneficial effects of prayer are "good science" we can look forward to their incorporation into the curriculum as well.

In his conclusion Feldman states:

"If we could be more tolerant of sincere religious people drawing on their beliefs and practices to inform their choices in the public realm, and at the same time be more vigilant about preserving our legacy of institutional separation between government and organized religion, the shift would redirect us to the uniqueness of the American experiment with church and state."

I don't know who Feldman means by "we" but a vision of what South Carolina might look like if the courts embraced his reasoning is truly frightening. There is already PLENTY of overt religion in the "public realm" around these here parts and most of us are quite "tolerant" because we don't have the time, energy, or fortitude to endure the censure, opprobrium, and death threats that any complaint is sure to evoke. (Update: See also.)

Now here are the "photomontages" (as the NYT calls them) that accompany the article:

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Is someone at the NYT gently mocking Feldman's piece?

Cynical Sunday

Do "conservative groups" really oppose the nomination of Alberto Gonzales to the Supreme Court, or is this just a ploy to make Gonzales seem less reactionary and more palatable to the rest of us?

Will Karl Rove assert that he actually discovered that Joe Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame, was a CIA operative (and subsequently passed this information to journalists) from Wilson himself, or from Plame, or from a Democrat, or from Google? How many other war dissenters have been more quietly punished, and how much dissent has been chilled by this episode altogether?

Live 8 Tokyo Style

Apparently, the Live 8 concert in Tokyo was a bit of a bust, in spite of having a lineup that included Bjork and the Japanese band Dreams Come True, in addition to Good Charlotte. The Telegraph reports that Bjork stole the show (which doesn't surprise me; I'm a big fan, and it's always interesting to watch someone as crazy as she is on a big stage).

But only 10,000 people went to Makuhari Messe to see the concert, or slightly fewer people than were at the tricked-out car show I attended in Chicago a few weeks ago. Quick note: if you happen to be in the Tokyo area at the time of the next major earthquake, try to give Makuhari Messe and Tokyo Disneyland a wide berth. They're on reclaimed land areas that will, I assume, turn to warm porridge when the temblor hits.

July 2, 2005

OK, I admit it, I had no idea

Seriously. I had no idea how batshit insane the far right in the country is. I mean, I was born here and have lived here most of my life, but it's like I had my eyes closed. The far right is calling for President Bush not to nominate Attorney General Alberto Gonzales as a supreme court justice because his views on abortion aren't hard-core enough.

Look, in his defense. Gonzales wrote the infamous "torture memo" that basically said that anything short of reducing a prisoner to boneless pile of bleeding goo is a-ok in constitutional terms. And he's not conservative enough?

I mean, Alberto Gonzales basically set the US Constitution on fire in order to justify Donald Rumsfeld's urinating on it to put out its smoldering embers. I mean, any frontal assault on the Constitution in which John Ashcroft is basically just a bystander has to be considered damned impressive.

And yet, he's not conservative enough?

God bless you conservatives. I have devoted my life to learning, and every day, I learn something new about how looney a political movement can actually be. This really is a special time for America. The cool thing is when you reduce the Constitution to a glowing fog of atoms (I assume this is the next step, right?), there sure as hell won't be any room for those goddamned activist judges to, you know, be all activist and everything

Duct Tape Prom Outfits

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You can see a whole flock of them here. Probably doesn't sell quite as many rolls of tape as the Tom Ridge Terrorism Protection Initiative did but you have to admire the creativity.


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Found A Cool SC Blog!

And I perseveringly achieved this astounding feat of stupifyingly industrious research by googling (yes, I'm using a corporate noun as a verb, primarily to mess with their trademark rights) "South Carolina blog." First result was the "South Carolina Trial Law Blog." Goober City, huh? Actually it may be of interest to my students, so I'll probably keep track of it for a while and see if it is worth recommending to them. Next result was the "Official Website of the South Carolina Democratic Party." It's kind of boring, with lots of male faces (most white) and predictable content about what an abysmal job our Republican Gov. is doing. The third result, though, is awesome: "Little Lost Robot." Dang he's funny!

Potato Chips That Proselytize

Front
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Back
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Bought a snack sized bag in Philadelphia a while back, and I'm still not sure what to make of it.

Interesting Superhero Comics

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Batman's boners. Wonder Woman's binding games and spanking. Superman's emotional abusiveness. And much more, here. Via Tom Tomorrow.

July 1, 2005

1000 Women for the Nobel Peace Prize 2005

From the site:

"Millions of women are engaged daily in working for a better future. Without regard for their own safety, they are active on behalf of the community's well-being. They call for reconciliation, demand justice, and rebuild what has been destroyed. They transform conflicts. They fight against poverty and for human rights. They create alternative sources of income, and they strive for access to land and clean water. They educate and heal. They reintegrate HIV patients. They find solutions to a great many forms of violence and they condemn the genital mutilation of girls.

"The project 1000 Women for the Nobel Peace Prize 2005 defined as its objective the nominating of 1000 women to represent collectively the millions above-mentioned. The life stories, the visions, methods, strategies and networks of these 1000 women will be publicized. With this recognition they should receive both encouragement and gratitude for their commitment."

Among the U.S. nominees I am familar with, I'd especially like to see Barbara Lee win.

Thomas Friedman Is Wrong Again

Friedman's column about Ireland's economy is deeply flawed. Henry at Crooked Timber explains some of the reasons here. Let me add a few as well:
1. Ireland is attractive to many U.S. technology companies because it is primarily English-speaking, as opposed to France or Germany.
2. Friedman mentions something he calls "the Irish-British model" without explaining how he came to the suprising and dubious conclusion that both countries, Ireland and Great Britain, are pursuing and reaping economic growth in the same, or even similar ways. Somewhat relevant anecdotal observation: Very few low wage service workers in Ireland are Irish, especially not in the larger cities where the bulk of the population lives. In Ireland I was waited on or served by folks from Asian and Eastern European countries, Spain, Italy and even the United States, but very, very few Irish citizens. By contrast, in Northern Ireland, most of the service workers I encountered were "natives", and in Scotland, every single waiter, clerk, custodian or cab driver, etc. I chatted with was Scottish.

Summer of Truth

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A Freeway Blogger initiative described here.

Remembering Rosemary Nelson and Pat Finucane

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Rosemary Nelson

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Pat Finucane

I spent most of June traveling throughout Ireland, Northern Ireland, and Scotland. I haven't ever had the time or money to travel recreationally very much, so this trip was a very big deal to me, something I've been planning for years. I had a wonderful time, and I observed and learned an enormous amount, which I will be blogging about in future days.

Being in Northern Ireland made me think a lot about Rosemary Nelson and Pat Finucane, human rights lawyers who were brutally murdered on their own doorsteps. Neither of their murders has been "solved." This post is one small attempt to make sure that they are not forgotten outside of Northern Ireland.

Sew Strange!

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Vintage sewing patterns, complete with ribald commentary, at Threadbared.com.

Friday Dog/Supreme Court Blogging

Ellie says:

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"Protect humans' right to choose!"

Beer Golf

Here.

Colorful USB Drives!

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More here!

I Fear for my Country

I am SO glad Ann is back on the blog! I am especially glad because the next few months we could be seeing legal meltdown in this country. As the only law professor who contributes here, we need her insight.

Justice Sandra Day O'Connor was the last stalwart conservative to support Stare Decisis. That meant that even though she was an opponent of abortion she modestly refused to overturn Roe v. Wade.

There were many times that O'Connor acted more like a legislator than a justice. Sometimes her legislative manners favored liberals. Other times conservatives. But in Casey (the case that upheld Roe) she was a dignified jurist.

Overall she was persuasive and reasonable. The court needs people like her.

Chief Justice Rehnquist is certain to retire as well. So we are in for a major showdown over the court in the next few months.

Either the crazy radicals will take over (very likely) or the court will remain moderate yet divided (less likely). It all depends on how effectively the Democrats and reasonable Republicans in the Senate can unite to save all that is great about this country. The reasonable ones will have to articulate just how dangerous Bush's team is. That will be hard to do with the press today.

I wish, but no not hold much hope, that Bush will appoint someone as reasonable as she was. But Bush has never been anything but radical and irresponsible.

So I fear for my country. Mostly, I fear for the rights of women in my country. Their bodies will soon be subject to the whims of men once again.

---

BTW, I will be on WCBS television in New York on Saturday morning at both 6 a.m. and 9 a.m. discussing O'Connor and the future of the court. If y'all are in NYC, tune in (at 9 a.m. of course).

And I will be on NY1, the local cable news channel in NYC, this afternoon at various times.

And I was interviewed a few months back by Reason Magazine on who I would like appointed to the Supreme Court. I decided to list some folks who would drive Reason readers (liberatarians) a bit batty:

1) Bill Clinton (if only he had not been disbarred!)

2) Cass Sunstein, professor of law at the University of Chicago and author of, among many other books, Free Markets and Social Justice (Oxford University Press 1997; reprinted twice in hardcover; paperback 1999) and Democracy and the Problem of Free Speech (The Free Press 1993; paperback with a new afterword 1995).

3. Kathleen Sullivan, former dean of Stanford Law School.

Reason also asked me my favorite sitting justice and all-time justice. I said John Paul Stevens and Louis Brandeis.

Needless to say, few others among those Reason interviewed concurred with me!

Some Possible Replacements

I had an eerie feeling that a Supreme Court justice would retire this week, so Sanda Day O'Connor's announcement didn't take me by surprise. In fact, I had prepared earlier this week, doing some research on President Bush's likely selections to replace her by watching Land of the Dead.

Bush's potential nominees will likely differ in some respects, like whether they are "strict constructionists" of the Code of Hammurabi, or whether they would prefer that capital punishment be carried out with hanging or stoning. But I'm confident that all will share the crucial quality: a mindless appetite for human flesh, laying waste to what is left of our great country.

O'Connor's Retirement Not Welcome News

Hey ya'll! I've returned from my travels and hereby resume blogging! I'm not a huge fan of the jurisprudence of Sandra Day O'Connor, primarily because my political views are very different from hers, and I have a disparate view of the role of law in a just society. However, I think everyone recognizes that she has been a critical swing vote, and a smart and thoughtful Justice, and extremely courageous at times. She has actually been a feminist icon and role model to a suprising degree, even though she clearly doesn't identify herself as a feminist, or act or sound much like one either, most of the time. Being the first woman on the Supreme Court must have been very difficult at times and Justice Scalia has been extremely rude to her in his writings, but she has rolled with that and generally handled herself with a lot of dignity. I honor her service to the Court, and I will miss her. I fear her replacement greatly.

Thanks for not sharing

If anyone had told me back in 1985 that 20 years later, the New York Times would provide space on its op-ed page for a salvo in a public fight between Tom Cruise and Brooke Shields about mental health, I would have killed myself. So, to the Oracle, thanks for not mentioning that when revealing my bright future as passive bystander to history.

I had actually predicted at the time that the key public debate in 2005 would be Tracy Scoggins and Ralph Macchio weighing in on nuclear deterrence.

In fairness, it turns out that Ms. Shields is a better writer and more thoughtful than David Brooks, who is, for some reason, allowed to place his crayola scribblings about American society on the op-ed page twice a week.

Just how jaded are New Yorkers?

I've actually had a couple of conversations with actors who have appeared in guest roles on the various Law & Order shows: Law & Order, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Law & Order: Trial By Jury, and the new one, Law & Order: Nancy Grace Talks Some Complete Bullshit and Commits Ethical Misconduct. Though, come to think of it, I might have just dreamed that I saw a commercial for that one.

Anyway, these conversations got me thinking. In all of these shows, whenever the detectives interview a witness, the witness keeps doing whatever their job is while they're answering questions about unspeakably brutal crimes. So, while the newsstand guy is setting up newspapers, he's absent-mindedly saying over his shoulder, "Yeah, so the shooter comes up around the corner, points it, blam blam, and the guy's head explodes like a watermelon. Then the shooter just starts firing at the couple coming down the street, they go down together. Hey, we gonna be done soon? The lunchtime rush is on its way." I mean, you just witnessed a triple homicide, and you can't give the detective your undivided attention for two minutes? Man, New York is a cynical town.