Mon-Jun 30 2003
...These days, NGOs are supposed to do nothing more than quietly pass out care
packages with a big "brought to you by the US" logo attached - in
public-private partnerships with Bechtel and Halliburton, of course.
That is the message of "NGO Watch", an initiative of the American Enterprise
Institute and the Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy Studies that
takes aim at the growing political influence of the non-profit sector. The
stated purpose of the website, launched on June 11, is to "bring clarity and
accountability to the burgeoning world of NGOs". In fact, it is a McCarthyite
blacklist, telling tales on any NGO that dares speak against Bush
administration policies or in support of international treaties opposed by the
White House.
This bizarre initiative takes as its premise the idea that there is something
sinister about "unelected" groups of citizens getting together to try to
influence their government. "The extraordinary growth of advocacy NGOs in
liberal democracies has the potential to undermine the sovereignty of
constitutional democracies," the site claims.
Coming from the AEI, this is not without irony. As Raj Patel, policy analyst at
the California-based NGO Food First, points out: "The American Enterprise
Institute is an NGO itself and it is supported by the most powerful
corporations on the planet. They are accountable only to their board, which
includes Motorola, American Express and ExxonMobil."
As for influence, few peddle it quite like the AEI, whose looniest of ideas have
a habit of becoming Bush administration policy. And no wonder. Richard Perle,
member and former chairman of the Pentagon's Defence Policy Board, is an AEI
fellow, along with Lynne Cheney, the wife of the vice-president, and the Bush
administration is crowded with former AEI fellows. As President Bush said at an
AEI dinner in February: "At the American Enterprise Institute, some of the
finest minds in our nation are at work on some of the greatest challenges to
our nation. You do such good work that my administration has borrowed 20 such
minds."
In other words, the AEI is more than a think-tank - it's Bush's outsourced
brain. Taken together with Natsios's statements, this attack on the non-profit
sector marks the emergence of a new Bush doctrine: NGOs should be nothing more
than the charity wing of the military, silently mopping up after wars and
famines. Their job is not to ask how these tragedies could have been averted,
or to advocate solutions. And it is certainly not to join anti-war and
globalisation movements pushing for real political change.
Link
AEI pundits are news show staples. They never fail to elicit from me rolling of eyes
and exclamations of "bullshit".
And apropos of nothing, the NGOWATCH website
looks like hammered crap.
Now *That* Is a Hobby
America is coming in second in the High Weirdness race. May I present
the Elegant Gothic Lolitas from Japan.
Original Lead Via Boing Boing
Sun-Jun 29 2003
Just Not Right On So Many Levels
The Who's "Happy Jack" is being used to sell the new, more grotesque
Humvee. I can only shake my head in shame and mutter softly to myself.
Good for Gays, Bad for Dems
While the SCOTUS voiding of the Texas anti-sodomy law is a good thing, I fear
that it is a perfect issue for Bush to rally the Republican faithfull for the
upcoming election. Karl Rove is probaby hugging himself in glee.
P.S. I may be getting the hang of this punditry thang. After a day of ruminating
on the Court's decision this idea bubbled to the top of my mind. Later that night
I heard some expert on NPR express the same idea. Being smart is cool.
Thu-Jun 26 2003
Harvey Lembeck
He was much more than just "Eric Von Zipper".
North Korea Needs Proofreaders
Though they do seem rather proficient in Dreamweaver and Fireworks.
Link
Tue-Jun 24 2003
Wet Work
Working partly on information from the highest Iraqi captured so far, Abid
Hamid Mahmud al-Tikriti, Special Operations forces attacked a convoy of several
vehicles to stop what they believed were high-level fugitives linked to the
fallen Iraqi government.
...
The special commando team, known as Task Force 20, was joined in the
convoy operation by an AC-130 gunship and other air support that attacked the
vehicles along a known escape and smuggling route near the western city of
Qaim, an official told the Associated Press.
At some point in the operation, the convoy of a half-dozen vehicles was
in a compound at the village of Dhib, where they were bombed and an undisclosed
number of houses or other buildings were destroyed, officials said on condition
of not being identified by name. A few of the vehicles moved out of the
compound and were believed to be trying to head for the Syrian border. They,
too, were struck.
Silly me, I thought the idea was to capture these "high-level fugitives" so
they could tell us about those missing WMDs or maybe even face trial. Not to
mention that we obviously are clueless about who was in that convoy. For all we
know we just unleashed an AC-130
gunship on Abid's ex-wife.
Link
Mon-Jun 23 2003
Disturbed
Does it bother anyone else that the Jeep ad for the next "Lara Croft"
movie is out way before any ad for the actual film?
Sat-Jun 21 2003
Fun Fun Fun
The Economic Limits of the Empire
...The threat I'm talking about is economic. Like the British Empire in the years
after World War I, the American Empire is marching toward global domination on
increasingly shaky financial legs:
* The American economy now depends on a rising tide of cheap imported goods
to sustain acceptable levels of economic growth and domestic consumption.
* Because of this dependence, the trade deficit - the gap between what
America exports and imports -- has reached truly gargantuan levels. This trend
is unsustainable.
* To pay for its import habit, America has to attract approximately $1.5
billion a day from foreign lenders and investors. This means foreign capital -
and capitalists - are becoming increasingly essential to the smooth functioning
of the U.S. economy.
* But foreign investors are becoming increasingly reluctant to invest in
U.S. assets. To cover the shortfall between what America needs to borrow and
what private investors are willing to lend, foreign central banks (the
counterparts to our Federal Reserve) have stepped in to fill the gap.
* As a result of these trends, foreign governments are accumulating a
growing ownership stake in the U.S. national debt. In fact, they now own more
Treasury debt than the Federal Reserve itself. But their willingness to
continue subsidizing our import habit in this fashion is unclear.
The strain of increased defense budgets, combined with the looming demographic
burdens of retirement and health-care spending, make the longer-term picture
even gloomier. A debt crisis looms. The Republican fiscal train wreck - product
of the stubborn supply side fantasy that federal taxes can be cut without
reducing federal spending - has only brought the day of reckoning closer.
Link
Via The Early Days of a Better Nation
Linky
English-language blogs from around the world.
Via MemeFirst
Useless Knowledge
This explains what David Cronenberg
is doing in the "Friday the 13th" slasher flick "Jason X".
Mon-Jun 16 2003
And I'm Elvis
"A third of the American public believes U.S. forces have found weapons of mass
destruction in Iraq, according to a recent poll. Twenty-two percent said Iraq
actually used chemical or biological weapons."
Link
Via Fark
Sun-Jun 15 2003
Painful it is
Star Wars, Episode II: Attack of the Clones makes David Lynch's
"Dune" look like the "Maltese Falcon". Or should I say "sound"?. I've heard better
dialogue from intrigued terriers.
Fri-Jun 13 2003
But George Was So Sure
"U.S. military units assigned to track down Iraqi weapons of mass destruction
have run out of places to look and are getting time off or being assigned to
other duties, even as pressure mounts on President Bush to explain why no
banned arms have been found.
After nearly three months of fruitless searches, weapons hunters say they are
now waiting for a large team of Pentagon intelligence experts to take over the
effort, relying more on leads from interviews and documents.
"It doesn't appear there are any more targets at this time," said Lt. Col. Keith
Harrington, whose team has been cut by more than 30 percent. "We're hanging
around with no missions in the foreseeable future."
Over the past week, his and several other teams have been taken off assignment
completely. Rather than visit suspected weapons sites, they are brushing up on
target practice and catching up on letters home."
Link
Via Looka!
More on Less Missing
Making Light has a lovely and comprehensive
posting on the Iraqi Museum looting fuss.
Preventing Blowback
I keep seeing the commercials for "Scare Tactics", the show where elaborate
frightening practical jokes are played on unsuspecting people. It occurs to
me that there must be somebody on the production staff whose job it is to
make sure that victims are proper fodder. I can see one of these stunts
falling apart real fast if one of the patsies had a cellphone. And things
could get real nasty if they had armed service or martial arts training.
And they better be damn sure nobody is packing heat.
Baron Harkonnen Says WMDs Will Be Found
Baron Vladimir Harkonnen today reiterated his insistence that Arrakis possesses
worms of mass destruction, despite growing skepticism that proof of WMDs will
ever be found. "We know for a fact that they have worms," Vladimir said in a
statement to the Emperor, "but it will take time to uncover them, as they are
likely hidden deep underground." Rival houses, however, have stepped up their
criticism of Harkonnen, accusing the House of exaggerating the threat of WMDs
to justify "Operation Arrakis Freedom," the March 20 Harkonnen-led invasion of
the desert planet.....
More
Thu-Jun 12 2003
A Good Thing
"So, there's the picture: 100,000-plus priceless items looted either under the
very noses of the Yanks, or by the Yanks themselves. And the only problem with
it is that it's nonsense. It isn't true. It's made up. It's bollocks.
Not all of it, of course. There was some looting and damage to a small number of
galleries and storerooms, and that is grievous enough. But over the past six
weeks it has gradually become clear that most of the objects which had been on
display in the museum galleries were removed before the war. Some of the most
valuable went into bank vaults, where they were discovered last week. Eight
thousand more have been found in 179 boxes hidden "in a secret vault". And
several of the larger and most remarked items seem to have been spirited away
long before the Americans arrived in Baghdad."
Link
Up Went the Eyebrow
JACKSON: You're wedding is in less than a week and your fiance is off sleeping
with some other guy!
BLAMB: Technically, he's an octopus
Link
Pride
I beat Metafilter to the Gambian Pouched Rat story! I may be getting the
hang of this blog thang. It's the little things in life.
I Feel a Lot More Normal Now
"If there's a global or celebrity-laden event in or near New York, odds are Packer
is there, or is trying to be there. He was first in the line to see ground zero
when the viewing platform opened at the World Trade Center site Dec. 30. He was
the first in line in 1997 to sign the condolence book at the British consulate
when Princess Diana died. He slept outside in the snow in Washington last
January to be the first in line to greet President George W. Bush after his
inauguration.
"This is what I like doing," he said. "You only live once, you might as well
make the most of it.""
Link
Packer was mentioned on Metafilter, and I Googled him.
Wed-Jun 11 2003
It's Dodgeball Time.
I rocked at dodgeball, couldn't throw worth shit but I could dodge like Jet Li.
Last man on my side, three on their's, I get up to the line and taunt them.
Bob and weave and keep the hips loose-pretty funky for a 13-year old
white boy. It was like bullet-time for real. Collect all the balls in a corner and laugh.
Dodgeball is Back
Via Alt-Log
Wait a Minute...
I like "Blade II". Guillermo Del Toro is a good director, the movie looks
marvelous, the fight scenes kick ass (dude) and I always enjoy watching Kristofferson
shoot things. But something occurred to me. Wouldn't driving a hopped up 70's Dodge
Charger around Prague be kind of conspicuous, even for a big black vampire hunter
with a sword?
More on the Weiner/Savage Lawsuits
"The suit charges that by endorsing a boycott of advertisers called for by the
Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD), the groups are causing
Savage financial damage by unjustifiably interfering in his business
relationships with program advertisers, specifically by causing Illinois-based
Culligan International Company, which makes water filters, to pull its
sponsorship from the show.
The suit also charges the defendants with violating the US Copyright Act by
rebroadcasting his shows without permission and illegally trading off "The
Michael Savage Show" likeness and image to sell merchandise; among other
things, the suit describes one of the sites displaying a retouched photo of
Savage wearing a KKK hood. The suit also charges the defendants with spreading
"false and malicious" information about Savage."
Link
Via Metafilter
Mon-Jun 09 2003
What is the Weiner lawsuit against TBTM really about?
"Those who spoke out became fodder for shrieking heads on cable TV and hate
radio. On a nightly basis, partisan hacks like Joe Scarborough and Bill
O'Reilly vented their outrage that there were those in this country who didn't
fall on their knees and pledge life-long fealty to an ex-drunk deserter who was
placed in position to wage war on the world by a group of partisans in black
robes. And talk radio, unbelievably, was even worse.
The Glenn Becks, Rush Limbaughs and Michael Savages of the world went even
further, calling dissenters unpatriotic and Un-American. 'Pro-troop rallies'
(which consisted mainly of complaining about those who dared criticize the
government) were assembled by Clear Channel Communications, and there were
calls from the most hateful fringe to try and imprison dissenters under the
Sedition Act (never mind that it was repealed). Pretty perverse - but the
festering sewer known as right-wing talk radio somehow found a way to pervert
the situation even further.
While Limbaugh and Beck kept the rabble-rousing on a general level, Michael
'Michael Savage' Weiner took things to an absurdly personal level. Weiner's
response to a boycott by GLAAD led him to spend hours on his marginally-rated
droolfest threatening those who would try to boycott him. In the rush to war,
Weiner somehow made the situation all about him , and made threats to go after
those who criticized him and make them pay. A Goliath in search of a David, he
railed against GLAAD - and then trained his sites on an entirely different
target.
Weiner filed suit against 3 small web sites -
SavageStupidity.com,
MichaelSavageSucks.com, and Take Back The Media.
We should get something straight here - this isn't about any of the charges in
the lawsuit. It's not about loss of revenue, it's not about trademark
infringement or defamation or damage to Weiner's reputation. It's not about any
of these things.
It's about a large corporation attempting to take away the free speech of
regular Americans with a point of view. It's about people with deep pockets
using money and influence to run roughshod over people who don't agree with
them."
Link
Via Booknotes
It Followed Me Home, Can I Keep It?
According to NPR, the monkey pox showing up in the midwest came from
Gambian Giant Pouched Rats kept as pets. Now if you are like me (just a little, don't
worry) you're saying to yourself "what in the flying baby Buddha is a Gambian
Giant Pouched Rat, and why in this world or the next would someone want one as
a pet?".
Wonder No More

Cute not-so-little critter
Thu-Jun 05 2003
Spun
Bush to the troops in Qatar:
"But one thing is certain: no terrorist network will gain weapons of mass
destruction from the Iraqi regime, because the Iraqi regime is no more."
Link
I'm afraid I'm going to have to call bullshit on this statement.
1: Bush says Iraq has vast quantities of operational Weapons of Mass Destruction.
2: As of this writing, coalition forces have not located these Weapons.
Conclusion: We have no idea where these weapons are. And until they are found
(if they are found) there is no reason to know that they aren't in fact in the
possession of a terrorist network.
Ten killer questions to put to Blair
"1. Did Downing Street ask the joint intelligence committee to add to, or change
the wording of, the September dossier on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction?
The dossier contains four references to the claim that Iraq could deploy
chemical and biological weapons within 45 minutes of an order to do so. A
senior British official told the BBC this was one of several claims added
against the wishes of intelligence agencies. Adam Ingram, the armed forces
minister, admitted the claim was made by an uncorroborated, single, source.
The dossier said Iraq was seeking uranium from Africa - a reference to Niger.
Colin Powell, US secretary of state, omitted it from his speech to the UN
security council on February 5. "It turned out to be untrue; that happens a lot
in the intelligence business," he said this week.
The dossier said aluminum tubes Iraq tried to buy could be for nuclear weapons.
The US energy and state departments dismissed the claim. That very month, the
US defence intelligence agency concluded: "There is no reliable information on
whether Iraq is producing and stockpiling chemical weapons.""
Link
Pleasantly Surprised
I didn't know David Chase not only writes and produces
"The Sopranos" but did the same for "The Rockford Files", and he was
a story consultant for "The Night Stalker".
No Contest
Tonight on Letterman Tisziji Munoz is sitting in with the band.
Spiritual Guitarist, author, and astrologer, Tisziji has played with the likes of
McCoy Tyner and
Mongo Santamaria. And on Leno we're being treated to "Jaywalking", wherein people
on the street are stupid and ignorant.
Mon-Jun 02 2003
This is Rich
"Until a Florida judge issued an unusual order last month, Mr. Max's site also
contained a long account of his relationship with Ms. Johnson, whom he
portrayed, according to court papers, as vapid, promiscuous and an unlikely
candidate for membership in the Sobriety Society.
The order, entered by Judge Diana Lewis of Circuit Court in West Palm Beach,
forbids Mr. Max to write about Ms. Johnson. It has alarmed experts in First
Amendment law, who say that such orders prohibiting future publication, prior
restraints, are essentially unknown in American law. Moreover, they say, claims
like Ms. Johnson's, for invasion of privacy, have almost never been considered
enough to justify prior restraints.
....
Judge Lewis ruled on May 6, before Mr. Max was notified of the suit and without
holding a hearing. She told Mr. Max that he could not use "Katy" on his site.
Nor could he use Ms. Johnson's last name, full name or the words "Miss
Vermont."
The judge also prohibited Mr. Max from "disclosing any stories, facts or
information, notwithstanding its truth, about any intimate or sexual acts
engaged in by" Ms. Johnson. That prohibition is not limited to his Web site.
Finally, Judge Lewis ordered Mr. Max to sever the virtual remains of his
relationship with Ms. Johnson. He is no longer allowed to link to her Web site.
The page of Mr. Max's site that used to contain his rambling memoir now has only
a reference to the court order.
....
Ms. Johnson did not respond to telephone and e-mail messages seeking comment.
In her lawsuit, Ms. Johnson maintained that Mr. Max had invaded her privacy by
publishing accurate information about her and had used her name and picture for
commercial purposes."
Link
For your viewing pleasure here's the Google cache of the
offending page, and this is the cache of Mr. Max's home page.
I suspect the home page is unavailable due to the SlashDot effect. If Miss Vermont's
lawyers get creative and somehow compel Google to remove the cache I've copied the
page for future reference.
And in the blue corner, Ms. Johnson's homepage
in all it's flash-laden glory. I really she makes it as an actress, because IMHO
her cartooning is stunningly bad.
This story started with Metafilter, but I found the Googled NYTimes
story, the caches, and Ms. Johnson's site all by my lonesome.
Sun-Jun 01 2003
Sock Monkeys Save The World
"Using my superior education, a PHD in Stuffed Animal Psychology from Austin
Community College, I devised a plan that could successfully save the world from
this horrible disaster. My solution had its roots in the old adage that says
that a million monkeys working at a million typewriters would eventually write
a Shakespearean play. It was my hypothesis that if a billion sock monkeys
worked on a billion computers, all the faulty code could be re-written before
the onset of Y2K."
Link
Via Major FUN's Daily Briefings
Really Badass Scooter
Ladies and Gentlemen, the Kickbike. These things look
as if they would be quite interesting on a steep downhill.
Via Major FUN's Daily Briefings
Pitch Perfect
The Onion captures exactly how I feel about Republicans and Professional Sports:
Terrifying Bill Passed During NBA Playoffs
Via Doc Searls Weblog
I Didn't Need to Know That
Gay Porn seems to have colonized the Google search
Bad Puppy.
That's as far as I'm going with this. Proceed at your own risk.
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