Be INFORMED

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Tucson Highway Project To Be A 39 Month Nightmare

   Right about now I'm pretty glad that I am not back in the Tucson desert what with the new I-10 road construction that is expected to take a little bit more than three years.

    The $122 million  will widen I-10 to four lanes for a fair stretch of interstate and will curb the highways use down to only two working lanes.

Tucson Citizen

02.10.2007

The project was originally set for three phases over 10 years, creating a potential decade-long migraine for motorists.
Instead, ADOT engineers opted for a single-phase, 39-month project that will be painful but for a much shorter period, said Teresa Wellborne, ADOT spokeswoman for the project.
To help motorists, ADOT plans a new, high-tech operations center where traffic conditions will be electronically monitored.
This will allow operators to activate message boards along the freeway to advise motorists of conditions, Wellborne said.
Also, ADOT and the Tucson Transportation Department are working to better synchronize downtown traffic signals during the project.
One critical element of the widening will be the demolition of bridges over downtown streets.
Plans are to demolish and build new bridges on one side of the freeway, routing all traffic to the other side during that work. When the first side is completed, traffic will be routed to the new half, and demolition and construction will be done on the other side, Wellborne said.
"The interstate will be built one side at a time," Wellborne said.

   My friends out in Tucson certainly have my sympathy.

 

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Anna Nicole's Home Taken Over By Ex Boyfriend

February 10, 2007

CNN

NASSAU, Bahamas (AP) -- The attorney for a U.S. developer who claims ownership of the waterfront mansion where Anna Nicole Smith lived in the Bahamas said Saturday he has retaken control of the residence on behalf of his client.

The South Carolina developer, G. Ben Thompson, is a former boyfriend of Smith's who was embroiled in an ownership dispute with the 39-year-old celebrity before she died Thursday in Florida. Thompson's attorney, Godfrey Pinder, said Smith's death meant her claims to the mansion were no longer legitimate.

"We changed the locks and have put a chain on the gate," Pinder said. "We have physical control of the house."

   The woman is not even buried yet and the shit is already getting ugly! Between the three daddy's of the child and the cash that is at stake, this will get ugly real fast.

 

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Is Cheney The Real President In The White House

   We have all noticed over the past six years how stupid our President really is and how ignorant at the same time. Those are not good combinations to have in one individual especially if they are sitting in the White house supposedly running the country.

   We have all pretty much wondered who was really running things in Washington and we have made the jokes that Cheney is the real president and Bush is just a puppet. Ha, Ha! The joke may be on the citizens of the United States.

    If you have kept up with the Libby trial then you know that many things are pointing in Dick Cheney's direction.

   WaPo

After seven days of such courtroom testimony, the unanswered question hanging over Libby's trial is, did the vice president's former chief of staff decide to leak that disparaging information on his own?

No evidence has emerged that Cheney told him to do it. But Cheney's dictated reply is one of many signs to emerge at the trial of the vice president's unusual attentiveness to the controversy and his desire to blunt it. His efforts included the extraordinary disclosure of classified information, including one-sided synopses of Wilson's report and a 2002 intelligence estimate on Iraq.

   It would seem that the Vice President has his hands in just about everything, like Iraq, Iran, and domestic surveillance, to name a few.

TPM    ( Edited For space )

(February 04, 2007 -- 09:01 AM EDT)

I will confess to having been extremely skeptical in the early years of the Bush Presidency that Cheney was really running the show. It seemed too facile an explanation for what I was convinced was a far more complicated situation. Until the 9/11 Commission report came out.

Even the watered-down version of events in the Commission's report made it absolutely clear that Cheney, ensconced in the White House bunker on the morning of the attacks, had issued shootdown orders outside of the chain of command and then conspired with the President to conceal this fact from the Commission.

Since then, I've gone from being open to the idea of an Imperial Vice Presidency to being convinced that historians will debate whether something approaching a Cheney-led coup d'etat has occurred, in which some of the powers of the Executive were extra-constitutionally usurped by the Office of the Vice President.

Last week, in trying to break the lock on who actually works in the OVP--which the Vice President refuses to reveal--the guys at Muckraker stumbled across this entry from a government directory known as the "Plum Book":

The Vice Presidency is a unique office that is neither a part of the executive branch nor a part of the legislative branch, but is attached by the Constitution to the latter. The Vice Presidency performs functions in both the legislative branch (see article I, section 3 of the Constitution) and in the executive branch (see article II, and amendments XII and XXV, of the Constitution, and section 106 of title 3 of the United States Code).

For a long time, talk of Cheney's unprecedented power carried with it a whiff of left-wing radicalism and Oliver Stone conspiracies. But in the last year, several serious journalistic efforts have explored the Cheney vice presidency. Robert Kuttner surveyed the field in his essay, "See Dick Run (the Country)," for The American Prospect. While it is axiomatic that Cheney is the power behind throne, what remains missing, as Kuttner pointed out, is the sort of relentless, day-to-day media coverage of Cheney that befits his claims to constitutional power:

If Cheney were the actual president, not just the de facto one, he simply could not govern with the same set of policies and approval ratings of 20 percent. The media focuses relentless attention on the president, on the premise that he is actually the chief executive. But for all intents and purposes, Cheney is chief, and Bush is more in the ceremonial role of the queen of England.

Yet the press buys the pretense of Bush being "the decider," and relentlessly covers Bush -- meeting with world leaders, cutting brush, holding press conferences, while Cheney works in secret, largely undisturbed. So let's take half the members of the overblown White House press corps, which has almost nothing to do anyway, and send them over to Cheney Boot Camp for Reporters. They might learn how to be journalists again, and we might learn who is running the government.

By custom and tradition, the Vice President's role had been circumscribed by how little express power and authority the Constitution granted the position. Hence, all the jokes over the years about the vice presidency. But in a move that is decidedly anti-conservative, in the conventional sense, Cheney moved to fill the void. I fear that what we will eventually find are structural flaws that were deliberately exploited by the OVP, which in turn further undermined constitutional and statutory structures.

Still, I can't help but be fascinated by the more pedestrian issue of how Cheney continues to assert himself so vigorously without running up against the ego of a cocksure President. How is it that Bush, who is so caught up in macho public demonstrations of his own personal strength and courage, can tolerate a shadow presidency within his own White House? What kind of spell has Cheney cast that allows Bush to continue to believe he is the decider? You can imagine all sorts of dysfunctional psychological dramas playing out behind the scenes.

But whether it's the legal or political aspect of Cheney's role, it all comes down to the same thing: we just don't know.

It's about time we find out.

-- David Kurtz  

       Dick " the decider " Cheney. That sounds about right. 

 

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How Many More Troops Will The Bush Ego Get Killed

    I ran across this article while checking out some news sights online and I thought that it would be nice to share with you.

   It deals with the death of our people in Iraq and in the coming war with Iran and whoever else Bush is mad at. It mainly deals with the Americans who voted for Bush and the new Congress that we have which has yet to find a spin to confront this asshole that we call a president.

   I have shortened it for space but the link to the entire piece will follow.

How Many More Will Die For Bush’s Ego?
By Paul Craig Roberts
12/09/06 "
Information Clearing House" -- -- Last July in response to Bush-the-Evil’s enabling of Israel’s gratuitous slaughter of thousands of Lebanese civilians and destruction of the country’s infrastructure, I wrote about “the shame of being an American.” With the ongoing slaughter of our troops and Iraqi civilians in Bush’s war in Iraq, it is time to revisit that theme.

The report from the bipartisan Iraq Study Group has made it plain as day that the US is accomplishing nothing in Iraq except the destabilization of the entire Middle East. As Middle East expert Anthony Sullivan writes in The National Interest, the ISG report “constitutes a massive repudiation of the policy of the Bush Administration.” The war is lost and cannot be retrieved militarily. “Staying the course” is the path of total folly.
Yet, the White House Moron says that it is better for 100 US troops and 3,000 Iraqi civilians to die every month than for him to admit that he is wrong.

To date the cost of Bush being wrong is 25,000 US casualties (dead and wounded) and approximately 650,000 dead Iraqis. No one knows how many have been wounded. How many more will die before America drowns in the shame of the blood that is being shed for no other reason than the American people were so stupid as to elect a president who cannot admit that he made a mistake? The same stupid American people elected a Congress that is too corrupt to impeach a president who is a liar, a war criminal, and a tyrant. Instead, they are prepared to let Bush off with a mere “mistake,” a courtesy denied to President Clinton. Lying about sex is an impeachable offense. Lying about war is a mere mistake.
Are the American people, Congress, and the American Establishment going to let the death toll continue to mount day by day for the two more years it takes for Bush to become history?

How do the troops themselves feel about it? On December 8, a US Marine who has spent 7 months fighting insurgents in Anbar province answered this question on lewrockwell.com as follows: “I’m sick and tired of this patriotic, nationalistic and fascist crap. . . . How do you justify ‘sacrificing’ your life for a war which is not only illegal, but is being prosecuted to the extent where the only thing keeping us there is one man’s power, and his ego.” US Marine Philip Martin says he joined the Marines to protect the US Constitution, not to serve as an imperialist storm trooper.
I couldn’t believe my ears when I heard talking heads worrying about Bush’s “comfort level” with the Iraqi Study Group’s unanimous report. Bush’s comfort level? What about the comfort level of the Iraqis and Americans who are losing family members while idiot talking heads worry about Bush’s comfort level with the facts!    Entire Article

 

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The Partners Of Iran

   I'm sure that the military has thought about it, but does Bush understand that Iran has some pretty potent allies that may assist Iran if the United States attacks the country?

   When Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said that he would retaliate against the U.S. if they attacked, he was not just mouthing off for the exercise.

   The Guardian

US stumbling in the Middle East has strengthened and emboldened Iran. On top of an array of patron-client relationships with powerful Shia groups, like Hizbullah in Lebanon, the Badr brigades and the Mahdi army in Iraq, Tehran has built a new layer of alliances with some more surprising partners among the Sunni jihadists. It has forged a relationship with Hamas in Gaza, and even appears to have developed links with the Taliban.

    I'm sure that the butthead in the White house knows these things unless he's still not reading the memos given to him, so I would say that bush is counting on some of the other groups coming to aid Iran after we bomb them. That way, " the decider " can attack a few other countries in the name of terrorism and democracy.

    What a freakin loser!

 

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DoJ Teaching Hide The Documents From Congress?

   The Democrats have started some of their investigations and with some of their inquiries they have been getting stone-walled by the Department of Justice.

   Here is the DoJ  Mission Statement

    To enforce the law and defend the interests of the United States according to the law; to ensure public safety against threats foreign and domestic; to provide federal leadership in preventing and controlling crime; to seek just punishment for those guilty of unlawful behavior; and to ensure fair and impartial administration of justice for all Americans.

   Someone must have forgot to tell them that when the Bush Crime Family came into office back in 2000 because we have had our 4th Amendment rights scrambled and now they want to protect us from the congressional oversight committees.

      It looks as if the Department of Justice is teaching other agencies how to sidestep the Congress with their questions and material request.

The Justice Department, which serves as legal counsel in court proceedings for other departments, has repeatedly gone beyond merely protecting its own actions from scrutiny. Even when Congress was in Republican hands, Justice Department officials advised other government departments on how to stonewall congressional review. These efforts now appear to be ramping up.  More Here

   This cannot be a good thing.

    Maybe we just need to trash both of these political parties and start all over from scratch with people who aren't lawyers and professional politicians.

 

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Blair House Reception With Bush and The Iraqi Elections

   These are a few days old but I though that they were worth mentioning just for the hell of it.

From UPI

By ARNAUD DE BORCHGRAVE
UPI Editor at Large
WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (UPI)

At a farewell reception at Blair House for the retiring chief of protocol, Don Ensenat, who was President Bush's Yale roommate, the president shook hands with Washington Life Magazine's Soroush Shehabi. "I'm the grandson of one of the late Shah's ministers," said Soroush, "and I simply want to say one U.S. bomb on Iran and the regime we all despise will remain in power for another 20 or 30 years and 70 million Iranians will become radicalized."

"I know," President Bush answered.

"But does Vice President Cheney know?" asked Soroush.

President Bush chuckled and walked away.

                      * * * *

The much-vaunted series of Iraqi elections, frequently confused with democracy, produced a spectacular breakthrough for axis-of-evilers. Jamal Jafaar Mohammed, a man sentenced to death in Kuwait for the 1983 bombings of the U.S. and French embassies, now sits in parliament as a member of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's Shiite-dominated ruling coalition. He enjoys parliamentary immunity, i.e., cannot be unseated.

 

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U.S. Forces Kill Civilian Contractor,Anna Nicole Mourned Online

Yahoo News

BAGHDAD, Iraq - The U.S. military confirmed on Saturday that American forces at Camp Anaconda, the huge air base north of Baghdad, shot and killed a civilian contract truck driver.

A spokeswoman for KBR, a contracting subsidiary of Halliburton that was formerly known as Kellogg, Brown & Root, said the shooting was under investigation.

In Baghdad, Lt. Cmdr. Bill speaks said, "There was an escalation of force incident at Camp Anaconda on Feb. 5 (Monday) that resulted in the death of a civilian contractor. The incident is under investigation by the Army Criminal Investigation Division and KBR."

                    * * * *

Associated Press   

HOLLYWOOD, Fla. - Fans of
Anna Nicole Smith aren't making pilgrimages to the place where she spent her final days. They're not leaving flowers. They're not gathering in crowds to express their grief.

Instead, emotions are being expressed in a way as uniquely modern as Smith's fame — on blogs, Web pages and online message boards where true fans battle naysayers to get their voices heard.

           

 

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Tax Payers Are Spending $1 Billion Per Year On Pot Inmates


From the U.S. Department of Justice

Bureau of Justice Statistics

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2006

ETHAMPHETAMINE USE INCREASING AMONG STATE AND FEDERAL PRISONERS

WASHINGTON -- Prior methamphetamine use among state and federal prisoners has increased since 1997, according to a new report by the Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS). The use of methamphetamines in the month before an offense rose from 7 percent of state prisoners in 1997 to 11 percent in 2004. Methamphetamine use at the time of an offense rose from 4 percent to 6 percent during that period. Federal inmates reported similar increases in methamphetamine use.

Prisoner reports about drug use were collected as part of the BJS "Survey of Inmates in State and Federal Correctional Facilities." This survey has been conducted periodically since the 1970s, and in 2004 involved confidential personal interviews with a nationally representative sample of approximately 14,500 state and 3,700 federal prisoners.

Women (17 percent of state inmates, 15 percent of federal inmates) were more likely than men (10 percent of both) to have used methamphetamines in the month before their offense. At least 20 percent of white inmates in state and federal prison used methamphetamine in the month before their offense, compared to 1 percent of black inmates. Among Hispanics, 12 percent of state and 5 percent of federal inmates reported methamphetamine use.

 

 
Drug seizures

Many Federal agencies are involved in the removal of illicit drugs from the market. The Federal-Wide Drug Seizure System (FDSS) contains information about drug seizures made within the jurisdiction of the United States by the FBI, DEA, U.S. Customs Service (USCS), and U.S. Border Patrol as well as maritime seizures made by the U.S. Coast Guard.

  • the Federal government seized 16,270 illegal drug laboratories between fiscal years 1975 and 2003
  • in fiscal year 2003, of the 420 labs seized, 409 (97%) manufactured methamphetamines
  • in 2003 the DEA program for eradicating domestic marijuana resulted in the destruction of 3.4 million plants in 34,362 plots, 8,480 arrests, 4,176 weapons seized, and assets seized valued at $25.1 million.
    Source: Data provided by U.S. Department of Justice, Drug Enforcement Administration as reported in the BJS, Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics 2003, NCJ 208756, July 2005. 

 

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Airstrike Against Iran In Spring? Iranians Arrest Two al-Qaeda Operatives

The Guardian

February 10,2007

US preparations for an air strike against Iran are at an advanced stage, in spite of repeated public denials by the Bush administration, according to informed sources in Washington.

The present military build-up in the Gulf would allow the US to mount an attack by the spring. But the sources said that if there was an attack, it was more likely next year, just before Mr Bush leaves office.

   That would be a typical Bush Crime Family thing to do! Start another mess and then leave it for the new Democratic President to have to deal with. This is no surprise to anyone with an I.Q. over 1.

   Congress has to stop this mess and it has been acknowledged that they have the power to do so. Will they?

   On another note about Iran, we have this little piece of news from the Washington Post.

Last week, the CIA sent an urgent report to President Bush's National Security Council: Iranian authorities had arrested two al-Qaeda operatives traveling through Iran on their way from Pakistan to Iraq. The suspects were caught along a well-worn, if little-noticed, route for militants determined to fight U.S. troops on Iraqi soil, according to a senior intelligence official.

"There was real debate about all this," said one counterterrorism official. "If we go public, the Iranians could turn them loose." The official added: "At this point, we know where these guys are and at least they are off the streets. We could lose them for years if we go down this path."

   The Iranians are going to throw a wrench into Bush's plans one way or another. This would seem to debunk his rhetoric about Iran helping al-Qaeda. This could also be an Iranian ploy to avert attack by the Bush cowboys. Based on the Bush track record, I'll stick with the Iranians story, for now

 

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Libby Trial Witness Fingers Cheney

    Crossposted From TruthOut

Trial Exposes White House Crisis Machine
    The Associated Press

    Friday 09 February 2007

    Washington - David Addington, chief legal adviser to Vice President Dick Cheney, says he was taken aback when the White House started making public pronouncements about the CIA leak investigation.

    In the fall of 2003, President Bush's press secretary was categorically denying that either Karl Rove or I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby was involved in exposing the identity of Valerie Plame, a CIA employee married to a critic of the war in Iraq.

    "Why are you making these statements?" Addington asked White House communications director Dan Bartlett.

    "Your boss is the one who wanted" them, Bartlett replied, referring to Cheney.

    With that, "I shut up," Addington recalled recently for jurors in Libby's CIA leak trial, which begins its fourth week on Monday with Libby's lawyers calling their first witnesses.

    So far, the testimony of Addington and other administration aides, along with documents and Libby's audiotaped grand jury testimony, have provided a rare glimpse of how the Bush White House scrambled to respond to a political crisis as it intersected a criminal investigation.

    At the intersection was Cheney, along with Rove and Libby, who were working in the summer of 2003 to rebut claims by Plame's husband, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson, that Bush had misled the nation about prewar intelligence on Iraq.

    The White House denials on behalf of Rove and Libby came just before Rove secretly began acknowledging to the FBI that he had confirmed Plame's identity for conservative columnist Bob Novak, who first published her name and relationship to Wilson.

    About the same time, Libby came under suspicion because NBC News Washington bureau chief Tim Russert had talked to the FBI, contradicting Libby's version of a conversation between the two men that would become the heart of the perjury and obstruction charges against Libby.

    Bush and Cheney made a common mistake in their public handling of the Plame affair, says presidential scholar and University of Texas government professor Bruce Buchanan, who has watched Bush's career since his days as Texas governor.

    "They're in a high-stakes game of poker, the immediate pressure is political and the people in charge are political people," Buchanan said. "If there is a legal issue it will dawn, but by then someone is out on a limb."

    Testimony and documents in the trial show Rove joining Cheney in trying to undercut Wilson's claim that the administration had twisted prewar intelligence to exaggerate the Iraqi threat.

    "We're a day late in getting responses to the story," Rove told a staff meeting, according to Libby's notes.

    "Get the full story out," Cheney told aides, according to Libby's grand jury testimony.

    There were glitches in the leak campaign against Wilson.

    New York Times reporter Judith Miller never wrote a story about it, even after Cheney persuaded Bush to declassify prewar intelligence so it could be shared with Miller. The intelligence report said Iraq was vigorously trying to acquire uranium from the African nation of Niger.

    "It was a totally failed effort," Libby told the grand jury of his meetings with Miller.

    But there were successes too.

    Libby recalled asking Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz to reach out to The Wall Street Journal.

    "I don't have as good a relationship with The Wall Street Journal as Secretary Wolfowitz did," Libby told the grand jury. "I talked to Secretary Wolfowitz about trying to get that point across, and he undertook to do so."

    The Journal ran an editorial focusing on the theme Libby wanted. The editorial stated that the prewar intelligence the newspaper was describing had not come from the White House, "which to our mind has handled this story in a hamhanded fashion."

    In the Libby trial, Bush comes across mostly as an interested observer.

    According to Libby's notes, some of which surfaced at the trial, Bush expressed interest in a May 6, 2003 New York Times column critical of the administration and referencing an unnamed former ambassador, who turned out to be Wilson.

    In questioning Libby before the grand jury, Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald juxtaposed Bush's public statements condemning leakers and Libby's contacts with reporters, some of whom have testified against him.

    "Were you at all concerned that while the president was stating that there's no White House involvement in any leaks whatsoever, that you were one of the people who may have been referred to" in press reports about possible White House leakers? asked Fitzgerald.

    In the grand jury recordings, the prosecutor also asked Libby about his interaction with Rove a few days before Novak exposed Plame's CIA identity. Libby said Rove "was animated that Novak was animated about this." Libby added that Rove "thought it was a good thing that somebody was writing about" Wilson and his wife.

    Cheney told Libby early in the effort to deal with Wilson that his wife worked at the CIA. And while the Cheney-Libby team worked in lockstep attacking Wilson in July 2003, Libby said he faced a somewhat distant vice president when the affair came under investigation, first by the Justice Department, then by Fitzgerald.

    Regarding his discussions with reporters about Wilson's wife, "I would have been happy to unburden myself" to Cheney, Libby told the grand jury, but "he didn't want to hear it."

 

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Brazilian Man Wrestles With Anaconda Over Grandson

   Here's a story of a 66 year old Brazilian man who got into a wrestling match with a 15-foot (5-metre) anaconda that had gotten hold of his grandson.This match lasted for half an hour before the snake  was killed by the grandfather.  The boy needed stitches from where the snake had bitten him

 

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Bush,Foreign oil and Energy Proposals

   President Bush: "Every member of Congress who cares about strengthening our economy, protecting our national security and confronting climate change should support the energy initiatives I have set out. We can leave behind a cleaner and better world for our children and grandchildren."

"The need for action is clear. Republicans and Democrats both recognize these problems. We agree on the solution: We need to diversify our energy supply and make America less dependent on foreign oil."

   This is coming from a man who for the past six years has been in the pockets of the major oil companies and who has done absolutely nothing about the American's consumption of said oil.

Sen. Jeff Bingaman ( bio, voting record), D-N.M., chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, says Bush is ignoring the problem of global warming by not embracing some mandatory emission reductions. The president has made it clear he has no plans to shift away from a largely voluntary program to address climate change, continuing to oppose mandatory reductions of so-called "greenhouse" gases.

   The president is also asking Congress to give the Bush Crime Family  the authority to set the standards for automobile emissions saying that the system he has in mind would cut said emissions while still preserving choices for the consumer.

   If Bush is worried about America's dependence on foreign oil it is only because he, Cheney, and the oil companies have come up with a better plan, such as maybe investing in new, non-corn feedstocks for ethanol?

    The day this idiot gets concerned about the American's oil consumption, I'll become a Republican. That ain't going to happen anytime soon!

 

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Putin Has Words For U.S.

    Vladimir Putin had a few words for the United States at a security forum in Munich, Germany, saying that,

"we are witnessing an almost uncontained hyper use of force in international relations" and that "one state, the United States, has overstepped its national borders in every way. "This is very dangerous, nobody feels secure anymore because nobody can hide behind international law."   CNN

   Putin also said that the actions of the United States are encouraging other countries to go after nuclear weapons who are in fear of being attacked by the Bush Crime Family (my words).

   Bush does not care about what the other countries think or his own people, for that matter. Iran could give up their nuclear weapons pursuits, if they have any, Iraqi people could fall in love with each other, and Israel could become friends with the entire middle east and Bush would still attack somebody for some make believe reason.

   That is what war profiteers do. They start shit for profit no matter who gets killed or who gets damaged. This is a generational thing with the bush clan which probably started back in the stone ages.

                              IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

 

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Can Congress Stop Bush's Attack On Iran? Experts Say " Yes "

    We all know that the only way that us citizen's of the United States are going to stop Bush and his future attack on Iran is through Congressional action. Everyone is asking if the Congress can do that.

   I've stated before, yes, it is possible and the pros will tell you so.

   The following has been shortened to just the main points. Click FindLaw  for the entire article                                                            

Leading Experts Say Congress Must Stop An Attack on Iran: Is That Constitutionally Possible?
Absolutely - According to Experts on Both Sides of the Aisle
Friday, Feb. 09, 2007  By JOHN W. DEAN
    Professor David Barron from the Harvard Law School opened the testimony. Barron is a graduate of Harvard Law School and clerked for Judge Reinhardt on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, as well as for Associate Justice Stevens on the United States Supreme Court. He served as an attorney advisor in the Office of Legal Counsel at the Department of Justice, before joining the faculty at Harvard Law School in 1999.

"Congress possesses substantial constitutional authority to regulate ongoing military operations, and even to bring them to an end," Barron stated, explaining that while the power of the purse is the strongest authority to control executive military actions, it is not the only power. Barron's statement reviews relevant rulings of the Supreme Court, and finds in them, and in the Constitution, no real limits on Congress's powers to manage a war. In fact, his review of the sources related to this question shows that to find otherwise would be contrary to the clear intention of the nation's Founders to control the chief executive.

Professor Robert Turner graduated from the law school at the University of Virginia and is now a professor there. He co-founded the school's Center for National Security Law. He served as the National Security Advisor to Senator Robert Griffin (R-MI) in the mid 1970's and worked at the Pentagon, the White House, and the State Department during the Reagan Administration, and from 2001 to 2003 worked in the Bush White House Counsel's office.

Professor Turner's statement was based as much on "a practical appreciation of the imperatives of presidential military decision making in a time of crisis as from a deep study of the case law." While the committee was not seeking policy advice, Turner was offering it. He concluded that "Congress does indeed possess the power to limit the broad outlines of hostilities through legislation," but he explained, in effect, why in his view, Congress should not use that power, as a policy matter.

Dr. Louis Fisher is a Constitutional Law Specialist at the Library of Congress. Before joining the Library of Congress, he spent thirty-six years at the Congressional Research Service. Dr. Fisher has published a number of authoritative books relating to legislative versus executive branch conflicts. (And I have most of them on my book shelf.) Dr. Fisher's statement explained that not only does Congress have the power to influence the direction of the nation's military when at war, but its members have the responsibility to do so. Drawing on history, he sets forth what the Framers of the Constitution did, and why they did it. His statement is rich in historical quotations that are not the now-hackneyed comments commonly found in discussion of these issues.

  For example, in 1793, Fisher reported, Madison called war "the true nurse of executive aggrandizement. . . . In war, the honours and emoluments of office are to be multiplied; and it is the executive patronage under which they are to be enjoyed. It is in war, finally, that laurels are to be gathered; and it is the executive brow they are to encircle. The strongest passions and most dangerous weaknesses of the human breast; ambition, avarice, vanity, the honourable or venial love of fame, are all in conspiracy against the desire and duty of peace."

  And in 1861, Fisher advised the committee, Attorney General Edward Bates explained that the President is Commander in Chief not because he is "skilled in the art of war and qualified to marshal a host in the field of battle." Rather he is Commander in Chief so whoever leads U.S. armies to battle "is subject to the orders of the civil magistrate, and he and his army are always 'subordinate to the civil power.'"

  Bradford Berenson, now a partner at Sidley & Austin, graduated from the Harvard Law School and clerked for Judge Silberman on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and Associate Justice Kennedy on the United States Supreme Court. He also served as Associate Counsel to President George W. Bush from 2001 to 2003, a position in which he focused on the relationship between the Congress and the Executive.

Berenson took an approach similar to Professor Turner's. Accepting that the Constitution and rulings make it very clear that Congress has ample power and authority relating to this nation's military activities, he instead made a policy case as to why Congress should not exercise their power. He acknowledged the nature of his statement when summarizing it for the committee, and quickly conceded, "I think the constitutional scheme does give Congress broad authority to terminate a war."

Finally, Professor Walter Dellinger of the Duke University School of Law testified. Dellinger, the former head of the Office of Legal Counsel at the Justice Department under President Clinton, and also acting Solicitor General from 1996 to 1997 (during which time he argued nine cases before the High Court) is a graduate of Yale Law School and a former law clerk for Associate Justice Hugo Black

"In the absence of any congressional legislation on point," Dellinger said in his prepared statement, "I would be ready to conclude that a president can act on his own authority and pursuant to his own judgment in matters of national security. Once Congress has acted, however, the issue is fundamentally different. The question then becomes whether the Act of Congress is itself unconstitutional."

In short, all the experts on this politically diverse but balanced panel agreed - in the abstract - that the Congress has the power to control a warrior president. But, as Walter Dellinger noted, the action itself must be constitutional.

Senator Kennedy thus, during the questioning, properly moved the discussion from the abstract to the specific.

Can Congress Prevent the President from Going to War In Iran?

In condensed form, with a few annotations, here is the text of the exchanges that occurred. They require no commentary:

SEN. KENNEDY: "Question just quickly through the panel. Is the President required to seek authorization from Congress before using the military force against Iran?"

DR. FISHER: "I think if there's some action that's a threat to U.S. soldiers I think a president has the power to repel sudden attacks, protect U.S. troops. Otherwise, if it goes beyond isolated incidents like that I think you're running into the preface of the Iraq Resolution, which …Congress amended … to make sure it applied only to Iraq. So I think by statute, by legislative policy, you can confine the President to Iraq." (Emphasis added.)

SEN. KENNEDY: "I'm interested in … what actions can Congress take now to ensure the President doesn't take us into war in Iran without congressional authorization."

PROF. BARRON: "The question of whether the President could right now initiate any actions against the Iran -- I think the proper way to think about it is what authority does he have under the current Iraq Authorization Statute, which would require some close consideration. . . . William Rehnquist [as an assistant attorney general] … thought that a statutory limitation on the exercise of such authority would be constitutionally valid. So I think the legal question then comes to . . . no doubt Congress could restrict him from going and widening the war, not just in terms of the amount of troops used, but in the geographic area covered, and the only issue is whether Congress has in effect already done so by virtue of the limitations and bounds of the Authorization to Use Military Force in Iraq that's already enacted." (Emphasis added.)

SEN. KENNEDY: "Yes, Professor Turner."

PROF. TURNER: "Senator, let me just make nuanced point on this. John Hart Ely in his War and Responsibility made the point that after Congress declared war against Germany, FDR did not need a new declaration of war to go into North Africa after the German forces. Going into Cambodia I think was perfectly legal because the North Vietnamese had taken over the whole side of Cambodia. . . . I could see a situation in which Iran became involved in the Iraq War where the President would be able to use force. . . . I think in terms of launching a major war against Iran he should get and would need an official [Congressional approval] for Iran. But there's some area in there where I think he could act." (Emphasis added.)

SEN. KENNEDY: "If Congress passed legislation requiring the President to seek authorization from Congress before using military force against Iran would the President be obliged to seek such authorization before launching military action?"

MR. BERENSON: "Senator Kennedy, I think the questions that you're posing falls into the sphere . . . of shared powers, and it's important to recognize that for very important institutional reasons the President is the first mover and the prime mover in this area of shared powers. That has to do with the fact that unlike Congress which needs to go through an often time consuming and difficult legislative process, a process that can sometimes be stymied, the President has the ability to receive information in real time to act to protect the national security. So the President through the [clause vesting him with executive power], through his executive authority in the absence of legislation to the contrary by the Congress, I think unquestionably would have authority to engage Iran in hostilities, whether in defense of our forces inside the borders of Iraq or if he decided that we needed to do something to address Iran's nuclear facilities. I do not think he would be acting outside the scope of his constitutional authority. That said, for major military actions most presidents have recognized the importance of coming to Congress as a political and practical matter. It is certainly unwise, if not unconstitutional, to try to engage in large scale hostilities or engage a new enemy in warfare without public support. And the best way to ensure that at the outset is, of course, to come to Congress." (Emphasis added.)

SEN. KENNEDY: "My time, Mr. Chairman, is up. Mr. Dellinger -"

PROF. DELLINGER: "Briefly, I agree with Mr. Berenson's statement. I believe that the President does have the authority to introduce U.S. troops into situations of hostilities, including in Iran, in the absence of congressional limitation as long as the anticipated scope and duration does not amount to a war. I don't believe he has the authority to send 500,000 troops into Iran, but he does have the authority to deploy U.S. forces in hostilities…. That said, it is also clear that Congress can impose limits either before or after the fact on the size, scope, and duration of that. But I do believe there's a consensus in the Executive Branch position that the President has the authority to deploy U.S. forces into hostilities when Congress has not spoken to the question." (Emphasis added.)

* * *

In sum, as I read both the general statements of these experts, and their specific answers to Senator Kennedy's question about Iran, everyone agrees that Congress has the power to prevent a president from going to war.

The only question that is doubtful, then, is whether the members of Congress actually have the will to do so. This, I suspect, is what James Fallows concluded, when he said that, at best, they might draw a line.

Of course, George W. Bush and Richard B. Cheney know this too, so they will do whatever they wish to do - and Congress may or may not catch up. But there is no real question as to whether Congress could legally stop Bush and Cheney from going to war in Iran without coming to Congress to fully explain what they are doing and why. Congress has that power; the only question is whether it will dare to use it.

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Friday, February 09, 2007

Robert Gates Insist The U.S. Has Proof Of Iran Interference

    Defense Secretary Robert Gates still says that the United States has proof that Iran has been supplying Iraqi militants with explosives .

    The fine, honest folks in Washington and Iraq have been gathering the evidence for weeks so that they can present it to the Bush administration who will in turn present some of it to the public. This will be, of course, after they have cherry picked the details which appeal to them and their cause.

   Then again, if Gates is as good as the GOP thinks he is, there may not be much cherry picking to do. the entire report may be just one great big cherry to pick from!

   Come on now! All that we have been hearing about Iran is basically the same shit we heard about Iraq, only under a different cover.

   Forgive me if I do not trust this group, but they have never given the American citizens any reason to believe them much less trust them. It's been six years of one lie after another and I see no reason for the Bush Crime Family to change course this late in the game.

AP

The materials — which in their classified form include slides and some two inches of documents — provide evidence of Iran's role in supplying Iraqi militants with highly sophisticated and lethal improvised explosive devices and other weaponry. Among the weapons is a roadside bomb known as an "explosively formed penetrator," which can pierce the armor of Abrams tanks with nearly molten-hot charges. One intelligence official said the U.S. is "fairly comfortable" it knows where the explosives came from.

The Iran dossier also lays out alleged Iranian efforts to train Iraqis in military techniques.

Yet, government officials say there is some disagreement about how much to make public to support the administration's case. Intelligence officials worry the sources of their information could dry up.

 

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New York City To Get Nuke Detectors

    According to CNN, NYC will get detectors surrounding the city that are supposed to send out an alert if nuclear or dirty bombs are detected being moved into the city by land.

Under the "Securing the Cities" initiative, detectors will be placed along highways, at truck stops, in weigh stations and at other sites on the perimeter of New York, as well as locations closer to the city center, an official said. Locations will not be made public "for obvious reasons," the official said.

   The 2008 budget adds $30 million to the $16 million that has already been spent on the system. Homeland Security says that they want this working this year. I guess we'll see how it goes.

  

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Norovirus Hits Two North Carolina Hospitals

   I figured that I would post this article since this is where I happen to be living at the present time.

AP            Norovirus

By STEVE HARTSOE, Associated Press Writer
Fri Feb 9, 6:44 PM ET

GREENSBORO, N.C. - Two hospitals are asking visitors, especially children, to stay away until they control an outbreak of a highly contagious stomach virus that has sickened patients and staff members.

"We're just asking the community to help out," said Dr. Ward Robinson, an infectious disease specialist at Moses Cone Hospital. "I don't think this is the black plague coming into Greensboro."

Doctors confirmed an outbreak at Moses Cone and believe the virus also hit Wesley Long Hospital. The number of people affected wasn't immediately available, hospital officials said.

Three suspected norovirus cases first appeared Feb. 1 and were not confirmed until Wednesday, Doug Allred, a spokesman for Moses Cone Health System, said Friday.

The hospitals will admit new patients who will be sent to areas considered clear of the virus.

 

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Anna Nicole Smith,Vietnam, And Stolen Property In North Carolina

    Here are some of the stories on the Internet tonight.

International Herald Tribune

DANIA BEACH, Florida: Prescription drugs were found in Anna Nicole Smith's hotel room, but there were no pills in her stomach, and investigators said Friday that they were waiting for toxicological tests that would tell whether the former Playboy playmate died of a drug overdose.

No illegal drugs were found in the hotel suite in Hollywood, Florida, where Smith, a former Playboy Playmate and diet diva, collapsed Thursday. Dr. Joshua Perper, the Broward County medical examiner, would not identify the prescription drugs.

There was no immediate indication of a drug overdose, Perper said, but officials "do not exclude any kind of contribution of medication to the death."

He said it would take three to five weeks to conclude the investigation.

The autopsy found no physical injury on the body of the 39-year-old Smith, Perper said. The death could be from natural causes, a drug reaction or something else, Perper said. Smith apparently had been sick for several days with some kind of stomach flu.

                    * * * *

BBC NEWS

Last Updated: Friday, 9 February 2007

US cash for Agent Orange study

Archive image from Ho Chi Minh of child said to be deformed due to effects of Agent Orange

Vietnamese groups say thousands of children have been affected

The US has agreed for the first time to help towards cleaning up a site in Vietnam which stored Agent Orange and other chemicals during the Vietnam war.

Washington has pledged $400,000 (£205,000) towards a $1m study into the removal of the highly toxic chemical dioxin at a former US base at Da Nang.

The move is an important step forward in a long-standing dispute between the former enemies, correspondents say.

Vietnam says the chemicals are to blame for millions of cases of ill health.

Dioxin is an ingredient in Agent Orange, a herbicide US forces sprayed to destroy vegetation and help them fight in forest areas during the war.

Its legacy continues to damage both the environment and relations between the two governments, the BBC's Bill Hayton in Hanoi says.

                    * * * *

WCNC

 Friday, February 9, 2007

By NATALIE DICK / WCNC
E-mail Natalie: ndick@WCNC.com

MATTHEWS,NC. - A Matthews man who says he built his farm with his own hands now says the town is taking it away from him.

Town leaders argue they paid a fair price for the property and that the move is for the good of the community.

Two years ago, the town of Matthews condemned the land and claimed it in order to preserve quickly dwindling open space and park land.

Infuriated, Purser fought the town in court and ultimately received $14,000 more an acre than the town's original offer. But he insists it was never about the money. So he nailed a sign at the end of his drive to remind all who pass by that the infantryman will never give up his fight.

"It was not for sale! They took it and that's what the sign says," Purser said.

 

 

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Baghdad Crackdown Hampered By Infighting

Infighting hampering Baghdad crackdown

By RYAN LENZ, Associated Press Writer Fri Feb 9,2007

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Iraqi commanders are urging the Americans to go after Sunni targets as the first focus of the military push to secure Baghdad, displaying a sectarian tilt that is delaying full implementation of the plan to drive gunmen from the streets, U.S. officers say.
   American officers, interviewed at the sprawling Camp Victory base at the western edge of the capital, also acknowledge they are finding little in their initial searches of Baghdad neighborhoods — suggesting either they received faulty intelligence or that the massive publicity that preceded the operation gave militants time to slip away.

                    * * * *

    I'd say it was more than likely a case of both the intelligence being lousy and all of the advertisement before hand.

    Maybe the White House will consider calling this new way forward " surge and miss." Can't blame the troops for this. It is  all on the White House and the Defense Secretary and the intelligence ( ? ) community.

    Support our Troops, Get rid of the White house occupants.

 

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Bank of America Gets Amnesty In Bond Probe

 BofA gets amnesty in bond probe

RICK ROTHACKER
rrothacker@charlotteobserver.com

The Department of Justice has granted Bank of America Corp. amnesty in its ongoing investigation of bidding practices in the municipal derivatives industry, the bank said Friday.

The Charlotte bank said the leniency agreement will keep the department from bringing a criminal antitrust prosecution against the company in the matter, in return for its continuing cooperation.

In a separate agreement, Bank of America said it had agreed to a $14.7 million settlement with the Internal Revenue Service related to certain bond transactions. Under the agreement, the bank said it did not admit to any conduct that would be subject to liability under the Internal Revenue Code.            Charlotte Observer

   I used to be a customer of the bank that merged with this group. That would have been NationsBank, which was a fairly good bank at the time.

   Since becoming BofA though, they have turned into nothing but shit! Fees, fees, and more fees.

   I received a check from a company that I did some work for here in Greensboro, NC. It was on a BofA account so I went to one of the local branches to cash it as my bank was a little out of the way. I figured that I would pay the $5 that the banks charge to cash a check from another bank and be on my way. Not gonna happen at BofA! The only way that they were going to cash this check was if I opened an account! That did not go over to well with me so I ended up going to a check cashing center next door to BofA. The clerk at the cashing center told me that BofA provided her place with lots of customers. No doubt!

   Is trying to force someone to become a customer illegal? I need to find that out someday. Film at 11!

  

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War Resolution Seen Hurting Morale

War resolution seen hurting morale

By S.A. Miller
THE WASHINTON TIMES
February 9, 2007

Senate Republicans yesterday contradicted top Pentagon officials who say Congress would not injure troop morale by passing a nonbinding resolution critical of President Bush's Iraq war plan.
Sen. Lindsey Graham said he was outraged that Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Peter Pace and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates would say U.S. combat forces "understand" politics back home and won't be disheartened by a symbolic no-confidence vote against the commander in chief.

       I guess that it has not occurred to Sen. Graham that most of our troops in Iraq have been back home at least once and they have no doubt watched the news and read the papers and blogs.

    Our troops are not as ignorant as Sen. Graham appears to be and our troops have more than likely formed their own opinions on Bush's rhetoric and if I am reading the emails from friends in Iraq correctly, they have very little confidence in Bush and his policies..

    A symbolic vote of no-confidence will dishearten no-one but Sen. Graham and the remaining Republicans that support this bullshit. It will not dishearten our troops.

                         IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

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Pentagon Extends Troops Buildup In Afghanistan

   The Pentagon will be extending the troop buildup in Afghanistan into next year instead of early spring of this year. All of this because they expect the Taliban to go on the offensive in the spring and the U.S. is waiting for more troops from some of our allies.

The extension of the U.S. buildup means American troop levels in Afghanistan, which increased this month to about 26,000 — the highest of the war — will remain roughly the same until at least spring 2008. Until now, a level of 22,000 to 23,000 had prevailed through much of last year.  AP

   Maybe we should just take the extra troops needed for the Bush Escalation in Iraq and send them over to Afghanistan to help with the real war on terror. It would be nice to at least see one conflict resolved during my lifetime.

 

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Mesa Arizona Councilman Gets threats Over Protest

   I just love the people of Arizona!

      Over in Mesa, just outside of Phoenix, a councilman has been sitting down during the Pledge of allegiance during council meetings as his way of protesting the war in Iraq.

   Mesa City Councilman Tom Rawles has been getting threats since he started his little protest.

    From the Tucson Citizen

AMANDA LEE MYERS
The Associated Press   02.09.2007

MESA - One person suggested that Mesa City Councilman Tom Rawles be taken out back and beaten. Another said someone should put a bullet in his head, and a third that he should be buried in the cement his construction company uses.

"You have disrespected our country and the symbol of it and the men and women who fought for it," resident Mike Thelan told Rawles through tears at a council meeting on Monday. "You have acted like a spoiled little child that has not received what he wants from his parents."

Rawles, a 57-year-old lawyer who long ago decided not to run for re-election when his term is up in June 2008, said he will continue his protest "until the troops come home." He said he doesn't mind that his stand is angering some people.

   If you are going to protest the war, by all means do so. But you can do it another way instead of dis-respecting the flag that many have fought and died for!

 

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News For Friday Afternoon

Associated Press

Honda   plans to recall 45,335 Civic Hybrid sedans worldwide to repair an electrical defect that could stop the cars' engines, a company spokeswoman said Friday.

Japan's No. 2 automaker plans to recall 7,219 of the vehicles sold domestically and another 38,116 sold overseas, mostly in the United States, a Honda spokeswoman said on condition of anonymity, citing company policy.

                    * * * *

Clint Eastwood said he opposed the U.S. decision to go into Iraq

AFP

"I wasn't for going in there," Eastwood said. "Only because democracy isn't something that you get overnight. I don't think America got democracy overnight. It's something we had to fight for and believe in."

                    * * * *

The Washington Times

Rival Palestinian factions signed a power-sharing accord aimed at ending months of bloodshed yesterday, agreeing that the Islamist militant group Hamas would head a new coalition government that would "respect" past peace agreements with Israel.

                    * * * *

    From Think Progress we get this piece on Bill Donohue, the man who cried about John Edwards hiring two blogger's who disagreed with some views on the Catholic group that Donohue heads.

During the 2004 presidential campaign, George Bush’s Catholic outreach coordinator, 54-year-old Deal Hudson, was outed as a sexual predator for taking advantage of a drunken 18-year old while he was a professor. The National Catholic Reporter reported:

According to documents obtained by NCR, Hudson invited a vulnerable freshman undergraduate, Cara Poppas, to join a group of older students for a pre-Lenten “Fat Tuesday” night of partying at a Greenwich Village bar. The night concluded after midnight in Hudson’s Fordham office, where he and the drunken 18-year-old exchanged sexual favors. The fallout would force his resignation from a tenured position at the Jesuit school, cost him $30,000, and derail a promising academic career.

Yet at least one prominent right-wing figure came to Hudson’s defense: the Catholic League’s Bill Donohue, who has spent the last several days calling for the heads of two John Edwards bloggers. Donohue ardently defended Hudson in a statement, even invoking the Virgin Mary in downplaying his sexual assault:

In a press release, Bill Donahue, president of the Catholic League, minimized the charges against Hudson and attempted a joke at the Virgin Mary’s expense. “Effective today,” Donohue wrote, his organization had “a new requirement for all future employees: all candidates must show proof of being immaculately conceived, that is, they must demonstrate that they were conceived without sin.”

         * * * *

Reuters

US strike kills 8 Kurd soldiers in northern Iraq

Fri 9 Feb 2007

By Ibon Villelabeitia
BAGHDAD, Feb 9 (Reuters) - A U.S. air strike killed eight Kurdish Peshmerga soldiers and wounded six others in northern Iraq on Friday in what appeared to be a "friendly fire" incident, Kurdish officials said.

The men, who had ignored warnings in Arabic and Kurdish to put down their weapons, turned out to be Kurdish policemen, the military said in a statement, adding that U.S. forces expressed their "deepest sympathies" to the families of the victims.

 

 

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Former U.S. Interrogator, Eric Fair, Speaks Out

    Meet Eric Fair, a former contract interrogator in Iraq. He has an interesting article in the Washington Post on the nightmares that he suffers through since he  has come home from Iraq. He speaks on the interrogation of one prisoner who was in custody

I was one of two civilian interrogators assigned to the division interrogation facility (DIF) of the 82nd Airborne Division.

The lead interrogator at the DIF had given me specific instructions: I was to deprive the detainee of sleep during my 12-hour shift by opening his cell every hour, forcing him to stand in a corner and stripping him of his clothes.

   Mr. Fair goes on to state that it is he who now can not sleep because of the nightmares with this prisoner's face always in his dream. Mr. Fair has a guilt trip over what went on during the interrogating process.

American authorities continue to insist that the abuse of Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib was an isolated incident in an otherwise well-run detention system. That insistence, however, stands in sharp contrast to my own experiences as an interrogator in Iraq. I watched as detainees were forced to stand naked all night, shivering in their cold cells and pleading with their captors for help. Others were subjected to long periods of isolation in pitch-black rooms. Food and sleep deprivation were common, along with a variety of physical abuse, including punching and kicking. Aggressive, and in many ways abusive, techniques were used daily in Iraq, all in the name of acquiring the intelligence necessary to bring an end to the insurgency. The violence raging there today is evidence that those tactics never worked. My memories are evidence that those tactics were terribly wrong.  WaPo Article

  

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Secrecy's Dangerous Side Effects

     Common Dreams

Published on Thursday, February 8, 2007 by the Los Angeles Times

When legal settlements allow companies to hide their mistakes, what we don't know can hurt us.
by Richard Zitrin

Drug Giant Eli Lilly & Co. recently settled 18,000 lawsuits brought by people claiming they were injured by the side effects of its biggest-selling drug, Zyprexa, which is used to treat schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. But the $500 million in settlements says less about the dangers of the drug than the dangers of secrecy.
About 18 months earlier, Lilly had settled 8,000 other Zyprexa cases for $700 million. But those settlements required the plaintiffs to return all sensitive documents obtained through the legal discovery process to Lilly — a requirement that kept the strongest smoking-gun evidence out of public view. The plaintiffs also had to agree "not to communicate, publish or cause to be published, in any public or business forum or context, any statement, whether written or oral, concerning the specific events, facts or circumstances giving rise to [their] claims."
Lilly had strong motivation to settle. The documents contained evidence that Zyprexa caused large, often enormous, weight gain in many patients, significantly increasing the risk of dangerously high blood-sugar levels and diabetes. They also showed that Lilly knew about the problems in 1999, largely through its own research. Other documents outlined a marketing scheme to encourage physicians to prescribe Zyprexa for elderly patients with early signs of dementia. This strategy not only had no clinical evidence to support it, it promoted an "off-label" use not approved by the Food and Drug Administration, a violation of federal law.   Entire Article

    The drug companies have been doing this shit since their first lawsuit, that is why there should be a bill introduced to make this info public knowledge. As it stands now, they pay off the plaintiffs, then continue to market the junk that they put out unless it is pulled by the FDA.

 

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