September 10, 2008

  • God damn this cowardly shithole of a nation

    Trickle-Down Preemption: Baghdad on the Mississippi

    by Ray McGovern

    Ten days ago, as the nation focused
    attention on the hurricane nearing the Mississippi delta, another storm
    was brewing far upstream in St. Paul, Minnesota -- a storm far more dangerous,
    it turned out, but one by and large overlooked by the Fawning Corporate
    Media (FCM). 

    When I flew into St. Paul on Saturday
    evening, August 30, I encountered a din in local media about "preemptive
    strikes" on those already congregating there to demonstrate against
    the Iraq war and injustice against the poor in our country.  St.
    Paul's Pioneer Press expressed surprise that "despite preemptive
    police searches" and arrests, a group calling itself "the RNC Welcoming
    Committee" was still intent on "disrupting the convention." 

    A headline screamed, "Preemptive
    Arrests of Protesters in Twin Cities."  But it was the article's
    lead that hit home:  "Borrowing from the Bush administration's
    ‘preemptive war' playbook, police agencies in the Twin Cities have
    made ‘preemptive strikes' against organizations planning to protest
    at the Republican National Convention." 

    In the following days I was to see,
    up close and personal, a massive and totally unnecessary display of
    ruthlessness. 

    What struck a bell was that this domestic
    application of the dubious doctrine of "preemption" was totally
    predictable-indeed, predicted by those courageous enough to speak
    out before the U.S. "preemptive" attack on Iraq.  Ironically,
    it was FBI Special Agent Coleen Rowley, living in the St. Paul area,
    who warned of precisely that in her hard-hitting letter to FBI Director
    Robert Mueller three weeks before the attack on Iraq.  [Text of Feb. 26, 2003 Letter, published
    March 6, 2003 in NY Times

    Confronting Mueller on a number of
    key issues (like "What is the FBI's evidence with respect to the
    claimed connection between al-Qaeda and Iraq?"), Rowley warned of
    the trickle-down effect of "the administration's new policy of ‘preemptive
    strikes'": 

    "I believe it would
    be prudent to be on guard against the possibility that the looser
    ‘preemptive strike' rationale being applied to situations abroad
    could migrate back home, fostering a more permissive attitude on the
    part of law enforcement officers in this country."
     

    Rowley called Mueller's attention
    to the abuses of civil rights that had already occurred since 9/11,
    and pointedly warned "particular vigilance may be required to head
    off undue pressure (including subtle encouragement) to detain or ‘round
    up' suspects." 

    Transforming the Police 

    While in St. Paul, I got in touch with
    Rowley, who has been politically active in the Twin City area, and asked
    for her reaction to St. Paul's version of preemption.  This was
    hardly her first chance to say I-told-you-so, but she called no attention
    to her right-on prophesy five and a half years ago. 

    Shaking her head, Rowley simply bemoaned
    how easily the artificial stoking of fear had succeeded in causing the
    "otherwise wonderful community police officers of St. Paul to turn
    on their own peaceful citizens (the surreal insanity we witnessed during
    the RNC)."  She added that, once the Feds, the fusion centers,
    the contractors get into the act, "all the rules go up in smoke." 

    The "preemption" began on Friday,
    August 29, well before the RNC began on Sept. 1. 

    An academic doing research on social
    movement organizations, who for several months has been observing the
    main protesters -- the RNC Welcoming Committee, the Coalition to March
    on the RNC and End the War, and the Poor People's Economic Human Rights
    Campaign -- provided this account: 

    "On Friday evening
    the space in St. Paul that was being rented by the Welcoming Committee
    was raided by riot police, who knocked in the door with automatic weapons
    drawn, forced the 60-70 activists inside onto the floor, handcuffed
    them, then proceeded to confiscate all the banner-making supplies and
    movement literature.
     

    "Over the course of
    several hours the cops interrogated, photographed, ran warrant checks,
    and eventually, released everyone one by one.  Then they closed
    down the space for a code violation.  The next morning a city code
    inspector arrived and found no basis for closing the space.
     

    "Saturday morning
    was one of escalation and terror.  The Ramsey County Sheriff Department,
    together with the St. Paul police, Homeland Security, and the FBI raided
    four private houses.  At 8:00 AM, dozens of cops in SWAT gear broke
    down the door of one house where about a dozen activists were staying. 
    They were awakened with rifle barrels in their faces and forced to lie
    face down for more than an hour.
     

    "The cops stole all
    the computers and other electronic devices in the house, and core members
    of the Welcoming Committee sleeping there were arrested.  It being
    a holiday weekend, those arrested for alleged crimes could not arrive
    in court until Wednesday, at the earliest.  Thus, those trying
    to organize demonstrations will be in jail for the entire time the RNC
    is going on.  Four other houses were raided and dozens of activists
    were detained."
     

    The academic who wrote the report appealed
    to those concerned over "this enormous police over-kill" to contact
    the Twin Cities' mayors and demand an end to the "witch hunt." 
    He added, "The people who were arrested were some of the gentlest,
    most dedicated activists I've ever met."  A far cry from the
    "criminal enterprise" described by notorious Ramsey County Sheriff
    Bob Fletcher. 

    Nanette Echols, a resident of St. Paul
    who had been extending hospitality to the visiting protesters, insisted
    they had done nothing wrong.  "In the place they raided on Friday
    night they were showing documentary movies to twenty-somethings in a
    clean, alcohol-free zone after dinner," she said. 

    Caving In to the Feds 

    The St. Paul City Council?  Only
    one member had the courage to speak out -- Councilman Dave Thune, who
    was particularly enraged that Sheriff Fletcher took action within St.
    Paul city limits: 

    "This is not the way
    to start things off...I'm really ticked off...the city is perfectly
    capable of taking care of such things...This is all about free speech. 
    It's what my father fought for in the war.  To me this smacks
    of preemptive strike against free speech."
     

    Thune objected in particular to Fletcher's
    deputies using battering rams to knock down doors, then entering with
    guns drawn, and forcing people to the ground, as they did on Friday
    night. 

    This was the unsettling backdrop as
    I flew into St. Paul on Saturday evening, to speak at the Masses at
    St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church on Sunday morning.

    On Monday, I joined some 10,000 on
    a peaceful march from the Capitol to the Berlin wall of fences and the
    "organs of public safety" arrayed before the RNC convention hall. 
    On the fringes there was some property damage and further arrests. 
    What violence there was bore the earmarks of provocation by the likes
    of Sheriff Fletcher and his Homeland Security, FBI, and, according to
    one well-sourced report, Blackwater buddies. 

    That's right.  Agent provocateurs. 

    Primary targets of the repression were
    the alternative media, including any and all those who might have a
    camera to record the brutality -- as was successfully done at the RNC
    in New York four years ago.  The manner in which Amy Goodman and
    the two producers of "Democracy Now!" were deliberately mistreated
    was clearly aimed to serve as a warning that the rules had indeed gone
    up in smoke -- the First Amendment be damned.  

    Tuesday evening, after speaking at
    the "Free Speech Zone," a fenced-off area surrounded by the organs
    of public safety, I joined the Poor People's march up to the fences
    before the RNC.  I observed no violence at all; yet, the police/FBI/national
    guard/and who-knows-who-else decided they needed to clear the streets. 
    My friends and I narrowly escaped being tear-gassed, pepper-sprayed,
    or worse.  It was an overwhelming show of force -- not to protect,
    but to intimidate. 

    Palin Significance 

    After speaking at a conference at Concordia
    University in St. Paul on Wednesday, I was more eager to watch the Republican
    vice-presidential candidate, Sarah Palin, deliver her acceptance speech
    than to risk the tear gas and pepper spray. 

    The way she dissed community organizers
    was hard to take.  But that would pale in significance, so to speak,
    compared to the way the governor of Alaska proceeded to ridicule the
    notion of reading people their rights.  I had thought that despite
    the distance between Alaska and Washington, the reach of the U.S. Constitution
    and statutes extended that far. 

    Friends tell me I should not have been
    surprised.  But, really!  After the widespread kidnapping,
    torture, indefinite imprisonment, and our cowardly Congress' empowerment
    of the president to imprison sine die anyone he might designate
    an "enemy combatant" -- after all that...well, it seems to me that
    reading a person his/her rights takes on more, not less, importance. 

    Not to mention the massive repression
    then under way right outside the convention hall. 

    It was, it is, a scary juxtaposition. 
    The following day Col. Ann Wright, other members of Code Pink, and I
    went to the jail to offer support to the young people who had been brutalized
    and then released.  They had not been read their rights. 
    Many were camped out on the sidewalk, refusing to leave until their
    friends still inside were also released. 

    Out of the jail came Jason, a well-built
    young man of about twenty years, who needed help in walking.  We
    talked to Jason a while, and he showed us the seven, yes seven, taser
    wounds on his body.  One, on his left buttock, had released considerable
    blood, creating a large stain on the seat of his pants. 

    Resourcefulness 

    The young protesters had some success
    in exposing infiltrators in their ranks.  During confrontations,
    members of the Welcoming Committee, in particular, took copious photos
    of law enforcement officers and then memorized the faces.  This
    tactic worked like a charm in one of the St. Paul parks, when a man
    who looked like a protester -- dark clothes, backpack, a bit disheveled-walked
    by. 

    One of the protesters recognized the
    man's face and searched through her camera until she found a photo
    of the man actually performing the raid on the Welcoming Committee's
    headquarters on Friday night.  The young protesters asked the man,
    and two associates, to leave the park, at which point the three hustled
    into a nearby unmarked sedan. 

    The license plate, observed by a
    Pioneer Press
    reporter, traced back to the detective unit of the
    Hennepin County sheriff's office, according to the county's Central
    Mobile Equipment Division. 

    Protesters later drove two other men
    out of the day's planned march -- one because he was wearing brand-new
    tennis shoes.  The two left without indicating whether they were
    with the organs of public safety. 

    So there is hope.  Young people
    are smarter than old ones.  It is a safe bet that in the coming
    weeks lots of unwelcome photos will be exposing various agents provocateurs,
    including over-the-hill flat-feet in unmarked cars, as well as young
    Republicans with unmarked tennis shoes.  If those are the kind
    of "sources" upon which the police, FBI, etc. have been relying...well,
    that would be like having Shia reporting on Sunni, or vice versa. 

    The organs of public safety are probably
    not quite so dumb as to be unaware that one cannot expect valid "intelligence"
    from such amateurish antics.  More likely, the attitude is that
    any kind of "intelligence" will do for the purposes of local law
    enforcement and timid public officials cowed by the Feds. 

    Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, the
    publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in inner-city
    Washington. He is also with Veteran Intelligence Professionals for
    Sanity (VIPS), as are Coleen Rowley and Ann Wright.

    The original version of this article appeared on Consortiumnews.com.

September 1, 2008

  • A Rumination on "Experience"

    The impending election has once again raised the question of
    the “experience”, or lack thereof, of the respective presidential and vice presidential
    candidates.  Experience is thought to be
    a positive attribute, while lack of experience is considered a negative.

    The Democratic  presidential
    candidate Barack Obama, and the Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah
    Palin, are said to be lacking in experience in general and foreign affairs
    experience in particular.  The older John McCain
    and Joe Biden, on the other hand, are presumably men of great experience in
    governing.

    Now experience, to paraphrase the late Dr. Martin Luther
    King Jr., most certainly has its place. 
    I wouldn’t want a surgeon operating on me who had never performed a
    surgical procedure before, or an auto mechanic attempting to repair my car who
    had never before held a socket wrench in his hands.  But those are highly technical skills; and
    beyond the requirement of a certain fundamental level of experience, other
    factors come into play.

    A threshold question might be, since John McCain and Joe
    Biden have so much experience, how come they haven’t done a better job of
    fixing our broken country?  How, in fact,
    have they managed to let things get so far out of hand during their long tenures in Washington?  Why is it that, in the unchanging election-year political rhetoric,
    our politicians with such vast experience are forever promising us that they
    will  “fight” for exactly the same things
    that they promised to fight for years ago when we first elected them?  But that too is an oversimplification. 

    When I was on the Fire Department, those of
    us who were more educated and impatient with what we considered “mediocrity” spoke
    of  our less-respected elders this way:  “Yeah, he’s got a lot of experience all
    right.  Twenty years experience.  He’s had the same two years of experience ten
    times!”  In other words, the firefighter
    in question had stopped learning after two years.  He was stuck in a past of 18 years before.

    When I was first hired as a firefighter back in 1975, we new
    recruits were sent away for 10 or 12 weeks of training, where we were taught
    the newest techniques of firefighting, including the use of self-contained
    breathing apparatus (SCBA), commonly known as  “air packs”. 
    To put out a fire, you have to apply the water in your hose to the seat
    or base of the fire – where the fire actually IS.  Unless you can get lucky by spraying water
    through a window and hitting the fire more or less accidentally, this generally
    means going INSIDE the burning building to find the fire, rather than waiting
    for the fire to come outside and find you. 
    And staying inside the burning building long enough to find the fire and extinguish it,
    particularly with all of the toxic synthetic materials in use today, generally
    requires the use of air packs.

    When I got done with my training, and in fact for quite a number of years, I was among the least
    experienced of all the firefighters on my fire department.  And some of the older guys with many years of
    experience in fighting fires – who were, incidentally, in command for most of my career - didn’t
    believe in air packs.  They prided
    themselves on being “smoke eaters”, macho men who crawled into the burning
    building and breathed the smoke, coughing and gagging all the while, for as
    long as they could before having to crawl back out.  They hoped that in the five minutes or so
    that they could stay inside, they could get the fire put out.  Otherwise they got a lot of experience hosing
    down the charred rubble which was all that remained of the building that had
    burned to the ground.

    [These were, incidentally, the same neanderthals who didn’t
    believe in "book learnin'" of any sort.  When a
    few of us young pups studied training manuals or, God forbid, took fire science
    classes, these guys guffawed, “What ya  gonna do when there’s a FIRE?  Throw a fuckin’ BOOK at it?  Haw haw haw!”]

    In 1975 my fire department had just recently gotten some air
    packs, but these older, experienced “smoke eaters” refused to wear them, and
    some of them even discouraged us younger guys from wearing them.

    One fire in particular illustrates the ludicrous insufficiency of
    experience alone.  The fire was on the
    second floor of a two-story house, with smoke rolling out of a bedroom
    window.  (Fire doubles in intensity every
    minute, so the situation was rapidly threatening to get out of control.)  I put on an air pack and followed a hose
    through the front door.  Inside the house
    I found four of our experienced smoke eaters all huddled together at the base
    of the stairs leading to the second floor, unable to proceed further because the
    smoke and heat became more intense if they tried to ascend the stairs.  I had to grab the nozzle and literally climb
    over the backs of my more experienced colleagues in order to go up the stairs
    all by myself, locate the fire in a back bedroom, and put it out.

    No, experience in and of itself is not enough, since it’s a
    buzzword that communicates essentially nothing. 
    The only experience that’s really worth a damn is the kind that’s
    combined with an open and questioning mind, one that is receptive to the
    application of new ideas and improved techniques in order to avoid the mistakes
    and ignorance of the past.  And when it
    comes to governing (as with most other worthwhile things in life), let us look
    also for a heart of genuine integrity and compassion, without which all the experience in the
    world is but smoke and mirrors.

August 19, 2008

  • Quote of the Year

    From a taxpayer/voter up in Chicago during my recent visit.  Spoken with a straight face and no apparent awareness of irony:

    "I want change, but I don't want to PAY for it!"

    This attitude, typical of most Americans, is why the Empire will continue to crumble.  You heard it first right here.

August 10, 2008

August 4, 2008

August 2, 2008

  • I'll bet you didn't know this...

    U.S. agents can seize travelers' laptops: report

    Fri Aug 1, 2008 12:31pm BST
     


    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. federal agents have been given
    new powers to seize travelers' laptops and other electronic
    devices at the border and hold them for unspecified periods, the
    Washington Post reported on Friday.

    Under recently disclosed Department of Homeland Security
    policies, such seizures may be carried out without suspicion of
    wrongdoing, the newspaper said, quoting policies issued on July
    16 by two DHS agencies.

    Agents are empowered to share the contents of seized
    computers with other agencies and private entities for data
    decryption and other reasons, the newspaper said.

    DHS officials said the policies applied to anyone entering
    the country, including U.S. citizens, and were needed to
    prevent terrorism.

    The measures have long been in place but were only
    disclosed in July, under pressure from civil liberties and
    business travel groups acting on reports that increasing
    numbers of international travelers had had their laptops,
    cellphones and other digital devices removed and examined.

    The policies cover hard drives, flash drives, cell phones,
    iPods, pagers, beepers, and video and audio tapes -- as well as
    books, pamphlets and other written materials, the report said.

    The policies require federal agents to take measures to
    protect business information and attorney-client privileged
    material. They stipulate that any copies of the data must be
    destroyed when a review is completed and no probable cause
    exists to keep the information.

    (Reporting by Paul Eckert, editing by Alan Elsner)

    © Thomson Reuters 2008 All rights reserved.


    EDIT:  Other relevant songs on the same CD by Haitian group Boukan Ginen:
                 Je'n La Nap Gade ("Our Eyes Are Watching")
                 Kouman Nap Fe ("What Can We Do?")

July 29, 2008

  • The Value of Education

    Sometimes you go along and think, "Why did I get this wonderful education?  What good is it really doing me?"  Then you have an experience that helps you understand just how useful a thing education is.

    A Facebook friend of mine - who also happens to be something of a friend in real life - posted this on his Facebook today:   "__________ (name elided to protect the innocent) is still trying to figure out how we
    wound up with free education - a good thing, mind you - but without
    free healthcare in this country."

    Being as educated as I am, it didn't take me long to come up with a response.  "What's the matter with you, __________?" I said.  "Isn't it patently obvious? Free tax-supported universal
    mandatory public education is an essential part of democracy.  Free
    tax-supported universal health care, on the other hand, while not
    mandatory, smacks of godless socialism!

    NOW is it clear to you? Whew! One would think you had learned NOTHING from your own public education!"

    I always feel much better when I'm able to enlighten a fellow human being.

July 22, 2008

  • I hope someone can explain this to me


    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/07/18/hp_packaging/

    17 boxes to protect 32 A4 sheets

    Published Friday 18th July 2008 10:27 GMT

    We've just had an email from a shaken Stephen Strang who this morning took delivery of a very, very large box from HP:

    The very large box from HP

    Stephen said: "Imagine our excitement as we opened it, hoping
    against hope that it might contain a copy of some c-class virtual
    connect firmware that actually works."

    Sadly not. What the überbox did contain was 16 smaller boxes "which
    in turn [each] contained (wrapped in foam so they wouldn't get broken)
    exactly two sheets of A4 paper":

    A smaller box containing two sheets of A4 paper

    Yup, so that's 17 boxes in total to protect 32 pages. A world-class effort there from HP. ®

July 16, 2008

  • Recession Analysis

    Having lost roughly 10% of my life's savings in the last month alone, I'm in a positively giddy mood.

              Suicide With Gun

    Recession-Plagued Nation Demands New Bubble To Invest In
           July 14, 2008 | Issue 44 o 29

      WASHINGTON--A panel of top business leaders testified before Congress
      about the worsening recession Monday, demanding the government provide
      Americans with a new irresponsible and largely illusory economic bubble
      in which to invest.

      "What America needs right now is not more talk and long-term strategy,
      but a concrete way to create more imaginary wealth in the very
      immediate future," said Thomas Jenkins, CFO of the Boston-area Jenkins
      Financial Group, a bubble-based investment firm. "We are in a crisis,
      and that crisis demands an unviable short-term solution."
     
      The current economic woes, brought on by the collapse of the so-called
      "housing bubble," are considered the worst to hit investors since the
      equally untenable dot-com bubble burst in 2001. According to investment
      experts, now that the option of making millions of dollars in a short
      time with imaginary profits from bad real-estate deals has disappeared,
      the need for another spontaneous make-believe source of wealth has
      never been more urgent.

      "Perhaps the new bubble could have something to do with watching movies
      on cell phones," said investment banker Greg Carlisle of the New York
      firm Carlisle, Shaloe & Graves. "Or, say, medicine, or shipping. Or
      clouds. The manner of bubble isn't important -- just as long as it
      creates a hugely overvalued market based on nothing more than whimsical
      fantasy and saddled with the potential for a long-term accrual of debts
      that will never be paid back, thereby unleashing a ripple effect that
      will take nearly a decade to correct."

      "The U.S. economy cannot survive on sound investments alone," Carlisle
      added.

      Congress is currently considering an emergency economic-stimulus
      measure, tentatively called the Bubble Act, which would order the
      Federal Reserve to begin encouraging massive private investment in
      some fantastical financial scheme in order to get the nation's false
      economy back on track.

    <end excerpt from http://www.theonion.com/content/node/82504>

July 1, 2008

  • A Perspective for Independence Day ("Plus Ca Change....")

    A letter I received recently in a roundabout way, from a person about my own age...

    28 Jun 2008

    Various and sundry folk,

    Thirty-seven years ago today, if my math is correct (never a certainty),
    I was instantly, after a quick trial, convicted of the intolerably
    dangerous crime of refusing to participate in a war of which I could
    make neither ethical nor pragmatic sense.  Those of you who were present
    may remember that, though the curtain of the Temple may not have been
    rent in two,  the sun (around 4:00 p.m.) was indeed blackened-over and
    the earth (or at least, the chandeliers in the courtroom) indeed quaked,
    as the skies opened and "threw down their spears"; the thunderstorm was
    so massive that several times, while on the witness stand, I simply had
    to stop speaking until I could be heard again.

    Nonetheless, I felt less like Jeremiah than like someone who, never
    (yet) having had so much as a parking ticket, finally felt compelled to
    say, It may be the law, but it stops here.  (Well, OK, I'd had a prior
    arrest, for the equally heinous crime of joining two Anglican bishops in
    full vestments, with acolytes croziers and incense and quite a few other
    people, in a prayer-for-peace service inside the Pentagon...but it was
    later held that that hadn't been a crime, so the several-hundred-odd of
    us weren't guilty of one.)

    I survived a week each in the Richmond City Jail and Lewisburg Prison,
    complete with getting beaten up in a rape attempt (declining on pacifist
    grounds to defend myself physically, while at the same time declining to
    submit to rape).  The rest of the time (which was going to be four
    years, until the once-honorable-but-now-late Judge Merhige had a change
    of heart and reduced it to two) I spent at the Allenwood Prison Camp.
    There, while definitely on my own as regards survival, I didn't feel
    quite alone in this doubtless-lunatic-seeming stance: there were enough
    other war resisters, there and in other "joints", that we could actually
    deceive ourselves into thinking, or at least hoping, that we might be
    making some small contribution to the national consciousness on subjects
    like atrocity and a national temptation to pound our collective chest
    and play King of the Hill.

    Fools, yes we were.  DAMNED fools.  Fast forward 37 years, and we have
    a government which stands accused, in unambiguous terms (by a general,
    no less), of war crimes, and yet there isn't the slightest indication
    anywhere on the horizon that any policy-maker will ever be called to
    account.  What we would forcefully call atrocity, were it done by an
    adversary, is here entre nous considered just one policy option among
    others, options about which reasonable people can disagree.  (Well, as
    long as they come to the conclusion that anything - ANYTHING! - goes, as
    long as someone - anyone - has accused a person of being a
    Terrorist...otherwise, they're not reasonable people, but pro-enemy
    haters of America.)

    Some incredibly smug person has said that all that's necessary for the
    triumph of evil is for good people to do nothing (a statement that has
    been wildly variously attributed).  Forgive me for suspecting aloud that
    it seems much closer to say that, even if every good person embraced
    total asceticism and spent every waking moment in rigorously attempting
    to counteract evil, evil would still be the odds-on favorite to win the
    contest.

    To say that this has been something of a wistful day is to understate
    just a bit.  I wish it were a different world that my daughters were
    inheriting (or being saddled with).

    Lances at the ready, yonder comes a windmill.

    TK

    **********************************

    And another Independence Day perspective, from the same now-ancient era:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_M._Shoup

    "I believe if we had, and would, keep our dirty, bloody, dollar-crooked
    fingers out of the business of these nations so full of depressed,
    exploited people, they will arrive at a solution of their own. That
    they design and want. That they fight and work for...and not the
    American style, which they don't want. Not one crammed down their
    throats by the Americans."

    1966, General David Shoup, Commandant of the Marine Corps (1960-1963)