Terrible

"Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired, signifies in the final sense a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed." Dwight Eisenhower

Saturday, July 31, 2004

"Notes From a Non-Lineal Republic"

June 7th, 2001
'All quiet on the Front.'
June 14th, 2001
'The People neither wanted nor started this war.'
June 25th, 2001
'How many generations blood must stain the land before the People are Free upon it?'
July 1st, 2001
'Sometimes it is strategically advantageous to extend your Front. But you must be careful not to overextend your own resources.'
Aug. 26th, 2001
'And then came the month of August, with the heat, the flys, the helicopters and the gun-fire. The government troops and the Spoilers were making their move. All the Fighters could do was sit and wait.'
Sept. 9th, 2001
'The first wave of the government legions had passed through. They were fewer, each year the Empire had less resources. And the Spoilers feared to trespass with the Fighters still so near. So when the Fighters came out of the hills, there was still a crop to harvest; corn, squash, potatoes, and onions. The non-combatants had been hidden well and all the People would survive the long cold winter. The Gods and Goddesses willing.'

Friday, July 30, 2004

Saudi War Warning

Do you think if Chimpy did (or should I say could?) read newspapers, he would have given any credence to this article from Feb. 17 2003?? Do you think any of our Senators or Congressman heard it? And what did they think? That they *knew* better?

"If the choice is you destroy Iraq in order to get Saddam Hussein, it is a self-defeating policy, isn't it? I mean, you destroy a country to get a person out - it doesn't work "

"There has never been in the history of the world a country in which a regime change happened at the bayonets of guns that has led to stability."

Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal

Dead Show - OK I'm Going!

Looks like I will go to the show! I just have to be at work at 7:00am Monday is the only catch. If I'm alive enough Monday evening maybe I'll write a report from the Dead Zone!!

Thursday, July 29, 2004

Anyone remember the Nuremberg trials?

"To initiate a war of aggression, therefore, is not only an international crime, it is the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole. ... If certain acts in violation of treaties are crimes, they are crimes whether the United States does them or whether Germany does them, and we are not prepared to lay down a rule of criminal conduct against others which we would not be willing to have invoked against us. "
Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson, U. S. Prosecutor at Nuremberg:

Thanks to American Leftist for the historical quote!

Hate your job?

The Game is there to 'help' as always!

For those who wonder why I don't watch television

From the Sidney Morning Herald:

Here's the news - now forget it
July 30, 2004


The next time you watch the news on television, bear in mind you're about to forget almost all of it.

According to a study in Germany, most viewers completely forget what they have seen on the TV news.

Seven in 10 people surveyed had forgotten the most important political news item they had seen the previous evening.

One top story on German television news - about a major company wanting to reintroduce the 40-hour week - had been forgotten by 98 per cent of those surveyed.

The news items people best remembered were those with an emotional content or which were accompanied by strong pictures, the television program magazine TV Hoeren und Sehen said.

A report on the resignation of German national football team coach Rudi Voeler was recalled the next day by 54 per cent of viewers.

News of violent attacks or natural catastrophes also tended to stay in people's memories, the survey found.

A report of a terrorist attack in Turkey was remembered by 26 per cent of viewers, while about one in five recalled an item on a whirlwind causing damage to a village in Germany.

However, the study indicated people soon forget news about celebrities.

A report on Princess Caroline of Monaco was recalled the next day by only 3 per cent of viewers.

The study was carried out by the Hamburg-based Gewis Institute which surveyed 1059 men and women between the ages of 16 and 65.

Dead Show Update

My life sucks right now and I'm most likely not going!

Media neglegence

I'm too lazy to write tonight. But heres a great article from the Toronto Globe and Mail to read:

Published on Thursday, July 29, 2004 by the Globe and Mail /Canada
Patriot Game, Media Shame
by Lawrence Martin

At the Democratic convention this week and the coming Republican fest, rest assured of one thing: No one will mention a crux issue -- how patriotism supplanted journalism in America.

For its coverage of Iraq, The New York Times has publicly expressed its regret for being a conduit of White House propaganda. Dan Rather of CBS has lamented how "patriotism run amok" sabotaged his country's media freedoms. Some others have honorably done the same.

The current edition of Foreign Affairs has an article that raises a hot question: whether the war that was waged to disarm a dictator who was already disarmed would have happened if the media had done their job. The analysis by George Lopez and David Cartwright charts how Western sanctions and inspections throughout the 1990s had turned Iraq into a sickly wimp about as daunting as Denmark.

Its collapse into obsolescence, the sheering of its defense budget from $15-billion to $1-billion, were all on the public record. But the American media, jingoized by 9/11, largely ignored it. They went, instead, with the "gathering threat" tales the Bush White House fed them, a diet of disinformation that gave the President the needed support for a war that led to the slaughter of thousands of civilians. Had the media dug, had they consistently countered the Bush hyperbole with known fact, that support probably would have been lacking.

Perspective is a ghost in American journalism. History is forgotten as soon as it happens. You would think that given the presidential record of duplicity -- Bill Clinton on Monica, Ronald Reagan on Iran contra, Richard Nixon on Watergate, Lyndon Johnson on the Gulf of Tonkin, John Kennedy on the missile gap -- the journalists might catch on one day. Not in America.

In his speech at the Democratic convention, Jimmy Carter noted how the Bush administration had willfully generated public panic over terrorism. Statistics show that, last year, acts of terrorism killed 300 to 400 people, ranking it so far down the list of dangers to livelihood that it is barely visible. The threat of terrorism certainly shouldn't be minimized; but it also shouldn't be exaggerated by a cowed media to fit the White House agenda. For anyone who looks at some of history's worst threats -- the German military machine that killed tens of millions, the Soviet Union with a nuclear arsenal that could have turned this continent into rubble -- the terrorism of today, though George Bush has seeded so much more of it in Iraq, isn't anywhere close.

But how often does the media carry this context? The toll from weapons of mass destruction, which played no part in 9/11, has been trifling over the past decade, but the White House, playing the media as puppets, has made WMD a momentous issue of our times.

If it weren't so politically useful to Mr. Bush -- check the midterm elections -- and media buttons weren't so easy to push, it's safe a bet that the terrorism threat wouldn't get half the air time.

As journalists have been duped so often, admittedly duped, how can anyone say the media system in America is working? In times of foreign crises, the press doesn't report. It is politically exploited. It is supposed to reflect truth and reality but, by treating politically motivated White House words with face-value reverence, it is distorting that truth and reality and succumbing to patriot games.

It was encouraging to see The New York Times, which, despite all, still ranks high in the journalistic firmament, as well as other media admit to their folly on Iraq. But will it change anything?

When the Bush administration faced a bad news week with the announcement of John Edwards as the Democratic vice-presidential nominee, it issued another one of its regular terrorist alerts. None of these alerts have amounted to anything, but each, like this one, seemed conveniently timed to divert the news cycle.

How did American journalists respond? Rather than view this announcement with cynicism, they ran the story right up there on the top of Page 1. Like it was the truth, the whole truth, nothing but the truth, so help them God.

© Copyright 2004 Bell Globemedia Publishing Inc

Wednesday, July 28, 2004

Going to the DEAD!!!!!!!!

I must live right or something!!! I've just been offered a ticket (only $25!!!) for the Dead at Saratoga Sun night! It's going to be a bit tricky to work out maybe because I'm starting a new job Mon. Do you know the George Carlin routine were he's talking about going to a job interview "tell him you don't need a 2 martini lunch break, but you'd like a 1 joint coffee break."? Well I'll just have to tell Charlie that my first day I may be late because of the DEAD. Seems very reasonable to me!!! I'm going to the dead, I'm going to the dead!!!!!!!!!!

This is a little off the subject but check out this article about  Isreali and Palistinian films



Adding Links

Well I've learned how to add links here. It's a bit of a pain but not overly complicated or anything. I just added about 10 links and then had 'explorer' shut down before I got them saved. Arrrrggggg!!! A 1/2 hr or more down the tube! Well I'll try again and that's it for today!!

Comments section now open to anyone! (I hope!)

I'm learning as I go, haven't got time to read a tuturial. But I think I've got things set so that a person can comment without being a registered 'blogspot' member now!!!!! Hurrah!!!!!!

So this Barack Obama guy sounds very interesting! Any one know anything more about him??

What did I just do?

I only wanted to post a comment on Steve Gillards blog but was sent to the page to open up my own blog. So here it is! Don't expect much but I will try to put something of interest up every few days if I can find the time. First - where the heck is the place for me to put in a profile?? Fear not unfortunites who have stumbled onto this site!!! I will get it rolling soon!!