Friday, January 19, 2007

Olbermann blasts bush, Bush lifts oil drilling ban, Deliberate nicotine boosts, Cali steps up to climate change, US embassy attacked, Exxon looks at emissions, Idaho wolves to be killed, Syria & Isreal peace


VIDEO: Bush's Legacy: The President Who Cried Wolf
By Keith Olbermann, MSNBC "Countdown"
Thursday 11 January 2007


Olbermann: Bush's strategy fails because it depends on his credibility.

Only this president, only in this time, only with this dangerous, even messianic certitude, could answer a country demanding an exit strategy from Iraq, by offering an entrance strategy for Iran.

Mr. Bush, the question is no longer "What are you thinking?" but rather "Are you thinking at all?"

full video and transcript here.

Bush Lifts Oil-Drilling Ban in Alaska's Bristol Bay
By Steven Mufson and Juliet Eilperin, The Washington Post
Wednesday 10 January 2007


Royalties to rise for some offshore wells in advance of Democrats' plans to roll back tax breaks.

The Bush administration yesterday moved to boost U.S. oil and gas supplies by lifting a long-standing moratorium on drilling in Alaska's Bristol Bay, as OPEC accelerated plans to reduce supplies in order to prop up sagging crude prices.

full article here.

Nicotine Boost Was Deliberate, Study Says
By Stephen Smith, The Boston Globe
Thursday 18 January 2007


Harvard researchers analyze cigarette data.

Data supplied by tobacco companies strongly suggest that in recent years manufacturers deliberately boosted nicotine levels in cigarettes to more effectively hook smokers, Harvard researchers conclude in a study being released today.

full article here.

State of the State: Bold Move on Global Warming
By Greg Lucas, The San Francisco Chronicle
Wednesday 10 January 2007


A world first: Governor to order new standard to reduce carbon content of motor fuels.

Sacramento - California will create the world's first global warming pollution standard for transportation fuels, ratcheting down fuel carbon content 10 percent by 2020 under a plan put forward by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger Tuesday in his State of the State address.

full article here.

US Embassy in Athens Hit by Rocket Attack
By Anthee Carassava, The New York Times
Friday 12 January 2007


Athens - Shortly before sunrise today, an anti-tank missile ripped through the United States embassy here, rocking the compound but causing no injuries.

full article here.

Exxon Cuts Ties to Global Warming Skeptics
MSNBC News
Friday 12 November 2007


Oil giant also in talks to look at curbing greenhouse gases.

New York - Oil major Exxon Mobil Corp. is engaging in industry talks on possible U.S. greenhouse gas emissions regulations and has stopped funding groups skeptical of global warming claims - moves that some say could indicate a change in stance from the long-time foe of limits on heat-trapping gases.

full article here.

Idaho Governor Calls for Gray Wolf Kill
By Jesse Harlan Alderman, The Associated Press
Friday 12 January 2007

Boise, Idaho - Idaho's governor said Thursday he will support public hunts to kill all but 100 of the state's gray wolves after the federal government strips them of protection under the Endangered Species Act.

Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter told The Associated Press that he wants hunters to kill about 550 gray wolves. That would leave about 100 wolves, or 10 packs, according to a population estimate by state wildlife officials.

The 100 surviving wolves would be the minimum before the animals could again be considered endangered.

full article here.

Israeli, Syrian Representatives Reach Secret Understandings
By Akiva Eldar, Haaretz, Israel
Tuesday 16 January 2007


In a series of secret meetings in Europe between September 2004 and July 2006, Syrians and Israelis formulated understandings for a peace agreement between Israel and Syria.

full article here.

Senators Agree on Iraq War Resolution
By Anne Flaherty, The Associated Press
Wednesday 17 January 2007


A group of senators including a Republican war critic announced agreement Wednesday on a resolution opposing President Bush's 21,500 troop buildup in Iraq, setting their marker for a major clash between the White House and Congress over the unpopular war.

full article here.
Posted by Spunn at 16:15:51 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

Nuclear ambitions, Global warming, Domestic spying, Environmental ambush, Women in government.

At Anarchist U, it's all about structure
The four-year-old free school has survived partly because it's, um, well organized
BERT ARCHER, Special to The Globe and Mail

     As the kids go back to school and the rest of us try to figure out how to make ourselves better people in the new year, thoughts often turn to taking some kind of course. A quick Google jog tells us we could learn Chinese brush painting through the Toronto District School Board for $127 (plus materials), take a course called Marx, Freud and Nietzsche: Critics of Religion at the University of Toronto's school of continuing studies for $290, or learn about sociology and gender at Ryerson's G. Raymond Chang School of Continuing Education for $427.

     Or we could study Latin American Politics for free at Anarchist U.

     About 60 people signed up for the three courses offered by Anarchist Free University this term (the other two are Questioning Masculinity and Politics of Addiction). But the mere fact that it's entering its fourth year without an address or a registrar, and with total operating expenses of about $50 a year (most of which is the fee for hosting its website, http://www.anarchistu.org), is something of a milestone.

full article here.

Revealed: Israel Plans Nuclear Strike on Iran
By Uzi Mahnaimi, New York and Sarah Baxter, The Sunday Times

    Israel has drawn up secret plans to destroy Iran's uranium enrichment facilities with tactical nuclear weapons.

    Two Israeli air force squadrons are training to blow up an Iranian facility using low-yield nuclear "bunker-busters", according to several Israeli military sources.

full article here.

World faces hottest year ever, as El Niño combines with global warming
By Cahal Milmo, The Independent
January 1, 2007


     A combination of global warming and the El Niño weather system is set to make 2007 the warmest year on record with far-reaching consequences for the planet, one of Britain's leading climate experts has warned.

full article here.

W Pushes Envelope on US Spying
By James Gordon Meek, The New York Daily News
Thursday 04 January 2007


New postal law lets Bush peek through your mail.

    Washington - President Bush has quietly claimed sweeping new powers to open Americans' mail without a judge's warrant, the Daily News has learned.

    The President asserted his new authority when he signed a postal reform bill into law on Dec. 20. Bush then issued a "signing statement" that declared his right to open people's mail under emergency conditions.

full article here.

Exxon Mobil Cultivates Global Warming Doubt
By Deborah Zabarenko, Reuters
Thursday 04 January 2007


    Washington - Energy giant ExxonMobil borrowed tactics from the tobacco industry to raise doubt about climate change, spending US$16 million on groups that question global warming, a science watchdog group said on Wednesday.

full article here.

US Selecting Hybrid Design for Warheads
By William J. Broad, David E. Sanger and Thom Shanker, The New York Times
Sunday 07 January 2007


    Washington - The Bush administration is expected to announce next week a major step forward in the building of the country's first new nuclear warhead in nearly two decades. It will propose combining elements of competing designs from two weapons laboratories in an approach that some experts argue is untested and risky.

full article here.

Shut Out of the Forests
The Baltimore Sun | Editorial
Tuesday 02 January 2007


    Citizen activists have been a bane to the Bush administration - particularly on environmental regulations.

    They ask questions. They file lawsuits. They try to thwart nearly every administration attempt to cut the red tape surrounding use of the nation's natural resources and wind up adding greatly to the cost of these gambits.

    So the administration has decided to simply eliminate the bothersome environmental reviews previously applied to management plans for the 193 million acres of national forest. If there's no requirement to consider the impact of activities such as mineral extraction or hazardous waste shipments, those effects can't be used to challenge the plans.

full article here.

Hurricane Center Chief Issues Final Warning
By Carol J. Williams, The Los Angeles Times
Wednesday 03 January 2007


A departing Max Mayfield is convinced that the Southeast is inviting disaster.

    Miami - Frustrated with people and politicians who refuse to listen or learn, National Hurricane Center Director Max Mayfield ends his 34-year government career today in search of a new platform for getting out his unwelcome message: Hurricane Katrina was nothing compared with the big one yet to come.

full article here.

Pelosi Becomes First Female Speaker, Preparing to Confront Bush
By Laura Litvan, Bloomberg
Thursday 04 January 2007


    Nancy Pelosi, making history today as the first female speaker of the House, is taking office with two goals: becoming an effective counterweight to President George W. Bush, and proving that a woman can thrive at the summit of U.S. political power.

full article here.

No More Free Lunch for House
By Zachary Coile, The San Francisco Chronicle
Friday 05 January 2007


Ethics rules changed on first day. Pelosi's first success in House - forceful changes in ethics rules.

     Washington - Newly elected House Speaker Nancy Pelosi racked up her first legislative victory of the 110th Congress on Thursday, passing ethics reforms that will ban gifts and meals paid for by lobbyists and strictly limit travel for lawmakers funded by outside groups.

     Pelosi, in an opening day speech, called the measures the "toughest congressional ethics reform in history." Government watchdog groups agreed the new rules amount to the biggest crackdown on the influence of lobbyists since the post-Watergate changes in ethics rules, but added that Democrats still must improve the enforcement of ethics rules.

     The measures were part of Pelosi's pledge to run "the most ethical Congress in history" and were passed on the opening day of the House session - usually strictly a ceremonial day - to signal a break from the GOP-led 109th Congress, which was plagued by numerous corruption and influence-peddling scandals.

full article here.

EU to Urge "New Industrial Revolution" in Energy
By Marcin Grajewski, Reuters
Friday 05 January 2007

    Brussels - The European Commission will call next week for "a new industrial revolution" in the energy sector to boost competition, protect the climate and ensure security of supply, a draft paper from the EU executive showed.

    The draft strategy proposals, obtained by Reuters on Thursday before publication on Jan. 10, call for cutting carbon dioxide emissions further, increasing energy from renewable sources and curtailing the powers of large energy companies.

full article here.

New Roles for Women Leaders Worldwide
Feminist Daily News Wire
Thursday 04 January 2007


    In the past month, women across the world have been moving into new and groundbreaking political leadership positions. Here, we profile four women's recent successes.

full article here.

Pelosi's Ascent Breakthrough for Women
By Stephen Ohlemacher, The Associated Press
Friday 05 January 2007


    Washington - It shouldn't be surprising that it took more than 200 years for Congress to select a female speaker of the House. The United States isn't exactly at the forefront when it comes to women in politics.

    Women make up a larger share of the national legislature in 79 other countries, including China, Cuba, North Korea and Vietnam, according to the Inter-Parliamentary Union, an association of national legislatures. The U.S. even trails a couple of fledgling democracies: Afghanistan and Iraq.

full article here.

Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney Makes the Case for Impeachment
By David Swanson, AfterDowningStreet.org
Friday 05 January 2007


    Here is McKinney's case for impeachment and for the history books, a case that says to historians, "Look, I knew what needed to be done, and I failed for years but I admitted it on my last day," but a case that says to us: "Here is your mission: awaken currently serving Congress members to this case or kiss your democracy goodbye."

full article here.

What'd You Do to My Mail Bill, Mr. Prez?
By James Gordon Meek, The New York Daily News
Friday 05 January 2007


    Washington - The Republican sponsor of a postal reform bill called on President Bush yesterday to explain why he used it to claim he can open domestic mail without a search warrant.

full article here.

Pelosi Hints at Denying Bush Iraq Funds
The Associated Press
Sunday 07 January 2007


    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said newly empowered Democrats will not give President Bush a blank check to wage war in Iraq, hinting they could deny funding if he seeks additional troops.

full article here.

Feds Pushing for Internet Records
By John Reinan, McClatchy Newspapers
Saturday 06 January 2007


    Minneapolis - The federal government wants your Internet provider to keep track of every Web site you visit.

    For more than a year, the U.S. Justice Department has been in discussions with Internet companies and privacy rights advocates, trying to come up with a plan that would make it easier for investigators to check records of Web traffic.

full article here.

Gore Mobilizes Global Warming Activists
By Anne Paine, The Tennessean
Monday 08 January 2007


Hundreds at Hilton Hotel receive tools for training others.

    Hundreds of volunteers from across the country have flocked to Nashville this fall and winter and more are here today as part of a grass-roots training effort to spread the word on global warming.

    They are taking part in Al Gore's The Climate Project, which mushroomed from his documentary, An Inconvenient Truth.

full article here.
Posted by Spunn at 15:48:13 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

Recent Headlines.

Review of the Year: Global Warming
By Steve Connor, The Independent UK
Friday 29 December 2006


Our worst fears are exceeded by reality.

    It has been a hot year. The average temperature in Britain for 2006 was higher than at any time since records began in 1659. Globally, it looks set to be the sixth hottest year on record. The signs during the past 12 months have been all around us. Little winter snow in the Alpine ski resorts, continuing droughts in Africa, mountain glaciers melting faster than at any time in the past 5,000 years, disappearing Arctic sea ice, Greenland's ice sheet sliding into the sea. Oh, and a hosepipe ban in southern England.

    You could be forgiven for thinking that you've heard it all before. You may think it's time to turn the page and read something else. But you'd be wrong. 2006 will be remembered by climatologists as the year in which the potential scale of global warming came into focus. And the problem can be summarised in one word: feedback.

    During the past year, scientific findings emerged that made even the most doom-laden predictions about climate change seem a little on the optimistic side. And at the heart of the issue is the idea of climate feedbacks - when the effects of global warming begin to feed into the causes of global warming. Feedbacks can either make things better, or they can make things worse. The trouble is, everywhere scientists looked in 2006, they encountered feedbacks that will make things worse - a lot worse.

full article here.

Lies and Obfuscations
By Eleanor Clift, Newsweek
Friday 22 December 2006

A look back at some of the biggest falsehoods of 2006.

    In the spirit of holding our political leaders accountable, this year-end review will tabulate the worst lies told by Bush and company, along with several stories that were underreported in the media. Much of what was generated got lost in the fog of war, but the long arm of history will retrieve these moments. As the president said in his news conference this week, if they're still writing about No. 1 - George Washington - there's plenty of time before the historians can properly evaluate No. 43. Judging by the mess in Iraq, it could be 200 or 300 years - if ever - before Bush is vindicated.

full article here.

In Search of a Criminal: Donald Rumsfeld's Name Tops the List of Accused of War Crimes
By Alexia Garamfalvi, Legal Times
Monday 25 December 2006


    "Rumsfeld is no longer untouchable," says Wolfgang Kaleck, the German lawyer who filed the complaint along with the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights and the International Federation for Human Rights. "He is now deeply connected with claims of abuses and torture. We have taken the first step to begin the legal discussion on his accountability."

    The complaint against Rumsfeld, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, former CIA director George Tenet, and other senior civilian and military officials, was filed in mid-November on behalf of 11 Iraqis who had been detained at Abu Ghraib prison and Mohammed al-Qahtani, a Saudi detained at Guantánamo. It alleges that the defendants ordered, aided, and abetted war crimes and failed to prevent the commission of war crimes by their subordinates. In international law, war crimes are defined as grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions, including torture and inhuman treatment.

full article here.

How Old Is the Grand Canyon? Park Service Won't Say
PEER | Press Release
Thursday 28 December 2006


Orders to cater to creationists makes national park agnostic on geology.

    Washington, DC - Grand Canyon National Park is not permitted to give an official estimate of the geologic age of its principal feature, due to pressure from Bush administration appointees. Despite promising a prompt review of its approval for a book claiming the Grand Canyon was created by Noah's flood rather than by geologic forces, more than three years later no review has ever been done and the book remains on sale at the park, according to documents released today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER).

    "In order to avoid offending religious fundamentalists, our National Park Service is under orders to suspend its belief in geology," stated PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch. "It is disconcerting that the official position of a national park as to the geologic age of the Grand Canyon is 'no comment.'"

full article here.

Poll: More Troops Unhappy With Bush's Course in Iraq
By Robert Hodierne, Military Times
Friday 29 December 2006


    The American military - once a staunch supporter of President Bush and the Iraq war - has grown increasingly pessimistic about chances for victory, according to the 2006 Military Times Poll.

    For the first time, more troops disapprove of the president's handling of the war than approve of it. Barely one-third of service members approve of the way the president is handling the war.

    When the military was feeling most optimistic about the war - in 2004 - 83 percent of poll respondents thought success in Iraq was likely. This year, that number has shrunk to 50 percent.

full article here.

Turning Off the Digital World
By Bill Thompson, BBC News
Friday 15 December 2006


The increasing energy demands of the digital world need to be addressed if we are to avoid severe global warming, argues regular commentator Bill Thompson.

    This Christmas period offices will be empty of staff as the country shuts down for the extended celebration that has become the norm over the last few years.

    Many staff will head home from work on 22 December, not to return until 2 January.

    They'll leave behind the wreckage of the Christmas party, a pile of unopened mail and, if they are at all typical, a lot of glowing lights.

    Unfortunately, the lights won't be on the office Christmas tree but on the monitors, photocopiers, fax machines, phone rechargers and PCs that will be left on standby or, worse, turned on throughout the break.

    According to research carried out by office equipment supplier Canon, based on figures from the National Energy Foundation and Infosource, more than six million PCs will be left on over Christmas, consuming nearly forty million kilowatt hours of electricity.

full article here.

US Death Toll in Iraq Seen Spurring Anti-War Protests
By Carey Gillam, Reuters
Thursday 28 December 2006


    Kansas City, Missouri - In Kansas City, they will light candles and lay out more than 80 pairs of empty combat boots. In Chicago, anti-war activists will hand out black ribbons, each bearing the name of a U.S. soldier killed in Iraq.

    And in New Haven, Connecticut, opponents of the war plan to read aloud the names of 3,000 dead U.S. soldiers.

    In all, organizers say some 140 demonstrations in 37 states are planned to mark the 3,000th U.S. military death in Iraq, a milestone that is likely only days away. By Thursday, some 2,989 U.S. troops had died in Iraq since the start of the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003. Tens of thousands of Iraqis have been killed in the unrelenting violence.

full article here.

Military Draft System To Be Tested
CBS News
Friday 22 December 2006


    Washington - The Selective Service System is making plans to test its draft machinery in case Congress and President Bush need it, even though the White House says it doesn't want to bring back the draft.

full article here.

Iraq Civilian Deaths Hit New Record - Ministry
By Alastair Macdonald, Reuters
Monday 01 Janurary 2007


    Baghdad - The number of Iraqi civilians killed in political violence edged to a new record high in December after a big leap the previous month, data from Interior Ministry officials showed on Tuesday.

    The statistics, widely viewed as an indicative but only partial record of violent deaths, showed 12,320 civilians were killed in 2006 in what officials classified as "terrorist" violence - half of them in the last four months.

full article here.
Posted by Spunn at 12:12:58 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Friday, December 29, 2006

Media Focus on Climate Change

Just this past week and especially today ive noticed a surprising saturation of articles in the media relating to climate change and events that have taken place all over the world as evidence that not only is climate change real (which simply shouldnt be up for discussion anymore) but that it is in fact accellerating. (Some of these articles have been repeated from previous headline collections on this site.)

Climate Change vs. Mother Nature:
Scientists Reveal That Bears Have Stopped Hibernating

By Geneviève Roberts, The Independent UK
Thursday 21 December 2006

Bears have stopped hibernating in the mountains of northern Spain, scientists revealed yesterday, in what may be one of the strongest signals yet of how much climate change is affecting the natural world.

full article here.


Disappearing World: Global Warming Claims Tropical Island
By Geoffrey Lean, The Independent UK
Sunday 24 December 2006


For the first time, an inhabited island has disappeared beneath rising seas.

Rising seas, caused by global warming, have for the first time washed an inhabited island off the face of the Earth. The obliteration of Lohachara island, in India's part of the Sundarbans where the Ganges and the Brahmaputra rivers empty into the Bay of Bengal, marks the moment when one of the most apocalyptic predictions of environmentalists and climate scientists has started coming true.

full article here.


Giant ice island breaks off Arctic shelf
Guardian Unlimited
Friday December 29, 2006


An ice island the size of a small city is adrift in the Arctic after breaking free from one of Canada's largest ice shelves, scientists said today.

The island was part of the Ayles ice shelf, one of six major ice shelves in Canada's Arctic. Scientists believe the shelf's break-up - the largest of its kind in the Canadian Artic in 30 years - is the result of global warming.

full article here.


U.S. admits that polar bears are at risk
Caroline Alphonso, Globe & Mail
28/12/06


U.S. President George W. Bush's administration moved away from its steadfast refusal to recognize the effects of global warming yesterday, proposing to protect polar bears, whose habitat is threatened by the rapid melting of Arctic sea ice.

full article here.


Climate change causing loss of Thai coastline
2006-12-28

BANGKOK, Dec 28 (TNA) - Climate change-induced wind patterns has led to the erosion of up to 5 metres on average of coastal lands along the Andaman Sea and the Gulf of Thailand each year, according to a leading Thai expert on climate change.

full article here.

Posted by Spunn at 16:24:40 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Headlines!

FDA Set to OK Food From Cloned Animals
By Libby Quaid, The Associated Press
Thursday 28 December 2006


    Washington - The government has decided that food from cloned animals is safe to eat and does not require special labeling.

    The Food and Drug Administration planned to brief industry groups in advance of an announcement Thursday morning. The FDA indicated it would approve cloned livestock in a scientific journal article published online earlier this month.

    Consumer groups say labels are a must, because surveys have shown people to be uncomfortable with the idea of cloned livestock.

full article here.

FDA says food from clones is safe
Some critics say such products ought to bear a label. However, the agency's report does not address that issue.
By Karen Kaplan, Times Staff Writer
10:12 AM PST, December 29, 2006


    The Food and Drug Administration on Thursday formally endorsed the meat and milk from cloned cattle, pigs and goats as safe, but the agency's 678-page report failed to satisfy critics who cite concerns rooted in ethics, not science.

"Neither the agency nor animal scientists are qualified to tell us whether and when it is ethically acceptable for humans to alter the essential nature of animals," said Carol Tucker Foreman of Washington-based Consumer Federation of America's Food Policy Institute.

full article here.

Ten Simple Things You Can Do to Go Green
By Della De Lafuente, The Associated Press
Wednesday 27 December 2006


    Laurie David, who produced Al Gore's documentary about global warming, "An Inconvenient Truth," says saving the planet isn't about everyone doing everything.

    "It's about everyone doing something," said David, who is also the author of "Stop Global Warming: The Solution is You" and founder of the StopGlobalWarming.org Web site. "The impact of small actions by millions of people will be huge."

Group's Rejection of Consumerism Is Catching On
By Carolyn Jones, The San Francisco Chronicle
Wednesday 27 December 2006


3,000 people attempt to get by without buying new things.

    For Shawn Rosenmoss, the deal-breaker was a drill bit.

    John Perry's worst temptation was a plumber's snake for his clogged drain.

    Sarah Pelmas and Matt Eddy succumbed to the siren song of new white paint.

    But aside from the occasional hardware crises, the Compact - an ever-growing group who have vowed not to buy anything new except food, medicine and underwear - is going strong on its first anniversary.

    The Compact originated in December 2005 at a San Francisco dinner party, where guests decided to take recycling one step further and go for a year without new purchases. Consumerism, they said, is destroying the world and most of us already own far more than we need.

full articles here.

Climate Change vs. Mother Nature:
Scientists Reveal That Bears Have Stopped Hibernating
By Geneviève Roberts, The Independent UK
Thursday 21 December 2006


    Bears have stopped hibernating in the mountains of northern Spain, scientists revealed yesterday, in what may be one of the strongest signals yet of how much climate change is affecting the natural world.

full article here.

Former Bush Interior Secretary Takes Job as Attorney for Shell
By Todd Wilkinson, New West
Wednesday 27 December 2006


    Gale Norton is back providing oversight of energy development issues on public lands in the American West, this time as a key legal advisor for a major global oil company.

    Months after she resigned her cabinet post as President Bush's Interior Secretary-and then seemed to disappear from public view-the Coloradan apparently has accepted an offer to serve as counsel for Royal Dutch Shell PLC.

    Shell, one of the world's largest producers of oil, was also one of the companies that Norton's Interior Department routinely engaged on matters of drilling in sensitive ecological settings.

full article here.

Memorization, Standardized Tests, and Official Policy
By Jack Blatherwick, PhD, t r u t h o u t | Guest Contributor
Thursday 28 December 2006


    Teaching answers to standardized tests should not be called "education," especially when problem-solving will be the most important tool for a generation of students destined to inherit the incredible problems we will leave as our legacy.

    To repeat the answers we feed is at best, preparing future "patriots" for greater acceptance of official policy. The consequences of this blind trust have become painfully apparent. Our government spent millions of dollars on propaganda to sell a peace-loving populace on an illegal invasion of a sovereign country.

full article here.

Judge Weighs Torture Claim Vs. Rumsfeld
By Matt Apuzzo, The Associated Press
Friday 08 December 2006

    Washington - A federal judge on Friday appeared reluctant to give Donald H. Rumsfeld immunity from torture allegations, yet said it would be unprecedented to let the departing defense secretary face a civil trial.

    "What you're asking for has never been done before," U.S. District Judge Thomas F. Hogan told lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union.

    The group is suing on behalf of nine former prisoners in Iraq and Afghanistan. The lawsuit contends the men were beaten, suspended upside down from the ceiling by chains, urinated on, shocked, sexually humiliated, burned, locked inside boxes and subjected to mock executions.

    If the suit were to go forward, it could force Rumsfeld and the Pentagon to disclose what officials knew about abuses at prisons such as Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq and what was done to stop it.

full article here.

Repeat Iraq Tours Raise Risk of PTSD, Army Finds
By Ann Scott Tyson, The Washington Post
Wednesday 20 December 2006


    U.S. soldiers serving repeated Iraq deployments are 50 percent more likely than those with one tour to suffer from acute combat stress, raising their risk of post-raumatic stress disorder, according to the Army's first survey exploring how today's multiple war-zone rotations affect soldiers' mental health.

full article here.

US Marines Charged in Haditha Murder Case
By Josh White, The Washington Post
Thursday 21 December 2006


Men allegedly had roles in deaths of at least two dozen Iraqi civilians.

    Four U.S. Marines were charged with multiple counts of murder today for their alleged roles in the deaths of two dozen civilians in the Iraqi town of Haditha last year, setting up what could be the highest-profile atrocity prosecution so far arising from the Iraq war.

full article here.

Raul Castro Urges Students to Debate "Fearlessly"
By Manuel Roig-Franzia, The Washington Post
Friday 22 December 2006

    Mexico City - Raul Castro has set a surprising new tone for Cuban politics, telling university students in Havana that they should debate "fearlessly" and bring their concerns directly to him.

full article here.
Posted by Spunn at 15:28:06 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Global warming claims island, FDA downsizes, Army may recruit foreigners.

Disappearing World: Global Warming Claims Tropical Island
By Geoffrey Lean, The Independent UK
Sunday 24 December 2006

For the first time, an inhabited island has disappeared beneath rising seas.

    Rising seas, caused by global warming, have for the first time washed an inhabited island off the face of the Earth. The obliteration of Lohachara island, in India's part of the Sundarbans where the Ganges and the Brahmaputra rivers empty into the Bay of Bengal, marks the moment when one of the most apocalyptic predictions of environmentalists and climate scientists has started coming true.

full article here.


FDA Lab Closure Plan Endangers Public, Watchdogs Say
By Michelle Chen, The NewStandard
Friday 22 December 2006

    The Food and Drug Administration is aiming to cut back its research infrastructure at a time when critics say monitoring and regulation are more crucial than ever.

    According to materials released Thursday by the watchdog group Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER), the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), in an effort to streamline its operations, is now looking to downsize its laboratories.

    The FDA runs a nationwide system of laboratories, with locations in San Francisco, Detroit, New York City and other areas. These labs help investigate and monitor public-health issues like food contamination and drug safety.

full article here.


Military Considers Recruiting Foreigners
By Bryan Bender, The Boston Globe
Tuesday 26 December 2006

Expedited citizenship would be an incentive.

    Washington - The armed forces, already struggling to meet recruiting goals, are considering expanding the number of noncitizens in the ranks - including disputed proposals to open recruiting stations overseas and putting more immigrants on a faster track to US citizenship if they volunteer - according to Pentagon officials.

    Foreign citizens serving in the US military is a highly charged issue, which could expose the Pentagon to criticism that it is essentially using mercenaries to defend the country. Other analysts voice concern that a large contingent of noncitizens under arms could jeopardize national security or reflect badly on Americans' willingness to serve in uniform.

full article here.

Posted by Spunn at 13:03:14 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Sunday, December 24, 2006

Canadian Mining Headlines

Canadian Diamonds Not Conflict-Free
Many issues to be addressed, says First Nations leader
By Joan Delaney, Epoch Times Victoria Staff
Dec 15, 2006

An Ontario First Nations group is launching a campaign to persuade Americans not to buy diamonds mined in Canada. The group maintains that because of ongoing  aboriginal rights and environmental concerns, many Canadian diamonds come with a hidden cost.

Alvin Fiddler, Deputy Grand Chief of the Nishnawbe Aski Nation who represents 49 First Nations communities in northern Ontario, said De Beers Canada plans to develop massive open pit diamond mining projects on their traditional lands without honouring treaty rights or undertaking consultations.

full article here.

CANADIAN MINING PERSPECTIVES: VIEWPOINT – Taking lead off the toxic list
Marilyn Scales
12/13/2006
 
Regulators in the U.S. are pondering whether lead should be removed from a list of regulated pollutants. Have toxins in the air affected their thinking?
 
Lead has been linked to learning difficulties in children and ill health in adults. Before it was placed on the list of regulated pollutants, lead used to be added to gasoline, paint, household plumbing, and a wide range of items used every day by consumers.
 
full article here.
Posted by Spunn at 14:56:30 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Friday, December 22, 2006

Collection of Recent Headlines

Bush "Developing Illegal Bioterror Weapons" for Offensive Use
By Sherwood Ross, t r u t h o u t | Guest Contributor
Wednesday 20 December 2006


In violation of the US Code and international law, the Bush administration is spending more money (in inflation-adjusted dollars) to develop illegal, offensive germ warfare than the $2 billion spent in World War II on the Manhattan Project to make the atomic bomb.

So says Francis Boyle, the professor of international law who drafted the Biological Weapons Anti-Terrorism Act of 1989 enacted by Congress. He states the Pentagon "is now gearing up to fight and 'win' biological warfare" pursuant to two Bush national strategy directives adopted "without public knowledge and review" in 2002.
 
full article here.

Iraqi Women's Bodies Are Battlefields for War Vendettas
By Kavita N. Ramdas, Global Fund for Women
Tuesday 19 December 2006


The United States' so-called "liberation" of Iraqi women has made them less free than they were under the Baathist regime, with abduction, rape, and "honor" killings now a daily reality.

The Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq (OWFI) recently issued a frightening report documenting the growing practice of public executions of women by Shia Militia. One of the report's more grisly accounts was a story of a young woman dragged by a wire wound around her neck to a close-by football field and then hung to the goal post. They pierced her body with bullets. Her brother came running trying to defend his sister. He was also shot and killed. Sunni extremists are no better: OWFI members estimate that no less than 30 women are executed monthly for honor related reasons.

full article here.

Pentagon Eyes $468.9 Billion Budget for 2008
By Andrea Shalal-Esa and Jim Wolf, Reuters
Friday 15 December 2006

Washington - The White House has approved a $468.9 billion budget for the Pentagon in fiscal year 2008, a six-percent increase over last year's request, according to a Defense Department document obtained by Reuters.

It is also asking the Pentagon to cover some Army and Marine Corps war costs in Iraq and Afghanistan as part of the regular budget, rather than through emergency budget requests.

The 2008 budget request is $4.7 billion more than the level the Pentagon forecast in its 2007 budget documents. 
 
full article here.

Despite a $168 Billion Budget, Army Faces Cash Crunch
By Greg Jaffe, The Wall Street Journal
Tuesday 12 December 2006


Fort Stewart, Georgia - With just six weeks before they leave for Iraq, the 3,500 soldiers from the Third Infantry Division's First Brigade should be learning about Ramadi, the insurgent stronghold where they will spend a year.

Many of the troops don't even know the basic ethnic makeup of the largely Sunni city. "We haven't spent as much time as I would like on learning the local culture, language, and politics - all the stuff that takes a while to really get good at," says Lt. Col. Clifford Wheeler, who commands one of the brigade's 800-soldier units.

Instead, the troops are learning to use equipment that commanders say they should ideally have been training with since the spring. Many soldiers only recently received their new M-4 rifles and rifle sights, which are in short supply because of an Army-wide cash crunch. Some still lack their machine guns or long-range surveillance systems, which are used to spot insurgents laying down roadside bombs. They've been told they'll pick up most of that when they get to Iraq.

The strains here at Fort Stewart - one of the busiest posts in the U.S. military - are apparent throughout the Army. They spotlight a historic predicament: The Iraq war has exposed more than a decade's worth of mistakes and miscalculations that are now seriously undermining the world's mightiest military force.
 
full article here.

Showdown Looms Over Domestic Spying
By David Kravets, The Associated Press
Sunday 17 December 2006


San Francisco - Federal agents continue to eavesdrop on Americans' electronic communications without warrants a year after President Bush confirmed the practice, and experts say a new Congress' efforts to limit the program could trigger a constitutional showdown.
 
full article here.

China's River Dolphin Declared Extinct
By Andrew C. Revkin
Sunday 17 December 2006


The first species to be erased from this planet's great and ancient Order of Cetaceans in modern times is not one of the charismatic sea mammals that have long been the focus of conservation campaigns, like the sperm whale or bottlenose dolphin.

It appears to be the baiji, a white, nearly blind denizen of the Yangtze River in China.

On Wednesday, an expedition in search of any baiji, run by Chinese biologists and baiji.org, a Swiss foundation, ended empty-handed after six weeks of patrolling its onetime waters in the middle and lower stretches of the river, the baiji's only known habitat.
 
full article here.

Corporate Agribusiness Is Behind Our Deadly Food Supply
By Sally Kohn, AlterNet.org
Monday 18 December 2006


First it was spinach. Now it's green onions at the Taco Bell. What's next? The growing anxiety over our nation's food supply is enough to make you chew your nails - unless of course they're contaminated with E. coli as well. Is nothing safe?

In the United States today, 80 percent of beef is slaughtered by four companies, 75 percent of pre-cut salad mixes are processed by two companies and 30 percent of milk is processed by just one company. Most of our fresh produce comes from the same region of California where the contaminated spinach and now green onions were grown. During off seasons, up to 70 percent of the produce sold in the United States comes from other countries.

Globalization has meant that, with the click of a button, we can connect with people and places halfway across the country or the world. But rather than just exchanging ideas and cultures, we've increasingly come to depend on the rest of the world for our consumption of goods, services, energy - and food. With the speed of clicking a button, an E. coli outbreak in California or China can threaten our entire food supply and risk a widespread pandemic.

Gone are the days of family farms, which would produce sustainable, healthy food that also fed the local economy. Today, a staggering 330 farmers abandon farming each week. In the 1930s, there were over seven million family farms in our country. Today, roughly two million remain.
 
full article here.

Environmental Group Offers Road Map to Curb Global Warming
The Associated Press
Monday 18 December 2006


Rockport, Maine - A regional environmental group Monday released a comprehensive "climate change roadmap" to reduce pollution linked to global warming by 75 percent in the northeastern United States and eastern Canada.

Environment Northeast said the proposals included in the 275-page plan draw from many of the best practices already found within the region, including Massachusetts's use of low-emission, hybrid buses and Maine's requirement that new state buildings exceed energy codes by 20 percent.
 
full article here.

Women Lose Ground in the New Iraq
By Nancy Trejos, The Washington Post
Saturday 16 December 2006


Baghdad - Browsing the shelves of a cosmetics store in the Karrada shopping district, Zahra Khalid felt giddy at the sight of Alberto shampoo and Miss Rose eye shadow, blusher and powder.

Before leaving her house, she had covered her body in a billowing black abaya and wrapped a black head scarf around her thick brown hair. She had asked her brother to drive. She had done all the things that a woman living in Baghdad is supposed to do these days to avoid drawing attention to herself.

It was the first time she had left home in two months.

"For a woman, it's just like being in jail," she said. "I can't go anywhere."
 
full article here.

US Not Winning War in Iraq, Bush Says for 1st Time
By Peter Baker, The Washington Post
Wednesday 20 December 2006


President Bush acknowledged for the first time yesterday that the United States is not winning the war in Iraq and said he plans to expand the overall size of the "stressed" U.S. armed forces to meet the challenges of a long-term global struggle against terrorists.

As he searches for a new strategy for Iraq, Bush has adopted the formula advanced by his top military adviser to describe the situation. "We're not winning, we're not losing," Bush said in an interview with The Washington Post. The assessment was a striking reversal for a president who, days before the November elections, declared, "Absolutely, we're winning."
 
full article here.

Neo-Cons Wanted Israel to Attack Syria
By Jim Lobe, Inter Press Service
Tuesday 19 December 2006


Washington - Neo-conservative hawks in and outside the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush had hoped that Israel would attack Syria during last summer's Lebanon war, according to a newly published interview with a prominent neo-conservative whose spouse is a top Middle East adviser in Vice President Dick Cheney's office.

Meyrav Wurmser, who is herself the director of the Centre for Middle East Policy at the Hudson Institute here, reportedly told Yitzhak Benhorin of the Ynet website that a successful attack by Israel on Damascus would have dealt a mortal blow to the insurgency in Iraq.

full article here.

Darfur: Genocide Without Borders
By Peter Boehm, The Independent UK
Wednesday 20 December 2006

As anarchy spreads, rampaging militias bring death and carnage to refugees in neighbouring Chad.

The village is still smouldering. A girl combs through the remains of a burnt-down hut with her bare hands, trying to salvage knife blades and rakes that were not consumed by the fire. Two women, with tears in their eyes, have broken down in front of a pile of ash, wailing violently.

A band of youths is patrolling the ruins near Koukou-Angarana, bows and arrows slung over their shoulders, boomerangs and knives at the ready. But their decision to form a self-defence group has come too late. The Arab horsemen who swept through the village on their bloody rampage have long since vanished.

It is a tragically familiar scene in Darfur, the province of western Sudan where more than 200,000 people have been killed and at least two million brutally forced from their homes - a genocide unleashed and sustained by the Islamist government in Khartoum - but this man-made inferno now sweeping across the plains is taking place across the Sudanese border in Chad. The pattern is identical to events in Darfur, where the well-armed Arab raiders allied to the Sudanese government set villages ablaze, rape the women, and leave a trail of dead black Africans in their wake. Just as in Darfur, the Sudanese government is being accused of being behind the violence in Chad, an accusation which is rejected by Khartoum.
 
full article here.

Pentagon Wants $99.7 Billion More for Wars
By Andrew Taylor, The Associated Press
Wednesday 20 December 2006


Washington - The Pentagon wants the White House to seek an additional $99.7 billion to fund the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to information provided to The Associated Press.

The military's request, if embraced by President Bush and approved by Congress, would boost this year's budget for those wars to about $170 billion.
 
full article here.

High IQ Linked to Being Vegetarian
BBC News
Friday 15 December 2006


Intelligent children are more likely to become vegetarians later in life, a study says. A Southampton University team found those who were vegetarian by 30 had recorded five IQ points more on average at the age of 10.

Researchers said it could explain why people with higher IQ were healthier as a vegetarian diet was linked to lower heart disease and obesity rates.

The study of 8,179 was reported in the British Medical Journal.
 
full article here.

Wal-Mart Wins Ruling on Foreign Labor
Bloomberg News
Tuesday 19 December 2006


Wal-Mart Stores cannot be held liable under United States law for labor conditions at some of its overseas suppliers, a federal judge has ruled.
 
full article here.
Posted by Spunn at 16:28:34 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Saturday, December 16, 2006

Troops want out; Iraqi unions against oil privitization; Starbucks fucks ethiopia

About Face: Soldiers Call for Iraq Withdrawal
By Marc Cooper, The Nation
Saturday 16 December 2006


For the first time since Vietnam, an organized, robust movement of active-duty US military personnel has publicly surfaced to oppose a war in which they are serving. Those involved plan to petition Congress to withdraw American troops from Iraq.

full article here.
Iraq Unions Against Oil Privatization
Earthtimes.org
Friday 15 December 2006


Amman, Jordan - Five Iraqi trade union federations have condemned federal oil law negotiations for being too corporation-friendly.

The leaders of the five federations meeting in Amman released a statement Thursday urging a pause in negotiations over a law to govern Iraq's 115 billion barrels of oil reserves, the third largest in the world.
full article here.
Starbucks Against Ethiopia
By Eric Leser, Le Monde
Thursday 14 December 2006


Coffee is by far Ethiopia's main resource. It represents between 40 and 60 percent of the country's exports and assures the survival of about 15 million people, essentially the families of poor farmers. In an attempt to increase its income and protect itself from the catastrophic collapse of prices, like the one that took place between 2000 and 2003, Addis Ababa is trying to register the brand names for the regions where its most well-known coffees - Sidamo, Yirgacheffe, and Harar - are produced, much the way cognac or Roquefort are registered.

But Ethiopia runs up against Starbucks. The multinational makes liberal use of Ethiopian names to sell its beverages and does not want to hear about paying for trademarks. Oxfam, the English organization that preaches fair trade, has accused the American group for months of depriving Ethiopian farmers of at least $90 million of additional income per year. "Harar and Sidamo coffees are sold for as much as $24 to $26 a pound by Starbucks. The farmers who grow them
receive between 60 cents and $1.10 per pound," explains Oxfam's Seth Petchers.
full article here.
Posted by Spunn at 13:15:58 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Friday, September 29, 2006

recent headlines and a jon stewart video :)

Senate Democrats Criticize Bush, Rumsfeld
By Bill Brubaker, Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, September 29, 2006; 1:54 PM


Senate Democrats today seized upon revelations in a new book by Bob Woodward, saying it offers compelling evidence that President Bush has misled the public about the war in Iraq.

"We've got a continuing state of denial in a president," said Sen. Carl Levin (Mich.), a reference to the title of the book, "State of Denial."

Woodward's book makes it clear that Bush "took us to war without a plan, conducted war incompetently," Levin said, appearing at a Capitol Hill news conference with other Senate Democrats.

full article here.

US-Iran Shootout Is Inevitable
by Leon Hadar
September 23, 2006


[excerpt]"Did (Bush) challenge the Iranian bomb program before the world?" he asked. "He did not. He said nothing about it. There will be no UN action, no Security Council sanctions, nothing." And Mr. Frum concluded: "America's dwindling list of Iran options has dwindled further to just two: unilateral military action without any semblance of international approval to pre-empt the Iranian bomb program – or acquiescence in that program."

[excerpt]But investigative journalist Seymour Hersh and other analysts have reported that President Bush and his aides have already ordered the US military to prepare for operation against Iran's nuclear military sites and have also been providing assistance to Iranian exile groups. Indeed, retired Air Force colonel Sam Gardiner, interviewed on CNN, said the Bush administration had already given a "go ahead" to US military operation against Iran.

[excerpt]"In fact, we've probably been executing military operations inside Iran for at least 18 months," Col. Gardner said. "The evidence is overwhelming."

full article here.

Global warming law, challenges and related bills at a glance
Associated Press

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on Wednesday signed the nation's first statewide cap on greenhouse gas emissions. It was one of several bills related to global warming that was approved by the Democrat-controlled Legislature this year. A universal cap will have the greatest effect on industries such as power plants, refineries and cement makers.

full article and list can be found here.


The Rumsfeld Test
Is Washington's strategy killing terrorists faster than it creates them?

Ludwig De Braeckeleer
Published 2006-09-28 07:20 (KST)


On Sunday, U.S. media revealed that a classified National Intelligence estimate asserts that the war in Iraq has worsened the threat of Global terrorism and contributes to the spread of Islamic Radicalism.

In the past, fearing to be perceived as weak on security issues, Democrats had refrained from criticizing Bush's strategy concerning the war in Iraq and the fight against Global Terrorism. But things are changing.

Over the last three days, they have used the document as an opportunity to denounce the debacle in Iraq and the failure of the fight against Global Terrorism.

"Every intelligence analyst I speak to confirms that the Iraq war had contributed to the increased terrorist threat," said Representative Jane Harman of California, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee. "Even capturing the remaining top Al Qaeda leadership isn't going to prevent copycat cells, and it isn't going to change a failed policy in Iraq."

full article here.

Stewart Goes After Bush’s Naivete

The Daily Show host has the perfect rejoinder to Bush’s assertion, regarding the national intelligence estimate, that war critics are “naive.”

watch it here

Posted by Spunn at 16:18:22 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |
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