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Aug 30, 2007
The War Criminal in the Living Room
by Paul Craig Roberts

The media is silent, Congress is absent, and Americans are distracted as George W. Bush openly prepares aggression against Iran.

US Navy aircraft carrier strike forces are deployed off Iran.

US Air Force jets and missile systems are deployed in bases in countries bordering or near to Iran.

US B-2 stealth bombers have been refitted to carry 30,000 pound "bunker buster" bombs.

The US government is financing terrorist and separatist groups within Iran.

US Special Forces teams are conducting terrorist operations inside Iran.

US war doctrine has been altered to permit first strike nuclear attack on Iran and other non-nuclear countries.

Bush's war threats against Iran have intensified during the course of this year. The American people are being fed a repeat of the lies used to justify naked aggression against Iraq.

Bush is too self-righteous to see the dark humor in his denunciations of Iran for threatening "the security of nations everywhere" and of the Iraqi resistance for "a vision that rejects tolerance, crushes all dissent, and justifies the murder of innocent men, women, and children in the pursuit of political power." Those are precisely the words that most of the world applies to Bush and his Brownshirt administration. The Pew Foundation's world polls show that despite all the American and Israeli propaganda against Iran, the US and Israel are regarded as no less threats to world stability than demonized Iran.

Bush has discarded habeas corpus and the Geneva Conventions, justified torture and secret trials, damned critics as anti-American, and is responsible, according to Information Clearing House, for over one million deaths of Iraqi civilians, which puts Bush high on the list of mass murderers of all time. The vast majority of "kills" by the US military in Iraq and Afghanistan are civilians.

Now Bush wants to murder more. We have to kill Iranians "over there," Bush says, "before they come over here." There is no possibility that Iranians or any Muslims who have no air force, no navy, no modern military technology are going to "come over here," and no indication that they plan to do so. The Muslims are disunited and have been for centuries. That is what makes them vulnerable to colonial rule. If Muslims were united, the US would already have lost its army in Iraq. Indeed, it would not have been able to put an army in Iraq.

Meanwhile the US media focuses on whether Republican Senator Larry Craig is a homosexual or has offended gays by denying to be one of them. The run-up for the public's attention is why a South Carolina beauty queen cannot answer a simple question about why her generation is unable to find the United States on a map.

The war criminal is in the living room, and no official notice is taken of the fact.

Lacking US troops with which to invade Iran, the Bush administration has decided to bomb Iran "back into the stone age." Punishing air and missile attacks have been designed not merely to destroy Iran's nuclear energy projects, but also to destroy the public infrastructure, the economy, and the ability of the government to function.

Encouraged by the indifference of both the American media and Christian churches to the massive casualties inflicted on Iraqi civilians, the Bush administration will not be deterred by the prospect of its air attacks inflicting massive casualties on Iranian civilians. Last summer the Bush administration demonstrated to the entire world its total disdain for Muslim life when Bush supported Israel's month-long air attack on Lebanese civilian infrastructure and civilian residences. President Bush blocked the attempt by the rest of the world to halt the gratuitous murder of Lebanese civilians and infrastructure destruction. Clearly, turning the Muslim Middle East into a wasteland is the Bush policy. For Bush, civilian casualties are a non-issue. Hegemony uber alles.

The Bush administration has made its war plans for attacking Iran and positioned its forces without any prior approval from Congress. The "unitary executive" obviously doesn't believe that an attack on Iran requires the approval of Congress. By its absence and quietude, Congress seems to agree that it has no role in the decision.

In the improbable event that Congress were to make any fuss about Bush's decision to attack yet another country, the State Department has devised legalistic cover: simply declare Iran's military to be a "terrorist organization" and go to war under the cover of the existing resolution.

The "Iran issue" has been created by the Bush administration, not by Iran. Iran, like many other countries, has a nuclear energy program to which it is entitled as a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Inspectors of the International Atomic Energy Agency have found no evidence of a nuclear weapons program in Iran.

The Bush administration has brushed away this fact, which should be determining, just as the Bush administration brushed away the fact that weapons inspectors reported, prior to Bush's invasion of Iraq, that there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.

The Bush administration managed to disrupt the work of the pesky IAEA weapons inspectors in Iran. Iran has been working successfully with the IAEA and has achieved what a senior IAEA official recently described as a milestone agreement. The Bush administration instantly went to work to discredit the agreement and unleashed its new lapdog, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, to threaten "the bombing of Iran."

The Bush administration's position is legally untenable and is really nothing but a contrived excuse to start another war. Bush claims that Iran, alone among all the signatories of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, must be denied its right under the pact to develop nuclear energy, because Iran, alone among all the other signatories, will be the only country able to deceive the IAEA inspectors and develop nuclear weapons. Therefore, Iran must be denied its rights under the agreement.

Bush's position on the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty is as legally untenable as his position on every other issue – the Geneva Conventions, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, habeas corpus, the constitutional separation of powers, and presidential signing statements that he cavalierly attaches to new laws in order to override the legislative power of Congress. Bush's position is that the meaning of laws and treaties varies with his needs of the moment.

Bush has declared himself to be the "decider." The "decider" decides whether Americans have any rights under the Constitution and whether Iran has any rights under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. As the "decider" has decided that Iran has no such rights, the "decider" decides whether to attack Iran. No one else has any say about it. The people's representatives are just so much chaff in the wind.

Whatever form of government Bush is operating under, it is far outside an accountable constitutional democratic government. Bush has transitioned America to caesarism, and even if Bush leaves office in January 2009, the powers he has accumulated in the executive will remain. Unless Bush and Cheney are impeached and convicted, there is no prospect of the US Congress and federal judiciary ever again being co-equal branches of government.

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Posted: Aug 30, 2007 10:32pm
Dec 15, 2006
Please go check out these really cool cartoons by Stephanie McMillan. This is great stuff!

http://www.minimumsecurity.net/index.htm

 
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Posted: Dec 15, 2006 4:54pm
Aug 5, 2006
http://www.noanie.com/



Please show your support for our wounded soldiers at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center
(LRMC), Germany. 

Landstuhl Regional Medical Center (LRMC), the largest American hospital outside the United States, is where the majority of our wounded soldiers are directly transferred to from the field while serving in the Middle East, Persian Gulf areas and Europe.  Wounded soldiers arrive daily...  

Requested items:

Burger King Certificates
(there's a BK near the hospital)  
International Calling Cards

Sweatsuits: small through extra large 

Athletic Shoes: men sizes 9-12, women's 6-9 
Men's & women's fall & winter jackets medium through extra large 
Ruck sacks, gym bags, and small suitcases
for clothing storage 
DVD's movies to put in the hospital wards so they can watch movies 

Only new items are being accepted. Pastoral services staff are also now asking for CHECKS to "USAREUR Chaplains Fund" so they can help the wounded get personal items. If you can not send any of the above, please send letters of support, get well cards, thinking of you etc. Click here for Military mailing restrictions that apply to this address. 
MAIL TO:

Mail to address to left                    Landstuhl Regional Medical Center 
               Pastoral Services Department 
               US Hospital 
               CMR 402 
               APO AE 09180
If you are unable to purchase or mail anything, prayers are very much appreciated!  Read the THANK-YOU letter from Landstuhl here!

You can also send letters and cards to Walter Reed Army Medical Center
 
Send cards and letters to wounded soldiers at the address below:  

Medical Family Assistance Center
Walter Reed Medical Center
6900 Georgia Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20307-5001 

  More links to sites that help wounded soldiers in blue box below. Also see VETS

The Wounded Warrior Project,   supporting our wounded soldiers.

Operation Patriot Down  help alleviate financial burden of military families of wounded soldiers.

Fallen Patriot Fund
was established to help families of U.S. military personnel who were killed or seriously injured during Operation Iraqi Freedom. 

Homes for disabled soldiers HomesForOur Troops.org assists injured veterans and their immediate families by building new or adapting existing homes for handicapped accessibility for these American heroes.


Salute America's Heroes helps our severely wounded and disabled veterans and their families rebuild their lives.

Army Disabled Soldier Support System (DS3) Initiative that provides its severely disabled Soldiers and their families with a system of advocacy,  follow-up, personal support to assist them as they transition from military service to the civilian community.

Injured Marine Semper Fi Fund provides financial grants and other assistance to the Marines, sailors, and families of those injured serving our nation

Cause: Comfort for America's Uniformed Services Elite provides personal-use, comfort items to military service personnel undergoing medical treatment and/or recuperating in gov hospitals, rehab facilities.

Injured Solider Foundation

Azalea Charities Aid to Wounded Soldiers project provides comfort and relief items for soldiers and Marines sick, injured or wounded from service in Iraq and Afghanistan. Donated items are distributed to soldiers and Marines at Walter Reed Army Medical Center and the National Naval Medical Center Bethesda each week.

Angels of Mercy & No Soldier Left In Need "Angels of Mercy" Program focuses on the current needs of our OIF/OEF wounded and injured, and their families while at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. “No Soldier Left In Need” Project focuses on the long-term needs of our OIF/OEF wounded & injured & their families.

Bold Brave Courageous comfort items for injured Military Personnel returned from Afghanistan and Iraq.



SPECIAL REQUESTS FROM OUR TROOPS...  

*See pics of school that recently sent packages to our troops!


Due to heightened security and safety concerns
we are now asking that you please include your full name, your home address, and your phone number when requesting a units' address. Emails requesting unit's addresses that do not provide complete info (name, address, number) will not be responded to. Please do not give the addresses out to third parties (for example, do not post the addresses in a public place, give out to people or ask catalog companies to mail catalogs to troops etc). Please remember to click links provided for mailing restrictions and to include the unit's name in the subject line. Please allow up to a week to hear back from Noanie. NEW! You can also email Noanie with your name, address, phone # and ask for "the unit that could use the most help" by clicking here.  Some units get lots of requests while others don't so we have added this option. Thanks for showing your support!   


UNIT IN IRAQ REQUEST SUPPORT

Our unit really needs your help and we need support. We're at a tiny px and the guys are having to work very long days. Some are only getting 4 hours of sleep. PLEASE SEND:

-bug spray
-any snack food
-mini fans to cool down with including the batteries
-lip sunscreen and lip balm
-calling cards they have AT@T phones
-deodorant
-soap
-wipies
-bug coils
-newspapers
-magazines
-razors or some bath hygiene kits

Thank you for all your support of our troops!
Click here for Military mailing restrictions then email Noanie at operationbandaid@yahoo.com and include your full name, your home address, and your phone number when requesting the unit's address. Please include "4 Hours Sleep" in the subject of the email and allow up to a week to hear back from Noanie. 

Alaska National Guard REQUEST SUPPORT

We are deployed in Iraq and need junk food, anything fattening, cup of noodles, Twinkies, Tang, Ding Dongs, etc. Click here for Military mailing restrictions then email Noanie at operationbandaid@yahoo.com and include your full name, your home address, and your phone number when requesting the unit's address. Please include "Alaska National Guard" in the subject of the email and allow up to a week to hear back from Noanie. 

27th Transportation Battalion
REQUEST SUPPORT

We are a transportation detachment who track convoys leaving our camp as well as track cargo throughout Kuwait and Iraq. We work 12 hour shifts, 7 days a week. We are 14 male soldiers and 1 female soldier. We would like to receive all kinds of snacks, personal hygiene items i.e. shampoo, conditioner, liquid soap, tooth brushes, toothpaste, cotton swabs, foot powder etc. We will be here until September '06.
Click here for Military mailing restrictions then email Noanie at operationbandaid@yahoo.com and include your full name, your home address, and your phone number when requesting the unit's address. Please include "27th Battalion" in the subject of the email and allow up to a week to hear back from Noanie. 


1st Brigade Iraq request support


I am from 1st Brigade 10th Mountain Division based at Fort Drum, Ny we are currently deployed to Baghdad Iraq. I am a Medical Operations Officer and my section has 15 people in it 5 females and 10 males. We would love to receive care packages, toiletries (liquid body soap, lotions, etc) junk food and magazines even old ones would be greatly appreciated. Click here for Military mailing restrictions then email Noanie at operationbandaid@yahoo.com and include your full name, your home address, and your phone number when requesting the unit's address. Please include "1st Brigade" in the subject of the email and allow up to a week to hear back from Noanie. 

IRONDOGS ALPHA UNIT NEAR BAGHDAD REQUEST SUPPORT

This unit is from Fort Campbell, KY deployed to the outskirts of Baghdad.  The unit consist of 82 males and 6 females.  Their wish list consist of food items, drink mixes, magazines and phone cards.  With great emphasis on the phone cards.  Click here for Military mailing restrictions that apply to this unit then email Noanie at operationbandaid@yahoo.com and include your full name, your home address, and your phone number when requesting the unit's address. Please include "IronDogs" in the subject of the email. Please allow up to a week to hear back from Noanie. 

IF YOUR UNIT WOULD LIKE TO RECEIVE LETTERS & PACKAGES, email operationbandaid@yahoo.com and include info about your unit, a detailed list of items needed, how long your unit will be stationed at the location, the name, email address and mailing address of the person who will be responsible for distributing the letters and packages to your unit. A photo of the unit would be appreciated. We would very much like to hear from you monthly (if possible) to give us updates and feedback that we can share on the site. 


Check military care package restrictions below

 Military Care package restrictions

What are the restrictions for your APO/FPO Zipcode?
(Restrictions check courtesy of http://oconus.com)

 

VETERANS, POWs, MIAs      TOP

VETERANS
Send a free e-card to a hospitalized veteran
The VA
VA Benefits - Operations Enduring Freedom & Iraqi Freedom Vets
 
AMERICAN VETERANS OF THE WAR IN IRAQ & AFGHANISTAN
Iraq War Veterans Organization
Iraq Veterans Against The War
Kitchen Table Gang  - Veterans helping hospitalized veterans
Disabled American Veterans
Paralyzed Veterans of America
Vets First: Assisting Veterans with Spinal Cord Injuries 
My Health E Vet
Gulf War Illness
Support board for vets who suffering from PTSD
Veteran's Help Network
Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW)
The American Legion
Vets For Justice
American Veterans for Equal Rights Supporting LGBT Vets
Center for Women Veterans
Vietnam Women's Memorial Foundation
Military Women Online
Helmets to Hardhats places vets into building / construction careers
National Coalition for Homeless Vets
Gulf War Vets Desert Storm Desert Shield Memorial Drive
Children of Vietnam Vets Webring
U.S. Military Veteran Locator - VetFriends.com

POW MIA

Operation Just Cause Webring (100s of websites listed)
Operation Carry The Flame - Veteran's rights POW*MIA 
ALL POW- MIA: Prisoners of War & Missing in Action, from ALL wars. 
The Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office
Coalition of Families of Korean & Cold War POW/MIAs
Federal Research Division - POW/MIA Home Page
Task Force Omega, Inc
Facts and Points in the POW/MIA Issue
Lima Site 85
National Alliance of Families For The Return of America's Missing Servicemen
POW/MIA FOIA Litigation Account
Three's In Official home page Vietnam era Prisoners of War (1961-1973)

About Noanie                                                       TOP

WE CAN DO IT! Help Wounded Soldiers - Click for larger photoNoanie's project (Operation Band Aid) is to spread the word on how to help our troops overseas, how to "visit" our wounded... 

Thank you everyone for caring for our troops, they need our prayers, support and love.....  Love to you all, Noanie 
 

Support our Troops! Together we CAN do it!  
For more info about Noanie, click here.

         

                                                                             TOP

If you have a success story
about how you have helped our wounded troops or sent packages to deployed troops listed under special requests that you would like listed at our site or know of other programs, websites that help our troops, click webmaster.  NOTE:
Please include NOANIE.com in the subject line of all corresponsdence to the webmaster.  Thank-you!

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Posted: Aug 5, 2006 9:43am
Jun 13, 2006
Baghdad Burning

... I'll meet you 'round the bend my friend, where hearts can heal and souls can mend...

Saturday, June 10, 2006

Zarqawi...
So 'Zarqawi' is finally dead. It was an interesting piece of news that greeted us yesterday morning (or was it the day before? I've lost track of time&hellip. I didn't bother with the pictures and film they showed of him because I, personally, have been saturated with images of broken, bleeding bodies.

The reactions have been different. There's a general consensus amongst family and friends that he won't be missed, whoever he is. There is also doubt- who was he really? Did he even exist? Was he truly the huge terror the Americans made him out to be? When did he actually die? People swear he was dead back in 2003… The timing is extremely suspicious: just when people were getting really fed up with the useless Iraqi government, Zarqawi is killed and Maliki is hailed the victorious leader of the occupied world! (And no- Iraqis aren't celebrating in the streets- worries over electricity, water, death squads, tests, corpses and extremists in high places prevail right now.)

I've been listening to reactions- mostly from pro-war politicians and the naïveté they reveal is astounding. Maliki (the current Iraqi PM) was almost giddy as he made the news public (he had even gone the extra mile and shaved!). Do they really believe it will end the resistance against occupation? As long as foreign troops are in Iraq, resistance or 'insurgency' will continue- why is that SO difficult to understand? How is that concept a foreign one?

"A new day for Iraqis" is the current theme of the Iraqi puppet government and the Americans. Like it was "A New Day for Iraqis" on April 9, 2003 . And it was "A New Day for Iraqis" when they killed Oday and Qusay. Another "New Day for Iraqis" when they caught Saddam. More "New Day" when they drafted the constitution… I'm beginning to think it's like one of those questions they give you on IQ tests: If 'New' is equal to 'More' and 'Day' is equal to 'Suffering', what does "New Day for Iraqis" mean?

How do I feel? To hell with Zarqawi (or Zayrkawi as Bush calls him). He was an American creation- he came along with them- they don't need him anymore, apparently. His influence was greatly exaggerated but he was the justification for every single family they killed through military strikes and troops. It was WMD at first, then it was Saddam, then it was Zarqawi. Who will it be now? Who will be the new excuse for killing and detaining Iraqis? Or is it that an excuse is no longer needed- they have freedom to do what they want. The slaughter in Haditha months ago proved that. "They don't need him anymore," our elderly neighbor waved the news away like he was shooing flies, "They have fifty Zarqawis in government."

So now that Zarqawi is dead, and because according to Bush and our Iraqi puppets he was behind so much of Iraq's misery- things should get better, right? The car bombs should lessen, the ethnic cleansing will come to a halt, military strikes and sieges will die down… That's what we were promised, wasn't it? That sounds good to me. Now- who do they have to kill to stop the Ministry of Interior death squads, and trigger-happy foreign troops?


Tuesday, June 06, 2006

Bad Day...
It’s been a horrible day. We woke up to unbearable heat. Our area averages about 4 hours electricity daily and the rest is generator electricity, which means we can use our ceiling fans, but there’s no way we can use air conditioners.

We woke up to an ominous silence- an indicator that the generator isn’t working. E. went next door to check and got a confirmation. It might not work all day. The neighbor responsible for it was going to bring by the ‘generator doctor’ as soon as he was free.

The electricity came at 6 pm for only twenty minutes- as if to taunt us. The moment the lights flickered on, we were gathered in the kitchen and we could hear the neighborhood children began to hoot and holler with joy.

Before that, we heard the news about the dozens abducted from the Salhiya area in Baghdad. Salhiya is a busy area where many travel agencies have offices. It has been particularly busy since the war because people who want to leave to Jordan and Syria all make their reservations from one office or another in that area.

According to people working and living in the area, around 15 police cars pulled up to the area and uniformed men began pulling civilians off the streets and from cars, throwing bags over their heads and herding them into the cars. Anyone who tried to object was either beaten or pulled into a car. The total number of people taken away is estimated to be around 50.

This has been happening all over Iraq- mysterious men from the Ministry of Interior rounding up civilians and taking them away. It just hasn’t happened with this many people at once. The disturbing thing is that the Iraqi Ministry of Interior has denied that it had anything to do with this latest mass detention (which is the new trend with them- why get tangled up with human rights organizations about mass detentions, torture and assassinations- just deny it happened!). That isn’t a good sign- it means these people will probably be discovered dead in a matter of days. We pray they’ll be returned alive…

Another piece of particularly bad news came later during the day. Several students riding a bus to school were assassinated in Dora area. No one knows why- it isn’t clear. Were they Sunni? Were they Shia? Most likely they were a mix… Heading off for their end-of-year examination- having stayed up the night before to study in the heat. When they left their houses, they were probably only worried about whether they’d pass or fail- their parents sending them off with words of encouragement and prayer. Now they’ll never come home.

There’s an ethnic cleansing in progress and it’s impossible to deny. People are being killed according to their ID card. Extremists on both sides are making life impossible. Some of them work for ‘Zarqawi’, and the others work for the Iraqi Ministry of Interior. We hear about Shia being killed in the ‘Sunni triangle’ and corpses of Sunnis named ‘Omar’ (a Sunni name) arriving by the dozen at the Baghdad morgue. I never thought I’d actually miss the car bombs. At least a car bomb is indiscriminate. It doesn’t seek you out because you’re Sunni or Shia.

We still don’t have ministers in the key ministries- defense and interior. Iraq is falling apart and Maliki and his team are still bickering over who should get more power- who is more qualified to oppress Iraqis with the help of foreign occupiers? On top of all of this, rumor has it that the Iraqi parliament have a ‘vacation’ coming up during July and August. They’re so exhausted with the arguing, and struggling for power, they need to take a couple of months off to rest. They’ll leave their well-guarded homes behind for a couple of months, and spend some time abroad with their families (who can’t live in Iraq anymore- they’re too precious for that).

Where does one go to avoid the death and destruction? Are the Americans happy with this progress? Does Bush still insist we’re progressing?

Emily Dickinson wrote, “hope is a thing with feathers”. If what she wrote is true, then hope has flown far- very far- from Iraq…


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Posted: Jun 13, 2006 10:05am
May 11, 2006

Jeb Would Make a 'Great President,' Bush Says

Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, May 11, 2006; Page A06

Washington Post Staff WriterThursday, May 11, 2006; Page A06
Coming soon: President Bush III?

The second -- and current -- President Bush suggested yesterday that his younger brother, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, would make a "great president."

 
"I would like to see Jeb run at some point in time, but I have no idea if that's his intention or not," Bush said in an interview with Florida reporters, according to a story on the St. Petersburg Times Web site.

If that sounds familiar, the Bush brothers' father, former president George H.W. Bush, made a similar statement last year, telling CNN's Larry King that Jeb Bush would be "awfully good" as president.

"This guy's smart, big and strong. Makes the decisions," the first President Bush said then.

Two brothers have never been elected to serve as U.S. president.

Jeb Bush, 53, who cannot seek reelection after his second term as governor ends in January, has repeatedly said that he will not run for president in 2008, just before his brother leaves the White House.

But that has not stopped at least two fellow Republicans -- his father and his older brother -- from planting the idea.

President Bush said in the interview that he has "pushed" his brother "fairly hard about what he intends to do."

The president said: "I have no idea what he's going to do. I've asked him that question myself. I truly don't think he knows."

In May 2005, King asked the senior Bush if he wanted Jeb Bush to run for president.

"Someday I would, yes," George H.W. Bush said.

"Is the timing wrong now, though?" King asked.

"Yes. The timing's wrong," Bush said. "The main thing is, he doesn't want to do it. Nobody believes that, but . . ."

In yesterday's interview, President Bush said his brother could have a "very bright" political future.


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Posted: May 11, 2006 11:28am
Apr 8, 2006
 
Last Updated: Monday, 27 March 2006, 00:12 GMT 01:12 UK
Blogger up for non-fiction award
Iraqi soldier manning Baghdad checkpoint
'Riverbend' has been posting from Iraq since August 2003
An anonymous blog by a young woman in war-torn Iraq has been longlisted for BBC Four's Samuel Johnson Prize for non-fiction.
Baghdad Burning, a first-hand account written under the pseudonym Riverbend, is one of 19 books in contention.

Others include Alan Bennett's Untold Stories, a biography of 19th-Century cook and author Mrs Beeton and a study of post-war US-Soviet relations.

The winner of the £30,000 prize will be announced on 14 June.

Professor Robert Winston, chair of the judging panel, said this year's longlist contained "an exceptionally wide variety of genres".

"It looks as if finalising a shortlist is going to be excessively difficult," he said.

Previous winners of the prize include Like a Fiery Elephant, Jonathan Coe's biography of the author BS Johnson, and Stasiland, Anna Funder's chronicle of the hardships endured by people from the former East Germany.

This year's panel includes theatre director Sir Richard Eyre, columnist Cristina Odone and Michael Prodger, literary editor of the Sunday Telegraph.



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Posted: Apr 8, 2006 1:52pm
Jan 24, 2006
For once, I am in agreement with the beautiful and talented Mr. Bush. I too object to the term "domestic spying." I much prefer "criminal malfeasance," or maybe "subversion of the Constitution," or how about just plain old TREASON!!!

Surveillance program protects country, Bush says
By John Diamond and David Jackson, USA TODAY Tue Jan 24, 7:35 AM ET

President Bush defended on Monday what he called a "terrorist surveillance program" that targets international communications of suspected al-Qaeda members. However, the nation's No. 2 intelligence officer acknowledged that not every call monitored proved to have a terrorist link.

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Objecting to the term "domestic spying," Bush said the surveillance he authorized the National Security Agency (NSA) to conduct after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks involves communications in which one party is outside the USA.


Bush said he had the legal and constitutional authority for the program without congressional approval. He told an audience at Kansas State University that U.S. intelligence can determine whether someone is tied to al-Qaeda, "and if they're making a phone call in the United States, it seems like to me we want to know why." (Related: Bush gets playful in Kansas)


Bush's comments and those of Gen. Michael Hayden, principal deputy director of national intelligence, were part of a White House response to weeks of bipartisan criticism.


Sen. Arlen Specter (news, bio, voting record), R-Pa., who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, has questioned the legality of the program. A 1978 law requires the NSA to obtain federal court-approved warrants before eavesdropping on U.S. targets.


Attorney General Alberto Gonzales was to discuss the legal justification for the program today. On Wednesday, Bush was scheduled to visit NSA headquarters at Fort Meade in Maryland.


Hayden acknowledged the program is not perfect.


All leads don't pan out, Hayden said, "but this program has given us information that we would not otherwise have been able to get."


If the surveillance had been used before Sept. 11, Hayden said, "we would have detected some of the 9/11 al-Qaeda operatives in the United States."


The Senate Judiciary Committee is set to take up the issue in public hearings beginning Feb. 6. A new USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup Poll shows public sentiment is against the program. Fifty-one percent of Americans said the administration was wrong to intercept conversations involving a party inside the USA without a warrant. In response to another question, 58% of Americans said they support the appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate the program. Both questions were asked of about 500 adults Friday through Sunday and have a margin of error of +/-5 percentage points. (Related: Poll results)



Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., said that by instituting the surveillance without explicit congressional approval, Bush seemed to be saying he was "above the law."


Hayden, in a news conference at the National Press Club, said the surveillance is "not a driftnet over Dearborn" - a reference to a Michigan city with a large Arab-American population. Instead, it "is targeted and focused" and used a process similar to that used in deciding whether to drop a bomb on a certain target.


After 9/11, Hayden said, the NSA shifted collection assets to focus on the worldwide terrorist threat and increased its used of surveillance warrants required by the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.


The warrantless surveillance began in October 2001. Bush characterized the surveillance program as a concept brought to him by senior aides in response to his question posed internally following the 9/11 attacks: "Is there anything more we can do, within the law, within the Constitution, to protect the American people?"


Hayden, who led the NSA when the program started, said the idea came from the White House. "I didn't craft the authorization. I am responding to a lawful order."


Diamond reported from Washington, D.C.

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Posted: Jan 24, 2006 9:32am
Jan 23, 2006
Okay. This right here is what I have been saying for three years now.

An American Hitler and his Gestapo
By DOUG THOMPSON
Publisher, Capitol Hill Blue

Jan 23, 2006, 09:15
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The U.S. Department of Justice, led by Alberto “The Constitution is an outdated document” Gonzales, wants to know if you’ve been looking at any racy material on the Internet.

Yahoo and MSN have already complied with subpoenas from Gonzales’ storm troopers demanding records on who is using their search services to look at porno sites on the Internet.

Google, to their credit, said no and is now caught in a tough legal fight against the George Bush’s Gestapo.

Ohmigod! Did he say Gestapo?

Damn right I did. If you don’t think the rights-robbing, privacy-invading, Constitution ignoring administration of George W. Bush is anything less than a Hitler-style Gestapo then you’ve got your head stuffed so far up your ass that all that brown stuff is blinding you.

America, once hailed as the land of the free, has – under the tyranny of King George – become Amerika, reviled as a global thug that doesn’t give a damn about anyone’s rights, especially those of its own citizens.

Protest if you want. Spout the Republican Party line is you can without gagging. I don’t give a damn. If you believe George W. Bush is anything less than an American Hitler then you’re too damn dumb and stupid to argue with anyway.

Bush is an evil man, a power-grapping despot who believes in absolute rule, a madman so wrapped up in his perceived role as “a wartime President” and “Commander in Chief” that he believes no law applies to him or his rotting, corrupt, administration. The Constitution? Why it’s just “a goddamned piece of paper” to this insane megalomaniac.

Legal scholars agree that Bush blatantly broke the law by ordering the National Security Agency to spy on Americans without warrants or court review. The only cretins who support this dictator are the brain-dead Republicans who put power above the law and party loyalty above their country.

Bush is a traitor to his country. As a traitor, he should be led from the White House in chains and tried as one. Since he insists he is a “wartime President,” then let’s try the son-of-a-bitch as a wartime traitor, a Benedict Arnold who turned on his country and gave aid and comfort to its enemies.  Bush has done far more damage to the freedoms and security of American than Osama bin Laden. In fact, I’m starting to believe the traitorous asshole is in league with bin Laden and others who want this country destroyed.

No true American would treat the Constitution with the contempt that spills like toxic bile from the lips of George Bush. No true American would continue to support this maniac as he continues to dismantle what once was the greatest country in the world.

Bush is clearly guilty of high crimes against the Constitution of the United States. It’s time to give this reincarnation of Adolph Hitler exactly what he deserves.

© Copyright 2006 by Capitol Hill Blue

Who the hell is this Thompson guy anyway?

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Posted: Jan 23, 2006 9:36am
Jan 14, 2006
Please visit Iraq's "Girl Blogger" if you want to see the real human cost of this administration's "just and necessary" war. It's easy to lob bombs at a faceless foreign "enemy," and very few of us have the courage to look at the human face behind all the foolishness and propaganda. You want to learn about the aftermath of one of the worst terrorist attacks in history? No, not 9/11. I'm talking about the totally unforgiveable destruction of Baghdad in the first hours of this act of mass murder that rotten piece of human filth Bush and his twisted cult of warmongers are still trying to pass off as justified. May they burn in hell.

http://riverbendblog.blogspot.com/


Check out this one too, and then tell me that scum in Washington should get off scot-free. WARNING: VERY disturbing images. At least, I HOPE they disturb people.

http://www.aztlan.net/iraqichildrenhorror.htm

Baghdad Burning

... I'll meet you 'round the bend my friend, where hearts can heal and souls can mend...

Thursday, January 12, 2006

Thank You for the Music...
When I first heard about the abduction of Christian Science Monitor journalist Jill Carroll a week ago, I remember feeling regret. It was the same heavy feeling I get every time I hear of another journalist killed or abducted. The same heavy feeling that settles upon most Iraqis, I imagine, when they hear of acquaintances suffering under the current situation.

I read the news as a subtitle on tv. We haven't had an internet connection for several days so I couldn't really read about the details. All I knew was that a journalist had been abducted and that her Iraqi interpreter had been killed. He was shot in cold blood in Al Adil district earlier this month, when they took Jill Carroll... Theysay he didn't die immediately. It is said he lived long enough to talk to police and then he died.

I found out very recently that the interpreter killed was a good friend- Alan, of Alan's Melody, and I've spent the last two days crying.

Everyone knew him as simply 'Alan', or "Elin" as it is pronounced in Iraqi Arabic. Prior to the war, he owned a music shop in the best area in Baghdad, A'arasat. He sold some Arabic music and instrumental music, but he had his regular customers - those westernized Iraqis who craved foreign music. For those of us who listened to rock, adult alternative, jazz, etc. he had very few rivals.

He sold bootleg CDs, tapes and DVDs. His shop wasn't just a music shop- it was a haven. Some of my happiest moments were while I was walking out of that shop carrying CDs and tapes, full of anticipation for the escape the music provided. He had just about everything from Abba to Marilyn Manson. He could provide anything. All you had to do was go to him with the words,"Alan- I heard a great song on the radio... you have to find it!" Andhe'd sit there, patiently, asking who sang it? You don't know? Ok- was it a man or a woman? Fine. Do you remember any of the words? Chances were that he'd already heard it and even knew some of the lyrics.

During the sanctions, Iraq was virtually cut off from the outside world.We had maybe four or five local tv stations and it was only during the later years that the internet became more popular. Alan was one of those links with the outside world. Walking into Alan's shop was like walking into a sort of transitional other world. Whenever you walked into the store, great music would be blaring from his speakers and he and Mohammed, the guy who worked in his shop, would be arguing over who was better, Joe Satriani or Steve Vai.

He would have the latest Billboard hits posted on a sheet of paper near the door and he'd have compiled a few of his own favorites on a 'collection' CD. He also went out of his way to get recordings of the latest award shows- Grammys, AMAs, Oscars, etc. You could visit him twice and know that by the third time, he'd have memorized your favorites and found music you might be interested in.

He was an electrical engineer- but his passion was music. His dream was to be a music producer. He was always full of scorn for the usual boy bands - N'Sync, Backstreet Boys, etc. - but he was always trying to promote an Iraqi boy band he claimed he'd discovered,"Unknown to No One". "They're great- wallah they have potential." He'd say. E. would answer, "Alan, they're terrible." And Alan, with his usual Iraqi pride would lecture about how they were great, simply because they were Iraqi.

He was a Christian from Basrah and he had a lovely wife who adored him- F. We would tease him about how once he was married and had a family, he'd lose interest in music. It didn't happen. Conversations with Alan continued to revolve around Pink Floyd, Jimmy Hendrix, but they began to include F. his wife, M. his daughter and his little boy. My heart aches for his family- his wife and children...

You could walk into the shop and find no one behind the counter- everyone was in the other room, playing one version or another of FIFA soccer on the Play Station. He collected those old records, or 'vinyls'. The older they were, the better. While he promoted new musical technology, he always said that nothing could beat the soundof a vintage vinyl.

We went to Alan not just to buy music. It always turned into a social visit. He'd make you sit down, listen to his latest favorite CD and drink something. Then he'd tell you the latest gossip- he knew it all. He knew where all the parties were, who the best DJs were and who was getting married or divorced. He knew the local gossip and the international gossip, but it was never malicious with Alan. It was always the funny sort.

The most important thing about Alan was that he never let you down. Never. Whatever it was that you wanted, he'd try his hardest to get it. If you became his friend, that didn't just include music- he was ready to lend a helping hand to those in need, whether it was just to give advice, or listen after a complicated, difficult week.

After the war, the area he had his shop in deteriorated. There were car bombs and shootings and the Badir people took over some of the houses there. People went to A'arasat less and less because it was too dangerous. His shop was closed up more than it was open. He shut it up permanently after getting death threats and a hand grenade through his shop window. His car was carjacked at some point and he was shot at so he started driving around in his fathers beaten-up old Toyota Cressida with a picture of Sistani on his back window, "To ward off the fanatics..." He winked and grinned.

E. and I would stop by his shop sometimes after the war, before he shut it down. We went in once and found that there was no electricity,and no generator. The shop was dimly lit with some sort of fuel lampand Alan was sitting behind the counter, sorting through CDs. He was ecstatic to see us. There was no way we could listen to music so he and E. sang through some of their favorite songs, stumbling upon the lyrics and making things up along the way. Then we started listening to various ring tones and swapping the latest jokes of the day. Before we knew it, two hours had slipped by and the world outside was forgotten, an occasional explosion bringing us back to reality.

It hit me then that it wasn't the music that made Alan's shop a haven- somewhere to forget problems and worries- it was Alan himself.

He loved Pink Floyd:

Did you see the frightened ones?
Did you hear the falling bombs?
Did you ever wonder why we
Had to run for shelter when the
Promise of a brave, new world
Unfurled beneath the clear blue sky?
Did you see the frightened ones?
Did you hear the falling bombs?
The flames are all long gone, but the pain lingers on.
Goodbye, blue sky
Goodbye, blue sky.
Goodbye. Goodbye.


(Goodbye Blue Sky - Pink Floyd)

Goodbye Alan...


Wednesday, January 04, 2006

2006...
Here we are in the first days of 2006. What does the ‘6’ symbolize? How about- 6 hours of no electricity for every one hour of electricity? Or… 6 hours of waiting in line for gasoline that is three times as expensive as it was in 2005? Or an average of six explosions per day near our area alone?

The beginning of the new year isn’t a promising one. Prices seem to have shot up on everything from fuels like kerosene and cooking gas, to tomatoes. A typical conversation with Abu Ammar our local fruit/vegetable vendor goes something like this:

R: “Oh nice lemons today Abu Ammar… give us a kilo.”

Abu A: “They are Syrian. You should see the tomatoes- if you think these are nice, take a look at those.”

R: “Hmmm… they do look good. Two kilos of those. How much will that be?”

Abu A: “That will be 3600 dinars.”

R (feigning shock and awe): “3600 dinars! What? That is almost double what we paid a week ago… why?”

Abu A (feigning sorrow and regret): “Habibti… you know what my supplier has to go through to bring me these vegetables? The cost of gasoline has gone up! I swear on the life of my mother that I’m only profiting 50 dinars per kilo…”

R: “Your mother is dead, isn’t she?”

Abu A: “Yes yes- but you know how valuable the dear woman was to me- may Allah have mercy on her- and on us all! The dogs in the government are going to kill us with these prices…”

R (sighing heavily): “You voted for the dogs last year Abu Ammar…”

Abu A: “Shhh… don’t call them dogs- it’s not proper. Anyway, it’s not their fault- the Americans are making them do it… my Allah curse them and their children…”

R (with eyes rolling) and Abu A (in unison): “… and their children’s children.”

A few days ago, the cousin took me to buy a pack of recordable CDs. The price had gone up a whole dollar, which may seem a pittance to the average American or European, but it must be remembered that many Iraqis make as little as $100 a month and complete families are expected to survive on that.

“B. why has the price of these lousy CDs gone up so much???” I demanded from the shop owner who is also a friend, “Don’t tell me your supplier has also pushed the prices up on you because of the gasoline shortage?” I asked sarcastically. No- supplies cost the same for him- he has not needed to stock up yet. But this is how he explained it: his car takes 60 liters of gasoline. It needs to be refueled every 2-3 days. The official price of gasoline was 50 Iraqi dinars before, so it cost him around 3000 dinars to fill up his car, which was nearly two dollars. Now it costs 9000 Iraqi dinars IF he fills it up at a gas station and not using black market gasoline which will cost him around 15,000 dinars- five times the former price- and this every two to three days. He also has to purchase extra gasoline for the shop generator which needs to be working almost constantly, now that electricity is about four hours daily. “Now how am I supposed to cover that increase in my costs if I don’t sell CDs at a higher price?”

People buy black market gasoline because for many, waiting in line five, six, seven… ten hours isn’t an option. We’ve worked out a sort of agreement amongst 4 or 5 houses in the neighborhood. According to a schedule (which is somewhat complicated and involves license plate numbers, number of children per family, etc.), one of us spends the day filling up the car and then the gasoline is distributed between the four or five involved neighbors.


The process of extracting the gasoline from the car itself once it is back at the house was a rather disgusting and unhealthy one up until nearly a year ago. A hose was inserted into the gasoline tank and one of they unlucky neighbors would suck on it until the first surge of gasoline came flowing out. Now, thanks to both local and Chinese ingenuity, we have miniature gasoline pumps to suck out the gasoline. “The man who invented these,” My cousin once declared emotionally, holding the pump up like a trophy, “deserves a Nobel Prize in… something or another.”

I know for most of the world, highly priced gasoline is a common concern. For Iraqis, it represents how the situation is deteriorating. Gasoline and kerosene were literally cheaper than bottled water prior to the war. It’s incredibly frustrating that while the price of petrol is at a high, one of the worlds leading oil-producing countries isn’t producing enough to cover its own needs.

There is talk of major mismanagement and theft in the Oil Ministry. Chalabi took over several days ago and a friend who works in the ministry says the takeover is a joke. “You know how they used to check our handbags when we first walked into the ministry?” She asked the day after Chalabi crowned himself Oil Emperor, “Now WE check our handbags after we leave the ministry- you know- to see if Chalabi stole anything.”

I guess the Iraqis who thought the US was going to turn Iraq into another America weren’t really far from the mark- we too now enjoy inane leaders, shady elections, a shaky economy, large-scale unemployment and soaring gas prices.

Goodbye 2005- the year of SCIRI, fraudulent elections, secret torture chambers, car bombs, white phosphorous, assassinations, sectarianism and fundamentalism… you will not be missed.

Let us see what 2006 has in store for us.



Thursday, December 15, 2005

Elections...
Elections have been all we hear about for the last ten days at least.

The posters are everywhere in Baghdad. There are dozens of parties running for elections, but there are about four or five ‘lists’ which stand out from the rest:

- National Iraqi (731): Ayad Allawi’s list, which now includes some other prominent puppets including Adnan Al-Pachachi, Ghazi Al-Yawir, Safiya Al-Suhail, etc. Ayad Allawi is a secular Shia, CIA-affiliated, ex-Ba’athist.
- Unified Iraqi Coalition List (555): Hakim, Ja’affari and various other pro-Iran fundamentalists, in addition to Sadrists.
- Kurdistani Gathering (730): Barazani, Talbani and a few other parties.
- Iraqi Front for National Dialogue (667): Mainly Sunni, secular list – includes the Iraqi Christian Democratic Party and is headed by Salih Al-Mutlag.
- Iraqi Alliance Front (618): Mainly Sunni Islamic parties

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Chuck Miller
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Norman, OK, USA
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