Hi there, !
Today Sun 09/11/2005 Sat 09/10/2005 Fri 09/09/2005 Thu 09/08/2005 Wed 09/07/2005 Tue 09/06/2005 Mon 09/05/2005 Archives
Rantburg
533639 articles and 1861795 comments are archived on Rantburg.

Today: 125 articles and 437 comments as of 5:42.
Post a news link    Post your own article   
Area: WoT Operations    WoT Background    Opinion           
200 Hard Boyz Arrested in Iraq
Today's Headlines
Headline Comments [Views]
Page 3: Non-WoT
13 00:00 Frank G [6] 
4 00:00 DMFD [6] 
5 00:00 Chris W. [4] 
0 [3] 
2 00:00 Jake-the-Peg [1] 
4 00:00 Phil Fraering [2] 
3 00:00 DMFD [8] 
4 00:00 Bomb-a-rama [1] 
3 00:00 Phineck Whimble2173 [4] 
4 00:00 Bomb-a-rama [2] 
3 00:00 raptor [1] 
0 [2] 
7 00:00 Deacon Blues [3] 
13 00:00 JosephMendiola [4] 
1 00:00 Deacon Blues [2] 
11 00:00 Sister Townsend Barbie [] 
5 00:00 Frank G [3] 
2 00:00 wrinkleneck_trout [2] 
7 00:00 JosephMendiola [3] 
33 00:00 Frank G [7] 
3 00:00 raptor [3] 
0 [4] 
7 00:00 Shipman [2] 
2 00:00 CrazyFool [2] 
1 00:00 Jackal [2] 
4 00:00 Zhang Fei [5] 
3 00:00 3dc [5] 
3 00:00 Zhang Fei [4] 
0 [2] 
3 00:00 DMFD [2] 
4 00:00 Sherry [3] 
8 00:00 john [] 
9 00:00 Shipman [2] 
1 00:00 ARMYGUY [1] 
2 00:00 dushan [5] 
3 00:00 Secret Master [3] 
2 00:00 Steve [2] 
3 00:00 Al-Aska Paul [3] 
0 [1] 
4 00:00 Frank G [1] 
8 00:00 Omerens Omaigum2983 [2] 
12 00:00 Cyber Sarge [2] 
8 00:00 Danielle [5] 
5 00:00 Zhang Fei [2] 
4 00:00 Sock Puppet O´ Doom [1] 
6 00:00 Flack Elmegum1744 [3] 
2 00:00 Redneck Jim [8] 
6 00:00 Desert Blondie [3] 
8 00:00 Bobby [2] 
Page 1: WoT Operations
4 00:00 JosephMendiola [3]
0 [5]
3 00:00 Frank G [5]
7 00:00 Anonymoose [3]
2 00:00 Jackal [3]
0 [7]
11 00:00 Frank G [5]
5 00:00 Abu MacSuirtain [8]
6 00:00 Shipman [6]
0 [2]
6 00:00 Seafarious [2]
0 [3]
5 00:00 tu3031 [6]
4 00:00 Throlulet Graviling7296 [6]
0 [4]
0 [1]
4 00:00 Throlulet Graviling7296 [3]
11 00:00 Rightwing [8]
0 [3]
0 [2]
0 [1]
0 [5]
0 [5]
0 [2]
5 00:00 mojo [2]
3 00:00 Sock Puppet O´ Doom [5]
Page 2: WoT Background
8 00:00 Barbara Skolaut [4]
4 00:00 Fred [2]
5 00:00 BigEd [5]
1 00:00 Robert Crawford [1]
3 00:00 Scooter McGruder [2]
2 00:00 tu3031 [1]
0 [4]
1 00:00 tu3031 [4]
12 00:00 Curly Howard [5]
2 00:00 raptor [2]
0 [3]
7 00:00 Shipman [3]
3 00:00 Bugs [3]
0 [1]
5 00:00 JFM [1]
12 00:00 JosephMendiola [2]
3 00:00 Danielle []
3 00:00 trailing wife [1]
0 [2]
2 00:00 trailing wife [5]
2 00:00 Raj [6]
1 00:00 Sock Puppet O´ Doom [2]
0 [2]
2 00:00 raptor [1]
1 00:00 Dan Darling [2]
0 []
3 00:00 John Q. Citizen [1]
2 00:00 Formerly Dan [1]
0 [1]
0 [2]
2 00:00 BH [5]
1 00:00 tu3031 [3]
0 [7]
0 []
1 00:00 Raj [2]
3 00:00 DoDo [1]
1 00:00 Shipman [7]
1 00:00 Uninetle Hupating2229 [2]
2 00:00 meeps [3]
0 [1]
0 [1]
4 00:00 Zhang Fei [2]
Page 4: Opinion
1 00:00 3dc [2]
11 00:00 Frank G [6]
1 00:00 Anonymoose [3]
1 00:00 Snunter Threreper9435 [3]
0 [2]
2 00:00 Sock Puppet O´ Doom [2]
1 00:00 DepotGuy [2]
0 [3]
-Short Attention Span Theater-
'Pacifist' chimps face extinction within a generation
I HOPE OUR BLIND PACIFISTS WILL LEARN FROM BONOBOS WHAT BLIND PACIFISM COULD DO TO A SPECIES.
Pygmy chimpanzees known as "jungle hippies" for resolving conflict through sex rather than fighting are hurtling towards extinction faster than any other primate, experts said yesterday.

Bonobos, gentle creatures found only in the remote war-torn forests of Congo, live in strictly matriarchal families and neither kill nor fight over territory. Bonobos chimpanzee is a close relative of man. They also pair off for sex at the slightest hint of danger, stress or friction, earning them their hippy nicknames for "making love not war".

They are among man's closest relatives and face the prospect of being the first great ape to be wiped from the planet. Mrs Andre said: "These are animals which search for peace whenever they sense danger, usually through approaching another and having sexual intercourse.
ABSOLUTELY REMARCABLE, JUST LIKE OUR PACIFISTS. I BELIEVE IT'S PUREJ GENETICS. SOME PEOPLE CAN NOT CHANGE EVEN WITH THE GUN TO THEIR HEAD, IT'S IN GENES.
Posted by: wonderer || 09/08/2005 13:43 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1 

Posted by: Jomoth Ebbomons8032 || 09/08/2005 14:42 Comments || Top||

#2  Take your stinking paws off me, you damned dirty ape!
Posted by: Chris W. || 09/08/2005 15:06 Comments || Top||

#3  ...live in strictly matriarchal families and neither kill nor fight over territory.

Other primates in urban environments have shown just the opposite trait.
Posted by: Phineck Whimble2173 || 09/08/2005 17:02 Comments || Top||


Why You Don't Want to Wake an Ex-SF Guy for No Reason...
[New Orleans] Sometime around midnight, a squad of 82nd Airborne guys accompanied by a US Marshall busted into our Data Center with their M4-A1s to investigate the lights and movement. Personally, I know they were just bored -- there's no way they honestly thought there was some kind of threat up here just yards away from several huge military and police presences. Anyway, they came up and demanded to account for us all. That means they told Donny, who was still up, to come wake up Crys and me in the side closet room type area where we sleep. I could hear Donny telling them that I was exSpecial Forces as he came to get me. He stuck his head in and explained the situation while I made Crys get up and get dressed. We came out and I gave the Marshall a sheepish look which said was this really enough fun for to relieve your boredom? He kind of knew they shouldn't be up here -- I think it was Crystal's being here which really made him snap out of it. He began apologizing and I could tell the yound soldiers with him were really shy about having seen Crystal come out too.

But I didn't let them all off that easily. "Hey, I understand. I know you guys are just doing your job." He kept apologizing. Then I put them to work. "So wait, how did you get up here anyway? We locked this building down....

The Marshall claimed that one of the emergency exits -- the one on the Lafayette Square side had been open. I knew this was bullshit. For one thing, Sig and I tied down and concealed that door. It would have taken a group of guys to open it. For another Lafayette Square is to the south of our building. The only lights visisble are from Poydras to the north. Am I to believe that they bypassed the obvious entrances (also locked down) to look for one they didn't even know existed and it just happened to be open?

No, they searched for a way in, and by the time they got around back and found the emergency exit, they were ready to break in, so they did.

"Wait, we secured that exit. That means that this building might have other people in it," I told them.

They all knew what was coming next. If it was their job to check on lights and movement to look for people who didn't belong there....

I asked them to sweep the building for us.

And they did. All 27 floors of it with no elevators.

If you want to play soldier with me, I will make you play it a lot longer than you had in mind.

Crystal and I went back to bed secure in the knowledge that a US Marshall and a squad from the 82nd Airborne cleared 27 floors and the roof of our temporary residence. And then they secured the door they must have spent 45 minutes breaking into.

Most restful sleep I've had all week.

Good morning, world.

This guy has been keeping his data center in downtown NOLA alive all through the hurricane. The blog (with pictures) is fascinating.
Posted by: Thrusing Phineling3752 || 09/08/2005 11:32 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This is lame. The Army guys were rousted from their bunks to carry out this thankless mission in New Orleans. They did not need to be sent on a sweaty, tiring wild goose chase - on top of the wild goose chase they'll be carrying out over the next several weeks.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 09/08/2005 13:40 Comments || Top||

#2  Have you read the gentleman's blog, ZF? He's been carrying on with 2 hour naps round the clock since Katrina hit, keeping alive the computers for his company's clients -- including the NO government -- plus patrolling the area around his building to keep it free from those with poor impulse control. The Army patrol could have rung the doorbell instead; it would have been answered.
Posted by: trailing wife || 09/08/2005 13:58 Comments || Top||

#3  Lighten-up,ZF.Those guys new they were busted and(I'm sure) took it with a wry grin.Watch ya wanta bet a couple of those 82 boys come-up with a little imaginative pay back.
Posted by: raptor || 09/08/2005 15:14 Comments || Top||


U.S. Meteorologist Says Russian Inventors Caused Hurricane Katrina
A meteorologist in Pocatello, Idaho, claims Japanese gangsters known as the Yakuza used KGB inventions to cause Hurricane Katrina, Wireless Flash reported Thursday. Scott Stevens says after looking at NASA satellite photos of the hurricane, he’s is convinced it was caused by electromagnetic generators from ground-based microwave transmitters.
"Wow man, look at the colors!"
“There is absolutely zero chance that this is natural, zero,” Villagevoice quoted Stevens as saying after Katrina’s landfall, pointing out suspiciously rectilinear shapes in the satellite-photoed hurricane clouds. The generators emit a soundwave between three and 30 megahertz and Stevens claims the Russians invented the storm-creating technology back in 1976 and sold it to others in the late 1980s. Stevens says the clouds formed by the generators are different from normal clouds and are able to appear out of nowhere and says Katrina had many rotation points that are unusual for hurricanes.

At least 10 nations and organizations possess the technology, but Stevens suspects the Japanese Yakuza created Katrina in order to make a fortune in the futures market and to get even with the U.S. for the 1945 bombing of Hiroshima.
Posted by: Steve || 09/08/2005 09:26 || Comments || Link || [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  What hospital is this MORON in?????
Posted by: ARMYGUY || 09/08/2005 9:41 Comments || Top||

#2  Well, surprise surprise, we've got a webpage...

http://www.weatherwars.info/katrina.htm

...and consider yourself warned.
The Yakuza can shoot another Katrina anytime they wish. Watch for yet another one, which is probably being debated right now. This weapons platform has been operational since 1963 with weather operations running since 1976! The woodpecker grid (Google woodpecker grid) which has fantastic weather modification capabilities was turned on Bicentennial weekend July 4th 1976 and has remained on since that time. One can hear it chirping on shortwave radios in the 3 to 30 Mhz range.
Posted by: tu3031 || 09/08/2005 9:55 Comments || Top||

#3  The generators emit a soundwave between three and 30 megahertz and Stevens claims the Russians invented the storm-creating technology back in 1976 and sold it to others in the late 1980s.

Damn, they're onto us...
Posted by: Halliburton - Hurricane Division || 09/08/2005 10:35 Comments || Top||

#4  Halliburton, stop trying to take credit for the Soviet stuff, okay?
Posted by: lotp || 09/08/2005 11:02 Comments || Top||

#5  The woodpecker grid (Google woodpecker grid) which has fantastic weather modification capabilities was turned on Bicentennial weekend July 4th 1976 and has remained on since that time. One can hear it chirping on shortwave radios in the 3 to 30 Mhz range.

We've been talking about this sort of stuff over ---->thataway for the past couple of days. I don't know if this is on the same wavelength as the other guy who says the Russians did it with some sort of Ray Gun based on Tesla's Lost/Forgotten/Forbidden (because of course, it'll make oil obsolete) inventions. Of course, that guy has been saying the Russians have been about to destroy us with this stuff for the last twenty years that I know of.

(So, LOTP, these aren't really Russian inventions to begin with; you'd have to start the argument over whether or not they stole them fair and square...)

I intent to write something more in-depth on this in the future, but just as a couple of "quickies:"

* You can zoom in on jpegs (which many satellite image data starts out as these days) and find all sorts of artifacts. You might ask why someone would use a lossy image transmission on a satellite, well, it lets them double or triple the available resolution for the same bandwidth. Of course, a raw image of half the resolution wouldn't have the image artifacts, and would be useful in proving that these image artifacts weren't there, but these satellites are built for scientists interested in looking at the weather, who are already aware of the existance of image artifacts and the like.

The satellites and their instruments aren't built for the express purpose of convincing scientifically subliterate paranoid laymen that the hurricane wasn't caused by evil Russians who entered into a plot with the Zionists, the evil Machivellian Chimphitler Bush and his Dark Master, Darth Chainey of Brown, Root, and the Sith, or the Yakuza... (huh. The Yakuza is a new one to me.) This puts us as a disadvantage.

Here is an exaggerated example showing that jpegs can introduce rectilinear artifacts into an image. It's a weakness of the storage format.

This week's edition of Science.ars at Ars Technica has a neat picture of the hurricane which I hope will explain how the hurricane managed to strengthen while in the gulf, and probably didn't need Russian or Japanese Lost Tesla Scalar Weapons in order to strengthen. Of course you need to know how hurricanes work to begin with.

* I also need to do a refutation to the "hyperdimensional physics" explanation of the storm, as well as a follow-up to last night's first pass at refuting both the "they blew up the levees to try to save the city" rumors and the great Lafayette crime spree rumors. I can't figure out how blowing the levee of the ninth ward would do anything to alleviate flooding elsewhere, for instance...

(Oh, and the Great Lafayette Crime Spree turned out to be fictional.)

I expect by next week there will be three more conspiracy theories out there.
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 11:39 Comments || Top||

#6  evrywun wants in on em blayme game.
Posted by: muck4doo || 09/08/2005 12:10 Comments || Top||

#7  It's more than just the blame game. They want people to be disconnected enough from reality that what's true doesn't matter, just the size of the megaphone.

Conspiracy theories about Russian/Yakuza weather machines or exploded levees facilitate this process.
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 12:24 Comments || Top||

#8  I was driving through Kansas and heard this bullshit on some talk radio that showed up.

Supposedly the Russians sold the technology to Al Qeada so were in the shitstorm. Whatever.

I'm not saying it isn't possible, but I will say that its very unlikely.

Bin laden will ride a nuke on a tsunami surfboard suicide raid next week if he's really got cajones and a weather machine!

EP
Posted by: ElvisHasLeftTheBuilding || 09/08/2005 12:32 Comments || Top||

#9  I just cehcked. Stevens was on C2C on _Tuesday_ of last week. I wonder if he had everything ready-to-go before the storm even hit.
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 12:36 Comments || Top||

#10  I know the developer of the USSR's woodpecker radar well enough that I jointly hold a patent with him.

It was a very powerful over the horizon radar! NOTHING MORE!

NOTHING! NADA!

Will kind humane society come forward and put these deranged morons down as the are obviously rabid!
Posted by: 3dc || 09/08/2005 12:39 Comments || Top||

#11  I thought that Joe Vialls guy died a few months ago.
Posted by: Mike || 09/08/2005 13:41 Comments || Top||

#12  I thought Art Bell quit. Guess I was wrong; he just changed his name.

And I hope to god this clown is just a meteoroligist who lives in the U.S., not an official U.S. meteoroligist. :-(
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 09/08/2005 14:14 Comments || Top||

#13  I wanna hear what JoesphM has to say.....
Posted by: Crereth Glolutch7258 || 09/08/2005 16:19 Comments || Top||

#14  Art Bell is on once or twice a month. As I hinted at in the other thread, I suspect that the management might be trying to reduce the chances of an incident like the big 9-11/Popular Mechanics conspiracy theory debunking show controversy (which we discussed here earlier this year).

(That possibility should have occured to me earlier, but it didn't. Hmm.)
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 18:19 Comments || Top||

#15  I came across this guy's website a few days ago. Apparently he first started out as a devotee of the "chemtrail" hoax, and later linked it to these Tesla/scalar EM weapons that supposedly exist.

I must admit that I have only rudmentary understanding of science, and I have no mathematics. I've only got my own intuition on this.
I think chemtrails are ridiculous hokum. However, I'm not absolutely sure (but skeptical) that "scalar EM" weapons don't exist. Here's what SecDef Cohen had to say (link)

Part of the problem with getting information on this is that so many folks out there on the internet confuse terminology -- any secret project that involves EM emissions just must to be associated with this, thus the "woodpecker" anachronism. It also must be said that such ideas attract people of a certain bent -- that is to say, people schizoid and schizotypal personality disorders, and just plain hoaxter/jokesters. And if there is some truth to it, we can expect a certain amount of disinformtion about it.

Furthermore, if the scalar-EM theory is true, then it would be itself based on non-standard cosmology. To wit, the "Electric Universe Theory," which, as Phil notes, is itself highly controversial. Apart from scalar-EM weapons, I find the Electric Universe hypothesis more convicing than standard models, in that it removes the need for various band-aids that have cropped up with conventional cosmology such as dark matter we can't see, 11-dimension string theory 4 of which are inacessable, supermassive particles we can't find.

I must admit that I have only rudimentary understanding of science, and no mathematics. I have only my own intuition, and a (healthy?) disregard for authority. I'm always willing to question experts, whether on Iraq-9/11 links or on this stuff.
Posted by: Rory B. Bellows || 09/08/2005 18:33 Comments || Top||

#16  How did I screw up that paragraph like that?
Posted by: Rory B. Bellows || 09/08/2005 18:38 Comments || Top||

#17  Rory wrote:
Furthermore, if the scalar-EM theory is true, then it would be itself based on non-standard cosmology. To wit, the "Electric Universe Theory," which, as Phil notes, is itself highly controversial. Apart from scalar-EM weapons, I find the Electric Universe hypothesis more convicing than standard models, in that it removes the need for various band-aids that have cropped up with conventional cosmology such as dark matter we can't see, 11-dimension string theory 4 of which are inacessable, supermassive particles we can't find.


Actually, it depends on which "plasma universe" or "electric universe" theorists one wants to believe. In The Beginning, there was Hannes Alfven, who I think was less interested in creating a substitute unified theory of everything to displace the standard model than in slowly extending his previous theories about electromagnetics and plasmas in space to see what other phenomenon they could explain. In the process he performed a lot of math and numerical modelling. Others interested in his work have started to do their own researches...

...and some people who don't understand the math have come up with their own "Readers' Digest Condensed Version" of Alfven's theories, with less math and less predictions but more Grand Unification of Everything. Which is where I think the Electric Universe people are coming from.

Coincidentally, I also recently wrote a quick post with pointers to pages seeking to refute the Electric Universe models, which you can find here.

And the plot thickens: Slashdot has a post today about The First Results From the Deep Impact Mission. Suprisingly, it doesn't fit the Standard Model. The comet was more of a loosely congealed dustbunny than it was a dirty snowball. OTOH, this doesn't fit what Hoagland and Tom Van Flandern have predicted on the air about what it would turn out to be in their model, which is basically that it was a much more "solid" piece of an exploded planet. Nor does it match, IMHO, McCanney's model of comets as being "powered" by electromagnetic phenomenon.

But I expect either or both of these groups to say one of two things: that since it doesn't match the standard model exactly, that it therefore validates their models (never mind that it doesn't match their predictions either), OR that NASA does have data that validates their models but instead fabricated this data set and published it in the place of the real data.

I am interested in fringe theories, and the like... but for the same reason I find the fringe theories interesting I distrust this particular set of theorists: science is a process, not a collection of correct answers, and the way they present their theories and rewrite them after the fact makes them essentially unfalsifiable. (And therefore outside the process and useless).

(Whew!)
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 19:06 Comments || Top||

#18  And to save everyone the trouble, the conclusion I had time for:

To be honest, I'm not up to date on the current state-of-the-art in the explanations of the Solar Neutrino Deficit, but based on what I've seen thus far about the electric universe models of the sun, they seem to do precisely what they accuse the standard model of doing: they add another couple layers of turtle's worth of complexity to the situation, without ever saying where the energy is coming from. The nuclear physicists not only have a pretty good idea, but if you're a competent enough electrician/electrical engineer to keep from electrocuting yourself you can demonstrate nuclear fusion on a tabletop with a Farnsworth Fusor. You may not get breakeven but you can at least demonstrate the physical process. (The sun's a lot bigger than the average Farnsworth Fusor, and you won't be able to exploit the proton-proton cycle, but it's the same general concept).
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 19:11 Comments || Top||

#19  Damn, that's quite an explanation. I just thought the guy was a kook of some sort.... without realizing that so many scientists were kooks of some sort.
Posted by: Secret Master || 09/08/2005 19:32 Comments || Top||

#20  he’s is convinced it was caused by electromagnetic generators from ground-based microwave transmitters.

Another reason that will be used by the folks who want to make all cold medications perscription only...
Posted by: BigEd || 09/08/2005 19:45 Comments || Top||

#21  The atmosphere can be influnced by RF emmisions. But no onehas the energy/RF power to do it. Changing or creating weather even slightly is mostly out of reach of existing technology. You need amounts of power that no one has available and if they did they would use it for something else. File this stuff under weather myths.
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom || 09/08/2005 19:50 Comments || Top||

#22  Secret Master wrote:
Damn, that's quite an explanation. I just thought the guy was a kook of some sort.... without realizing that so many scientists were kooks of some sort.


Well, while a lot of the above referenced "scientists" are kooks, Alfven was real, and he wasn't a kook.

After you get the Nobel Prize in Physics, you're no longer a kook, you're just eccentric.
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 19:53 Comments || Top||

#23  Sock, these guys also usually claim the ability to bypass completely the laws of thermodynamics as we know them.

If they could have done that twenty years ago (as many of the tesla scalar people claimed then) the history of the last twenty years would probably look a lot different.
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 19:55 Comments || Top||

#24  Phil, I like that conclusion you wrote. The astronomical community hasn't been exactly open-minded about this. And then you get the propenents of the theory, who glom onto it with the fervor of the newly-converted. So some of these electric universe folks take things way too far, which sparks still more skepticism from some of the mainstream astronomers. Throw in a few genuine kooks and jokers, and soon both sides are shouting past each other instead of trying to find common ground.

Then you've got the mainstream astronomers holding their celestial mechanics model together with ducttape in the face of all reason, and the folks on the other side arguing that the electric universe is responsible for every phenomenon from the Banjawarn Station incident to Boy Bands. It's something I've seen before. Someone comes up with a new idea, and people aren't generally accepting. Laurie Mylroie, for example, with the Iraq-al Qaeda connections. I think her fundamentals are very good, and I agree with them, but she's taken things too far. (And she may have a large error in her work, too.)

About the comet, specifically, from my understanding (link) the importance isn't the density of the comet but the energy discharge in the explosion, plus the absence of the expected amount of water in the nucleus. What attracts me to electric universe isn't the missing nuetrinos but explaining things like the missing matter problem, and the pioneer anomaly. Simplicity is better. But sometimes the simplest explanation is a connection.
Posted by: Rory B. Bellows || 09/08/2005 20:22 Comments || Top||

#25 
Phil, I like that conclusion you wrote. The astronomical community hasn't been exactly open-minded about this. And then you get the propenents of the theory, who glom onto it with the fervor of the newly-converted. So some of these electric universe folks take things way too far, which sparks still more skepticism from some of the mainstream astronomers. Throw in a few genuine kooks and jokers, and soon both sides are shouting past each other instead of trying to find common ground.


Well, I don't think there is much common ground. The electric universe people aren't Hannes Alfven, to put it bluntly. They seemed to be making things up.

Then you've got the mainstream astronomers holding their celestial mechanics model together with ducttape in the face of all reason, and the folks on the other side arguing that the electric universe is responsible for every phenomenon from the Banjawarn Station incident to Boy Bands. It's something I've seen before. Someone comes up with a new idea, and people aren't generally accepting. Laurie Mylroie, for example, with the Iraq-al Qaeda connections. I think her fundamentals are very good, and I agree with them, but she's taken things too far. (And she may have a large error in her work, too.)


The thing is, the "Electric Universe" people are making predictions that are turning out to be outright wrong, and/or outright contradicting what we already know about plasma phenomenon and current flows in the solar system. For instance:

About the comet, specifically, from my understanding (link) the importance isn't the density of the comet but the energy discharge in the explosion, plus the absence of the expected amount of water in the nucleus. What attracts me to electric universe isn't the missing nuetrinos but explaining things like the missing matter problem, and the pioneer anomaly. Simplicity is better. But sometimes the simplest explanation is a connection.


First off, your link didn't work. Second, Hoagland, Tom Van Flandern, and McCanney all said that the density of the comet would be higher than the standard model predicts. It was much lower, and composed of rather loosely bound material at the surface.

Loosely bound enough that if the comet were carrying a net electric charge the material would probably be repelled by each other and not be able to hang together as a comet.

Remember what I said earlier, that they'd claim that everything that doesn't match the standard theory would be proof that theirs is right, even if it doesn't match their theory either? There's an example.

Hoagland and Flandern think that comets are fragments of a larger terrestrial planet that broke apart; I have yet to see any model (or math) describing the _process_ as to how it broke apart. Just handwaving. Anyway, as such, they believe that comets are big chunks of rock with little bits of atmosphere and water along for the ride.

McCanney thinks comets eventually turn into regular stony-material or even nickel-iron asteroids.

(Of course, there are other scientists who believe that many asteroids are "dead comets," and DON'T need to postulate the Electric Universe's modifications to physical processes in order to get it to work. Heck, back when I was in college, I was discussing that possibility LONG before McCanney ever went public with his theories.

And his theory isn't NEARLY the only one that can explain a larger-than-usual outburst from the comet.

Frankly, (hah!) Louis Frank's models for comets (and smaller comet fragments) being dust-covered fluffy snowballs accounts for the observed data much more closely than any of the other above mentioned theorists. Incidentally, it's taken him about a decade and a half of wandering through the wilderness to find more and more proof for his theory, but since he doesn't patronize the usual conspiracy theorists or postulate New Physics! noone's ever really heard of him.

Dr. Frank has written a book about the subject, BTW, called The Big Splash. I recommend it highly.

Anyway, this reiterates what I've been trying to say earlier: the EU proponents are not only wrong, but dishonest: they ignore theories besides their own that might explain anomalous observations, and claim all anomalous observations prove their theories whether they really do or not.
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 21:42 Comments || Top||

#26  I also highly recommend Phil Plait's "Bad Astronomy" website, at http://www.badastronomy.com/.
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 21:43 Comments || Top||

#27  some of these electric universe folks take things way too far

I wouldn't mind taking things too far. I think that churchians accused Galileo of that exact deed.

I like the electric universe theory myself for the same reasons you state and more. But my beef with some of the adherents is that they don't, in many instances, stipulate what is a certifiable fact and what is pure speculation. They commit the same sins that are so prevalent in the mainstream scientism.
Posted by: Sobiesky || 09/08/2005 21:48 Comments || Top||

#28  Oh, one little clarification: McCanney claims that comets turn into asteroids of any conceivable type: stony, nickel-iron, chronditic...

Most _other_ scientists who think some asteroids are dead comets restrict themselves to carbonaceous chronditic objects.

An example of this is Phobos; it has a very dry surface, but a very low density consistent with water ice.
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 21:55 Comments || Top||

#29  give it a rest...
Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 22:02 Comments || Top||

#30  I drove through Roswell last year and Ima purfctly norml. Only thng, Ima canotta makm good fatwas nomo.
Posted by: Al-Aska Paul || 09/08/2005 22:13 Comments || Top||

#31  they're fine - you can make Stainless into valves
Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 22:17 Comments || Top||

#32  Sorry, Frank, I got carried away.
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 22:21 Comments || Top||

#33  :-) I've NEVER done that lol. Actually, I should STFU - I'm the last one to criticize...carry on, my bad
Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 22:37 Comments || Top||


Parasites brainwash grasshoppers into death dive
EFL: A parasitic worm that makes the grasshopper it invades jump into water and commit suicide does so by chemically influencing its brain, a study of the insects’ proteins reveal. The parasitic Nematomorph hairworm (Spinochordodes tellinii) develops inside land-dwelling grasshoppers and crickets until the time comes for the worm to transform into an aquatic adult. Somehow mature hairworms brainwash their hosts into behaving in way they never usually would – causing them to seek out and plunge into water. Once in the water the mature hairworms – which are three to four times longer that their hosts when extended – emerge and swim away to find a mate, leaving their host dead or dying in the water.
Bush Derangement Syndrome (BDS) works much the same way.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 09/08/2005 08:55 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I wonder if we are going to see this in a Sci-Fi flick soon. Imagine if there was a human version?

After all, the Geiger Alien (Alien, Alens, etc.) was modeled on the Iclumineon(sp?) wasp.

Of course, one could make the argument that Islamism is one such instance....
Posted by: N guard || 09/08/2005 10:20 Comments || Top||

#2  This vaguely reminds me of my ex-wife thingy.
Posted by: .com || 09/08/2005 10:23 Comments || Top||

#3  can we give this to some of the DEAN CROWD?????
Posted by: ARMYGUY || 09/08/2005 10:31 Comments || Top||

#4  Just vaguely, .com?
Posted by: Raj || 09/08/2005 10:54 Comments || Top||

#5  It's the plot of my next blockbuster movie N guard. I call it Aliens VS Water World.
Posted by: Kevin Costner || 09/08/2005 11:03 Comments || Top||

#6  Too late, Kevin.
Khan, about to put Ceti Eels in Terrell and Chekov's ears]

Khan: You see, their young enter through the ears and wrap themselves around the cerebral cortex. This has the effect of rendering the victim extremely susceptible to suggestion. Later as they grow follows madness and death.
Posted by: Steve || 09/08/2005 11:44 Comments || Top||

#7  Ima remember the New TriLo Episode where our hero undergoes 58 hours of physical hellpain from EarWicks. Survived, happy. Only to lern it was a formerly pregnant worm. Only so so.
Posted by: Shipman || 09/08/2005 15:33 Comments || Top||


Chimps Surrender To Police Marksmen
Posted by: SwissTex || 09/08/2005 06:48 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:


Swiss thief nabbed by door
Another stupid human trick.
GENEVA — A thief raiding a Swiss shopping centre was arrested after his head was clamped by a sliding door, police said yesterday.

The thief forced his way through the automatic sliding door in the village of Nendaz during the night and carted way several bags full of DVDs, watches and food, police in the southern canton of Valais said. But the door suddenly shut during the illicit shopping spree, trapping his neck and foot and forcing him to call for help. Some locals prised open the door but pushed the thief back inside as it shut. Police said he was forced to wait inside until they picked him up.
Posted by: Steve White || 09/08/2005 00:47 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  DOH!!!!!!!
Posted by: ARMYGUY || 09/08/2005 9:07 Comments || Top||


Britain
'Evil' bogus spy jailed for life
A few days old, but a strange, sad case.
A former barman who posed as a spy to trick his victims out of almost £1m has been jailed for life. Robert Hendy-Freegard, 34, of Blyth, Nottinghamshire, persuaded his victims they were being hunted by the IRA. London's Blackfriars Crown Court heard they endured years of poverty and carried out bizarre "missions" for him over a 10-year period. He was convicted in June of theft and kidnapping-by-fraud. After the trial, police said he was an "evil" conman. Hendy-Freegard used the cash he took from his eight victims to fund a luxury life of top-of-the-range cars, designer suits, expensive meals, and five-star holidays in Brazil and elsewhere.
Well, at least he didn't waste it
The former barman and car salesman, who worked at a pub in Newport, Shropshire, when the con began in 1992, told the victims he was an MI5 agent and that they were being hunted by the IRA.
Six of his victims were women, including a solicitor, a psychologist and a recently married PA who ended up leaving her husband and sleeping on park benches, surviving on a slice of Mars Bar a day. John Atkinson, a student befriended by Hendy-Freegard, handed over more than £300,000 to him. Judge Deva Pillay said on Tuesday Hendy-Freegard was "an egotistical and opinionated confidence trickster who has shown not a shred of remorse or compassion". The judge said there was a "heinous pattern of offending" against his victims, all of whom fell prey to his "devious charm".
Outside court, Metropolitan Police Det Sgt Bob Brandon said: "He [Hendy-Freegard] ruthlessly deprived his victims of many years of their lives by making them believe their lives were in mortal danger. "He lived a millionaire lifestyle while they lived in abject poverty. He was motivated by power; he was a sad, pathetic individual who achieved nothing from his life, but by pretending to be a spy he had power and control over people."
Judge Pillay imposed discretionary life sentences upon Hendy-Freegard in respect of two charges of kidnapping along with jail sentences totalling nine years for a catalogue of theft and fraud offences.
He said it would be March 2013 before parole would even be considered.
The 34-year-old denied all 24 charges, but was found guilty of two counts of kidnap, 10 of theft and eight of deception. He was cleared of two kidnap counts, one of theft and one of making a threat to kill.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 09/08/2005 08:50 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:


Another Data Mining Application
Statistical methods usually employed as industrial quality-control measures might have allowed authorities to catch mass-murdering UK doctor Harold Shipman much earlier than he was, according to a new study. The method, which can also be used to uncover awful surgeons or poorly-performing hospitals, is now being tested in pilot schemes by the UK's Healthcare Commission, an independent body which monitors public health services. Harold Shipman - the UK's most prolific serial killer - was convicted in 2000 for murdering 15 of his patients as a GP or community doctor. But it is believed that he may have murdered a further 245, between 1975 and 1998. His victims were mostly elderly female patients, to whom he administered fatal doses of morphine. Shipman hung himself in his prison cell in January 2004.

Now David Spiegelhalter of the UK Medical Research Council's Biostatistics Unit, Cambridge, UK, has applied an industrial quality-control technique to data on the death of Shipman's patients to see if his heinous crimes could have been detected any earlier. The method was first used in 1943 to ensure consistent quality in explosive shells and other wartime munitions production lines, says Spiegelhalter. The same statistics are used today in a wide range of industries, but have never before been applied to healthcare performance. "Maths has many crime-fighting applications," comments applied mathematician Chris Budd at the University of Bath, UK. "Statistics can be a useful approach for detecting anomalies in many contexts," he says.

Monitoring the excess death among Shipman's patients may not have been enough alone to detect the murders, says Spiegelhalter. Some other general practitioners – those who regularly work in care homes or hospices for example – have been shown, understandably, to have a higher patient fatality rate. But cross-referencing other factors such as time of death or location might have set alarm bells ringing – many of Shipman's victims were murdered at around 3pm, during his afternoon rounds, and anomalous numbers died while in Shipman’s presence.
Posted by: Rory B. Bellows || 09/08/2005 02:25 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  But we can't have data mining to prevent terrorism. Nope nope nope. Privacy concerns, don'tcha know. Those algorithms might send you unsolicited junk mail.
Posted by: Rory B. Bellows || 09/08/2005 15:22 Comments || Top||

#2  Shipman, eh?

Hmmm....... ;)
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 09/08/2005 21:23 Comments || Top||

#3  Been there done it. No government will listen. Ok a year after the temple mnt thingy the Israelis dropped by to talk but nobody else did.
Posted by: 3dc || 09/08/2005 22:46 Comments || Top||


Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Yeltsin Breaks Leg at Italian Resort
Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin was hospitalized Wednesday after falling and breaking his leg at a villa in a resort town on the Italian island of Sardinia, officials said. Emergency service workers arrived early Wednesday at the home in exclusive Porto Rotondo where the 74-year-old Yeltsin was staying and took him to a local hospital, said Giuseppe Soro, director of the ambulance dispatch center in Sassari.

Yeltsin's spokesman, Vladimir Shevchenko, told Russia's ITAR-Tass news agency the former president broke his thigh bone in a bad fall. Russia's Interfax news agency quoted a source close to Yeltsin as saying the former president left on his private jet Wednesday evening for Moscow and was expected to be hospitalized immediately.
Posted by: Fred || 09/08/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  was he dancing drunkenly?
Posted by: Shep UK || 09/08/2005 4:48 Comments || Top||

#2  There's another kind?
Posted by: Steve || 09/08/2005 8:34 Comments || Top||


China-Japan-Koreas
Chinese restaurant's "Tiger Meat" actually donkey meat in tiger urine
A restaurant in northeastern China that advertised illegal tiger meat dishes was found instead to be selling donkey flesh marinated in tiger urine, a newspaper reported Thursday.
It's the marinade that makes the flavor.

The Hufulou restaurant, located beside the Heidaohezi tiger reserve near the city of Hailin, had advertised stir-fried tiger meat with chilies for $98 as well as liquor flavored with tiger bone for $74 a bottle, the China Daily reported.

The sale of tiger parts is illegal in China and officers shut down the restaurant, only to be told by owner, Ma Shikun, that the meat was actually that of donkeys, flavored with tiger urine to give the dish a "special" tang, the newspaper said. The report didn't say how the urine was obtained.
And I don't want to know.

Authorities confiscated the restaurant's profits and fined Ma $296 it said.
Well, they are communists.
It wasn't clear what Ma was fined for. Selling donkey meat is not illegal in China and it is widely consumed in the northeast. Um, this is kind of "out there," but maybe perhaps selling food soaked in piss is a health violation?

You know, maybe Mucky has a point...
Posted by: MSM || 09/08/2005 17:28 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I have to figure that this restaurant works differently from regular ones - they pay the patrons $98 to eat this stuff.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 09/08/2005 19:04 Comments || Top||

#2  Patrons were reportedly p-o'd when they found out.
Posted by: Mike || 09/08/2005 19:07 Comments || Top||

#3  Well, thanks for making me lose my appetite for dinner.
Think you can come up with something stomach-churning every evening about 5 PM, Central? Maybe at about 7 and 11 AM, too? As a diet plan this could really take off the pounds.
CSI usually does it for me, but it's only on a couple of times a week.
Posted by: Sgt. Mom || 09/08/2005 19:50 Comments || Top||

#4  The people who paid $98 to eat something known to be illegal got what they deserved.

GIves new meaning to the term "Caveat Emptor." BTW, back in the '70s, Italian Health officials cracked down on restaurants that catered to tourists. Seems they were adding ox blood to the wine and marble dust to the flour.

Posted by: mom || 09/08/2005 19:58 Comments || Top||

#5  I'd be mighty pissed if they didn't marinate my filet of donkey in tiger urine. Wouldn't you be?
Posted by: Chris W. || 09/08/2005 23:51 Comments || Top||


Koizumi headed for big victory in Japanese elections
With an election just days away, Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi looks headed for a victory that will give the staunch U.S. ally a firmer grip on his fractious party and provide impetus to efforts to reduce the government's role in the world's second-biggest economy. If opinion polls prove correct, the outcome of Sunday's lower house election will be cheered in Washington and welcomed by investors eager to see economic reforms stay on track. But there will be little applause in China and South Korea. Japan's ties with both countries have deteriorated during Koizumi's four years in office, mainly because of his visits to Yasukuni shrine for war dead, where war criminals are among those honoured, and perceptions of rising Japanese nationalism.

Media surveys predict Koizumi's two-party ruling bloc will win a comfortable or overwhelming majority. His long-ruling Liberal Democratic Party could even take a majority on its own in parliament's lower house for the first time since 1990. That would be a striking victory for Koizumi -- not only over the opposition Democratic Party, which also preaches reform, but over old guard LDP rivals who consider funnelling benefits to the hinterlands and special interest groups to be their main job. "In terms of changing the LDP, I think Koizumi has done an awfully good job," said Steven Reed, a political scientist at Chuo University. "He's getting straight A's."

Koizumi, who sprang to power in 2001 promising to change the hide-bound party that has ruled Japan for most of the past half century, has gotten mixed reviews for his economic reforms. Banks have shed their huge bad loans and public works spending declined, but government debt has grown to 150 percent of gross domestic product, the highest among advanced nations.
Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Dan Darling || 09/08/2005 00:37 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Another Coalition leader approved by the voters. Congrats Mr. Koizumi, and thanks.
Posted by: Seafarious || 09/08/2005 9:20 Comments || Top||

#2  Just make sure that Al-Quaeda doesn't try to pull another 3/11.
Posted by: dushan || 09/08/2005 9:55 Comments || Top||


Chicoms begin drilling at undersea gas field near Japanese territory
From East Asia Intel, subscription req'd.
Tokyo has authorized Japanese companies to begin exploring undersea natural gas in waters claimed by both Japan and China, a move likely to increase tensions in Northeast Asia.
However, reports last week from Tokyo said China has already begun drilling and is "highly likely" to begin production of gas at the Chunxiao field near the median line in the East China Sea.
China is developing three fields near the median line that Tokyo says will extend into Japanese territory.
"Don't like it, sue us, sez the Chicoms.
China began drilling work on the Chunxiao field in early August, according to Japanese officials quoted in the Sankei Shimbun.
"If the [gas field development] is carried out at this pace, China may start full production in October, or in November at the latest," said a senior Foreign Ministry official.
To counter the Chinese moves, Japan's government granted Teikoku Oil Co. exploration rights to test drill at three sites in the Japanese territory near the median line. The company has not yet begun drilling.
If you want to be a player, better drill it.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 09/08/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I can see a war being started over this real quick.
Posted by: Raj || 09/08/2005 11:06 Comments || Top||

#2  Let's ask April Gillespie.
Posted by: Seafarious || 09/08/2005 11:18 Comments || Top||

#3  1 of dale brown's "Old Dog" books covered such a scienerio.
Posted by: raptor || 09/08/2005 15:25 Comments || Top||

#4  Raj: I can see a war being started over this real quick.

I think the odds are low, because the cost of replacing destroyed military hardware may surpass the benefits from extracting natural gas. I suspect each country will try to empty out that natural gas field from its side of the water as fast as it can. Iraq went to war with Kuwait because of competitive oil extraction over the same oil field on different sides of the border. But Japan's no Kuwait - the Japanese Navy would beat the crap out of the Chinese Navy, and that's without Uncle Sam jumping in.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 09/08/2005 18:58 Comments || Top||

#5  Basically, the Chinese are interested in the disputed area because of natural resources. There are bragging rights involved, but these are nowhere near as significant as the gas and oil at stake. If they can get the resources without getting into an expensive skirmish with Japan that will get the hackles of everyone in East Asia up about Chinese territorial ambitions, they'll do so.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 09/08/2005 19:01 Comments || Top||


Down Under
"Death Squad Commander' back in Australia
AN ex-Australian army reservist who headed Serbian paramilitary units implicated in the wartime rape, torture and slaughter of Muslims in Bosnia has returned to Australia and is living in Perth.

Dragan Vasilykovic, a Serb with Australian citizenship known as Captain Dragan, ran brothels in the Melbourne suburb of St Kilda before he travelled to his homeland in 1991 to fight in the inter-communal conflict in the Balkans.
Between 1991 and 1994, Mr Vasilykovic commanded a number of paramilitary units alleged to have murdered hundreds of civilians and participated in the organised rape of women and girls.

At the time, Mr Vasilykovic claimed he used the training methods of Australia's SAS forces to train up to 16,000 Serbian fighters.

Despite his wartime activities, Mr Vasilykovic has recently returned to Australia, settling in Perth.

According to Serbian newspapers, has been on a recruitment drive to Serbian clubs around the country, raising money for a Belgrade-based charity known as Fond Kapetan Dragan, or the Captain Dragan Fund.

When contacted by The Australian in Perth yesterday, Mr Vasilykovic, who now goes by the name of Daniel Snedden, said he was "playing golf and basically just doing my own thing".
Mr Vasilykovic rejected allegations that he was a war criminal as nothing more than "war propaganda".

"I won't say I'm perfect, no, because nobody is perfect ... but I'm sure that I never killed a civilian, I'm sure I never killed a prisoner, I'm sure I never killed anybody that didn't have to be killed," he said.

"I would like to answer any war crime question ... I would really love to see anyone come up with an accusation - I'm prepared to answer any question."

Mr Vasilykovic said he mobilised Serbs for action during the Balkans war, and helped save many lives.

He said he had appeared before the War Crimes Tribunal at The Hague, and answered questions for 18 hours, rejecting an offer of immunity.

The 50-year-old has lived in Perth since December, and said he was enjoying being near his 76-year-old mother, and working as a golf teacher at the Serbian community centre in the southern Perth suburb of Maddington.

But former deputy prosecutor to the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, Graham Blewitt, said Mr Vasilykovic should "without hesitation" be investigated by Australian authorities over the allegations of wartime atrocities levelled against him.

"If they were Australian citizens who went overseas and participated in war crimes, and then came back, the Australian Federal Police have got the authority to investigate them for crimes under the Crimes Act (Foreign Excursions)," said Mr Blewitt, a New South Wales local court magistrate.

"These guys who went overseas were mercenaries, and that is an offence under the Crimes Act."

Mr Vasilykovic has been investigated by the Hague-based International Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, and a 1992 report by the tribunal's UN precursor found that one of the militia units he commanded, known as the Red Berets or the Draganovci, had terrorised the Muslim population in the Bosnian city of Zvornik before a mass expulsion.

"The increasing terror caused by ... the newly arrived unit of one Kapetan Dragan was the preparatory stage for the ultimate forceful expulsion of the Muslim inhabitants of Zvornik," the report by a UN Commission of Experts said.

The report says resident interviewed as part of the investigation had described Mr Vasilykovic as second in importance to Serbian warlord Zeljko Raznatovic, known as "Arkan", who was indicted by the International War Crimes Tribunal in The Hague before being gunned down in a Belgrade hotel in January, 2000.

Mr Vasilykovic first came to notoriety in mid-1991 when his forces attacked the small town of Glina on the Croatia-Bosnia border.

Footage broadcast on Croatian television showed the mutilated bodies of nine Croatian policemen.

Mr Vasilykovic was quoted in a newspaper report after the incident as justifying the violence: "When the Croatian side uses hospitals or police stations in their villages as fortified positions, I'm sorry, I just have to massacre them."
Posted by: Oztralian [AKA] God Save The World || 09/08/2005 05:45 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Who's investigating war crimes again?

Not Koffis' Krew™, I hope!
Posted by: Bobby || 09/08/2005 8:31 Comments || Top||

#2  An olde friend of 'oris
Posted by: Throlulet Graviling7296 || 09/08/2005 8:37 Comments || Top||

#3  Article: Footage broadcast on Croatian television showed the mutilated bodies of nine Croatian policemen.

Mr Vasilykovic was quoted in a newspaper report after the incident as justifying the violence: "When the Croatian side uses hospitals or police stations in their villages as fortified positions, I'm sorry, I just have to massacre them."


Note that these guys went after combatants. When are al Qaeda terrorists - who are going after civilians - going to be charged by the UN?
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 09/08/2005 13:35 Comments || Top||


Europe
French flunk labour reforms
And Dominique doesn't know why.
Posted by: Steve White || 09/08/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  His brother Margaret does, though...
Posted by: Fred || 09/08/2005 9:33 Comments || Top||

#2  The Socialist's answer to payless workdays, vacations, and lower leave, etc. is more payless workdays, vacations, leave, etc. and doing so whilst demanding that the already over-stressed Socialist State provide more benefits. NATIONAL, TRANSNATIONAL, REGIONAL, TRANSREGIONAL AND GLOBAL TAXATION NOW, D*** YOU - BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH....
EXTRA-GLOBAL, SOLAR AND LUNAR TAXATION TO FOLLOW - WHY WAIT FOR THE CHICOMS TO SEND A MAN TO THE MOON?
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 09/08/2005 21:18 Comments || Top||

#3  I followed the first part, JM, but the Chicoms on the moon thing kinda got me confused....
Posted by: Al-Aska Paul || 09/08/2005 22:29 Comments || Top||


Fifth Column
Bergler to regain clearance in time to serve in Hillary's cabinet
Sandy Berger, President Clinton's national security adviser who was once entrusted with the nation's most sensitive secrets, was fined $50,000 Thursday for taking classified documents from the National Archives. U.S. Magistrate Judge Deborah Robinson handed down the punishment in federal court, stiffening the $10,000 fine recommended by government lawyers. Under the deal, Berger avoids prison time but he must surrender access to classified government materials for three years.
So he gets it back in September 2008, so can work the campaign.
"The court finds the fine is inadequate because it doesn't reflect the seriousness of the offense," Robinson said, as a grim-faced Berger stood silently. She also sentenced Berger to two years' probation and 100 hours of community service.
Suggestions for the latter? Perhaps sorting out recyclable paper from garbage dumps and shredding it to pulp.
"I let considerations of the Democrats' partisan advantage personal convenience override clear rules of handling classified material," said Berger, calling his actions a lapse of judgment that came while he was preparing to testify before the Sept. 11 commission last year. "In this case, I failed. I will not get caught again," he said.

The sentencing capped a bizarre sequence of events in which Berger admitted to sneaking classified documents out of the National Archives in his suit, later destroying some of them in his office and then lying about it. Berger's lawyer, Lanny Breuer, said his client will not appeal the sentence. Initially saying his actions were an "honest mistake," Berger later pleaded guilty in April to a misdemeanor of unauthorized removal and retention of classified material, which contained information relating to terror threats in the United States during the 2000 millennium celebration. During Thursday's hearing, Breuer characterized Berger as an official eager to cover up get the facts of the Sept. 11 attacks right when he improperly took classified documents and handwritten notes from the Archives.
Posted by: MSM || 09/08/2005 17:19 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This is bullshit,he should have lost his clearance perminatly.He has proved he can't be trusted with classified docs.
Posted by: raptor || 09/08/2005 19:24 Comments || Top||

#2  Nor can Judge Robinson be entrusted to hand down proper punishment.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 09/08/2005 21:16 Comments || Top||

#3  Sandy will have messy hearings. He'll never touch a secret document alone again - and it should be on his epitaph: "Why don't they make smaller shredders?"
Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 21:18 Comments || Top||

#4  So did the handwritten notes on the documents that Sandy Burglar shredded contain:

a) The name 'Mohamed Atta'.
b) The words 'Able Danger'.
c) The phrase 'Don't worry - be happy!'
d) All of the above
Posted by: DMFD || 09/08/2005 22:55 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Sandy Burglar Gets A Slap On The Wrist
Just annouced on Rush - 50K fine, 5 yrs. probation, 200 hrs community service. No link yet...
Posted by: Raj || 09/08/2005 14:45 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This really burns me. Politcos take care of their own. When I had a clearance, we had the fear of Gawd put into us for mishandling classified material.

Sandy needed some quality rock hockey time in the big arena for knowingly taking classifed material out of a secure area. And Mr. Burglar did not do this on his own initiative, that's for damned sure. *Boiler pressure down to manageable level again*
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 09/08/2005 14:53 Comments || Top||

#2  What burns me even more is the Dems want Karl Rove's head and he didn't even break the law. Dickweeds!
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 09/08/2005 15:25 Comments || Top||

#3  What about his clearance. Care to bet it's suspended until January 2009?
Posted by: Jackal || 09/08/2005 15:55 Comments || Top||

#4  How about revoking it permanently?

The fact that this guy actually managed to avoid imprisonment is beyond belief.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 09/08/2005 17:27 Comments || Top||


Al Gore: Mankind Living In Post-Apocalyptic New Age
"...We're entering -- have already entered -- a new phase of human history," Gore said. "The fundamental relationship between our species and our home planet has been utterly transformed..."
"We are now as gods that tread upon the Earth, and our whims are the commandments of heaven!"
Posted by: Anonymoose || 09/08/2005 10:58 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  You've already been there for a few years, Al, so prepare us. What's it like?
Posted by: tu3031 || 09/08/2005 11:19 Comments || Top||

#2  Have any other of our nations "would bes" and "also rans" come as unhinged as old Al Gore? He needs to get a job or something.
Posted by: Secret Master || 09/08/2005 11:21 Comments || Top||

#3  You should know, Al; - you brought us the Internet!
Posted by: Raj || 09/08/2005 11:25 Comments || Top||

#4  Next attempt at relevancy Al?
Posted by: MunkarKat || 09/08/2005 11:44 Comments || Top||

#5  I'm picturing Al in an Aunty Entity outfit from Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome. Its scary 'cause it suits him.

Max: I don't know anything about methane.
Aunty Entity(Al Gore): You can shovel shit can't you?
Posted by: BrerRabbit || 09/08/2005 12:07 Comments || Top||

#6  Good one. brother Rabbit. LOL!!
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 09/08/2005 12:33 Comments || Top||

#7  Al just wasted one BILLION smackers buying a perfectly good left wing cable news group and turning it into some weird jumbled space that MTV can't even understand.

To make it more confusing his family (who stood to inherit that 1 billion $) didn't kill him to stop their asset loss. Somewhere his DNA got badly lost.
Posted by: 3dc || 09/08/2005 13:00 Comments || Top||

#8  A living parody. Thanx Al, oh and by-the-way, thanx fer this internet too. It's been workin' out really well.
Posted by: macofromoc || 09/08/2005 13:20 Comments || Top||

#9  If only he had won.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 09/08/2005 15:58 Comments || Top||

#10  I wonder if he was misquoted when he said "our home planet"?
Posted by: Anonymoose || 09/08/2005 17:21 Comments || Top||

#11  Off his meds again.
Posted by: DMFD || 09/08/2005 18:51 Comments || Top||

#12  It is truly frightening to think of how close he came to being our president.
Posted by: Truly frightening to think how close he cameDarrell || 09/08/2005 20:28 Comments || Top||

#13  POTUS Al, aka Hillary's VP, likely didn't see the X17-magnitude Solar flare on Sept 7.: even thru the sunlight the disc of the sun was "on FIRE", i.e "visible" arcs of flame exploding from the body/mass of the sun. Good Clintonians and Socie-Commie Secularists read the science and news blogs; Good Madonna and Headbangers Ball fans do the same while also seeing the sun on fire, like a burning house, like the biblical "burning bush".
Now iff Osama was the true Imam Mahdi, the true Saladin, etc. incarnate, he would see arcs of flames, lift his hand, head, and soul to heaven, and invoke God to cease his wrath, telling God now is NOT a good time to have that long-planned camel barbecue, silly boy! Al, Al, Al - if Asteroids cometh, or the Moon exploded today or tomorrow, or circa 2030, and chunks slammed into the earth, ... etc.it would still be only and just the "light stuff". * KWAI CHANG CAIN to MASTER PO: "Old Man, Master, you are old and blind, yet how do you see the grasshopper at my feet? MASTER PO: "Young Man, how is it that you do NOT"!?
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 09/08/2005 22:06 Comments || Top||


Hillary: Raise Taxes To Pay For Katrina
2008 presidential candidate Hillary Clinton said Wednesday that she favors rolling back the Bush tax cuts to fund reconstruction efforts in New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.
Asked where the money to rebuild the city should come from, Mrs. Clinton told NBC's "Today Show": "It comes from the first instance in not making those tax cuts for rich people like us permanent."

"Let's get back to shared sacrifice," Clinton insisted, defending her tax hike plan. "Let's take care of each other. Let's plan for the future. Let's do what is necessary to put Americans first again."

Mrs. Clinton has consistently argued for a tax hike ever since she was elected to the Senate.

Last year she told a San Francisco audience: "We're going to take things away from you on behalf of the common good."

In 2003 Clinton argued for a tax hike to pay for the Iraq war.

In Nov. 2001, the former first lady blamed the 9/11 attacks on the Bush tax cuts, telling CNN: "If we hadn't passed the big tax cut last spring, that I believe undermined our fiscal responsibility and our ability to deal with this new threat of terrorism, we wouldn't be in the fix we're in today."
Sounds like Jacques Chirac, no?
Posted by: Anonymoose || 09/08/2005 10:42 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  How about a one time fee levied against future building permits in the affected area? Let them finance their own reconstruction.
Posted by: BrerRabbit || 09/08/2005 11:03 Comments || Top||

#2  "We're going to take things away from you on behalf of the common good."

Does this woman seriously expect to run for President?
Posted by: Secret Master || 09/08/2005 11:18 Comments || Top||

#3  Like I said yesterday, GIVE THIS BITCH A BUCKET AND GET HER FAT ASS DOWN THERE TO DO SOMETHING USEFUL FOR ONCE! NOW!!!
Posted by: tu3031 || 09/08/2005 11:21 Comments || Top||

#4  Hillary on Bush's tax cuts (sometime last year):

"We're saying that for America to get back on track, we're probably going to cut that short and not give it to you. We're going to take things away from you on behalf of the common good."

Freakin' socialist to the core...
Posted by: Raj || 09/08/2005 11:23 Comments || Top||

#5  Sorry, Secret Master - I didn't refresh before I posted.
Posted by: Raj || 09/08/2005 11:24 Comments || Top||

#6  How about one year PORK FREE. Talk to your buddy Teddy and the "Big Dig". What is it, 15 Billion and still sucking?
Posted by: Flack Elmegum1744 || 09/08/2005 11:44 Comments || Top||

#7  It's called the "Big Pig" to some.
Posted by: MunkarKat || 09/08/2005 11:46 Comments || Top||

#8  "It comes from the first instance in not making those tax cuts for rich people like us permanent."

I'm not aware of any law that forbids her from voluntarily paying the difference.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 09/08/2005 15:08 Comments || Top||

#9  How 'bout a ten dollar a pop tax on comparing any person (apart from real WWII Nazis) to Hitler. MoveOn alone could fund the reconstruction of New Orleans.
Posted by: DMFD || 09/08/2005 18:53 Comments || Top||

#10  Or (seriously) how 'bout we cut 50% out of the recent transportation bill. I mean, I REALLY was looking forwarding to driving across that $200+ million bridge in Alaska, but I'll live with my disappointment.
Posted by: DMFD || 09/08/2005 18:55 Comments || Top||

#11  Raise taxes on the top 2 percent of the earners in this country and give all of Gawds chillun a 2,000 Dollar Debit Card of Love.
Posted by: Sister Townsend Barbie || 09/08/2005 19:55 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
Passenger attacks flight attendant, meets "93rd Volunteer Infantry"
EFL. Speaking of monuments to Flight 93, . . .
Jason Glen Tervort flew much of the way from Houston to Denver Tuesday night on the floor of the plane, tied up with duct tape.

Fellow passengers on Frontier Flight 147 subdued him, according to court documents, after he walked up the aisle toward the cockpit, loudly stated, "Ladies and gentlemen, I have an announcement to make. My name is Jason," and then roughed up a female flight attendant while proclaiming repeatedly, "I'm on drugs! stupid! a moonbat! a man!"
I can hear his defense attorney now: "It was perfomrance art, Your Honor; he was doing his Muddy Waters imitation. Had he not been so rudely interrupted, his next words after 'I'm a man' would have been 'I spell M! A! N!'"
The flight attendant told authorities later that Tervort attacked her after she told him to sit down, poking her in the shoulder and chest, pushing her, slapping her and shouting profanities. Unable to reach her emergency whistle, she yelled for help.
Let's roll!
"Several male passengers exited their seats and physically restrained Tervort," court documents said. "Tervort continued yelling profanities while hissing spitting at and making faces biting passengers." The male passengers tied Tervort's arms and legs with duct tape, then put him face-down on the center aisle and tied his feet to seat rails. Other passengers were moved to the front of the plane but some of the men sat around Tervort until the plane landed at Denver International Airport.

When Denver police officers boarded, they found Tervort still tied up on the floor.
"Officers, I have an announcement to make. My name is Jason. I'm immobilized!"
I think it's just 'performance art' on the part of the passengers.
Police arrested Tervort and took him to a hospital. He remained in custody Wednesday and was to appear in federal court today.
Make sure he's wearing a muzzle.
Posted by: Mike || 09/08/2005 14:27 || Comments || Link || [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  A google search on "Jason Tervort" yields a Louisiana jockey by that name, but no picture (well, one, but he's riding in a race, and you can't see his face). There's a picture of the airplane Tervort here.
Posted by: Angie Schultz || 09/08/2005 15:53 Comments || Top||

#2  I'd be under arrest right now for killing the mofo.
Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 16:48 Comments || Top||

#3  Yet another use for Duct Tape - the stuff is amazing!
Posted by: DMFD || 09/08/2005 19:05 Comments || Top||


State Department confirms Chinese cyber attacks
From East-Asia-Intel, subscription req'd.
The State Department acknowledged last week that China is a source of many computer attacks.
Insert "Master of the Obvious" picture here.
“Threats to our computer systems can arise from many sources and are difficult to identify,” the department said in a statement. “We defend against attempted attacks into our systems from sources in China and many other countries.”
The department seeks to cooperate with international meetings in Asia to deal with cyber security, such as the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation Forum (APEC) and “China is a member of APEC and takes part in the cyber security dialogue in that venue.”
Fox: meet chicken coop. The Chicoms are known around the world for the promises they keep.
The department statement would not say if China succeed in penetrating computers during a China-origin computer hacking effort known as Titan Rain.
We can say no more.™
“We remain vigilant through our anti-virus and firewall protection to thwart attacks such as these,” the statement said. “So far this calendar year, the Department of State has blocked from its systems about 3.8 million viruses and 13 million spam attacks.”
The spam attacks were by and large from Nigeria.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 09/08/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  RB got some comment spam from China yesterday, but the AoS acted quickly to restore order and Fred's levee firewall has been reinforced. Die spammers die.
Posted by: Seafarious || 09/08/2005 0:14 Comments || Top||

#2  Die spammers die.

May as well be the same way like that Russian dude.
Posted by: twobyfour || 09/08/2005 1:02 Comments || Top||

#3  Pff...the ignorance on these issues is astounding. Everyone seems to assume that the Chinese government is behind this.

The internet is totally disconnected from geography. If I want to attack US servers, I can do it from anywhere I want to. As a matter of fact, it's only common sense to disguise your true location.
Posted by: gromky || 09/08/2005 1:19 Comments || Top||

#4  China's sheer number of unprotected and zombie systems is a part of this problem. Most people don't have legal copies of the operating system they use. Chinese rarely if ever secure them with firewall and anti virus protection. They also don't patch them as they are bootleg copies and don't have that option. They just reformat and reinstall when the systems finally crash. Knowing where many of these "attacks" actually come from is hard to establish. I suggest taking much salt with people you claim to know where attacks really originate.

Most of the spam out of China is actually sent by US spammers. These attacks could be the same type of thing.
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom || 09/08/2005 2:19 Comments || Top||


International-UN-NGOs
U.N.: Anti-Poverty Goals Not Being Met
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - Unless drastic measures are implemented, the world will not meet its targets for reducing poverty and millions of people will die needlessly during the next decade, according to a major U.N. report released Wednesday.
My wallet just started weeping. I wonder why?
Despite progress globally, many countries are falling behind, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, where the HIV/AIDS pandemic is dramatically reducing life expectancy and creating financial and social burdens that slow development.
Maybe you should nationalize your farms and factories. That always works well.
The stark findings contained in the 2005 Human Development Report were presented to world leaders a week before they meet in New York for a U.N. summit to review progress toward the Millennium Development Goals. The goals include halving extreme poverty, reducing child deaths by two-thirds and achieving universal primary education by 2015. The goals "are a promissory note, written by 189 governments and signed only by the US and Australia to the world's poor people," said Kevin Watkins, the development report's chief author. "That note falls due in less than 10 years time, and without the required investment and political will, it will come back stamped 'insufficient funds.'"
Hint: It always comes back 'insufficient funds.' It's something in the ink, I guess.
Despite increasing global prosperity, more than 1 billion people still survive on less than $1 a day; 10.7 million children die before their fifth birthday; and 115 million children are not in school, the report said. Life expectancy in Botswana has dropped 20 years since the 1970s to just 36. A person living in Zambia has less chance of reaching 30 than one born in England at the dawn of the industrial revolution in 1840.
Which means less than nothing, since all those Zambians are being raised under the gentle auspices of the UN anti-poverty programs and the 1840 English had to go it alone.
In many instances, the gap between rich and poor also is widening, the report said. One-fifth of humanity live in countries where people can spend $2 on a cappuccino. Another fifth survive on less than $1 a day.
"UN conference awed by poor's ability to live like that"
Such disparities present one of the greatest barriers to progress, Watkins argued. At the current rate, 115 countries with a combined population of almost 2.1 billion are off track by more than a generation on at least one millennium goal. Governments of developing countries can help turn these trends around by tackling inequalities, respecting human rights, encouraging investment and rooting out corruption, the report said. But in the meantime, give us more money their success will depend on the support of wealthy nations. This year saw the eight richest nations devote unprecedented attention to poverty at their summit in Gleneagles, Scotland,
Just before their attention was diverted when Al-Q boomed the Tube...
including a pledge to double aid to $50 billion by 2015.
*BUT*
But aid levels are still far from keeping pace with growing incomes in the wealthiest countries, the report said.
Posted by: Seafarious || 09/08/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Of course, everyone knows the REAL reason for the anti-poverty goals not being met:

George Bush Doesn't Care About Black People™
Posted by: Chris W. || 09/08/2005 1:42 Comments || Top||

#2  Kojo wants new car?
Posted by: gromgoru || 09/08/2005 1:59 Comments || Top||

#3  Kojo wants new car?
Posted by: gromgoru || 09/08/2005 1:59 Comments || Top||

#4  Sorry about the double posting.
Posted by: gromgoru || 09/08/2005 2:00 Comments || Top||

#5  The UN can start by paying their own goddam bar tab.
Posted by: badanov || 09/08/2005 2:12 Comments || Top||

#6  Another lame excuse for instating some kind of global tax scheme, without our permission of course.
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom || 09/08/2005 2:22 Comments || Top||

#7  How did Fairbanks get on the sign post?
Posted by: John Q. Citizen || 09/08/2005 7:10 Comments || Top||

#8  Current issue of Scientific American: Can Extreme Poverty Be Eliminated
Subtitle: Market economics and globalization are lifting the bulk of humanity out of extreme poverty, but special measures are needed to help the poorest of the poor. Poverty, by their definition, has been coming down steadily for decades.

Almost everyone who ever lived was wretchedly poor. Famine, death from childbirth, infectious disease and countless other hazards were the norm for most of history. Humanity's sad plight started to change with the Industrial Revolution, beginning around 1750. New scientific insights and technological innovations enabled a growing proportion of the global population to break free of extreme poverty.

What? The government didn't do it? Whaddabout the socialists? Jane Fonda?

I'll read it at home, but you can go to:
Link
Posted by: Bobby || 09/08/2005 8:07 Comments || Top||


Southeast Asia
Indonesian Moslems Debate With Christians About Religion
From Compass Direct
Indonesian judges today sentenced three women to three years in prison for allowing Muslim children to attend a Christian Sunday school program. Rebekka Zakaria, Eti Pangesti and Ratna Bangun received the sentence after judges found them guilty of violating the Child Protection Act of 2002, which forbids “deception, lies or enticement” causing a child to convert to another religion. The maximum sentence for violation of the Act is five years in prison and a fine of 100 million rupiah ($10,226).

The Sunday school teachers had instructed the children to get permission from their parents before attending the program, and those who did not have permission were asked to go home, according to Jeff Hammond of Bless Indonesia Today, a Christian foundation operating out of Jakarta. None of the children had converted to Christianity.

When the verdict was announced at 11 a.m. local time, the courtroom crowd erupted with shouts of “Allahu akbar” (“God is great”). .... The three women, described by friends as “ordinary housewives,” were relieved that they had not been given the maximum five-year prison sentence. All three, however, were devastated at the prospect of being separated from their children, who range from 6 to 19 years of age.

As they have done throughout the trial, Islamic extremists made murderous threats both inside and outside the courtroom. Hammond said several truckloads of extremists arrived; one brought a coffin to bury the accused if they were found innocent. “The ladies, witnesses and judges were constantly under the threats of violence from hundreds of Islamic radicals who threatened to kill the three ladies, witnesses, pastors, missionaries and even the judges if the women were acquitted,” Hammond told Compass. Before a court proceeding on August 25, the Islamic radicals warned the judges that they were willing to shed their own blood if the women were not found guilty. ....

Defense attorneys pointed out that several of the Muslim parents had been photographed with their children during the Sunday school activities, proof that they had permitted their children to attend. When Muslim leaders lodged a complaint, however, the parents refused to testify in support of the women. No witnesses, defense attorneys had told the court, testified or provided evidence of the charges that the women had lied, deceived, or forced the children into changing their religion. Also, they said, witnesses who testified against the women had no first-hand knowledge of the educational program and were speaking from hearsay. .....

The women launched the program in September 2003. It proved popular, and Muslim children soon began to attend with the verbal consent of their parents.

Since the first accusations were made, Muslim authorities in West Java have forced Zakaria’s church to close. Muslim leaders have forced at least 60 unlicensed churches in West Java to shut down over the past year, with minimal intervention from the government. ....
Posted by: Mike Sylwester || 09/08/2005 00:43 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  AI and HRW are all over this are they not? At the post embassy protest press conference they are reminding the world that in every muslim nation there is a systematic denial of the freedom of religion and thought that effects millions of people everyday? Even the muslim AI and HRW members/executives are behind the denouncement? There is a specific and large AI and HRW campaign aimed at exactly this acknowledged issue, right?
Posted by: MunkarKat || 09/08/2005 9:04 Comments || Top||

#2  I've just come to learn that when the headline says XXXXXX Moslems debate w/ Christians about religion, it's a Mike Sylwester post. Ignore and move on.
Posted by: BA || 09/08/2005 9:11 Comments || Top||

#3  It's the orality of "debate", I'm sure.
Posted by: .com || 09/08/2005 10:26 Comments || Top||

#4  We can thank Bill Clinton for single-handedly toppling Suharto - an old-fashioned dictator and a crook - but someone intolerant of the Islamists (who returned after Suharto fell) and a Cold War ally for 30+ years he was in power. Suharto was a dictatorial crook who tortured and killed the al Qaeda wannabes in Indonesia, but he has now been replaced by democratic crooks who now tolerate Islamist terrorists. The crooks' take from the Indonesian treasury is the same, but we have the Indonesian democrats to thank for the Bali and other terrorist attacks.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 09/08/2005 11:04 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran denies oil offer
Posted by: DanNY || 09/08/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Oh, it really wasn't an offer!

They just said (paraphrasing) "If the sanctions weren't in the way, we could give you 10-20 million barrels of oil as aid."

THAT'S not an offer!
Posted by: Bobby || 09/08/2005 7:49 Comments || Top||

#2  Oh yes it's an "Offer"

Bribes are "Offered"
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 09/08/2005 14:34 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Economy
New Orleans Gestapo police seize firearms, round up residents
It can't happen here? Keep in mind that 20 percent of New Orleans was not flooded at all and that many residents, especially in more affluent areas, were very well prepared and are riding out the aftermath in relative comfort.
NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 8 - Waters were receding across this flood-beaten city today as police officers began confiscating weapons, including legally registered firearms, from civilians in preparation for a mass forced evacuation of the residents still living here.


Shannon Stapleton/Reuters
Police officers looking for survivors today in the Ninth Ward of New Orleans.


No civilians in New Orleans will be allowed to carry pistols, shotguns or other firearms, said P. Edwin Compass III, the superintendent of police. "Only law enforcement are allowed to have weapons," he said.

But that order apparently does not apply to hundreds of security guards hired by businesses and some wealthy individuals to protect property. The guards, employees of private security companies like Blackwater, openly carry M-16's and other assault rifles. Mr. Compass said that he was aware of the private guards, but that the police had no plans to make them give up their weapons.

"New Orleans Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agent sticks his gun inside the front door of a home looking for survivors in the ninth ward of New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina September 8, 2005. The agents were forcibly entering homes searching for remaining residents as authorities have stated that evacuations of the city will become mandatory." REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

Nearly two weeks after the floods began, New Orleans has turned into an armed camp, patrolled by thousands of local, state, and federal law enforcement officers, as well as National Guard troops and active-duty soldiers. While armed looters roamed unchecked last week, the city is now calm. No arrests were made on Wednesday night or this morning, and the police received only 10 calls for service, a police spokesman said.
Louisiana residents have their state constitution on their side (hat tip Volokh): the Louisiana Constitution, art. I, sec. 11 (enacted 1974), provides that --


The right of each citizen to keep and bear arms shall not be abridged, but this provision shall not prevent the passage of laws to prohibit the carrying of weapons concealed on the person.
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy || 09/08/2005 20:32 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  bad news. No open/outside carrying, I can understand, but not "Evacuate or we'll kill you to save your life"?
Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 21:07 Comments || Top||

#2  Get a list of all the Feds involved in confiscation of legaly held firearms and sue them in Federal court. It's a constitutional right for a reason. Violating it is plenty of reason for insurection regardless of the facts.
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom || 09/08/2005 21:11 Comments || Top||

#3  note that corporate security (Blackwater) are allowed to continue to carry M-16s etc to protect business. The second amendment was not for two tiers of allowed self-protection IMHO
Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 21:17 Comments || Top||

#4  I wonder, what are the chances these legal firearm owners are going to get back their guns?
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 09/08/2005 21:18 Comments || Top||

#5  those two photos, like the closet arrest of Elian Gonzalez, are the strongest weapon law-abiding people have against a Hillary-Reno (sorry Joe M) gun grabbing admin. These guys should be ashamed of themselves and this program terminated tonight!~
Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 22:04 Comments || Top||

#6  This fiasco is turning into the biggest clusterf$%k since Nam. If these jerks are going to break into people's homes looking for what are presumably bad guys, they should atleast be wearing some body armor. Somebody will shoot back when they're vulnerable.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 09/08/2005 22:08 Comments || Top||

#7  somebody who wouldn't be shooting if a gun wasn't poking in their front door? Create a criminal, use it as reason why you were there. Sh*t. Leave the people alone or deploy with more tact - these people aren't the enemy. They may be hell bent on keeping the only home/possessions they have, against all odds. We used to admire that attitude. I know all about the illness, yadda yadda .
Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 22:16 Comments || Top||

#8  Just checking, but the state and city are still in charge of this cluster****, right?
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 22:18 Comments || Top||

#9  I'm still hoping to avoid civil war, but it is looking bleaker and bleaker day by day.
Posted by: mmurray821 || 09/08/2005 22:22 Comments || Top||

#10  good catch on Volokh quoting *acckkk* NYT:

"No civilians in New Orleans will be allowed to carry pistols, shotguns, or other firearms, said P. Edwin Compass, the superintendent of police. "Only law enforcement are allowed to have weapons," he said.

But that order apparently does not apply to the hundreds of security guards whom businesses and some wealthy individuals have hired to protect their property. The guards, who are civilians working for private security firms like Blackwater, are openly carrying M-16's and other assault rifles. Mr. Compass said he was aware of the private guards, but that the police had no plans to make them give up their weapons."

Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 22:40 Comments || Top||

#11  werd frank. werd.

ima beter start go get em shuvel an em waterprroof case...
Posted by: muck4doo || 09/08/2005 22:54 Comments || Top||

#12  heheh. gonna barrie nikels all over em yard to jusn throw em off.. :)
Posted by: muck4doo || 09/08/2005 22:56 Comments || Top||

#13  LOL! Mucky - I expected nothing less. Brilliant!
Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 23:09 Comments || Top||


Ray Nagin's Greatest Hits!
Howie Carr (Afternoon drive time host on WRKO, 680 AM in Boston) posted a bunch of sound clips of the Mayor of New Orleans, Ramblin' Ray Nagin. Good for a few laughs!
Posted by: Mohammed Spreewell || 09/08/2005 15:04 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:


Africa: North
Shocking upset: Mubarak may get under 80%
President Hosni Mubarak won Egypt's first contested presidential race, according to a preliminary count Thursday, an expected victory in a vote that was crucial to his claims of democratic reform but was marred by allegations of irregularities.

Mubarak took 78 percent to 80 percent of Wednesday's polling and opposition candidate Ayman Nour took 12 percent — a respectable showing for a relative unknown and one that could propel him to greater political prominence.

An official on the electoral commission gave the preliminary count to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the results. A final count was expected Friday.

Despite government promises of a clean race, reports were widespread of pressure and intimidation for voters to support Mubarak. The vote also was marred by low turnout. Nour demanded a rerun.

"After the grave violations that ... influenced the integrity of the election process ... we demanded out of concern national interest that elections be repeated," Nagui al-Ghatrifi, deputy head of Nour's al-Ghad Party, told reporters.
Sounds more like the al-Gore party.

The 77-year-old Mubarak has ruled Egypt for 24 years, re-elected in referendums in which he was the only candidate.
No doubt reelected by getting more votes that any other candidate on the ballot.

The nation's first open race came amid Washington's push for greater democracy in the Middle East, and while a Mubarak win had been long forecast, the election process was, for many, more important than the results.

Cairo played down reports of irregularities, saying they did not diminish a major step toward reforms.

"There may be some comments, maybe some violations happened, but we have to agree that we're seeing an experience that we can build on for a future that realizes more freedom and more democracy in the Egyptian society," Information Minister Anas al-Fiqi told reporters after polls closed late Wednesday.

In Washington, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the Bush administration was following the election closely. He called the vote "a beginning."

Posted by: MSM || 09/08/2005 15:39 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Well so much for that convention bounce...
Posted by: tu3031 || 09/08/2005 16:33 Comments || Top||

#2  The despondent Mr. Nour then shot himself in the head 12 times, once for each percent he gained.
Posted by: Jake-the-Peg || 09/08/2005 16:55 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Economy
New Orleans: A Green Genocide
As radical environmentalists continue to blame the ferocity of Hurricane Katrina’s devastation on President Bush’s ecological policies, a mainstream Louisiana media outlet inadvertently disclosed a shocking fact: Environmentalist activists were responsible for spiking a plan that may have saved New Orleans. Decades ago, the Green Left – pursuing its agenda of valuing wetlands and topographical “diversity” over human life – sued to prevent the Army Corps of Engineers from building floodgates that would have prevented significant flooding that resulted from Hurricane Katrina.

In the 1970s, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Lake Pontchartrain and Vicinity Hurricane Barrier Project planned to build fortifications at two strategic locations, which would keep massive storms on the Gulf of Mexico from causing Lake Pontchartrain to flood the city. An article in the May 28, 2005, New Orleans Times-Picayune stated, “Under the original plan, floodgate-type structures would have been built at the Rigolets and Chef Menteur passes to block storm surges from moving from the Gulf into Lake Pontchartrain.”

“The floodgates would have blocked the flow of water from the Gulf of Mexico, through Lake Borgne, through the Rigolets [and Chef Mentuer] into Lake Pontchartrain,” declared Professor Gregory Stone, the James P. Morgan Distinguished Professor and Director of the Coastal Studies Institute of Louisiana State University. “This would likely have reduced storm surge coming from the Gulf and into the Lake Pontchartrain,” Professor Stone told Michael P. Tremoglie during an interview on September 6. The professor concluded, “[T]hese floodgates would have alleviated the flooding of New Orleans caused by Hurricane Katrina.”

The New Orleans Army Corps of Engineers and Professor Stone were not the only people cognizant of the consequences that could and did result because of the environmental activists. While speaking with Sean Hannity on his radio show on Labor Day, former Louisiana Congressman and Speaker of the House Bob Livingston also referred to environmentalists whose litigation prevented hurricane prevention projects. In other words, unlike other programs – including the ones leftists like Sid Blumenthal excoriated the president for not funding – these constructions might have prevented the loss of life experienced in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

Why was this project aborted? As the Times-Picayune wrote, “Those plans were abandoned after environmental advocates successfully sued to stop the projects as too damaging to the wetlands and the lake's eco-system.” (Emphasis added.) Specifically, in 1977, a state environmentalist group known as Save Our Wetlands (SOWL) sued to have it stopped. SOWL stated the proposed Rigolets and Chef Menteur floodgates of the Lake Pontchartrain Hurricane Prevention Project would have a negative effect on the area surrounding Lake Pontchartrain. Further, SOWL’s recollection of this case demonstrates they considered this move the first step in a perfidious design to drain Lake Pontchartrain entirely and open the area to dreaded capitalist investment.

On December 30, 1977, U.S. District Judge Charles Schwartz Jr. issued an injunction against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Lake Pontchartrain hurricane protection project, demanding the engineers draw up a second environmental impact statement, three years after the corps submitted the first one. In one of the most ironic pronouncements of all time, Judge Schwartz wrote, “it is the opinion of the Court that plaintiffs herein have demonstrated that they, and in fact all persons in this area, will be irreparably harmed if the barrier project based upon the August, 1974 FEIS [federal environmental impact statement] is allowed to continue.”

If the Greens prevailed, it was not because the forces of common sense did not make a compelling case. SOWL’s account reveals that during the course of the trial the defense counsel, Gerald Gallinghouse – a Republican U.S. Attorney who acted as a special prosecutor during the Carter administration – felt so strongly that the project should continue that he told the judge he would “go before the United States Congress with [Democratic Louisiana Congressman] F. Edward Hebert to pass a resolution, exempting the Hurricane Barrier Project from the rules and regulations of the National Environmental Policy Act because, in his opinion, [this plan] is necessary to protect the citizens of New Orleans from a hurricane.” Despite this, the judge ruled in favor of the environmentalists. Ultimately, the project was aborted in favor of building up existing levees.

However, the old plan lived on in the minds of those who put human beings first. The Army Corps of Engineers as recently as last year had publicly discussed resuming the practice. The September-October 2004 edition of Riverside (the magazine of the New Orleans District Army Corps of Engineers Public Affairs Office) referred to this lawsuit and project. Eric Lincoln’s article titled, “Old Plans Revived for Category 5 Hurricane Protection,” stated:

In 1977, plans for hurricane protection structures at the Rigolets and Chef Menteur Pass were sunk when environmental groups sued the district. They believed that the environmental impact statement did not adequately address several potential problems, including impacts on Lake Pontchartrain’s ecosystem and damage to wetlands.

Ultimately, an agreement between the parties resulted in a consent decree to forego the structures at the Rigolets and Chef Menteur Pass
The new initial feasibility study will look at protecting the area between the Pearl River and Mississippi River from a Category 5 storm
. (Emphasis added.)


The article added, “[A]lternatives that would be studied in the initial feasibility report are: Construction of floodgate structures, with environmental modifications, at Rigolets and Chef Pass.” (Emphasis added.) The Times-Picayune recorded last May, “the corps wants to take another look [at building the floodgates] using more environmentally sensitive construction than was previously available.” This time the Army Corps of Engineers would modify the original plans because of the environmentalists. However, the project was already delayed more than two decades because of the environmentalists’ lawsuit. If begun immediately it would take another two decades to complete: a 40-year delay caused by the Green Left.

Planning for a category five hurricane was, indeed, visionary thinking. Few people believed such a storm would take place more often than once every few centuries, and no one had the political will to fight for the funding such a project would necessitate. However, scientists had long warned about New Orleans’ vulnerability to the potential for massive loss of life caused by such things as the environmentalists’ lawsuit. A National Geographic article, written after a smaller hurricane last year, captured the sentiments of one such expert:

“The killer for Louisiana is a Category Three storm at 72 hours before landfall that becomes a Category Four at 48 hours and a Category Five at 24 hours – coming from the worst direction,” says Joe Suhayda, a retired coastal engineer at Louisiana State University who has spent 30 years studying the coast
“I don’t think people realize how precarious we are.”


As it turned out, this is exactly how events played out during the next hurricane, one year later. USA Today noted, the levees the government had constructed were no match for the vortex of this force of nature. Soon Katrina pushed inland:

Hurricane Katrina pushed Lake Pontchartrain over the flood walls...The spilling water then undermined the walls, and they toppled
Lake Pontchartrain, a body half the size of Rhode Island, was losing about a foot of water every 10 hours into New Orleans.


The rushing lake soon overwhelmed the city’s pumps. The ever-rising water soon mixed with sewage, creating a toxic liquid mixture that burned the skin on contact. When the flood levels grounded the city buses Mayor Ray Nagin never deployed, it denied thousands of New Orleans’ poorest and feeblest an escape.

Despite the mayor’s apparent incompetence, these floodgates environmental activists sued to prevent from being constructed may have kept a flood from consuming the city to the extent it did in the first place. The current programs aimed at reinforcing existing levees but would only prove effective against a level three hurricane; they were not adequate for a level five storm like Katrina. Moreover, they did not fortify the specific areas the government sought to protect, to keep Lake Pontchartrain from flooding the entire city, which everyone knew posed a danger to a city below sea level. In other words, this plan would have saved thousands of lives and kept one of the nation’s greatest cities from lying in ruins for a decade. At a minimum, such a plan would have staved off a significant portion of the disaster that’s unfolded before our eyes.

Worse yet, the environmentalists’ ultimate decision to reinforce existing levees may have actually further harmed the Big Easy. There is at least one expert who claims the New Orleans levees made no difference – in fact, they contributed to the problem. Deputy Director of the LSU Hurricane Center and Director of the Center for the Study Public Health Impacts by Hurricanes Ivor van Heerden said, “The levees ‘have literally starved our wetlands to death’ by directing all of that precious silt out into the Gulf of Mexico.”

Thirty years after its legal action, Save Our Wetlands boasts, “SOWL's legacy lives on and on within the heart and spirit of every man, woman, child, bird, red fish, speckle trout, croakers, etc.”

Despite its pious rhetoric, the environmental Left’s true legacy will be on display in New Orleans for years to come.
Posted by: Steve || 09/08/2005 15:27 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "I SEE EVERYTHING TWICE! I SEE EVERYTHING TWICE!"

"HOW MANY FINGERS AM I HOLDING UP?" "TWO!"...
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 16:22 Comments || Top||

#2  Project was shelved on 1977? Anyone remembers the name who was President at that time?
Posted by: JFM || 09/08/2005 16:25 Comments || Top||

#3  Unfortunately don't expect this to get picked up on by the MSM
Posted by: Cheaderhead || 09/08/2005 16:58 Comments || Top||

#4  OK, so the duplication of posts is fixed. :-)

Anyway, in a more serious note... I'd like to know more about this project as well. I'm having trouble with the whole concept, that simply putting floodgates in those locations would have stopped the storm surge. Remember the surge this time went up the Pearl River several miles.

I'm also imagining a situation where the storm goes inland north of the gates, but a surge forms on both the lake and gulf sides, causing the sort of sloshing in the lake some think led to one of the current levee breaks.
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 17:25 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Tech
Hamsters impacted by cigarette smoke
Hamsters exposed to cigarette smoke are significantly less likely to conceive, according to a recenty study from the University of California at Riverside. The researchers found that he microscopic hairs, or cilia, inside the oviduct, which transport eggs, cannot move it to where fertilization occurs. When the upper region of the hamster oviduct alone was exposed to six types of cigarette smoke, eggs were 50 to 90 percent more likely to stick to the oviduct than was the case in control animals that were not exposed.
Hamsters shouldn't be smoking in bed anyway. Might set those wood shavings on fire.
The concern, of course, isn't about infertile rodent couples. The study shows that cigarette smoke impacts a variety of organs, which has greater implications for humans.
Cigarettes, now a proven method of birth control and a tax generator! That'll have liberals spinning in circles.
Posted by: Steve || 09/08/2005 13:39 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Really? It doesn't seem to bother mine.
Posted by: Richard Gere || 09/08/2005 14:09 Comments || Top||

#2  I'll keep this in mind the next time a woman cuts her ovaries open to blow smoke out of her fallopian tubes...

Jeez
Posted by: DanNY || 09/08/2005 14:53 Comments || Top||

#3  Smoking has also been shown to meet govt standards to reduce weight, but that has always been buried. Now that the fat police are on a rage, maybe its time to bring that fact back up.
Posted by: Phineck Whimble2173 || 09/08/2005 17:00 Comments || Top||

#4  Hamsters exposed to cigarette smoke are significantly less likely to conceive, according to a recenty study from the University of California at Riverside.

Aha, apparently this is one of the ways that CA taxpayer dollars are wasted.....
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 09/08/2005 17:39 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Economy
weekly Oil drawdown bad but not as bad as feared
...Crude stocks fell by 6.4 million barrels, gasoline stocks fell by 4.3 million barrels and stocks of distillates decreased by 800,000 barrels, according to the Energy Information Administration.

Analysts were looking for a drop of 6.4 million barrels of crude, 6.2 million barrels of gasoline and 2.6 million barrels of distillates, according to Reuters...


What the report doesn't show is any change in consumption. That's because its essentially impossible to calculate.

Posted by: mhw || 09/08/2005 12:12 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: Tech
Want to live longer? Eat chocolate
A DIET recommending you eat 100g of chocolate a day and drink red wine, which will add six years to your life - is this for real?
Prob'ly not...
Scientists in Australia and The Netherlands have come up with a diet they claim will cut a person's risk of heart disease by 78 per cent. It involves daily consumption of 150ml of red wine, which has been found to cut heart disease risk by 32 per cent.
Bartender! Another Ruff 'n' Red, please! The old ticker's acting up...
Chocaholics line up, because you have to consume 100g of dark chocolate per day, an amount the scientists calculate will reduce blood pressure. You have to eat four meals of fish each week (each 114g), which is said to reduce your heart disease risk by 14 per cent. The diet also includes a daily total of 400g of fruit and vegetables, also proven to cut blood pressure, and 68g of almonds to cut cholesterol. You also have to consume 2.7g of garlic per day to reduce your cholesterol levels.
"Whoa, honey! Do you have to get the cholesterol levels so low on a sex night?"
In a paper published in the British Medical Journal, scientists claim that if all these foods are combined in a diet they will lower the risk of heart disease by 78 per cent. The research shows men who stuck to this diet would gain an extra six years of life and have an extra nine years free from heart disease. Women would gain an extra 4.8 years of life and have an extra eight years without heart disease.
I can't help thinking about Woody Allen's Sleeper. Now all we need is a study of the health benefits of tobacco.
Posted by: MSM || 09/08/2005 11:16 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I've been following that particular diet for years now. I'll live long, but fat and unloved.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 09/08/2005 12:11 Comments || Top||

#2  Hot dog! I'm going to live forever! :-D
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 09/08/2005 14:09 Comments || Top||

#3  I love how these studies abuse stats. If you add up all the years added to your life by following the medical research of the week, you could live to be 200.

Let's see: 6 years for red wine and chocolate, plus 5 years for oat bran, plus 7 years for getting adequate sleep, plus 3 for anti-oxidants, ...
Posted by: Xbalanke || 09/08/2005 14:29 Comments || Top||

#4  Unless you're a woman, in which case a study is released every month that reverses all the findings of the study of the previous month.
Posted by: Seafarious || 09/08/2005 14:35 Comments || Top||

#5  Any news on pork rinds and Schlitz?
Posted by: Doolittle || 09/08/2005 15:21 Comments || Top||

#6  A man/person after my own heart Doolittle.
Posted by: Shipman || 09/08/2005 15:28 Comments || Top||

#7  Ship, I went to the Food Lion on Saturday and there was a rack with....5POUND BAGS of pork rinds. I damn near died right there.
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 09/08/2005 15:58 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan/South Asia
Reason #27 not to go in the water
CHANDPUR, Sept 7:–A 5-member task force has been formed to investigate the cultivation of 'Pirhana', a omnivorous fish in different places, it is learnt from Chandpur Fisheries Research Institute source. The task force led by a Joint Secretary of Fisheries and Livestock Ministry has already instructed the upazila level fishery officers to keep alert about cultivation of 'Piranha' in the ponds.
Yeah, that's just what Bangladesh needs, piranha.
It may be mentioned here that Dr Khalilur Rahman, a senior scientific officer of the Chandpur Fisheries Research Institute found 'Pirhana' fish in the nearby wireless bazar. He collected two Pirhana and preserved theft fish. The 'Pirhana' are being sold as Thai Rupchanda fish. The people purchase the fish as it is beautiful to look at and tasty. But the Fisheries officials said that it is a dangerous omnivorous fish.
Think of it as a fish stick that bites back
It is a fish of Amazan area of South America. If this is cultivated with other fish if will destroy other fish. It is further learnt that 'Pirhana' also attack even man when they are in swarm. No body knows how this dangerous fish has come to our country.
It is presumed that the aquarium businessmen took this fish in this country without the knowledge of the Fisheries Department. At present it is cultivated in many ponds of Chandpur, Laksam and Daudkandi on commercial basis.
If it's in the ponds, my guess is it's already escaped into the rivers
It is further learnt that there are different kinds of Pirhana. The carnivor varieties of Pirhana eat other fish. These attack people in swarm.
More urban legend than fact, but it will help clean up those bodies that keep popping up in canals
It is learnt that the task force has already sought information about this fish from Agriculture University, Fisheries Research Institutes and from Fisheries Departments of Dhaka and Chittagong Universities. The task force will soon take necessary steps to stop the spread of this dangerous fish in the water bodies of the country.
All together now, "They're DOOMED!"
Posted by: Steve || 09/08/2005 10:58 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Back in 1986 near Birmingham, Alabama a 3 pound pirhanna was caught in the Black Warrior River and here in East Tennesse a few years ago a large Pirhanna was caught in Boone Lake. Newspaper articles confirmed both instances.
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 09/08/2005 12:26 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Economy
Levee board under federal investigation before Katrina hit
Rampant public corruption was doing big business in New Orleans long before Hurricane Katrina ever hit. What then Congressman, now Senator David Vitter calls "corrupt, good old boy" practices were apparent in the New Orleans Levee Board just one year before the collapse of regional levees, emergency communications and government services brought the Big Easy to the brink of anarchy. In fact, Senator Vitter requested a federal investigation into improper practices of a number of public utilities, including the New Orleans Levee Board, and a new Task Force was to have been initiated in the Baton Rouge office, beginning in July 2004.

As Vice-Chairman of the Appropriations Subcommittee, which holds jurisdiction over the Justice Department, Vitter met with and actively encouraged Attorney General John Ashcroft and FBI Director Robert Mueller to establish an additional Public Corruption Task Force in their Louisiana offices. With the focus on kickbacks and bogus contractors, who was heeding experts calling for a levee disaster from a major hurricane?
This next part is a wee bit confusing, but I think she's implying that we can blame the French.
Could New Orleans’s descent into quasi-revolutionary chaos be an indirect result of racketeering, kickbacks and procurement fraud by Democrat insiders with ties to a fast-growing organization called `La Francophonie’?
Oh, why not
Of all the coastal regions struck by Katrina, only the State of Louisiana is in the clutches of La Francophonie. La Francophonie’s detractors insist that the organization is a simple tool of France’s unsavory foreign policy toward Africa.
Did they move New Orleans to Gabon? Why wasn't I told?
Others describe it as a Montreal-based, racketeering influenced and corrupt organization (RICO) with outlandish claims to represent the interests of the French-speaking world, including such luminaries as the negotiator of America's abdication of its allies in South Vietnam, John Kerry, and the companion to Kofi Annan at the U.N's school for translators in Geneva, Teresa Heinz. In international relations, Louisiana’s foreign partners include the governments of France, the French community of Belgium, and the Canadian provinces of Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. Louisiana now participates in the sometimes-raucous Sommets de la Francophonie as an observer.
Could they understand what was going on? It's a little-known fact, I suppose, but there aren't that many people left in Louisianna who speak French. There are a few more who can speak Cajun, but most people speak either Southern or English, or some combination of the two, whatcha might call a patois (if you speak Francaise) or even a patwah, if you speak Cajun...
Purporting to "defend Louisiana’s unique linguistic heritage", it was the Conseil pour le developpement du francais en Louisiane (CODOFIL) that brought the state into the La Francophonie tent. "CODOFIL represents Louisiana at the signing of accords with the foreign governments: these accords dictate the nature of the relationship between Louisiana and the foreign governments." According to a CODOFIL Internet boast, "foreign visitors to Louisiana are often more aware of CODOFIL than even Louisiana residents!"
I'd put money on it
"Maurice! Whut's this yere 'CODOFIL' thing?"
"I dunno, Henri! The pamplet's in French!"
La Francophonie was funded and re-structured for its dictatorial, syndicalist, racketeering and possibly genocidal goals by insiders of CIDA (Canadian International Development Agency) at a 1986 meeting in Paris. This first CIDA-funded Francophonie meeting was hosted by Francois Mitterrand, the notoriously corrupt French President and the author of a `failed state’ policy in Africa which has led to Canada’s indulgent support of the continent’s most bloodthirsty dictators and paramilitary goon squads as they engage in massacres–including that of Anglophone Tutsis by francophonie Hutus in Rwanda.

Management of La Francophonie is Canadian, CIDA is the main source of funds granted by Canada to Francophonie cooperation programs and managed by La Francophonie Affairs Division. Canadian Heritage, Industry Canada (information technologies), Justice Canada (democracy, legal cooperation) and Environment Canada (particularly management of the Energy and Environment Institute of la Francophonie. CIDA was founded in 1968 by the ex-president of Power Corp. of Montreal, Maurice Strong, a paranoid, billionaire depopulationist who claims "rich, industrialized countries (America and the Anglosphere) are the greatest threat to the survival of the planet and therefore he, Maurice Strong, has a duty to force them into line. In the 1990s, Strong went on to become the godfather of the $trillion Kyoto trading scandal, with the financial clout to execute his dreams for La Francophonie.

Strong’s plan appears to have played out as follows: Montreal insiders of Power Corp. and La Francophonie have controlling positions in global commodity markets through oil companies (TotalFinaElf) and water companies (Suez). Former UN Secretary-General Bhoutros Bhoutros Ghali serves as La Francophonie Secretary-General. Both Strong and Ghali are under investigation by American authorities for alleged ties to the UN oil-for-food scandal.
So it's all a evil French plot with Canadians pulling the strings? Never did trust them.
David Hawkins, Foundation Scholar-Cambridge University, and founder of the Citizen's Association of Forensic Economists at Hawks' CAFE.
Canada Free Press founding editor Judi McLeod is an award-winning journalist with 30 years experience in the media. A former Toronto Sun and Kingston Whig Standard columnist, she has also appeared on Newsmax.com, the Drudge Report, Foxnews.com, and World Net Daily.
Posted by: Steve || 09/08/2005 10:14 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Oh, I hate it when the NO Follies come to town. The Hercane has washed up more than a few pols it uppeers.

Tereza, I love that pose. You go girl.
Posted by: Captain America || 09/08/2005 14:19 Comments || Top||

#2  a wee bit confusing????Man talk about convuluted.I know I'm just dumb ass white boy could somebody simplfy this mess for me.corruption-kerrys-rawanda-UN-some obscure Frog orginazation.Guess I must be too simplimies.
Posted by: raptor || 09/08/2005 15:42 Comments || Top||

#3  Probably something was lost in the translation from Canadian.

I suspect the writers may have been having their little joke, whatever the hell it was.
Posted by: Fred || 09/08/2005 18:43 Comments || Top||

#4  They were cunning linguists, if ya aska me. Ima so cnfusr. [/Mucky]
Posted by: Al-Aska Paul || 09/08/2005 22:39 Comments || Top||

#5  cunning runts? oops - wrong joke
Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 22:41 Comments || Top||


2004 - Debate continues over Superdome as potential hurricane shelter
09:44 AM CDT on Thursday, September 23, 2004
WWLTV - More than one thousand people sought refuge in the Superdome during Hurricane Ivan. On Wednesday, Mayor Ray Nagin said the Superdome likely has the best chance of surviving hurricanes, making it a good choice for shelter in the future. Those working at the Dome are not so sure. On the surface, the Superdome seems like the most logical choice for an emergency shelter, and city officials are leaning in the Dome’s direction for future shelter needs instead of schools.
“Anything above a category two makes them pretty much ineligible because they’re not wind resistant enough and they're in flood prone areas it looks as though we're pointing to the Superdome in being reinforced with the proper back up system as shelter of last resort,” said Nagin. It appears a facility as large as the Dome could hold up in hurricane conditions but Bill Curl, spokesman for the Superdome, says that is yet to be tested and if there is no other choice then maybe the Dome could serve as a shelter. “Only in dire emergencies. The Superdome is not a shelter,” said Curl.
According to Curl, the assumption that the Superdome can withstand hurricane force winds is just that: an assumption. He says more analysis is needed to determine what the Dome can actually withstand because previous wind studies have become somewhat irrelevant since they did not factor in the new high-rise buildings around the Dome.
“They create a wind tunnel effect and that needs to be tested. There were initial studies that indicated 130 miles per hour, but we don’t know,” said Curl. He adds that the Dome is not impervious to the same elements other areas would be exposed to. “If we were to lose power, if we were to lose plumbing facilities, if a storm were to hit and create flooding in the area; the Superdome would not be a desirable place to be,” he said.
The American Red Cross admits it would not stay in town for a severe hurricane. Workers would offer supplies and training to the Dome but would then leave to ensure aid for the hurricane’s aftermath. Kay Wilkins, spokesperson for the American Red Cross, said, “While we’re saying we’re going to move our volunteers and staff out of the risk area into areas where its safer for them to be it doesn’t mean we're not going to be here ahead of time for others.”
Mayor Nagin said the city has more than 80,000 people without transportation access, and when the next hurricane evacuation there will be thousands of people who will not, or cannot, leave, highlighting the city’s urgency of finding the most suitable place for shelter.
Well, they can't say they weren't warned.
Posted by: Steve || 09/08/2005 10:06 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The peoples CHOICE!! What an inept idiot!!!
Posted by: ARMYGUY || 09/08/2005 10:27 Comments || Top||

#2 
The Red Cross is confirming to Garrett that it had prepositioned water, food, blankets and hygiene products for delivery to the Superdome and the Convention Center in the immediate aftermath of the hurricane, but were blocked from delivering those supplies by orders of the Louisiana state government, which did not want to attract people to the Superdome and/or Convention Center.

So who are the racists again? "If we let THOSE people suffer enough, maybe they'll walk out and we won't have to deal with them."
Posted by: wrinkleneck_trout || 09/08/2005 13:52 Comments || Top||


Look at Katrina as a Dress Rehearsal
BY JAMES LILEKS
Oh, the lessons we learned from Katrina. President Bush's refusal to invade New Orleans tells you everything you need to know about Republican racist perfidy. The local government's incompetence tells you nothing whatsoever about Democrats' ability to govern at the micro level. Lethal storms can be turned aside months in advance by signing the right treaties. Or so they're saying in the reality-based community.

Check the blogs: They're calling President Bush's response to Katrina "My Pet Goat Part 2." It's a reference to the idea, so beloved of the Michael Moore enthusiasts and Osama bin Laden, that Bush's initial reaction to the Sept. 11 attacks was to give a what-me-worry grin and keep reading a kids' story because he wanted to know how it ended. These people seem to believe that a complete set of evacuation plans -- including the removal of the entire city, buildings included, to Manitoba -- was slapped down on the president's desk the moment Katrina was just a stiff breeze, and Bush said nope. Call me when gas hits nine bucks a gallon, and besides, the town's just full of Democrats and po' folks. That's what the frothier elements on the left seem to think. One Air America host said as much; various rappers and actors have blamed Bush for not calling Superman on the hot line and blowing the storm away with Superbreath.

One theory -- and it's an interesting one, as Howard Dean would say -- suspects the administration deliberately flooded New Orleans to test the nation's ability to deal with a nuclear strike. That makes sense. Sure. Why bother to drill to learn lessons that can be applied in other cities when you can drown a city and learn nothing about the hazards of radioactivity? The latter method has the added virtue of a conspiracy, which means there's a good chance someone in the chain will breach the levee of secrecy, leading to what the founding fathers called Super Extra Immediate Impeachment Plus.

Crazy, yes. But this is what it's come to. According to the choir of professional carpers, President Clinton spent half his two terms personally drawing up plans for new levees -- when he wasn't sneaking around Afghanistan in camo paint trying to apprehend bin Laden.

By contrast, the Bush Junta sent 100 percent of the National Guard to Iraq, which meant the 12th Airborne Plunger Brigade couldn't descend to the Superdome with jetpacks and unstop the overflowing toilets. Doesn't matter that New Orleans had hundreds of school buses unused for evacuation -- blame the feds who cut matching funds for bus-driver instruction back in 1927.

This level of incandescent lunacy isn't new. In the '90s there were people who believed that Clinton would use Y2K to herd us into FEMA-run gulags to have bar codes tattooed on our necks, but these people confined themselves to rants at 3 a.m. on Art Bell's radio show. By 2006 their ideological heirs on the left will be the evening lineup of MSNBC guests.

If we learned anything we can take away, it's this: You're on your own. At least keep an emergency kit on hand, the sort of thing Tom Ridge proposed, and which made the smart set hardy-har-har because it contained duct tape. Don't rely on the government. Four years after Sept. 11, it's apparent that some local governments are not well-oiled machines when it comes to disasters -- more like a box of sand and busted gears. Blame for that can be promiscuously distributed.

Lesson two: The next terrorist attack will not unite us for a warm, hug-filled fortnight. The hard left won't wait 24 hours before blaming Bush, and the country will enjoy the sight of prominent pundits angrier at the president than at the men who nuked Des Moines.

If an attack should happen during the term of President Hillary Clinton, they'll still blame Bush -- and if she wishes to retain her moderate credentials, she'll be canny enough to repudiate the lot. They'll be stunned. They'll be hurt. After all the free-lance hating they did out of the goodness of their hearts! Where can they turn now?

The guy who took over for Art Bell still takes calls.
Posted by: Steve || 09/08/2005 09:34 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  What happened to the "Kingdom of NYE"?? Or is that who we call DEAN and company now??
LUNACY INDEED!!!!
Posted by: ARMYGUY || 09/08/2005 10:21 Comments || Top||

#2  Art retired again. Still makes occasional appearances on Sundays. It just got too hard too compete with the MSM for the tinfoil hat listeners.
Posted by: Random thoughts || 09/08/2005 11:03 Comments || Top||

#3  I suspect even Art has gotten burned out with a lot of the conspiracy theorists these days. See if you can find records of the "controversy" that occured when he got the guy from Popular Mechanics on the air to refute the worst of the 9/11 conspiracy theories.

Since then he's gone from doing weekends to just a couple nights a month. I guess the management at the network isn't happy with him.
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 09/08/2005 11:49 Comments || Top||

#4  "If we learned anything we can take away, it's this: You're on your own."

What??? If the goverment can protect me from fatty foods and second-hand smoke surely if there is a disaster they can be there within 24 hours.
Posted by: DepotGuy || 09/08/2005 17:14 Comments || Top||

#5  Well, if Bell is semi-retired for that reason, he needed to discriminate more with his conspiracy theories.

The more pleasant kind involve making "ooo!" noises with a Carl Sagan-like admiration of things like the Yeti, celebrity psychics and 200-mile carburetors.

Then there is a whole sliding scale down to the opposite extreme of scary psychos screaming obscentity-laced Time Cube theories at you.

In other words, conspiracy theories and kookery can be fun, or they can be sticky, stinky and downright unpleasant. Art Bell's show is about entertainment, not "the revolution", and not stuff that makes people curl their noses and turn the radio off.

Ironically, there is a radio show I've heard of in Argentina that is broadcast from a mental hospital, and hosted and guested by the inmates. Strangely enough, it is entertaining, heart-felt, very popular with listeners, and good therapy for the mentally ill.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 09/08/2005 17:39 Comments || Top||

#6  Damn, sounds like a ratings winner 'moose.

MEEEEEEEEEEEE! No Darlin.... The mike's over here right here say hi to our friends... MEEEEEEEEEEEE! That's good, very good heartfelt from the countryside. MEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE! ahhhhhhhhhghhhhhhhhhhhhh

We now return to Freddy's '70s Ballroom.
Posted by: Shipman || 09/08/2005 19:49 Comments || Top||

#7  The Leftlibs did proclaim to had been "hoodwinked" and "fooled", but as usual blamed it on the GOP andor GOVERNOR DUBYA - the GOP-Right and Conservatives were wholly blamed for the chicaneries of DemLeft leadership. In 2005 the only thing the Lefties have to run on is anarchy, defect, and mushroom clouds over America where because of America's innumerable, imperfect, Mistakes = Imperialism America must only intensify the size and power of [anti-sovereign] Regulatory Govt while making sure it doesn't win on the battlefield.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 09/08/2005 21:31 Comments || Top||


Frustrated: Fire crews to hand out fliers for FEMA
By Lisa Rosetta

ATLANTA - Not long after some 1,000 firefighters sat down for eight hours of training, the whispering began: "What are we doing here?"
As New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin pleaded on national television for firefighters - his own are exhausted after working around the clock for a week - a battalion of highly trained men and women sat idle Sunday in a muggy Sheraton Hotel conference room in Atlanta.
Many of the firefighters, assembled from Utah and throughout the United States by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, thought they were going to be deployed as emergency workers.
Instead, they have learned they are going to be community-relations officers for FEMA, shuffled throughout the Gulf Coast region to disseminate fliers and a phone number: 1-800-621-FEMA.
On Monday, some firefighters stuck in the staging area at the Sheraton peeled off their FEMA-issued shirts and stuffed them in backpacks, saying they refuse to represent the federal agency.
Federal officials are unapologetic.
"I would go back and ask the firefighter to revisit his commitment to FEMA, to firefighting and to the citizens of this country," said FEMA spokeswoman Mary Hudak.
The firefighters - or at least the fire chiefs who assigned them to come to Atlanta - knew what the assignment would be, Hudak said.
"The initial call to action very specifically says we're looking for two-person fire teams to do community relations," she said. "So if there is a breakdown [in communication], it was likely in their own departments."
One fire chief from Texas agreed that the call was clear to work as community-relations officers. But he wonders why the 1,400 firefighters FEMA attracted to Atlanta aren't being put to better use. He also questioned why the U.S. Department of Homeland Security - of which FEMA is a part - has not responded better to the disaster.
The firefighters, several of whom are from Utah, were told to bring backpacks, sleeping bags, first-aid kits and Meals Ready to Eat. They were told to prepare for "austere conditions." Many of them came with awkward fire gear and expected to wade in floodwaters, sift through rubble and save lives.
"They've got people here who are search-and-rescue certified, paramedics, haz-mat certified," said a Texas firefighter. "We're sitting in here having a sexual-harassment class while there are still [victims] in Louisiana who haven't been contacted yet."
The firefighter, who has encouraged his superiors back home not to send any more volunteers for now, declined to give his name because FEMA has warned them not to talk to reporters.
On Monday, two firefighters from South Jordan and two from Layton headed for San Antonio to help hurricane evacuees there. Four firefighters from Roy awaited their marching orders, crossing their fingers that they would get to do rescue and recovery work, rather than paperwork.
"A lot of people are bickering because there are rumors they'll just be handing out fliers," said Roy firefighter Logan Layne, adding that his squad hopes to be in the thick of the action. "But we'll do anything. We'll do whatever they need us to do."
While FEMA's community-relations job may be an important one - displaced hurricane victims need basic services and a variety of resources - it may be a job best suited for someone else, say firefighters assembled at the Sheraton.
"It's a misallocation of resources. Completely," said the Texas firefighter.
"It's just an under-utilization of very talented people," said South Salt Lake Fire Chief Steve Foote, who sent a team of firefighters to Atlanta. "I was hoping once they saw the level of people . . . they would shift gears a little bit."
Foote said his crews would be better used doing the jobs they are trained to do.
But Louis H. Botta, a coordinating officer for FEMA, said sending out firefighters on community relations makes sense. They already have had background checks and meet the qualifications to be sworn as a federal employee. They have medical training that will prove invaluable as they come across hurricane victims in the field.
A firefighter from California said he feels ill prepared to even carry out the job FEMA has assigned him. In the field, Hurricane Katrina victims will approach him with questions about everything from insurance claims to financial assistance.
"My only answer to them is, '1-800-621-FEMA,' " he said. "I'm not used to not being in the know."
Roy Fire Chief Jon Ritchie said his crews would be a "little frustrated" if they were assigned to hand out phone numbers at an evacuee center in Texas rather than find and treat victims of the disaster.
Also of concern to some of the firefighters is the cost borne by their municipalities in the wake of their absence. Cities are picking up the tab to fill the firefighters' vacancies while they work 30 days for the federal government.
"There are all of these guys with all of this training and we're sending them out to hand out a phone number," an Oregon firefighter said. "They [the hurricane victims] are screaming for help and this day [of FEMA training] was a waste."
Firefighters say they want to brave the heat, the debris-littered roads, the poisonous cottonmouth snakes and fire ants and travel into pockets of Louisiana where many people have yet to receive emergency aid.
But as specific orders began arriving to the firefighters in Atlanta, a team of 50 Monday morning quickly was ushered onto a flight headed for Louisiana. The crew's first assignment: to stand beside President Bush as he tours devastated areas.
lrosetta@sltrib.com
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 09/08/2005 08:56 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "They've got people here who are search-and-rescue certified, paramedics, haz-mat certified," said a Texas firefighter. "We're sitting in here having a sexual-harassment class while there are still [victims] in Louisiana who haven't been contacted yet."

Shout out the stupidity of the LLL's call for mandatory sexual-harrassment, diversity, cultural sensitivity, etc. training when you get back home. While I completely don't blame the Feds, this is what happens when the multi-culti groups get hit by reality in the face of a REAL crisis. There's probably some lawsuit, and thus, subsequent regulations (and as a result, training) behind this from ACLU or Code Pink or someone. Un-freakin-believable.
Posted by: BA || 09/08/2005 9:18 Comments || Top||

#2  "But Louis H. Botta, a coordinating officer for FEMA, said sending out firefighters on community relations makes sense. They already have had background checks and meet the qualifications to be sworn as a federal employee. They have medical training that will prove invaluable as they come across hurricane victims in the field."

Ywah, just ask the Navy helo pilots what happens when they 'come across hurricane victims in the field' and deviate from their assigned tasks. no matter their level of training and skill, the bungling continues....
maybe those FF should vote with their feet and return home where their skills can be used. and if there are those that won't evacuate, hire THEM to hand out fliers to each other.....

(Don't get me wrong; the FF are a very highly skilled and thought of bunch by most Americans. but evidently FEMA still hasn't found the ball and it is well intot he first quarter)

Everybody wins; FEMA gets the community-relations check in the block, the FF are no longer under utilized, and the "I-ain't-leavin'-crowd" gets a job.
Posted by: USN, ret. || 09/08/2005 14:54 Comments || Top||

#3  I think I would have walked-out.
Posted by: raptor || 09/08/2005 15:52 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
Maybe someone at the NYT should see this...
Scandal claims key Asahi, industry exec

The Asahi Shimbun's executive adviser said Wednesday he will step down from his post and resign as chairman of the Japan Newspaper Publishers & Editors Association to take responsibility for a fabricated report published in the daily.

The incident "tarnished the trust and honor of journalism as a whole," Shinichi Hakoshima said, adding he would leave the chairman's post after the association's annual convention, which will be held on Oct. 18 and 19.

The Asahi Shimbun revealed in late August that a reporter at its Nagano bureau had fabricated a story of a meeting between Nagano Gov. Yasuo Tanaka and former Liberal Democratic Party policy chief Shizuka Kamei to discuss founding new political parties, which was reported by the newspaper.

The Asahi Shimbun issued an apology over the fabricated story and explained the circumstances behind them. It has also fired the reporter.

Reading from a prepared statement during a news conference, Hakoshima said he hopes his resignation will be a "meaningful step" to regain the people's trust in newspapers.

Hakoshima said he does not view the incident as a chance occurrence but the result of a systemic problem within the organization and called for preventive measures to be put in place, including staff education and an examination of the personnel system.

The newspaper, which boasts the second-largest circulation among national papers in Japan, has been embroiled recently in several scandals, including the leaking to monthly magazine Gekkan Gendai of its reporters' interview records for an article in January about NHK.

At a separate news conference, Asahi Shimbun President Kotaro Akiyama said, "This is the last chance to regain a trust that is almost lost."

Despite the scandals, Akiyama said he will stay in his post because "Asahi is in grave danger," adding he will consider his future after doing his utmost to rebuild the company and reviewing the outcome of his efforts.

The news-gathering process used by Asahi reporters, the training they receive as well as the climate within the company will be scrutinized, and it will take about six months to a year for reforms to get on track, Akiyama said.

Hakoshima said he will step down from his post as executive adviser of the Asahi Shimbun, but the company said he will stay on as an adviser but not in an executive capacity.

Hakoshima was elected the association chairman in June 2003 and re-elected last June.

He joined the Asahi in 1962 and became president in February 1999. However, he stepped down and became an adviser in June, after it was revealed the newspaper had accepted 50 million yen from consumer loan firm Takefuji Corp. for articles that ran in the weekly Shukan Asahi magazine with no indication of sponsorship.

The Japan Times: Sept. 8, 2005
Posted by: DanNY || 09/08/2005 00:20 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Personally, I'd rather contribute to a fine set of Gensu knives for the NYT staff. If they would ever have that Colonel Nicholson* moment, I'd like them to be prepared.

*Colonel Nicholson: What have I done? [The Bridge on the River Kwai]
Posted by: Flack Elmegum1744 || 09/08/2005 9:59 Comments || Top||

#2  New York Times? Honor?

Are you kidding me?
Posted by: CrazyFool || 09/08/2005 10:47 Comments || Top||


Africa: Horn
Eritrean Moslems Debate With Eritrean Christians About Religon
From Compass Direct
Eritrean police arrested a bridal couple from the banned Hallelujah Church along with their 18 wedding guests on Sunday night, dragging them to jail because they are “Pentes” (Pentecostals), authorities said. The seven women and 13 men were attending a private wedding ceremony on September 4 in the home of the bride when Asmara police raided the house. Breaking into the traditional wedding tent of the groom, Mengesteab Tesfamariam, the police took him into custody along with his bride, Berekti Keshi Almaze, and their best men and bridesmaids. Jailed at Police Station No. 5 in Asmara, the 20 prisoners included two key leaders of the Hallelujah Church, Aklilu Habteab and Kashay Imbaye, as well as Zerit Gebreneguse, an evangelist in the Philadelphia Church.

The Hallelujah Church reportedly had taken careful precautions to avoid attracting the attention of local officials, who in recent months have escalated their raids on weddings conducted by Protestant congregations that have been closed. Sunday’s ceremony was conducted in a private home, with only a few close friends invited and none of the usual singing or other noticeable Christian activities. But somehow police learned about the wedding, arriving just as the ceremony was beginning. So far relatives and friends of the jailed guests have not been allowed access to the prisoners.

A total of 17 Protestant pastors are now jailed in Eritrea, where worshippers from any Christian community outside the government-recognized Orthodox, Catholic or Lutheran churches have been subject to arrest since May 2002. At least 1,000 evangelical church members are known to be in custody in prisons, police stations and military confinement camps across Eritrea for refusing, after arrest, to sign documents recanting their faith. Many are held in solitary confinement and subjected to regular beatings and more severe forms of torture.
Posted by: Mike Sylwester || 09/08/2005 00:38 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "Our arguments come from the Sermon on the Mount."

"Our arguments come from the AK-47." [BANG!][BANG!] "Allahu Akhbar! We win!"
Posted by: Jackal || 09/08/2005 15:58 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
MoveOn TV Ad uses Hurricane Katrina to target Roberts
You knew this would happen. Supposedly the events in NO prove that -- gasp! -- racial inequality still exists in our country, and Judge Roberts just isn't sensitive enough to fix that.
Posted by: Steve White || 09/08/2005 01:27 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  BDS needs to be added to the DSM IV.
Posted by: 3dc || 09/08/2005 2:39 Comments || Top||

#2  The should do like PETA: compare Roberts' confirmation hearings to the Holocaust!
Posted by: Anonymoose || 09/08/2005 10:19 Comments || Top||

#3  They have proof that John Roberts used to date Katrina back in his Harvard days.
Posted by: DMFD || 09/08/2005 19:00 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Economy
FEMA Head Bears Brunt of Katrina Anger
He's been called an idiot, an incompetent and worse. The vilification of federal disaster chief Michael Brown, emerging as chief scapegoat for whatever went wrong in the government's response to Hurricane Katrina, has ratcheted into the stratosphere. Democratic members of Congress are taking numbers to call for his head.

"I would never have appointed such a person," said New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton. "Let's bring in someone who is a professional," urged Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md.
Mr. Brown was confirmed as Deputy Director of FEMA by a voice vote in August, 2002. Guess the Senate was willing to appoint him. Since it was a voice vote both the Hildebeast and Mikulski are spared having this thrown at them.
A more visceral indictment came from closer to the calamity. Aaron Broussard, president of Jefferson Parish near New Orleans, said the bureaucracy "has murdered people in the greater New Orleans area."

"Take whatever idiot they have at the top of whatever agency and give me a better idiot," he told CBS. "Give me a caring idiot. Give me a sensitive idiot. Just don't give me the same idiot."

Republican Sen. Trent Lott of Mississippi, just back from a week surveying damage in his home state, allowed that "mistakes were made" but tried to counsel restraint Tuesday as calls for Brown's removal escalated. But even Lott displayed some of the potent emotions spawned by the horrific conditions on the Gulf Coast. "If somebody said, `You pick somebody to hammer,' I don't know who I'd pick," he told reporters. "I did threaten to physically beat a couple of people in the last couple of days, figuratively speaking."

It's not uncommon for the Federal Emergency Management Agency _ and whoever is in charge at the time _ to catch blame in the messy aftermath of disaster.

It happened after Hugo hit South Carolina in 1989 and Andrew struck Florida in 1992.

After Andrew, Mikulski slammed the agency for a "pathetically sluggish" response, and on the ground, Dade County emergency director Kathleen Hale famously summed up the frustration felt throughout the stricken areas when she cried, "Where the hell is the cavalry?"
Waiting to be called in by the Florida governor. What was his name again? Which party?
"There is nothing more powerful than the urge to blame," said Eric Dezenhall, a crisis-management consultant who helps corporate leaders and other prominent figures try to repair tattered images. "It happens every time. It is a deeply embedded archetype in the human mind."

He said the Brown episode is playing out in classic fashion. "You can follow the steps," he said. "First, outrage. Second, the headline: 'What went wrong?' Third, the telltale memo that supposedly suggests somebody knew and did nothing. I just don't find this to be unique at all."

Brown, a 50-year-old lawyer, in some ways is an easy target. The former head of the International Arabian Horse Association, Brown had no background in disaster relief when old college friend and then- FEMA Director Joe Allbaugh hired him to serve as the agency's general counsel in 2001. "There is a Jay Leno-esque comic undertone to his background," said Dezenhall. "It sort of conjures up a who's-on-first kind of thing."

But the dim view of Brown's qualifications by senators seems to have emerged only in hindsight. Members of both parties seemed little troubled by his background at 2002 Senate hearings that led to his confirmation as deputy FEMA chief.
See the link. See also the transcript of his confirmation. No one had any problems with Mr. Brown then. His past wasn't considered remarkable, and his lack of experience didn't seem to bother any Democrat.
Indeed, Democratic Sen. Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut, who led those hearings, called Brown's long-ago stint as assistant city manager in Edmond, Okla., a "particularly useful experience" because he had responsibility for local emergency services.

As FEMA chief, Brown has pressed for greater attention to natural disaster planning, including strategies for a major hurricane in New Orleans, and he has had to contend with cuts to FEMA's operating budget while more attention was paid to fighting terrorism.

But as the enormity of the Gulf Coast damage gradually came into clearer focus, Brown did not help his case with a number of comments seen as insensitive or ill-advised. For example, he acknowledged last week that he didn't know there were some 20,000 evacuees enduring heinous conditions at the New Orleans convention center until a day after their difficulties had been widely reported in the news. ABC's Ted Koppel was incredulous as he asked Brown, "Don't you guys watch television? Don't you guys listen to the radio?"

"Forgive me for beating up on you there," Koppel later told Brown, "but you are the only guy from the federal government who is coming out to take your medicine."

The doses keep getting stronger. But, for now at least, President Bush is standing by his embattled FEMA chief. "Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job," the president told him last week.

And Brown, for his part, is trying to shrug off the criticism. "People want to lash out at me, lash out at FEMA," he told reporters. "I think that's fine. Just lash out, because my job is to continue to save lives."
I don't know whether Mr. Brown is a decent fellow or a yutz. What I do know is that he'll be asked to fall on his sword in the near future.
Posted by: Steve White || 09/08/2005 00:54 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The MSM's Bush Hand Grenade Rule is in effect:

If credit must be given, keep it as far from Bush as possible.

If blame can be given, get it as close to Bush as possible.

Brown, and probably Chertoff later, are as close as they figure they can get. Now they just have to sell it - with the usual endless repetition and exaggeration of every nit they can dredge up - and silence on any and all mitigating factors and inconvenient facts.

Since the MSM and their Moonbat allies eat their own, Mayor Nugget and Gov Bunco had better figure it out lickety-split, STFU, and lower their profiles.

I'd enjoy hearing the response if someone is stupid enough to give Gen Honore any shit. Sometimes, us crude SOB's are regarded as "colorful" and get to tell the truth without the finger-wagging voyeur cluckfuck cheesedicks clouding the issue. Let 'er rip, General.
Posted by: .com || 09/08/2005 2:27 Comments || Top||

#2  Gen Honore would eat these little shits for breakfast. You don't get to be a one star general by being stupid. You don't get 3 if you don't understand politics.

To paraphrase Gen Honore: I am not going to to play the blame game, I don't have the time. I only have time to help these people who desperately need it, thats my job. If you have time to play the blame game your not helping these people.

This guy has done more for the people of the US in a few days than any of the above named politicans have in their whole ego filled lives.
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom || 09/08/2005 2:42 Comments || Top||

#3  And as some one (SPoD?) reported here earlier, Katrina did $1 billion in damage in Florida and there was no screaming and yelling about FEMA there. Must be outside the MSM tunnel vision.
Posted by: Bobby || 09/08/2005 7:54 Comments || Top||

#4  Seems like Brown was also FEMA director through all that horrible outbrust of 4 hurricanes in Florida last year.

Don't remember anyone calling for his job during that. Could it be, because he was working with a competent governor who utilized lots of leadership skills?

Let them keep screaming. They will drive themselves into a hole.

I call for a Katrina Kommission led by Rudy and Jeb, one a mayor during a diaster, and one a governor through hurricanes. Seems, they know what should have been happening!
Posted by: Sherry || 09/08/2005 12:20 Comments || Top||


Force threatened to clear out hold-outs as relief workers come under sniper fire
Using friendly persuasion backed by the threat of force, police and soldiers went house to house Wednesday to try to coax the last 10,000 or so stubborn holdouts to leave storm-shattered New Orleans because of the risk of disease from the putrid, sewage-laden floodwaters.

"A large group of young armed men with M-16s just arrived at my door and told me that I have to leave," said Patrick McCarty, who lives in the city's Lower Garden District. "While not saying they would arrest you, the inference is clear."

Mayor C. Ray Nagin ordered law officers and the military late Tuesday to evacuate all holdouts -- by force if necessary. He warned that the combination of fetid water, fires and natural gas leaks after Hurricane Katrina made it too dangerous to stay.

In fact, the first government tests confirmed Wednesday that the amount of sewage-related bacteria in the floodwaters is at least 10 times higher than acceptable safety levels. And health officials said at least four people may have died of a waterborne bacterial infection circulating in Katrina's floodwaters.

As of midday, there were no reports of anyone being removed by force, and it was not clear how the order would be carried out.

The stepped-up evacuation came as workers trying to get into the city to restart essential services came under sniper fire. More than 100 officers and seven armored personnel carriers captured a suspect in a housing project who had been firing on workers trying to restore cell phone towers, authorities said.

Workers struggled to find and count corpses sniffed out by cadaver dogs in the 90-degree heat. The mayor has said New Orleans' death toll could reach 10,000.

The enormity of the disaster came ever-clearer in neighboring St. Bernard Parish, which was hit by a levee break that brought a wall of water up to 20 feet high. State Rep. Nita Hutter said 30 people died at a flooded nursing home in Chalmette when the staff left the elderly residents behind in their beds. And Rep. Charlie Melancon said more than 100 people died at a dockside warehouse while they waited for rescuers to ferry them to safety.

The floodwaters continued to recede, though slowly, with only 23 of the city's normal contingent of 148 pumps in operation, along with three portable pumps.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 09/08/2005 01:08 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Gen Honore says there is no sniper fire. Someone pulls aout a gun and starts shooting that is not a sniper (unless you are the MSM) He says "you don't see me wearing body armor do you?" "two guys in the street have a shoot out it ain't sniper fire it's a gun fight." There are no snipers in NO. There are stupid people playing with guns.

Manditory evacuations are illegal. You can't force someone to leave their home without a warrant. No Judge will give you one. You can declare they can't be on the street. You can declare a 24X7 curfew. You can not order them to leave their home. You will also have a hard time getting anyone to remove someone who doesn't want to leave their home from their home. 99% of cops will not do it.
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom || 09/08/2005 2:52 Comments || Top||

#2  Both Mayor Nugget and Gov Bunco are out of their league - probably on any topic or issue of greater import than running a lemonade stand. The legal key is condemnation. Condemn the flooded homes and then you can legally remove the people - martial law optional, One of the film crews on Fox reported, with obvious amazement, that they saw people washing their clothes and dishes in the flood water. Sigh. Some people are in the Too Stupid To Live category, usually reserved for meatheads and bimbos in slasher movies. To protect others, as well as themselves, they need some help with the cognition thingy.
Posted by: .com || 09/08/2005 3:07 Comments || Top||

#3  yes i agree there is no sniper fire, i mean these goons firing guns around havnt been to any kind of sniper school, or for that matter any sort of school in there lifes, they dont have fckin sniper rifles either, drives me up the wall, BBC this morning are crowing the 'sniper fire' line so im gonna complain.
Posted by: Shep UK || 09/08/2005 4:59 Comments || Top||

#4  I remember picking up 2 slugs and watching other's do the same on Super Bowl Plaza on New Years Day in 2003. Gun sex on New Years Eve is a big New Orleans tradition.
Posted by: Shipman || 09/08/2005 7:30 Comments || Top||

#5  Super Dome Plaza.
Posted by: Shipman || 09/08/2005 7:31 Comments || Top||

#6  *ahem* Super Dumb Plaza.
Posted by: not altogether clear || 09/08/2005 7:34 Comments || Top||

#7  Just heard that the estimate of damage to the Jungle Super Dome and Rape exec. suites is 100,000,000. [Rush]
Posted by: Red Dog || 09/08/2005 15:09 Comments || Top||

#8  Mandatory evacuations are permitted in the exercise of what is called the "police power," which is the reserve power of the government to act in emergency situations.
Posted by: john || 09/08/2005 19:25 Comments || Top||


Lousiana spending went to questionable projects
Before Hurricane Katrina breached a levee on the New Orleans Industrial Canal, the Army Corps of Engineers had already launched a $748 million construction project at that very location. But the project had nothing to do with flood control. The Corps was building a huge new lock for the canal, an effort to accommodate steadily increasing barge traffic. Except that barge traffic on the canal has been steadily decreasing.

In Katrina's wake, Louisiana politicians and other critics have complained about paltry funding for the Army Corps in general and Louisiana projects in particular. But over the five years of President Bush's administration, Louisiana has received far more money for Corps civil works projects than any other state, about $1.9 billion; California was a distant second with less than $1.4 billion, even though its population is more than seven times as large.

Much of that Louisiana money was spent to try to keep low-lying New Orleans dry. But hundreds of millions of dollars have gone to unrelated water projects demanded by the state's congressional delegation and approved by the Corps, often after economic analyses that turned out to be inaccurate. Despite a series of independent investigations criticizing Army Corps construction projects as wasteful pork-barrel spending, Louisiana's representatives have kept bringing home the bacon.

For example, after a $194 million deepening project for the Port of Iberia flunked a Corps cost-benefit analysis, Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) tucked language into an emergency Iraq spending bill ordering the agency to redo its calculations. The Corps also spends tens of millions of dollars a year dredging little-used waterways such as the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet, the Atchafalaya River and the Red River -- now known as the J. Bennett Johnston Waterway, in honor of the project's congressional godfather -- for barge traffic that is less than forecast.

The Industrial Canal lock is one of the agency's most controversial projects, sued by residents of a New Orleans low-income black neighborhood and cited by an alliance of environmentalists and taxpayer advocates as the fifth-worst current Corps boondoggle. In 1998, the Corps justified its plan to build a new lock -- rather than fix the old lock for a tiny fraction of the cost -- by predicting huge increases in use by barges traveling between the Port of New Orleans and the Mississippi River.

In fact, barge traffic on the canal had been plummeting since 1994, but the Corps left that data out of its study. And barges have continued to avoid the canal since the study was finished, even though they are visiting the port in increased numbers.

Pam Dashiell, president of the Holy Cross Neighborhood Association, remembers holding a protest against the lock four years ago -- right where the levee broke Aug. 30. Now she's holed up with her family in a St. Louis hotel, and her neighborhood is underwater. "Our politicians never cared half as much about protecting us as they cared about pork," Dashiell said.

Yesterday, congressional defenders of the Corps said they hoped the fallout from Hurricane Katrina would pave the way for billions of dollars of additional spending on water projects. Steve Ellis, a Corps critic with Taxpayers for Common Sense, called their push "the legislative equivalent of looting."

Louisiana's politicians have requested much more money for New Orleans hurricane protection than the Bush administration has proposed or Congress has provided. In the last budget bill, Louisiana's delegation requested $27.1 million for shoring up levees around Lake Pontchartrain, the full amount the Corps had declared as its "project capability." Bush suggested $3.9 million, and Congress agreed to spend $5.7 million.

Administration officials also dramatically scaled back a long-term project to restore Louisiana's disappearing coastal marshes, which once provided a measure of natural hurricane protection for New Orleans. They ordered the Corps to stop work on a $14 billion plan, and devise a $2 billion plan instead.

But overall, the Bush administration's funding requests for the key New Orleans flood-control projects for the past five years were slightly higher than the Clinton administration's for its past five years. Lt. Gen. Carl Strock, the chief of the Corps, has said that in any event, more money would not have prevented the drowning of the city, since its levees were designed to protect against a Category 3 storm, and the levees that failed were already completed projects. Strock has also said that the marsh-restoration project would not have done much to diminish Katrina's storm surge, which passed east of the coastal wetlands.

"The project manager for the Great Pyramids probably put in a request for 100 million shekels and only got 50 million," said John Paul Woodley Jr., the Bush administration official overseeing the Corps. "Flood protection is always a work in progress; on any given day, if you ask whether any community has all the protection it needs, the answer is almost always: Maybe, but maybe not."

The Corps had been studying the possibility of upgrading the New Orleans levees for a higher level of protection before Katrina hit, but Woodley said that study would not have been finished for years. Still, liberal bloggers, Democratic politicians and some GOP defenders of the Corps have linked the catastrophe to the underfunding of the agency.

"We've been hollering about funding for years, but everyone would say: There goes Louisiana again, asking for more money," said former Democratic senator John Breaux. "We've had some powerful people in powerful places, but we never got what we needed."

That may be true. But those powerful people -- including former senators Breaux, Johnston and Russell Long, as well as former House committee chairmen Robert Livingston and W.J. "Billy" Tauzin -- did get quite a bit of what they wanted. And the current delegation -- led by Landrieu and GOP Sen. David Vitter -- has continued that tradition.

The Senate's latest budget bill for the Corps included 107 Louisiana projects worth $596 million, including $15 million for the Industrial Canal lock, for which the Bush administration had proposed no funding. Landrieu said the bill would "accelerate our flood control, navigation and coastal protection programs." Vitter said he was "grateful that my colleagues on the Appropriations Committee were persuaded of the importance of these projects."

Louisiana not only leads the nation in overall Corps funding, it places second in new construction -- just behind Florida, home of an $8 billion project to restore the Everglades. Several controversial projects were improvements for the Port of New Orleans, an economic linchpin at the mouth of the Mississippi. There were also several efforts to deepen channel for oil and gas tankers, a priority for petroleum companies that drill in the Gulf of Mexico.

"We thought all the projects were important -- not just levees," Breaux said. "Hindsight is a wonderful thing, but navigation projects were critical to our economic survival."

Overall, Army Corps funding has remained relatively constant for decades, despite the "Program Growth Initiative" launched by agency generals in 1999 without telling their civilian bosses in the Clinton administration. The Bush administration has proposed cuts in the Corps budget, and has tried to shift the agency's emphasis from new construction to overdue maintenance. But most of those proposals have died quietly on Capitol Hill, and the administration has not fought too hard to revive them.

In fact, more than any other federal agency, the Corps is controlled by Congress; its $4.7 billion civil works budget consists almost entirely of "earmarks" inserted by individual legislators. The Corps must determine that the economic benefits of its projects exceed the costs, but marginal projects such as the Port of Iberia deepening -- which squeaked by with a 1.03 benefit-cost ratio -- are as eligible for funding as the New Orleans levees.

"It has been explicit national policy not to set priorities, but instead to build any flood control or barge project if the Corps decides the benefits exceed the costs by 1 cent," said Tim Searchinger, a senior attorney at Environmental Defense. "Saving New Orleans gets no more emphasis than draining wetlands to grow corn and soybeans."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 09/08/2005 01:02 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  LA has long needed adult supervision.
Posted by: Captain America || 09/08/2005 2:57 Comments || Top||

#2  great article Dan. What amazes me most is the realization that that there is at least one real reporter left in the world. Nothing surprising in the article, a typical day of your tax dollars at work. But the fact that a reporter actually researched how they were being wasted...now that's news.
Posted by: 2b || 09/08/2005 6:08 Comments || Top||

#3  This boggles the mind! This is what happens when pork barrel spending clashes against spending needed on REAL needs. Everyone knew about New Orleans, and yet, it's dredge/dredge/dredge 24/7 by the Corps. Of course, I don't fault them, because (like the article states) Congress earmarks almost every dollar in their budget for their own pet project down there. And this doesn't even mention yesterday's news of the locals missing plenty of chances for federal $ for the levees because they couldn't come up with matching funds (too many bike paths on top of levees and jets to buy). And it sounds like Pam Dashiell needs to hook up with Taxpayers for Common Sense. Shout it from the rooftops, booooooyyyyyy!
Posted by: BA || 09/08/2005 8:58 Comments || Top||

#4  This reminds me of the Corps project (I'm sure it was earmark $ pork too) in South GA. They were wanting to dredge the Chattahoochee River (forms the GA/AL border in the southern parts of those States, and eventually becomes the Appalachicola River, to the Appalachicola Bay) all the way up to Columbus, GA. The Atlanta paper got word of that and studied and found that something like only 4-5 barges/year want to go up the river all the way to Columbus. And, yet they wanted to spend millions for those 4-5 barges. Ended up that there's a nuke plant down in South Alabama that the Southern Company (Parent company of GA/AL/MS/FL Power and Southern Nuclear Cos.) wanted the dredging to be able to get needed equipment for the nuke plant to it on the River (no need to dredge all the way to Columbus, plant was far south of there). Some Congress-critter saw that proposal and saw the opportunity to cash in all the way to Columbus. It eventually was defeated.
Posted by: BA || 09/08/2005 9:03 Comments || Top||

#5  Ba, I am from the area in South Alabama you are referencing (Dothan, Alabama) and you are right, there was no need to dredge all the way to Columbus, Ga. Besides, the Walter F. George dam and reservoir (also known as Lake Eufaula) is between Dothan and Columbus and it has a lock. It was not only not needed, it wasn't feasable. The Chattahooche is a prime fishing river (so is the Appalachicola) and the fishing folks were up in arms as well. I just missed a job building the nuke plant.
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 09/08/2005 10:16 Comments || Top||

#6  I think we need to dust off the Reconstruction legislation of the late 1860s.
Posted by: MSM || 09/08/2005 14:04 Comments || Top||

#7  It's not wasted money, damn it. It's spending and walkin money -- big difference.
Posted by: Captain America || 09/08/2005 14:21 Comments || Top||

#8  DB: An Auburn Tiger and reside in God's country? You are truly blessed. Did you see much damage in your area?
Posted by: BA || 09/08/2005 15:48 Comments || Top||

#9  Yeah, DB got a bad groundwasp invasion thing.
Posted by: Shipman || 09/08/2005 19:51 Comments || Top||


Mexico Sends First Aid Convoy Ever to U.S
Mexican army convoys and a navy ship laden with food, supplies and specialists traveled to the U.S. Wednesday to help in the Hurricane Katrina relief effort — a highly symbolic journey marking the first time Mexico's military has aided its powerful northern neighbor. The convoy was expected to arrive at the U.S.-Mexico border Wednesday evening and cross into U.S. territory early Thursday, President Vicente Fox's office said. Radio talk shows and newspapers in Mexico buzzed with excitement over news that this country, long on the receiving end of U.S. disaster relief, was sending a hurricane aid convoy north.

The convoy represents the first Mexican military unit to operate on U.S. soil since 1846, when Mexican troops briefly marched into Texas, which had separated from Mexico and joined the United States. It included military specialists, doctors, nurses and engineers carrying water treatment plants, mobile kitchens, food and blankets. "This is just an act of solidarity between two peoples who are brothers," said Fox's spokesman, Ruben Aguilar.
Posted by: Fred || 09/08/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Mexico Sends First Aid Convoy Ever to U.S

Ima hope thea sendum Beno w/ta frijoles.
Posted by: rojo perro || 09/08/2005 0:35 Comments || Top||

#2  Can we load the trucks with illegals when we send 'em back?
Posted by: AzCat || 09/08/2005 6:18 Comments || Top||

#3  "This is just an act of solidarity between two peoples who are brothers," said Fox's spokesman, Ruben Aguilar

I appreciate the sentiment, but my brother has never moved into my living room uninvited.
Posted by: Secret Master || 09/08/2005 16:25 Comments || Top||


La. Guardsmen Returning From Kuwait
Smart move. These guys must be worried sick about their families. Get them home; another NG unit will step up.
CAMP VICTORY, Kuwait (AP) - Hundreds of soldiers from a New Orleans National Guard unit begin leaving Thursday to return to the devastation left by Hurricane Katrina. Guard officials said 80 percent lost homes or jobs and some had not heard from relatives since the storm.

A Pentagon team led by Brig. Gen. Sean Byrne flew into this U.S. base in the Kuwaiti desert to help ease the Louisiana's unit redeployment home. Speaking Wednesday to 150 soldiers sitting on plywood benches in a tent billowing in the wind, Byrne told them that if their homes are gone and their families scattered and homeless, the Army will help. "The focus isn't necessarily on the Army right now. The focus is on you and your family," said Byrne, director of military personnel management.

In the audience, Sgt. John Roger, 30, said his wife and two children survived the storm by fleeing to Kansas in his pickup truck to stay with his in-laws. A neighbor stranded on her roof told the family she watched flood waters carry off its three-bedroom, cypress-wood house. "She saw my house float past her. She took a picture of it," Roger said in a Cajun drawl. "They said the water came in so fast down there, it swept everything away. I lost everything I own, except my truck."

The house once sat between a pair of moss-draped oaks in lower St. Bernard Parish, outside New Orleans. Asked where his house was now, Roger said: "I don't know. Probably in the Gulf somewhere."

Over the next two weeks, the 3,700 soldiers of the Louisiana Guard's 256th Brigade Combat Team will be flown to a former military airport in Alexandria, La., and then travel to nearby Fort Polk. Of the U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, the 256th was hit hardest by Katrina, particularly Roger's New Orleans-based unit, the 1st Battalion, 141st Field Artillery Regiment.
The brigade has 545 soldiers "drastically" affected by the disaster, and almost 300 of those are in the artillery battalion, said Lt. Col. Debbie Haston-Hilger, U.S. military spokeswoman in Kuwait. Fifty battalion soldiers still hadn't been able to contact some relatives as of Monday, Haston-Hilger said. Some family members are thought to have perished.

The Mississippi National Guard's 155th Brigade Combat Team, based in western Iraq, had 300 soldiers affected by the disaster, Haston-Hilger said. The 155th isn't scheduled to finish its tour until January.
The Pentagon has sent a team led by a two-star general to Fort Polk to prepare for the arrival of the 256th, helping with requests for relief, insurance settlements, mental health counseling and housing. "They're waiting to go home and they're facing a whole lot of uncertainty," Byrne said. "We're here to try to mitigate that uncertainty."

Byrne and his Pentagon comrades laid out options for the Louisianans, recommending that rather than return quickly to a disrupted civilian life, they remain on active duty at Fort Polk and bring their families there to stay. Byrne said the soldiers could also enlist in the regular Army. "If you go back to Louisiana or Mississippi and your house is gone, it gives you another option," he said.

Roger, a welder, said he would go to Kansas, where his wife has enrolled their children in school. But he said he prefers bayou life and will go back eventually. "You got so many ties down there, so many friends," he said. "It's a way of life. It's hard to say to hell with it."
Posted by: Steve White || 09/08/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:


Africa: Subsaharan
Zimbabwe Facing Bad Agricultural Season
HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) - Zimbabwe, once a regional breadbasket, is facing its worst agricultural season since independence in 1980, with shortages of seed, fertilizer and equipment threatening next year's harvest before it even has been planted, farmers and other experts said.

Some of those warnings were issued Tuesday in testimony before Parliament's agriculture committee, the state-run Herald newspaper and ruling party-allied Daily Mirror reported.
Fertilizer companies told the committee their warehouses were empty. The Zimbabwe Seed Traders Association said there was only 28,660 tons of maize seed in the country, slightly more than half of what is needed.
But don't worry, the Chinese will bail you out, Bob. Right?
The Agricultural Dealers and Manufacturers' Association has run out of plow disks for the first time in its history. There also are key shortages of irrigation piping, pumps, pesticides and other chemicals, suppliers said. "The information you have given us simply shows that there is no season," committee chairman Walter Mzembi was quoted as saying.
Steady Walter, you might want to sit down.
The seizure of thousands of white-owned commercial farms for redistribution to black Zimbabweans, combined with years of drought, have crippled Zimbabwe's agriculture-based economy. About 4 million people will need food aid before the next harvest in what was once a regional breadbasket, according to U.N. estimates. "This coming season's production prospects are the worst since 1980 independence due to inputs shortages and the lack of a strong message to allow all farmers to produce with confidence," Doug Taylor-Freeme, president of the mostly white Commercial Farmers Union, told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

President Robert Mugabe's government claims to have settled 300,000 black families on former white-owned farms, but U.N. agencies report many are derelict, with irrigation and housing vandalized, and livestock stolen or slaughtered. Mugabe has promised $287 million in assistance to black farmers.
Is he funding that out of his stash?
But Edward Raradza, vice president of the black Zimbabwe Farmers' Union, said 60 percent of the funds advanced by the government for cropping had not reached their intended beneficiaries. His organization represents 800,000 families in communal farming areas. "There have been too many middlemen," testified Wilfanos Mashingaidze, chairman of the Tobacco Growers' Trust. "The resources from government are going down the drain. They are disappearing like mist."
Of course there are too many middlemen. It's a socialist paradise. Now shaddup before you and your family are disappeared.
Posted by: Steve White || 09/08/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Surprise, surprise.
Posted by: gromgoru || 09/08/2005 1:54 Comments || Top||

#2  Does anyone else around here worry that RhodesiaFever might be trackin down Farmin B Hard?
Posted by: Shipman || 09/08/2005 15:35 Comments || Top||

#3  Yo, man. What up? Damn, mo bad news. I tell Bob back in the day farmin ain't shit without throwin in a whitey for all that plantin booshit and the like. But he doan lissen. Think the syphillis finally got his brain...
Who dis Rhodesiafever dude?
Posted by: Farmin B. Hard || 09/08/2005 16:41 Comments || Top||

#4  worry? Nooooooo
Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 16:41 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Economy
Hydrogen pill raises fuel hopes
Posted by: DanNY || 09/08/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Would that be a 50 l tank at ambient pressure or something a little more compressed?

"I know, we'll combine hydrogen with oxygen and carbon to create a super dense fuel."

"What will we call it?"

"Benzene!"
Posted by: 11A5S || 09/08/2005 0:33 Comments || Top||

#2  wake me up when they have a cold fusion hydrogen pill. zzzzzzzzz


/it's just that I've seen these specters for decades. [ok, someday..] back to sleep.
Posted by: Red Dog || 09/08/2005 0:45 Comments || Top||

#3  The list of occupations infected by nutjobs in Europe is expanding.
Posted by: gromgoru || 09/08/2005 2:03 Comments || Top||

#4  No doubt based on metal hydrides. Not cost effective. No news here. Back to sleep. zzz zzz
http://folk.uio.no/ponniahv/activity/hydride/hyd_tutorial.html
Posted by: Darrell || 09/08/2005 7:03 Comments || Top||

#5  This is huge news. It means the car side of the equation is mostly handles. Liquid hydrogen was always too dangerous to use, a solid form can be transported and used safely.

Now someone needs to work on the 'creating' the hydrogen part of the problem. Since it can be transported safely we can build the plant nearly anywhere we have a nuclear plant to generate the clean power needed.

If we have the balls the US could become the major energy exporter of the new century. If not the French and Japanese with their own nuclear power grids will probably become exporters. At least its better than relying on the Middle East.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 09/08/2005 11:56 Comments || Top||

#6  Now someone needs to work on the 'creating' the hydrogen part of the problem.

That's just it, isn't it. Much of the hydrogen in the world is attached to oxygen in the form of H2O. Breaking those atoms apart takes more energy than can be recovered from the hydrogen. This is a non-trivial obstacle.

Posted by: Baba Tutu || 09/08/2005 17:38 Comments || Top||

#7  Much of the hydrogen in the world is attached to oxygen in the form of H2O. Breaking those atoms apart takes more energy than can be recovered from the hydrogen.

That's not fair!
Posted by: Green Barbie || 09/08/2005 19:52 Comments || Top||

#8  Math is hard for you, isn't it Barbie.
Posted by: Omerens Omaigum2983 || 09/08/2005 21:12 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
Schwarzenegger Vows Gay Marriage Bill Veto
Legislature to the people of California: "F*&k you".
Gov. Schwarzenegger - "I don't think so"

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger announced Wednesday he will veto a bill that would have made California the first state to legalize same-sex marriage through its elected lawmakers. Schwarzenegger said the legislation, given final approval Tuesday by lawmakers, would conflict with the intent of voters when they approved an initiative five years ago. Proposition 22 was placed on the ballot to prevent California from recognizing same-sex marriages performed in other states or countries.
won by over 30% margin IIRC. The people will go for civil unions/domestic partners with full legal rights - just don't call it marriage.
"We cannot have a system where the people vote and the Legislature derails that vote," the governor's press secretary, Margita Thompson, said in a statement. "Out of respect for the will of the people, the governor will veto (the bill)." Proposition 22 stated that "only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California." The bill to be vetoed by Schwarzenegger would have defined marriage as a civil contract between "two persons."

In Massachusetts, recognition of gay marriages came through a court ruling. Gay rights advocates accused Schwarzenegger of betraying the bipartisan ideals that helped get him elected in the 2003 recall. "Clearly he's pandering to an extreme right wing, which was not how he got elected," said Geoff Kors, executive director of Equality California, one of the bill's sponsors. "He got elected with record numbers of lesbian and gay voters who had not previously voted for a Republican, and he sold us out."

Kate Kendell, executive director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights, said she was not surprised by word of Schwarzenegger's pending veto. "Any girlie man could have vetoed this legislation," she said, referring to a term Schwarzenegger used previously to mock Democratic legislators. "A real man demonstrating real leadership as governor of the most populous state in the nation would have chosen a different course of action."

The governor has until Oct. 9 to issue the veto. Despite his promise to do so, Schwarzenegger "believes gay couples are entitled to full protection under the law and should not be discriminated against based upon their relationship," Thompson's statement said. "He is proud that California provides the most rigorous protections in the nation for domestic partners."

The Republican governor had indicated previously that he would veto the bill, saying the debate over same-sex marriage should be decided by voters or the courts. A state appeals court is considering appeals of a lower court ruling earlier this year that overturned Proposition 22 and a 1978 law that first formally defined marriage as a union between a man and a woman. Meanwhile, opponents of same-sex marriages are planning measures on the ballot next year that would place a ban on gay marriages in the state Constitution.

Schwarzenegger's announcement dampened a celebratory mood among the bill's supporters, who only the night before cheered, hugged and kissed as the state Assembly narrowly sent the bill to the governor's desk. Democratic Assemblyman Paul Koretz had called bans on gay marriage "the last frontier of bigotry and discrimination."
Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Actually the solid center in California opposes this Bill. Arnie can safely vetot it. If he was pandering to the extreme right he would suggest killing all gays.

Californians support equal rioghts for all. Same sex marriage is not a civil right in this state by voter enacted state law.
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom || 09/08/2005 0:54 Comments || Top||

#2  Pretty simple>

The people spoke and passed a law via the ballot initiative - by an overwhelming

THe legilsationtried to override the people with a flwed bill.

The Governator did the right thing: vetoing the bill.

If they want a bill passed, and signed, word it so it doesnt violate the state constitutional law as enacted by the ballot initiative.

Semantics matter.
Posted by: OldSpook || 09/08/2005 5:45 Comments || Top||

#3  hasta la vista girly men. no you can't marry in Caleefornia. I veto it.
Posted by: Gubernator || 09/08/2005 7:30 Comments || Top||

#4  Its all about $$$. Someone wants the special treatment that another group receives. After no-fault divorces the whole concept changed but the state subsidies and perks remained. Time to adjust that by limiting any differences in treatment to be based solely on raising children. Once you take the monetary incentive out of the formula, a lot of the pressure for 'same sex' marriage will disappear and the fight for adoptions by gays increase. Follow the money.
Posted by: Flack Elmegum1744 || 09/08/2005 9:49 Comments || Top||

#5  FE - Maybe I'm reading you wrong, but do you mean that the only people who could get married are the ones who could possibly have children? I don't want that to be the criteria for allowing marriage between two people.
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 09/08/2005 10:10 Comments || Top||

#6  "He got elected with record numbers of lesbian and gay voters who had not previously voted for a Republican, and he sold us out."

Guess whos not getting invited to next years parade.
Posted by: DepotGuy || 09/08/2005 10:28 Comments || Top||

#7  No, I'm not talking about possible reproduction. I'm talking after the fact. The government bennies [tax deductions, expenses, etc] should be focused upon the children, not based upon contracts between adults. What adults agree upon is their problem and in no way should obligate a third party [the state as the representative of the people] for anything, with the state only being involved in resolution of in breach of contract [in writing or implied] as a disinterested third party. The children, who being unable by definition to take care of themselves, are the interest of the state in any such unions. If you remove the governmental monetary rewards for marriage and move it to children, I suspect a lot of the activist movement for acquiring the cultural annotation of 'marriage' will disappear.
Posted by: Flack Elmegum1744 || 09/08/2005 10:50 Comments || Top||

#8  See Eugene Volokh on the subject. "California Legislature About To Violate the California Constitution?"
Posted by: James || 09/08/2005 12:08 Comments || Top||

#9  The CA legislature is so out of touch with the people. It is unbelievable. They don't care about fixing any of the problems that have led to the HUGE debt. Instead the say "F*U...here's another gay marriage bill and another illegal alien drivers license bill. How do you like me now???" Keep your fingers crossed the redistricting proposition passess in November. Right now every district in the State is a "safe" district for the incumbent. Even some Republicans are against the proposition. They rather have a "safe" district and be in the minority than have to compete and be accountable to the voters.
Posted by: intrinsicpilot || 09/08/2005 13:41 Comments || Top||

#10  This was a deliberate set-up. A number of Democrat Hispanic legislators somehow were 'convinced' to vote for it. The objective by the opposition is to throw legislation at the governor that he'll be forced to veto.
Posted by: Pappy || 09/08/2005 16:31 Comments || Top||

#11  forced to veto? Arnold's asking to be thrown in that briar patch
Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 16:53 Comments || Top||

#12  If that redistricting admendment passes it will end a lot of these LLL political careers and good ridden to them.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 09/08/2005 19:01 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Economy
LA State Gov't Barred Red Cross, Supplies From Superdome, Conv. Ctr
Powerline Hugh Hewitt
FoxNews - original source


Major Garrett of Fox News is reporting that the Red Cross "had prepositioned water, food, blankets and hygiene products for delivery to the Superdome and the Convention Center in the immediate aftermath of the hurricane, but were blocked from delivering those supplies by orders of the Louisiana state government, which did not want to attract people to the Superdome and/or Convention Center."
Explosive, obviously, if true. Hugh has interviewed Garrett, who says the report comes from "sources at the highest levels of the Red Cross."

Powerline UPDATE: Several readers report seeing this statement made by Red Cross officials. Jane Ehrgott writes: "I saw the woman who was the spokesperson for the Red Cross on tonight's Shepard Smith Report. She said on that interview that the Louisiana "STATE HOMELAND SECURITY DEPT." stopped them from going to the Superdome in the immediate aftermath. I was shocked."
American Red Cross website FAQ:
Hurricane Katrina: Why is the Red Cross not in New Orleans?

Acess to New Orleans is controlled by the National Guard and local authorities and while we are in constant contact with them, we simply cannot enter New Orleans against their orders.

The state Homeland Security Department had requested--and continues to request--that the American Red Cross not come back into New Orleans following the hurricane. Our presence would keep people from evacuating and encourage others to come into the city.

The Red Cross has been meeting the needs of thousands of New Orleans residents in some 90 shelters throughout the state of Louisiana and elsewhere since before landfall. All told, the Red Cross is today operating 149 shelters for almost 93,000 residents.

The Red Cross shares the nation’s anguish over the worsening situation inside the city. We will continue to work under the direction of the military, state and local authorities and to focus all our efforts on our lifesaving mission of feeding and sheltering.

The Red Cross does not conduct search and rescue operations. We are an organization of civilian volunteers and cannot get relief aid into any location until the local authorities say it is safe and provide us with security and access.

The original plan was to evacuate all the residents of New Orleans to safe places outside the city. With the hurricane bearing down, the city government decided to open a shelter of last resort in the Superdome downtown. We applaud this decision and believe it saved a significant number of lives.

As the remaining people are evacuated from New Orleans, the most appropriate role for the Red Cross is to provide a safe place for people to stay and to see that their emergency needs are met. We are fully staffed and equipped to handle these individuals once they are evacuated.
Posted by: Frank G || 09/08/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Every lawyer in America is watching the aftermath of KATRINA, moreso after news that 30 + bedcare patients were allegedly "abandoned" by Staff to the flood, and over 100 allegedly drowned at a warehouse waiting to be rescued. I suggest the LA AG's office start buying those cases of Maalox, Headache pills, and Caffeine.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 09/08/2005 1:09 Comments || Top||

#2  This news will be buried by the MSM.
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom || 09/08/2005 2:25 Comments || Top||

#3  I watched a news report last night on the Nursing Home fiasco. It was discovered that the Home Director had evacuated most of the residents when a bus came to take them but there were about 12 bed-ridden and wheelchair bound residents that the director deemd could not be safely evacuated. These 12 as well as the director died in the flood. Tragic but the residents were not abandoned.
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 09/08/2005 7:39 Comments || Top||

#4  If this story holds up, CNN, the WaPo, etc. will only be able to hold off for a few days.

The more interesting thing is what they will do when they are forced to cover it. Will it get headline treatment or a 3-liner deep in the weeds.
Posted by: mhw || 09/08/2005 8:01 Comments || Top||

#5  And on the 100 or so in the warehouse, they are now saying it was just a couple (under 10). CNN changed that story real quick last night. Of course, CNN also stated that people were moved there when shelters were filling up, so it could be 100, and maybe the locals are just trying to CYA right now.
Posted by: BA || 09/08/2005 8:40 Comments || Top||

#6  The news story I watched last night had video footage and an on-scene reporter who stated they foundabout 12 bodies and that the Home was mostly evacuated. The fact the Director stayed with the residents that could not be moved and died in the flood as well wasglossed over as just deserts for not evacuating everyone. The probability is at least some of those that died in the flood would have died on the bus trip. These people were in very poor health.
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 09/08/2005 8:51 Comments || Top||

#7  As posted at the Captain's Quarters -

"FEMA positioned their assets in the area prior to the storm hitting, but not inside the impact zone, as that would have rendered them useless afterwards. A major component of that comes from the Red Cross. The Red Cross expected that either the local authorities would get the last of its citizens out of New Orleans or allow them to set up their relief provisions inside the city. To this day, the city and state have done neither, nor have they allowed the federal government to take control of the relief effort to make these decisions themselves. That means that the Red Cross personnel (and the relief provisions that FEMA helped them stage) have no way to reach those in the city anywhere, including the Superdome, the Convention Center, or any of the other shelters in New Orleans. Until Nagin and Blanco allow them to go to the victims or act to bring the victims out to them, the residents will not see any relief supplies except that dropped to them by air, a dicey proposition at best when facing toxic flood waters."

'bout wraps it up. If the mob wants heads, they'll get heads, just not the ones the usual agitators were expecting.
Posted by: Flack Elmegum1744 || 09/08/2005 9:30 Comments || Top||

#8  The sad truth is it is the survival of the fittest in these situations. Any plan must triage and some are nearly impossible to evacuate. Young staff with families are allowed to evacuate with them and volunteers are left in nursing homes, etc. in any disaster plan I've participated in. The shelters had rules like no smoking, no needles, no drugs, and everybody in Nawlins smokes. Pretty high rate of AIDS, too, which were the ones left in the hospital. No weapons allowed, either, and FOX had footage of an elderly white woman pulling a gun when they tried to evacuate her without her dog. The DoubleTree's bar was looted and the first floor burnt but left all the food and water behind. Those who make a living from drug trafficking aren't about to abandon everything to the Feds...the Border Patrol have large airboats to go in submerged areas but they frighten residents so they aren't helping with the evacuation in certain areas. NO has been on a watch list for terrorism since OK City and has a gang problem. Apparently the DC planners weren't aware of the unique cultural quirks of this area and the mayor and governor are afraid of what might be found when it dries up a bit. The overwhelming response from all Americans should be applauded, recognizing this could have been even more tragic if it had been a nuclear bomb, without warning, that may not allow a massive military evacuation.
Posted by: Danielle || 09/08/2005 15:31 Comments || Top||


Update: Day 3 Dallas Convention Center/New Orleans Evacuees 9-7-05
Finally found Bob who comments here and is also a National Guardsman working the evacuee situation in Dallas.

Things are happening very quickly here. But before I get into that, I will let you know what’s happening in regards to Bob. After arrival Sunday evening they stayed at the convention center over night but the next day were moved to a downtown hotel a few blocks over from both the Reunion Arena and Dallas Convention Center designated shelters for the evacuees. At first they were doing 12 hour shifts but reinforcements arrived and they are now doing officially 8 hour shifts, even though with briefings and other activities it is still a 10 hour day for each Guard shift. Bob’s shift is officially 7AM to 3PM.

Bob is responsible for working with the Lubbock Police Department contingent of the over all police presence at the Convention Center and also for being present for boarding of school buses that arrive early in the morning to take the kids to Dallas and various suburban school districts.

Local news put the number at 2,000 New Orleans students attended their first day of classes yesterday in Dallas and the suburbs and the schools are integrating these kids into extra curricular programs very quickly. Football is big in Texas so high school athletes from New Orleans were immediately given tryouts on the very first day and 20% of those candidates made first team (varsity) football teams even though they need to wait a mandatory 15 day UIL transfer period before they can hit the high school gird iron.

Regarding kids, local gangs in Dallas are trying to start stuff with the New Orleans kids already but tomorrow afternoon the Dallas Police intend to crack down on that tomorrow afternoon and I will get to that in a moment.

Bob said the guard is responsible for three things: Shelter for evacuees, working with law enforcement by adding a military presence and deterrent, in this case, the guard is displaying an unarmed presence. And Homeland Security related assignments which he cannot go into.

Other than a summer cold, he wanted to tell everyone thanks for asking about him and he hopes everyone is doing well.

People are moving in and out of the center and the Texas Workforce Commission is finding both full time and part time jobs for people as quickly as possible with positive results. You might have heard that the US government is giving each adult evacuee $2,000 as early as yesterday so if you have a mom and a dad, each family now has $4,000 and of course monthly unemployment each month so there is a lot of hope in these peoples lives.

There is a McDonalds three blocks from the Convention Center and a gang consisting of at least a dozen youth are making their presence known there. Many evacuees walk on into downtown to that McDonalds for dinner and the last three nights these youths have been there. Tonight they started making the evacuees walk sort of a gauntlet of gang youth shouting at them for being in Dallas, saying pea brain stuff like Dallas people wouldn’t invade New Orleans and other garbage. Sounded like liberals talking about Iraq statements. These have got to be crack head, troll losers. I had to go through there on the way over to the Convention Center to look for Bob this evening and the gang got a bit out of hand. They usually shout their garbage to groups of young New Orleans guys who come through so sounded like they were trying to start a gang on gang violence thing. However, a New Orleans family of a Mom, Dad and two little girls 3 and 5 years old had to pass through that gauntlet and take the verbal abuse of these punks. What they do not know is that when they show up tomorrow afternoon near that restaurant the Dallas Police intend to swarm the gang tomorrow, round them up and process them. I found that out when I reported what I saw to the command center at the Convention Center, they told me they had reports and had plans to be in that area of downtown tomorrow to take the gang down. Just in time because a group of New Orleans men, not boys but pretty tough looking young men, where watching the Dallas gang from the Convention Center entrance and talking about the Dallas gang, but hopefully the rumble won’t happen.
RG, please give Bob a big thank you from all of us. Ask him to stay safe and do whatever he can for the good people of NO.
Posted by: RG || 09/08/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1 

Will do.

:-)
Posted by: RG || 09/08/2005 0:12 Comments || Top||

#2  Best wishes to you and Bob, RG. And to everyone trying to adjust to a post-Katrina world.
Posted by: Seafarious || 09/08/2005 0:15 Comments || Top||

#3  Just a note about San Antonio's progress. Processed 13,000 folks. By the end of this weekend, only 5,000 will remain in shelters! That's 8,000 that have either found homes elsewhere, or SA has provided them with apartments, and most, jobs!

And yea, the area schools are lovin' having these new football players!
Posted by: Sherry || 09/08/2005 0:35 Comments || Top||

#4  Good lord, where are all the jobs being found? Don't these people know this is the worst economy ever?

At least, that's what they keep saying in the press.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 09/08/2005 7:48 Comments || Top||

#5  Amen, RC! Only the moonbats believe that 5% unemployment is the worst...economy...ever! In fact, wasn't it just 4.9% last month (before Katrina)? Report on CNN last night (usually watch Fox, but they were on commercial) of 500 N.O. evacuees (I won't call them "refugees") who ended up in Greenville, AL (1/2 way between Montgomery & Mobile, AL). The town only had 7,000 people before, so you're talking a 7% increase in population overnight! The city held a BBQ for all of them, and even the "poor, black" evacuees had nothing but praise for the City! I see a big shift coming in local/State and even Fed politics in Louisiana after this. Many who have NEVER even been outside of N.O. will see what the U.S. is REALLY like (generally kind, warm, open-arms kind of people) and it could affect an entire generation of blacks from N.O. Heck, even my wife's hometown (Gadsden, AL, NE of Birmingham) had 180 kids (plus their families) show up and enroll in school. They found 62 public housing units for these families, and even there, they are starting anew and finding jobs. If I were to get hit by a hurricane like that, I'd wanna be in NO other country than the U.S. They're moving people ALL over: 2,000 to Boston, Mass; 1,000 to Salt Lake City; 1,000 or so to Portland, Oregon; 1,000 or so to San Diego area, etc. These people are going to have their eyes completely opened to the outside world and to the REAL America. Me just hopes they take full advantage of it.
Posted by: BA || 09/08/2005 8:36 Comments || Top||

#6  Breaking up one [political] plantation at a time.
Posted by: Flack Elmegum1744 || 09/08/2005 9:43 Comments || Top||


Katrina has an unforeseen effect
Posted by: DanNY || 09/08/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I'd like to say how much this saddens and upsets me....

But I hate to lie.

Idjits.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 09/08/2005 0:54 Comments || Top||

#2  PARIS - Hurricane Katrina has had an unforeseen effect on the French fashion industry, which says it, fears it will be hit by a shortage of Louisiana alligator hides in coming months.

While there is no shortage of the saurians in the floodwaters of New Orleans, where rescuers say they fear the animals are feeding on the bodies of Katrina's victims, the hurricane may have seriously damaged alligator farming.


So the French have made a 'contribution', in a negative sort of way - they'll probably try to keep a stiff upper lip about the increase in the cost of imported alligator skin. Quell courage!

BTW - do gators eat dead things?
Posted by: Bobby || 09/08/2005 7:59 Comments || Top||

#3  BTW - do gators eat dead things?

As I understand it, yes. They'll drag their kill back to their burrow and snack on it as they get hungry.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 09/08/2005 8:04 Comments || Top||

#4  They pretty much eat only dead things. Kill it and store in the deep muddy. Gross creatures, we had them on the ropes for a long while, now the bastards are back.
Posted by: Throlulet Graviling7296 || 09/08/2005 8:42 Comments || Top||

#5  Alligators usually drown anything they catch that is too big to eat in one gulp. They then take the carcass and trap it under water by stuffing it under a submerged log or rock outcropping to let it get tender before they eat it. They also eat carrion.
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 09/08/2005 8:56 Comments || Top||

#6  No wonder the French adore them so much. They act like the idiots running the Palestinian Authority.
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 09/08/2005 10:18 Comments || Top||



Who's in the News
125[untagged]

Bookmark
E-Mail Me

The Classics
The O Club
Rantburg Store
The Bloids
The Never-ending Story
Thugburg
Gulf War I
The Way We Were
Bio

Merry-Go-Blog











On Sale now!


A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.

Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.

Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has dominated Mexico for six years.
Click here for more information

Meet the Mods
In no particular order...
Steve White
Seafarious
tu3031
badanov
sherry
ryuge
GolfBravoUSMC
Bright Pebbles
trailing wife
Gloria
Fred
Besoeker
Glenmore
Frank G
3dc
Skidmark

Two weeks of WOT
Thu 2005-09-08
  200 Hard Boyz Arrested in Iraq
Wed 2005-09-07
  Moussa Arafat is no more
Tue 2005-09-06
  Mehlis Uncovers High-Level Links in Plot to Kill Hariri
Mon 2005-09-05
  Shootout in Dammam
Sun 2005-09-04
  Bangla booms funded by Kuwaiti NGO, ordered by UK holy man
Sat 2005-09-03
  MMA seethes over Pak talks with Israel
Fri 2005-09-02
  Syria Arrests 70 Arabs Attempting to Infiltrate Iraq
Thu 2005-09-01
  Leb: More Hariri Arrests
Wed 2005-08-31
  Near 1000 dead in Baghdad stampede
Tue 2005-08-30
  Leb security bigs held in Hariri boom
Mon 2005-08-29
  Will Musharraf ban Jamaat-e-Islami and JUI?
Sun 2005-08-28
  UK draws up list of top 50 bloodthirsty holy men
Sat 2005-08-27
  Death for Musharraf plotters
Fri 2005-08-26
  1,000 German cops hunting terror suspects
Thu 2005-08-25
  UK to boot Captain Hook, al-Faqih


Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.
3.145.175.243
Help keep the Burg running! Paypal:
WoT Operations (26)    WoT Background (42)    Opinion (8)    (0)    (0)