28 February 2005

Bush is just hating that pesky U.S. Constitution

This guy, a US citizen, was held for 2 and a half years with no trial and no charges filed... Bush thinks he can do anything he wants.

____
A federal judge ordered the Bush administration Monday to either charge terrorism suspect Jose Padilla with a crime or release him after more than 2 1/2 years in custody.

"The court finds that the president has no power, neither express nor implied, neither constitutional nor statutory, to hold petitioner as an enemy combatant," Floyd wrote in a 23-page opinion that was a stern rebuke to the government. Floyd, appointed by Bush in 2003, gave the administration 45 days to take action.

Pretty good internet radio...

So I found a pretty good internet radio station, plays via iTunes or other media player... seems like pretty good tunes, I listened this afternoon for a few hours, and hear some good stuff.
The "nerd rap" from Revenge of the Nerds, songs from "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" (the Varuca Salt song), silly samples, some old school 80's and punk. Pretty good stuff, with a sense of humor too. 8-)

Let me know what ya think.
Charlie

26 February 2005

So this guy is blogging full time...

Beats me if this will work, but I guess he thinks it's worth a try. Weird thing is that he's not doing it with advertising at all. I'm not sure if people will donate on an ongoing basis... I did it once, but we'll see/hear about it I'm sure if it works out. Good luck I guess!

I'm a kottke.org micropatron.

Charlie

24 February 2005

Now this is just funny...

the latest bush budget item... heh.

Adware maker joins federal privacy board.... um wha?

OKay, what FECKING PLANET am I on?! A Gator/spyware exec working on privacy guidelines? Aren't there drug tests anymore for these people? The fox designing the henhouse here...

The Department of Homeland Security has named Claria, an adware maker that online publishers once dubbed a "parasite," to a federal privacy advisory board.

An executive from Claria, formerly called Gator, will be one of 20 members of the committee, the department said Wednesday.

"This committee will provide the department with important recommendations on how to further the department's mission while protecting the privacy of personally identifiable information of citizens and visitors of the United States," Nuala O'Connor Kelly, the department's chief privacy officer, said in a statement.

Claria bundles its pop-up advertising software with ad-supported networks such as Kazaa.

Not WHO is Deep Throat, But IS Deep Throat.

Did Woodward and Bernstein, the reporters that brought down Nixon and wrote "All The President's Men", work with a character named Deep Throat or did they create the character for the book and screenplay?

Not to take anything that reporters from Fox News state as fact, but Eric Burns, a news analyst for Fox stated that one of his sources shared the same publisher with the duo who and swears the first draft didn’t mention the D.T. character. Their literary agent corroborated that fact in his memoirs “Too Good to Be Forgotten.” (Nice title for you memoirs, what a narcissist).

I'm sure there are endless investigations that show how implausible their methods were for interacting with the character, but the fact that Woodward's New York Times was delivered in a pile with several others in the lobby of his building would have made it impossible for D.T. to write the meeting times on page 20 of HIS paper.

While the truth about the D.T. character is unclear the "follow the money" advice that he gives is good and, I think, has totally made Greg Palast's career as an investigative reporter.

23 February 2005

Big Stuff!!!

So my big man DeeCee has decided to grace us with his thoughts and observations on a more regular basis... he's been sending me great stuff for a while now, and I post them regularly. I thought it would be fun if he had access to just do it himself from now on, so here he is, ladies and gentlemen, the man from Milwaukee: DeeCee!

Welcome brudda.
Charlie

The win-at-all-costs president: Secret tapes reveal George Bush's combative, even arrogant heart

Nice, this is the leader and representative of our nation... "Win at all costs".

WASHINGTON - Here are two stories about young “Georgie” Bush that you may not have heard, but which are worth recounting as he travels the globe as a world leader.

As a boy in Maine, he was the oldest of many cousins, and would set the rules for summer games at the family compound. “If he was losing he’d change the rules – or take the ball and leave,” one cousin told me. Then there was the time when, as a new kid, just up from Texas at his prep school Andover, Bush was tripped and mocked early in an intramural soccer match. He waited for a chance to exact revenge – then blindsided his foe so viciously he nearly broke the boy’s ankle. “He spent that match angling to take me out,” said the Andover alum, now a successful businessman. “And he did.”

22 February 2005

I have a very strict isolation of my qubits

Very kool stuff.
What makes a quantum computer so different (and so much faster) than a conventional computer?

...For example, a central problem in modern cryptography is the search for the factors of very large integers. In a normal computer, the most efficient approach essentially consists of dividing the integer by every number smaller than its squareroot to see which ones will factor it. As more digits are added to the integer, the time required for this test grows very rapidly. With a quantum computer, however, factorization is a snap, because we can perform the test on all numbers simultaneously and thus only a single test is needed to find the right answer.

19 February 2005

Remember the Iran-Contra Scandal?

Oh, boy, this is just great... this is the man we put in charge of all the US intelligence??????

Who is John Negroponte?

You may remember him best as one of the key figures in the Iran-Contra scandal during the Reagan administration. John Negroponte was the ambassador to Honduras from 1981 to 1985. While there, he was directed the secret arming of the Contra rebels in Nicaragua to help them overthrow the Sandinista government.

At the time, he also was “cozy” with the chief of the Honduran national police force, Gen. Gustavo Alvarez Martinez. Martinez ran the infamous Battalion 316 death squad. Battalion 316 “kidnapped, tortured and murdered” dozens of people while Negroponte was ambassador. Negroponte, however, turned a blind eye to the death squad and ignored the gross human rights abuses so Honduras would allow bases for U.S.-backed Contras.

Negroponte maintained he knew nothing about them, leading to his nickname, “the ostrich ambassador.” The abuses, however, were widely chronicled in local papers. That means he either willfully ignored the mass murders and torturing of citizens or he was so out of touch that he didn’t see the atrocities going on beneath his very nose. Neither of these scenarios is what the United States needs in a National Director of Intelligence.

18 February 2005

Greenspan: Social Security is not in 'crisis'

Again, Bush is over-hyping things he wants to get done, and stretching the truth.
WASHINGTON - Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said Thursday that Social Security is not in "crisis" as President Bush has declared...

...the focus of the hearing was Social Security, which Greenspan said is not in crisis. "Crisis to me usually refers to something which is going to happen tomorrow or is on the edge of going into a very serious change," he said. "That is not going to happen."

Greenspan said private accounts funded with a portion of the 12.4 percent Social Security payroll tax would not address the program's solvency. But they could move the program to a pre-funded basis while providing a sense of ownership, and possibly transferable wealth, to individuals lower down the economic ladder "who have had to struggle with very little capital."

However, he reiterated that higher government borrowing to finance the move to private accounts poses a risk of higher deficits and interest rates.

17 February 2005

Oh this is good...

Geeze, this guy has no shame... and the American people/press don't even call him on it.
President Bush tells Syria to remove troops, adhere to UN resolutions and stop influencing other countries with military power.

Here's why, and here's the science

This is pretty funny... the more muscles, the quicker we doze... 8-)

White House Turns Tables on Former American POWs

Gulf War pilots tortured by Iraqis fight the Bush administration in trying to collect compensation.
By David G. Savage, LATimes Staff Writer

WASHINGTON — The latest chapter in the legal history of torture is being written by American pilots who were beaten and abused by Iraqis during the 1991 Persian Gulf War. And it has taken a strange twist.

The Bush administration is fighting the former prisoners of war in court, trying to prevent them from collecting nearly $1 billion from Iraq that a federal judge awarded them as compensation for their torture at the hands of Saddam Hussein's regime.
 
The rationale: Today's Iraqis are good guys, and they need the money.

The case abounds with ironies. It pits the U.S. government squarely against its own war heroes and the Geneva Convention.

Many of the pilots were tortured in the same Iraqi prison, Abu Ghraib, where American soldiers abused Iraqis 15 months ago. Those Iraqi victims, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has said, deserve compensation from the United States.

But the American victims of Iraqi torturers are not entitled to similar payments from Iraq, the U.S. government says.

"It seems so strange to have our own country fighting us on this," said retired Air Force Col. David W. Eberly, the senior officer among the former POWs.

The case, now being appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, tests whether "state sponsors of terrorism" can be sued in the U.S. courts for torture, murder or hostage-taking. The court is expected to decide in the next two months whether to hear the appeal.

Congress opened the door to such claims in 1996, when it lifted the shield of sovereign immunity — which basically prohibits lawsuits against foreign governments — for any nation that supports terrorism. At that time, Iraq was one of seven nations identified by the State Department as sponsoring terrorist activity. The 17 Gulf War POWs looked to have a very strong case when they first filed suit in 2002. They had been undeniably tortured by a tyrannical regime, one that had $1.7 billion of its assets frozen by the U.S. government.

The picture changed, however, when the United States invaded Iraq and toppled Hussein from power nearly two years ago. On July 21, 2003, two weeks after the Gulf War POWs won their court case in U.S. District Court, the Bush administration intervened to argue that their claims should be dismissed.

"No amount of money can truly compensate these brave men and women for the suffering that they went through at the hands of this very brutal regime and at the hands of Saddam Hussein," White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan told reporters when asked about the case in November 2003.

Government lawyers have insisted, literally, on "no amount of money" going to the Gulf War POWs. "These resources are required for the urgent national security needs of rebuilding Iraq," McClellan said.

The case also tests a key provision of the Geneva Convention, the international law that governs the treatment of prisoners of war. The United States and other signers pledged never to "absolve" a state of "any liability" for the torture of POWs.

Former military lawyers and a bipartisan group of lawmakers have been among those who have urged the Supreme Court to take up the case and to strengthen the law against torturers and tyrannical regimes.

"Our government is on the wrong side of this issue," said Jeffrey F. Addicott, a former Army lawyer and director of the Center for Terrorism Law at St. Mary's University in San Antonio. "A lot of Americans would scratch their heads and ask why is our government taking the side of Iraq against our POWs."

The POWs' journey through the court system began with the events of Jan. 17, 1991 — the first day of the Gulf War. In response to Hussein's invasion of Kuwait five months earlier, the United States, as head of a United Nations coalition, launched an air attack on Iraq, determined to drive Iraqi forces from the oil-rich Gulf state. On the first day of the fighting, a jet piloted by Marine Corps Lt. Col. Clifford Acree was downed over Iraq by a surface-to-air missile. He suffered a neck injury ejecting from the plane and was soon taken prisoner by the Iraqis. Blindfolded and handcuffed, he was beaten until he lost consciousness. His nose was broken, his skull was fractured, and he was threatened with having his fingers cut off. He lost 30 pounds during his 47 days of captivity.

Eberly was shot down two days later and lost 45 pounds during his ordeal. He and several other U.S. service members were near starvation when they were freed. Other POWs had their eardrums ruptured and were urinated on during their captivity at Abu Ghraib.

All the while, their families thought they were dead because the Iraqis did not notify the U.S. government of their capture.

In April 2002, the Washington law firm of Steptoe & Johnson filed suit on behalf of the 17 former POWs and 37 of their family members. The suit, Acree vs. Republic of Iraq, sought monetary damages for the "acts of torture committed against them and for pain, suffering and severe mental distress of their families."

Usually, foreign states have a sovereign immunity that shields them from being sued. But in the Anti-Terrorism Act of 1996, Congress authorized U.S. courts to award "money damages … against a foreign state for personal injury or death that was caused by an act of torture, extrajudicial killing, aircraft sabotage [or] hostage taking."

This provision was "designed to hold terrorist nations accountable for the torture of Americans and to deter rogue nations from engaging in such actions in the future," Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and George Allen (R-Va.) said last year in a letter to Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft that urged him to support the POWs' claim.

The case came before U.S. District Judge Richard W. Roberts. There was no trial; Hussein's regime ignored the suit, and the U.S. State Department chose to take no part in the case.

On July 7, 2003, the judge handed down a long opinion that described the abuse suffered by the Gulf War POWs, and he awarded them $653 million in compensatory damages. He also assessed $306 million in punitive damages against Iraq. Lawyers for the POWs asked him to put a hold on some of Iraq's frozen assets.

No sooner had the POWs celebrated their victory than they came up against a new roadblock: Bush administration lawyers argued that the case should be thrown out of court on the grounds that Bush had voided any such claims against Iraq, which was now under U.S. occupation. The administration lawyers based their argument on language in an emergency bill, passed shortly after the U.S. invasion of Iraq, approving the expenditure of $80 billion for military operations and reconstruction efforts. One clause in the legislation authorized the president to suspend the sanctions against Iraq that had been imposed as punishment for the invasion of Kuwait more than a decade earlier.

The president's lawyers said this clause also allowed Bush to remove Iraq from the State Department's list of state sponsors of terrorism and to set aside pending monetary judgments against Iraq.

When the POWs' case went before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit,, the three-judge panel ruled unanimously for the Bush administration and threw out the lawsuit.

"The United States possesses weighty foreign policy interests that are clearly threatened by the entry of judgment for [the POWs] in this case," the appeals court said.

The administration also succeeding in killing a congressional resolution supporting the POWs' suit. "U.S. courts no longer have jurisdiction to hear cases such as those filed by the Gulf War POWs," then-Deputy Secretary of State Richard L. Armitage said in a letter to lawmakers. "Moreover, the president has ordered the vesting of blocked Iraqi assets for use by the Iraqi people and for reconstruction."

Already frustrated by the turn of events, the former POWs were startled when Rumsfeld said he favored awarding compensation to the Iraqi prisoners who were abused by the U.S. military at Abu Ghraib.

"I am seeking a way to provide appropriate compensation to those detainees who suffered grievous and brutal abuse and cruelty at the hands of a few members of the U.S. military. It is the right thing to do," Rumsfeld told a Senate committee last year.

By contrast, the government's lawyers have refused to even discuss a settlement in the POWs' case, say lawyers for the Gulf War veterans. "They were willing to settle this for pennies on the dollar," said Addicott, the former Army lawyer.

The last hope for the POWs rests with the Supreme Court. Their lawyers petitioned the high court last month to hear the case. Significantly, it has been renamed Acree vs. Iraq and the United States.

The POWs say the justices should decide the "important and recurring question [of] whether U.S. citizens who are victims of state-sponsored terrorism [may] seek redress against terrorist states in federal court."

This week, Justice Department lawyers are expected to file a brief urging the court to turn away the appeal.

16 February 2005

Here's the story... I dont' even know how to summarize this...

Okay, so guy (Jeff Gannon) who had set up several gay "escort" sites with nude photos of himself... then he was granted access the White House Press Pool and lobbs inaccurate/softball questions to Bush... turns out he is admitted under a false name and has no reporting background/credentials. Either a serious security breach or a real gaffe by staffers in the white house.

Turns out he may also be connected to the undercover CIA officer leak... In 2003 he interviewed Plame's husband, former ambassador Joe Wilson, after unnamed administration officials leaked her role as a CIA operative to columnist Robert Novak.

Some people are trying to tie him to Scott McClelland, (who allegedly been seen at several Austin, Tx gay bars "hanging out" without his wife...) Besides additional lies/infidelity tied to the Bush administration, this is no big deal... but since McClelland is the press secretary, and runs the press pool, would have purview over who is admitted. So picture this scenario: McClelland and Gannon have a "thing"... Gannon says let me into the press pool, or some pix get leaked... bingo, next thing ya know, he's lobbin' questions to the sitting president. Just a theory... and no i didn't come up with it... 8-)

What ya think?
A senior house aide said:
“To me, the really amazing thing is that you know have the clear record of a guy who was a fake reporter from a fake news organization asking fake questions at a presidential press conference with a very questionable pass, and the best the mainstream media can do is an article in the C-section of the Washington Post,” the aide said.
Righto... amazing isn't it?

13 February 2005

Asian writing that doesn't mean what you think it does...

This is a fun site, basically some folks that know Japanese and Chinese, and look at tattoos to see if they mean what people think they mean... I think the "crazy diarrhea" tattoo above the butt is my favorite... hehe.

12 February 2005

US al-Qaeda warning revealed

So why is there no accountability here? Is all of American feckin' sleeping? Rice and Bush have been lying for years!!!


US al-Qaeda warning revealed
From correspondents in Washington
11feb05

EIGHT months before the September 11 attacks the White House's then counterterrorism adviser urged then national security adviser Condoleezza Rice to hold a high-level meeting on the al-Qaeda network, according to a memo made public today.

"We urgently need such a principals-level review on the al-Qaeda network," then White House counterterrorism adviser Richard Clarke wrote in the January 25, 2001 memo.

Mr Clarke, who left the White House in 2003, made headlines in the heat of the US presidential campaign last year when he accused the Bush White House of having ignored al-Qaeda's threats before September 11.

Mr Clarke testified before inquiry panels and in a book that Rice, his boss at the time, had been warned of the threat. Rice is now US Secretary of State.

However, Ms Rice wrote in a March 22, 2004 column in The Washington Post that "No al-Qaeda threat was turned over to the new administration".



Mr Clarke told a commission looking into intelligence shortcomings prior to the attacks, "There's a lot of debate about whether it's a plan or a strategy or a series of options - but all of the things we recommended back in January were those things on the table in September. They were all done, but they were done after September 11."

The document was released by the National Security Archive, an independent US group that solicits government documents for public review.

Another document released by the archive said that from April to September 2001, the US Federal Aviation Administration received 52 intelligence reports on al-Qaeda, including five that mentioned hijackings and two that mentioned suicide operations, according to today's New York Times.

The Times quoted a previously undisclosed report by a commission set up to investigate the September 11 attacks on New York and Washington.

The report criticises the FAA for failing to strengthen security measures in light of the reports and describes as "striking" the false sense of security that appeared to predominate in the civil aviation system before the attacks, the paper said.

10 February 2005

Thanks Doug for the wise words!

Last Wednesday was Groundhog Day and the State of the Union address in the United States.
In an ironic juxtaposition; one involves a meaningless ritual in which they look to a creature of little intelligence for prognostication, and the other involves a groundhog.

doug
___________________________
Heh, nice.
Charlie

dude, this is extremely fecked up...

Wow, Rice supposedly has a history education? I can't believe she said this...
_________
The policy being carried out today by the US and Israeli governments is that "Jews must be expunged from the living space of the Arab people."

An excerpt referring to the planning of Nazi Germany...
In moving entire populations, professionally known as cargo, punctuality is a must.

Transportation - that was the main item on the agenda at Wannsee. The delegates had to form a plan of action that would meet two primary objectives. As taken directly from the minutes: 1. "The expulsion of the Jews from every sphere of life of the German people." 2. "The expulsion of the Jews from the living space of the German people."

Looks like an interesting blog: on the face

on the face from Tel Aviv, Israel... "The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing" - Socrates

My pal Gregg's new little man!!!

Wow, so Gregg and Amy made a baby! Wyatt is a grumpy lookin' bugger, but cute, as all new babies are... 8-) Congrats friends!!!!!

09 February 2005

This is SOOOOO right on!

You GO girl, don't let them forget!!!

The Wedding...

The wedding was great, we had a brilliant time. Marcela's mother and sister came into Austin for the wedding. Along with many of my family from Florida, Wisconsin and Washington, DC... my mother, all my brothers and sisters and their significant others, as well as my Aunt Bridget (my "Best Man") and my GrandMother, and Aunt Ginny. My GrandMother is getting on in the years, and has some significant health issues, so it was amazing that she and Bridget could make it. They really helped make the even more special.

I had a pretty silly "bachelor" party, with my aunt and my mom attending... 8-) we just went downtown to 6th street for a few mexican martinis... it was fun. Played pool, mom got wild, it was a good (if tame) time.

The rehersal and rehersal dinner was nice, just the basics with family meeting each other for the first time, catching up and generally having a good time. We had the rehersal dinner at one of our favorite places, and the place where Marcela and I had our first date, NXNW. Thanks much to them.

The wedding was great, a masterpiece of organization by the staff of HamiltonTwelve, Lissa, and especially by Marcela. Parts were beautiful, parts were touching and there were lots of silly and fun times. We danced our asses off with the Argentines setting the pace, they never seem to run out of energy!!! My brother and I even got thrown into the "decorative" swimming pool... it was freeeeezing! It took me a while to defrost before I could perform my "husbandly" duties that night... 8-)

The honeymoon in Kauai, Hawai'i was a welcome rest... I'll post some notes on that soon.

Pix and more soon!
Charlie

06 February 2005

So it's over and we are back!!!

Marcela and I had a great wedding, and a brilliant honeymoon in Kauai, Hawai'i... we just got back on friday. Still recovering from jetlag and so much time off... 8-) I'll work on pictures of the wedding and trip soon, and I'll post a link here.

Hope you are all well!

Charlie and Marcela