NEW! Podcast: From the Pentagon Strike to the Da Vinci Code - Part 1
Sections on today's Signs Page:
Signs Editorials
Editorial: The Lost Gospel: The Book of Q and Christian Origins by Burton L. Mack
Book Review by Laura Knight-Jadczyk
June 11, 2005
Note:
Q is
short for the German word Quelle (which is source). Q is one of the two
sources for Matthew and Luke, the other being old Mark, but the unknown
lost source is now named Q. While this subject comes up under the subject
heading of Q hypothesis - (synoptics criticism), since the discovery of
the Gospel of Thomas, it really isn't a hypothesis anymore. But it looks
like that subject heading will stick. But more and more books are indexing
Q as Sayings Gospel Q. The first layer of Q is known as Q1.
June
11, 2005: Two
years ago I wrote a bit about Christianity
based on the research I had done up to that point. In recent months, I
have revisited the subject at the suggestion of several people, one of
whom promoted the book by Tony Bushby, The
Bible Fraud. This book was already on hand in our library, but
I had discarded it in disgust at the time I originally began to read it
(in 2002, I believe) because I had noted a "twisting" of the
facts in the first chapter. However, at the urging of a correspondent,
I revisited this book, reading it through to the end. Indeed, there were
a number of interesting references, but again I found it to be a frustrating
read because these references were often used in a very loose way intended
to support the incredible leaps of assumption, and a wholly fantastic
story. Bushby, like so many others, began with the assumption that at
least SOME of the "facts" of the narrative gospels were true,
however distorted or misrepresented.
In
any event, reading Bushby's book started me off on the search for Christian
origins again, and that led me to The
Lost Gospel by Burton L. Mack. Let me say in advance that I highly
recommend this book, and I hope that the excerpts I am going to present
here will stimulate interest in the details that Mack presents in his
fascinating discussion of the discovery of Q (the theorized source document
for the basic ideas of Jesus) and the subsequent analyses that helped
to extract the truth of early Christian history.
Mack
begins his discussion saying:
Once upon
a time, before there were gospels of the kind familiar to readers of
the New Testament, the first followers of Jesus wrote another kind of
book. Instead of telling a dramatic story about Jesus' life, their book
contained only his teachings. They lived with these teachings ringing
in their ears and thought of Jesus as the founder of their movement.
But their focus was not on the person of Jesus or his life and destiny.
They were engrossed with the social program that was called for by his
teachings. Thus their book was not a gospel of the Christian kind, namely
a narrative of the life of Jesus as the Christ. Rather it was a gospel
of Jesus' sayings, a "sayings gospel." His first followers
arranged these sayings in a way that offered instructions for living
creatively in the midst of a most confusing time, and their book served
them well as a handbook and guide for most of the first Christian century.
Then the
book was lost... to history somewhere in the course of the late first
century when stories of Jesus' life began to be written and became the
more popular form of charter document for early Christian circles. [...]
For the
first followers of Jesus, the importance of Jesus as the founder of
their movement was directly related to the significance they attached
to his teachings. What mattered most was the body of instructions that
circulated in his name, what these teachings called for in terms of
ideas, attitudes, and behavior, and the difference these instructions
made in the lives of those who took them seriously. But as the Jesus
movement spread, groups in different locations and changing circumstances
began to think about the kind of life Jesus must have lived. Some began
to think of him in the role of a sage, for instance, while others thought
of him as a prophet, or even as an exorcist who had appeared to rid
the world of its evils. This shift from interest in Jesus' teachings
to questions about Jesus' person, authority, and social role eventually
produced a host of different mythologies.
The mythology
that is most familiar to Christians of today developed in groups that
formed in northern Syria and Asia Minor. There Jesus' death was first
interpreted as a martyrdom and then embellished as a miraculous event
of crucifixion and resurrection. This myth drew on Hellenistic mythologies
that told about the destiny of a divine being (or son of God). Thus
these congregations quickly turned into a cult of the resurrected or
transformed Jesus whom they now referred to as the Christ... The congregation
of the Christ ... experienced a striking shift in orientation, away
from the teachings of Jesus [...]
Narrative
gospels began to appear. [...] These gospels combined features of the
martyr myth from the Christ cult with traditions about Jesus as he had
been remembered in the Jesus movements, thereby locating the significance
of Jesus in the story of his deeds and destiny. Naturally, these gospels
came to a climax in an account of his trial, crucifixion, and resurrection
from the dead. They followed a plot that was first worked out by Mark
during the 70s in the wake of the Roman-Jewish war. The plot collapsed
the time between the events of Jesus' life and the destruction of the
Jerusalem temple which took place during the war. Mark achieved this
plot by making connections between two sets of events (Jesus' death
and the temple's destruction) that could only have been imagined after
the war. His gospel appears to have been the earliest full-blown written
composition along these lines, but once it was conceived, all the narrative
gospels used this same basic plot. [...]
The first
followers of Jesus could not have imagined, nor did they need, such
a mythology to sustain them in their efforts to live according to his
teachings. Their sayings gospel was quite sufficient for the Jesus movement
as they understood it. [...] Even after the narrative gospels became
the rage, the saying gospel was still intact. It was still being copied
and read with interest by ever-widening circles. And it was available
in slightly different versions in the several groups that continued
to develop within the Jesus movement. Eventually, the narrative gospels
prevailed as the preferred portrayal for Christians, and the sayings
gospel finally was lost to the historical memory of the Christian church.
Were it
not for the fact that two authors of narrative gospels incorporated
sizable portions of the sayings gospel into their stories of Jesus'
life, the sayings gospel of the first followers of Jesus would have
disappeared without a trace in the transitions taking place. [...] But
Matthew and Luke each had a copy of the sayings gospel... It was this
fortuitous coincidence that made it possible in recent times to recover
the book [...]
By reading
Q carefully, it is possible to catch sight of those earlier followers
of Jesus. We can see them on the road, at the market, and at one another's
homes. We can hear them talking about appropriate behavior; we can sense
the spirit of the movement and their attitudes about the world. A sense
of purpose can be traced through subtle changes in their attitudes toward
other groups over a period of two or three generations of vigorous social
experimentation. It is a lively picture. And it is complete enough to
reconstruct the history that happened between the time of Jesus and
the emergence of the narrative gospels that later gave the Christian
church its official account of Christian beginnings.
The remarkable
thing about the people of Q is that they were not Christians. They did
not think of Jesus as a messiah or the Christ. They did not take his
teachings as an indictment of Judaism. They did not regard his death
as a divine, tragic, or saving event. And they did not imagine that
he had been raised from the dead to rule over a transformed world. Instead,
they thought of him as a teacher whose teachings made it possible to
live with verve in troubled times. Thus they did not gather to worship
in his name, honor him as a god, or cultivate his memory through hymns,
prayers, and rituals. They did not form a cult of the Christ... The
people of Q were Jesus people, not Christians. [...]
In Q there
is no hint of a select group of disciples, no program to reform the
religion or politics of Judaism, no dramatic encounter with the authorities
in Jerusalem, no martyrdom for the cause, much less a martyrdom with
saving significance for the ills of the world, and no mention of a first
church in Jerusalem. The people of Q simply did not understand their
purpose to be a mission to the Jews, or to gentiles for that matter.
They were not out to transform the world or start a new religion.
Q's challenge
to the popular conception of Christian origins is therefore clear. If
the conventional view of Christian beginnings is right, how are we to
account for these first followers of Jesus? Did they fail to get his
message? Were they absent when the unexpected happened? Did they carry
on in ignorance or in repudiation of the Christian gospel of salvation?
If, however, the first followers of Jesus understood the purpose of
their movement just as Q describes it, how are we to account for the
emergence of the Christ cult, the fantastic mythologies of the narrative
gospels, and the eventual establishment of the Christian church and
religion? Q forces the issue of rethinking Christian origins as no other
document from the earliest times has done. [...]
With Q
in view the entire landscape of early Christian history and literature
has to be revised. [...]
The narrative
gospels can no longer be viewed as the trustworthy accounts of unique
and stupendous historical events at the foundation of the Christian
faith. The gospels must now be seen as the result of early Christian
mythmaking. Q forces the issue, for it documents an earlier history
that does not agree with the narrative gospel accounts. [...]
The issues
raised are profound and far reaching. [...] They strike to the heart
of an entrenched reluctance in our society to discuss the mythic foundations
for attitudes and values, both shared and conflictual, that influence
the way we think, behave, and construct our institutions. Q can hardly
be discussed without engaging in some honest talk about Christian myth
and the American dream. [The
Lost Gospel by Burton L. Mack]
Well,
you can say that again!
Christians,
as a whole, are not comfortable with myth. Again and again we hear stories
about this or that group of Fundies that want to ban such things as The
Wizard of Oz, or Harry Potter, or Grimm's Fairy Tales.
We hear stories of censorship and exclusion of other ideas. The Christian
mentality takes itself and its own myths way too seriously. They have
to in order to maintain their "rightness." This "rightness"
is fundamental to the lynchpin of Christianity: Faith.
Faith that
can "move mountains" is promoted by Christianity as the necessary thing
that the "faithful" must cultivate in order to receive the benefits that
are promised by the religion. And so it seems that admitting, reading,
discussing, myths in general is perceived as opening a door to the insinuation
that maybe - just maybe - Christianity itself might be a myth.
The example
of Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son, Isaac, has been trotted
out for ages as the supreme example of how one is to approach the "god".
One must be willing to give the god anything and everything! This "Faith"
is an essential part of the "covenant" with the god - a sort of "act of
trade", so to say. You must "believe in Jesus and his atonement"
to be saved.
What would
happen if a good Christian was to read the myths of other cultures and
discover that the story about the almost sacrifice of Abraham in the Bible
is actually nearly identical to a Vedic story of Manu? Mack writes about
the Christian resistance to myth as follows:
This strong
resistance [to myth] is ... a peculiarity integral to the Christian
myth itself. The Christian myth was generated in a social experiment
aware of its recent beginnings, and because the myth was about those
beginnings, early Christians imagined their myth as history. The myth
focused on the importance of Jesus as the founder figure of the movements,
congregations, and institutions Christians were forming. Thus history
and myth were fused into a single characterization, and the myths of
origin were written and imagined as having happened at a recent time
and in a specific place.
Christians
of the second, third, and fourth centuries found themselves troubled
by the resemblance of their myths to both Greek and Jewish mythologies.
They could distance themselves from these other cultures and distinguish
their myths from the others only by emphasizing the recent historical
setting of their myths and the impression given by the narrative gospels
that the myths really happened. [The
Lost Gospel by Burton L. Mack]
What seems
to be so is that it is generally individuals who have been "disenfranchised"
or who feel helpless and at the mercy of the forces of life - whether
they manifest through other people or random events - who are those most
likely to seek such faith, such a surety that their myths, and theirs
alone, are the RIGHT ones. They feel acutely their own inability to have
an effect in the world, and they turn their creativity inward to create
and maintain their subjective "faith" in opposition to objective reality.
They
then spend an enormous amount of energy editing out all impressions that
are contrary to their system of illusion. They become "The Right
Man" (or woman). It
is extremely important to get others to believe in their illusion in order
to confirm its "rightness", even if they claim, on the surface, that "everyone
has the right to their own opinion". The fact is, they cannot tolerate
anyone else's opinion if it is different from their own because it threatens
their "rightness". And this is the reason that they are so "serious"
and rejecting of such frivolity as myths, fairy tales, and so on.
This rightness
must be maintained at all costs because, deep inside, the Right
Man (or woman) is usually struggling with horror at their own helplessness.
Their rightness is a dam that holds back their worst fears: that they
are lost and alone and that there really is no god, because how could
there be a god who loves them if they have to suffer so much? Their inability
to feel truly loved and accepted deep within is, in effect, like being
stranded in a nightmare from which they cannot wake up.
Faith. This
is the thing that, historically, has caused individuals to engage in violence
against other human beings.
This "faith"
can be induced by manipulations and promises of heavenly or other rewards,
this "rightness" of one's views, of one's god, and what the god is supposedly
"revealing" to the leader, and this can then be used to manipulate other
people to do one's bidding.
And so it
seems that the requirement of "faith" and "worship" of an object of cultic
value such as Jehovah, Yahweh, Jesus or Allah is the means by which human
beings can be induced to commit atrocities upon other human beings.
But that
is not what the Jesus people were about originally.
Mack's discussion
shows how the Jesus movement was a vigorous social experiment that was
generated for reasons other than an "originating event" such
as a "religious experience" or the "birth of the son of
God."
The Jesus
movement seems to have been a response to troubled and difficult times.
Mack outlines and describes the times, and shows how the pressures of
the milieu led to thinking new thoughts about traditional values and experimenting
with associations that crossed ethnic and cultural boundaries. The Jesus
movement was composed of novel social notions and lifestyles that denied
and rejected traditional systems of honor based on power, wealth, and
place in hierarchical social structures. Ancient religious codes of ritual
purity, taboos against intercourse across ethnic boundaries, were rejected.
People were encouraged to think of themselves as belonging to the larger,
human family. Q says: "If you embrace only your brothers, what more
are you doing than others?"
The Jesus
people not only rejected the old order of things, they were actively at
work on the questions of what ideal social order they wanted to manifest
and promote. The attraction of the Jesus people to its followers was not
at all based on any ideas to reform a religious tradition that had gone
wrong, nor was it even thought of as a new religion in any way. It was
quite simply a social movement that sought to enhance human values that
grew out of an unmanageable world of confusing cultures and social histories.
It was a group of like-minded individuals that created a forum for thinking
about the world in new ways, coming up with new ideas that included the
shocking notion that an ethnically mixed group could form its own kind
of community and live by its own rules. Mack writes:
At first
no one was in charge of the groups that formed around such teachings.
Conversation and mutual support were enough to encourage an individual
to act "naturally," as if the normal expectations of acquiescence
to social conventions did not apply. As groups formed in support of
like-minded individuals, however, loyalty to the Jesus movement strengthened,
a social vision for human well-being was generated within the group,
and social codes for the movement had to be agreed upon . Why not ask
when in need and share what one had when asked, they wondered? Eventually,
therefore, the Jesus movement took the form of small groups meeting
together as extended families in the heady pursuit of what they called
God's kingdom.
To explore
human community based on fictive kinship without regard to standard
taboos against association based on class, status, gender, or ethnicity
would have created quite a stir, and would have been its own reward.
Since there was no grand design for actualizing such a vision, different
groups settled into practices that varied from one another. Judging
from the many forms of community that developed within the Jesus movement,
as documented in literature that begins to appear toward the end of
the first century, these groups continued to share a basic set of attitudes.
They all had a certain critical stance toward the way life was lived
in the Greco-Roman world. They all struggled not to be determined by
the emptiness of human pursuits in a world of codes they held to be
superficial. [...] Despite these agreements, however, every group went
its own way and drew different conclusions about what to think and do.
[The
Lost Gospel by Burton L. Mack]
In addition
to reconstructing the times in which the Jesus people lived, Mack presents
the Q document itself, showing that it was built up in three layers, each
layer being additions made in response to external pressures on the group.
What is most interesting is the analysis of the first layer, the one that
must be composed of the actual teachings of the man called Jesus. It seems
that Jesus' challenge to his followers was to take a deeper look at their
world and challenge it in how they lived their lives.
Seven clusters
of teachings, or sayings, emerged from the study of Q, and each of these
express a coherent set of issues. These sayings comprise a comprehensive
set of sage observations that delight in critical comment on the everyday
world and unorthodox instructions that recommend unconventional behavior!
The ever-present theme of Jesus' teachings was a review of life and conventional
values that promoted the idea that customary pretensions are hollow, wealth,
learning, possessions, secrets, rank, and power are meaningless in terms
of the true value of a human being. Jesus was promoting the idea that
the Emperor is naked, though in no way did he propose any idea of changing
the system. Implicit in his critique is the idea that there is a better
way to live. The challenge was to be able to live without being consumed
with worry even if one was fully aware that the world "out there"
was a dangerous jungle that required care to navigate.
When fully
analyzed and compared with other norms of the time, Jesus emerges as a
man living the life of the popular philosophy of the Cynic. This is striking
because the Cynics are remembered as distinctly unlovable because they
promoted biting sarcasm and public behavior that was designed to call
attention to the absurdity of standard conventions. Cynics were:
"critics
of conventional values and oppressive forms of government. [...] Their
gifts and graces ranged from the endurance of a life of renunciation
in full public view, through the courage to offer social critique in
high places, to the learning and sophistication required for the espousal
of Cynic views at the highest level of literary composition. Justly
famous as irritants to those who lived by the system and enjoyed the
blessings of privilege, prosperity, and power, the Cynics were rightly
regarded for their achievement in honing the virtue of self-sufficiency
in the midst of uncertain times.
The crisp
sayings of Jesus in Q show that his followers thought of him as a Cynic-like
sage. [...]
These popular
philosophers of a natural way of life did not wander off to suffer in
silence. Their props were a setup for a little game of gotcha with the
citizens of the town. [...] The Cynic's purpose was to point out the
disparities sustained by the social system and refuse to let the system
put him in his place. [...] The marketplace was the Cynic's platform,
the place to display a living example of freedom from social and cultural
constraints, and a place from which to address townspeople about the
current state of affairs. [...] The challenge for a Cynic was to see
the humor in a situation and quickly turn it to advantage. [...]
In our
time there is no single social role with which to compare the ancient
Cynics. But we do recognize the social critic and take for granted a
number of ways in which social and cultural critique are expressed.
These compare nicely with various aspects of the Cynic's profession.
For example, we are accustomed to the social critique of political cartoonists,
standup comedians, and especially of satire in the genre of the cabaret.
All of these use humor to make their point. We are also accustomed to
social critique in a more serious and philosophical vein, such as that
represented by political commentary. And there is precedent for taking
up an alternative lifestyle as social protest, from the utopian movement
of the nineteenth century, to the counterculture movement of the 1960s,
to the environmentalist protest of the 1980s and 1990s. The list could
be greatly expanded, for much modern entertainment also sets its scenes
against the backdrop of the unexamined taboos and prejudices prevailing
in our time. Each of these approaches to critical assessment of our
society (satire, commentary, and alternative lifestyle), bears some
resemblance to the profession of the Cynic sage in late antiquity. [...]
Noting
the Cynic's wit should not divert our attention from their sense of
vocation and purpose. Epictetus wrote that the Cynic could be likened
to a spy or scout from another world or kingdom, whose assignment was
to observe human behavior and render a judgment upon it. The Cynic could
also be likened to a physician sent to diagnose and heal a society's
ills. [...] The Stoics sometimes claimed the Cynics as their precursors.
[...]
[The Cynics]
were much more interested in the question of virtue, or how an individual
should live given the failure of social and political systems to support
what they called a natural way of life. They borrowed freely from any
and every popular ethical philosophy, such as that of the Stoics, to
get a certain point across. That point was the cost to one's intelligence
and integrity if one blindly followed social convention and accepted
its customary rationalizations. [...]
What counted
most, they said, was a sense of personal worth and integrity. One should
not allow others to determine one's worth on the scale of social position.
One already possessed all the resources one needed to live sanely and
well by virtue of being a human being. Why not be true to the way in
which the world actually impinges upon you [objectively]? Say what you
want and what you mean. Respond to a situation as you see it in truth,
not as the usual proprieties dictate. Do not let the world squeeze you
into its mold. Speak up and act out. The invitation was to take courage
and swim against the social currents that threatened to overwhelm and
silence a person's sense of verve. [...]
The Jesus
people are best understood as those who noticed the challenge of the
times in Galilee. They took advantage of the mix of peoples to tweak
the authorities of any cultural tradition that presumed to set the standard
for others. They found a way to encourage one another in the pursuit
of sane and simple living. And they developed a discourse that exuded
the Cynic spirit. [...]
Beliefs
were not a major concern. Behavior was what mattered and the arena for
the action was in public. The public sphere was not subjected to a systematic
analysis, however, as if society's ills had been traced to this or that
particular cause. The social world was under review, to be sure, for
the behavior recommended was intentionally non-conventional, mildly
disruptive, and implicitly countercultural. But there is no indication
that the purpose of this behavior was to change society at large. The
way society worked in general was taken for granted, in the sense of
"What more can one expect?" Instead, the imperatives were
addressed to individuals as if they could live by other rules if they
chose to do so. [...] It is important to see that the purpose of the
change was not a social reform. The Jesus people were not organizing
to fight Roman power or to reform Jewish religion. [The
Lost Gospel by Burton L. Mack]
Apparently
many responded to the movement and associations of like-minded people
began to form. And then, something very interesting happened... Suddenly,
in the next layer of Q, a heightened sense of belonging to a movement
becomes obvious because injunctions given as aphorisms now become rules
supported by arguments. At this point, the idea of the "Kingdom of
God" enters the picture. This "Kingdom" was, apparently,
a realm or domain in which the rule of God is actualized. The rule of
God is what the Q people said they were representing in the world. For
the Jesus people, this meant something quite different from what Christians
now assume it to mean. First of all, there was nothing at all apocalyptic
about it (all that came later). For the Jesus people, the Kingdom of
God was compared repeatedly to the natural process of growth as witnessed
in Nature. Everything about this "Kingdom of God" was practical,
having to do with things that can be accomplished in contrast to the conventional
life.
God's kingdom
can be announced, desired, affirmed, claimed, and signaled in a given
human exchange. Thus the link between the notion of the rule of God
and the pattern of Q's countercultural practices is very, very strong.
[...]
If the
present forms of rule were far from the ideal, and the people knew it,
something other than philosophical speculation was called for. The ideal
kingdom had to be imagined as an alternative order with some relation
to the present status quo. [...]
The language
of rule or kingship came to be used as a metaphor for personal self-control.
The term king no longer had to refer to an actual ruler, and kingdom
no longer had to refer to a political domain. "King" became
a metaphor of a human being at its "highest" imaginable level,
whether by endowment, achievement, ethical excellence, or mythical ideal.
"Kingdom" became a metaphor for the "sovereignty"
manifest in the "independent bearing," "freedom,"
"confidence," and self-control of the superior person, the
person of ethical integrity who thus could "rule" his "world"
imperiously.
Stoics
internalized the image of the king and idealized the individual who
ruled his passions and controlled his attitudes even in circumstances
where others governed his existence. Their strategy was to be hopeful
about the constructive influence of such individuals on society. A popular
Stoic maxim was "the only true king is the wise man." Cynics
were not as sanguine about the philosopher's chance of influencing social
reform, but they also used the royal metaphor to advantage. In their
case, taking control of one's life required extrication from the social
scene. [...]
The use
of the term kingdom of God in Q matches its use in the traditions of
popular philosophy, especially in the Cynic tradition of performing
social diagnostics in public by means of countercultural behavior. The
aphoristic imperatives recommended a stance toward life in the world
that could become the basis for an alternative community ethos and ethic
among those willing to consider an alternative social vision. [...]
The language of the rule of God in Q refers not only to the challenge
of risky living without expectation that the social world will change
but also to the exemplification of a way of life that like-minded persons
might want to share. The God in question is not identified in terms
of any ethnic or cultural tradition. [The
Lost Gospel by Burton L. Mack]
The match
between the Cynics and the Jesus people is not exact in all cases because
the Jesus people DID have an interest in the "Divine" aspect
of "God." Unfortunately, there is little in the Q document that
explains this Divine source other than the fact that the Jesus people
represented it as a "Father" and those who could successfully
resist the ruin of social evils were the "children of God."
The way the Jesus people referred to God was a bit more serious than the
way the Cynics referred to such ideas. The Q people were concerned with
the care of their members as a "family." I would suggest that
there was a perception of differences
in human beings among the Q people, though Mack does not make a special
point of analyzing that issue.
Mack continues
to examine and identify the stages in the Jesus movement, including the
point at which the movement experienced rejection, criticism, and censure.
A sudden shift in tone is noted in the third layer of Q. This is one of
the more interesting parts of the book which describes an extremely troubled
phase of the movement. There is a concern with loyalty noted, which suggests
that there had been pressure from some outside authority, and betrayal
from within. At this point, the role of Jesus was expanded, and this seems
to have been related to mutual recognition of other "Jesus people."
The movement must have been growing quite fast and threatening the authorities,
and some action must have been taken which resulted in the need to find
criteria for who was or was not a real follower of the teachings. So it
was that concern for loyalty to the teachings resulted in the need to
recast Jesus as the authoritative founder of the movement whose teachings
must be "kept". That is to say, the shift in focus was from
the teachings to the teacher. The next step was, of course, loyalty to
Jesus himself.
The question
is, of course, what happened? The document doesn't tell us, though it
hints at the nature of the problem by virtue of the additional text that
dealt with the issues. There were, obviously, painful experiences that
were turned to a lesson. Mack suggests that the formation of Jesus people
"families" must have seriously offended certain authorities.
He writes:
This concern
for loyalty to the movement is matched by signs of social distress.
Tensions within the movement are indicated by the saying on scandals
and the instruction to forgive a brother if he has a change of heart.
But changes of heart have apparently not been the rule. Families have
been torn asunder and the divisions have been rationalized as fully
in keeping with the importance and purpose of the movement. Painful?
Yes, but to be expected.
It seems
that families were being split, and ethnic conventions were being personally
challenged over loyalty to the movement. The evidence indicates that this
occurred in relation to Judaism.
The story
of the Beelzebub accusation is about rejection, conflict, and labeling
Jesus and his followers as agents of a foreign (Syrian) god. Jesus'
retort about "your sons" turns the challenge back upon his
questioners and directs the issue of conflict to the social world that
Jesus shares with them. There are instructions about what to do in case
one is called before the village authorities. [...]
The people
of Q2 had not organized their movement to become a society with membership
requirements and officers, much less with rites of entrance. But the
rule of God that they represented was certainly in the process of being
reconceived as a discrete domain or kingdom, and there was now a great
deal of talk about "entering into" the kingdom or being excluded
from it. [...] Loyalty to the Jesus movement had run up against the
challenge of Jewish propriety and the question of belonging to the people
of God as the children of Abraham, or Israel. And the Jesus people had
taken this challenge seriously. The evidence for this includes the repeated
appeals to biblical traditions, the preaching of John about the children
of Abraham, the import of the Beelzebub accusation, and the list of
counter charges leveled against Pharisees and lawyers. [The
Lost Gospel by Burton L. Mack]
Here we find
the most fascinating twist of all in the development of Christianity.
If the Jesus people had not been attacked by the Jewish authorities, they
would not have sought to justify their movement in terms of the Jewish
religion. It was only in defense that they did this. They ran afoul of
the Pharisaic code, probably because they had Jewish members whose families
were horrified at the participation of their children or relatives in
the new movement. The issue of loyalty came to be phrased as a "Jewish"
question, and the Jesus people felt they had to answer it in Jewish terms.
One can
easily understand how this situation might have developed if loyalties
to the Jesus movement began to wear and tear at the fabric of families
and villages in which Jewish sensibilities were strong. One can imagine
a family worried about the involvement of some of its members in the
Jesus movement. Attempts at dissuasion could have and must have taken
many forms. But insisting upon traditional family loyalties, throwing
up Pharisaic standards, and making arguments for preserving Jesus' identity
were apparently the ploys that struck home. They were in any case the
ones that got a response from the Q people. And they triggered a spate
of counter-charges that determined the emerging self-identification
of the Jesus movement. [...]
The charges
against the Pharisees and lawyers are especially interesting in this
regard. The issues under debate were just what one might expect - washings,
giving to charity, tithes, justice, honor, and knowledge. The list combines
items typical for the Pharisaic code of ritual purity with items for
which scribal representatives of the temple system of courts and taxation
would be known. Such standards had apparently been held up as exemplary
by families and village leaders seeking to chide their Jesus people
into postures of propriety. Apparently the people of Q were not impressed.
[...]
True to
their Cynic heritage, the Jesus people were still capable of engaging
in a bit of caustic riposte. The Pharisees were like tombs (so much
for their desire to be honored), and the lawyers treated people like
beasts of burden (so much for their claims to know the law and administer
justice). [...]
Lo and
behold, the people of Q linked the Pharisees and lawyers to the history
of what their fathers did to the prophets. ...
That is
some ante. ...
It is clear
that the offense had registered and that the defense would be to beat
the Jewish exemplars at their own game. [The
Lost Gospel by Burton L. Mack]
And so it
was that the Jesus people turned to the labor of mythmaking. They had
to find ways to best their critics by turning their own words against
them. They began to search for self-justifying arguments, examples in
support of their own movement. They were only doing it in the sense of
the Cynic system of argumentation, but the results were nonlinear. What
they presented as their arguments was then adopted as REAL, and the Jesus
people made an implicit claim on the cultural heritage of the Jews.
It is clear
that the individuals who did this were not well versed in the Jewish writings.
They made no appeals to such obvious things as the promises to the patriarchs,
the priestly covenants, the Mosaic law, the Davidic covenant, and so on.
Most of the allusions to Judaism were taken from popular oral traditions
that would have been available to non-Jews of the time.
It is almost
as if, when challenged by a Jewish orthodoxy, the Galileans appealed
to what they knew of the popular epic traditions of Israel generally
shared by Jews, Samaritans, and Galileans. [...] The people of Q worked
these stories to their own advantage on the one hand, and to the detriment
of their detractors' claims to represent the true form of Israel on
the other. [...]
The Jesus
people were encouraged to think of themselves as "fortunate"
because they were treated just as the prophets had been treated [by
the Jews in ancient times.] The logic was that the epic tradition supported
the Jesus people because they, like the prophets, registered appropriate
criticism of the status quo. The motif of the killing of the prophets
could also be cited to embarrass their detractors because they, just
as the fathers always had done to the prophets, were wrongfully "persecuting"
and "killing" the Jesus people. [...] The way the Jesus people
of Q used the motif was not a particularly clever manipulation of the
Hebrew scriptures of the logical thrust of the biblical epic. They simply
took what there was in the Jewish reservoir of stock images and turned
it against their detractors. [...]
Their achievement
was a popping of pompous balloons and a freaky delight in seeing themselves
reflected in the story at its most embarrassing turns. Think of Jonah.
Were the Ninevites Jews? No. Did they not repent at Jonah's preaching?
Yes. Now think of Jesus and the Jesus movement in the very same light,
only brighter.
Remember
the Queen
of the South (Sheba)? Was she a Jew? No. Did Solomon withhold his wisdom
from her? No. See? Something greater even than Solomon is here.
And the
story of Noah? Be careful whose side you are on. Everyone else perished
you know. It is going to be the same story... And the same goes for
Lot and the city of Sodom. He was called out; they were destroyed.
So there
is your epic, they seemed to be saying, if you want to know what we
are about, read it. [...]
Their movement
certainly was not generated by an apocalyptic hysteria or persuasion
of imminent judgment any more than it was by a drive to reform or restore
some ethnic identity based on the promise inherent in the biblical epic
of Israel. In both cases, the appeal to examples from the epic and the
threat of an apocalyptic judgment, the Q people invaded the territory
of their Jewish detractors and used their own idioms against them.
And yet,
once involved in such an imaginative exercise, polemical as it surely
was at first, a curious fascination with the broadened horizon seems
to have developed. To think of the Jesus movement taking its place in
the grand scheme of things, from the very "foundation of the world"
to the "day when the son of man appears" was not a bad idea.
No one could have started, either with the thrust of the Hebrew epic,
or with the pull of an apocalyptic hope, and come up with a plan for
just such a movement as the Jesus movement. But once it was there as
a movement in the process of social formation, worthy of the loyalties
of those within and threatened by the cuffs of those without, finding
a place in the sun was exactly what the movement needed. And what a
place to take, aligned with the "little ones" whose pedigree
reached back to the beginning and who already knew in advance how the
final judgment would go. [The
Lost Gospel by Burton L. Mack]
Mack next
takes the reader through the process of exactly how the subsequent myth
was built, layer by layer, and it is fascinating. Effectively, what happened
was that a group of people created a myth of broad - even global - horizons
by elaborating on the sayings of an unlikely sage of Cynic persuasion
who was reconceived as a wisdom teacher, an apocalyptic prophet, the son
of God, and the means of atonement for all the world's sins if people
will just "believe." By degrees, Jesus was saying things that
only the wisdom of God could reveal. An amazing accommodation with Jewish
piety against which earlier battles had raged was made, and Jesus was
now quoting scriptures as proof texts that he was the son of God whose
kingdom would only be revealed at the end of time.
This brings
us back to the fact that Christians don't like myths. At some level they
surely know that Christianity based on the narrative gospels is a myth,
but they are in denial. They cannot deal with the fact that, for the original
followers of the teachings of Jesus , there was no need to claim any epic
legitimacy. To them, Jesus was simply a Cynic sage whose insights were
tried and tested and found to be good. His success was in his masterful
Cynic discourse that challenged others to try a different way of living.
The most
ironic thing about the development of Christianity as a global religion
is that it has aligned itself with Judaism as a "daughter" when,
the facts indicate that the adoption of a "Jewish" heritage
was merely the result of a defensive maneuver. The Jesus people simply
usurped the epic of their main detractors and used it against them. "Get
off our backs. Your own history should tell you that what we represent
is a critical voice in unhealthy times and has always been needed. See,
we are OK even on your own terms." It was never intended to be a
serious alignment.
The conclusions
to be drawn from the story of Q are therefore obvious. The followers
of Jesus were normal human beings, responding to their times in understandable
ways, investing intellectual energy in their evolving social experiments,
and developing mythologies just as any society-in-the-making does. As
for methods and means toward the creation of a mythic universe, the
Jesus people also performed according to normal patterns. They assessed
their social and cultural context with critical care, laid claim to
the cultural traditions most relevant and ready at hand, sorted out
the combinations most appropriate to their movement, and borrowed creatively
from the mythologies current at the time. [...]
Q's story
puts the Jesus movements in the center of the picture as the dominant
form of early group formations in the wake of Jesus, and it forces the
modern historian to have another look at the congregations of the Christ.
The congregations of the Christ will now have to be accounted for as
a particular development within the Jesus movements, not as the earliest
form of Christian persuasion and standard against which the Jesus movements
have appeared as diluted accommodations to banal mentalities.[...]
Q documents
a Jesus movement that was not Christian. The Jesus movement that produced
Q cannot be shunted aside as a group of people who missed the dramatic
events portrayed in the narrative gospels. They cannot be dismissed
as those who mistook Jesus, failed to understand his message, or misunderstood
their mission to found the church. The reason they cannot be dismissed
is because they were there at the beginning. Q reveals what Jesus people
thought about Jesus before there was a Christian congregation of the
type reflected in the letters of Paul, and before the idea of a narrative
gospel was even dared. [...]
Q is the
best record we have for the first forty years of the Jesus movements.
There are other snippets of early tradition about Jesus, but they all
generally agree with the evidence from Q. [...]
Q's challenge
is absolute and critical. It drives a wedge between the story as told
in the narrative gospels and the history they are thought to record.
The narrative gospels can no longer be read as the records of historical
events that generated Christianity.
Q puts
us in touch with the earlier history of the Jesus movements, and their
recollections of Jesus are altogether different. The first followers
of Jesus did not know about or imagine any of the dramatic events upon
which the narrative gospels hinge. [...] All of these events must and
can be accounted for as mythmaking in the Jesus movements, with a little
help from the martyrology of the Christ, in the period after the Roman-Jewish
war. The narrative gospels have no claim as historical accounts. The
gospels are imaginative creations whose textual resources and social
occasions can be identified. The reasons for their composition can be
explained. They are documents of intellectual labor normal for people
in the process of experimental group formation. [...]
From the
above, we can almost understand why so many must insist on denying these
conclusions. So much energy, for two thousand years, has been put into
this mythology, into related mythologies, including an entire industry
that today tries to come up with novel and alternative explanations for
who Jesus was, whether or not he was married, did he did of a blood clot,
is the Shroud of Turin authentic, and so on and so on. It seems, based
on the Q document, that it is unlikely that Jesus was even Jewish.
Mack is NOT
saying that there was not something going on at that period of history.
Clearly there was. Clearly, there WAS a teacher and a teaching and followers.
Of that, there can be no doubt.
Biblical
scholars, of course, work very hard trying to find ways to "enhance"
the picture of Jesus. For a very long time, they (and even alternative
writers such as Bushby, Lincoln, Leigh, Baigent, and others) have assumed
that Jesus was a unique individual, and his teachings and life must have
been novel. But even this approach has failed to save the story told in
the narrative gospels. When scholars reveal the results of their work
outside scholarly circles, there is generally an anguished public outcry.
People cannot bear to be told that Jesus did not say what Matthew, Mark
and Luke say he said, and the scholars who are trying to save the buns
from the fire don't seem to be able to adequately explain to the public
how they arrive at their conclusions. There is a complete lack of basic
knowledge on the part of the general public about the formations of early
Christianity, generally encouraged by the purveyors of the "religion"
itself. "Thou shalt not ask questions," they intone solemnly,
and the threats of hell-fire and damnation are intimated for those who
even open the cover of a book on the subject.
The average
Christian is horrified to think that Matthew was either lying, or was
mistaken, or he made it all up and didn't bother to inform the reader
that he was making stuff up. Mack deals with this issue in some detail
and even if the explanation will produce discomfort in many Christians,
the explanation is "eminently understandable." The fact is,
the authors of early Christian texts, following a tradition of Greco-Roman
attitudes and practices with regard to sayings or maxims of a teacher,
felt perfectly free to attribute new sayings, and even deeds, to Jesus.
At various points in the history of these early groups, when certain tensions
arose, it was seen as necessary and useful to recast the character of
Jesus by speech attribution and narrative changes. This is exactly what
was done, and the evidence is in the textual analyses. It was in this
sense that the history of the Q community was traced.
At the first
stage, the discourse was playful and the behavior public. The people of
Q were challenging one another to live a life of integrity despite the
social repercussions.
The second
stage was that of forming groups. Apparently, these experiments in behavior
produced satisfying results and more and more people were attracted to
the idea. Human relationships became a particular focus, and there was
no evidence of any idea of reforming society or any demand for conversion
of outsiders.
And then,
the third shift: apparently, when groups were formed, this attracted very
negative attention. The distress signal in the text is evident, and it
is also evident that it was not a consequence of weariness with reproach
or discouragement, but rather that there was a definite and dangerous
social conflict relating to certain members of the Q groups.
And then,
another stage occurred, a period during which the people of Q began to
see themselves as carriers of a social movement with a purpose in the
grander scheme of things.
It was in
this context that the ideas of the Christ cult of northern Syria overshadowed
and even erased the memories and importance of Jesus, the Cynic teacher.
As Mack points out, the cost of surviving the Roman-Jewish war must have
been very high. This part of the discussion is particularly interesting,
and one can speculate on the possibility of an esoteric tradition being
combined with the social experiment and coverted into a history. The "real"
Jesus disappeared from the story because the narrative gospels told a
more exciting tale that promised wonderful things in terrible times, and
Jesus became the "lynchpin" of all history.
Mack's conclusions
regarding the importance of this event on our world are quite startling
considering what has transpired on the world stage since he wrote this
book.
The question
now is whether the discovery of Q has any chance of making a difference
in the way in which Christianity and its gospel are viewed in modern
times? The question is quite serious, because neither the university,
nor among knowledgeable people in our society, nor among the Christian
churches, have the results of biblical scholarship ever made much of
a difference. [...]
The discovery
of Q effectively challenges the privilege granted the narrative gospels
as depictions of the historical Jesus. The difference between the narrative
gospels and modern retellings of the story can no longer lie in the
distinction between history and fiction. The narrative gospels are
also products of mythic imagination.
The difference
lies in the status of the gospels as foundation stories for a religion
in distinction from interpretations of that story in genres of a surrounding,
secular culture. So the modern critic who seeks to understand a public
outcry over Jesus is now confronted not only with the question of modern
myth and ancient history, but also with the more interesting question
of the reasons why the gospels are so hard for moderns to recognize
as myth. [...]
Myths,
mentalities, and cultures go together. Myths are celebrated publicly
in story and song. Mentalities are nurtured just beneath the surface
of social conventions by means of unexpressed agreements. Myths, mentalities,
and cultural agreements function at a level of acceptance that might
be called sanctioned and therefore restricted from critical thought.
Myths are difficult to criticize because mentalities turn them into
truths held to be self-evident, and the analysis of such cultural assumptions
is seldom heard as good news.
Christian
myth and Western culture go together. [...]
To acknowledge
publicly that [the American Dream] may owe something to the legacy of
western Christian culture is, on the other hand, taboo.
The exception
to this general rule occurs, interestingly enough, when pressure on
public policy and patriotism results in exaggerated expressions of those
values for which our nation stands. We have a history of such platitudes:
new world, new land, new people, righteous nation, manifest destiny,
city set on a hill, liberty enlightening the world, a beacon for the
homeless, one nation under God, moral majority, defenders of the free
world, and new world order.
These truisms
signal a messianic mentality.
When times
are not perceived to be critical, it is easy to discount these expressions
as the harmless formulations of a well-meaning people. Then we are willing
to recognize the influence of Christian symbols on our self-understanding.
But in periods of critical decision, when the rhetoric is used by our
leaders in support of some national interest, few find it easy to blow
the whistle and ask for debate on the reasonableness of attitudes rooted
in religious convictions. Why? Is it because we do not dare, or because
we do not know how to criticize our myths? [...]
We do not
know how to talk about the mentalities that underlie a culture's system
of meanings, values, and attitudes. Some cultural critics are saying
that it is time we set to work at cracking that equation.
I also
think that the time is right. Americans have lost their sense of our
nation's innocence, though the rhetoric of the righteous nation continues
to be heard from our leaders.
The recent
history of what we have done with our technology and power throughout
the world is troubling, as are the human cries for help from around
a world grown small and yet too large to handle. The list of concerns
has run off the page, and we seem to be overloaded with unsolvable problems
and strife, and ecological responsibility. For thoughtful people, the
issues have to do with assessing the chances for constructing sane and
safe societies in a multicultural world while understanding the conditions
for predation and prejudice, power abuse, and violence. In either case,
it is irresponsible not to engage in public discussion of our own system
of cultural values. [...]
In order
to understand ourselves and register reasons for our social options,
cultural analysis will have to include a comparative evaluation of mytholgies.
And that means having a close look at our own mythology.
Q should
help with this analysis by breaking the taboo that now grants privilege
to the Christian myth. That is because the story of Q gives us an account
of Christian origins that is not dependent upon the narrative gospels.
... Christian mythology can now be placed among the many mythologies
and ideologies of the religions and cultures of the world. The Christian
myth can be studied as any other myth is studied. It can be evaluated
for its proposal of ways to solve social problems, construct sane societies,
and symbolize human values. [...]
So the
times are troubled for thinking Christians who wonder about the social
and political consequences of Christian mythology in its secular dress.
The effect
of Christian mythology has not always been humanizing. The Captain
America Complex, a book by Robert Jewett has traced our zealous
nationalism to its biblical roots.
Others
have reflected deeply on the Christian persuasions that have undergirded
colonial imperialism, the taking of the West, the Indian wars, and the
slave trade.
Still others
have studied the relationship of the gospel story to the profile of
the American hero, the American dream, and the destructive politics
of righeousness wherever we have intervened in the affairs of peoples
around the world.
The
conclusion seems to be that the Christian gospel, focusing as it does
on crucifixion as the guarantee for apocalyptic salvation, has somehow
given its blessing to patterns of personal and political behavior that
often have had disastrous consequences. [...]
Q's challenge
to Christians is therefore an invitation to join the human race, to
see ourselves with our myths on our hands and mythmaking as our task.
[The
Lost Gospel by Burton L. Mack]
After reading
Mack's book, Tony Bushby's The
Bible Fraud is even sillier than I originally thought. It will
have to join a host of others - including Holy Blood, Holy Grail,
the Da Vinci Code, The Templar Revelation, The Jesus
Conspiracy, Jesus the Magician, and just about everything that
assumes a priori that there is ANYTHING even remotely historical in the
narrative gospels - on the trash heap.
Yes, it's
all a fraud, no doubt about that, but not exactly the way so many
are claiming nowadays when they create their equally ridiculous "New
Age" or "alternative" mythologies to replace the Dead Man
on a Stick nonsense.
I say good
riddance to all of it.
[Original]
Comment on this Editorial
Editorial: New Doctored Video of Pentagon Attack Release - Confirms Boeing Was Not Involved
Joe Quinn
Signs of the Times
17/05/2006
It only took four and a half years, but finally the U.S. government has seen fit to confirm what so many of us have been saying all along - Pentagon security cameras recorded no evidence of a Boeing 757 hitting the Pentagon.
The videos comprise the footage from each of the two security cameras stationed close to each other at one end of the Pentagon. The first video contains nothing new given that it is simply the footage from which 5 stills were taken and released in early 2002 by the Pentagon, the extra footage merely being the scene after the impact. The second video comprises previously unseen footage from the security camera that is slightly closer to the impact point. The Pentagon alleges that in this video the "nose cone" of a plane can be seen in one frame. It should be noted that the security cameras appear to be the standard type installed in train stations and airports around the world. Most people will have seen footage from such cameras showing people walking in "jumps", which is due to the fact that the camera records a still image every 2 seconds or so.
Basically then, while the mainstream press is trumpeting the line that "the Defence Department has released "the video of Flight 77 hitting the Pentagon", nothing could be further from the truth because there is still no evidence of a Boeing 757 in the security camera footage. If mainstream press reporters were to be honest (for once in their lives) the most they could state would be that: "the DOD has released a video of the attack on the Pentagon in which something appears in one frame of the footage and the U.S. government claims that this 'something' is the nose cone of Flight 77."
Let's take a look at this "nose cone":
This, ladies and gentlemen, is "Flight 77 hitting the Pentagon". This, is supposed to "finally put to rest" the "conspiracy theory" (backed up by massive evidence) that Flight 77 didn't hit the Pentagon. This, is apparently the best the DOD can do, or is prepared to do, to convince the world that they are telling the truth about what happened on 9/11. It doesn't say much for their confidence in their own story, does it.
Below is a zoom of the same "nose cone":
Is it more clear now? Can you see Flight 77 in all its glory? All we can see is an amorphous white blob that looks more like a car than the nose cone of any aircraft. Obviously the images are too grainy to be of any use to anyone. At this point then, the most we can say is that an amorphous white blob with definite Islamic terrorists leanings hit the Pentagon on 9/11.
The above image comprises one frame and 2 seconds (7 and 8) of the footage, the next and subsequent frames show the explosion, there is nothing in between, at least not on this camera footage. On the footage from the second camera, from which the original five stills were cut, an image of "Flight 77" moving between the right most edge of the camera angle and the Pentagon facade is visible. Perhaps you remember it. For old times' sake, let's have a look:
As you can see, this image, along with the new image of the "nose cone" appears to back up the idea that it was indeed an amorphous white blob that hit the Pentagon. Case closed? Well there is still the problem of where the hell the plane is in the above still. If, as the government claims, this image shows Flight 77 a few dozen feet from the Pentagon, we are still left with the question of, "where the hell is the plane!?"
The side of the Pentagon is 971 feet long and the "blob" or smoke trail in the above image is no more than 750 feet (250yards) from the camera. Remember the indelible images of those huge planes flying into the World Trade Center towers? The WTC planes were approximately the same distance from the observers on the ground as the "blob" in the above image was from the camera. So why can't we see a large 757 in the above image?
To sum up: At this stage, absent any new future video from the DOD, the U.S. government's "evidence" that Flight 77 hit the Pentagon consists of:
the "nose cone" frame
the white smoke trail or "blob" frame
the explosion at the Pentagon frames.
Convincing stuff, eh? This evidence is all the more suspect given the fact that the FBI confiscated tapes from at least two other video cameras in the area that would surely provide a more complete picture, but they refuse to release them.
The release of the DOD video footage comes at a very interesting time. Some readers may be aware that the pre-eminent Cannes film festival is just starting. Fewer however will be aware that the "Pentagon Strike" Flash animation is being shown at this year's festival. While we are not paranoid per se, we couldn't help but feel it was a little strange that the DOD would release their videos on the very day that our team set off to Cannes to promote the Pentagon strike flash. If we were "paranoid", we might say that the release of these videos is an attempt at pre-emptive damage control over potential exposure at Cannes. Of course, it will also simply help to raise the profile of all things 'Pentagonian', which can only help our team in Cannes.
A word on the response from alternative new pundits and 9/11 researchers about the new videos: Most appear to agree that there is nothing new in the videos that in any way discredits the sound allegations that a Boeing 757 did not hit the Pentagon. A few notable editorialists however are attempting to revive the dead horse that is the claim that the "no Boeing at the pentagon" theory is one big government-sponsored Psyops. The theory goes that government spooks are deliberately fuelling the "no Boeing" theories in an attempt to draw in as many researchers as possible - a honey trap for conspiracy theorists if you will - and then, when enough have been lured in, destroy their reputations by releasing a definitive video that shows clearly that Flight 77 hit the Pentagon.
While possible, in a remote sort of way, I seriously doubt that if the U.S. government has had access to a tape for four and a half years that could prove categorically that Flight 77 hit the Pentagon, that they would have put up with so much rabble rousing from the "fringe" rather than simply quashing their claims from the outset. The simple truth is that the U.S. government has NO recourse to any evidence that can disprove the claims of serious 9/11 researchers because no such evidence exists.
Serious 9/11 researchers claim that a section of the U.S. government and military helped to orchestrate the 9/11 attacks, that the WTC towers were deliberately demolished, and that Flight 77 was very obviously not the plane that hit the Pentagon. The U.S government, and the agencies that are tasked with preserving its hold on power, have been actively running interference over the threat of exposure of the truth about 9/11 by the alternative media for the past four years.
The decades-old tactic of the CIA's Counter Intelligence Programs where their agents infiltrate "movements" in an attempt to sow discord from within is a major part of this "running interference". It is noticeable therefore that the only area of discord among 9/11 "truth seekers" is the Pentagon attack and whether or not Flight 77 was involved. Let me put it bluntly: The success of government Psyops on 9/11 is measured not by how many people can be made to believe the "no Boeing at the Pentagon" claim but rather by how many 9/11 researchers can be convinced that the "no Boeing at the Pentagon" claim is a government Psyop and should be avoided.
The attack on the Pentagon is the real Achilles heel of the official 9/11 story.
Let me explain:
Even in the event that evidence for the obvious controlled demolition of the WTC towers were to be publicly revealed and accepted, the U.S government could plausibly claim that 'al-Qaeda' somehow managed to plant explosives in the buildings, that this evidence had somehow been overlooked due to "incompetence" in the 9/11 investigation. The incompetence angle could be used, as it has been already, as a plausible explanation for many other areas that would ordinarily point to government complicity. The Pentagon attack, however, is a very different matter. If it were ever to be publicly revealed that it was not Flight 77 that hit the Pentagon, there is simply no way that the U.S government continue to claim that "al-Qaeda did it" or lie its way out of it, because they would have to explain what happened to Flight 77 and its passengers. It is for this reason that the "no Boeing at the Pentagon" theory has been thoroughly attacked and maligned by government shills and many alleged 9/11 investigators.
The Pentagon attack holds the key to the entire 9/11 mystery, it presents the best opportunity to blow the lid completely off the entire sordid deal and reveal the very, very disturbing reality of the nature of the U.S. government and that other Middle Eastern agency and the roles they both played in wantonly murdering almost 3,000 American citizens on September 11th 2001.
Comment on this Editorial
Editorial: What the Pentagon Video Should Have Shown
Signs of the Times
May 18, 2006
Thanks to our friends at Onnouscachetout, we can finally present you with the video the Pentagon should have released... if a Boeing 757 had really hit the Pentagon.

Comment on this Editorial
Fascist Fun
A New Tack for Airport Screening: Behave Yourself
By SALLY B. DONNELLY/WASHINGTON
Time.com
Wed May 17, 2006
In the four years since it was created, the Transportation Security Administration has been trying - and often failing - to find dangerous things that passengers might bring onto an aircraft. Now the TSA is aiming to become less obsessed with scissors and cigarette lighters and focusing more on passenger behavior. Government sources tell TIME that the agency will announce in the next few weeks that it will introduce a race-neutral profiling program at the country's busiest airports, among them New York's John F. Kennedy, Los Angeles International and Chicago's O'Hare. The program has an awkward title, Screening Passengers by Observation Techniques, but a clever acronym, SPOT. It has been tested over the last three years at several airports in the Northeast, including Boston's Logan Airport, where two of the 9/11 hijacking teams launched their operations.
Unlike the TSA's troubled and controversial use of computer databases to scan for individuals whose names occur on passenger "watch lists," SPOT is based on observing passenger behavior. George Naccara, the TSA's Federal Security Director who has been overseeing the SPOT program in Boston, is a big booster. "This system is conducted by trained personnel and closely monitored by supervisors," he says. "It provides another significant layer of security."
Here's how it works: Select TSA employees will be trained to identify suspicious individuals who raise red flags by exhibiting unusual or anxious behavior, which can be as simple as changes in mannerisms, excessive sweating on a cool day, or changes in the pitch of a person's voice. Racial or ethnic factors are not a criterion for singling out people, TSA officials say. Those who are identified as suspicious will be examined more thoroughly; for some, the agency will bring in local police to conduct face-to-face interviews and perhaps run the person's name against national criminal databases and determine whether any threat exists. If such inquiries turn up other issues countries with terrorist connections, police officers can pursue the questioning or alert Federal counterterrorism agents. And of course the full retinue of baggage x-rays, magnetometers and other checks for weapons will continue.
So far, the results for SPOT have been encouraging. According to Naccara, the SPOT program has resulted in the arrest of more than 50 people for having fake IDs, entering the country illegally or drug possession. It also has caught one of its own: several months ago a representative from the Department of Homeland Security tested the system by trying to get a fake weapon through the screening checkpoint; he was successfully stopped by a STOP screener. The TSA will also consider deploying SPOT teams to other transportation systems like train and bus stations.
The SPOT program comes none too soon, since the current TSA system of screening for threats on airplanes has been, well, spotty. Earlier this month TSA screeners not trained in the SPOT program pulled over three Marines in dress uniform for special screening. After being patted down and scrutinized closely, the Marines were finally let go and allowed to continue their duties - escorting the body of one of their colleagues killed in Iraq.
Comment: Can you see the problem here? You could be sent to prison - or worse - simply because a "SPOT screener" thinks you are behaving suspiciously. It doesn't matter if you don't have any weapons or aren't on any terrorist watch list. Elsewhere on today's page, we report that you can also now be arrested for asking a police officer for directions! But first, the next article gives a bit more information on SPOT...
Comment on this Article
US to monitor behavior at more airports
Thu May 18, 2006
Reuters
WASHINGTON - The U.S. Transportation Security Administration will soon use more behavioral profiling at American airports to detect suspicious activity, a top official said on Thursday.
TSA Director Kip Hawley said the agency would expand a pilot program that has trained officers to observe passengers' behavior currently at about a dozen airports. He said it will be expanded after the summer travel rush.
"We are looking at expanding ... as another layer of security," Hawley said. "We have been very pleased with its effectiveness. We expect it to be an important part of our security going forward."
TSA officials would not identify which "highest risk" airports will be included in the expanded program.
The program began at Boston's Logan International Airport -- the departure point for the two hijacked airplanes that were crashed into the World Trade Center on September 11. It is also being implemented in Miami among other airports.
George Naccara, the federal security director at Logan, said the TSA program is modeled on behavior detection systems used in Israel and some other countries.
"It's been very effective overseas," Naccara said, where the effort "is much more confrontational and much more aggressive."
Officers are taught to look for abnormal behavior in passengers, such as people wearing coats when it's warm in order to disguise bombs, or people acting fidgety or nervous.
Naccara said they look for signs of "stress, fear and deception."
"We associate that with people who are doing something wrong -- some kind of criminal or terrorist intent," he said.
The officers must be able to differentiate between nervous travelers and those having something to hide, he added.
Some civil rights groups have complained the program involves racial profiling. The American Civil Liberties Union has sued the Massachusetts Port Authority over its behavior pattern recognition program.
TSA officials said race is not used to monitor passengers. Officers fill out a score sheet identifying behaviors that trigger extra screening for a passenger or police attention.
"The vast majority of those referred to law enforcement ... do in fact have something wrong," said Hawley. "They are either illegal for false ID, immigration status, drugs or prohibited items."
Comment: People must realise that these "security measures" are being implemented to "protect" the population against a threat that comes from the U.S. government itself. They have no purpose other than to deceive Americans into believing that an external threat exists, as infamous Nazi Hermann Goering said at the Nurenberg trials:
"Naturally the common people don't want war; neither in Russia, nor in England, nor in America, nor in Germany. That is understood. But after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine policy, and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is to tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country."
Comment on this Article
Shooting Closes San Diego Border Crossing
By THOMAS WATKINS
Associated Press
May 19, 2006
SAN DIEGO - The world's busiest border crossing reopened early Friday following a nine-hour closure that occurred after federal authorities shot and killed the driver of a car headed for Mexico, officials said.
The shooting took place on southbound Interstate 5 around 3:30 p.m. Thursday about 50 feet north of the San Ysidro Port of Entry, which links Tijuana, Mexico with San Diego. The crossing reopened around 12:40 a.m. Friday, according to the California Highway Patrol.
The driver, who was not identified, was pronounced dead at the scene with multiple gunshot wounds, said Maurice Luque, a spokesman for the San Diego Fire-Rescue Department. No other injuries were reported.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents began following a black sport utility vehicle after somebody reported seeing it pick up suspected illegal immigrants near the U.S. side of the Otay Mesa border crossing, said Lt. Kevin Rooney of San Diego Police Department.
As traffic backed up near the border, the vehicle stopped on the shoulder. When agents approached, the suspect "began to drive off and he veered hard to the left, trying to get back in traffic," Rooney said. Two agents then opened fire, he said.
Five passengers in the vehicle, whose identities were not released, were taken into custody and were being interrogated, Rooney said.
Anna Valderrama of Tijuana, Mexico, who was about four vehicles back when the shooting occurred, said she was stuck in her car for more than two hours.
"I was going to eat with my family," said Valderrama. "I feel desperate to go home."
Comment: Let's see: a vehicle allegedly containing illegal immigrants was trying to get back into Mexico FROM the US, and when it left the shoulder and tried to get back into traffic, US officials fired multiple rounds into the driver, killing him. Given the recent uproar about illegal immigration, wouldn't authorities think that it was a good thing that some of them were returning to Mexico??
Comment on this Article
German Tortured by CIA Has Suit Nixed to Safeguard "State Secrets"
By MATTHEW BARAKAT
Associated Press
Thu May 18, 2006
ROCKVILLE, Md. - A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit by a German man who said he was illegally detained and tortured in overseas prisons run by the CIA, ruling that a lawsuit would improperly expose state secrets.
Thursday's ruling by U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis III makes no determination on the validity of the claims by Khaled al-Masri, who said he was kidnapped on New Year's Eve 2003 and detained for nearly five months before finally being dumped on an abandoned road in Albania.
The ruling hands a victory to the Bush administration, which intervened in the civil lawsuit to prevent exposure of its tactics in the war on terrorism.
During his detention, al-Masri said he was beaten and sodomized with a foreign object by his captors. He also alleges that a CIA team forced him to wear a diaper and drugged him before a flight to an Afghan prison and refused to contact German authorities about his arrest.
Ellis said he was satisfied after receiving a secret written briefing from the director of central intelligence that allowing al-Masri's lawsuit to proceed would harm national security.
"In the present circumstances, al-Masri's private interests must give way to the national interest in preserving state secrets," Ellis wrote.
Al-Masri's lawsuit named former CIA Director George Tenet and three private companies that allegedly helped transport al-Masri from country to country.
The lawsuit says al-Masri was initially held for almost a month in Macedonia before being taken to a secret CIA prison in Kabul, Afghanistan, known as "the salt pit."
Al-Masri said the CIA knew shortly after his arrival in Kabul that he was a victim of mistaken identity. He further alleges that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice knew by early May 2004 that al-Masri was mistakenly detained but that he was still not released until May 28.
Ben Wizner, a staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, which is representing al-Masri, said he expects to file an appeal.
"We expect we will continue this fight in the courts," Wizner said.
He said it is absurd to think al-Masri's lawsuit would expose state secrets because many of the details of al-Masri's detention have been made public and confirmed by government sources in newspaper reports.
"There isn't really any dispute about what happened," Wizner said.
Judge Ellis' ruling "confers a blank check on the CIA to shield even the most outrageous conduct from judicial review," Wizner said.
Ellis did not describe what information he received that convinced him a lawsuit would expose state secrets and harm national security.
But he said he received a briefing labeled "JUDGE'S EYES ONLY" and that "it is enough to note here that al-Masri's publicly available complaint alleges a clandestine intelligence program." Ellis added that "any admission or denial of these allegations by defendants in this case would reveal the means and methods employed pursuant to this clandestine program and such a revelation would present a grave risk of injury to national security."
Ellis, at the end of his ruling, writes that "putting aside all the legal issues, if al-Masri's allegations are true or substantially true, then all fair-minded people ... must also agree that al-Masri has suffered injuries as the result of our country's mistake and deserves a remedy."
But Ellis said that remedy must come from Congress or the executive branch, not the judiciary.
Wizner said the Bush administration has not yet offered any financial settlement.
A Justice Department spokesman said the judge's ruling is under review and declined comment.
Comment on this Article
US must come clean over secret detention, end rendition: UN panel
AFP
May 19, 2006
GENEVA - The United States must come clean over its secret "war on terror" detention facilities, stop sending prisoners to countries where they might be tortured and "take firm measures to eradicate all forms of torture" by its own personnel, a United Nations anti-torture panel said.
"The state party should cease to detain persons in secret detention facilities, inside its territory, in territories under its jurisdiction and in facilities under its de facto effective control," the UN Committee on Torture said.
"The state party should acknowledge that detaining persons in secret facilities constitutes, per se, an act of torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, depending on its exact nature, purpose and severity."
Comment on this Article
Couple Arrested For Asking For Directions
WBALTV 11
May 17, 2006
BALTIMORE -- Baltimore City police arrested a Virginia couple over the weekend after they asked an officer for directions.
WBAL-TV 11 News I-Team reporter David Collins said Joshua Kelly and Llara Brook, of Chantilly, Va., got lost leaving an Orioles game on Saturday. Collins reported a city officer arrested them for trespassing on a public street while they were asking for directions.
"In jail for eight hours -- sleeping on a concrete floor next to a toilet," Kelly said.
"It was a nightmare," Brook said. "I was in there thinking I was just dreaming and waiting to wake up."
Collins reported it was a nightmare ending to a nearly perfect day. He said the couple went to a company picnic and watched the Orioles beat Kansas City. It was their first trip to Camden Yards and asked two people for directions to Interstate 95 South when they left.
Collins said somehow they ended up in the Cherry Hill section of south Baltimore. Hopelessly lost, relief melted away concerns after they spotted a police vehicle.
"I said, 'Thank goodness, could you please get us to 95?" Kelly said.
"The first thing that she said to us was no -- you just ran that stop sign, pull over," Brook said. "It wasn't a big deal. We'll pay the stop sign violation, but can we have directions?"
"What she said was 'You found your own way in here, you can find your own way out.'" Kelly said.
Collins said the couple spotted another police vehicle and flagged that officer down for directions. But Officer Natalie Preston, a six-year veteran of the force, intervened.
"That really threw us for a loop when she stepped in between our cars," Kelly said. "(She) said my partner is not going to step in front of me and tell you directions if I'm not."
Collins reported the circumstances got worse. Kelly pulled 40 feet forward parking next to a curb and put his flashers on while Brook was on the phone to her father hoping he could help her with directions. Both her parents are police officers in the Harrisburg, Pa., area.
"(Brook's father) was in the middle of giving us directions when the officer screeched up behind us and got out of the car and asked me to step out. I obeyed," Kelly said. "I obeyed everything -- stepped out of the car, put my hands behind my back, and the next thing I know, I was getting arrested for trespassing."
"By this time, I was completely in tears," Brook said. "I said, 'Ma'am, you know, we just need your help. We are not trying to cause you any trouble. I'm not leaving him here.' What she did was walk over to my side of the car and said, 'Ok, we are taking you downtown, too.'"
Collins said the couple was released from jail without being charged with anything. Brook is now concerned the arrest may complicate a criminal background check she's going through in her job as a child care worker.
Collins said police left Kelly's car unlocked and the windows down at the impound lot. He reported a cell phone charger, pair of sunglasses and 20 CDs were stolen.
Baltimore City police said they are looking into the incident.
Comment on this Article
Patriot Act e-mail spying approved
CNET News.com
February 9, 2006
What: The Justice Department asks a judge to approve Patriot Act e-mail monitoring without any evidence of criminal behavior.
When: Decided Feb. 2, 2006 by U.S. District Judge Thomas Hogan in Washington, D.C.
Outcome: E-mail surveillance approved.
What happened: As part of a grand jury investigation that's still secret, the Justice Department asked a federal magistrate judge to approve monitoring of an unnamed person's e-mail correspondents.
The request had a twist: Instead of asking to eavesdrop on the contents of the e-mail messages, which would require some evidence of wrongdoing, prosecutors instead requested the identities of the correspondents. Also included in the request was header information like date and time and Internet address--but not subject lines.
The federal magistrate judge balked and asked the Justice Department to submit an additional brief to demonstrate that such a request would be legal.
Instead, prosecutors asked Judge Hogan to step in. He reviewed the portion of federal law dealing with "pen register" and "trap and trace" devices--terms originating in the world of telephone wiretapping--and concluded it "unambiguously" authorizes the e-mail surveillance request.
Though the language may be clumsy, Hogan said, the Patriot Act's amendments authorize that type of easily obtainable surveillance of e-mail. All that's required, he said, is that prosecutors claim the surveillance could conceivably be "relevant" to an investigation.
Excerpt from the court's opinion:
"In 2001, Congress enacted the Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001 (the "USA Patriot Act"), Section 216 of which explicitly amended the authorities relating to pen registers and trap and trace devices...by expanding the definitions of these devices to include "processes" to obtain information about "electronic communication."
"Commenting on the very language that was finally enacted in Section 216 of the USA Patriot Act, several members of Congress highlighted the fact that the amendments would bring the state of the law in line with current technology by making pen registers and trap and trace devices applicable to the Internet and--more to the point--e-mail.
"For example, a section-by-section analysis of the bill that Representative John Conyers included in the record before the final House vote, which contains the same language that was finally enacted by Congress, states that Section 216 "extends the pen/trap provisions so they apply not just to telephone communications but also to Internet traffic."
"In addition, Senator Jon Kyl, who is currently Chairman of the United States Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Terrorism, Technology & Homeland Security, noted that the same language in the Senate version of the bill "would codify current case law that holds that pen/trap orders apply to modern communication technologies such as e-mail and the Internet, in addition to traditional phone lines."
"The Congressional Research Service also published a legal analysis of the USA Patriot Act that states that the Act "permits pen register and trap and trace orders for electronic communications (e.g., e-mail)."
"The plain language of the statute makes clear that pen registers and trap and trace devices may be processes used to obtain information about e-mail communications. The statute's history confirms this interpretation and there is no support for a contrary result."
Comment on this Article
Legislation On American Privacy Laws A Sticky Issue
by Stephanie Sonntag
UPI
May 18, 2006
Though the federal government's current use of spying techniques has irked many Americans, statistics from polls show many citizens are willing to give up some privacy for increased security.
Panelists at a Tuesday forum on privacy laws noted this balancing act, with some adding, however, that in addition to legislation, the free market would step in to defend the right of Americans to privacy.
According to Sen. John Sununu, R-N.H., the public needs to understand that there are no explicit constitutional rights to privacy, also adding, "We tend to lump security and privacy issues together. The bottom line is that the issues are not the same."
At the conference Sununu addressed several issues in privacy legislation including the Patriot Act, datamining and economic contracts.
The Patriot Act, which gives government increased access to private information by wiretapping, and electronic interceptions, Sununu said created fundamental constitutional questions.
The violation of personal data collected by corporations is also questionable ethically, though allowed by the latest legislation. In many cases banks release personal information to the government or sell it to corporations but Sununu pointed out this wasn't unconstitutional but Americans should know under what conditions these transactions may take place.
But Sununu said the market may be more effective in weeding out questionable behavior because markets can assert direct retribution on those who infringe upon the privacy of citizens.
Sununu took a market approach to the privacy laws, which fellow panelists said was explainable by the congressman's business background.
One key problem Sununu noted was that privacy laws concerning new technology have no protection under the Constitution. Also Congress may have difficulty in creating appropriate legislation on technology they often know nothing about.
"If you are going to be effective you need some sort of framework," Sununu said. "To develop a good solution you must understand what it is."
Sununu said the federal government should put more faith into governments at the state level.
Martin Frost, a former democratic representative from Texas, addressed difficulties associated with creating new legislation.
"Most members in Congress are clueless on these issues because we know so little," said Frost, a scholar at the Woodrow Wilson Institute.
Joelle Tessler, a journalist for Congressional Quarterly, also attended the conference. She agreed with Sununu's observation that legislation hadn't kept up with the advances in technology.
"Some Fourth Amendment Acts don't have precedence in cyberspace," Tessler said. "The public is often unaware of how little privacy protection they really have."
Tessler said the public generally has a high support for anti-terrorism despite intrusions on privacy. This leaves little incentive for Congress to aggressively attack the issue.
But Peter Swire, a professor of law at Ohio State and former Clinton administration privacy counselor at the Office of Management and Budget, took a more casual approach to the issue. He compared the current privacy concerns to the '60s, when citizens were worried about their bosses using lie detectors.
"I am optimistic, though it (sometimes) seems privacy is on the verge of despair," Swire said of mounting citizen concerns over the issue.
Comment on this Article
Business as Usual
Hayden on track for CIA approval
By MARK MAZZETTI
The New York Times
May 19, 2006
WASHINGTON - Gen. Michael V. Hayden sought on Thursday to distance himself from the Pentagon and its role in prewar intelligence on Iraq, in an appearance that put him on track to win swift confirmation as the next director of the Central Intelligence Agency.
In a confirmation hearing before the Senate intelligence committee, Hayden appeared in the pristine navy blue uniform he has worn for 36 years as an Air Force officer.
But he repeatedly professed his independence from the Defense Department and its leadership, saying he had been "uncomfortable" with the work of a Pentagon intelligence office run by Douglas J. Feith, a former undersecretary of defense, which asserted in the months before the Iraq war that Iraq had established ties with al-Qaida operatives in the Middle East.
He also spoke candidly about his disagreements with Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld about the Pentagon's control over a large part of America's annual intelligence budget. In characterizing one such conversation, Hayden said, "I think it's what diplomats would call that frank and wide-ranging exchange of views."
Hayden flatly defended as legal the secret domestic eavesdropping program he ran until last year as director of the National Security Agency, and that argument was directly challenged only by a handful of Democratic senators. But Hayden notably declined to endorse a Bush administration stance that has severely limited the number of senators who could be briefed on the program.
The questioning of Hayden during more than seven hours of public testimony included moments of tension. But, for the most part, Democrats as well as Republicans praised Hayden's experience and said he was a good choice to lead an agency that has been buffeted by recriminations over intelligence failures and the stormy service of its current director, Porter J. Goss, who will leave the agency next week.
None of the 15 senators on the committee indicated that they planned to vote against Hayden's nomination. By day's end, Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas, the Republican chairman of the committee, said he hoped to hold votes in the committee and the full Senate next week that could install Hayden at the CIA by Memorial Day.
Comment: Sure, Hayden's a fascist who thinks spying on Americans is a good thing - just like the rest of the Bush gang - but he looked so sharp in that "pristine navy blue uniform" that the committee just had to approve his appointment.
Comment on this Article
Lack of prosecutions demoralizing Border Patrol
By Elliot Spagat
ASSOCIATED PRESS
May 18, 2006
SAN DIEGO - The vast majority of people caught smuggling immigrants across the border near San Diego are never prosecuted for the offense, demoralizing the Border Patrol agents making the arrests, according to an internal document obtained by The Associated Press.
"It is very difficult to keep agents' morale up when the laws they were told to uphold are being watered-down or not prosecuted," the report says.
The report offers a stark assessment of the situation at a Border Patrol station responsible for guarding 13 miles of mountainous border east of the city. Federal officials say it reflects a reality along the entire 2,000-mile border: Judges and federal attorneys are so swamped that only the most egregious smuggling cases are prosecuted.
Only 6 percent of 289 suspected immigrant smugglers were prosecuted by the federal government for that offense in the year ending in September 2004, according to the report. Some were instead prosecuted for another crime. Other cases were declined by federal prosecutors, or the suspect was released by the Border Patrol.
The report raises doubts about the value of tightening security along the Mexican border. President Bush wants to hire 6,000 more Border Patrol agents and dispatch up to 6,000 National Guardsmen. He did not mention overburdened courts in his Oval Office address Monday on immigration.
The report was provided to the AP by the office of Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., who has accused the chief federal prosecutor in San Diego of being lax on smuggling cases. Issa's office said it was an internal Border Patrol report written last August. It was unclear who wrote it.
The lack of prosecutions is "demoralizing the agents and making a joke out of our system of justice," said T.J. Bonner, president of the National Border Patrol Council, which represents agents. "It is certainly a weak link in our immigration-enforcement chain."
The 41-page report says federal prosecutors in San Diego typically prosecute smugglers who commit "dangerous/violent activity" or guide at least 12 illegal immigrants across the border. But other smugglers know they are only going to get "slapped on the wrist," according to the report.
The report cites a 19-year-old U.S. citizen caught three times in a two-week period in 2004 trying to sneak people from Tijuana, Mexico, to San Diego in his car trunk, two at a time.
"This is an example of a kid who knows the system," the report says. "What is true is that he will probably never be prosecuted if he only smuggles only one or two bodies at a time."
The report also cites a Mexican citizen who was caught in Arizona and California driving with illegal immigrants and was released each time to Mexico. He was prosecuted the fourth time and sentenced to five years in prison, after two illegal immigrants in his van died in a crash.
U.S. Attorney Carol Lam in San Diego said about half her 110 attorneys work on border cases in an area where the Border Patrol made nearly 140,000 arrests last year. She said she gives highest priority to the most serious cases, including suspects with long histories of violent crime or offenders who endanger others' lives.
"We figure out how many cases our office can handle, start from the worst and work our way down," she said.
Lam said many suspected migrant smugglers are prosecuted instead for re-entering the country after being deported, a crime that can be proved with documents. Smuggling cases are more difficult to prosecute because they require witnesses to testify.
The Border Patrol, which would neither confirm nor deny the document's authenticity, said prosecutors in San Diego recently agreed to prosecute a Top 20 list of smugglers if they are caught.
The Justice Department in Washington declined to comment. However, at a congressional hearing last month, Rep. Ric Keller, R-Fla., told Attorney General Alberto Gonzales that Lam's record on migrant smuggling was "a pathetic failure." Gonzales replied that he was urging U.S. attorneys to more actively enforce laws but noted that immigration cases were "a tremendous strain and burden" along the border.
Peter Nunez, a former U.S. attorney in San Diego, said prosecutors along the border struggle with limited resources and a huge caseload of immigration cases.
"This is not an indictment of the U.S. attorney's office, because you have to deal with the realities of the caseload, but it is an indictment of how badly Congress and presidents have handled the immigration system," he said.
The report says immigrants in the area paid an average of $1,398 to be guided across the border in 2004.
"Smugglers are making lots of money breaking the immigration laws, and there is not much incentive for them to stop these illegal activities," it says. "The smugglers know that even if they are caught, it will be difficult to punish them."
Comment on this Article
Bush Is Certifiable
Paul Levy
05/18/06
George W. Bush is suffering from a peculiar but not that uncommon form of madness in which a pathological part of his psyche has co-opted all of the healthy parts into its service.
Speaking about such a pathological condition, Jung commented that "...an unknown 'something' has taken possession of a smaller or greater portion of the psyche and asserts its hateful and harmful existence undeterred by all our insight, reason, and energy, thereby proclaiming the power of the unconscious over the conscious mind, the sovereign power of possession."
Bush has been taken over by an unconscious complex of the collective unconscious. We speak of a mother complex, or a father complex, but Bush has what we could call a savior complex. Jung said, "The savior complex is an archetypal image of the collective unconscious, and it quite naturally becomes activated in an epoch so full of trouble and disorientation as ours." The archetypal figure of savior is literally dreamed up into incarnation by the field to be both a compensation for and an expression of the disorientation and dissociation in the field.
Being a reflection of the greater underlying unified field, this figure will embody the unconsciousness of the time. Because of the unconsciousness in the field, the person playing the archetypal role of savior will reflect this unconsciousness and become inflated, blown up out of human proportion by the power of the archetype. He will then, of necessity, be compelled to act out his hubris in a way that is destructive for all who are under his dominion.
Inflated by the power of the underlying archetype, Bush is suffering from delusions of grandeur, and has become megalomaniacal. He is unconsciously identified with the archetype of the Messiah. Bush told an Amish group in 2004 that "God speaks through me." Bush imagines that God actually speaks to him as well; in 2003 he told Palestinian ministers that God told him to invade Iraq. Jung commented, "One should listen to the inner voice attentively, intelligently and critically, (Probate spiritus!) [test the spirits], because the voice one hears is the influxus divinus consisting, as the Acts of John aptly state, of "right" and "left" streams, i.e., of opposites. They have to be clearly separated so that their positive and negative aspects become visible." John 4:1 says, "Do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits whether they are of God."
Just because one hears an inner voice doesn't necessarily mean it is the voice of God. Listened to uncritically, we could just as easily be seduced by the Devil. Bush has become inflated with an archetype of the collective unconscious, which is an expression of madness. He has become identified with one side, the light, of an inherently two-sided polarity, and projects out the other, dark side, which he then tries to destroy. By shadow projecting in this manner, Bush has become possessed by the very evil he is projecting outside of himself.
This is to fall under the spell of the Devil, who is rightly called "the deceiver." A clearer case of madness is hard to imagine. Jung describes such a situation by saying it is an "...overwhelming manifestation of the "blond beast" [of prey, a figure popularized by Nietzsche], which seizes the unsuspecting soul with nameless shudderings. The seizure transforms him into a hero or godlike being, a superhuman entity. He rightly feels himself "six thousand feet beyond good and evil."
Because of his inflation, Bush literally feels himself above human morality, as he is under the self-generating delusion that he is the supreme moral arbiter, not realizing in the slightest that he has fallen into his unconscious, whose dark side he is acting out. Because of his pathological condition, he is the last person who should be the judge of morality, the very last person on earth choosing justices for the Supreme Court. Jung continued by saying, "The psychological observer knows this state of 'identification with the shadow,' a phenomenon which occurs with great regularity at such moments of collision with the unconscious." Paradoxically, by dissociating and projecting out our shadow, we become unconsciously identified with it, possessed by it, and unconsciously act it out.
Speaking about becoming taken over by a complex of the collective unconscious, Jung elaborates by saying, "As a rule there is a marked unconsciousness of any complexes, and this naturally guarantees them all the more freedom of action. In such cases their powers of assimilation become especially pronounced, since unconsciousness helps the complex to assimilate even the ego, the result being a momentary and unconscious alteration of personality known as identification with the complex.
In the Middle Ages it went by another name: it was called possession."
Because of his complete unconsciousness, Bush has unwittingly allowed himself to become an instrument for evil, the dark half of the Self, to give shape and form to itself. Speaking about what the devil symbolizes psychologically, Jung said, "The devil is a variant of the "shadow" archetype, i.e., of the dangerous aspect of the unrecognized dark half of the personality."
Bush has become unconsciously taken over by the shadow side of the savior archetype, which is to become possessed by the very thing from which people need to be saved. Becoming inflated and identifying with an archetype of the collective unconscious is to step outside ordinary human boundaries, a state in which genuine humility is impossible. Jung said, "The potentialities of the archetype, for good and evil alike, transcend our human capacities many times, and a man can appropriate its power only by identifying with the daemon, by letting himself be possessed by it, thus forfeiting his own humanity."
Any mental health professional would recognize that Bush's inflation is an expression of his unconscious identification with (as compared to conscious realization of) God, which is an unequivocal form of madness. Lacking self-reflection, Bush is blissfully unaware of the perverse nature of his situation, which itself is an expression of the extent of depravity he has fallen into.
Speaking of a person who has fallen into such a pathological state, Jung said "...they avoid self-criticism to an amazing degree, preach to others, and know nothing of themselves. They are happy to possess no self-knowledge, because then nothing disturbs the rosy glow of illusions." By being inflated, Bush is unconsciously accessing and unleashing the power inherent in the archetype - this is why he has such an enchanting power over his followers.
By identifying with the archetype, the archetype acts as an amplifier, enhancing beyond measure Bush's hypnotic power over his followers. Because Bush is so taken over by the unconscious, he has a compelling and entrancing effect on others' unconscious. Only one who is seized by an archetype has a gripping effect on others. To quote Jung, "It is a psychological fact that an archetype can seize hold of the ego and even compel it to act as it - the archetype - wills. A man can then take on archetypal dimensions and exercise corresponding effects."
By being so seized by an archetype of the collective unconscious, Bush becomes an agent that has a very powerful effect on the field around him. He becomes a portal through which an underlying psychic epidemic which non-locally pervades the field that I am calling "malignant egophrenia" (see my book The Madness of George W. Bush: A Reflection of Our Collective Psychosis, available on my website www.awakeninthedream.com) feeds, replicates, and actualizes itself in full-bodied form, in and over time.
When we become unconsciously gripped by an archetype, we become pawns in the hand of a deeper power. Succumbing to the compulsive adrenaline rush of the "will to power" inherent in the shadow, Bush is, as Jung said in describing Hitler, "...like a man living in his own biography." Bush has become arrogant and full of himself, a legend in his own mind, someone who feels he is not bound by law, and believes himself entitled to get away with murder.
Speaking about being unconsciously taken over by an archetype, Jung commented, "Here we see the characteristic effect of the archetype: it seizes hold of the psyche with a kind of primeval force and compels it to transgress the bounds of humanity." When we are gripped by an archetype and forced to unconsciously act out its effects destructively, we are acting out the dark side of this greater power.
Etymologically, the word "transgress" is related to the word "evil." The world literally shape-shifts around someone who is inflated and blown up with an archetype, as this inner state of possession is able to synchronistically express itself through the medium of the outside world.
To quote Jung, "...archetypes are not found exclusively in the psychic sphere, but can occur just as much in circumstances that are not psychic (equivalence of an outward physical process with a psychic one)." [Emphasis in original] When we become inflated by an archetype, there is a synchronistic correlation between the inner experience of being identified with the archetype and outer events. The inner state of being possessed by the archetype expresses itself by arranging external events so as to give shape and form to itself.
A person inflated by an archetype, such as Bush, literally becomes the channel through which transpersonal, mythic forces become materialized into our third-dimension, which just reinforces his inflation in a diabolical fee dback loop. By identifying with the archetype, Bush becomes seized by the archetype's irresistible field of force and unwittingly becomes the agent who does the archetype's bidding. By being so taken over by an impersonal force, Bush has become a "magnet" which torques the field around him so as to insatiably feed his own pathology, while simultaneously wreaking havoc on the field.
Taken over by the archetype's magnetic power, Bush achieves a certain magnetism, which polarizes the field around it. Like a magnet, archetypes are bi-polar, having a negative and a positive aspect. On the one hand, the power of the archetype coming through Bush attracts people to support him in his delusion who are suggestible to the overwhelming unconscious power inherent in the archetype. In a co-dependent relationship, Bush's followers feed his identification with the archetype, which simultaneously nourishes their own bewitchment, in a perverse, self-perpetuating feedback loop which develops an autonomous life of its own.
At the same time, Bush's identification with the archetype repels other people, who react against the one-sidedness and perversity of his inflation. By being so unconsciously identified with the archetype, Bush will literally attract to himself, like a lightning rod attracts lightning, other people's negative, shadow projections. These people will strongly condemn Bush, and see him as being evil. And yet, people who react against Bush in this way are unwittingly feeding the polarization in the field, perpetuating the very diabolical energy they are reacting against. If we concretize Bush as being evil, we are projecting our own shadow onto him and are then guilty of the very evil of which we are accusing Bush.
Interestingly, another inner meaning of the word Devil is "the accuser." If we are accusing Bush of being evil, we are guilty of the very evil of which we are accusing Bush. Bush is merely an ignorant human being who, due to his unrestrained greed, desire, and lust for power is unwittingly allowing himself to be used as an instrument of evil.
Evil itself is a power, or principality that transcends the merely human dimension, as it is archetypal in nature and thereby is a content belonging to the collective unconscious. Bush is simply a deluded human being who is dangerous because of his position of power, which allows him to act out his pathological process on the world stage. We do not want to make the mistake of attributing evil - an archetypal content of the collective unconscious - to Bush as a person.
Becoming possessed by an archetype of the collective unconscious is an expression of not only forfeiting our humanity, but of abdicating our personal responsibility as well. A true Faustian pact with the Devil, we discover too late that what we have lost in the bargain is our soul. As in any such bargain, we are ultimately responsible and accountable for our choices. Identifying with the archetype of the savior is a compensation for a deep inferiority, fear, and weakness. We become absorbed into the archetype due to our inability and unwillingness to deal with the darker part of ourselves that needs saving.
Though describing Hitler, Jung just as easily could have been describing Bush when he said that he had a "...conceit that bordered on madness, a very mediocre intelligence combined with the hysteric's cunning and the power fantasies of an adolescent." Bush is acting out the adolescent fantasies of a war of good versus evil with our living sons and daughters as his toy soldiers.
Being inflated, Bush doesn't relate to other human beings as being autonomous or independent, but as pawns to serve his own narcissistic blindness and masturbatory fantasies.
Jung pointed out that "Inflation magnifies the blind spot of the eye.... A clear symptom of this is our growing disinclination to take note of the reactions of the environment and pay heed to them." When we are inflated, we don't accept any reflection or feedback from the outer universe that contradicts our puffed up image of ourselves. Instead of being open, receptive, and learning from the outer world, we continually interpret everything to support our delusory self-image. When we become inflated, we become closed to any information or in-forming influence from the outside world, which is a form of psychic blindness.
Instead of being in genuine relationship to the world, a person who is inflated relates to the world through their own narcissistically self-serving, grandiose self-image. Speaking about madness, Jung said that it "...consists essentially in the fact that the unconscious in large measure ousts and supplants the function of the conscious mind. The unconscious usurps the reality function and substitutes its own reality."
Jung continued that this resulted in "...senseless, unshakable judgments upheld in the face of reality [for example, Bush saying, 'the war in Iraq is going well,' despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary]." Being caught up in inflation is like being sucked up by a cyclone, as there is literally no getting through to the person who is inflated, who has been taken over and lifted off the ground by a more powerful energy.
Bush and his supporters feed into and off of and support each others' unconscious madness so as to conjure up an impenetrable field around them that resists consciousness at all costs. It is only when their world - which in this case is our world, too - self-destructs that the universe forces them out of their psychosis.
Just as the unconscious always compensates a one-sidedness, inflation inevitably results in all of the air (life, breath, spirit) being taken out of the person who is inflated. Inflation is ultimately self-destructive and always results in catastrophe. Talking about inflation, Jung said that it "...can be damped down only by the most terrible catastrophe to civilization, another deluge let loose by the gods upon inhospitable humanity."
The fact that our government, led by an inflated madman, is insanely and endlessly investing in and feeding the industry of creating weapons of mass destruction is an extremely dangerous situation for all of us. To quote Jung, "Let man but accumulate sufficient engines of destruction and the devil within him will soon be unable to resist putting them to their fated use.It is well known that fire-arms go off of themselves if only enough of them are together."
Bush has let the spirit out of the bottle which will undoubtedly destroy him. Being possessed by the unconscious is a very dangerous situation, particularly when the person so taken over is in a position of power where he can act out as well as activate a virulent madness on the world stage. Bush's madness affects all those under his sphere of influence, which in this case is the entire planet. Jung commented,
"It is abundantly clear that such an abaissement du niveau mental [lowering of the mental level], i.e., the overpowering of the ego by unconscious contents and the consequent identification with a preconscious [as compared to conscious] wholeness, possesses a prodigious psychic virulence, or power of contagion, and is capable of the most disastrous results." When such a "lowering of the mental level" happens collectively, a psychic epidemic becomes activated in the field.
The (collective) unconscious goes from being in the background and comes actively to the foreground, where it makes itself known by (destructively) giving shape and form to world events. It is merely a question of mitigating the damage of this virulent psychic epidemic for the rest of us. Seen as a dreaming process, we are all complicit in dreaming up Bush to pick up the archetypal role of savior. Our doing this is clearly a reflection of the part of ourselves which is disempowered and is not in touch with the savior within ourselves.
To be in touch with the savior within ourselves is to be in touch with the wholeness of our true nature, which is to be truly saved and redeemed. To the extent that any of us get in touch with the part of ourselves that is a genuine redeemer and leader, we literally are dis-investing energy from the archetypal role of leader being dreamed up outside of ourselves in a pathological way.
When we consciously and collectively access the part of ourselves that is a leader by our very nature, we become truly empowered. Being in touch with our God-given power engenders a situation in which the savior archetype is consciously distributed throughout the field, rather than being localized and concentrated in a single figure, which is a set -up for abuse.
The only way to change the collective nightmare we are sharing is through inner transformation in the individual, which collectively gets mobilized on the world stage so that we can effect genuine change. As each of us wakes up, we discover that we can reciprocally empower each other so that we can consciously activate the archetypal figure of the savior in the collective unconscious itself. Mediating, humanizing and incarnating this archetypal figure consciously throughout the field, we connect in lucidity, stepping into being agents of light who collectively dis-spell the darkness in the field.
Comment on this Article
Protests to greet War Whore Rice at Boston school
By Monica M. Clark
Reuters
Thu May 18, 2006
BOSTON - Plans by a prominent Boston Jesuit school to award U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice an honorary degree are stirring protests by some students and faculty who say her support for the Iraq war contradicts Catholic teaching.
Boston College theology professor David Hollenbach and Kenneth Himes, the department's chair, issued a petition to the school's president objecting to a planned commencement address by Rice on Monday when she will receive the honorary degree -- a custom for commencement speakers.
One faculty member, Steven Almond, resigned in protest.
"We'll be turning our backs during the honorary degree ceremony," said Sasha Westerman, a graduating student at the college who plans to distribute 1,000 protest armbands along with placards reading: "not in our name."
"No one asked me if I wanted (Rice) to speak and no one asked me if I wanted (the country) to go to Iraq," she said.
Support for Rice was also strong. Some students said a recent rally organized to protest Rice's visit drew only a few hundred of the school's 9,000 students.
Boston College said it had no plan to change its commencement schedule. "There is much about her life that is admirable and worthy of emulation and we expect that she will be respectfully received," said spokesman Jack Dunn.
At nearby Harvard University, the assistant professor of Christian history, Patrick Provost-Smith, said the Roman Catholic Church issued a statement specifically citing pre-emptive strikes as acts that are not part of the Catholic catechism.
"Of course, Catholics can and do differ from such statements," Provost-Smith said. "But it was indicative at the time of what concerns that the church did in fact have."
Hollenbach said 223 of 1,000 faculty had signed his petition, which he began circulating on May 2. Two student online protest petitions had 961 and 1,643 signatures respectively.
Comment on this Article
Darpa's Far-Out Dreams on Display
By Noah Shachtman
02:00 AM Mar, 15, 2004 EST
ANAHEIM, California -- Conspiracy freaks, hold onto your tin hats.
Darpa, the Pentagon's far-out research arm, may have publicly abandoned its creepiest programs, like Total Information Awareness. But the agency, as shown at its DarpaTech conference, still has a project to make you run full-speed into your bunker.
Mighty Isis: Darpa wants to start planning for a blimp, three times the size of Goodyear's, that would keep watch over an entire city.
Hovering 70,000 feet above ground, the ISIS (PDF) airship (short for Integrated Sensor Is Structure) would use a giant, flexible radar antenna to give, in the words of Darpa program manager Larry Correy, a "dynamic, detailed, real-time picture of all movement on or above the battlefield: friendly, neutral or enemy."
"We will apply this technology to track people emerging from buildings of interest and follow them as they move to new locations," said Darpa's Paul Benda. "Imagine the impact it will have if ISIS tracks the movement of individuals for months. Hidden webs of connections between people and facilities will be revealed."
Such a system is meant to keep tabs on urban combat zones -- abroad, of course. But there's no reason ISIS couldn't float over New York or Chicago or Kalamazoo.
For now, hold off on buying that one-way trip to a secluded Caribbean island. ISIS is futuristic, even by Darpa standards. At the moment, the agency is only studying the feasibility of the airship. Darpa won't even begin soliciting research proposals until 2005.
A key problem to tackle: how to store energy for the blimp. Correy figures that to stay aloft, ISIS will need batteries that weigh one-tenth what today's cells weigh. Building the airship's enormous radar antenna -- as large as the ship itself -- is going to be a huge challenge, as well. The lightest space antennas weigh 20 kilograms per square meter. For ISIS to work, that will have to drop at least sevenfold.
- - -
Flights of fancy: One of the big ironies of the DarpaTech conference is the disconnect between the program managers' lofty visions for the future and the often mundane experiments they show off. Robotics is probably the most striking example.
In the cavernous conference hall at the Marriott Anaheim, Darpa's Ted Bially sketched out a vision of tomorrow's fighting force. Fleets of drones do most of the fighting, he said, and a couple of humans would be left to make a few big-picture decisions. Across the corridor, at the agency's Joint Unmanned Combat Air Systems' display, was a prediction by Sen. John Warner (R-Virginia) in big, bright letters. By 2010, he foretold, one-third of America's deep-strike aircraft would fly without a pilot.
Inside the booth, as if to confirm the senator's statements, a trio of flat-panel screens showed snazzy animations of U.S. drones blowing up Scud missile launchers to a techno soundtrack.
But a few feet away, the reality was a whole lot more humdrum -- and a whole lot cuter.
Kids from Carnegie Mellon University sat on the floor, redirecting their soccer-playing, robotic dogs. Drones still have a tough time seeing the world around them, and a game of soccer helps researchers figure out new ways to see the ball.
Employees from iRobot -- the company that makes the drone vacuum cleaner -- were right next to the students. They were directing a gaggle of toaster-sized bots through a makeshift maze. Mechanical creatures aren't particularly good at cooperating with one another yet. This "Swarm" project is the beginning of an attempt to get the robots to work together.
Looking over at the audiovisual extravaganza going on in the Joint Unmanned Combat Air Systems booth, an iRobot employee subtly shook his head. The people mesmerized by the slick presentation don't understand how hard it is for robots to do the most basic of things, he explained.
He murmured, "It's so far off."
Animated equipment: In recent years, Darpa has launched a series of programs to divorce soldiers from their most basic needs. One project looks at ways to keep GIs going for days on empty stomachs. Another examines methods to get soldiers to fight without sleep.
Now, Darpa wants to give inanimate objects some of the characteristics of living things. Bones grow, change shape, make blood and heal themselves when broken. Why, asked Darpa's John Main, couldn't ship hulls or airplane fuselages do the same thing?
"All of these characteristics are unobtainable if you limit yourself to the world of conventional materials," Main said. "Yet they are all clearly possible, because nature has supplied us with examples to study and potential paths to follow."
There have been some baby steps in this direction, Main said. Research has been conducted on artificial muscles and miniature drone wings that both keep the unmanned plane aloft and supply it with electrical power.
But to really make materials that grow or heal themselves, he said, these structures might need to be given circulatory systems, like the ones plants or birds or people have.
Main did not mention, however, whether these materials would be allowed, every once in a while, to take a nap or have a bite to eat.
Comment on this Article
State Dept to limit use of Chinese computers
By Richard Cowan
Reuters
Thu May 18, 2006
WASHINGTON - The State Department, reacting to security concerns after its purchase of computers from a Chinese company, will not use the equipment for classified information, the agency said on Thursday.
Government security experts are recommending that the nearly 16,000 computers purchased last fall from China's Lenovo Group Ltd. "be utilized on unclassified systems only," said Assistant Secretary of State Richard Griffin in a letter to Congress.
The letter did not specifically cite security concerns with Lenovo. But it said that the department was altering its procurement process "in light of the changing ownership of IT (information technology) equipment providers."
The State Department took the action on the $13 million contract after questions were raised recently about the computers by Rep. Frank Wolf (news, bio, voting record), a Virginia Republican who oversees the agency's funds.
"I was deeply troubled to learn that the new computers were purchased from a China-based company, and that at least 900 of these computers were planned to be used as part of the classified network deployed in the United States and around the world in embassies and consulates," Wolf said.
But Lenovo said the U.S. government's concerns were unwarranted.
"We know these computers present no security risk because they do not have back doors and they do not have surveillance software tools installed on them," said Jeff Carlisle, Lenovo's vice president of government relations.
Wolf is a frequent critic of China's human rights policies and he said Chinese firms with links to the Communist government in Beijing should not win U.S. government contracts.
Since the September 11 attacks, there has been growing skepticism in Congress of some foreign companies' involvement in American commerce.
OBJECTIONS TO PURCHASE
The computer deal also raised questions from the congressionally created U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission.
Michael Wessel, a Democratic commissioner on the panel that monitors China trade and national security implications, said: "The U.S. is a principal intelligence target for China."
He added that a "significant portion" of Lenovo is owned by the Chinese Academy of Sciences, an arm of the Chinese government.
In March, Wessel said the U.S. government should be worried about the computer purchase, especially if there were codes embedded into the computers that could be remotely activated.
Carlisle countered that Lenovo "has always operated as a market-oriented independent company" and that the Chinese Academy of Sciences has only a "minority interest." He said the academy does not direct Lenovo's day-to-day operations and does not have a member on its board of directors.
The State Department said the Lenovo computers were purchased under standard U.S. government purchasing rules. The computers were procured through CDW Corp., a government contractor based in Vernon Hills, Illinois.
Lenovo bought IBM's personal computer division last May. The computers bought by the State Department were assembled in the United States and Mexico with integrated circuits made in Taiwan, according to the company.
Details of the State Department contract surfaced shortly after Congress pressured a state-owned Arab company, Dubai Ports World, into walking away from plans to manage several U.S. port terminals.
Last year, China's state-controlled CNOOC Ltd. dropped its bid to acquire U.S. oil and gas company Unocal Corp. after a strong backlash from the U.S. Congress.
Comment on this Article
Milberg Weiss Is Charged With Bribery and Fraud
By JULIE CRESWELL
The New York Times
May 18, 2006
The securities class-action law firm of Milberg Weiss Bershad & Schulman was charged today with several criminal counts, including obstructing justice, perjury, bribery and fraud.
The 20-count indictment, handed up by a federal grand jury in Los Angeles, represents the most prominent confrontation between the government and a law firm in years. While federal regulators won multimillion-dollar settlement from big corporate law firms over their role in the savings and loan scandals, no major law firm has faced a criminal indictment in recent memory.
Milberg Weiss has been the dominant law firm in winning multimillion-dollar lawsuits against huge corporations on behalf of shareholders who claimed they were wronged. Its success was so great that Congress raised the legal hurdle for winning such lawsuits in the 1990's.
Today, the firm was accused of secretly paying kickbacks, beginning in 1981 and continuing through 2005, to plaintiffs in class-action lawsuits. While the indictment does not prevent the firm from practicing law, it is expected to have a huge impact on its business.
Talks in recent days to avert an indictment had stalled between prosecutors in Los Angeles and lawyers representing Milberg Weiss, lawyers involved in the negotiations said. The firm had been unwilling to sign a deferred prosecution agreement in which it have waived attorney-client privileges, put in new monitoring systems and made a substantial payment.
Two of the firm's prominent partners are named in the indictment: David J. Bershad and Steven G. Schulman. The two men, who sat on the firm's executive committee, decided to take leaves of absences late last week in the hopes it would stave off an indictment of the entire firm.
While the indictment caps off a six-year investigation by the Justice Department into the firm's activities, prosecutors have been stymied in their efforts to bring charges against the two primary targets of the investigation, Melvyn I. Weiss and his former partner William S. Lerach.
Before a bitter split in 2004, when Mr. Lerach began his own firm, the two dominated the securities class-action arena through their firm Milberg Weiss Bershad Hynes & Lerach. Mr. Weiss ran the East Coast operations of the firm, "Milberg East," and Mr. Lerach headed up the San Diego operations, known as "Milberg West."
Both men were told in February that they would not be indicted at this time, although people involved in the talks believe they still remain targets of prosecutors.
The indictment against the firm and Mr. Bershad and Mr. Schulman was included in a revised indictment that was originally handed up last summer against a retired California lawyer and former Milberg client, Seymour M. Lazar.
Beginning in 1981 and continuing through about 2004, Mr. Lazar or members of his family served as plaintiffs in approximately 70 lawsuits for Milberg Weiss and received about $2.4 million in "secret and illegal kickback payments," according to the new indictment.
While Mr. Lazar has long stated his intentions to fight the charges, another Milberg Weiss client, Howard J. Vogel, signed a plea deal with prosecutors last month, agreeing to provide information against the firm.
A retired mortgage broker, Mr. Vogel admitted that he or members of his family served as plaintiffs in approximately 40 lawsuits from 1991 and as recently as 2005, receiving approximately $2.5 million in "secret and illegal kickback payments," according to the new indictment.
A third figure named in the indictment, a Beverly Hills ophthalmologist named Dr. Steven G. Cooperman, or members of his family acted as plaintiffs in nearly 70 lawsuits, receiving approximately $6.5 million in payments, the new indictment said.
Testimony by Mr. Cooperman prompted the original investigation six years ago. He is a highly controversial figure, however, as he offered to provide evidence to prosecutors in hopes of receiving a reduced sentence on his conviction of art fraud charges.
Under New York law, it is illegal for a lawyer to promise or give anything of value to induce a person to bring a lawsuit or to reward a person for having done so, according to the indictment.
Furthermore, the kickbacks created a conflict because the paid plaintiffs had a "greater interest in maximizing the amount of attorneys' fees awarded to Milberg Weiss than in maximizing the net recovery" to others in the class, the indictment said.
Comment on this Article
War of Terror
Few at Guantanamo are interrogated, commander says
Reuters
Thu May 18, 2006
GUANTANAMO BAY U.S. NAVAL BASE - Only about one-fourth of the prisoners held at the Guantanamo naval base are interrogated regularly because there are not enough translators and interrogators to question them all, the U.S. admiral in charge of the detention operation said on Thursday.
Rear Adm. Harry Harris, who at the end of March took command of the military task force that runs the camp, said the 460 captives at Guantanamo in Cuba were dangerous men who still provide useful information about al Qaeda tactics, financing and safe houses.
But only those he described as senior al Qaeda and Taliban leaders were routinely questioned by U.S. interrogators, he said.
"It's about around 25 percent of the population that we are actively interrogating," Harris told visiting journalists.
"If we had unlimited interrogators and translators then we could interrogate more. But we have limited resources so we have to focus that the best way we can, so we go after those detainees that have the largest intelligence value."
The rest are not ignored completely, he said. But asked if some prisoners might have gone years without being questioned, he replied, "I would think there are, but I just don't know."
The United States has faced criticism from human rights groups and some of its allies for indefinitely holding prisoners at Guantanamo. President George W. Bush said earlier this month he would like to close the detention center.
Some 759 captives have been held at Guantanamo since the detention operation opened in 2002, and nearly 300 have been released or transferred to their home nations for continued detention, including 15 sent home to Saudi Arabia on Thursday.
Harris said he expected the population to drop further as officials in Washington complete diplomatic negotiations to return about 120 more to their homelands.
He said he was convinced the rest were "truly dangerous men intent on jihad" and must continue to be held for the protection of Americans.
Comment on this Article
Pentagon launches Guantanamo PR campaign
USnews.com
16/05/2006
Officials from the Joint Chiefs of Staff Detainee Affairs Section have worked up a new briefing and made presentations in recent months to some 3,000 people, including media representatives and members of Congress, stressing the strategic value of detainees at the prison camp.
Officials from the Joint Chiefs of Staff Detainee Affairs Section have worked up a new briefing and made presentations in recent months to some 3,000 people, including media representatives and members of Congress, stressing the strategic value of detainees at the prison camp. The briefings present a benign picture of life at Gitmo, noting the presence of decent food, healthcare, and literacy training for the inmates. Notwithstanding allegations of psychological and physical torture, officials say the biggest threats faced by many detainees are in fact frequent sports injuries on Gitmo basketball courts.
Comment: Government propaganda at it's finest. On 9/11 the US government showed the world that it views ordinary people, of whatever nationality, with nothing but contempt.
Comment on this Article
Rumsfeld won't promise Iraq troop cut
By Will Dunham
Reuters
Wed May 17, 2006
WASHINGTON - Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said on Wednesday he could not promise that the United States would withdraw some of its 133,000 troops from Iraq this year, although he hoped it would be able to do so.
Marine Corps Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said he did not believe U.S. troops could pull out of any of Iraq's provinces in the next three months and leave security duties to U.S.-trained Iraqi security forces.
Rumsfeld and Pace, testifying before a Senate appropriations subcommittee, faced questions from senators about when the
Pentagon planned to reduce the U.S. military presence in Iraq more than 3 years into a war in which about 2,450 U.S. troops have died.
Rumsfeld said Iraq, in the grips of a relentless insurgency, had "entered a hopeful new phase in what has been a long and difficult journey," with Shi'ite politician Nuri al-Maliki, the prime minister-designate, due in the coming days to unveil a new cabinet.
Democratic senators expressed doubt about progress in the war.
"We still don't have answers to the most basic questions about the war," said Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia. "How much more is this war going to cost? When is this mission really going to be accomplished? How much longer until our troops start coming home?"
Sen. Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat, asked Rumsfeld whether there will be "a significant troop withdrawal this year."
"We ought to be able to make a reduction," Rumsfeld said, depending on progress in developing Iraqi security forces and public support among Iraqis for a new unity government.
After again being pressed on troop reductions by Illinois Democratic Sen. Richard Durbin, Rumsfeld said, "I did not say it will not happen this year. I said I hoped it happens this year, but I can't promise it."
Questions about troop levels come during a congressional election year in which the U.S. public's support for the war is dropping. Public concern over Iraq has also helped push
President George W. Bush's approval rating to the lowest of his presidency.
RECOMMENDATION PENDING
The Pentagon has said Rumsfeld expects to receive by the end of spring a recommendation from Gen. George Casey, his top commander in Iraq, on possible troop cuts this year.
The Pentagon this month put off next month's scheduled deployment of a Germany-based Army brigade to Iraq pending Casey's recommendation. Casey said last month he was "still on my general timetable" for recommending cuts, but did not say how many troops or when.
Pace said Iraqi security forces number 254,000 people, with a goal of 325,000. Rumsfeld said, "They're making excellent progress."
But Leahy asked Pace if there was any significant section of Iraq that the Iraqis can control on their own without U.S. involvement.
Pace responded that 14 of the 18 provinces are essentially calm. Leahy then asked whether U.S. forces could withdraw completely from any of those 14 in the next three months.
"No, sir," Pace said.
"There are still the logistics and command and control parts of their army that need to be built for them to be able to sustain themselves completely," Pace said.
On another topic, Rumsfeld said he foresaw no circumstances under which he would recommend reinstating the draft after more than three decades of an all-volunteer U.S. military.
After Rumsfeld completed his opening statement to the panel, a protester in the hearing room yelled out, "Liar," and flashed the two-finger peace sign while being led out by security.
Comment: All the Bush administration's talk about how prepared the Iraqi "security forces" were was obviously just a bunch of hot air...
Comment on this Article
'Why did my son die in vain?'
By Sumathi Reddy
Baltimore Sun
05/18/06
Standing on the porch outside his Gwynn Oak residence, Marion Flint Sr. speaks softly and slowly about his only son, his namesake, who was killed in a roadside explosion while serving in Iraq.
But inside, Flint is angry.
That his 29-year-old son, Staff Sgt. Marion Flint Jr., on his second tour of duty for the Army, had to go to Iraq again for a war that he says seems so futile infuriates him.
"It's not just my child; it's everybody's child," said Mr. Flint, 49, clasping hands with his wife, B.J. Flint, 50.
"What's the purpose of this war?" he said, his voice rising. "What have they accomplished? Somebody please give me some kind of answer. Why did my son die in vain?"
The younger Flint and Pfc. Grant A. Dampier, 25, of Merrill, Wis., were killed on a combat patrol operation in Baghdad when a bomb exploded near their vehicle Monday.
Sergeant Flint was the third soldier with ties to Maryland to die in Iraq this week and the 45th overall in a war that has lasted more than three years, triggering frustration and anger among many families.
"What we believe in don't matter," said Sergeant Flint's wife, LaShaviea Danielle Flint, 30, who lives in Garner, N.C., with their children, Dyamond, 11, and Malik, 3. "He had to go regardless. But he didn't believe in going over there. We're against Bush all the way."
Marion Flint Jr. was raised in Athens, Ga. He graduated from Clarke Central High School, where he played basketball and football. His mother and two sisters remain there.
Sergeant Flint moved to Baltimore with his father after graduating from high school and joined the National Guard a short time later, family members said.
He joined the Army in January 1998, according to officials at Fort Carson, Colo. He was stationed with the 25th Infantry Division in Hawaii and then with the 101st Division (Air Assault) at Fort Campbell, Ky.
He met his future wife in 2001 in Baltimore through his stepsister. They married in September 2002.
Sergeant Flint served his first tour in Iraq with the 101st from March 2003 to February 2004.
He arrived at Fort Carson on Dec. 16, 2004, and was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 8th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Heavy Brigade Combat Team. He left for Iraq in December and was stationed at an air base in Balad, in northern Iraq.
Fort Carson officials said Sergeant Flint was a dismount squad leader for light infantry patrol at the time of his death and had received numerous awards.
He was quoted and pictured in an April article in Iron Brigade Chronicles, a magazine for his combat team.
In the article, about a "search and knock" operation, Sergeant Flint tells how soldiers passed out stuffed animals and school supplies to the children they encountered.
"It's basically just to give the kids and the families stuff just to show them that we are trying to help in any way possible," he says.
In an unrelated picture, he is carrying a weapon as he crouches in his fatigues while searching a field near Balad.
Yesterday Sergeant Flint's father and stepmother pulled out another picture. In it, the soldier stands ramrod-straight, hand raised, as he is sworn into the Army.
Marion Flint Sr. recalled how happy his son was that day. "He came to me and he hugged me and said, 'I love you, Dad. Everything will be all right.' And he was so happy."
His parents, devout Baptists, prayed for him. Every week in church, the congregation at Christ Delivers in Edmondson Village invoked his name, said Martin Jacobs Jr., 72, pastor of the church and the father of Flint's stepmother.
"We constantly kept him in our prayers," Mr. Jacobs said.
Sergeant Flint became more religious when he moved to Baltimore and was baptized, serving as an usher.
"He surrendered to God when he was 19 and got his life together just before he went into the Army," his father said.
Family members said Sergeant Flint wasn't afraid to go to Iraq but didn't talk much about his life there.
"He never wanted us to believe he was in any danger," said B.J. Flint. "He always wanted to make us feel comfortable."
He called his wife every other day. The family sent him e-mail and used a Web cam so that he could see the children. His wife said she last spoke with him Friday, when he said he was going on patrol and would call her when he returned.
The family had been preparing for him to return for two weeks in July. He was to come home for good in November. Now, the preparations are for his body to arrive and for arranging a funeral.
"He shouldn't have been over there," Marion Flint Sr. said. "They never found any weapons of mass destruction, so what's the point? Why now do they have all these kids over there? Why are they still fighting? Why? I want an answer."
Comment on this Article
Gruesome Iraq War movie sparks Pentagon outrage
5/18/2006
Al-Jazeerah.com
A new documentary about an emergency room of a U.S. military hospital in war-torn Iraq sparked outrage among top Pentagon officials.
The film, titled "Baghdad ER", shows the daily lives of doctors, nurses, chaplains and soldiers in the emergency room of a U.S. hospital in the Iraqi capital.
Baghdad ER (ER stands for emergency room) is the work of the Emmy-winning filmmakers Jon Alpert and Matthew O'Neill, who spent two months in mid-2005 at the 86th Combat Support Hospital in Baghdad's Green Zone, the main medical facility for the U.S. army in Iraq, where wounded soldiers go to recover and learn how to re-use their mutilated bodies.
The documentary, due to be aired next Sunday on the U.S. cable channel Home Box Office, was screened on Monday night at the National Museum of American History and is scheduled to be shown at 22 military installations across the United States.
Although it was initially applauded by top U.S. military commanders, the film caused controversy due to its gruesome images of soldiers suffering, and in some cases dying, from their war wounds. Almost at the start, you see a medical orderly carrying a human arm, amputated above the elbow, which he puts into a red plastic bag.
But suddenly, the army withdrew its support for the film. Army surgeon Lieutenant General Kevin Kiley warned that the film showed "the ravages and anguish of war", and that it could cause post-traumatic stress disorder, "such as flashbacks or nightmares." The Secretary of the Army even asked HBO to delete some footage from the final cut. The Pentagon also turned down an HBO's offer to co-sponsor a screening of the film this week at Fort Campbell, Kentucky where the 86th is based.
Moreover, none of the highest ranking officers or senior medical personnel attended Monday's screening. "Maybe people at the Pentagon feel the truth will discourage people from backing the war. "The film certainly tells you what could happen in a war," Shelia Nevins, President of HBO's documentary unit, told the Washington Post after the screening.
The Pentagon's fears that the documentary will undermine the support for the war shows how top U.S. officials are out of touch of reality. In fact, public support for Iraq War is already waning. Seven retired generals have publicly called for the resignation of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld over his handling of the war. President George W. Bush's approval rating has tumbled to an all-time low of barely 30 percent. A recent Washington Post poll showed that only 59% of Americans believe that going to war was a mistake.
Below are some excerpts of the film published on Democracy Now. Its reporter also interviewed the film's directors, a military doctor who appeared in the documentary, and a mother of a dead soldier who saw her son's last hours in the film.
Amy Goodman: This is an excerpt of Baghdad ER
Army surgeon: What all do we have to do to save his arm? What are our options?
Army surgeon: It doesn't look good.
Army surgeon: He's just got a massive injury to his arm. He's going to lose it.
Army surgeon: Hey, can you grab me an amputation set?
Army surgeon: Alright, let's get this thing off.
Maj. Martin Harnish: This war and the number of lives it's affecting is just unbelievable. I have to think that the people in this country are in a better place for it or will be in a better place for it. I have to believe that, because otherwise, this is just sheer madness.
Amy Goodman: That was an excerpt of the film, Baghdad ER. We're joined now by the filmmakers who produced and directed the film: Jon Alpert and Matt O'Neill, both award-winning filmmakers at Downtown Community Television. Between them, they've won 14 national and local Emmy Awards. We're also joined from Alabama by Dr. James Hill, the flight surgeon in aviation medicine at Fort Rucker in Alabama. Dr. Hill spent a year as an emergency medical physician in the Combat Support Hospital in Baghdad. And on the phone with us is Paula Zwillinger. Her son Marine Lance Corporal Robert Mininger was killed in Iraq on June 6, 2005, 21 years old. We welcome you all to Democracy Now! We're going to begin with Jon Alpert. Jon, tell us about the mission you went on to Baghdad, you and Matt O'Neill.
Jon Alpert: We spent two months in the Combat Support Hospital in Baghdad. It's the main Army hospital, the most sophisticated facility that we have in Iraq. And when you're wounded and your life is on the line, that's where you're taken. And the Army gave us complete access. We were embedded, and I was really quite surprised when we got there that the army completely facilitated our access to the facility. They're extraordinarily proud of this facility. I've never seen doctors so dedicated. I've never seen miracles like this, and I've never seen horrors like this before.
Amy Goodman: Matt O'Neill, what most stands out for you as you were embedded in this unit in the emergency room?
Matthew O'Neill: For me, it's the relentless pace that the doctors are working under day after day. I mean, we spent two months there, and we came out exhausted and rattled by what we saw. And the doctors who were there, like Dr. Hill, were there for a year, and spending 12 months under those conditions working the enormously hard shifts that they worked is unbelievable.
Amy Goodman: Let's go to Dr. Hill in Alabama. Your response to this film, Baghdad ER? Do you feel it captures what you went through, spending a year in the emergency medical unit at Combat Support Hospital in Baghdad?
Dr. James Hill: Well, I don't think there's any film that can capture a whole year's worth of footage within an hour, but I definitely think that Jon Alpert and Matt O'Neill hit a home run with this production. It was sensational. It gave me flashbacks, and I'm a person who was trained at one of the best trauma centers in the country down in Miami. And I thought I saw everything before I went to Baghdad. And within six hours, the facility showed me that I just saw the beginning, the tip of the iceberg, and after a year, I did feel like I was beat down, I mean, just run over.
Amy Goodman: What was hardest for you, Dr. Hill?
Dr. James Hill: The hardest thing for me, and I believe it was for all the medical providers, was the difficulty in taking care of so many soldiers and at the same time having to take care of the Iraqi people that actually injured them. They'll be in one bed, the Iraqi person that shot four or five soldiers, and three of those soldiers may have died, and we still had to deal with our personal feelings and the medical ethics of taking care of that individual, so they can stand trial. So, we have a very big test of our morality of saving these people that want to hurt us, that are definitely against us, and then also taking care of our American heroes.
Amy Goodman: I want to go to another clip of the HBO documentary.
Maj. Al Weed: So this guy's obviously been shot in several places. He's got some fractures, and we're just looking at his films here. He's got a lot of shrapnel in his legs and stuff.
Army medical personnel: Man, it's a rubber knee.
Army medical personnel: You should feel it. Very unstable fracture. He'll probably end up losing that limb.
Maj. Al Weed: These guys have injuries all over the place, and so you have to prioritize which injuries take precedence. Life over limb.
Army Surgeon: I'm just a good West Texas boy, and back in West Texas, we thought we were seeing some stuff, but out here it's all -- whole 'nother ball game.
Amy Goodman: Another excerpt of Baghdad ER. So, Jon Alpert, what happened? You were embedded. You had the full support of the unit and the Army. They knew you were there, obviously. I mean, the images of just the two of you with your cameras right in there in the surgeries. What happened?
Jon Alpert: The support from the people who were there on the ground, the people in the hospital, the people who every single day are there saving American lives has not wavered at all. Everybody that we've spoken to feels honored by this film, is proud that they're part of it, and they want everybody in the United States to see it. It's been universal. There are people in some offices in the Pentagon that have had objections to this, but it's certainly not anybody who is in Iraq helping to keep Americans alive.
Amy Goodman: Well, what about the top brass? What happened? They originally did support what you're doing, and then at the Washington screening, where many of them were going to be -- can you talk about the memos? Can you talk about what has turned around?
Jon Alpert: There certainly was an attempt at one point from the Secretary of the Army to see if HBO would change this film or alter it, and a phone call was made, and this is very sensitive. All these large media organizations are affected by Congressional legislation. There is a bill going through Congress that you've been talking about on your show that has certain language in it.
It's billions of dollars for Time Warner one way and billions the other way if the language is changed, and when somebody makes a phone call, it's intimidating. And to HBO'S credit -- you know, I've been in this situation before in the first Gulf War. Our reports came back, and the news organizations wouldn't play it. And HBO basically looked back and said, "You know, this is the truth, and it's going on the air." And I'm really proud to be associated with HBO on this, because they didn't buckle.
Amy Goodman: The call that was made, the Secretary of the Army called the president of HBO?
Jon Alpert: Not president. He called a vice president of HBO?
Amy Goodman: Who was it?
Jon Alpert: I don't know. I'm not privy to the conversation, but I do know that he wondered whether certain things in the program could be changed, and HBO said, "Hell, no."
Matthew O'Neill: I think it's important to understand that every person that wears a uniform that's spoken to us, including the top people in the Army, the Chief of Staff of the Army, have nothing but respect for this film, and they've told us directly that they think that it accurately captures the truth of what's happening over there.
Amy Goodman: I want to turn now to another clip from Baghdad ER that Major Hill is in, as well.
Army chaplain: Lord, you brought him to us. We tried everything we could to save his life. But it was not our -- not up to us. Lord, we pray that his life and even his death might be used to hasten peace and end this terrible war.
Dr James Hill: Another crummy day in Baghdad.
Army surgeon: Very young, very young. P.F.C. hasn't been in very long, and the specialist could have been in a few years, but could have come in as a specialist. A lot of young kids over here getting hurt.
Amy Goodman: Major Hill, you were there as the person is dying, saying, "Another crummy day in Baghdad." Your feelings when someone dies?
Dr James Hill: I feel a personal loss, because it's my patient. I take responsibility for each one of my patients, whether they end up in the morgue or they end up in the O.R. and make it back to their families. It feels like a triumph when we get them back to their families, and they give us a call and say, "Thanks a lot. I really appreciate everything you did for me."
Amy Goodman: We're also joined on the phone by Paula Zwillinger. Her son U.S. Marine Lance Corporal Robert Mininger was killed in Iraq June 6, 2005. He was 21 years old. This film has to bring back memories for you... How important do you think it is for people to see these images?
Paula Zwillinger: I think it's very important. It brings the reality of the war into the home. Right now, as we've talked about previously, what is the public really seeing nowadays? They're seeing a paragraph on the second page of a newspaper saying that, you know, we lost X number of lives today, whether it be an I.E.D., whether a tank rolled over, and it's just a little paragraph, and you don't really get the visual image of really what war is about until you see the movie.
It's very easy to read it in the paper. There's no getting around it. It's a little cold. It's not detailed. You know, you never get details in the newspaper, but when you see the documentary it really hits home, because it's reality. What you're going to see is war, and it's the outcome of war, whether it be positive or negative.
Amy Goodman: And your feelings now about the Army seeming to pull back, withdraw support from showing this film, saying it's going to cause post-traumatic stress and even putting pressure on HBO to change this film, to delete scenes?
Paula Zwillinger: Well, you know, I have an opinion and, you know, the more I think about it, as Jon mentioned that, you know, it does have political ties to it, but you know, everybody has to take from this documentary their own feelings, and right now with -- everybody has an opinion about the war. Of course, with the polls and everything showing, you know, where the American public really resides as to our opinion as to whether we should be there or not and how things have changed, I mean, that's an ever ongoing situation, but it definitely has a strong image of what war is about.
Amy Goodman: Paula, Matt and Jon brought you to New York, because they had filmed the death of your son in the Baghdad ER.
Paula Zwillinger: Correct.
Amy Goodman: You, alone, watched this with your husband.
Paula Zwillinger: Yes.
Amy Goodman: What were your feelings?
Paula Zwillinger: Well, you have to understand that I initially had 17 hours where I knew nothing. It was, in essence, a black hole. I had many questions that I thought I would never get the answers to, and five months later, after, you know, losing Bob, Matt called me and told me about the documentary that they were working on, and for me to see this footage again of my son literally puts me at his bedside, and I think that is a precious gift that any parent would take, to literally be there at your son's bedside.
You know, it's -- you have to wonder, timing of it and everything, as to why they were there when Bob came through the door, you know, all those little coincidences and things of that nature, but in reality it has given me peace. It has given me closure. It has answered some of my questions that I've had. It has given me the opportunity to talk with the doctors and the nurses who took care of him. Not every parent gets those answers in a time of war when their child is, you know, injured or killed overseas. And again, you know, I am very fortunate that I have that now, so I look at it as a gift.
Amy Goodman: Jon Alpert?
Jon Alpert: And on our part, it was an honor to meet Paula. It was an honor to meet the doctors who tried to save her son's life and people like Dr. Hill who every single day were working in ways that just made me so proud to be with them. It's my firm belief that the soldiers in uniform want every American to see this film, and they're proud of it, and I'm proud to have been part of it.
Amy Goodman: Do you think it will be shown in Fort Campbell?
Jon Alpert: It was shown in Fort Campbell last night to a very enthusiastic response. We've talked to the soldiers, right? You talked to some of the soldiers.
Matthew O'Neill: I talked to some of the soldiers who saw the film yesterday in Fort Campbell in a closed screening, just for people in the C.A.S.H. who were involved with the film, and one major called me up and she said, "I don't understand what the warnings are about. You guys only showed the tip of the iceberg. They were saying this was gruesome, and you showed nothing."
Comment on this Article
Ten killed in Afghan violence as Pakistan denies training militants
AFP
May 19, 2006
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan - Ten people have been killed in fresh fighting in Afghanistan as security forces carried out clean-up operations after some of the heaviest clashes in months left more than 100 people dead, most of them Taliban.
Neighbouring Pakistan rejected allegations that militants perpetrating violence in Afghanistan were being trained on its soil, a claim made by Afghan President Hamid Karzai and echoed by a top British army officer.
Meanwhile Afghan forces said Friday they were investigating if a man captured in a battle on Wednesday was the famed Taliban commander Mullah Dadullah, one of the most trusted followers of fugitive Taliban leader Mullah Omar.
Taliban and Afghan security forces fought an hours-long battle late Thursday in Ghazni, a southern province that has experienced some of the heaviest insurgency-linked violence since the fall of the Taliban in 2001.
"Eight Taliban were killed and two police were also killed in the fighting on Thursday night," Ghazni governor Sher Alam Ibrahimi said.
Around 100 other people, nearly 90 of them Taliban fighters, have been killed in battles in southern Afghanistan since Wednesday.
The spike in violence, which also saw two suicide blasts claimed by the Taliban Thursday that killed a US national and Afghan civilian, was just weeks before a
NATO-led force of peacekeepers is due to take over from the coalition in southern Afghanistan at the end of July.
A Canadian soldier was also killed in one of the clashes, a battle that erupted in Kandahar province's Panjwayi district on Wednesday when coalition forces were assisting Afghan security forces who had gone to the area after hearing Taliban were massing there.
Around 35 Taliban were captured. Afghan security forces believe one of them may be Dadullah, said to be a mastermind of the insurgency, because of his facial features and because he, like the commander, has one leg, an army commander said on condition of anonymity.
Dozens of reinforcements were meanwhile sent to search for rebels in Musa Qala in Helmand province, scene of the deadliest battle on Wednesday in which about 40 militants were killed, provincial spokesman Moheedin Khan said. Thirteen police were also killed.
The more than 3,000 British troops in Helmand were not directly involved in the fighting although their Harrier fighter planes may have flown over the area as part of ongoing coalition operations, a spokesman said.
The British chief of staff for southern Afghanistan, Colonel Chris Vernon, added his voice to charges often made by Afghan officials that the Taliban leadership is coordinating its campaign from the Pakistani city of Quetta near the Afghan border.
"The thinking piece of the Taliban is out of Quetta in Pakistan. It's the major headquarters," he told the Guardian newspaper. "They use it to run a series of networks in Afghanistan."
Karzai made similar charges on Thursday.
"We know very well that in Pakistani madrassas (Islamic schools) boys are being told to go to Afghanistan for jihad (holy war). They're being told to go and burn schools and clinics," he told a gathering in insurgency-hit eastern Kunar province.
Pakistan rejected the allegations. "There is no truth in this," Pakistani foreign office spokeswoman Tasnim Aslam told AFP.
"Pakistan is not providing training to insurgents and it is not sending them to Afghanistan," she said.
Comment on this Article
Kaboom
"Boom" sparks bomb scare in US Airways plane
Reuters
Thu May 18, 2006
BOSTON - The word "boom" found scrawled in the bathroom of a US Airways airplane during a flight from Washington DC to Boston caused a brief bomb scare on Thursday.
Massachusetts state police with bomb-sniffing dogs swept flight 2024 after it landed in Boston's Logan International Airport but found no explosives, said Ann Davis, a spokeswoman at the federal Transportation Security Administration, or TSA.
"The pilot and command called ahead and notified TSA and the Massachusetts state police who met the aircraft and ultimately swept the aircraft using explosive detection canines," she said.
Davis said the writing was found by flight crew while the plane was in the air.
Comment on this Article
No security guarantee for Iran: US
May 18 2006
AFP
The United States will not give Iran security guarantees in exchange for forfeiting its nuclear programme, state department spokesman Sean McCormack said on Wednesday.
"That's not something from the United States that's on the table," Mr McCormack told reporters when asked about European willingness to present Iran with incentives tied to security.
On Monday, EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana said in Brussels that the European Union was preparing a "bold package, that will contain issues relating to nuclear, economic matters and maybe, if necessary, security matters". But Mr McCormack said the US was not considering offering assurances over security. "I'll let others speak for themselves," Mr McCormack said.
"But from the United States, that's not on the table." He recalled President George W. Bush's oft-repeated position that no option is off the table, including the military option.
Comment: Right here, good readers, we have the real source of the "impasse" on negotiations with Iran. If you are wondering why Iran has rejected several offers put to it by the European trio of UK, France and Germany, then understand this:
At every meeting Iran has presented one central requirement to the European three, one issue which, if it can get a satisfactory answer on, it would be more than willing to give up its nuclear program. The requirement is:
"America must give an assurance that it will not invade Iran or attempt to overthrow the government there".
This is the one "security issue" that the Bush government refused to move on, and in doing so, it renders all diplomacy by European countries null and void. Why would the Iranian government ever agree to anything with the European three if it can be fairly sure that the only outcome that the US will accept is an invasion or ousting of Ahmadinejad and the imposition of a more "friendly" regime, like the entirely neutered government in Iraq?
The facts are clear: The U.S. government is determined to effect "regime change" in Iran, regardless of what Iran offers to do. All of the "diplomacy" and claims by the Bush government that it wants a peaceful resolution to the "Iran crisis" is nothing but a charade in order to acclimatise the world's population to yet another invasion by US forces.
The simple fact is that there is NO "Iranian crisis" other than that which has been deliberately manufactured by the Neocon cabal in Washington in league with their Israeli taskmasters.
Comment on this Article
Ahmadinejad mocks critics of Iran
Thu May 18, 2006
Reuters
TEHRAN - President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Thursday derided foes of Iran's nuclear work as mentally disturbed, ignoring a fresh plea by U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan for all sides in the dispute to calm their rhetoric.
Pursuing a diplomatic effort, European nations want to offer Iran security guarantees as a key incentive to freeze its uranium enrichment program, but U.S. officials say Tehran can expect no non-aggression pledge from Washington.
Iran insists its nuclear program is only to generate electricity for civilian use. But Western countries believe Tehran is seeking a military nuclear capacity as well.
"Those who get sad at the progress and happiness of others are suffering from mental and psychological problems, so they should find a way to cure themselves," the student news agency ISNA quoted Ahmadinejad as saying in a speech.
Since his election last year, the president has frequently needled critics of the Islamic Republic's nuclear program, raising tensions with the United States and the European Union.
"We do not have a fight with anyone, but we will not step back on our absolute rights," declared Ahmadinejad, who on Wednesday rejected an expected EU incentive package as an attempt to persuade Tehran to accept "candy for gold."
Annan urged those involved in negotiations over Iran's nuclear crisis to moderate their language.
"There is also a need to lower the temperature, and refrain from actions and rhetoric that could further inflame the situation," he said in a speech to Tokyo university students.
Britain, France and Germany plan to offer Iran a package expected to include a European light-water reactor and some form of security assurances in return for a halt to enrichment.
The EU trio will discuss their proposal with senior U.S., Russian and Chinese officials in London next week.
EU officials say security guarantees are the major sticking point affecting their ability to produce a credible package.
Comment: Seems like Ahmadinejad's opinion is shared by many others...
Comment on this Article
N.Korea may be preparing missile launch: reports
Thu May 18, 2006
Reuters
TOKYO - North Korea may be preparing to launch a long-range ballistic missile that could reach parts of the United States, Japanese media reports said on Friday, but Japan's government said it did not believe a launch was imminent.
Quoting unidentified South Korean government officials, public broadcaster NHK said satellite pictures showed there have been signs since early this month around a site in northeastern North Korea that pointed to a possible firing in the near future.
Analysts have said, though, that development of a multiple-stage version of a ballistic missile that can take payloads deep into the continental United States is years away.
Japan's top government spokesman, Shinzo Abe, said he could not comment on specific security issues, but added, "At the moment, we do not believe that a launch is imminent."
The latest reports come amid a deadlock in six-party talks aimed at dismantling North Korea's nuclear programs, and ahead of a visit to China next week by the chief U.S. negotiator to the talks that involve the two Koreas, the United States, Japan, Russia and host China.
North Korea has said in numerous official media reports that it is building a nuclear deterrent to counter U.S. hostility. The United States believes that North Korea has one or two nuclear bombs and the ability to build more.
U.S. officials said on Thursday that Washington was open to discussions with North Korea on a peace treaty at the same time as the six-party nuclear talks, but that it must come back to the negotiating table first.
North Korea has long demanded a peace treaty to replace the armistice that ended the 1950-53 Korean war.
Some experts detected in the U.S. stance at least a slight change in emphasis designed to entice Pyongyang back to the table and keep Asian allies from blaming Washington for the moribund diplomacy.
NHK said the missile appeared to be a Taepodong-2, which previous reports have said has a range of more than 6,700 km (4,200 miles), making it capable of hitting Alaska with a light payload.
Quoting Japanese government sources, Japan's Kyodo news agency also said that a launch could be imminent and that the missile was probably a Taepodong-2.
Comment: Major nation with a wierdo leader who has publicly threaten to attack the US in the past now plans missile lauch that could reach the U.S. - US government response? Zilch
Major nation with lots of oil and who could threaten Israel's dominant position in the Middle East, has never publicly threatened to attack the US and has no plans to fire any missiles at anyone - U.S. government response? Draw up plans for invasion, including the use of low yield nuclear devices.
Make sense? Of course it doesn't. That's because you are being lied to and denied accurate information by your government.
Comment on this Article
LM To Upgrade ICBM Reentry System Upgrade
SPX
May 17, 2006
Valley Forge, PA - Lockheed Martin announced Wednesday it has received a $28 million contract modification from Northrop Grumman to provide hardware components for the full-rate production phase of the Minuteman III Intercontinental Ballistic Missile's Safety Enhanced Reentry Vehicle program.
The entire force of Minuteman III missiles is slated to be upgraded with the SERV modifications by 2011. With options, the contract modification's total value over six years will be about $104 million, the company said in a statement.
LM is a principal teammate on the SERV program to Northrop Grumman, the ICBM prime integration contractor for the U.S. Air Force. LM Space Systems, the principal designer and manufacturer of Minuteman III reentry systems since the 1960s, has designed and developed all of the flight hardware and ground support equipment associated with the SERV program.
LM Space Systems will provide the Electronic Command Signal Generator component and associated cabling that interface between the guidance and control system of the Minuteman III missile and the reentry vehicles. The company also will provide the flight hardware for attachment of the reentry vehicles to the missile.
LM's Valley Forge facility produces the Electronic Command Signal Generator, cables, attachment hardware and a complete suite of ground support equipment, as well as associated engineering and logistics support.
With SERV, the Minuteman III is now capable of carrying single Mark 21 reentry vehicles that became available from the recently decommissioned Peacekeeper ICBM missile force. The Mark 21 is a newer design with enhanced safety features.
"The same commitment that has led to success on the earlier phases of the SERV program will help assure a reliable ICBM force through full-rate production and beyond," said Les Lyon, LM Space Systems' director of Air Force reentry programs.
Comment on this Article
Vigilant Eagle Incorporates New Technology For Urban Warfare
SPX
May 18, 2006
Tucson, AZ - Raytheon recently developed a version of the Vigilant Eagle Airport Protection System that employs the fire distribution center (FDC) of the Norwegian Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System (NASAMS).
The NASAMS FDC is a capable, fielded and mature air defense system that can now serve as Vigilant Eagle's command and control (C2) component that operates the airport protection system's electromagnetic countermeasure to divert threatening missiles away from aircraft.
Vigilant Eagle is a ground-based electromagnetic energy system designed to actively protect all aircraft flying in and out of airports from surface-to-air missiles.
"This adds a field-proven command and control component to Vigilant Eagle, offering improved technical maturity to the system," said Mike Booen, vice president of Directed Energy Weapons at Raytheon Missile Systems.
"We have selected an operating command and control system that is successfully used today in both military and urban environments."
The NASAMS FDC has been in military use since 1994 and was recently deployed to protect Washington, D.C., from an airborne attack. In this role, the FDC can track and identify all objects in the capital's airspace, operate with existing civilian systems, discriminate friendly versus hostile objects and recommend appropriate action in the event of an attack.
The U.S. Army's Surface Launched Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile (SLAMRAAM) system also under development by Raytheon builds upon proven NASAMS technology so that the SLAMRAAM system is capable of providing the next generation of command and control for Vigilant Eagle.
SLAMRAAM's FDC functionality is highly similar to that required by Vigilant Eagle's C2 subsystem that must identify, discriminate and engage shoulder-fired missile threats.
By leveraging the existing technology of the NASAMS FDC, Raytheon will be able to adapt the Vigilant Eagle system to an urban environment while dramatically reducing the cost.
All Vigilant Eagle's subsystems have successfully been demonstrated as individual components. With the incorporation of NASAMS FDC, Vigilant Eagle is now immediately available for demonstration in an urban environment.
The FDC currently receives radar and tracking information from a grid of civilian and military radars. Addition of the Vigilant Eagle infrared missile detect and track subsystem would prove interoperability in an urban environment and low false alarm rate.
Vigilant Eagle has been proven effective against the MANPADS threat in field testing. It is a ground-based system that protects all aircraft at an airport, with no additional weight, drag or cost added to airliners. Vigilant Eagle is a mature, cost-effective airport protection solution and is ready for a large-scale demonstration or military or commercial sale.
Comment: "Vigilant Eagle"?!
Comment on this Article
Human Rights
Siege of 1.4 Million Souls in Gaza v International Law
By David Halpin
05/18/06
The 360 square kms of the 'Strip' represent 1.5% of 'mandate' Palestine. Another 3 million Palestinians live in the ineptly named 'West Bank', and in East Jerusalem. This represents about 11% of mandate Palestine. Two thirds of the 1.4 million population in the Gaza Strip are refugees and their offspring. The former had fled southwards from their homes and land in 1948 before and during the Arab-Israeli war. The massacre of Deir Yassin on April 4th was a central cause of the panic that drove that mass migration, as well as overwhelming force of arms. The refugees were given materials for building concrete shelters in 'camps' throughout the Strip. They were cheek by jowl, and cold in winter. In spite of UN resolution 242 and others, they have remained trapped in an utterly oppressive environment. Since the start of the second intifada - 'shaking loose', in September 2000, the standard of living has dropped steadily. Unemployment has been over 50% and is rising quickly now. 78% of the population are living under the poverty line of less than US $ 2.1 per person per day, and 10% of children under the age of five suffer from chronic malnutrition. (1) A study in late 2002 found that 17.5% of children aged 6-59 months suffered from chronic malnutrition 53% of women of reproductive age and 44% of children were found to be anaemic (2)
The Israeli Occupation Force withdrew itself and 8000 colonists last September from the 30% of the Strip they occupied. But the occupation went on. Tight control of the border crossing points has continued, including the one with Egypt - Rafah. Overflights by 'drones', Apache helicopter gunships and F16s persist. The latter were used to cause sonic booms at low levels last autumn. The mental injury to adult and child triggered a petition to the Israeli Supreme Court. (3) The distance from shore within which Palestinians are allowed to fish is set by the occupier, and sometimes banned completely. Thus an important source of high quality protein is limited. A commercial port was being built, but that was bombed along with the airport.
Then in January this year, Hamas received 43% of the votes in scrupulously held elections.(4) Out of this they gained 74 of the 132 seats in the legislature. Hamas, which first came to life in 1987, has been proscribed as a 'terrorist' structure because of its charter and because of its use of suicide bombing from 1993. However, it has maintained a hudna - a truce, with the occupier for 18 months. It has energetically led social, educational projects etc and in Gaza especially. It has widespread support within the populace which wishes to be sumud - steadfast. Ground has been lost in reality and metaphorically; 'not one grain of sand more!'
An already dire state of affairs, was quickly exacerbated. Taxes amounting to $50 million per month that are due to the Palestinian government have been withheld by the State of Israel and financial support by the EU ceased. The latter amounted to 0.5 billion euros in direct and indirect aid per year.
The US has driven this policy of isolation with the clear intention of destabilising the elected government so that it is overturned. There is no money to pay the 150,000 public servants within the 'West Bank' and Gaza strip. This includes doctors, nurses and other health workers. Most have not been paid for two months. There is very little money in circulation. High quality fruit that has been grown for export through Israel has been allowed in only small amounts through Karnai, the commercial checkpoint. No other exports are passing through, and little is coming in. That includes drugs, spare parts for dialysis machines etc. There are no drugs and anaesthetic agents left in the hospitals. Shafa hospital, the main public hospital, was threatened with closure last week. What was to be done for the case of peritonitis? Dr. Moawiya Hassanein at the Ministry of Health (MOH) reported 7-05-06 that Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) prevented 274 patients last month from passing through the Erez checkpoint to receive vital medical treatment in the hospitals of the West Bank and Israel. He added that they suffer from critical diseases such as cancer, leukemia, cardiac diseases etc. They are in need of urgent and advanced medical treatment as well as surgical operations.
To this economic siege has been added the firing of tens of thousands of shells (5) into 'open ground' for over two months by artillery, tanks and ships. These fall into one of the most densely populated areas in the world. The ostensible purpose is to quell the firing of the primitive and unguided Qassam rockets, which have killed thirteen Israeli subjects in the last two years according to B'tselem ( 6). This Israel based organisation states the indiscriminate nature of these weapons makes their firing a war crime, especially when it is close to Palestinian residential areas. It points out the shelling is a disproportionate response and an inappropriate one, given that these rockets are fired from varying positions. There has been considerable loss of life and limb. In the first fortnight of April, 16 were killed. On 16 April 2006, B'Tselem, along with other Israeli and Palestinian human rights organizations, petitioned the High Court of Justice to cancel the IDF order reducing the safety zone for shells fired into the Gaza Strip to only 100 meters from civilian objects. The petitioners argued that the weaponry is not precise and reduction of the safety zone endangers civilian lives. On 10 April, after the range had been reduced, seven-year-old Hadil Ghiban was killed by a shell that struck her house. The blast also injured twelve members of her family. Gaza Community Mental Health Programme (GCMHP) has documented mental injury to children caused by the noise and shock of shell explosions. In addition to these war crimes, extra-judicial assassination of Palestinian resistance leaders occurs without abatement. Often bystanders are involved. This is usually done by rocket from Apache helicopters or unmanned aircraft.
It is unconscionable and unprecedented that nations who are signatories to the Fourth Geneva Convention and of the UN Charter should be instruments in a siege which is causing suffering and loss now, and which will lead to a humanitarian disaster, probably epidemic disease.
Under international humanitarian law, Israel as occupier, must protect the wounded, sick, children, and pregnant women, enable the free passage of medicines and essential foodstuffs, enable medical teams to provide assistance, and not impose collective punishment. Under international human rights law, Israel must respect the right of every person to freedom of movement, to work, to an adequate standard of living, to education, to adequate health care, and to family life. (6)
The Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in the Time of War, states in its first article - "The High Contracting Parties undertake to respect and to ensure respect for the present Convention in all circumstances." In addition, Article 146 of the convention outlines specific obligations of contracting parties, including undertaking legislative procedures, to pursue those suspected of committing serious violations, and to bring them to trial or hand them to a third party interested in bringing them to trial. (7)
The 25 countries of the EU have an additional obligation in that the second article of the EU-Israel Association Agreement states " Relations between the Parties, as well as all the provisions of the Agreement itself, shall be based on respect for human rights and democratic principles, which guides their internal and international policy and constitutes an essential element of this Agreement. (7)
The EU Commissioner, Ms Ferrero-Waldner, is currently negotiating ways to get money into the hospitals and schools without it 'touching' the Hamas dominated Palestinian Authority. AIDA and other NGO groups have spoken strongly against this as being inefficient and destabilising. There are large amounts of money from Arab nations and individuals which are sitting in Cairo and elsewhere because Arab banks fear draconian sanctions by the US if they break the siege.
Comment.
These words from the total of one hundred and twenty-six in the Balfour Declaration on the 2nd of November 1917 would seem to have been hollow:-
'...it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine,..'
International law is clear as to the state obtaining in Gaza today. There is no requirement to negotiate 'solutions', but for these unlawful actions to cease forthwith.
David Halpin FRCS Orthopaedic and trauma surgeon.
Notes
Jan Coffey - Save the Children UK Programme Manager at press conference with 31 other international aid agencies meeting (AIDA) in Jerusalem on 4-05-06.
John Hopkins and Al-Quds Universities for Care International.
Gaza Community Mental Health Programme (GCMHP) and Physicians for Human Rights -Israel (PHR): Joint Press Release 14-11-05
Jimmy Carter: 'Punishing the innocent is a crime' 05/07/06 International Herald Tribune
Conal Urquhart:Observer 7-05-06
B'tselem: http://www.btselem.org/english/Special/20060426_Gaza_Status.asp
Palestinian Committee for Human Rights: http://www.pchrgaza.org/Interventions/poss_april_06.htm
Comment on this Article
Olmert Denies Humanitarian Crisis in Gaza
Friday May 19, 2006
Associated Press
JERUSALEM - Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert denied in an interview published Friday that Palestinians were experiencing a "humanitarian crisis" and said Israel would buy them any medicine they need.
"We wouldn't allow one baby to suffer one night because of a lack of dialysis," Olmert said in an interview with The New York Times.
Claims that the Palestinians face "humanitarian crisis" are "for the time being total propaganda," the Israeli leader said.
The Hamas-led government has been unable to pay salaries of its 165,000 employees - about one-third of Palestinian households - for two months because of international sanctions, including Israel's refusal to transfer $55 million in monthly tax revenues.
The crisis has reportedly put the cash-strapped Palestinian Authority on the verge of complete economic collapse.
Despite is financial straits, Hamas has stubbornly rejected international demands that it recognize Israel, accept past Israeli-Palestinian peace agreements and renounce violence.
The United States and the European Union, which list Hamas as a terrorist organization, are looking for ways to circumvent the Islamic group and get humanitarian assistance to the Palestinians.
Olmert said that any medicines purchased by Israel would be given directly to hospitals, bypassing Hamas, which is sworn to Israel's destruction.
"We will pay, if necessary, out of our own pockets,'' Olmert said.
Olmert's comments came days before he heads to Washington for his first meeting as prime minister with President Bush.
At the White House meeting on May 23, Olmert is expected to present his plan to withdraw from most of the West Bank and draw Israel's final borders, unilaterally if necessary.
But in the newspaper interview, Olmert remained vague about the details of the plan, which would annex the three largest West Bank settlement blocs for Israel.
"What I can talk about at this point is the basic desire to set borders for Israel, to separate from the Palestinians and to create a contiguous territory that will allow the Palestinians to fulfill their national dreams and establish their own independent state alongside the state of Israel,'' Olmert said.
"We have to set borders and to define strict lines of what is right and what is wrong. It's not just a political issue, it's a social issue, it's a cultural issue,'' he said.
The plan, Olmert said, would be closely coordinated with the United States, the United Nations, the European Union and Russia - the four members of the so-called Quartet of Mideast mediators.
In the interview, Olmert appeared to leave the door open for possible talks with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, leader of the Fatah Party that Hamas ousted in January parliamentary elections.
Olmert has said he will not hold peace talks with Abbas while Hamas remains in power, saying the Palestinian leader does not have the ability to implement any agreements.
Abbas, however, still wields significant authority despite his party's election loss, and the United States remains in favor of Israel holding peace talks with the president.
Olmert said Abbas must disarm Hamas and other "terrorist organizations,'' saying such a scenario would not necessarily lead to civil war.
Since Hamas' election victory, Fatah and Hamas have come increasingly close to a civil confrontation. They each sent their armed forces to Gaza streets in recent days, finally leading to a gunfight overnight Friday.
"I have to say, how can any political entity tolerate the existence of many armed groups fighting against each other in the streets?'' Olmert said.
Abbas "has to force Hamas to change, has to impose on Hamas the acceptance of Israel and the recognition of all agreements signed with Israel and the disarming of its militant groups, because if not, then the damage threatening the Palestinian Authority is devastating,'' he said.
Comment: Olmert, as Israeli PM, has authorised the blocking of essential supplies, including medical, from reaching Gaza essential services, yet he has the gall to state that "we wouldn't allow one baby to suffer one night because of a lack of dialysis." Now I want you to think about this. There is categoric proof, published by the mainstream press (although maybe not in America) that many Palestinian children and adults have already died in hospital from a lack of medicine and proper equipment to treat them, yet Olmert blithely claims that this is not the case. You know what that means? He's lying, he obviously does it with ease, and has done it many times before.
Watch this short report by UK television's Channel 4 on the plight of Palestinian hosptial patients, for but one example.
Of course, we should not be surprised that Olmert and his ilk would metaphorically rub salt into the very real wounds of Palestinian children by denying that Israel is causing a humanitarian crisis in Gaza. People like Olmert have presided over the deliberate murder of thousands of innocent Palestinians, including hundreds of tiny children, over the past five years. To Olmert, the life of a Palestinian child is a worthless thing, and this belief allows him to nonchalantly lie to the world's media (who are only too happy to print lies) about the ongoing ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian people from their own land.
Comment on this Article
Egypt holds 314 Islamists for protesting for judges
Reuters
Fri May 19, 2006
CAIRO - The Egyptian authorities are holding 314 members of the Muslim Brotherhood for taking part in protests in support of judicial independence, the opposition Islamist group said on Friday.
Brotherhood deputy leader Mohammed Habib said the 314 had been referred to the public prosecutor on charges including gathering and taking part in illegal demonstrations on Thursday.
Most of the activists who tried to protest in support of the judges were from the Brotherhood, which is by far Egypt's biggest and most organized opposition force.
The Brotherhood had said police detained more than 500 of its members. Those not referred to the prosecutor had been released, Habib said.
The activists were trying to protest in solidarity with two judges who were facing a disciplinary panel for their criticism of abuses in elections last year.
Thousands of riot police deployed in central Cairo on Thursday to block any protests and plainclothes security men beat activists.
The panel on Thursday cleared one of the judges but disciplined the second by withholding his next promotion.
Comment on this Article
Why is Bush cosying up to the Egyptian president while government thugs are beating up demonstrators in Cairo?
Brian Whitaker
May 17, 2006
Gamal Mubarak, son and probable successor of the Egyptian president, visited the US last week, allegedly to renew his pilot's licence. While in Washington, he happened to be passing the White House and decided to drop in and say hello. It's only courteous, and I must try it myself sometime.
Gamal - or Jimmy as his friends call him - had a chat with Steve Hadley, the president's national security adviser, and also met vice-president Dick Cheney and secretary of state Condoleezza Rice.
While he was having his cup of tea with Mr Hadley, President Bush "dropped by to greet Mr Mubarak and convey his best regards to his father, President Hosni Mubarak", according to a White House spokesman.
What exactly was going on here is still a mystery. "Jimmy" holds no government post in Egypt, though he is assistant secretary-general of the ruling party - not the sort of post that usually opens doors to all the highest people in the United States.
But what on earth was President Bush doing, passing on "his best regards" to the Egyptian pharaoh just 24 hours after riot police and government thugs had been beating up demonstrators and journalists in Cairo? That's hardly in line with Mr Bush's "forward strategy of freedom in the Middle East", is it?
The protests in Cairo were sparked by government attempts to remove two judges who dared to speak out against the widespread fraud in last year's parliamentary elections. The judges, Mahmud Mekki and Hisham Bastawisi, wrote an article about it for Comment Is Free earlier this month.
The sad news today is that Judge Bastawisi suffered a heart attack this morning - quite possibly brought on by the strain of events - and is now in hospital. His exact medical condition is unclear.
The email informing me of Judge Bastawisi's illness also included a document circulated by "an anonymous group of Egyptians who seek to raise awareness over the judges crisis". It's long, but I think it's worth quoting in full:
Judges Crisis Background
Current events in Egypt represent an escalation in the conflict between a government intent on domesticating the judiciary, in order to expand the executive's dominance in political life, and the judiciary's attempts to ensure their independence and ability to act as a check on executive power.
In recent years, the judiciary has become an important actor in efforts to maintain the separation between government branches. In June 2000, Egypt's Supreme Constitutional Court passed a landmark ruling that all elections must be supervised by judges. Then, in 2003, a decision by the Court of Cassation (the Highest Appeals court) null-and-voided parliamentary electoral results for a high-ranking executive official. In response, the government has pursued a number of strategies to isolate and intimidate proponents of judicial independence.
The Court of Cassation's president, who simultaneously represents the executive as the head of the presidential-appointed Supreme Judicial Council (SJC), has sent threatening letters to outspoken judges. The presidency is also implicated through appointments of known pro-executive judges to high positions throughout Egypt's court system as well as a presidential decree that increased the retirement age of bench judges from 66 to 68 (against the will of the Egyptian Judges Club). More recently, the executive drafted a new judiciary law that is scheduled to be passed by parliament before the current session ends in June. The bill, which was not subject to any consultations with judges, is rumored to ignore the demands of the Egyptian Judges Club for greater independence and to further accelerate the process of the executive's appropriation of the judiciary. The source of the current protests is the attempt to dismiss two judges (Hisham al-Bastawisi and Mahmoud Mekky) who have publicly argued for the autonomy of the judiciary from the executive branch.
The SJC has begun "competency" investigations into the two individuals on charges that they reported cases of election rigging in the country's three most recent elections last year, spoke to the media about political affairs, and 'disparaged' the executive-affiliated SJC. Such investigations are unprecedented in Egyptian history. At least five more judges have been formally named and could be investigated in future cases. The response of Egyptian society and the international community is crucial in determining the fate of Egypt's independent judges.
The executive has feigned all responsibility and refused to interfere in this matter by declaring that it is solely an internal judicial matter. This could not be further from the truth. Rather, these measures represent a culmination of the executive's recent attempts to control the judiciary. What is at stake is the future autonomy of an already embattled judiciary to assert itself as a check to executive power and will. At the core of this struggle is the state's attempt to nationalize the judiciary as its central legitimacy tool.
The Egyptian Judges Club has sought negotiation and compromise measures, which have all been rebuffed by the executive and led to an unavoidable showdown for control, power, and the future. The regime is determined, at seemingly any cost, to eliminate the independent judges from state ranks so that future governance - and an impending transition of presidential power - is unobstructed and declared legitimate by the judicial branch. This, in effect, has turned the situation into a zero-sum game in which the regime must increase the use of its repressive apparatus through detention and beatings of peaceful demonstrators, who are standing in solidarity with the judge's demand for autonomy.
The two judges currently under investigation are scheduled to appear in front of the SJC-appointed disciplinary board in Cairo on Thursday 18th of May. The judges say they will appear before no such body until the security forces are removed from the streets and nearly 400 activists - from all political trends - that have been detained since 24 April - are released.
Demonstrations, which have previously been met by severe repression and violence by the security services, are scheduled across the country. Yesterday, the Interior Ministry issued a statement banning "unlawful" protests, which is being understood as a threat of further escalation against demonstrators.
The interest of ordinary citizens in the judges is at unprecedented levels as the executive pursues its unprecedented measures against them. The judges - particularly those under investigation - have been catapulted into legendary hero status. The current events in Egypt are no mere crackdown on political parties, extra-parliamentary protest movements, or Islamist-leaning organizations - it is about the very nature of future governance.
A general protest, led by the judges, is scheduled for the 25th of May to mark the ongoing struggle between the executive and judiciary as well as to remember the one-year anniversary of the flawed referendum that amended the Egyptian constitution. These are occasions for those that care about the future of Egypt and the democratic rights of all to get involved.
Comment on this Article
Russia becomes unlikely human rights guardian
By Anne Penketh in Strasbourg
The Independent
19 May 2006
A confident, even swaggering, Russia takes the helm of Europe's foremost human rights body today, ready to deflect accusations that it has failed to live up to the standards set by the institution it will lead for the next six months.
Russia's chairmanship of the Council of Europe, whose three pillars are human rights, the rule of law and open democracy, comes just two months before President Vladimir Putin hosts the G8 summit in St Petersburg and will place the Kremlin's commitment to the core values of the West under fresh scrutiny.
In recent months, concerns have been raised about Russia's moves to shut down non-governmental organisations, its curbing of the media and its imprisonment of Russia's richest man just when he was becoming a political rival of Mr Putin. The President has, meanwhile, developed strong links with the hardline authoritarian leaders of Belarus and Uzbekistan.
In Chechnya, according to Human Rights Watch researcher Anna Neistat who visited the restive Russian republic three weeks ago, the pro-Moscow leader Ramzan Kadyrov has taken torture to a new level as he seeks to crush resistance.
But the West's dependency on Russian energy has radically changed the balance of power, leaving European governments with less political leverage at a time when Russia has already used its gas-powered influence over the West-leaning former Soviet states of Ukraine and Georgia.
Asked yesterday how Russia would respond to Western concerns about the level of its commitment to democracy and human rights as Council of Europe chairman, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said: "I believe our common commitment to democracy will certainly be reconfirmed during the six months of the Russian chairmanship." But he made it clear that, for Russia, the West does not have the monopoly on democratic values.
"I do not believe the West would be interested in seeing the Council of Europe become a place where just one out of many models of democracy would be made a criteria to judge each and every other state," he said. "The world is much more complicated. It's not black and white and attempts to approach the whole problems in black and white manner has been made in the past few years. And they're not working."
His comments come after President Putin issued a muscular rebuttal of criticism from the US Vice-President Dick Cheney who - while in Lithuania - accused Russia of bullying its neighbours, reversing the democratic gains of the past decade and trampling on Russians' rights.
The secretary general of the Council of Europe, Terry Davis, acknowledged that sometimes, "people in the West see the Council of Europe as a lecture room to give lectures to the people of eastern Europe, and naturally that is resented".
Even so, Russia's first chairmanship, which has come about through alphabetical order, has raised eyebrows in Strasbourg, where the council's largest member stands accused of having failed to implement key demands, including judicial reforms and ending the culture of impunity for security forces in Chechnya.
Russia, which joined the Council of Europe 10 years ago, remains the only one of 46 member states not to have abolished the death penalty completely, even though a moratorium was put in place in 1998.
But diplomats see the next six months as an opportunity and a challenge for the Kremlin. "I think it's an opportunity for them to show they adhere to the core values," said the Polish ambassador to the Council of Europe, Piotr Switalski. "Particularly now there are so many critical voices and doubting governments, to show they are on the right course."
Russia's first initiatives will be announced today. They will include a sports conference in Moscow in November, and an inter-faith conference in Niznhy Novgorod in September to which Orthodox Christians, Catholics and Buddhists will be invited.
Strong-arm methods
Chechnya
"Torture is simply rampant," according to Human Rights Watch researcher Anna Neistat, who spent two weeks in Chechnya where she interviewed more than 70 victims and relatives. "They all say it's worse than a war." Hostage-takings of the relatives of Chechen fighters are common in an attempt to obtain a surrender. It is not known how many civilians have "disappeared".
Democracy
Media and opposition parties are muzzled. Many non-governmental organisations have been shut down. This week, the lower house gave preliminary approval to a bill that would strip MPs of their seats if they change parties. Critics say it marked a final step to create a "rubber-stamp" parliament.
Economic bullying
Russia cut off gas to Ukraine last winter and has started a trade war with Georgia by banning imports of wine and mineral water. Both republics are attempting to loosen their ties to Moscow.
Comment on this Article
Beslan victims' relatives allege cover-up
18/05/2006
IOL
Relatives of the victims of the Beslan school hostage massacre today accused Russian authorities of covering up the facts as the judge read the verdict against the sole alleged surviving attacker for a third day, describing horrific conditions inside the school.
The victims' family members said they believed Nur-Pashi Kulayev was guilty but they expressed frustration that the year-long trial had failed to reveal all those responsible for the 331 deaths - more than half of them children - in the small southern Russian town.
Judge Tamerlan Aguzarov, who has already indicated Kulayev's guilt as he sums up the case against him, read victims' accounts of the hostage-takers growing increasingly nervous and aggressive as the three-day crisis in September 2004 wore on.
By the second day, they were refusing to let the more than 1,200 captives leave the stiflingly hot sports hall where they were held to go to the bathroom.
They denied the hostages water, and many resorted to drinking urine to try to slake their thirst.
Most victims died on the third day in a hail of gunfire and explosions that erupted after one of the bombs the attackers rigged at the school went off, and security forces rushed to free hostages.
"I still have not learned the truth from the trial. I wanted to know who caused the first explosions and why my husband was killed. There is no such information and I think the authorities are purposely covering it up," said Olga Kravchenko, 74, whose husband had worked as a janitor at the school.
"This is a virtual show and it is obvious that the authorities are trying to cover things up in the Kulayev trial," said Emma Betrozova, 43, who lost her husband and two sons in the siege.
Aguzarov read a statement to prosecutors from a former hostage he identified only by her last name, Atayeva, who said that Kulayev had beaten her with the butt of an automatic rifle and had refused to allow her son to drink, the only testimony so far of Kulayev's direct role in abusing the hostages.
"There is no doubt of Kulayev's guilt, because he was among the rebels, but there is no witness testimony that he shot anyone," said Murat Kaboyev, member of a public commission established to investigate the tragedy.
"But of course Kulayev is guilty," Kaboyev said, adding that the defendant had been seen among the attackers in a room where about 20 men were shot dead early in the crisis.
Prosecutors have called for the death penalty for Kulayev, who has admitted to participating in the September 2004 attack along with some 30 other heavily-armed militants but denied killing anybody.
It was unclear, however, whether Kulayev could be executed, since Russia imposed a moratorium on the death penalty when it joined the Council of Europe eight years ago. Kaboyev said the court would need a stronger case against Kulayev to sentence him to death.
Ella Kesayeva, the leader of the Voice of Beslan activist group, said she was worried that once Kulayev's trial was over, authorities would drag out a broader probe supposed to establish all the circumstances surrounding the tragedy, not just Kulayev's role.
That investigation has been extended until July 1.
"There was premeditated murder of people by the Russian special services in Beslan," she alleged. "This is not (just) negligence.
"When people ran to the cafeteria after the initial explosions, militants put them in the windows as shields and Russian troops killed them. But nothing has been said about this in the trial," Kesayeva said.
She also said that her group had asked prosecutors to provide a photograph of a militant who was alleged to have helped carry out the car bombing that killed a senior police official and six other people in the neighbouring region of Ingushetia.
Ingush police spokesman Nadir Yevloyev said investigators suspected a militant named Ali Taziyev was one of two attackers involved in Wednesday's attack.
He refused to confirm or deny allegations that Taziyev, reportedly a former Ingush policeman turned rebel, had been among the Beslan attackers.
The conflicting reports on Taziyev underlined lingering suspicions that some of the Beslan attackers may have escaped police cordons in spite of the authorities' declaration that all except for Kulayev were killed.
Kaboyev said many different numbers of hostage-takers had come up in witness testimony during the trial.
"To this day we do not know," he said.
Comment on this Article
Around the World
Sarkozy defends immigration law, defies protests
AFP
May 18, 2006
BAMAKO - French Interior Minister Nicholas Sarkozy on Thursday defended his new immigration bill on a visit to Mali aimed at heading off strong criticism over its tough measures.
Despite demonstrations in Mali before his arrival late Wednesday, and last weekend in France, Sarkozy insisted the law posed "no risk of controversy."
Hundreds of people demonstrated Thursday in Mali against his visit.
In the capital Bamako, about 100 demonstrators staged a sit-in outside the French embassy and waved placards accusing Sarkozy of racism and xenophobia and calling for "respectful cooperation".
"He is not in occupied territory, we refuse to be considered as animals," said youth leader Ousmane Keita.
Passed Wednesday by France's lower house of parliament, the draft law promotes "selected immigration", sets tougher conditions for immigrants coming to France by favouring skilled workers, and limits opportunities for migrants to reunite with their families.
It also eliminates automatic citizenship for long-term foreign residents.
"It's a reasonable text," Sarkozy said. "There are no alternative suggestions," he added, claiming three quarters of French people supported it.
There are tens of thousands of Malian immigrants in France, and Sarkozy's visit to Mali, after which he travels on to Benin, is designed to discuss the immigration question
Ahead of his arrival, hundreds of people joined political leaders in a protest march in the Malian capital Bamako organised by the Association of Expelled Malians.
Police blocked marchers from reaching the French embassy at the end of the protest, which was attended by members of the African Solidarity for Democracy and Independence (SADI).
SADI, which counts six members of parliament among its members, has said Sarkozy's visit was a "provocation" and described the law as "fundamentally racist".
Earlier in the week, 21 Malian lawmakers called for the cancellation of Sarkozy's trip, which they characterized as a "pure provocation" due to the timing of the parliamentary vote.
Malian opponents of Sarkozy's law planned further action Thursday, including a sit-in in front of a hotel where he was expected to speak on French-African relations.
Sarkozy said the protests were having little impact on his visit.
"Otherwise, I do not think (Malian) President Amadou Toumani Toure would receive me for lunch" on Thursday, he said.
He told journalists that he planned to defuse the situation during his visit, after already being branded a "racist" by the Malian daily Info-Matin ahead of his visit.
There are some 45,000 legal immigrants from Mali in France, and around the same number of illegal Malian immigrants, according to interior ministry figures.
These immigrants send home some EUR 180 million a year, the ministry said. French development aid to Mali totals EUR 210 million.
Sarkozy arrived in Bamako late Wednesday after the bill was passed earlier in the day by the lower house. It will be debated in June in the upper house of parliament before becoming law.
A poll published in France's Le Figaro newspaper said 76 percent of right-wing French voters and 71 percent of voters on the left supported the text.
However between 11,200 people, according to police, and 35,000, according to organisers, demonstrated against the bill on Saturday in Paris.
On his third trip to sub-Saharan Africa since 2002, Sarkozy is due to hold discussions on immigration, development projects and France's Africa-related policies with leaders in Mali and Benin.
He was due to head to Benin later Thursday for a visit lasting until Friday.
Comment on this Article
I was the mystery informant: EADS executive
AFP
May 18, 2006
PARIS - Jean-Louis Gergorin, vice-president of the European defence company EADS, admitted Thursday that he is the mystery informant who launched the Clearstream dirty tricks scandal currently rocking the French government.
Gergorin, a 60-year-old foreign affairs expert who is a former associate of Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin, told Le Parisien newspaper that in mid-2004 it was he who sent a judge a list of alleged account holders at the Clearstream bank of Luxembourg.
In the last three weeks the scandal has dominated France's political agenda, with Villepin accused of setting up a secret investigation into claims that his arch-rival Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy benefited from illegal commissions paid via Clearstream.
The claims turned out to be false, but Sarkozy believes he was the victim of a smear campaign ahead of the 2007 presidential elections in which he is a leading candidate.
In a long interview with Le Parisien, Gergorin set out his version of the extraordinarily complex affair - tracing his interest in Clearstream back to the March 2003 death of his former boss, media and armaments tycoon Jean-Luc Lagardère.
Convinced that the 75-year-old Lagardère - who died of a rare disease - might have been murdered, Gergorin "had the idea of seeing if there was any unusual interest in Lagardère shares in the weeks leading to his death."
Gergorin said he had a secret source able to tap into the computer records at Clearstream, a bank which was aleady under suspicion as an alleged conduit for international money-laundering. The bank vehemently denies the allegation.
In late 2003 the source sent Gergorin a list of 70 alleged Clearstream account holders, who included several French politicians and senior civil servants as well as "Russian billionaires and mafia members". Sarkozy's name did not feature on the list, he said.
Gergorin said he tried to interest the government in the list - which he thought to be an important lead in the fight against international crime and terrorism - and eventually arranged a meeting with Villepin, who was then foreign minister, in January 2004.
This meeting was also attended by spymaster General Philippe Rondot, who was charged there with setting up a secret enquiry into the list.
In an important piece of evidence, Gergorin said that Sarkozy's name as a possible account holder was not brought up at the meeting. This corroborates Villepin's version of events, which is that he did not order an enquiry that specifically targeted Sarkozy.
According to Gergorin, Sarkozy's name appeared in a subsequent list of Clearstream account holders sent by his source in April 2004.
Frustrated that Rondot's enquiry did not appear to be making headway, Gergorin decided to approach judge Renaud Van Ruymbeke, who was investigating illegal commissions paid in the sale of French warships to Taiwan.
"I turned down Van Ruymbeke's proposal that I make a formal submission (of the 70 names) ... so it was arranged that a summary of my information would be communicated to him. This was the anonymous letter of May 4, the first," Gergorin said.
A second list was sent to Van Ruymbeke in June 2004, this one bearing the names of Sarkozy and other politicians. But Gergorin refused to confirm whether he had also sent this one, saying he would reserve his comments for the judges looking into the affair.
Gergorin took leave of absence from EADS last week in order to defend himself in the Clearstream scandal.
Comment on this Article
One billion people have Internet access
AFP
May 18, 2006
More than one billion people in the world have access to the Internet, with a quarter of them with broadband, or high-speed connections, according to a survey.
The report by the firm eMarketer said the milestone of one billion was reached in late 2005, and that nearly 250 million households had broadband connections.
The firm estimates that of these people, 845 million use the Internet regularly.
The United States is still number one in terms of numbers of Internet users with 175 million, and broadband households, 43.7 million.
In terms of regions, however, Asia-Pacific has the largest number (315 million) and is the largest broadband center containing nearly 40 percent of the world's broadband households.
Latin America was the fastest growing broadband region worldwide, achieving 70 percent subscriber growth, the survey found. But it had just 70 million people online.
Europe had 233 million people online and 55.2 million broadband households. China had 111 million users and 34.1 million households with fast connections.
The report was based on a number of industry surveys and data from the International Telecommunication Union and Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development.
Comment on this Article
China to build six more nuclear reactors in southeast
AFP
Friday May 19, 2006
China is set to build six nuclear reactors in the southeastern province of Fujian, in the latest plank of the country's ambitious nuclear power program.
State-run energy provider China National Nuclear Corporation and China Huadian Group, one of China's top five power producers, has signed an agreement to build six reactors of 1,000-megawatt capacity, China Daily reported.
The report did not say when the construction will begin or be completed, nor did it give the total investment involved.
Energy hungry China is trying to diversify its energy mix by pushing the use of nuclear and renewable energy sources, such as wind and solar power.
China's current nuclear generating capacity is 8,700 megawatts, just under two percent of total output.
With the nation's largest nuclear power generator, the Tianwan plant in Jiangsu province, due to come on line by the end of this year, China's nuclear power capacity will be over 9,100 megawatts, earlier press reports said.
China's national energy strategy has set a target for the country's nuclear power generation capacity to reach 40,000 megawatts, or four percent of China's total power output, by 2020.
China currently has nine nuclear reactors in operation, the China Daily said. To reach the target, China has to build at least one nuclear power station with a capacity of 1,800 megawatts per year.
The ambitious plan is being implemented in an effort to meet rising energy demand and build up alternatives to massive coal use, which is causing serious air pollution, acid rain and killing thousands of miners.
Comment on this Article
Friend left as deposit at German gas station
Reuters
Thu May 18, 2006
BERLIN - A German woman left her friend as a deposit at a gas station because she did not have enough cash to pay for her petrol, police said Wednesday.
"She didn't have enough money to pay the bill, so her friend stayed behind as a human deposit while she went to withdraw cash," said a spokesman for police in the southern town of Muenchberg. "Unfortunately, the woman did not return."
Two hours after the 20-year-old driver left, the gas station called the police, who interrogated the stranded "deposit" before releasing her. Police are investigating the driver on suspicion of fraud.
Comment on this Article
Nature's Fury
Death Toll From Chanchu Reaches 63
By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN
Associated Press
Fri May 19, 2006
SHANGHAI, China - The Asia-wide death toll from Tropical Storm Chanchu rose to 63 on Friday, with at least 27 fisherman still missing at sea as the tempest moved offshore again after battering southern China.
The storm has cut a path of destruction across at least four countries and territories around the South China sea since it rose to typhoon strength and tore through the Philippines last weekend, killing 37.
Chanchu was downgraded from a typhoon on Thursday as it reached China's heavily-populated southern coast, but was still powerful enough to cause landslides and flooding and force the evacuation of more than 1 million people.
Storm-induced landslides and building collapses killed 15 people in Fujian province and left four missing, the provincial Water Resources Department said on its Web site.
Another eight perished in neighboring Guangdong province, it said, including a boy and girl aged five and six and their 68-year-old grandfather who were crushed when their home collapsed.
Taiwan and northern Vietnam were also pummeled by the storm's powerful winds and lashing rain, though it largely bypassed the port and financial center of Hong Kong.
Officials in Vietnam said 27 fisherman were missing since Thursday after three boats sank in Chinese waters during the storm.
In Taiwan, two women were swept to their deaths by floods in the southern region of Pingtung.
High waves also swept away three 17-year-old male students swimming in Japan's southern Okinawa island chain, leaving one dead and another missing, said coast guard spokesman Shoji Kawabata. The third was rescued.
The storm was headed toward northern Japan on Friday. It would continue to weaken but bring heavy rain to Japan and possible flooding in northern Honshu island on Saturday, forecasting service Weather Underground said.
Chanchu caused scores of homes to be flooded in China, and officials moved more than 1 million people to schools and the homes of relatives in Guangdong and Fujian provinces. Nearly 100,000 ships were ordered to return to harbor, Xinhua said.
Fujian estimated storm damage at $480 million, including damage to 9,600 homes and 2,116,658 acres of crops. There was no immediate word on damage estimates in Guangdong.
Television news showed violent waves pounding sea walls along China's coast. Reports said winds and rain damaged dikes, uprooted trees and brought down buildings along the Guangdong coast.
A Chinese rescue vessel deployed in the South China Sea saved eight sailors from a stranded Belgian-flagged freighter, then came to the aid of 24 Vietnamese fishermen, the official China Daily reported.
The rescue ship, Dejin, reached the 1,000-ton Pompei Thursday afternoon, a day after the freighter's engines failed off the Pratas, or Dongsha, islands, the newspaper said, citing the government's Salvage and Rescue Bureau. After bringing the crew on board and towing the Pompei, the Dejin went to help the Vietnamese, giving them food, fuel and water, the newspaper said.
Chanchu, which means "pearl" in Cantonese, headed out to sea shortly before midnight Thursday, just southeast of the commercial hub of Shanghai, which on Friday enjoyed unusually fresh breezes and clear skies.
T.C. Lee, an official with the Hong Kong Observatory, said Chanchu was the "most intense" typhoon on record to strike in the South China Sea in May, an early month in the annual cyclone season.
Lee said the early arrival of the year's first typhoon does not necessarily portend an unusually active storm season, and said the observatory forecast an average year of six to eight typhoons affecting the territory.
But a Chinese meteorologist quoted by Xinhua, Ding Yihui of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, said the storm appeared to be a sign of increasingly extreme weather events, a phenomena some scientists have linked to rising global temperatures.
Comment on this Article
Ecuadoreans evacuate as Tungurahua volcano spews
Reuters
May 19, 2006
Ecuadorean peasants evacuated the area around the Tungurahua volcano as it spewed smoke and ashes high into the sky yesterday. Scientists said that in the past week, the central Ecuador volcano has increased its activity, with repeated explosions of volcanic gas and ashes.
"(We've had) Various explosions that are accompanied with very important emissions of great altitude, up to 4km high, with an important load of ashes," said Geophysical Institute spokesman Patricio Ramon. Authorities have declared a cautionary yellow alert zone around the 5.029-metre high volcano, 160km south of the capital city of Quito.
So far, officials say over 400 Ecuadoreans have been evacuated to temporary shelters. The Tungurahua volcano has been active since 1999 and has alternated periods of intense activity with some of relative calm. -
Comment on this Article
Earthquake Rattles Town Near St. Louis
May 18, 2006
OLYMPIAN VILLAGE, Mo. -- A 2.9-magnitude earthquake rattled residents but caused no injuries or significant damage Thursday morning in parts of Jefferson County, south of St. Louis.
The quake was centered near the towns of Olympian Village and De Soto, said Julie Martinez, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Society's Earthquake Center in Golden, Colo. It occurred at 8:01 a.m.
Some residents reported hearing a loud noise, raising concerns about an explosion. But Martinez said reports like that are common, even with small quakes.
"It's just the sound from the ground moving," Martinez said. "A lot of times it is mistaken for an explosion."
Comment on this Article
Water Shortages In Northeast Linked To Human Activity
SPX
May 18, 2006
Rockland County, NY - Recent water shortages in Rockland County, N.Y., reveal an increasing mismatch between water demand and supply following rapid growth in the Northeast during period of abnormally high precipitation.
With the summer approaching, new research has shown that recent water emergencies in the Northeast have resulted from more than just dry weather. Instead, researchers from The Earth Institute at Columbia University found droughts had more direct, human causes. The result is a condition known as demand-driven drought that may catch more water managers and residents off-guard in coming years.
The study, which appeared in a recent issue of Journal of the American Water Resources Association was conducted by Bradfield Lyon at the International Research Institute for Climate and Society (IRI), Nicholas Christie-Blick at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and Yekaterina Gluzberg from the Department of Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology.
They examined precipitation variability and drought in Rockland County, N.Y. over the last 100 years and found that factors such as development, population growth, and failing water supply systems played as significant a role as climate in creating the water emergencies.
"The balance between water demand and supply is now so finely tuned that even a few months of lower than normal precipitation is sufficient to trigger an emergency," said Christie-Blick. "Rockland County is ill-prepared to deal with the severe drought conditions that we know recur on a scale of tens to hundreds of years."
Located 24 miles northwest of New York City, Rockland County is in many respects a typical suburban county in the Northeast. In a landscape dotted with lakes and ponds, traversed by the Ramapo River and bordered by the Hudson River, the region might appear to be highly resilient to drought. However, between 1995 and 2002, the county declared three drought emergencies, the most recent of which one county official called "the worst on record."
Research shows, however, that, although unusually dry weather contributed to these emergencies, their severity indicates an increasing imbalance between water demand and supply driven largely by human factors.
"There were certainly droughts during the three recent water emergencies, but by several measures, they were far from exceptional," said Lyon. "In terms of accumulated rainfall deficit and duration, the drought from the 1960s was larger by a factor of three than what we've seen more recently."
By examining tree-ring and rain-gauge records, the researchers found that the most rapid increase in the population of Rockland County occurred over a 30-year period that was relatively wet for the region. Another significant cause was that the aging water supply system had not been upgraded to keep pace with growing demand, thus making it more vulnerable to failure, even within the normal range of climate conditions.
The result is that the criteria for declaring a drought emergency-when water demand is anticipated to exceed supply-are expected to be met in Rockland County with increasing frequency, a situation that is likely to become more common throughout the Northeast.
The researchers' findings also reinforce the fact that, instead of pointing to climate forces that are beyond local control, groups most concerned with water demand, such as community planners and developers, and those that focus on supply, such as water resource managers, must work together more effectively to come up with solutions.
"It's going to require taking a hard look at the options and deciding you either have to increase your supply or deal with the demand side of the equation to keep things in balance," said Lyon.
The Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, a member of The Earth Institute at Columbia University, is one of the world's leading research centers examining the planet from its core to its atmosphere, across every continent and every ocean. From global climate change to earthquakes, volcanoes, environmental hazards and beyond, Observatory scientists provide the basic knowledge of Earth systems needed to inform the future health and habitability of our planet.
The International Research Institute for Climate and Society (IRI), part of the Earth Institute at Columbia University, aims to enhance society's ability to understand, anticipate and manage the impact of seasonal climate fluctuations, so as to improve the quality of life and the environment. From environmental monitoring and forecasting to climate-related risk management tools and practices in water resources, public health, agriculture, and food security, IRI and its partners focus on opportunities to build capacity for bringing climate information into regional planning and decision-making.
Comment on this Article
Fla. Officials Capture Killer Alligator
AP
Thu May 18, 2006
OCALA NATIONAL FOREST, Fla. - Wildlife officers captured an alligator Thursday that they believe fatally attacked a Tennessee woman while she snorkeled in a secluded recreation area.
Trappers caught the 11-foot-4-inch, 407-pound alligator on a baited hook in Juniper Creek, near Lake George, where Annemarie Campbell was attacked, state wildlife officials said.
"I think it's a great relief because my experience of alligators is that, once they kill, they kill again, and I don't want someone else to go through what I went through," the woman's mother, Dawn Marie Yankeelov of Louisville, Ky., told the Ocala Star-Banner for Friday's editions.
A forensic tooth expert has to confirm that the bite marks on Campbell match the gator's teeth, said Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission spokeswoman Kat Kelley.
People with Campbell beat the animal until it released her body. The captured alligator bore scratch marks on its snout and a stab wound in its right eyelid, officials said.
Campell, 23, of Paris, Tenn., died from drowning and multiple blunt-force injuries, according to an autopsy.
Her death was the third fatal alligator attack in Florida this month. The state had 17 confirmed fatal attacks by the animals in the previous 58 years.
Comment on this Article
Monetary Mayhem
Greenspan says US housing boom is over
Reuters
Thu May 18, 2006
NEW YORK - Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said on Thursday that the "extraordinary" boom in the U.S. housing market in recent years is over.
"This has been quite an extraordinary boom," Greenspan told a Bond Market Association dinner in New York. "The boom is over. I think we can safely say that with a strong degree of confidence."
Greenspan said there was a "high degree of froth in the system," and that it was clear that home equity extraction and the turnover of home sales was waning.
He said it wasn't clear how this will impact the notoriously resilient U.S. consumer.
Similarly, the former Fed chief said it was too soon to say how the latest rise in energy prices will impact consumer spending or feed through to inflation.
He noted that up to now profits for firms outside the financial and energy sectors have not been hurt by higher energy costs.
The ability of U.S. industry to adapt to challenging circumstances and maintain its productivity levels have shielded the economy from these developments in the past, he added.
"And I suspect that is going to continue," Greenspan said.
On Wednesday, data showing an unexpectedly large rise in U.S. consumer prices in April spooked financial markets. The blue chip Dow Jones industrial average suffered its biggest point drop since 2003, while European bourses also plunged on concerns the Fed would need to raise interest rates more to stem inflation.
U.S. Treasury prices also fell, though they rebounded strongly on Thursday in response to signs of slowing employment growth in the U.S. manufacturing sector. Stocks were down again on Thursday.
Overall consumer prices have risen 3.5 percent in the last 12 months, while the core consumer price index, which excludes the effects of volatile food and energy costs, is up 2.3 percent in the year.
The Fed has raised interest rates in 16 consecutive meetings since June 2004, but traders and analysts have had mixed views over whether the Fed would tighten again in June, raising its benchmark rate to 5.25 percent, or pause.
Greenspan departed from the Fed on January 31. He was the second-longest serving chairman in the Fed's 92-year history, having served more than 18 years.
Greenspan was succeeded by Ben Bernanke.
Comment on this Article
Rumsfeld Seeks Extra Funds for War Bills
By ROBERT BURNS
The Guardian
Wednesday May 17, 2006
WASHINGTON (AP) - With war bills to pay, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld is calling on Congress to pass President Bush's request for an extra $65 billion to cover costs in Iraq and Afghanistan this year.
His scheduled appearance Wednesday before the Senate Appropriations defense subcommittee was his first public testimony on Capitol Hill since retired generals issued a series of calls for Rumsfeld to resign earlier this spring. Rumsfeld, with strong public backing by Bush, appears to have weathered that storm.
It also was Rumsfeld's first opportunity to comment on Bush's announcement Monday that he is sending 6,000 National Guard troops to the U.S. southern border to support the federal Border Patrol. The administration has not said how much it expects that to cost, nor has it set a hard time limit on the assistance.
Although the Guard troops will be operating under state governors' control, the cost will be paid by the federal government.
Pentagon press secretary Eric Ruff said Tuesday that Rumsfeld planned to tell the appropriations panel that Iraq has entered a "hopeful new phase'' following a successful election last December and progress in recent weeks toward assembling a unity government.
"We will be talking about defense spending in terms of how we view the global war on terror and why there is reason for optimism in Iraq,'' Ruff said.
Rumsfeld has stressed several times in recent weeks the importance of getting congressional approval for the extra $65 billion in war costs. About half of that is for the cost of conducting the fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq; about $5.9 billion is for developing Iraqi and Afghan security forces, and $1.9 billion is for countering the threat posed by roadside bombs, which are a leading killer of U.S. troops.
The government has so far provided about $368 billion for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and global operations against terrorism, according to the Congressional Research Service, Congress' nonpartisan research arm. That includes military, foreign aid, reconstruction and veterans spending.
That does not include the $65 billion the administration has requested for the rest of this year, or the $50 billion it has proposed for the beginning of next year.
Of the money approved so far, the research service estimates that $261 billion was for Iraq and $77 billion for Afghanistan and worldwide operations against terrorism, with most of the rest for improving security at U.S. military bases.
Comment on this Article
Hope for the best, expect the worst
UK Guardian
May 17, 2006
We need an orderly transition to a lower dollar, lower US trade deficits and higher spending in China. Fat chance.
One day it will be for real. The capacity of the global economy to live with systematic abuse is not infinite, and the US and China are testing it to destruction. The fall in the dollar over the last few days and the knock-on consequences for the stock markets around the world make everybody feel queasy because those in the know are aware that we can't go on like this.
The US cannot finance $800 billion trade deficits with China and Japan's savings for ever; one day it will have to stop. The dollar will collapse - or the Americans will slap on tariffs - and the open world system we have known since the war will begin to implode. One day, as I said earlier, it will be real; but it's probably not now.
What we want - rather as Gordon Brown wishes on Tony Blair - is an orderly transition to a lower dollar, lower American trade deficits and higher spending in China. The trouble is that these days nothing happens in an orderly way; there is so much speculation that once the speculators smell an one way bet, it becomes a self fulfilling prophesy. Hedge funds and the tidal wave of speculative capital should be better regulated, but until disaster strikes there will be no appetite to do anything.
And China spending more is like waiting for Godot; it never arrives - not least because it would set in train threats to the Communist party's position. So regard the last few days as an omen - an augury of which nobody took any notice . Globalisation needs to be governed, but that is not on the agenda. So we wait, watch and hope for the best while preparing for the worst.
Comment on this Article
The Scariest Predators in the Corporate Jungle
2006-05-17
Inter Press Service
The world's oil, gas and mining industries account for nearly two-thirds of all violations of human rights, environmental laws and international labor standards, according to a soon-to-be-released United Nations study.
The food and beverages industry is a distant second, followed by apparel, footwear, and the information and communications technology sector.
"The extractive industries -- oil, gas and mining -- also account for most allegations of the worst abuses, up to and including complicity in crimes against humanity," says the interim report titled "Promotion and Protection of Human Rights". A more detailed study is expected to be released later this year.
These are typically for acts committed by public and private security forces protecting company assets and property; large-scale corruption; violations of labor rights; and a broad array of abuses in relation to local communities, especially the indigenous peoples.
Asked for her comments, Kathryn Mulvey of Corporate Accountability International told IPS that human rights abuses by extractive industries are among "the most concentrated, visible and urgent to address".
"Abuses by other industries such as tobacco, which claims five million lives around the world each year, have not typically been framed as human rights issues, but that is changing," she said.
The interim U.N. study, by a team headed by John Ruggie, a special representative of Secretary-General Kofi Annan, was conducted in response to a resolution by the now-defunct U.N. Commission on Human Rights.
"The problems of corruption and the misallocation of public revenues have been endemic," the report points out. "They undermine the rule of law, impede the pursuit of social objectives, and contribute to conflicts that frequently foster human rights abuse.."
"There being no global repository of comprehensive, consistent and impartial information, we cannot say with certainty whether abuses in relation to the corporate sector are increasing or decreasing over time, only that they are reported more extensively because more actors track them and transparency is greater than in the past," the report points out.
According to the Geneva-based U.N. Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), there are some 70,000 transnational firms worldwide, together with roughly 700,000 subsidiaries, and millions of suppliers spanning every corner of the globe.
Last week, Ruggie met with several non-governmental organisations (NGOs), including human rights groups, mostly based in New York, primarily to brief them on the progress made in relation to protection of human rights vis-a-vis transnational corporations. "The general mood was that his interim report leaned way too much in accommodating business priorities," a spokesman for one of the participating groups told IPS.
He said that Ruggie is planning several regional consultations, including one in Colombia and another in Thailand in late June. "He wants to do site visits to companies, as well as affected communities."
Mulvey said that in most industries -- from water to tobacco -- "transnational corporations engage in irresponsible and dangerous actions". "When campaigns have been organized to protect people and save lives, we have won gains on an issue-by-issue basis," she added.
To reverse the tobacco epidemic, health and human rights advocates have a great tool in the first global corporate accountability treaty, formally known as the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.
"But in a world where more than one billion people don't have safe water to drink, we must strengthen and enforce international legal instruments to prevent corporate interference in the human right to water," she added.
"Transnational corporations are responding to the demand that they be accountable to people and communities, but in the long run, democratic global institutions and enforcement mechanisms are necessary to stop abuses," Mulvey added.
According to the report, the United Nations is the process of surveying the "Fortune 500" companies -- 500 of the world's biggest corporations -- in relation to the protection of human rights. But only about 80 companies have responded so far.
Asked why, Mulvey said: "This demonstrates why we need global human rights norms that are binding on corporations, with teeth." She said that reporting must be mandatory, as standard as financial reporting, with a rigorous auditing regime.
"The adoption of the Human Rights Norms for Transnational Corporations by the Sub-Commission on the Protection and Promotion of Human Rights was a step in that direction", and Ruggie should build on that progress, she added.
Speaking generally of corporate responsibilities, Saradha Iyer of the Malaysia-based Third World Network told IPS: "I personally do not think corporations have played their role in sustainable development."
In fact, she said, they have pushed for sustained economic growth with little or no regard for the Rio principles -- laid down at the 1992 Earth Summit in Brazil -- that the "polluter pays", or the precautionary approach when it comes to the environment. "They get away with impunity because they have already paid to rig legislation in their favor and therefore appear to have complied," she added. That is the reason, she said, the Papuans and others are protesting in the streets and blockading access to mines.
"Given the recent spate of violations by oil and mining companies, they are going to up the ante on further green-washing," she added.
The United Nations has also been promoting the virtues of its own "Global Compact", described as "the world's largest corporate responsibility initiative", with nearly 3,000 corporate participants and other stakeholders.
But Iyer of the Third World Network said: "The Global Compact has become adept at surveys and publications that tout its members contributions."
While a few corporations are taking a longer term perspective on the issue, she said, the majority pay lip service to the triple bottom line -- and that only because ratings agencies and shareholders are behind the pressure for change.
The U.N. study also said there are at least three "distinct drivers" behind the increased attention on transnational corporations.
The first is simply the expression of one of the oldest axioms of political life: the successful accumulation of power by one type of social actor will induce efforts by others with different interests or aims to organize countervailing power.
"When large firms in industrialized countries first became major players on the national scene in the late 19th century, countervailing efforts came from labor and faith-based communities, among others, and ultimately from the state," the study said.
At the global level, a broad array of civil society actors has been in the lead. Moreover, when global firms are widely perceived as abusing their power -- as was the case with major pharmaceutical companies concerning pricing and patents of AIDS treatment drugs in Africa -- a social backlash was inevitable, the study noted.
The second driver, according to the study, is that some companies have made themselves, and even their entire industries, targets by committing serious harm to human rights, labour standards, environmental protection and other social concerns.
A third rationale for engaging the transnational corporate sector is the sheer fact that it has global reach and capacity, and that it is capable of acting at a pace and scale that neither governments nor international agencies can match.
Comment on this Article
For Your Health
Preschoolers used as guinea pigs in psychotropic drug tests
News Target
18/05/2006
As ClinicalTrials.gov reveals, in 2005, Massachusetts General Hospital conducted an 8-week trial study that recruited children as young as four years old to be drugged and monitored, including having their blood drawn, to see if their tiny four-year-old bodies would tolerate a powerful psychotropic drug (Seroquel).
Here's more from ClinicalTrials.gov:
This is an 8-week open-label study aimed at assessing the effectiveness and tolerability of Quetiapine, in the treatment of preschool children aged 4 to 6 years with bipolar and bipolar spectrum disorder. This is an exploratory, pilot study, seeking to determine whether Quetiapine is efficacious and well tolerated in the treatment of preschoolers with pediatric bipolar and bipolar spectrum disorder in this age group.
Ages Eligible for Study:4 Years - 6 Years, Genders Eligible for Study: Both
Subject must be able to participate in mandatory blood draws.
Massachusetts General Hospital, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138, United States; Recruiting
Joseph Biederman, MD, Principal Investigator...
Chemical child abuse
In my view, this exploitation of young children for drug testing amounts to nothing less than chemical child abuse. What possible medical justification could these doctors, hospital staff and drug pushers have for prescribing mind-altering drugs to four-year-olds? Even the "disease" being treated here is entirely fictional. So-called "bi-polar disorder" was wholly invented by psychiatrists with strong financial ties to drug companies. The purpose of this disease is not to help children, but to sell drugs to anyone and everyone, including toddlers.
I often wonder when the rest of the country will wake up and notice that the mass-drugging of our nation's children has gone too far. Why isn't the mainstream media giving this front-page coverage? Why aren't lawmakers demanding an end to the chemical abuse of our children? Why isn't the FDA halting these trials on toddlers out of plain decency?
You already know the answer: Because they're all making money from this chemical assault on our nation's children. The doctors, hospitals, drug companies, psychiatrists and mainstream media all profit handsomely from the sales of mind-altering drugs to children. Ethics will never get in the way of old-fashioned greed, even when we're talking about the health and lives of four-year-olds.
Modern psychiatry, with all its false authority, drugging of children and rampant disease mongering, is an affront to all people who believe in honest medical science and basic human decency. Armed with the DSM-IV, on-the-take psychiatrists invent diseases out of thin air (like "bi-polar disorder"), then vote official treatment protocols into the reference books. Yet a recent review of such decision panels reveals that one hundred percent of the psychiatrists and doctors involved in such decisions have financial ties to the drug companies that coincidentally happen to manufacture the recommended drugs.
This is a life-threatening scandal of such proportion that it deserves a Dept. of Justice investigation, complete with criminal charges being brought against many of these so-called "doctors." To characterize this as a crime against humanity is not an exaggeration.
Blatant quackery
Let's face it: Modern psychiatry and its incessant disease mongering amounts to quackery at its worst. This group both invents the diseases, then hawks the snake oil that "treats" those diseases. And underneath it all, there's absolutely no physiological evidence of any such diseases at all. They can be diagnosed in children on a whim, based on a mere sixty seconds of casual observation combined with the biased opinion of a drug-pushing psychiatrist being bribed by Big Pharma.
This is not medicine, folks. And it's certainly not science. It's just plain medical fraud. Yet the whole of conventional medicine goes along with it, pretending that nothing is amiss. Doctors, hospitals, FDA bureaucrats, teachers and even many parents just pretend that all these mysterious brain chemistry diseases have spontaneously appeared in the world over the last ten years, suddenly afflicting tens of millions of children. And thank goodness the drug companies just happened to have invented all these treatment drugs at the exact same moment in history when these psychiatric diseases became so widespread! Imagine the odds...
Where are the skeptics on this issue? Where are the quack busters on the drugging of our children? The silence is deafening. They have nothing to say about the lack of science behind psychiatric disease mongering. They aren't skeptical at all. Clear thinking, it seems, isn't allowed when the conclusions might question the institutions of modern medicine. And thus, the skeptics reveal themselves as little more than purveyors of medical dogma; protectors of a drug-the-children medical cult that demands unquestioning obedience to its profit-minded beliefs.
Good science has long since left psychiatry. And if you want to know the true, horrifying history of the mental health industry, visit the Citizen's Commission on Human Rights. Prepare to be shocked.
Born psychotic
Psychiatry believes there is no child too young to diagnose as having psychiatric disorders. It won't be long before psychiatrists will be hanging out in delivery rooms, declaring children to be mentally diseased at birth (because they keep crying, obviously) and immediately injected with powerful mind-altering drugs. To psychiatry, human life has no value other than the possibility of creating a new paying customer, and every new birth is seen as another opportunity for dispensing profitable drugs.
There's no end to the evil that psychiatry might do in the years ahead. As long as society continues to give psychiatrists carte blanche to invent fictitious diseases, there is no human behavior, emotion or condition that's safe from being labeled a pathology. So-called "adult ADHD screening tests" label a whopping 80 percent of participants with the disease. Behavioral disorders screenings for children demonstrate similar numbers. And the things that can get you labeled as "diseased" are all too mundane: Feeling overwhelmed, feeling distracted by modern life, handling too many projects as once, being afraid of public speaking, feeling shy in social situations... gee, is there anyone who doesn't experience these sooner or later?
But it wasn't enough to attempt to drug up all the adults, you see. Modern psychiatry had to expand its markets, and that meant reaching younger and younger "customers." A couple of decades ago, they started drugging teens with antidepressant drugs. Then they attacked younger schoolchildren with Ritalin. Now they're targeting preschoolers, and the trend is clear: Children will soon be "born psychotic" if psychiatry has anything to do with it.
Years ago, the giant soda companies handed out baby bottles emblazed with the logos of their flagship soft drink products. The idea was to get mothers to feed their infants soda instead of infant formula, thereby altering the taste of the infant for life, creating a lifelong consumer of soft drinks. When I first uncovered this disturbing report, I thought it was perhaps the most evil thing a corporation could do to the health of infants. But now, psychiatry takes the prize.
Using four-year-olds as guinea pigs to test psychotropic drugs is more than merely unethical; it's predatory. It's Nazi-esque in its use of human beings for medical experiments, and yet it remains strangely acceptable across society. Child Protective Services does nothing. Hospitals gladly run the trials (they get paid, of course). Psychiatrists and doctors happily drug these children, observe them, then draw their blood, all in the name of corporate profits. And thus, they all join the long and sordid history of human medical experimentation that demonstrates ethics, or human lives, or plain decency will never get in the way of the forward march of medicine.
The complicity of conventional medicine is astounding. The American Medical Association, to my knowledge, says nothing skeptical about disease mongering by psychiatry. Few doctors see any problem at all, and fewer still have the courage to speak out. The FDA, which is supposed to protect people, gladly approves one psychotropic drug after another, even for use on toddlers. Lawmakers take campaign finance contributions from drug companies and look the other way, and the mainstream media continues publicizing fictitious diseases, lending them false credibility and creating customer demand for dangerous drugs.
Only a handful of doctors, authors, organizations and celebrities dare tell the truth on this issue, and they are singled out for incessant ridicule. Take Tom Cruise, for example. Although he speaks the truth about the drugging of children, he is endlessly dragged through the mud of public opinion simply because he expresses authentic passion for ending this chemical child abuse. Cruise should be applauded for his efforts, not ridiculed.
Let's hospitalize the psychiatrists
When it comes to mental health, there is one group of people in this country that truly needs to be drugged: The psychiatrists. Because to practice psychiatry today, and to support the mass drugging of toddlers and schoolchildren, is to demonstrate a deep-rooted madness that may justify chemical restraint. To drug toddlers, or to use them for medical experiments, should be rightly regarded as a crime. And there's no question whatsoever that the children of our nation would be safer, healthier and happier if the practice of modern psychiatry simply disappeared.
Besides, the real cause of depression, mood swings, emotional disorders or other so-called "diseases" mostly comes down to diet and lifestyle. Remove the food additives and refined sugars from a child's diet, and he returns to normal in about two weeks. Feed children healthy oils, live foods, whole grains and superfoods, and you automatically create energetic, curious, fast-learning children who need no drugs. Give children some sunshine, play time and some time with nature, and you get balanced, healthy children. It's no secret, it's just common sense.
But psychiatry has no common sense, and no one in the industry dares mention that most so-called mental disorders are really just caused by nutritional imbalances. Because to admit to the truth about the mental health of children would be to render their careers irrelevant. And no psychiatrist is going to commit career suicide by admitting that bi-polar disorder was just made up, or that toddlers need good food, not expensive drugs. Just like conventional doctors, psychiatrists have to protect their egos and revenue streams, and that means convincing parents that little Johnny has a brain chemistry imbalance and he'll have to take psychotropic drugs for life. The parents, as gullible as ever, naively go along with the scam, usually after being frightened into compliance by a psychiatrist who warns them what might happy to little Johnny of they don't drug him. "He might commit suicide," they're sternly warned.
Will the scams of modern medicine never cease? Is there no child too young to be targeted for medical experiments? Will the sinister desire for Big Pharma profits ever be balanced against basic human decency?
Probably not. The world has, indeed, gone half mad. And psychiatry is standing by, ready to drug everyone, regardless of their age or mental health status.
Comment on this Article
Vioxx Risks Started Within Months, Not Years as Merck Claims
By LINDA A. JOHNSON
AP Business Writer
Fri May 19, 2006
TRENTON, N.J. - Unpublished data from the Merck & Co. study that led the drugmaker to halt sales of Vioxx appear to show the blockbuster painkiller raised the risk of heart attack and stroke within just a few months - not after at least 18 months' use, as Merck has consistently argued.
The company disputed that Thursday, saying it is "not scientifically appropriate" to draw conclusions based on a key graph in a 108-page report on the data.
The news, first reported by National Public Radio, comes after prominent doctors said Merck misrepresented other data from the same study late last Thursday.
Merck officials said last week that data from a follow-up of patients a year after they stopped taking Vioxx showed heart and stroke risk ended soon after patients stopped taking it - and that patients who later had such complications didn't have a legitimate lawsuit. But several doctors told The Associated Press they believe the data instead showed the heart and stroke risks persisted for at least a year.
The newly public data show the increased cardiovascular risk with Vioxx use likely begins as early as four to six months and then gets bigger, said Dr. Steven Nissen, a Cleveland Clinic cardiologist who heads a huge international study of painkiller safety.
"It didn't really make a lot of sense that nothing happened for 18 months and then all of a sudden you would see a hazard," Nissen said Thursday.
Other doctors concurred.
Because few heart attacks and strokes occurred, Nissen said scientists can't definitively say the painkiller caused the excess complications in the Vioxx group compared to those in the placebo group, but most would interpret it that way.
"There's no 18-month delay until you see harm," said Dr. Curt Furberg, professor of public health science at Wake Forest University School of Medicine.
"This has implications for patients and all the legal cases that are under way," he said, adding, "You're probably at risk the rest of your life."
The study, known by the acronym APPROVe, included 2,586 patients, with half taking Vioxx and half dummy pills for three years. Patients were enrolled from February 2000 to November 2001.
By September 2004, Merck said, the Vioxx group had about twice as many heart attacks and strokes, leading the Whitehouse Station, N.J.-based company to pull the drug from the market then. As lawsuits over Vioxx have topped the 11,500 mark, Merck has insisted there was no increased risk until 18 months - a key argument in its legal strategy.
"The new APPROVe data do not establish that the risk for Vioxx starts earlier than had been previously reported," Merck repeated Thursday in a statement. Merck declined to provide a company official to answer questions on the record.
When the company first published APPROVe data, in February 2005 in the New England Journal of Medicine, it only included complications patients had within 14 days of stopping the drug, even if they stopped early. A key graph in that report didn't show higher risk until after 18 months.
The lead author of that report, Dr. Robert Bresalier of M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, told The Associated Press he is still reviewing the new data but doesn't think the data show that Vioxx risk began earlier. He said the original and new graphs look about the same.
Still, that's not the proper way to report studies, said Dr. Alastair Wood, professor of pharmacology at Vanderbilt University. He said that method would exclude complications suffered by patients who stopped taking Vioxx early because of side effects such as rising blood pressure, then had a heart attack more than two weeks later.
If Merck knowingly excluded those complications, he said, "that's outrageous."
"It's a 'let's hope the referee isn't looking' kind of thing," Wood said.
The complete data follow about 85 percent of patients throughout the full study, producing a different picture.
A key graph and two related tables in the 108-page report, which Merck supplied to The Associated Press, seem to indicate that within three or four months, a higher risk of heart complications began for patients on Vioxx. The tables show that over the first six months, the Vioxx group had about a 60 percent higher chance of having a heart attack or stroke.
The risk to the Vioxx group bounces around over the following months, as is common in clinical studies with small numbers of complications, then rises after 18 months' use.
Merck has submitted the report to the Food and Drug Administration, which has said it is reviewing the new data. A spokeswoman did not return messages Thursday.
Of the six Vioxx lawsuits that have reached verdicts, Merck has lost three.
In trading on the New York Stock Exchange, Merck shares rose 79 cents to $35.13, as a panel of federal advisers recommended approval of the company's vaccine against cervical cancer, but shares fell 13 cents in after-hours trading.
Comment on this Article
Two more bird flu deaths confirmed in Indonesia, takes toll to 32
AFP
Friday May 19, 2006
Indonesia's bird flu toll has risen to 32 as the World Health Organisation (WHO) confirmed two more deaths from the virus in the world's fourth most populous nation.
The rise in the toll here -- the second highest since 2003 after Vietnam -- comes as WHO investigators have yet to rule out that human-to-human transmission occurred in a cluster of five deaths among relatives in North Sumatra.
I Nyoman Kandun, director for the health ministry's communicable disease control centre, said one of the deaths was a 10-year-old boy who was the fifth confirmed fatality in the cluster.
He said that another boy had been confirmed by the WHO as dying of the deadly H5N1 strain in Bekasi, a suburb on the outskirts of Jakarta.
"He was a 12-year-old male. We suspect it was from backyard chickens," he told AFP Friday. The boy died on Sunday.
The 10-year-old fatality was the nephew of a 37-year-old woman believed to have been the initial victim of the virus in the village of Kubu Sembelang in Karo district, North Sumatra.
She died of respiratory disease on May 4 and was buried before tissue samples were taken, the WHO said in a statement dated Thursday.
The women's two sons aged 17 and 19 also died, as did her 28-year-old sister and that woman's 18-month-old daughter.
A 25-year-old brother of the initial case has been confirmed as carrying the virus but remains alive, while another family member hospitalised on suspicion of infection has been cleared, the WHO said.
The cluster -- Indonesia's largest to date -- raised fears of the possibility of human-to-human transmission.
The WHO said in its statement that the likely source of infection for the additional cases had not yet been determined but that the cases had all participated in a family gathering around April 29.
"The possibility of limited human-to-human transmission cannot be ruled out at present... (but) if human-to-human transmission has occurred, it has not been either efficient or sustained," it said.
Indonesia has witnessed more bird flu deaths than any other country this year. It has the world's second highest number of fatalities since 2003, after Vietnam. Nine Indonesians who were infected have survived.
Indonesia's President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono warned Thursday that Indonesia faces a huge challenge to stop further outbreaks of bird flu, which has spread to 27 of 33 provinces in the archipelago nation.
The UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation has said that Indonesia needs to focus more on coordination between different levels of government in its battle against the virus.
Critics have charged that the government has been too reluctant to instigate the mass slaughters undertaken in other nations to stamp out the virus. It was also accused of initially covering up outbreaks.
Experts fear the virus may mutate into a form that can pass easily between humans, sparking a pandemic.
Comment on this Article
Remember, we need your help to collect information on what is going on in your part of the world!
Send your article suggestions to: sott(at)signs-of-the-times.org