AP
Wed Dec 21, 5:21 PM ET
AP
Wed Dec 21, 5:21 PM ET
Thu, 22 Dec 2005 12:00 EST
Around the World
Reuters
Dec 22 2005
Reuters
Dec 22 2005
Thu, 22 Dec 2005 12:00 EST
Reuters
Dec 22 2005
Reuters
Dec 22 2005
Thu, 22 Dec 2005 12:00 EST
"The primates with the most symmetrical bodies have a head start in being chosen as the most promising mate, according to new research."
Is it that someone, somewhere in authority either sees human beings as little more than animals or wants human beings to see themselves as little more than animals? Or perhaps we ARE little more than animals? Albeit animals with the ability to utterly destroy their habitat and each other...
Sarah Boseley, health editor
The Guardian
Thursday December 22, 2005
Sarah Boseley, health editor
The Guardian
Thursday December 22, 2005
Thu, 22 Dec 2005 12:00 EST
To the dismay of medical experts and concern among those responsible for the worldwide efforts to fight a pandemic, the H5N1 bird flu virus in the bloodstream of the two patients in Vietnam rapidly developed resistance to the drug, Tamiflu. One, a 13 year-old girl, appeared to be stable at first and then rapidly worsened as the virus mutated, became more aggressive, and eventually killed her.
By JIM DWYER
December 22, 2005
New York Times
By JIM DWYER
December 22, 2005
New York Times
Thu, 22 Dec 2005 12:00 EST
In glimpses and in glaring detail, the videotape images reveal the robust presence of disguised officers or others working with them at seven public gatherings since August 2004.
The officers hoist protest signs. They hold flowers with mourners. They ride in bicycle events. At the vigil for the cyclist, an officer in biking gear wore a button that said, 'I am a shameless agitator.' She also carried a camera and videotaped the roughly 15 people present.
Beyond collecting information, some of the undercover officers or their associates are seen on the tape having influence on events. At a demonstration last year during the Republican National Convention, the sham arrest of a man secretly working with the police led to a bruising confrontation between officers in riot gear and bystanders.
Until Sept. 11, the secret monitoring of events where people expressed their opinions was among the most tightly limited of police powers.
Provided with images from the tape, the Police Department's chief spokesman, Paul J. Browne, did not dispute that they showed officers at work but said that disguised officers had always attended such gatherings - not to investigate political activities but to keep order and protect free speech. Activists, however, say that police officers masquerading as protesters and bicycle riders distort their messages and provoke trouble.
Note the comment by the Police Depts Chief spokesman that officers go undercover only to "keep order and protect free speech". But why would they need to go undercover to protect free speech? Clearly an overt police presence would be much more effective in attempting to dissaude anyone from infringing on the free speech of the demonstrators. Obviously, the only reason to go undercover is to keep tabs on the people who are attempting to exercise their right to free speech and to make sure that they do not go so far as to threaten the positions of power of the unelected "elite".
By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA and MARC SANTORA
The New York Times
December 22, 2005
By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA and MARC SANTORA
The New York Times
December 22, 2005
Thu, 22 Dec 2005 12:00 EST
Every apartment block, office, store or sidewalk had its tales of people who were unable to get to work, of businesses that had trouble functioning or were able to operate only at a daunting cost, of workers and employers who reached their jobs and found there had been little point in trying because the customers were missing.
The economic burden was felt citywide, but there were other costs, too - hundreds of thousands of children missing school, commuters spending extra hours shuttling to work and back, and pervasive fear of how long this will go on.
28 October 2005
Rabbi Yisroel Dovid Weiss
Neturei Karta International
Jews United Against Zionism
www.nkusa.org
28 October 2005
Rabbi Yisroel Dovid Weiss
Neturei Karta International
Jews United Against Zionism
www.nkusa.org
Wed, 21 Dec 2005 12:00 EST
It is a dangerous distortion, to see the Presidents words, as indicative of anti-Jewish sentiments. The President was simply re-stating the beliefs and statements of Ayatollah Khomeini, who always emphasized and practiced the respect and protection of Jews and Judaism. The political ideology of Zionism alone was rejected. President Ahmadinejad stressed this distinction by referring only to Zionism, not Judaism or the Jewish people, regardless of whether they reside in Palestine or else were.
We concur!! Orthodox Jews have always prayed and till today, continually pray for the speedy and peaceful dismantling of the Zionist state. As per the teachings of the Torah, the Jewish law, the Jewish people are required to be loyal, upstanding citizens, in all of the countries where-in they reside. They are expressly forbidden to have their own entity or state in any form or configuration, in this Heavenly decreed exile. Furthermore, the exemplification of one-self, with acts of compassion and goodness, is of the essence of Judaism. To subjugate and oppress a people, to steal their land, homes and orchards etc. is of the cardinal sins, of the basics crimes, forbidden by the Torah.
We have long stood together with the suffering Palestinian people in their struggle for self determination and respect. Based on our religious teachings, we believe it is impossible that any lasting peace can be achieved, for so long as the state of Israel exists. It is towards this goal of true reconciliation that religious Jews strive; via Palestinian statehood, so that we can once again reside in harmony and brotherhood.
May we merit to see the fruition of our prayers. Ultimately we pray for the day when all mankind will recognize the One G-g and serve Him in harmony. May this come upon us in the near future. Amen.
By John Kaminski
rudemacedon.ca
4 July 2004
By John Kaminski
rudemacedon.ca
4 July 2004
Wed, 21 Dec 2005 12:00 EST
Instead, the new millennium has brought with it a return to unapologetic barbarism, in which the human aspirations of compassion and understanding have been crushed in the maw of raw power. Instead of leaping ahead into a new 21st century of enlightenment, the human species has apparently decided to lurch backwards into the 19th century, where the only things that really matter are the size of your guns and your bank account.
Where the outstretched hand of those in need is greeted with a bullet to the face, accompanied by some smug justification about survival of the Chosen few. No, this is not what I call evolution.
The events of September 11, 2001 changed the tone of civilized society, perhaps forever. As people around the globe poured out admiring sympathy for the victims of the atrocity in New York, the leaders of the U.S. embarked on a fateful course: to start shooting at the rest of the world until everybody everywhere fell into line in submissive gestures of terrified subservience.
By Joe Conason
NY Observer
By Joe Conason
NY Observer
Wed, 21 Dec 2005 12:00 EST
The partisan peepshow of the Clinton impeachment did not leave much enthusiasm for that process. Nor would any thoughtful citizen want to risk abusing it in the manner made infamous by Newt Gingrich and Tom DeLay. For responsible citizens, the reluctance to seek the ultimate sanction against the President is especially strong in a time of peril. He and his supporters could argue, quite plausibly, that to impeach him now would be dangerous and destabilizing. His pet pundits and flacks would deploy all the defensive arguments they scorned in 1999. He might well be able to rally the public to his side again by denouncing politicians in Washington for undermining national security. As political strategy and as public policy, the impeachment of Mr. Bush is an unappealing prospect. (Besides, if he could be thrown out somehow, who would want Dick Cheney to succeed him?) And yet, the actions and attitudes of this President raise the question of how else we can preserve the bedrock principles of a democratic republic.
Philip James
The UK Guardian
Wednesday December 21, 2005
Philip James
The UK Guardian
Wednesday December 21, 2005
Wed, 21 Dec 2005 12:00 EST
Perhaps I'm naive, but I grew up believing that America was somehow different, that alongside the corporate greed, brash materialism and barely functioning social safety net, a unique society prospered. This America was a land of limitless opportunity, a magnet to those escaping oppression, offering prince and pauper alike the possibility to dream big.
This America still exists, but it is being eroded by an administration that believes it can rule outside the rule of law. They are fast replacing the American dream with an American nightmare, an Orwellian world where memos defending torture are penned in the department of justice and judges are made redundant in the public interest.
267,723 people have viewed this page since Tue, 19 Dec 2006





![Validate my Atom 1.0 feed [Valid Atom 1.0]](/images/valid-atom.png?1222505720)
![Validate my RSS 2.0 feed [Valid RSS 2.0]](/images/valid-rss.png?1222505756)






















"The primates with the most symmetrical bodies have a head start in being chosen as the most promising mate, according to new research."
Is it that someone, somewhere in authority either sees human beings as little more than animals or wants human beings to see themselves as little more than animals? Or perhaps we ARE little more than animals? Albeit animals with the ability to utterly destroy their habitat and each other...