The Underground Librarian

A Emergency Infrastructure Mangement Education Blog

Archive for July 14th, 2009

Too many shiny things?

Posted by Tespid on July 14, 2009

{FYI: This post has been clipped and copied from another news service. For those who are used to common place view points, thisis not one of them. Be prepared for a radical if not anarchical edge. Even I read though the lines to the tones of suicide, but worry not, staff here sympathizes, but is not completely depressed over the state of the world. Sometimes you have to realize that you are to close to the problem and need to look away or move away to get health and a better personal perspective.}

 

Choose Your Revolution, or “Stop Fighting Against Things”

July 10, 2009 by ecopunk

 In a recent talk Bruce Sterling proposed that the environmentalists of my generation apply the “Great-Grandfather Principle” to their actions. “Stop acting dead,” he said.

 Now, you think that acting dead is a virtue because you’ve been trained to behave as if you were dead for a long time, and it actually appeals to your temperament as a generation. It’s your default position. But you have to stop it, because “hair shirt green”… just changes the polarity of the Twentieth Century. It’s just the opposite of consumer culture… It’s not really a different way to live. And it’s not something that’s going to fulfill you.

 Now, how do you know if you’re acting dead? Well, there’s a test for this: It’s the “great-grandfather principle.” You’re saying you’re “going to do something really morally worthwhile that will make me feel proud of myself,” but does your dead great-grandfather do a better job of it than you?

 For instance, saving water. Water is indestructible first of all. You cannot possibly damage water… But you’re trying to save water, because you’re told to save water. Alright. Your dead great-grandfather is saving more water than you. You cannot possibly save any more water than a dead guy. He’s greener than you in that regard.

 Saving electrical power. Okay, you shouldn’t be using power, power’s bad, you need a lower [electrical] footprint… Your great-grandfather is not using any electrical power. He’s much greener than you. You cannot compete with that.

 You should move into a smaller apartment? Your [great]-grandfather’s in a very, very small apartment. It’s underground, there’s no lighting, there’s no heating, he doesn’t have any broadband.

 Recycling? Okay, recycling is useful in some ways. Your [great]-grandfather is literally being recycled. You can’t actually out-recycle your dead [great]-grandfather.

 And furthermore, in a pretty short amount of time, compared to the lengths of the problems you’re tackling, you’re going to be dead like your [great]-grandfather. You’ll be saving everything at that point. I mean, you might be alive seventy, eighty, ninety years… You’re gonna be dead for hundreds of millions of years. Billions of years of saving water. Billions of years of having a light carbon footprint.

 It’s carbon sequestration. You’re full of carbon and they buried you.

 So you need to do things that you can do while alive.

 Sterling is being his usual acerbic self here, but his point remains and, more importantly, is broadly applicable to many causes today’s radicals hold dear. Your dead great-grandfather isn’t part of an economic system that blows the tops off of mountains. He doesn’t go out and bomb villages on the other side of the world. He won’t eat animals. There is no way that any of us can be more virtuous in these ways than our dead great-grandfathers.

 To our credit I think some of us have started to figure this out. But I’d be a lot happier if the conclusions we were reaching didn’t sound like something that might have been uttered in the final moments of Jonestown. I recently found myself making the drive from Greeley to Denver with two local activists, and as the conversation turned towards the long-term survival of humanity it became positively gothic. Neither of my comrades saw any long-term hope for humanity. The future, they mused, would consist of bands of hunter-gatherers, but eventually even these would probably disappear. In their minds human intelligence was a failed experiment, and evolution would eventually select against it.

 It wasn’t so much the bleak the future they presented that shocked me, but rather the fact that they seemed to welcome it. Sure, things were going to get bad, they reckoned, but in the Earth would survive without us. It would even be a better place.

 Let me tell you another story.

 Back in April a few anti-authoritarian activists I greatly respect visited one of the many “tea parties” being held around the United States. Some of the people they met were the kind of crazies you’d expect at an event promoted by Fox News, but there were also many more ordinary folk, angry with what they described (but did not name) as the class warfare being waged against them. The rage was populist, and while the conservative frame dominated it was not entrenched. There was still room for other, explicitly anti-authoritarian, narratives.

 The activists shared their experiences on a mailing list I subscribe to, prompting a fierce debate. “Personally, I’m close to having given up on the American middle class,” another activist I respect wrote. He then continued more darkly that “[u]sing them as pawns on the other hand… makes more sense.” Later he offered an analysis similar to that found in RAIM-Denver’s recent story here on Colorado Indymedia. RAIM-Denver writes that

 [u]nlike [Robert] Jensen [a professor of journalism at the University of Texas in Austin], we at RAIM [the Radical Anti-Imperialist Movement] apply global class analysis fully. Doing simple math, Amerika [sic] is only 5 percent of the world population but the consumer of over 25 percent of the world’s resources. The poorest half of the world lives on less than $2 a day, and the bottom 1.3 billion live on less than $1 a day. Although Jensen admits this, RAIM-Denver plainly says the obvious truth and takes it to its logical end: Amerikans [sic] are part of the problem; they are a force which must be overcome during the course of progressive change. Unlike Jensen who is fruitlessly engaged in various forms of pandering to a population of petty exploiters and polluters, RAIM champions the cause of the world’s exploited and oppressed majority as the most direct route to creating a new world.

 At one point, Jensen said that he struggles to identify as part of humanity and not Amerikan [sic], white or male. In reality, to stand with humanity is to stand against Amerika [sic] and the First World.

 While I’m sure this position feels virtuous, it doesn’t offer any real insight — like Sterling’s “hair shirt green,” it simply changes the polarity of the Twentieth Century. The autocrats of the past argued that there was something special about Western civilization, and that it was “the white man’s burden” to spread it. Today it seems that the radical left are still arguing that there’s something special about Western civilization, only now it’s something “bad” that has become “the white man’s burden” to crush (or at least get out of the way so that everyone who’s not a white man can do the job for them). Some take it a step further and argue that civilization itself should be annihilated. And a few, like the activists I carpooled home with from Greeley, even seem to welcome our eradication as a species. It’s as if our discourse has been reduced to borrowing the dominant memes of the last century and prefixing them with a logical “not.”

 ”[T]o stand with humanity is to stand against Amerika [sic] and the First World.” Let’s think this through. Are we standing against the first world because the developing world exhibits less racism and overt oppression? Tell that to the Uighurs. Perhaps we believe that developing nations are more economically and politically stable? I doubt the people of Zimbabwe would agree. People the world over have been finding brutal ways to kill and oppress each other since the dawn of recorded history. Probably longer.

 Murder, war, rape, slavery, and economic exploitation are hardly unique characteristics of the current dominion held by the first world. This is not to absolve the United States, Europe, or Japan of their past and present crimes. Nor is it an argument that oppression is such a deep part of the human condition as to be impossible to address. If RAIM-Denver had written that to “stand with humanity is to stand against oppression” I would agree, though such a statement still runs afoul of Sterling’s “Great-Grandfather Principle.” Dead people oppress no one.

 Moreover, the problem is not one of simple wealth redistribution. The world’s per-capita GDP (adjusted to reflect relative purchasing power) is about $10,400/year. Now, that may sound like a lot (especially if you make less than a dollar a day!), but the important part to note here is that this figure already contains adjustments to account for differing costs of living. Ask someone you know who’s ever lived on anything close to this figure how pleasant an experience that kind of poverty is. (By way of comparison, the unit of measure here is equivalent to the 2000 US dollar, and the estimated poverty line for an individual that year was $8,794.) Distributing resources more equally may make life much better for most folks, but it will also make life much worse for many, and unfortunately those on the losing side have the guns, the technology, and the resources. Anyone who for a moment believes that ethical niceties are going to stand in the way of perceived survival when the revolution (or collapse) comes needs to seriously brush up on their history.

 Anarchist fantasies about mounting the barricades in some global Twenty-first Century version of the French Revolution are just that — fantasies. Right now there are too few of us, and let’s be honest, our position isn’t particularly well-placed within the current economic or political system. Why should someone risk persecution so they can join up with a bunch of people offering… Well, what exactly? Certainly not a bigger slice of the resource pie. And if things get messy we won’t be offering a longer life expectancy either.

 But this discussion also misses the point. The conversation’s still as Eurocentric, anthropocentric, and androcentric as it was before — we didn’t change our perspectives, we just turned around. We haven’t really stepped outside of Western civilization here. Hell, we haven’t even really stepped outside of the United States. We talk about the coming revolution as if it were a global event without any discussion of how we expect to achieve this or whether anyone else is even on board with us. Changing things in one country, or one culture, isn’t going to change anything. The United States and its allies exit their role as global hegemons stage left. Enter China (or India, or Brazil), stage right. We can all feel good about ourselves then. We did our part. The world might still be going to hell in a hand basket, but at least our consciences are clear.

 If you’re serious about helping midwife a more just world — or simply ensuring human survival — you need to look straight into this abyss. The world really is flat, just not the way Thomas Friedman thinks it is. A tremendous amount of cultural and technological diffusion has taken place. It is now possible for governments and warlords to monitor dissent more closely than ever before, targeting reprisals more swiftly and accurately or, if need be, killing more people at once than was possible just a hundred years ago. A global uprising of the type still romanticized in radical circles has become so wildly improbable as to be essentially off the table.

 So, is that it? Should we all just go home, sit on our hands, and vote for the latest face on TV every four years?

 Hardly. If I didn’t see myself as a revolutionary I wouldn’t be writing this. The difference is in the kind of revolution I believe in. Whether you describe yourself as an anarchist, a communist, a feminist, or an environmentalist, you’ve cast your lot with a project that you will never live to see completed. The problems we address as radicals are a deep part of the human condition. Overthrowing the hegemony of power, or capital, or patriarchy, or anthropocentrism means rewiring some of our most fundamental social relationships on a scale never before attempted. Like it or not, these institutions give structure to our world and cannot simply be yanked out of our collective psyche. They must be replaced.

 The problem isn’t the physical manifestation of things. It isn’t the SUVs, the computers, or the political parties. It’s the social relationships these things embody. The difference between the 2008 protests at the DNC and those at the RNC was that people understood why they should be angry at the Republican Party. But this difference points to a shared failure: The radical community succeeded in attacking the thing (the political system) without damaging the relationship (authoritarian hierarchy). Had the political system experienced a (wildly improbable) collapse due to our efforts, it would not have ushered in an era of anti-authoritarian triumphalism. Smashing the state isn’t enough if the relationships the state embodies still dominate our social discourse.

 Anyone can set a car on fire. These days the real radicals are starting carshares.

Posted in Economic Growth | 2 Comments »

Score! Underground networks exist!

Posted by Tespid on July 14, 2009

Barrick-Recommended Military Force burns down hundreds of homes in PNG

Hundreds of homes in the Porgera valley of Papua New Guinea are being set aflame. Local human rights organizations in Porgera claim that these fires are part of a strategy to clear people out of the way for the expansion of Barrick Gold’s Porgera mine.

On April 27th, without prior warning, the indigenous land owners of the villages surrounding Barrick Gold’s Porgera open pit mine were violently evicted by a police and military operation with 200 troops. “Operation Ipili” was launched during the middle of the day to allegedly make way for the expansion of a Barrick gold mine. This effective State of Emergency in Porgera was motivated by situation reports presented by Barrick (PNG) Limited, according to Laigap Porgera Member of Parliament Phillip Kikala.

Past Coverage: Apr09: Smoking ceremony, blockade and protesters occupy open cut pit halting mine operations | Dec08: Thousands raid Barrick’s North Mara mine, destroy $15 million in equipment | Nov07: En Santiago de Chile y en Tanzania: Protestas y huelga preceden a reunión de Barrick Gold | Oct07: Protests and a Strike Precede Barrick Gold’s 3rd quarter shareholders meeting | May07: La Rioja, Argentina vs. Barrick Gold Corp | Apr07: Anti-Gold Mining Conflicts Spreading Throughout the Americas | Feb07: Interview: Mining & Developing World: Barrick Gold’s Porgera Gold Mine in Papua New Guinea | Jan06: Pascua Lama, Bulyanhulu, Lake Cowal and Cyanide – Barrick’s Hunt for Gold

The Demarest Factor: The Ethics of U.S. Department of Defense Funding for Academic Research in Mexico

On October 23, 2006 the Lawrence Journal World or LJ World published an article which silently uncovered a funding scandal within Kansas University, in Lawrence, Kansas. In 2005, the university’s department of geography received at least $500,000 in Department of Defense funds to map communally held indigenous land in the states of San Luis Potosi, and in Oaxaca, Mexico.

As a result of this original story, on November 26th, of 2007 elenemigocomun.net published a feature follow up story on the funding scandal titled “The Road to Hell”, which elaborates on the the potential dangers of this type of militarily funded mapping project. Since the publication of this 2007 article, myself and a growing number of community members and students from both sides of the U.S. Mexico border, have engaged in several extensive investigations into the details of this particular research project. Our growing concern has revolved around, academic ethics violations due to improper transparency with communities about the research funding, and serious U.S. Army violations of Mexican sovereignty, and of indigenous autonomy. Our collective research over the last year has resulted in several key pieces of irrefutable evidence, demonstrating both academic ethics violations, and serious violations of Mexican sovereignty and indigenous autonomy.

Chicago Police Plumb New Depths in Malfeasance

24 Jun 2009
permalink

by CIMC – MS

Who Watches the Watchers?The Chicago Police Department have had a long sordid history of malfeasance and subsequent legal ramifications. Recent developments posted to Chicago Indymedia have revealed new lows even for Chicago’s infamous police.

Exhibit A — Federal Jury Awards Victim Largest-Ever Amount in Chicago Cop Frame-up: A Federal jury awarded the largest-ever compensation for a wrongful conviction in Chicago history — $21 million in compensatory damages — against a Chicago detective who framed a Humboldt Park resident. That resident, Juan Johnson, was sentenced to 30 years in prison over a murder for whose evidence a Chicago police detective wholly fabricated. Read more

Exhibit B — CPD Hit With $625,000 Fine for Violent Police Assault During Traffic Stop: “A federal jury yesterday awarded 41-year-old Curtis Mason $625,000 in compensatory damages for a brutal beating he received at the hands of at least five Chicago police officers during a January 13, 2007 traffic stop on Chicago’s south side. ” The Police Department declined to discipline the accused officers over the assault and the Cook County States Attorney’s Office did not prosecute them criminally. Read more

Exhibit C — Officer in Publicized Bartender Beating Case Receives Only Probation: In a case of Chicago police malfeasance which has received considerable Chicago corporate media coverage, the Chicago police officer who was caught on camera in a public beating was released on probation by a Cook County judge. Read more

It so happens that the Chicago lodge of the Fraternal Order of Police will hold a 1968 Riot Cop Reunion (the police involved in the 1968 DNC crackdown and in political assassinations), but Chicago Copwatch is organizing a protest and march.

Posted in U.S. Foreign Policy | 1 Comment »

If you didn’t know…

Posted by Tespid on July 14, 2009

New Sharia law marriage contract gives Muslim women rights

Muslim women are to be guaranteed equal rights in marriage under a new wedding contract negotiated by leading Islamic organisations and clerics in Britain.

 

By Urmee Khan
Published: 7:40PM BST 07 Aug 2008

Dr Ghayasuddin Siddiqui, Director of the Muslim Institute
Dr Ghayasuddin Siddiqui, Director of the Muslim Institute and author of the contract Photo: PA

Hailed as the biggest change in Sharia law in Britain for 100 years, a married Muslim couple will now have equal rights. A husband will have to waive his right to polygamy, allowed under Islamic law, in the new contract which has been described as “revolutionary”.

Currently Muslims in Britain have an Islamic ceremony called a nikah (a non register office marriage) which, although it is guaranteed under Sharia law, is not legally binding and does not provide a woman with written proof of the marriage and of the terms and conditions agreed between the spouses.

Dr Ghayasuddin Siddiqui, Director of the Muslim Institute and one of the authors of the contract, told The Daily Telegraph: “The document is a challenge to various sharia councils who don’t believe in gender equality but the world has changed and Islamic law has to be renegotiated.”

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, was criticised earlier this year when he called for greater recognition of Sharia in British civil legislature, a view that was echoed recently by the Lord Chief Justice Phillips.

Ann Cryer, a Labour MP who has campaigned for the rights of Muslim women, welcomed today’s change, saying: “This document has been carefully researched over a four year period and I feel confident in recommending its findings to women (and men) of the Muslim Faith contemplating Marriage.”

In cases of divorces, the absence of such proof, has meant that many Muslim women have been denied financial rights.

The new Muslim marriage contract does not require a ‘marriage guardian’ (wali) for the bride, and also makes delegation of the right of divorce to the wife (talaq-i-tafweeed) automatic.

This right does not affect the husband’s right of talaq but enables the wife to initiate divorce and retain all her financial rights agreed in the marriage contract. These provisions reflect a recognition of changes in the Muslim world, including women’s greater public roles, educational achievements and financial autonomy.

Drawn up by the Muslim Institute, the contract has taken four years to negotiate and create. It is supported by leading Muslim organisations including the Imams & Mosques Council (UK), Muslim Council of Britain, The Muslim Law (Shariah) Council UK, Utrujj Foundation, and The Muslim Parliament of Great Britain.

According to its authors, the new contract “brings Muslim marriages in Britain into line with positive developments in Muslim family law across the Muslim world”.

Dr Siddiqui said “A lot of people come to us and the Islamic Shari ‘ah Council for advice and we realised that Islamic marriage had lots of problems.

“Many Muslims in this country have a ‘village’ background, with Muslims from Sylhet in Bangladesh or in Pakistan where the local Imam performs a nikah, without proper registration or properly recording that such a ceremony has taken place.

“But in Britain, more marriages are breaking down and young people have said that we need to update things.”

Dr Siddique outlined several cases where the cleric was a friend of the husband and there were no witnesses present.

“In many cases, Muslim men have put a woman on ‘trial’ to see ‘if a marriage works out’ and will not agree to have a civil ceremony” he said.

“One woman told me that she came home one day to find the locks had changed and there was a note saying ‘ your stuff is at my sisters house’.

“This contract is revolutionary and will lead the way in addressing problems that exist under sharia law. Although it is only the tip of the iceberg, it is a revolutionary step, nothing like this has happened in 100 years. The adoption of this model will change everything and force people to talk about the issues.”

Religious leaders and community groups have also said the document will be useful in securing rights for Muslim women.

Dr Usama Hasan, director of The City Circle, an organisation for British Muslim professionals, said: “Too many fathers have abused their right of wilayah (guardianship) over their daughters and too many husbands have abused their right of initiating divorce for us to continue with law rooted in patriarchal societies. It is high time that Muslim women enjoy the same rights and freedoms under Islamic law as they do under present legal systems in the UK.”

 

—>What are courtroom rights worth if a muslim woman has no rights in her own home? Is the bedrock of women’s rights under the roof of marriage with a  husband? Some balance and equity of survival in the stead of familial relationships must be secured. Human Rights and Common Sense must extend after where Shariah and the Qur-an stop or even where an interpretation is not mentioned at all.

Posted in Feminism, Metamorphosis, Saudi Arabian Peninsula | Tagged: , | Comments Off

Did you do your homework?

Posted by Tespid on July 14, 2009

{Observation: Senator Graham told Judge Sotomayor to go home tonight and do her homework. I took the challenge upon myself to prepare for a competent comment tomorrow. This follow his line of questioning about military courts and issues of terrorism, war and jailing prisoners of this shadow war. you don’t always see it, but it is there. When the topic is discussed, light causes the shadow to be cast of what happened, and then you put it all together in hindsight.}

SEC. 412. MANDATORY DETENTION OF SUSPECTED TERRORISTS; HABEAS CORPUS; JUDICIAL REVIEW.

(a) IN GENERAL- The Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1101 et seq.) is amended by inserting after section 236 the following:

`MANDATORY DETENTION OF SUSPECTED TERRORISTS; HABEAS CORPUS; JUDICIAL REVIEW

`SEC. 236A. (a) DETENTION OF TERRORIST ALIENS-

`(1) CUSTODY- The Attorney General shall take into custody any alien who is certified under paragraph (3).

`(2) RELEASE- Except as provided in paragraphs (5) and (6), the Attorney General shall maintain custody of such an alien until the alien is removed from the United States. Except as provided in paragraph (6), such custody shall be maintained irrespective of any relief from removal for which the alien may be eligible, or any relief from removal granted the alien, until the Attorney General determines that the alien is no longer an alien who may be certified under paragraph (3). If the alien is finally determined not to be removable, detention pursuant to this subsection shall terminate.

`(3) CERTIFICATION- The Attorney General may certify an alien under this paragraph if the Attorney General has reasonable grounds to believe that the alien–

`(A) is described in section 212(a)(3)(A)(i), 212(a)(3)(A)(iii), 212(a)(3)(B), 237(a)(4)(A)(i), 237(a)(4)(A)(iii), or 237(a)(4)(B); or

`(B) is engaged in any other activity that endangers the national security of the United States.

`(4) NONDELEGATION- The Attorney General may delegate the authority provided under paragraph (3) only to the Deputy Attorney General. The Deputy Attorney General may not delegate such authority.

`(5) COMMENCEMENT OF PROCEEDINGS- The Attorney General shall place an alien detained under paragraph (1) in removal proceedings, or shall charge the alien with a criminal offense, not later than 7 days after the commencement of such detention. If the requirement of the preceding sentence is not satisfied, the Attorney General shall release the alien.

`(6) LIMITATION ON INDEFINITE DETENTION- An alien detained solely under paragraph (1) who has not been removed under section 241(a)(1)(A), and whose removal is unlikely in the reasonably foreseeable future, may be detained for additional periods of up to six months only if the release of the alien will threaten the national security of the United States or the safety of the community or any person.

`(7) REVIEW OF CERTIFICATION- The Attorney General shall review the certification made under paragraph (3) every 6 months. If the Attorney General determines, in the Attorney General’s discretion, that the certification should be revoked, the alien may be released on such conditions as the Attorney General deems appropriate, unless such release is otherwise prohibited by law. The alien may request each 6 months in writing that the Attorney General reconsider the certification and may submit documents or other evidence in support of that request.

`(b) HABEAS CORPUS AND JUDICIAL REVIEW-

`(1) IN GENERAL- Judicial review of any action or decision relating to this section (including judicial review of the merits of a determination made under subsection (a)(3) or (a)(6)) is available exclusively in habeas corpus proceedings consistent with this subsection. Except as provided in the preceding sentence, no court shall have jurisdiction to review, by habeas corpus petition or otherwise, any such action or decision.

`(2) APPLICATION-

`(A) IN GENERAL- Notwithstanding any other provision of law, including section 2241(a) of title 28, United States Code, habeas corpus proceedings described in paragraph (1) may be initiated only by an application filed with–

`(i) the Supreme Court;

`(ii) any justice of the Supreme Court;

`(iii) any circuit judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit; or

`(iv) any district court otherwise having jurisdiction to entertain it.

`(B) APPLICATION TRANSFER- Section 2241(b) of title 28, United States Code, shall apply to an application for a writ of habeas corpus described in subparagraph (A).

`(3) APPEALS- Notwithstanding any other provision of law, including section 2253 of title 28, in habeas corpus proceedings described in paragraph (1) before a circuit or district judge, the final order shall be subject to review, on appeal, by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. There shall be no right of appeal in such proceedings to any other circuit court of appeals.

`(4) RULE OF DECISION- The law applied by the Supreme Court and the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit shall be regarded as the rule of decision in habeas corpus proceedings described in paragraph (1).

`(c) STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION- The provisions of this section shall not be applicable to any other provision of this Act.’.

(b) CLERICAL AMENDMENT- The table of contents of the Immigration and Nationality Act is amended by inserting after the item relating to section 236 the following:

`Sec. 236A. Mandatory detention of suspected terrorist; habeas corpus; judicial review.’.

(c) REPORTS- Not later than 6 months after the date of the enactment of this Act, and every 6 months thereafter, the Attorney General shall submit a report to the Committee on the Judiciary of the House of Representatives and the Committee on the Judiciary of the Senate, with respect to the reporting period, on–

(1) the number of aliens certified under section 236A(a)(3) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, as added by subsection (a);

(2) the grounds for such certifications;

(3) the nationalities of the aliens so certified;

(4) the length of the detention for each alien so certified; and

(5) the number of aliens so certified who–

(A) were granted any form of relief from removal;

(B) were removed;

(C) the Attorney General has determined are no longer aliens who may be so certified; or

(D) were released from detention.

SEC. 413. MULTILATERAL COOPERATION AGAINST TERRORISTS.

Section 222(f) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1202(f)) is amended–

(1) by striking `except that in the discretion of’ and inserting the following: `except that–

`(1) in the discretion of’; and

(2) by adding at the end the following:

`(2) the Secretary of State, in the Secretary’s discretion and on the basis of reciprocity, may provide to a foreign government information in the Department of State’s computerized visa lookout database and, when necessary and appropriate, other records covered by this section related to information in the database–

`(A) with regard to individual aliens, at any time on a case-by-case basis for the purpose of preventing, investigating, or punishing acts that would constitute a crime in the United States, including, but not limited to, terrorism or trafficking in controlled substances, persons, or illicit weapons; or

`(B) with regard to any or all aliens in the database, pursuant to such conditions as the Secretary of State shall establish in an agreement with the foreign government in which that government agrees to use such information and records for the purposes described in subparagraph (A) or to deny visas to persons who would be inadmissible to the United States.’.

Posted in U.S. Foreign Policy | Comments Off

PM:Potter’s Manson

Posted by Tespid on July 14, 2009

I got laughed at in my own mind thinking of explaning my statements over and over again. Yet, I always falter in that I have to write 25 pages of cited evidence and developed notes and perceptual facts before anyone believes what I have said in less than four or five words. I told him Harry Potter is real. I can hear you scoffing from the other end of the ethernet.

Let me put it this way. The principles upon which Harry Potter is based are real. I had an email/document I carried in my files for years, because of its oddity and the source from whence I got it. The person who wrote the email reffered to the works of one David or Matthew Potter who wrote about the connections of magic, freemasonry, U.S. Government, Parliament in the United Kingdom and the royal family there of known. The excerpt from Potter’s research was brief, detailed and intriguing. I say this as well, I received this email long before J.K. Rowling was heard of as a writer in the book world of certain buildings. The method of getting this email was internet email interchange with individuals who may be 3 to 5 degrees of separation from people like Charles Manson and the realms of religious magical cult warfare. Sometimes when you seek information, you drop into places that are more of a treasure trove in all regards. One path yields one perspective, another path yields different fruit in its discord.

Before I offer this next bit, remember that a murder did happen to one of the actors in the Potter movies. He was to play a key role in another, but his life was literally cut short.

One tradition in occult writing is that the author bases his/her plot on real magically related events. A writer like Dion Fortune did so for years. Most, if not all of her themes were based on cases she was involved in directly or known through others. Keep in mind that H.P. Lovecraft may have written out of real life events and Catholic histories. Should you believe in the seen and the unseen, it might make sense to you.

Illustrating: What if Charles Manson had gotten away with the librarian and went underground to live a bland life. He has one child. Lo and behold a secret group gets wind of where he is and goes to kill him. During the clean up someting let’s the child go free. yet when he grow up, he has the propinquity of the knowledge of evil, speaking like the snake that tempted eve in the garden of Eden. Makes a case for genetic predisposition to murder doesn’t it? The child becomes an orphan and grows up in a boarding school as is the country’s tradtion in working with orphans.

How close to the Harry Potter novels does that sound?

Posted in U.S. Foreign Policy | Comments Off

Reference Reading – Senator Graham’s querying Sotomayor

Posted by Tespid on July 14, 2009

(If you watched the confirmation hearings today, you may remember a mention of the Geneva Convention and the War on Terrorism. Here’s the reference in partial context:)

Art. 4. Persons protected by the Convention are those who, at a given moment and in any manner whatsoever, find themselves, in case of a conflict or occupation, in the hands of a Party to the conflict or Occupying Power of which they are not nationals.

Nationals of a State which is not bound by the Convention are not protected by it. Nationals of a neutral State who find themselves in the territory of a belligerent State, and nationals of a co-belligerent State, shall not be regarded as protected persons while the State of which they are nationals has normal diplomatic representation in the State in whose hands they are.

The provisions of Part II are, however, wider in application, as defined in Article 13.

Persons protected by the Geneva Convention for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded and Sick in Armed Forces in the Field of 12 August 1949, or by the Geneva Convention for the Amelioration of the Condition of Wounded, Sick and Shipwrecked Members of Armed Forces at Sea of 12 August 1949, or by the Geneva Convention relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War of 12 August 1949, shall not be considered as protected persons within the meaning of the present Convention.

Art. 5 Where in the territory of a Party to the conflict, the latter is satisfied that an individual protected person is definitely suspected of or engaged in activities hostile to the security of the State, such individual person shall not be entitled to claim such rights and privileges under the present Convention as would, if exercised in the favour of such individual person, be prejudicial to the security of such State.

Where in occupied territory an individual protected person is detained as a spy or saboteur, or as a person under definite suspicion of activity hostile to the security of the Occupying Power, such person shall, in those cases where absolute military security so requires, be regarded as having forfeited rights of communication under the present Convention.

In each case, such persons shall nevertheless be treated with humanity and, in case of trial, shall not be deprived of the rights of fair and regular trial prescribed by the present Convention. They shall also be granted the full rights and privileges of a protected person under the present Convention at the earliest date consistent with the security of the State or Occupying Power, as the case may be.

Art. 6. The present Convention shall apply from the outset of any conflict or occupation mentioned in Article 2.

In the territory of Parties to the conflict, the application of the present Convention shall cease on the general close of military operations.

In the case of occupied territory, the application of the present Convention shall cease one year after the general close of military operations; however, the Occupying Power shall be bound, for the duration of the occupation, to the extent that such Power exercises the functions of government in such territory, by the provisions of the following Articles of the present Convention: 1 to 12, 27, 29 to 34, 47, 49, 51, 52, 53, 59, 61 to 77, 143.

Protected persons whose release, repatriation or re-establishment may take place after such dates shall meanwhile continue to benefit by the present Convention.

Art. 7. In addition to the agreements expressly provided for in Articles 11, 14, 15, 17, 36, 108, 109, 132, 133 and 149, the High Contracting Parties may conclude other special agreements for all matters concerning which they may deem it suitable to make separate provision. No special agreement shall adversely affect the situation of protected persons, as defined by the present Convention, not restrict the rights which it confers upon them.

Protected persons shall continue to have the benefit of such agreements as long as the Convention is applicable to them, except where express provisions to the contrary are contained in the aforesaid or in subsequent agreements, or where more favourable measures have been taken with regard to them by one or other of the Parties to the conflict.

Art. 8. Protected persons may in no circumstances renounce in part or in entirety the rights secured to them by the present Convention, and by the special agreements referred to in the foregoing Article, if such there be.

Art. 9. The present Convention shall be applied with the cooperation and under the scrutiny of the Protecting Powers whose duty it is to safeguard the interests of the Parties to the conflict. For this purpose, the Protecting Powers may appoint, apart from their diplomatic or consular staff, delegates from amongst their own nationals or the nationals of other neutral Powers. The said delegates shall be subject to the approval of the Power with which they are to carry out their duties.

The Parties to the conflict shall facilitate to the greatest extent possible the task of the representatives or delegates of the Protecting Powers.

The representatives or delegates of the Protecting Powers shall not in any case exceed their mission under the present Convention.

They shall, in particular, take account of the imperative necessities of security of the State wherein they carry out their duties.

Art. 10. The provisions of the present Convention constitute no obstacle to the humanitarian activities which the International Committee of the Red Cross or any other impartial humanitarian organization may, subject to the consent of the Parties to the conflict concerned, undertake for the protection of civilian persons and for their relief.

Art. 11. The High Contracting Parties may at any time agree to entrust to an international organization which offers all guarantees of impartiality and efficacy the duties incumbent on the Protecting Powers by virtue of the present Convention.

When persons protected by the present Convention do not benefit or cease to benefit, no matter for what reason, by the activities of a Protecting Power or of an organization provided for in the first paragraph above, the Detaining Power shall request a neutral State, or such an organization, to undertake the functions performed under the present Convention by a Protecting Power designated by the Parties to a conflict.

If protection cannot be arranged accordingly, the Detaining Power shall request or shall accept, subject to the provisions of this Article, the offer of the services of a humanitarian organization, such as the International Committee of the Red Cross, to assume the humanitarian functions performed by Protecting Powers under the present Convention.

Any neutral Power or any organization invited by the Power concerned or offering itself for these purposes, shall be required to act with a sense of responsibility towards the Party to the conflict on which persons protected by the present Convention depend, and shall be required to furnish sufficient assurances that it is in a position to undertake the appropriate functions and to discharge them impartially.

No derogation from the preceding provisions shall be made by special agreements between Powers one of which is restricted, even temporarily, in its freedom to negotiate with the other Power or its allies by reason of military events, more particularly where the whole, or a substantial part, of the territory of the said Power is occupied.

Whenever in the present Convention mention is made of a Protecting Power, such mention applies to substitute organizations in the sense of the present Article.

The provisions of this Article shall extend and be adapted to cases of nationals of a neutral State who are in occupied territory or who find themselves in the territory of a belligerent State in which the State of which they are nationals has not normal diplomatic representation.

Art. 12. In cases where they deem it advisable in the interest of protected persons, particularly in cases of disagreement between the Parties to the conflict as to the application or interpretation of the provisions of the present Convention, the Protecting Powers shall lend their good offices with a view to settling the disagreement.

For this purpose, each of the Protecting Powers may, either at the invitation of one Party or on its own initiative, propose to the Parties to the conflict a meeting of their representatives, and in particular of the authorities responsible for protected persons, possibly on neutral territory suitably chosen. The Parties to the conflict shall be bound to give effect to the proposals made to them for this purpose. The Protecting Powers may, if necessary, propose for approval by the Parties to the conflict a person belonging to a neutral Power, or delegated by the International Committee of the Red Cross, who shall be invited to take part in such a meeting.

Posted in Terrorism, U.S. Foreign Policy | Comments Off

Bad Interview Skills and Confirmation Hearings

Posted by Tespid on July 14, 2009

The one thing you never do in an interview is to point out blatantly or euphemisitcally that you are not qualified for the job. Crafting your replies to questions in a manner that says, “in my old job, we did it this way”. Or perhaps to consistently comment that you can not guess at what other people do in a particular office and would rather not answer the question, because you do not know. The best questions in an interview are the leading ones that ask you to use your imagination and base your reply on what you have accomplished either professionally or personally. An interview is no time to reserve judgement and not try. It’s a determination of what initiative you have to flesh out or complete a job.

 I wonder if Judge Sotomayor actually hears what she is saying? Why can she not take up a challenge and leave her factoid limitations behind. Leading questions as to cases coming up in the court are built to flesh out her ideology and thinking. Not just an evaluation of her ability to complete the mechanics of judgeship. Which would incline her to consider what went wrong or right in the history of an appealed case that arrives at her bench.

Sotomayor was on target with fleshing out her character and experience in tandem with the law. Though she may be ground breaking, she seems to lack the courage to apply her personal knowledge and temper it with case law. Still it was explained to me in high school that the Supreme Court, when handing down an opinion and a dissent rule in the stead of contemporary culture and the needs of the current and upcoming generations. How can she not have some consideration toward general news and how she may have bandied topics about in her mind. She could resolve by saying, I have not come to a complete conclusion about the matter, but I have though about how certain aspects play out in an argument.

The other part about a bad interview is pushing off what you will do is dependant upon others.

It makes it impossible for the interviewer to figure out how the candidate will fit into the office.

Is Sotomayor saying that you’ll just have to hire me to see what I’ll do. Make the consideration on what I have done – which for some may not be that appealing.

Senator Kyl is catching Sotomayor on her ideology and plans in her speeches. In an absolutist realm, is Sotomayor trying to garner that her experience gives her a better perspective on all that would come before the bench of the high court? What catches her is that she does not comment that U.S. Supremem Court Judge Clarence Thomas has just as much of a better perspective. In the guise of feeling legal oppression and seeing the end of it from a manor of changing the system form the inside may be what colors Sotomayors comment. Which makes it not to far off from being representative of the student protest and Civil Right Era that her struggles and achievements are born from.

Posted in Economic Growth, Metamorphosis, U.S.A. White House | Comments Off

Researchers Note

Posted by Tespid on July 14, 2009

The blog The Medicine Wars has been taken down for fear of literary theft and an ill assured writer. The writer is considering doing what the New York Times and other newspapers  have done in centuries past. Charles Dickens, when writing the Christmas Carol turned in a chapter more or less to his literary agent, who in turn gave it to the newspaper. The paper published Dicken’s progress every Sunday in a sectino of the paper. Whether or not Tiny Tim’s last word’s were seen to grace newsprint, I do not know. A tactic that is usually taken is that only a portion of the book is published in the paper. To read the whole thing, one must buy the book. Meanwhile the writer is mulling over lost time and a lost laptop.

 

~staff

Posted in U.S. Foreign Policy | Comments Off

Reviving tradition as a contemporary solution

Posted by Tespid on July 14, 2009

Rabbi: Women can revive Jewish law

Getting women involved in Halachic rulings could expand and rejuvenate field, says Rabbi Yehuda Gilad of Religious Kibbutz Movement

Kobi Nahshoni Published:  07.13.09, 16:58 / Israel Jewish Scene 

 ”The introduction of women into the field of halachic rulings could lead to renewed thinking in many areas and to a revival, expansion and rejuvenation of the world of Halacha,” Rabbi Yehuda Gilad, head of the Maale Gilboa yeshiva and a Religious Kibbutz Movement rabbi said Monday.

 Opinion

Why Wait?  / Rabbi Chaya Rowen-Baker

Not ordaining women as rabbis is a serious mistake that deprives the Jewish people of divinely inspired leadership

Full Story

Speaking at the Kolech – Religious Women’s Voice sixth annual conference, Rabbi Gilad explained that since women have not been involved in the field till recently, they are not bound by halachic traditions and can offer innovative solutions.

 ”Tradition is undoubtedly an important thing. One cannot speak about Jewish life without tradition. However, we all feel that there are tings in religious life that are no longer relevant and that are out of touch with reality,” said Gilad.

 The rabbi warned that because of their new and still unstable status, women might prove to be either too conformist or too daring and defiant in their rulings. Nevertheless, he concluded that “this is the right thing to do.”

 ’Family planning a must’

Another speaker at the conference, head of Midreshet Lindenbaum for girls Malka Puterkovsky, addressed the issue of family planning in religious society, and said: “There is a place in Jewish law, and I believe it is a privilege rather than a duty, for every couple to plan their family.”

 According to Puterkovsky, postponing the first pregnancy and ensuring a gap between each birth are “the number one obligation in Halacha.” She criticized rabbis who avoid discussing the subject and said, “Those who withhold the fact that this is halachically possible, violate the mitzvoth of the Torah… they deny information that is critical to a couple’s life and commit the sin of standing idly by the blood of thy neighbor.”

 Puterkovsky said that the present reality in which teens are encouraged to “marry young and start having children immediately,” was terrible in her view. “If we don’t open this up to public debate, we will pay social and human prices, and this is already happening today.”

[After reading the above article, a similar approach can be done in predominantly Islamic countries. Why not have women as voting members during trials or in the least advising members in trials that directly or indirectly involve women. A progreessive intepretation of tradition in this day and age for some countries. It is amazing to see how maintaining tradition is so vital in some countries. I wonder if a poet's musings were true in saying that tradition left shackles on his life that he could not take off.  Now I remember, its the musical Fiddler on the Roof . The song he sings is called "Tradition". It leaves no wonder in my mind why some foreigners accuses Westerners of being Godless, faithless, confused and unorganized. Does tradition have a manner of laying life out in an organized path to follow? Is there any free thinking to it? Has tradition in the past made everything predetermined? In other words, you always go into the family business. That's a great topic for an Opinion page. Soon to follow.]

Posted in Feminism | Tagged: , , , | Comments Off

Headline: The Iranian Anger Machine

Posted by Tespid on July 14, 2009

Iranian Clerics Lash Out At China Over Unrest
Iranian clerics condemned China on Sunday for “horribly” suppressing Muslim Uighurs in deadly unrest between the Uighurs and Han Chinese that has killed more than 180 people.“It is true that the Chinese government and its people have close economic and political ties with us and other Islamic countries, but this is no reason for them to horribly suppress our Muslim brothers and sisters,” said Grand Ayatollah Naser Makarem Shirazi in a statement to ISNA news agency.

“We strongly condemn this suppression and urge all Muslims of the world to demand in one voice that the Chinese government end this situation and punish the criminals.”

China is one of the top trading partners of the Islamic republic.

Shirazi also took a dig at Iranian officials for remaining “silent” over the unrest in the Chinese province of Xinjiang.

“People expect that the Islamic republic’s officials will not remain silent and take an appropriate step and not leave our Muslim brothers and sisters alone,” he added.

The Society of Qom’s Seminary Scholars, the top hard line clerical body from the Iranian religious town of Qom, also lashed out at China over the unrest.

“The Chinese government has called this horrible killing a tribal clash, but reports say that the government has been taking the side of one special racist group in this conflict,” it said in a statement issued on its website.

It urged the Chinese government to “end this conflict by confronting it firmly and responsibly and by taking into consideration the rights of the Muslims.”

The body also urged the Iranian foreign ministry to pursue the issue “diplomatically” until it is resolved.

Iranian officials have yet to issue an official reaction on the unrest in Xinjiang, whose eight million Uighurs have long complained about repressive Chinese rule, grievances which the government says are baseless.

Uighurs reportedly attacked Han Chinese in the unrest which broke out on July 5 and destroyed their shops but exiled Uighur leaders said the protests were peaceful until security forces over-reacted with deadly force.(AFP)

 
{Subtext Note}

6 Qaida Militants Sentenced to Death for Spate of Attacks in Yemen
A Yemeni court on Monday sentenced six suspected al-Qaida militants to death for a spate of deadly attacks on government and Western targets in the impoverished country.
Another 10 other defendants, including four Syrians and a Saudi, were sentenced to between eight and 15 years in jail on the same charges.

The 16 were convicted of carrying out 13 armed attacks over the past two years on foreign targets, government establishments and oil facilities in Yemen, the ancestral homeland of al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden.

These include a January 2008 attack that killed two Belgian women tourists, a March 2008 attack targeting the U.S. embassy and a rocket strike on a compound housing American oil workers.

The defendants chanted “God is great” after the verdicts were announced in the court, which specializes in dealing with terror cases.

“We will liberate the land of Islam between Hadramut (southeastern Yemen) and the Sham (Syria),” they shouted.

The sentences can be appealed, but the convicts did not declare in court if they will formally challenge the verdicts.(AFP)

 
Beirut, 13 Jul 09, 10:48

{Get out while the gettins good.}

Iraqi Military Chief Predicts Years of Attacks
The Iraqi military on Sunday predicted that insurgent attacks, though declining, could continue for a few years, raising the prospect of militant violence after the scheduled withdrawal of all U.S. troops by the end of 2011.The comments by Gen. Babaker B. Shawkat Zebari, the army chief of staff, came several hours after gunmen fatally shot a government financial officer in northern Iraq and one day after bombs in Baghdad and a village near Mosul killed 10 people.

Violence is sharply down in the war that began with the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, but militants still carry out lethal attacks on a regular basis. The U.S. military completed a withdrawal of combat forces from Iraqi cities to outlying bases last month as part of a plan to let Iraq take the lead on ensuring its own security.

Zebari said insurgents once held sway in cities and provinces, but had been whittled down to a few highly dangerous cells that he expected would continue attacks for “a year or two or three.” He said the Iraqi military would get help from American forces if needed, but would also rely on assistance from its own citizens.

“To face terrorism, the Iraqi army does not need tanks or armored vehicles, but needs intelligence, fast communication and people’s support,” he said “The government has to coordinate with the population to get information about the terrorist cells.”

The army chief spoke after meeting Iraq’s top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, in the holy Shiite city of Najaf, south of Baghdad. Sistani enjoys massive support among Iraq’s majority Shiites, and the Iraqi military sees the backing of religious leaders as vital to its legitimacy and success.

While violence has diminished since 2007, insurgents exact a steady toll with bombs and targeted killings that would amount to a crisis in most other countries.

In the northern city of Kirkuk, gunmen with silencers in a car waited outside the house of Aziz Rizqo Nisan, head of the provincial audit department, and shot him as he drove to work on Sunday morning. His death was confirmed by local police and the national government’s media office in Baghdad.

The motive for the killing of Nisan, a Christian, was unclear.

In the capital, three bombs exploded around 4:30 p.m. near churches, injuring eight civilians, police said. Two bombs that were planted in a church in western Baghdad exploded at midnight Saturday, causing some damage but no injuries, police said. Iraqi Christians have often been attacked by Islamic extremists, and many have fled the country.

Half a dozen lawmakers demanded that a general census planned later this year be postponed until after parliamentary elections in January. They argued that the upheaval of war had caused radical change in the ethnic and sectarian makeup of many areas and the results could ignite fresh tension.

Lawmaker Osama al-Nujaifi, a Sunni Arab from the northern city of Mosul, noted that large numbers of Kurds had moved into the oil-rich Kirkuk area amid Arab concerns that they seek to take control. In Baghdad, sectarian violence between Sunni and Shiite Arabs altered the face of neighborhoods as people fled their homes or quit the city altogether.

“The form for the census has an item about the ethnicity of the person, and that would lead to shocking results,” Nujaifi said at a news conference.(AP)

 
Beirut, 12 Jul 09, 18:57

Posted in U.S. Foreign Policy | 4 Comments »