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March 05, 2006

Idiots Reasses Fairfax County Taxes

My house value didn't change in one year. However, my LAND value went up almost 30%. Why? It could be because the idiots in Fairfax County continue to believe that it's a great idea to crowd as many houses as possible onto as little land as possible, regardless of the impact on the environment, wildlife, traffic congestion, school capacity, and other services. Land is valued so highly because it can then be subdivided ad infinitum, and houses can be piled on top of each other.

One would wonder "why would someone pay 2 million dollars for a cookie cutter McMansion on 1/8 acre of land?" Answer - Lots of idiots would, and DO. A pristine field across from our house is stacked with 2 million dollar crapola houses, adding more wells tapped into our existing awful water supply, more traffic stacked up at our intersection (where the VDOT won't put in lights or other traffic safety devices despite the fact that we have an elementary school bus stop at the end of our road, despite the houses driving the deer, fox, possums, raccoons, and other assorted wildlife into people's back yards, causing them to whine and complain that living in the woods would actually mean they might have to put up with *gasp* ANIMALS!

Greed. Selfishness. Inability to understand that they are part of a connected whole. Me Me Me. All of these reasons and more cause this ridiculous urban sprawl, obviously encouraged by ridiculous tax assessments making one's land SO valuable that people are encouraged to attempt to subdivide and make some money by saying "to hell with everyone else."

*ARGH*

November 27, 2005

Senate Approves Plan to Limit Detainee Access to Courts

Can't circumvent the constitution one way, let's try another one. When are these idiots going to leave our civil liberties alone, what few we actually have left?

Senate Approves Plan to Limit Detainee Access to Courts:


The Senate endorsed a plan yesterday that would sharply limit suspected foreign terrorists' access to U.S. courts, an effort to overturn a landmark 2004 Supreme Court ruling that has allowed hundreds of detainees held by the military at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to challenge their detentions.


November 17, 2005

Terror war detainees total passes 83,000; some held for years

Yet there's still terror. More now than before. So gee, how is this helping?

Terror war detainees total passes 83,000; some held for years:


WASHINGTON-The United States has detained more than 83,000 foreigners in the four years of the war on terror, enough to nearly fill the country's largest football stadium.

September 19, 2005

So What's Going On Here?

This is from Dave Farber's list. Could it really be possible that people think we are THIS stupid? Is this real? Is it a hoax? I'm confused.

Weldon: Atta Papers Destroyed on Orders

Thursday September 15, 2005 11:31 PM

By DONNA DE LA CRUZ

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - A Pentagon employee was ordered to destroy documents that identified Mohamed Atta as a terrorist two years before the 2001 attacks, a congressman said Thursday.

The employee is prepared to testify next week before the Senate Judiciary Committee and was expected to name the person who ordered him to destroy the large volume of documents, said Rep. Curt Weldon, R-Pa.

Weldon declined to name the employee, citing confidentiality matters. Weldon described the documents as ``2.5 terabytes'' - as much as one-fourth of all the printed materials in the Library of Congress, he added.

A Senate Judiciary Committee aide said the witnesses for Wednesday's hearing had not been finalized and could not confirm Weldon's comments.

A message left Thursday with a Pentagon spokesman, Army Maj. Paul Swiergosz, was not immediately returned.

Weldon has said that Atta, the mastermind of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and three other hijackers were identified in 1999 by a classified military intelligence unit known as ``Able Danger,'' which determined they could be members of an al-Qaida cell.

On Wednesday, former members of the Sept. 11 commission dismissed the ``Able Danger'' assertions. One commissioner, ex-Sen. Slade Gorton, R-Wash., said, ``Bluntly, it just didn't happen and that's the conclusion of all 10 of us.''

Weldon responded angrily to Gorton's assertions.

``It's absolutely unbelievable that a commission would say this program just didn't exist,'' Weldon said Thursday.

Pentagon officials said this month they had found three more people who recall an intelligence chart identifying Atta as a terrorist prior to the Sept. 11 attacks.

Two military officers, Army Lt. Col. Anthony Shaffer and Navy Capt. Scott Phillpott, have come forward to support Weldon's claims.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uslatest/story/0,1282,-5281566,00.html

August 05, 2005

Bush Names Bolton U.N. Ambassador in Recess Appointment

As if we don't already look like total dorks to the world, the Shrub appoints THIS loser to represent us. Oh joyous rapture.

Bush Names Bolton U.N. Ambassador in Recess Appointment: "President Bush installed John R. Bolton as ambassador to the United Nations yesterday, employing the presidential power to make temporary appointments to break through a wall of Democratic opposition to Bolton's confrontational brand of conservatism.

(Via Washington Post: Intelligence.)

August 04, 2005

Protection Against Terrorism

As I was watching CNN today, I couldn't help but notice a quite silly poll run by CBS asking the American public what methods they would like to see for protecting us against terrorism. I was rather upset that my favorite remedy was not listed - prohibiting the stampede of politicians crawling over each other to initiate stupid legislation while trampling civil rights and the constitution.

When are the moronic masses ever going to figure out that these stupid band-aid remedies are utterly useless when we allow Bin Laden and Zawahiri (who doesn't deserve the Arabic honorific "Al") and all these others to continue to use the World forum to spew their crap? We KNOW where these people are hiding. Why are we not blasting the holes they're hiding in rather than further restricting OUR liberties? Why are we wasting the lives of Marines from Ohio in Iraq rather than systematically taking out every single one of these people, their friends, their families, those who aid them, hide them, help them, talk to them, etc?

Why? Because the American people are largely stupid. Yes, ok, I've said it. But when you have only 33% of the American public saying "no" to national identity cards, they are just NOT capable of following a trail of logic. National ID cards do NOTHING but further restrict law abiding citizens. (Unless, of course, you're a forger or identity thief, then they're nirvana) Checking backpacks on subways does NOTHING but further restricts law abiding citizens. Restricting you from flying anywhere near DC does NOTHING but further restricts law abiding citizens. But what do you see on TV? Joe idiot after Jane idiot saying how they feel so much safer that the police are doing useless things!

So when are we going to have something that DOESN'T make it easier for "big brother" to keep tabs on us, yet helps in the fight on terror? Oh wait! That would mean something besides a knee jerk reaction. That would mean the the "powers that be" would have to think not of what the general idiot population thinks is a great idea and instead actually consider that would be USEFUL and make a difference. I suppose that perhaps I shouldn't hold my breath.

May 25, 2005

A Matter Of Public Record

You GO girl! It's about time that someone showed Congress what we "little people" have to put up with. We fought and fought back in 1988 to keep employee SSNs off of their health insurance cards. Fought some more in 1989 or so to stop Virginia from requiring our SSNs on drivers licenses. One would have hoped that perhaps the fight would have become easier, but that is not the case.

Perhaps if the decision makers had to play on the same field as we do, things would change pretty quickly. You want health insurance reform? Make Congress and the President use OUR health insurance instead of their own bloated policies. You want tax reform? Let the IRS harass Members of Congress the same way they harass the rest of us. Aviation reform? Put Congress on the "no fly" list. Privacy reform? Do exactly what BJ is doing. More power to her.

A Matter Of Public Record: "Betty (but call her BJ) Ostergren, a feisty 56-year-old from just north of Richmond, is driven to make important people angry. She puts their Social Security numbers on her Web site, or links to where they can be found.

It's not that she wants CIA Director Porter J. Goss, former secretary of state Colin L. Powell, or Florida Gov. Jeb Bush to be victims of identity theft, as were millions of Americans in the past year. Ostergren is on a crusade to scare and shame public officials into doing something about how easy it is to get sensitive personal data."

(Via Washington Post.)

May 01, 2005

Lip Service To Supporting the Military

The military is an important aspect of American life, and unfortunately necessary in a world that has still not figured out how to "just get along." So long as we have individuals who risk their lives and limbs in the service of their country, we, as a nation, should be willing to make certain sacrifices for them in return. Examples of these include maintaining adequate funding for military families to have proper health care, ensuring jobs are held for those who have been called to duty, and generally supporting the people and the job they do for us.

Unfortunately, it seems that at least one branch of the US Government refuses to make life just that little bit easier for those who want to support individuals in the military. The United States Postal Service states on its website that they do not support their Internet "Click and Ship" service to military addresses.

While it might be easy to say that this is not really a big deal since you can just march on down to the post office, wait in line for however long it might take, fill out the paperwork and ship the package, that isn't really the point. The point is that our government take that little bit of an extra step (in this case, providing scanners to post offices) so that we can more easily ship to our fighting men and women around the world, not to mention assist our disabled veterans to send packages and messages to their comrades by themselves, without having to ask someone to go to the post office for them.

It may be just a "little thing" to some, but to a business owner who wishes to fulfill orders made by members of the military, it means leaving work to stand in line. To a new mother it means packing up the baby and then standing in line and hoping he doesn't start crying. To the disabled it means having to ask someone else to go to the post office for them. All of these things CAN be done, but shouldn't our government try to make things LESS difficult to keep up the morale of the troops?

And before you say "use UPS or Fedex" they are prohibited from delivering to military addresses. The monopoly belongs to the USPS. Good try though :-)

April 21, 2005

As if you needed any more excuses to buy a Mac

One FUNDIE causes them to move.... but a couple million disgruntled customers make them do NOTHING? Why is this so typical?

As if you needed any more excuses to buy a Mac: "

United States: Microsoft has withdrawn support for a Washington State bill which would protect gays and lesbians from discrimination in employment, housing, banking, insurance, and other matters by adding sexual orientation to a state law which already bars discrimination on the basis of race, religion, national origin, gender, marital status, and mental or physical handicap after a single loony fundie threatened the company. Microsoft has previously supported equal rights legislation. As John Aravosis of AMERICAblog notes:

The radical right activist reportedly told Microsoft it had better pull its support for the gays or anti-gay bigots would launch a nationwide boycott of Microsoft, and guess what - Microsoft caved. A single anti-gay jerk, and Microsoft chose to reverse over ten years of policy and bash gays.

This is outrageous. It's also incredibly dangerous. For over a decade Microsoft, along with hundreds of other corporate leaders, has endorsed gay rights legislation in the states and nationally. And now, suddenly, because ONE ANTI-GAY ACTIVIST COMPLAINED, they've suddenly changed their minds ON A CIVIL RIGHTS ISSUE. A rather big oops after ten years of being in favor of civil rights, don't you think?

Microsoft clearly isn't proud of caving into threats from lunatics, and seems to have tried to keep it a secret.

Meanwhile, it has been drawn to my attention that the reason many Prattle commenters are unable to tell the difference between copy written by Prattle contributors and quoted material from elsewhere is because Microsoft Internet Explorer does not support current web standards. There is no evidence that this lack of functionality will ever be fixed, and affected readers are advised to get a proper standards-compliant browser (preferably running on a computer and OS which not only works, but comes from a company with a much better record on equality).

TAKE ACTION: Microsoft abandons gays - AMERICAblog, 20th April 2005.

"

(Via The Pagan Prattle Online.)

April 16, 2005

Hiding Failure in the "War on Terror?"

Oh that is funny, and just so typical of the current administration. Got information that you're failing? Well, BURY it! Don't let the American people KNOW that you're screwing up! No, NEVER!

There IS WMD in Iraq! The Iraqui people ARE welcoming us with open arms. There IS no collateral damage in civilian human lives in Iraq. TSA IS doing a better job than before 9/11. The DC ADIZ IS protecting us from that horrible threat of private aircraft. The Patriot Act is NEVER used against the innocent. And the "War on Terror" IS working.

Yeah, ok... right. We can always trust our government to give us all the facts.

WASHINGTON - The State Department decided to stop publishing an annual report on international terrorism after the government's top terrorism center concluded that there were more terrorist attacks in 2004 than in any year since 1985, the first year the publication covered. More here

April 12, 2005

Yep, They All Think We're Stupid

Okie Dokie Tom Ridge, RFID boosts security. But then, so do armed guards in front of every house in America, GPS tracking on our cars, unlimited wiretaps on our phones and Internet services, and shutting down US airspace to commercial and private planes. Lots of things boost security, but when was the last time you heard anyone propose anything that would boost privacy?

And isn't it just peachy that our former DHS head just happens to have landed into a job with an RFID contractor? This makes me feel ever so warm and fuzzy when this man who is exploiting the information, skills, and notoriety he gained at public expense, which is now being used to line the wallets of not only himself, but this lovely RFID contractor, then tells us that the government can be trusted to safeguard any personal data it happens to collect. Gee, that's good enough for me, eh?

Ridge Says RFID Boosts Security: "The former head of the Department of Homeland Security says RFID will help make the United States safer, but critics aren't so sure. Mark Baard reports from Chicago."

(Via Wired News.)

December 17, 2004

The Civil War

An interesting history lesson from Larry Lessig that we are unfortunately repeating. Will we ever learn? Or do the ends always justify the means, no matter what?

The most profound civil liberties issue during the Civil War involved Lincoln's suspensions of the writ of habeas corpus. What is the writ? Suppose you are arrested by police or military officers while you're walking down the street. You or your representative has the right to go to a court and seek a writ of habeas corpus. This writ gives the court the power to order the government to justify its action and it gives the court the authority to order your release if it finds that your detention is unlawful. The writ of habeas corpus is the bulwark of our constitutional system. Without it, the executive branch could unilaterally seize you and you would have no right to have an independent branch of government determine whether the seizure was constitutional. You would be completely at the mercy of the President.

Nonethelss, the Constitution express provides that the writ of habeas corpus can be suspended in cases of invasion or rebellion. The Civil War was certainly the latter. Lincoln first suspended the writ in 1861, shortly after the attack on Fort Sumpter. Seccesionists in Maryland had rioted and prevented Union troops from passing through Baltimore to protect the nation's capital from attack. To restore order, which was beyond the capacity of the local law enforcement officer, Lincoln (reluctantly) suspended the writ of habeas corpus and authorized the military summarily to arrest and detain individuals in military facilities.

During the course of the Civil War, Lincoln suspending the writ on eight separate occasions. The most far reaching of these was a suspension in 1863 that applied across the entire Union and empowered military officials to arrest and confine any person "guilty of any disloyal act or practice." As many as 38,000 civilians in the North were arrested by the military during the Civil War under these suspensions. Most were suspected of draft evasion, desertion, or sabotage. Some were accused of seditious utterance.

The most famous of these was Clement Vallandigham, a former congressman and a leader of the Peace Democrats, or "Copperheads." Vallandigham opposed the war. In his view, it made no sense to compel the Southern states to remain in the Union against their will. He argued that the Union should simply let them seceed, rather than fight a bloody war that would eventually kill 600,000 soldiers. He also opposed the draft, the suspensions of habeas corpus, and the Emancipation Proclamation, which he regarded as an unconstitutional executive action. For going a speech in Ohio in 1863 in which he made these points, Vallandigham was arrested by General Ambrose Burnside and tried by military authorities for "disloyal speech" that would cause desertion and rebellion against the Union army. He was convicted by a military tribunal and sentenced to confinement in a military tribunal for the duration of the war.

There was a storm of protest, from Republicans as well as Democrats. Many Republicans argument that we weren't fighting the war in order to destroy liberty in the Union. Lincoln found himself between a rock and a hard place. On the one hand, he didn't want to embarrass his generals by publicly overriding them; on the other he didn't want to turn Vallandigham into a political martyr. His solution: He order Vallandigham exiled to the Confederacy. (This did not please Vallandigham, who regarded himself as a loyal citizen of the United States. He quickly escaped the South and sneaked back into the U.S., where he participated actively in the 1864 Democratic National Convention.)

After the Civil War, the Supreme Court held in Ex parte Milligan that Lincoln had exceeded his powers as commander-in-chief by declaring martial law in those parts of the country (such as Ohio in 1863) where the ordinary civil courts were open and well-functioning.

So, here's the question: More than two years ago, the administration arrested Jose Padilla at O'Hare Airport because government officials believed him to be a potential "dirty bomber." Labelling him an "enemy combatant," the government removed him to a military brig, where it held him incommunicado, with no access to a lawyer, no access to family and friends, with no judicial determination that there was a lawful basis for his detention. The government explained that, even though Padilla is an American citizen who was seized on American soil, he has no right to judicial reivew of his detention because the President has certified that he is an enemy combatant. Padilla, by the way, is still in custody in a military brig.

What do you think? How does this compare with suspension of habeas corpus?

[Lessig Blog]

November 22, 2004

Jumping Off the Omnibus (Donna Wentworth)

Absolutely fantastic news: the aspects of the copyright mashup bill that had so many of us worried were dropped before it passed in the Senate this weekend. The omnibus is now a minibus -- S 3021 [PDF].

Kudos to Public Knowledge, the Home Recording Rights Coalition, the Consumer Electronics Association, NetCoalition, and many others for their hard work in this fight.

Says Gigi Sohn in the PK press release:


Consumers won a major victory when the Senate passed legislation removing the most egregious elements of the omnibus copyright bill that had previously been under consideration. We strongly support the version of the Family Movie Act included in the bill, which gives families more control over how they watch movies and television, preserving the right to skip over commercials. The bill will benefit consumers, both in their entertainment choices now, and from the innovation in technology that will result in coming years.

We are also pleased that HR 4077 was dropped from the bill that passed. That legislation would have lowered the standard for copyright infringement. The Senate also wisely removed the PIRATE Act, which would have made the government the entertainment industry’s private law firm at taxpayer expense.

The Senate should also be commended for including in the bill legislation helping to preserve orphan works and reauthorizing the National Film Preservation Board. These features of the bill are important steps in preserving our nation’s culture. We look forward to working with Congress in coming sessions to make further progress in advancing consumer interests and preserving copyright balance.


Reuters has more; so does CNet.

Later: Derek Slater: "Take note again of how much better the public interest is being represented today than just a few years ago. Still playing a lot of defense, but at least it's relatively successful defense."

[Copyfight]

November 20, 2004

A Senator with a CLUE?!?! - From Larry Lessig

Senator McCain has become an important force for good in the land of IP extremism. I reported a hold he had placed on H.R. 4077 because of valid concerns about whether the freedoms it granted (to enable parents to filter "smut" from films) would be read to deny fair use in other cases.

The same careful eye has now caught a very elegant trap buried within the Intellectual Property Protection Act of 2004.

That bill adds some "Anti-Counterfeiting Provisions" to regulate counterfeit or illicit "labels." Most thought its target was physical labels. But a careful reading revealed a real ambiguity in the statute, suggesting (as the MPAA believed) it regulated both tangible and intangible labels.

Why is that a problem? Well if the act makes it an offence to distribute unauthorized copies of labels, then there's a very simple way for content owners to hack around fair use: embed a watermark into the content, and then any clip, even if fair use, would also constitute an unauthorized copy of a label. Thus, DMCA-like, what copyright law gives, this labeling law would take away.

Senator McCain is thus floating an amendment, to limit the regulation of "illicit labels" to physical labels only. And he has proposed a savings clause, which states:

Savings Clause.--Nothing in Section 2318 of title 18, United States Code, as amended by this title, shall be construed to restrict defenses or limitations on rights under title 17, United States Code, for a phonorecord, a copy of a computer program, a copy of a motion picture or other audiovisual work, a copy of a literary work, a copy of a pictorial, graphic, or sculptural work, or a work of visual art, that a genuine certificate, licensing document, registration card, or similar labeling component is (1) affixed to, enclosing, or accompanying, or (2) designed to be affixed to, enclose, or accompany.

Very nice work by a very careful Senator. The Justice Department had expressed similar concerns about an earlier version in March. But the Senator has now given those concerns real life.

[Lessig Blog]

February 24, 2004

U.S. Still Mining Terror Data

In a world where Osama Bin Laden is not flagged by CAPPS, do we really want John Poindexter combing through private records to decide who is friend and who is foe? Obviously not, said Congress. However, it seems that the wishes of the American people to keep their privacy are irrelevant. One has to wonder how long it will be before the NEA is listed and your local second grade teacher arrested and interrogated.

When Congress deep-sixed the Total Information Awareness program for fear it would compromise individual privacy, the government simply moved its research to various intelligence offices. [Wired News]

February 05, 2004

Security Holes at DMVs Nationwide Lead to ID Theft and Safety Concerns

Well isn't THIS special? You're forced to go to the DMV and put up with a ton of bulloney at the hands of people with the customer service skills of Microsoft, and then you find your identity has been taken by a family of space aliens. Whooppee

CDT has issued a report entitled "Unlicensed Fraud" documenting rampant internal fraud and lax security at state motor vehicle administration offices across the country placing the reliability of all driver's license at risk. While heavy public attention has been placed on new national standards and new technologies for driver's licenses, studying local news reports from throughout 2003 CDT finds that basic management processes to stop bribery and theft are lacking. In the report, CDT offers policy recommendations to address this dire issue. February 2, 2004 [Center for Democracy and Technology]

January 18, 2004

If This is True....

If the following article from Alter.Net is true, then something MUST be done to stop the insanity before everything we hold dear as a nation and as a civilized body of intelligent people is completely crushed out of existence. What it would be replaced with is more the beginning of a 1984'ish scenario than anything we've seen to date. Combine this sort of list with RFID technology and what happens then? I was "talking" online with a person from Uruguay who marveled at the lack of privacy in the United States as compared with her country. I'm not marveling....I'm damn scared.

Green Party "Terrorist" Not Allowed to Fly

By Frederick Sweet, Intervention Magazine
January 12, 2004

Art dealer Doug Stuber, who ran Ralph Nader's Green Party presidential campaign in North Carolina in 2000, was pulled out of an airline boarding line and grounded this past holiday season. He was about to make an important trip to Prague to gather artists for Henry James Art in Raleigh, N.C., when he was told (with ticket in hand) that he was not allowed to fly out that day.

When he asked why not, he was told at Raleigh-Durham airport that because of the sniper attacks, no Greens were allowed to fly overseas on that day. The next morning he returned, and instead of paying $670 round trip, was forced into a $2,600 "same day" air fare. But it's what happened to Stuber during the next 24 hours that is even more disturbing.

Stuber arrived at the airport at 6 a.m. and his first flight wasn't due out until nearly six hours later. He had plenty of time. At exactly 10:52 in the morning, just before boarding was to begin, he was approached by police officer Stanley (the same policeman who ushered him out of the airport the day before), who said that he "wanted to talk" to him. Stuber went with the police officer, but reminded him that no one had said he couldn't fly, and that his flight was about to leave.

Officer Stanley took Stuber into a room and questioned him for an hour. Around noon, Stanley had introduced him to two Secret Service agents. The agents took full eye-open pictures of Stuber with a digital camera. Then they asked him details about his family, where he lived, who he ever knew, what the Greens are up to, and other questions.

Continue reading "If This is True...." »

December 12, 2003

Rather than spending all that money on CRAP....

Rather than spending billions to set up special TFRs (temporary flight restrictions) that follow Dubya everywhere he goes and costs the taxpayers PLENTY to enforce, and rather than maintaining the ridiculous "Defense" restrictions 30 miles around DC that costs another bundle to enforce (including chasing phantoms, people who didn't actually cause violations, and violators that get away), we COULD be focusing on the REAL homeland security issues - preventing terrorism.

But Oh NOOOO! We instead have to spend the money to ensure the safety of a few politicians rather than take care of the people who pay their salaries and elect them to office. But then, after all, we're expendable. Right?

One year after President Bush sought to energize the nation's bioterrorism preparations with an unprecedented smallpox vaccination campaign, the program has all but ground to a halt. A report released yesterday, meanwhile, finds that only two states -- Florida and Illinois -- are prepared to distribute and administer vaccines or medicines that would be needed in the event of a major outbreak or attack. [Washington Post: Nation and Politics]

December 10, 2003

Why, when travelling, I often say I'm Canadian

There's a REASON the world hates Americans. Rather than getting pissed at the Canadians, why don't we DO something about it?

From the National Post and Canadian Press

OTTAWA -- Canadians should be careful not to appear "boastful" to Americans, who are insecure because of the war in Iraq and admit they are annoyed by northerners showing off the red maple leaf on their luggage when they travel, a recent federal report warns.

In focus groups held this fall in four U.S. cities where the federal government is opening consulates, Americans acknowledged they don't know much about Canadians.

"Some participants expressed a certain amount of annoyance at what is perceived as a systematic attempt by Canadians to make the statement that they are not Americans by sporting the maple leaf," said the recently released report. "This underscores the American sensitivity at feeling rejected by the rest of the world ...."

Continue reading "Why, when travelling, I often say I'm Canadian" »

December 07, 2003

US spending surges to historic level

So how does a tax cut plus historic spending and a huge rise in governmental red tape look for the future? Can you say voodoo economics? I knew you could. here we go again

Vote on gargantuan bill in Congress caps a year of stunning growth in government. WASHINGTON – President Bush and the Republican-led Congress are spending money at a rate not seen since World War II - and America's expanding war on terrorism isn't the main reason.

Spending for national security, it is true, has surged due to the military effort in Iraq and stepped-up homeland security.

But judging by a bill that Congress is taking up Monday, the lasting fiscal legacy of the Bush administration will also include a historic rise in domestic spending that could affect everything from consumer interest rates to a fiscal landscape that could force epic tax increases in future.

The spending growth is punctuated this week by a single vote in the House that wraps in all the spending leftovers - not all the money for troops, not the big Medicare expansion - and totals $820 billion. That's as big as the annual economic output of Sweden and Spain combined.

Behind the shift are several factors, notably the Republican Party's changing strategy and the lapsing of self-imposed fiscal restraints in Congress since Mr. Bush took office.

[Christian Science Monitor: All Stories]

U.S. Revokes Visa of Cleric at Saudi Embassy

So will this do any good? Or is it just another smoke screen? We all know that the Saudis could be doing more to stop terrorism. Are they putting their money where their diplomatic mouth is?

U.S. authorities have revoked the diplomatic visa of an influential Islamic cleric, and the Saudi government has decided it will no longer sponsor an Islamic institute in Virginia where he sometimes lectured, moves that reflect both nations' increasing efforts to curb the spread of extremist Islamic rhetoric, according to U.S. and Saudi officials. [Washington Post: Nation and Politics]

Dirty Bomb Warheads Disappear

Does this scare anyone else? And you thought the Middle East was the only place to worry about...

TIRASPOL, Moldova -- In the ethnic conflicts that surrounded the collapse of the Soviet Union, fighters in several countries seized upon an unlikely new weapon: a small, thin rocket known as the Alazan. Originally built for weather experiments, the Alazan rockets were packed with explosives and lobbed into cities. Military records show that at least 38 Alazan warheads were modified to carry radioactive material, effectively creating the world's first surface-to-surface dirty bomb. [Washington Post: Front Page]

November 19, 2003

And Now For Something Completely Stupid

Need health insurance? If your name is on the government "Terrorist Watch List" you ain't going to get it. In a stunningly stupid illogical quagmire of complete bulloney, CNN reports that the Treasury Dept. is telling major insurers like Blue Cross, Aetna, etc. that the only way they can be sure of complying with a Shrub Executive Order prohibiting property rights to terrorists, is to go through the database and deny health insurance to those listed there.

Well how ridiculous is that? Forget for a minute that it's essentially guilt until proven innocent, forget that it targets Moslem Americans, and forget that it's downright unfair. Think, for a minute, since most of the 9/11 terrorists were relatively rich guys (or were supported by relatively rich guys) are they really going to CARE? How is this going to hurt the REAL terrorists? Does this make ANY sense at all? How many millions of dollars are being lost by going through these lists? Can someone who is WRONGLY placed on this list ever get off of it?

Don't we have other things we can be doing? Like maybe finding Osama Bin Laden and Saddam Hussein? Or are we planning on finding them after they complain they've been denied health insurance, or a job as a Walmart janitor?

November 11, 2003

Post-9/11 Visa Rules Keep Thousands From Coming to U.S.

So, while we grant illegal aliens in California and Massachusetts drivers licenses, organ transplants before Americans, let their kids go to our schools, and let them work at WalMart, the ones that will actually GENERATE INCOME for the US through tourism or by paying for their medical care, get excluded. Yeah, sure makes a ton of sense to me. Right.

AUSTIN -- More than two years after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, a thicket of new rules governing the granting of visas to foreigners is dissuading thousands of people from coming to the United States and generating protests from research universities, medical institutions, multinational corporations and the travel industry. [Washington Post: Front Page]

November 10, 2003

Moscow and Tehran are partners in the struggle against terrorism

Does this make anyone else nervous? Egads!!

Russia welcomes Iran's intention to intensify the struggle against terrorism, announced RF Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov after the meeting with Secretary of Iran's National Security Council Hasan Rohani. "The fact that Iranian authorities have arrested more than 500 al-Qaeda members indicates that Iran is serious about this work," the RF minister said [Pravda.RU: World]

November 06, 2003

Why anti-US fighting grows in Iraq

This is a really great story that gets right down to the heart of the matter. Many Iraqis are speaking with their stomachs. People tend to get very angry when there is no food on the table. The idea that "we didn't like Saddam, but at least then we could eat" is quite relevant here. Perhaps the US should shift focus.

The ranks of Iraqis who resist the American occupation swell ever larger. [Christian Science Monitor: All Stories]

November 05, 2003

White House Told To Justify Secrecy

This could be an interesting fight between the judicial and executive branches of our government. It will be quite interesting to watch Ashcroft attempt to wiggle out of this one.

The Supreme Court announced yesterday that it wants the Bush administration to defend the secrecy that enveloped lower federal courts' proceedings involving one of the 1,200 Arab and Muslim men detained by federal authorities after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. [Washington Post: Nation and Politics]

Deported Terror Suspect Details Torture in Syria

Is this what our country stands for? Is there any possible benefit to the United States in sending people to hostile governments where we know they'll be tortured? Just remember, this isn't a war on Islam. Sure it isn't....

TORONTO, Nov. 4 -- A Canadian citizen who was detained last year at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York as a suspected terrorist said Tuesday he was secretly deported to Syria and endured 10 months of torture in a Syrian prison. [Washington Post: Front Page]

October 30, 2003

Star Chamber?

If this doesn't scare you to your core, you really ought to rethink your priorities. Even if you love the Shrub, what would happen with this type of precedent used by an Administration you DON'T like?

MIAMI – It's the case that doesn't exist. Even though two different federal courts have conducted hearings and issued rulings, there has been no public record of any action. No documents are available. No files. No lawyer is allowed to speak about it. Period.

Yet this seemingly phantom case does exist - and is now headed to the US Supreme Court in what could produce a significant test of a question as old as the Star Chamber, abolished in 17th-century England: How far should a policy of total secrecy extend into a system of justice?

Secrecy has been a key Bush administration weapon in the war on terrorism. Attorney General John Ashcroft warns that mere tidbits of information that seem innocuous about the massive Sept. 11 investigation could help Al Qaeda carry out new attacks.

October 27, 2003

Reward for the Liar

Lie and cheat for political purposes to keep your job and keep America afraid and get a REWARD! Yes, that's right. "Overstate" (aka tell bald faced lies to draw attention to yourself and your "cause") and the Shrub might reward you with a promotion. How in the HELL are the American people supposed to react to this kind of blatant bullshit? Is it possibly because mainstream news organizations aren't picking up on this because it's ONLY general aviation after all? Regardless of your political leanings, watching our Commander in Chief promote someone for blowing smoke up our proverbial butts should be unnerving to the point of removing him from office.

From Avweb Newswire

Just a week after telling a Congressional panel that maybe GA is not such a big security threat after all -- remarks that elicited much glee from AOPA, as AVweb reported last Monday -- TSA chief James Loy was nominated by President Bush to fill the No. 2 slot in the Department of Homeland Security. If approved by the Senate, Loy will take over as Tom Ridge's deputy, filling a vacancy created when Gordon England became Secretary of the Navy this month. EAA applauded the nomination. "Admiral Loy has come to adopt a view of general aviation that is generally balanced, fair, and grounded in the need to preserve the American citizen's right to freedom of movement," EAA said in a news release on Thursday. "Most importantly, [Loy] set forth for the congressional record what EAA and others have believed all along; that the perceived security threat posed by general aviation has been consistently overstated in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks." Loy took over the agency in July 2002. TSA Deputy Administrator Steve McHale will serve as acting chief until a successor for Loy is named.

The White House whine: 'It's all the media's fault'

I LOVE the Christian Science Monitor. It's one of the best rags around.

After several months of bad news, the Bush administration has discovered the source of its problems. It turns out that it's not the Democrats, not really anyway. It's not Saddam or Osama. It's not even Bill Clinton. No, the problem, it turns out, is the media.

Call it a filter, or a bias - but the news of late is not good. [Christian Science Monitor: All Stories]

October 22, 2003

N. Korea Rejects US Nuke Program Offer

As RS says, "North Korea should be sent to its room without supper"

North Korea on Tuesday rejected President Bush's offer of a written pledge not to attack in exchange for the communist nation agreeing to scrap its nuclear weapons program. [AP World News]

October 21, 2003

Curtains Ordered for Media Coverage of Returning Coffins

So, tell me why a President can be so insecure about his own position, that he denies honors to those who have died in service of our country? What a surprise that he'd lose public support for an occupation that never had a plan or an endpoint in sight?

Since the end of the Vietnam War, presidents have worried that their military actions would lose support once the public glimpsed the remains of U.S. soldiers arriving at air bases in flag-draped caskets.

To this problem, the Bush administration has found a simple solution: It has ended the public dissemination of such images by banning news coverage and photography of dead soldiers' homecomings on all military bases. [Washington Post: Nation and Politics]

Hagel Says Bush Has Too Much Leeway

DUH! Let's state the OBVIOUS why don't we?

OMAHA, Oct. 21 -- Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.) is strongly criticizing Congress, saying it gave President Bush too much latitude in conducting foreign policy after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. [Washington Post: Nation and Politics]

October 15, 2003

What Happens Next?

Three Americans were killed in Gaza. The "powers that be" likely know a lot more about this than we do, so the State Dept. advised Americans to leave Gaza. The Palestinian "usual suspects" were almost too quick to deny knowledge and responsibility. So what does this mean and why is this important?

First of all, it shows that the Palestinian authority does NOT have control of every little thing in the territories. If they did, this attack would not have happened. It is so far counter to the best interests of the Palestinians that only a complete renegade nincompoop would have done it.

Why is it counter productive? First off, the Israelis already agreed to start pulling back from Gaza. Not a great idea to give them an excuse to stay for that overused catch-all phrase "security reasons." Secondly, when our Commander in Chief has a history of cowboy diplomacy, it's not terribly wise to give him any excuses either.

So why do it? Why paint bulls eyes on the backs of every Palestinian militant (or militant look-alike) in Gaza? Who would WANT the peace process to fail? Who would WANT the Shrub to get a bug up his butt and start blowing up anything around the region that might possibly maybe sometime in the last 10 years have harbored terrorists?

Who could it possibly be? Could it be....SATAN?!?!?!. Or instead could it be someone completely STUPID? Some idiot who thought it would be a fun idea?

In either case, I certainly hope that the Shrub doesn't take the bait and use this incident as a political catalyst for expanding the "War on Terror" to include as much of the Middle East as possible. Time will tell.

October 10, 2003

Shrub Vows to "Crack Down" on EVIL Tourists

Today, in a blindingly political maneuver, President Shrub has decided to "crack down" on those horrible evil cheaters who go to Cuba for tourism. Why? Perhaps he needs the Cuban expat vote. More likely, his BROTHER needs it to stay Governor.

Why in the WORLD would we prohibit tourism to Cuba? We allow tourism to Vietnam, even after their current regime killed over 50,000 Americans. Hell, we even allow tourism to FRANCE, after attempting to stomp the country's name out of the breakfast food and junk food arenas.

Could a prohibition on tourism to Cuba POSSIBLY be political? *Gasp* Say it ain't SO!

October 09, 2003

Watch Fox? Republican? Then you're WRONG!!!

We Report, You Get It Wrong
By Jim Lobe
Inter Press Services
Asia Times

Friday 03 October 2003

The more commercial television news you watch, the more wrong you are likely to be about key elements of the Iraq War and its aftermath, according to a major new study released in Washington on Thursday.

And the more you watch the Rupert Murdoch-owned Fox News channel, in particular, the more likely it is that your perceptions about the war are wrong, adds the report by the University of Maryland's Program on International Policy Attitudes (PIPA).

Based on several nationwide surveys it conducted with California-based Knowledge Networks since June, as well as the results of other polls, PIPA found that 48 percent of the public believe US troops found evidence of close pre-war links between Iraq and the al-Qaeda terrorist group; 22 percent thought troops found weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in Iraq; and 25 percent believed that world public opinion favored Washington's going to war with Iraq. All three are misperceptions.

Continue reading "Watch Fox? Republican? Then you're WRONG!!!" »

October 08, 2003

The Governator: what just happened?

California indeed voted to recall Gray Davis. The majority was not exactly overwhelming (54.4% for to 45.6% against), but the results are remarkable nonetheless, considering the nearly socialist views held by most of the residents of California.

There is an interesting map that shows a precinct-by-precinct breakdown of the California recall ballot. The distribution is simply fascinating. Largely, the coastal regions largely voted to keep Davis while the inner counties voted to toss him like yesterday's Taco Grande Meal. The inner counties have mountains and agriculture, and less of the affluence afforded the coast. But attempts to impose economic classifications on the recall results fail: consider that Santa Barbara voted 57% to toss him; San Diego 66%.

Does this mean that the decision to toss Davis was not based on the state's fiscal lunacy? Well, not exactly. For most people, the decision really boiled down this way:

  1. Those who voted "Yes" finally figured out that the inmates are running the asylum.
  2. Those who voted "No" voted based on their fear that anything that even smells conservative is evil, and it's better to keep a loser like Davis in office than risk allowing a republican to even speak.
The democratic party distributes daily "talking points" memos to their lackies at the media (just read about the Los Angeles Times contraversy). The key talking points of the democratic party are:
  1. George W. Bush is stupid
  2. We hate republicans.

Continue reading "The Governator: what just happened?" »

Introducing a NEW AUTHOR

I thought it would be a fantastic idea to get a rabid rightist republican to post to Dark Rantings to give me something more to rant about. Therefore, please welcome Rabid Rightist Rochester Republican Chris Piggott. Feel free to post many comments.