Wednesday, June 4th, 2008
Official who lied about air safety in Manhattan after 9-11 gets $11 million contract
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendAs President Bush’s health chief, Tommy Thompson was criticized for not doing enough to help workers exposed to toxic debris from the Sept. 11 attacks at the World Trade Center.
Now, a company he leads has won a $11 million contract to treat some of those workers who responded to New York’s ground zero. AP
Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008
G.M. Closing 4 Plants in Shift From Trucks Toward Cars
Problem: Managers asleep at the wheel when a change hits that should have been obvious for at least the last 5 years. Consumers respond in logical, predictable fashion.
Solution: Fire people working for said managers, close plants, blame the consumers.
Responding to a consumer shift to more fuel-efficient vehicles, General Motors said Tuesday that it would stop making pickup trucks and big S.U.V.s at four North American assembly plants and would consider selling its Hummer brand.
The moves, announced Tuesday by the company chairman, Rick Wagoner, will slash 500,000 units from the automaker’s overall production, and pave the way for increased investment in smaller cars and passenger vehicles. Within three years, he said, trucks will account for less than 40 percent of the vehicles that G.M. produces in North America, down from about half today.
Mr. Wagoner said that rising gasoline prices had forced a “structural shift” by American consumers away from truck-based vehicles built by G.M.
“These prices are changing consumer behavior and changing it rapidly,” Mr. Wagoner said in announcing the cuts before G.M.’s centennial shareholders meeting in Wilmington, Del. “We don’t believe it’s a spike or a temporary shift. We believe it is, by and large, permanent.” NY Times
Here in Germany people will probably like this though. Even more German/European cars to be sold to America.
Guess which country has world-record exports, while the other has the world´s biggest trade deficit?
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendSaturday, May 31st, 2008
Judge critical of Guantanamo war crimes case dismissed
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendA judge hearing a war crimes case at Guantanamo Bay who publicly expressed frustration with military prosecutors’ refusal to give evidence to the defense has been dismissed, tribunal officials confirmed Friday. LA Times
Thursday, May 22nd, 2008
Rice defends Bush policy on Iran as ’successful’, said same about Iraq in 2001
“‘I think this is called a successful multilateral coalition of states that have the same view’ that Iran should be rewarded for its cooperation or isolated for its defiance, Rice said.
She added: ‘I would like to see what other options there are for the international community, given that this policy is one that I think is the best course for us.’”AFP
This can only mean one thing: because everything is working, there needs to be war.
Why? Because she said the same about Iraq:
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Saturday, May 17th, 2008
US postpones first Guantanamo war crimes trial
A military judge on Friday postponed the first war crimes tribunal at Guantanamo Bay, saying he wants to wait until the Supreme Court makes its highly anticipated ruling on the right of detainees to challenge their confinement in civil courts.
Navy Capt. Keith Allred ruled the trial for Osama bin Laden’s former driver should be delayed seven weeks, until July 21, in case the Supreme Court ruling affects his case. He scheduled pretrial hearings to begin a week earlier.
A Supreme Court ruling is expected by June 30.”AP
And of course it’s only a mere coincidence that after witnesses attested the timing of the trials was political in nature, they will now postponed and occur even closer to the US election in November. Mere coincidence, I tell you.
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendWednesday, May 14th, 2008
US lists polar bear as threatened
Finally!
The United States has listed the polar bear as a threatened species, because its Arctic sea ice habitat is melting due to climate change.
But even though a Supreme Court ruling said it should:
Comments (1) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friend(…) However, the government stressed the listing would not lead to measures to prevent global warming.” BBC
Friday, April 4th, 2008
NYT: 81% of Americans say country on wrong track
“Americans are more dissatisfied with the country’s direction than at any time since the New York Times/CBS News poll began asking about the subject in the early 1990s, according to the latest poll.
In the poll, 81 percent of respondents said they believed ‘things have pretty seriously gotten off on the wrong track,’ up from 69 percent a year ago and 35 percent in early 2002.
Although the public mood has been darkening since the early days of the war in Iraq, it has taken a new turn for the worse in the last few months, as the economy has seemed to slip into recession. There is now nearly a national consensus that the country faces significant problems.”
(…) Only 21 percent of respondents said the overall economy was in good condition, the lowest such number since late 1992, when the recession that began in the summer of 1990 had already been over for more than a year. In the latest poll, two in three people said they believed the economy was in recession today. NY Times
Welcome back to reality.
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendSaturday, March 15th, 2008
Bush vs World on Dollar
President Bush’s world:
President George W. Bush, under fire from Democrats who say he’s doing too little to help homeowners facing foreclosure, said he won’t be stampeded into “bad policy decisions” that might harm the economy.
“The market now is in the process of correcting itself, and delaying that correction would only prolong the problem,” he said today in his weekly radio address. “I believe the government can take sensible, focused action to help responsible homeowners weather this rough patch.”
Bush’s remarks echoed a speech yesterday, when he said the economy is going through a “tough time'’ and that the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department will take “appropriate steps” to stabilize the financial system after a bailout of Bear Stearns Cos., the fifth-largest U.S. securities firm.” Bloomberg)
The real world:
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friend“Sao Paulo, Brazil - Antique store owners in lower Manhattan, ticket vendors at India’s Taj Mahal and Brazilian business executives heading to China all have one thing in common these days: They don’t want U.S. dollars.
Hit by a free fall with no end in sight, the once mighty U.S. dollar is no longer just crashing on currency markets and making life more expensive for American tourists and business people abroad; its clout is evaporating worldwide as foreign businesses and individuals turn to other currencies.
Experts say the bleak U.S. economic forecast means it will take years for the greenback to recover its value and prestige.
Negative dollar sentiment is growing in nations where the dollar was historically accepted as equal or better than local currency - and dollar aversion is even extending to some quarters in the United States.At the Taj Mahal, dollars were always legal tender, alongside rupees, for entry into the palace. But because of the falling value of the dollar, the government implemented a rupees-only policy a month ago. Indian merchants catering to tourists have also turned bearish on the dollar.
‘Gone are the days when we used to run after dollars, holding onto them for rainy days,’ said Vijay Narain, a tour operator in the city of Agra where the Taj Mahal is located. ‘Now we prefer the euro. It gives us more riches.’
In Bolivia, billboards feature George Washington’s image on a $1 bill alongside a bright pink 500 euro note, encouraging savers to turn to the euro to tuck away money earned abroad or sent home in remittances.
If the dollar’s going down … save it in Euros!!!’ say the signs popping up around La Paz for Bolivia’s Banco Bisa.” AP)
Friday, March 14th, 2008
weak US Dollar makes EU world’s number one economy
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendThe U.S. economy lost the title of “world’s biggest” to the euro zone this week as the value of the dollar slumped in currency markets.
Taking the gross domestic product of both economies in 2007, the combined GDP of the 15 countries which use the euro overtook that of the United States when the European currency surged to a record high of more than $1.56 per euro. Reuters
Wednesday, March 5th, 2008
White House BS on Venezuelan troop movement
This is the stuff that used to drive me insane. From today’s White House press gaggle:
Q Venezuela is saying today that it’s deploying tank battalions and air and sea forces toward the Colombian border and its crisis there. What’s the level of U.S. concern on that? And is there any chance that the U.S. would be offering military assistance to it’s ally, Colombia?
MS. PERINO: I think that’s a little bit premature. I don’t — we do not have independent confirmation of that claim of the troop movements down in that area. So I’m not able to say. I think it’s premature to say that there would be any need for military help. We do believe that Colombia and Ecuador should be able to work this out between themselves. We don’t see any need for a country that wasn’t involved to be a part of it. We do think it’s curious that a country such as Venezuela would be raising the specter of military action against a country who was defending itself against terrorism. I think that says a lot about Venezuela. White House
To review: Venezuela mobilizes its troops and moves them to the border of Colombia, a US ally, yet the White House says “we don’t know what’s going on.”
Spies, satellites, etc not working, I take it? How else can it happen that such an obvious intelligence failure can occur?
Or could it just be Perino was feeding bullshit to the mainstream press to avoid having to give a substantial comment, yet the press still has no idea when and how question should be asked?
It’s probably the latter. Again.
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendMental health crisis plagues New Orleans’ 12,000 homeless
Soon after 9/11 Republican scaremongers kept arguing for “tougher” terrorism laws because otherwise the US could actually “loose a major city.”
I imagine it would look something like this:
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendHe was diagnosed by a psychiatrist as aggressive, homeless and schizophrenic. He was kicked out of a Salvation Army homeless shelter late last year for holding a fork to a fellow resident’s throat. On Jan. 4, Johnson was committed to a psychiatric facility for causing a disturbance at a bank. He was released and, a few weeks later, attacked New Orleans police Officer Nicola Cotton, 24, in a parking lot.
Johnson wrestled Cotton’s service handgun from her and shot her 15 times, killing the officer, police said. Johnson remains in jail without bond, charged with first-degree murder.
New Orleans health and law enforcement officials say more cases such as this could unfold if the city’s mental health crisis isn’t resolved soon. Since Hurricane Katrina ravaged the city 2½ years ago, the number of public mental health facilities and community outreach centers has decreased dramatically, leaving the mentally ill without medication and monitoring. (…)
Mental illness also is rampant among the city’s homeless, whose population has spiked since the storm from 6,200 to 12,000 today, says Sam Scaffidi of the New Orleans Police Homeless Assistance Unit. Under the Interstate 10 overpass at the corner of Claiborne Avenue and Canal Street downtown, homeless encampments have multiplied since Katrina into a sprawling colony of tents, soiled sleeping bags and cardboard caves.
USA Today
Tuesday, March 4th, 2008
Rice asks Plaestinians to come back to the table
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has called on Palestinians to resume peace talks with Israel, on the eve of her latest Middle East visit. BBC
Right. Because the US has never taken a side in this before:
Benefits to Israel of U.S. Aid
Since 1949 (As of November 1, 1997)Foreign Aid Grants and Loans
$74,157,600,000Other U.S. Aid (12.2% of Foreign Aid)
$9,047,227,200Interest to Israel from Advanced Payments
$1,650,000,000Grand Total
$84,854,827,200Total Benefits per Israeli
$14,630 link
And some newer numbers from Dec 2002:
Since 1973, Israel has cost the United States about $1.6 trillion. If divided by today’s population, that is more than $5,700 per person.
This is an estimate by Thomas Stauffer, a consulting economist in Washington. For decades, his analyses of the Middle East scene have made him a frequent thorn in the side of the Israel lobby.
For the first time in many years, Mr. Stauffer has tallied the total cost to the US of its backing of Israel in its drawn-out, violent dispute with the Palestinians. So far, he figures, the bill adds up to more than twice the cost of the Vietnam War.
Christian Science Monitor
That’s about 1/3 of all foreign aid spend by the US.
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendSunday, March 2nd, 2008
US cuts aid to poor nation due to soaring prices, biofuels
The U.S. government’s humanitarian relief agency will significantly scale back emergency food aid to some of the world’s poorest countries this year because of soaring global food prices, and the U.S. Agency for International Development is drafting plans to reduce the number of recipient nations, the amount of food provided to them, or both, officials at the agency said.
USAID officials said that a 41 percent surge in prices for wheat, corn, rice and other cereals over the past six months has generated a $120 million budget shortfall that will force the agency to reduce emergency operations. That deficit is projected to rise to $200 million by year’s end. Prices have skyrocketed as more grains go to biofuel production or are consumed by such fast-emerging markets as China and India. Washington Post
It probably doesn’t help that the Dollar keeps falling either.
Comments (1) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendPlaestinian leader Abbas breaks contact with Israel citing mass killings
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas has suspended contact with Israel in protest at an assault on Gaza which has killed about 100 people, an aide says.
The suspension came amid angry demonstrations in Gaza and clashes with Israeli troops in the West Bank.
Israeli PM Ehud Olmert vowed to carry on the assault, which came in response to militant rocket attacks on Israel.
The violence intensified on Saturday, when nearly 70 people were killed in one of Gaza’s bloodiest days in years.
This all “started” because a rocket fired from what is jokingly called Palestine into Israel, killing a 40-year old jewish man. So the going rate apparently is one 44-year old jew against 100 Palestinians, including women and children.
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendFriday, February 29th, 2008
Israel warns of invasion of Gaza
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendIsrael’s deputy defence minister has said it will be left with “no choice” but to invade Gaza, if Palestinian militants step up rocket attacks.
Matan Vilnai said the Palestinians risked a big disaster - using the Hebrew word for the Holocaust.
Mr Vilnai said Israel would use all its might to defend itself, after rockets hit the city of Ashkelon, 10km (six miles) from Gaza. BBC
Thursday, February 28th, 2008
US sends warship to Lebanon
Signaling impatience with Syria, the United States has sent its USS Cole warship off the coast of Lebanon in a “show of support” for regional stability, U.S. officials said on Thursday.
(…) “The United States believes a show of support is important for regional stability. We are very concerned about the situation in Lebanon. It has dragged on very long,” said the senior official, who spoke on condition he was not named. Reuters
Watch stability sprout up at gunpoint.
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendArmy: Nation building as important as combat missions
The Army on Thursday rolled out the first revision of its operations manual since the Sept. 11 terror attacks, putting stability operations - nation-building - on par with combat.
Army officials said the revision reflects a focus on fighting terrorism.
“The field manual is our Army’s blueprint for an uncertain future,” said Lt. Gen. William Caldwell IV, commander of Fort Leavenworth, where the document was produced. “It does provide the blueprint for how we, as an Army, will operate over the next 10 to 15 years.”
The new manual reflects Army experiences over the past six years of fighting the Taliban and al-Qaida in Afghanistan and insurgents in Iraq, as well as with relief efforts after hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
Caldwell said the U.S. will focus on building its influence in nations plagued by conflicts so that it can make them stable and secure. AP
Now all we need is a time machine to send this back to 2000. That can’t be harder than what the US Army is facing in Iraq, so I say we go for it.
Comments (1) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendBush 2000
Seeing the Democratic debate reminded me of something. And it still blows my mind. Bush actually said this in his second debate with Al Gore in 2000:
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendMODERATOR: The use of the military, there (Columbia) — some people are now suggesting that if you don’t want to use the military to maintain the peace, to do the civil thing, is it time to consider a civil force of some kind that comes in after the military that builds nations or all of that? Is that on your radar screen?
BUSH: I don’t think so. I think what we need to do is convince people who live in the lands they live in to build the nations. Maybe I’m missing something here. I mean, we’re going to have kind of a nation building core from America? Absolutely not. Our military is meant to fight and win war. That’s what it’s meant to do. And when it gets overextended, morale drops. I strongly believe we need to have a military presence in the peninsula, not only to keep the peace in the peninsula, but to keep regional stability. And I strongly believe we need to keep a presence in NATO, but I’m going to be judicious as to how to use the military. It needs to be in our vital interest, the mission needs to be clear, and the extra strategy obvious.
Debate transcript, October 11, 2000
1% of Americans behind bars
The land of the Free.
For the first time in history, more than one in every 100 American adults is in jail or prison, according to a new report tracking the surge in inmate population and urging states to rein in corrections costs with alternative sentencing programs.The report, released today by the Pew Center on the States, said the 50 states spent more than $49 billion on corrections last year, up from less than $11 billion 20 years earlier. The rate of increase for prison costs was six times greater than for higher education spending, the report said.
Using updated state-by-state data, the report said 2,319,258 adults were held in U.S. prisons or jails at the start of 2008 — one out of every 99.1 adults, and more than any other country in the world. AP
What’s worse, the prisons are so overcrowded that one has to be tough to walk out of it again. So prisons are responsible for releasing hardened criminals who are usually a bigger threat to society than they were before they went to prison. The “correctional” aspect of “correctional institution” never even enters into the equation as people are warehoused.
Millions of dollars are spent on such crime farms, yet any suggestions like maybe not sending people to prison for minor offenses (420), is brushed aside as not being “tough on crime.”
Well, way to be “tough on” society there.
Comments (1) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendTuesday, February 26th, 2008
Iraq denounces Turkish offensive, tells troops to withraw immediately
One thing to remember: Kurdistan once existed where now Iraq and Turkey do.
The Iraqi government has denounced a Turkish incursion into northern Iraq in some of the strongest terms heard since the operation began last week.
In a statement, the Iraqi cabinet expressed its “rejection and condemnation” of the operation.
It called on Ankara to withdraw its troops immediately. BBC
Or else?
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendSunday, February 24th, 2008
White House says illegal phone wiretaps back on
Yo, America! You do know your President is forcing illegal actions onto large corporation to keep taps on your phones again, right?
The Bush administration said on Saturday U.S. telecommunications companies have agreed to cooperate “for the time being” with spy agencies’ wiretaps, despite an ongoing battle between the White House and Congress over new terrorism surveillance legislation.
The Justice Department and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence issued a joint statement saying wiretaps will resume under the current law “at least for now.”
“Although our private partners are cooperating for the time being, they have expressed understandable misgivings about doing so in light of the ongoing uncertainty and have indicated they may well discontinue cooperation if the uncertainty persists,” the statement said. Reuters
This is beyond absurd: The phone companies are not sure they should do what the government tells them to, because what the government tells them to is unethical and illegal. It’s that simple.
Instead of talking about the issue in a calm and objective way, the Bush administration resorts to terrifying stories about how America will be attacked again if this is not allowed. They say that if wiretapping americans is not made legal retroactively America is “at risk,” even though it is the president who is “at risk” of being held responsible. And we all know how much he hates that.
And if an attack should occur, which would be on his watch (again), it would be the Democrats fault because it is their twisted little mind who can’t come to grips with the fact that the president has said it’s ok, so it is. What did they think this was? A democracy?
Yet even members of the GOP have stressed they had reservations about tapping the phones of their own constituents without legal reason or backing. Since Bush is the president, and head of their own party, they can be forced into submission.
This has nothing to do with Democrats, or for that matter anyone, wanting America to go up in flames. It has everything to do with everyone involved, except the Bush administration, wanting to protect what America is. (or should I say was?) A country of the free, where laws are there to protect you.
Comments (1) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendFriday, February 22nd, 2008
Turkey army launches land offensive into Iraq
Turkish troops have crossed into northern Iraq in their hunt for Kurdish PKK guerrillas, the military said on Friday, but the United States and the European Union urged Ankara to keep the campaign limited.
The White House said the United States had been informed in advance of the incursion and urged Turkey to limit the operation to “precise targeting” of the PKK rebels hiding there.
Turkish TV said 3,000 to 10,000 soldiers had entered Iraq, but Iraq’s foreign minister and a senior military official with coalition forces based in Baghdad denied it was a major operation, saying only a few hundred troops were involved. Reuters
Don’t worry, they will no doubt be heralded as liberators and greeted with flowers. This is a cakewalk.
I mean, come on, this is Iraq. Nothing ever goes wrong there.
And even if something should go wrong, I am sure we will get very objective reports from the Turkish army, just like the US has done in Iraq. Use of internationally banned phosphorous optional, of course.
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendThursday, February 21st, 2008
The UK non-apology for rendition flights
This is widely heralded as a British MP apologizing for extraordinary rendition:
The Foreign Secretary apologised to MPs today after it emerged that two American “rendition flights” of CIA detainees had landed on British soil, contradicting previous statements from the Government.David Miliband told the House of Commons that he had now been informed by the US Government that the controversial flights – one en route to Guantanamo Bay and one to Morocco – stopped over at Diego Garcia, the British overseas territory in the Indian Ocean.
He said the US had just alerted the Government to the incidents, explaining the oversight due to “record errors” and was “very sorry indeed” that previous information given by ministers to the Commons had been incorrect. Times
It’s not. He is apologizing for getting information wrong. He is not apologizing for the flights.
That is a huge difference.
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendBush’s approval rating at 19%
George Walker Bush has eclipsed Richard Milhouse Nixon as the least liked US President ever:
Comments (0) | Permalink | Mail entry to a friendGeorge W. Bush’s overall job approval rating has dropped to a new low in American Research Group polling as 78% of Americans say that the national economy is getting worse according to the latest survey from the American Research Group.
Among all Americans, 19% approve of the way Bush is handling his job as president and 77% disapprove. When it comes to Bush’s handling of the economy, 14% approve and 79% disapprove. American Research Group


