The most successful tyranny is not the one that uses force to assure uniformity, but the one that removes awareness of other possibilities, that makes it seem inconceivable that other ways are viable, that removes the sense that there is an outside.

-Allan Bloom

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Pass It On

Well, a new study out of the Harvard Medical School, to be published in the July 2006 issue of the American Journal of Public Health has reiterated what many believe, despite the fact that it has been under attack by those whose friends may profit immensely by convincing us otherwise.

According to the study, the US and Canadian healthcare systems were compared by surveying 3,505 Canadians and 5,183 Americans between November 2002 and March 2003.

It was an all-around validation of Canadian socialized Medicare, despite the fact that the fear-mongers are trying to shock us into thinking we need more private involvement in our system, a move towards the US style.

According the the study,

Canadians are healthier and have better access to health care than U.S. residents. And, according to a new study, Canadians obtain better care for half of what Americans spend on their medical system.

"The data is clear and really irrefutable: Canadians are healthier than Americans and they have better access to medical care," Dr. Steffy Woolhandler of the Harvard Medical School said Tuesday. She added that medical care is easier to access for Canadians.

***
...Americans had higher rates of nearly every serious chronic disease, including obesity, diabetes and chronic lung disease, even though U.S. residents were less likely to be smokers.
"We pay almost twice what Canada does for care, more than $6,000 for every American, yet Canadians are healthier, and live two to three years longer," said Dr. David Himmelstein, an associate professor at Harvard and study co-author.

The main focus of the scare tactics to try and funnel more of our tax dollars into the private sector involves pointing out that our wait times have been greater than those in the US, which is confirmed in the study,

"But when you look at the actual number, it was a little over three per cent waiting for medical treatment, which is a tiny proportion when you look at the big picture, although doctors and patients might disagree with that," she said.

Lead author Dr. Karen Lasser said that, while Canada gets negative press about long wait times for medical procedures, the health system seems to work better.

"No one ever talks about the fact that low-income and minority patients fare better in Canada," said Lasser, a primary care doctor at Cambridge Health Alliance and an instructor at Harvard Medical School. "Based on our findings, if I had to choose between the two systems for my patients, I would choose the Canadian system hands down."

***
"The take-home message is: When you compare Canada to the United States, Canada is spending a lot less money to get better results," said Deber, who specializes in health policy, management and evaluation.
"There are small improvement in places that could be fixed and could be made better. But on average the system is working quite well."
Now let's hope that our media have the courage to hold our politicians to account on the findings of this study, although I am definitely pessimistic, as big business loves big business.
Take the message of this study, remember it, pass it on to friends, hopefully we can save what we have left before the likes of Campbell, Klein (and successor), and Harper can irrepairably destroy one of the greatest institutions we have as Canadians.

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Bilderberg Conference

For anyone who doesn't know what the annual Bilderberg Conference is (and I had no idea until quite recently), I would recommend checking out this link to the Wikipedia entry. Since 1954, the very powerful of the world have been meeting roughly annually at this event (The first one was held in Holland in a hotel called the Bilderberg, hence the name).

Heads of state, Henry Kissinger, Donald Rumsfeld, CEO's of major world corporations and banks, EU commissioners have been among the guests at this event, which is ultra-secret and the goings on are never discussed.

The secrecy surrounding the event and the demographic in attendance have led many to believe that these are meetings of the world's "power brokers" that are spelling out our fate behind closed doors in a completely undemocratic fashion with absolutely no accountability to the public.

I obviously have no real idea on what goes on here, but I have to say I find the idea a bit creepy.

This year, our own new PM, Stephen Harper is going to be hosting the annual conference in Ottawa. Seems rather appropriate considering how much secrecy has surrounded the first few months of his term. I sure hope that someone will have the courage to ask what implications this conference has for Canada and what sort of message he's sending.

Story on Last Year's Conference from the Asia Times.

Canwest Story on this Year's Event in Ottawa.

BBC Story Providing Further Details on the Bilderberg Group.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Nice Touch

[Democracy Watch coordinator Duff] Conacher says the new Accountability Act also deletes from the ethics code a clause requiring politicians, their staff and senior public servants to "act with honesty."


CBC Article

Democracy Watch report.

Long Live the Inquisition

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The United States government, not any court, is the best judge of whether to keep programs such as its controversial effort to eavesdrop on citizens a secret, an assistant attorney general said on Wednesday.



It's quite strange to be watching a fascist state materialize right in our midst. Journalists can now be prosecuted for reporting on government activities, uncontrolled spying is taking place and trying to be justified. The world's only current superpower is trying to bring the use of torture for political reasons back into the mainstream. Institutionalized practices to separate the upper and the lower classes are rampant and the middle class is disappearing.

It's strange to parallel this time to historical 'dark ages', but it definitely seems that with as much wisdom as one can have in the present moment without the benefit of hindsight, it certainly appears that humanity is heading for a low. It's interesting to see how this sort of thing evolves.

We hear about how ancient Rome and Greece were indeed much more advanced technologically, politically and philosophically than the times that followed. It appears that we may be headed for another such downswing.

Don't Believe the Hype

OTTAWA (Reuters) - A Canadian newspaper apologized on Wednesday for a story that said Iran to force Jews and other religious minorities to wear distinctive clothing to distinguish themselves from Muslims.

The conservative National Post ran the story on its front page last Friday along with a large photo from 1944 which showed a Hungarian couple wearing the yellow stars that the Nazis forced Jews to sew to their clothing.

The story, which included tough anti-Iran comments from prominent Jewish groups, was picked up widely by Web sites and by other media.

"Is Iran turning into the new Nazi Germany? Share your opinion online," the paper asked readers last Friday.

But the National Post, a long-time supporter of Israel and critic of Tehran, admitted on Wednesday it had not checked the piece thoroughly enough before running it.

"It is now clear the story is not true," National Post editor-in-chief Douglas Kelly wrote in a long editorial on page 2. "We apologize for the mistake and for the consternation it has caused not just National Post readers, but the broader public who read the story."

Asked about the Post story last Friday, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Iran "is very capable of this kind of action." He added: "It boggles the mind that any regime on the face of the Earth would want to do anything that could remind people of Nazi Germany."

A spokesman for Harper said the prime minister had started off his comments with the words "If this is true."

These are the kind of shenanigans that are shaping world opinion/policy. I hate to think of how much this stuff is unreported, but here's a small example. Are the National Post and all the other CanWest mouthpieces going to publish a front page retraction to match the front page propaganda? I am skeptical.

This seems especially dubious for Harper to be jumping on the "media bandwagon" villifying someone after refusing access to himself on the grounds that the media is biased against him.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Long Live the Empire

President George W. Bush has bestowed on his intelligence czar, John Negroponte, broad authority, in the name of national security, to excuse publicly traded companies from their usual accounting and securities-disclosure obligations. Notice of the development came in a brief entry in the Federal Register, dated May 5, 2006, that was opaque to the untrained eye.


Link.

The Culture of Fear Hurts Us All

After the recent theatrical release of the hyped-up United 93, one version of the story of the fated downed airliner, I mused that I could imagine the paranoia and fear surrounding flying increasing exponentially. Imagining such comments to those of middle-eastern descent along the lines of "You're not planning on blowing up the plane are you?", etc, and cringing at the increased feelings of prejudice that are a result of the perpetuated stereotyping of certain ethnic groups.

Just yesterday, I read in the National Post about a man who was flying to London to see his grandmother, who was dying very quickly. The article specified that he was of South Asian descent. He had never flown before and was understandably quite nervous. To distract himself before the flight, he called several friends on his cell phone from the waiting area in the airport. Apparently this was too much for the other passengers to handle, and several of them reported the man to the officials as being suspicious. After boarding the plane, the man was detained by security and escorted back into the airport where they informed him that he would be refused access to the flight for the sake of the other passengers' comfort. He was told to go re-book with another airline. He returned home and because of the delay, his grandmother subsequently died and he was not able to see her before this happened.

This is a horrible ending to this story. Let's all try and keep our heads about what kind of fear is helpful and what kinds tear our social fabric apart. No matter how much parts of society advance, it seems there have always been scapegoats.

The Culture of Fear Hurts Us All

After the recent theatrical release of the hyped-up United 93, one version of the story of the fated downed airliner, I mused that I could imagine the paranoia and fear surrounding flying increasing exponentially. Imagining such comments to those of middle-eastern descent along the lines of "You're not planning on blowing up the plane are you?", etc, and cringing at the increased feelings of prejudice that are a result of the perpetuated stereotyping of certain ethnic groups.

Just yesterday, I read in the National Post about a man who was flying to London to see his grandmother, who was dying very quickly. The article specified that he was of South Asian descent. He had never flown before and was understandably quite nervous. To distract himself before the flight, he called several friends on his cell phone from the waiting area in the airport. Apparently this was too much for the other passengers to handle, and several of them reported the man to the officials as being suspicious. After boarding the plane, the man was detained by security and escorted back into the airport where they informed him that he would be refused access to the flight for the sake of the other passengers' comfort. He was told to go re-book with another airline. He returned home and because of the delay, his grandmother subsequently died and he was not able to see her before this happened.

This is a horrible ending to this story. Let's all try and keep our heads about what kind of fear is helpful and what kinds tear our social fabric apart. No matter how much parts of society advance, it seems there have always been scapegoats.

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Posting Frequency

Hey everyone who reads and browses this blog, I was away from May 19th to the 22nd, and subsequently did not add any posts during this time. I will try and resume postings today.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Weird

(CBS/AP) The city council in Black Jack, Mo., has rejected a measure allowing unmarried couples with multiple children to live together. The mayor said those who fall into that category could soon face eviction.

Olivia Shelltrack and Fondrey Loving were denied an occupancy permit after moving into a home in this St. Louis suburb because they have three children and are not married.

The current ordinance prohibits more than three people from living together unless they are related by "blood, marriage or adoption." The defeated measure
would have changed the definition of a family to include unmarried couples with two or more children.

Story here.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

The Cheques Are Going to Start Bouncing

"Imagine this: you are deep in debt but every day you write cheques for millions of dollars you don't have -- another luxury car, a holiday home at the beach, the world trip of a lifetime. Your cheques should be worthless but they keep buying stuff because those cheques you write never reach the bank! You have an agreement with the owners of one thing everyone wants, call it petrol/gas, that they will accept only your cheques as payment. This means everyone must hoard your cheques so they can buy petrol/gas. Since they have to keep a stock of your cheques, they use them to buy other stuff too. You write a cheque to buy a TV, the TV shop owner swaps your cheque for petrol/gas, that seller buys some vegetables at the fruit shop, the fruiterer passes it on to buy bread, the baker buys some flour with it, and on it goes, round and round -- but never back to the bank. You have a debt on your books, but so long as your cheque never reaches the bank, you don't have to pay. In effect, you have received your TV free. This is the position the USA has enjoyed for 30 years."

Good article here on a bit of the background of the situation that has gotten us into the mess that may soon unravel.

This Could Be Fun

Things must be starting to look sort of grim for the mainstream press to be reporting on the impending financial crisis in the US. And the more it is reported, the more the rats start to flee the sinking ship, leaving fewer to bail and keep it afloat, and it sinks even faster.

From yesterday's BBC website:

The US dollar is plunging in world currency markets - and bringing down share prices in its wake.

But why is the dollar under pressure - and what would be the consequences for the US economy if it continues to fall?

Behind the problems of the dollar lies the huge and growing US trade deficit, and the large Federal budget deficit.

A fall in the greenback could hit Asian countries whose governments hold huge foreign currency reserves in dollars.

***

Together, the East Asian countries have accumulated foreign currency surpluses of nearly $1 trillion, much of it held in US Treasury bonds denominated in dollars.

Thus they are funding both the budget gap and the trade gap.

These huge global imbalances are threatening to derail the world economy, the IMF and other international organisations have warned.

***
In the first place, a rapid fall in the dollar, if it accelerates, could cause short-term problems for the US economy.
The higher price of imported goods could lead to a hike in domestic inflation, and it could take several years before consumers switch back to buying more US goods.
High inflation, combined with the stronger-than-expected growth of the US economy, could force the US central bank, the Federal Reserve, to keep raising interest rates.
They have already been raised 15 times, and now stand at 5%, partly on fears of a growing housing boom.
But the fears of inflation are also likely to affect the interest rates on long-term bonds, which determine mortgage rates.
The rising mortgage rates, while they may eventually dampen the housing boom, will also give a further boost to inflationary pressures.
***
As the value of the dollar falls, their reserves of the currency also reduce in value, as do the yields on the US Treasury bonds held by many of their central banks.
In buying such bonds these governments are, in effect, underwriting the large US Federal budget deficit as well.
This deficit is set to increase as the baby boomer generation faces retirement.
The Asian governments and investors may be tempted to sell many of their dollar holdings in order to protect themselves - but this would have the effect of weakening the dollar further.
And it would force the Fed to raise interest rates even more to protect the dollar.

I wonder if this will be the beginning of the end of the world's experiment of purely speculatory currency?

The Worst Kind of Pushers

For anyone who's ever suspected that the drug companies would rather see you sick than healthy (at least in your own eyes), here's a good article exposing some of the techniques used to sell drugs. I personally think that many of the things that are termed an illness these day are the product of an unhealthy lifestyle and remediation would require nothing more than some serious effort and soul-searching to get in touch with what it means to be human (physically and otherwise).

Here's also a link the 2006 Bitter Pill Awards (exposing drug company manipulation of consumers).

Monday, May 15, 2006

Control Freak?

It seems that Mr. Harper's treatment of his own party is shaping up to be much in line with the socially conservative patriarchal view of society held by many of the party members.

Instead of decentralizing power as promised, Mr. Harper has funnelled more and more control straight into the Prime Minister's Office. The PMO now pre-approves everything Tory ministers and MPs do in their political lives. They've been ordered to speak less to the media, and banned from gassing about the government's plans.

When they do speak (to order lunch, maybe) they have to stick to the government's five priorities — the federal accountability act, GST cuts, child care, crime and medical waiting lists — virtually idiot-proof subjects. Big Daddy's boys aren't just on message; they're all message, all the time.

Big Daddy is right. Have you had a look at the Prime Minister's Office website lately? It looks like an ad for the Conservative Party with the only visible member being Mr. Harper, as his mug is plastered all over it. Have a look: http://pm.gc.ca/eng/default.asp. Compare this to the Conservative Party website: http://www.conservative.ca.

For years openly scornful of reporters (“he blames the media for the 2004 loss,” one insider explains), the prime minister has now declared war on the parliamentary press gallery. The PMO no longer advertises the time and location of cabinet meetings, which means reporters can no longer scrum ministers as they leave the weekly brain mash.

As a result, they've resorted to buttonholing ministers as they climb into their limos. The PMO recently volleyed back by asking cabinet ministers not to park their limos near the members entrance to the House of Commons, so as not to tip reporters that a cabinet meeting is in session. Mr. Harper himself has allegedly resorted to sneaking up to the meeting on a freight elevator. All these antics make the nation's business look like a high-level game of sardines.

Mr. Harper bypasses the national media more and more — taking last minute trips, covering up visits by foreign statesmen such as the president of Haiti, waiting three days to reveal that Canada has renewed its commitment to NORAD, the North American Aerospace Defence Command — and instead travels the country to talk to local TV stations.

What have we got ourselves into. For the guy who was so critical of the Liberals voting as a block in the past and who has been a major proponent of the Parliamentary free vote, either he's one good liar, or all that (minority government) power has gone to his head. Are we supposed to believe that if he was given a majority government, there would be no influence on other Conservative MP's in their voting directions?

In recent days, rumours have begun to circulate that Mr. Harper has even limited his ministers' opportunities to speak in cabinet meetings. Instead, he has begun to meet them privately beforehand, hear their proposals and then make their presentations himself. That's Big Daddy, for sure.Naturally in partisan Ottawa, a lot of people claim Mr. Harper's love of command and control makes them nervous.

Greg Weston, Ottawa columnist for Sun Media, has been covering Parliament Hill for 30 years. “I don't need the PMO to do my job,” he says. “But the control concerns me. This is the way they're going to be running the country. It's not just early game jitters. This is part of a deep-rooted belief set. It's almost a culture.”

To thwart the Harper team, Mr. Weston has urged reporters to ferret out the home numbers of cabinet ministers, and to hound them in restaurants and in public. But in Harperville, it isn't where you talk that's a problem: it's talking, period. Talking invites debate; debate implies uncertainty; uncertainty is not prime ministerial. The name of this show is Big Daddy Knows Best.

Mr. Harper and his crew claim (without citing evidence) that only the media care about how much access the media get. A more accurate and potentially more damaging charge is that Mr. Harper treats the media — and therefore Canadians — like children. Mr. Harper and his team are betting a majority of Canadian voters prefer it that way.

Just the kind of person we should have directing the country. A control freak with a hidden agenda who sees the citizens of Canada as meddlesome.

“Harper's very message oriented, as we all are. But that's one of the great ironies of this: Political discourse has gone all to hell around here as a result. The bandwidth of political discussion in Canada and Ottawa is now extremely narrow — in the sense that all of the messaging that comes out of the PMO is written by a very small number of people. It destroys political discourse, because all the rest of us are doing is repeating bullets.” Dissatisfaction in the back benches is growing.


I sure hope it grows enough to put a crack in this facade. Hopefully at some point in the not too distant future we'll see the secrets start to leak out, as we're now seeing south of the 49th.

Pretty Good Listen

Listen to a pretty decent quality streaming version of Neil Young's new album Living With War at his website here.

Way to go, Neil.

Review from Livedaily.com:

Another political album from an aging Boomer, but what about the music? Neil Young has never been afraid to take risks, and that daring streak has led to some less than interesting fare from time to time (see: the 1980's catalog). But when he is on, he is on, and "Living with War" is turning out to be one of those moments, agenda be damned. This is a genuine rock and roll call-to-arms, Neil Young style.

Friday, May 12, 2006

Finally

If nothing else, hopefully this will help Americans to wake up the fraud that is their government. As if any more was needed to see the fraudulant dictator-wannabe cabal that currently occupies the White House.

From Think Progress today:

CongressDaily reports that former NSA staffer Russell Tice will testify to the Senate Armed Services Committee next week that not only do employees at the agency believe the activities they are being asked to perform are unlawful, but that what has been disclosed so far is only the tip of the iceberg. Tice will tell Congress that former NSA head Gen. Michael Hayden, Bush’s nominee to be the next CIA director, oversaw more illegal activity that has yet to be disclosed

A former intelligence officer for the National Security Agency said Thursday he plans to tell Senate staffers next week that unlawful activity occurred at theagency under the supervision of Gen. Michael Hayden beyond what has been publicly reported, while hinting that it might have involved the illegal use of space-based satellites and systems to spy on U.S. citizens. …

[Tice] said he plans to tell the committee staffers the NSA conducted illegal and unconstitutional surveillance of U.S. citizens while he was there with the knowledge of Hayden. … “I think the people I talk to next week are going to be shocked when I tell them what I have to tell them. It’s pretty hard to believe,” Tice said. “I hope that they’ll clean up the abuses and have some oversight into these programs, which doesn’t exist right now.” …

Tice said his information is different from the Terrorist Surveillance Program that Bush acknowledged in December and from news accounts this week that the NSA has been secretly collecting phone call records of millions of Americans. “It’s an angle that you haven’t heard about yet,” he said.


This could get ugly (I hope!). I'm pretty curious to see how absurd this gets. Hopefully there will be a tipping point when whistleblowers start coming out of the woodwork to expose the Bush admin. for what it is.

2010 Crackdown

I don't know how many of you have heard that Gamie Graham (Vancouver's chief of police) is now reviving the idea of installing public cameras in the city to monitor the citizens, but I think this is something we need to make our voices heard on.

"We live in a dangerous world and we're about to host one of the biggest sporting events in the world, and we want to be careful. "

"There are people in the world and there are situations unfolding in different parts of the globe, and there are people who want to do us harm."

said Chief Graham in an interview with the CBC. I am not aware of studies on the issue, but it seems to me that the more the state, whether through laws, police or military, intervenes in the lives of otherwise peaceful people, the stress level of the society increases as a whole.

I suppose it should be seen coming that in the final 3.5 years before the 2010 Olympics, there will be enormous pressure to institute new policies in the name of safety and security, which is the most common justification that states have used throughout much of modern history to take away rights from their citizens.

It seems that we often forget that we are supposed to give rights to government, not the other way around.

What are anyone's thoughts?

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Going, Going, Gone?

In an article entitled "Bush May Have Crossed the Line by Tracking Every US Phone Call" in today's Times, it was revealed that

[Bush's] Administration has covertly collected domestic phone records of tens of millions of citizens.

According to the [USA today] newspaper report, the NSA used data secretly handed over by the country’s three largest phone companies — AT&T, Verizon and BellSouth — to try to build a database of every call made within the US — the largest database assembled anywhere in the world, one source said.

The programme is significantly different from — and potentially far more damaging politically than the secret, warrantless wiretapping programme revealed in December.


Hopefully the system's not so broken that this won't be used to boot him out of office.

No-Spin Zone Indeed

A new poll conducted in Pennsylvania by Zogby International and commissioned by OpEdNews.com asked some of the questions the corporate media has failed to ask. The answers are surprising. One revelation is this: the single greatest predictor of an American's political views is whether she or he watches Fox News.
Article here.

Faith No More

Thanks to Mike Whitney and the Smirking Chimp for this article:

Why is George Bush destroying the dollar?

Or is it Bush? Maybe, it is the Federal Reserve, the privately owned group of 12 central banks that prints our money and sets the policy?

A UK Telegraph article on Tuesday "Dollar Drops as great Sell-Off Looms" explains the current dilemma. The dollar is falling against the euro and the Asian currencies while gold and energy prices continue to skyrocket. "Greenback liquidation comes amid growing concerns that global central banks and Middle East oil funds are quietly paring back their holdings of US bonds." David Bloom, a currency expert at HSBC, said the dollar was vulnerable to a steep sell-off as investors begin to refocus on America's yawning current account deficit, now 7% of GDP". (UK Telegraph)

Just to add some perspective to this topic; Argentina's economy collapsed when its trade deficit reached 4% of GDP. The US deficit is at an unprecedented level.

Normally, we could say that these are the predictable effects of market forces, but that's not the case here. After all, we know that Bush insisted that the lavish tax cuts be made permanent even though it was understood that such action would undercut the dollar. So, what is going on here; why does Bush want to kill the goose that laid the golden egg?

There are two ways to weaken the currency; either print more money which dilutes the supply, or create new debt which lowers the value.

Bush has done both simultaneously and with such gusto that it's a wonder the dollar hasn't crashed already. He's expanded government spending by 35% and produced humongous $450 billion per year tax cuts. Add this to the projected costs of a $2 trillion war and the dollar was bound to get hammered.

At the same time Bush has been spending us into oblivion, the Federal Reserve has kept the printing presses humming along at full-throttle doubling the money supply in the last decade. Almost half of all greenbacks are now located outside the country, which means that if the dollar becomes less attractive to investors those greenbacks will come flooding back to America and plunge the country into recession.

Regardless of one's political leanings, there is an obvious and demonstrable attempt to savage the currency by the political and banking establishment.

Why?

The real force behind Bush's actions is the Federal Reserve. No one has any illusion that our paper-mache president, who even boasts about not reading the newspapers, is making complex policy decisions about geopolitics and finance. As a privately owned institution, the Fed has its own agenda which runs contrary to the interests of the American people. Many people fail to realize that it was Greenspan who cooked up the massive increases in Social Security in 1983 to help Reagan reduce the soaring interest rates that were caused by his tax cuts for the wealthy. Ever since then, Social Security payments have gone directly into the general fund; paying for roads, social programs and war. This was the Fed's clever way of creating a flat tax directed exclusively at the poor and middle class.

The Federal Reserve has engineered many similar coups, the most impressive being the huge stock market bubble of the late 1990s. Greenspan kept the cheap money flowing into the Wall Street Casino (and refused to even increase marginal rates on stock purchases) while PE's skyrocketed and the bubble expanded to Hindenburg-proportions.

Following the explosion, which left tens of thousands of Americans stripped of their retirement and savings, Greenspan breezily noted that it is not the task of the Fed to stop bubbles.

Really? The European Central Bank (ECB) takes an entirely different tack intervening whenever it is clearly in the public interest. Greenspan's recalcitrance has nothing to do with principle; he was simply acting on behalf of constituents in the investment community.

Currently, the Fed has created the largest equity bubble of all time; the $9 trillion housing bubble, slapped together over the last 3 years by lowering rates to an unbelievable 1.5% (at one point) and facilitated through shabby lending practices. As rates continue to rise to satisfy America's need for $2 billion cash inflows from foreign lenders every day, the carnage from the housing-bomb is bound to be extensive and agonizing.

The Federal Reserve has always served the singular interests of the ruling class, the only difference now is that the present clash is designed to drive the wooden-stake into the heart of the middle class and create a permanent American oligarchy.

Bush has purposely generated another $3 trillion in debt ensuring that the dollar will fall mightily and working class people be left with a trifling of their life savings.

6 months ago, the Federal Reserve, anticipating the day when the foreign inflows would dry up, eliminated the M-3, their public record of foreign purchases of dollars and securities. It all sounds very abstract, but what it means is that we no longer have any way of knowing how quickly foreign banks are dumping their greenbacks. This means that the American people will be left holding the bag once again; stuck with an inflationary dollar while foreign investors bail out.

The Federal Reserve gave Bush the go-ahead on his "war of choice" just as they cheerily endorsed the budget-busting tax cuts. They've doubled the money supply and done everything in their power to shift middle class wealth to corporate kingpins and American plutocrats.

Still, this doesn't explain why they appear to be intentionally savaging the dollar?

Here's the key: We are not a "capitalistic" system or a "free market" system, that's all just philosophical mumbo-jumbo. In practical terms, we are a "Dollar system" and the greenback must continue to dominate the world oil trade or the Federal Reserve, the IMF, the World Bank and all the privately owned global institutions will crash and burn. That's not their plan; their plan is to perpetuate this debt-pyramid into infinity; integrating dissident states into an expanding and predatory neoliberal network.

The face value of the dollar doesn't matter to the men who print the money. The actual value is constantly manipulated to shift wealth from one class to another. (via bubbles and inflation) What really matters is who controls the system and the means whereby others are coerced to participate. In the last decade the amount of dollars stockpiled in foreign banks has gone from 53% to nearly 70%; this is a monopoly that the US intends to defend by every means possible. To maintain this monopoly, the Federal Reserve has linked arms with the oil industry (and the US military) in its effort to control the world oil market. This has become an "existential" issue for the corporate elites who run American foreign policy. If the dollar is not supported by access to the world's dwindling oil supplies, then there is no incentive for foreign banks to accumulate the anemic dollar. (Oil is sold exclusively in US greenbacks)

By this standard, we can see that Bush's fictitious war on terror is really just a smokescreen for a global resource war that will decide which economic system prevails.

Will it be the dollar system, with its wars and gulags spread across the planet? Or will some other system emerge, some non-ideological incarnation of socialism that redistributes wealth according to people's needs like we see in Venezuela?

The future of the dollar may be decided sooner than any of us had imagined. Iran's Mehr News Agency announced that the long-awaited Iran Oil Bourse (OIB) will open sometime next week on Kish Island challenging head-on America's monopoly on the sale of oil in dollars. Iran's plan is a direct attack on the greenback as the world's "reserve currency". The US must preserve that advantage because it allows it to maintain massive deficits as well as a national debt of $8.4 trillion without fear of economic collapse or hyper-inflation. The opening of the bourse guarantees that central banks around the world will convert some of their reserves into euros precipitating a sharp decline in the dollar's value.

This may be the most serious threat the dollar has ever faced. The fundamental economic law of "supply and demand" ensures that the bourse means hard times for the greenback. This explains why the Bush administration is cobbling together a feeble coalition of European allies (England, France and Germany) to push a resolution through the Security Council expressing their "serious concern" about Iran's alleged nuclear programs.

Washington is looking for international cover to conceal its battle-plans. The hawkish members of the administration want to preempt the opening of the bourse with a unilateral attack (nuclear?) on Iranian facilities.

Even if Washington succeeds in stopping Iran's plans to compete in the oil market, it's still a bumpy road ahead for the greenback. The dollar is under growing pressure from overspending and mismanagement. The prospect of diminishing foreign inflows and a fragile housing market are telltale signs of an inflationary cycle.

America is now facing a slow-motion meltdown that could escalate into a widespread run on the dollar. Attacking Iran will only aggravate the situation and push tenuous states towards new alliances. (China, India, Venezuela and Russia have already expressed support for the new bourse) Military action will do nothing to relieve America's enormous account imbalances or lesson the vulnerability of the ailing greenback.

The problems facing the dollar are purely systemic. The privately owned central banks in the Federal Reserve cannot be trusted to decide monetary policy any more than the oil giants can be trusted to decide foreign policy. When the public interest is excluded from policy-making, catastrophe is inevitable.

Expect the greenback to follow a long-downward spiral.

Nicely Done

For all of you who like the story of Robin Hood and didn't sympathize with the Sheriff of Nottingham,

[a] GANG of anarchist Robin Hood-style thieves, who dress as superheroes and steal expensive food from exclusive restaurants and delicatessens to give to the poor, are being hunted by police in the German city of Hamburg.

The gang members seemingly take delight in injecting humour into their raids, which rely on sheer numbers and the confusion caused by their presence. After they plundered Kobe beef fillets, champagne and smoked salmon from a gourmet store on the exclusive Elbastrasse, they presented the cashier with a bouquet of flowers before making their getaway.

The latest robbery is part of a pattern over the past several months, suggesting that the thieves deliberately set out to highlight what they perceive as the inequality inherent in German society. [emphasis added]

Perceive? If they're part of the current world economic model, that takes the real wealth created by workers and transforms it into phony monetary wealth for the moneylenders, I would say that they have pretty reasonable cause for these beliefs.

However, the authorities do not agree. Bodo Franz, a police spokesman, said: "They get off feeling they are just like Robin Hood. There are about 30 in the group. But whatever their motives, they are thieves, plain and simple."


This may be plain and simple theft, but it pales in comparison to the institutionalized, legal theft of the world's wealth by the powerful money managers.

Carsten Sievers, the manager of a luxury supermarket in the wealthy Blankenese area of Hamburg, recently watched the robbers run off with trolleys full of expensive foodstuffs, including Kobe beef which, at more than £100 a pound, is always on their illicit shopping list.

In another recent swoop, the gang emptied a groaning buffet table in a top restaurant into sacks, while one of their number held up a sign saying. "The fat years are over" - the title of a hit film currently doing the rounds in Germany.

In internet statements, the gang have made a point of saying their booty is distributed to Hartz IV recipients - the poorest of Germany's long-term unemployed.

***

When the gang robbed the gourmet store in April - triggering a massive police investigation that cost £20,000 in taxpayers' money without an arrest being made - they left a note behind saying: "Without the abilities of the superheroes to help them, it would be impossible for ordinary people to survive in the city of the millionaires."

***

Mr Franz said: "They try to make crime fun but are politically motivated."

What a thought. The police think that there is political motivation behind this and it's not just for fun. Why should this group of people want to effect change to a system that is bleeding us all dry to enrich a small class that is more powerful than one could ever imagine?

Way to go guys!

What Is The Nature of Our Mandatory Public Schooling?

I'm going to try, over the next little while, to have this be an evolving post, trying to illustrate the development, in the early 19th century of mandatory state schooling in Prussia, its adoption in America (and Canada in a large part), its true purposes, and its evolution and consequences in terms of the self-sufficiency (or lack thereof) of the general population and the lack of ability to think critically and effictively about the things that are fundamental about the organization of our society.

Depending on how I do with this and how long it takes, I may also try and show how universities, at different points true vestiges of human discovery, are ever-increasingly used as tools to further political-economic agendas.

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

Put On the Blinders and Run

From the e-economic newsletter in the Free Market News:

For those of us who are dismayed at the decision by the [U.S.] Federal Reserve to no longer publish the M3 numbers, which is the broadest measure of the money supply, alert reader Tom McC. thinks like we do, but with a nautical bent. He says "I refer to the government's refusal to publish M3 statistics going forward as the Depth Gauge gambit, as it is akin to disconnecting the depth gauge as a means of combating flooding in a submarine."


An interesting read.

Link

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

HIGHLY Recommended Reading

Article from May 4 Georgia Straight:

Link

Monday, May 08, 2006

Let's Get the Bad Guys

Well, for all of you out there that thinks Canada is soft on terrorists - and we must be since I can't even remember the last one we convicted - finally some good news today, from the Globe and Mail:

The Canadian judge heading the Air-India inquiry is being asked by the Stephen Harper government to consider new ways to try terrorism suspects -- including a parallel system where cases would be weighed by three-judge panels instead of the standard judge or jury.

Since it was announced one week ago, Mr. Justice John Major's commission has been chiefly described as a means of bringing "closure" to families whose loved ones were killed more than 20 years ago.

But his job is more broad and forward-looking than just that: He is to perform nothing less than a full review of the Canadian criminal justice system as it applies to terrorism prosecutions.



Well, this certainly seems a good first step, considering the number of repeat terrorist offenders we've been dealing with.

Defence lawyers say they are alarmed by any implicit suggestion that Canada's legal system is incapable of prosecuting terrorists. "There is a discussion that a single judge or judge and jury, somehow, are not up to the task," said criminal lawyer Marlys Edwardh. ". . . There is no evidence that that concern is justified."

The inquiry comes amid rising doubts that the Canadian criminal justice system is capable of bringing terrorists to justice. Last year's acquittal of two Vancouver men, the alleged ringleaders of the 1985 Air-India bombing, outraged relatives of the 329 victims. Last month, a U.S. State Department report criticized Canada for failing to convict anyone under the anti-terrorism laws passed in 2001.

Now, the government itself is wondering whether the system needs fixing. It has ordered Mr. Major to examine "whether the unique challenges presented by the prosecution of terrorism cases . . . are adequately addressed by existing practices or legislation, and, if not, the changes in practice or legislation that are required to address these challenges, including whether there is merit in having terrorism cases heard by a panel of three judges."

Such changes could open up a Pandora's box of thorny legal questions, and lead to a change in current laws intended to keep spy "intelligence" separate from Crown "evidence," as well as a Charter of Rights and Freedoms principle that every accused is entitled to a jury trial.



Well, obviously there's something wrong with our system if we didn't find them guilty. In every trial surrounding a heinous crime, the defendants are always guilty. Even Perry Mason knew that! And with the defender of freedom itself, the US, telling us there's something wrong with our justice system, we'll just have to start rootin' out the problems and make sure we start getting convictions.

Anyone else think there's a problem with Canada even considering taking away its citizens' Charter rights in order to "save us from terrorists" on the advice of the US? Creepy. Let's make sure Harper is booted out of here as soon as possible. If he gets a majority, we're going down the tubes like never before.

The History of Being Duped

Not much comment on this article from the Baltimore Chronicle, it speaks for itself:

While the Administration faces accusations that it overhyped post-9/11 threats to national security, the media have been slow to stitch together a similar pattern in Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld's connection with the pharmaceutical industry, a connection that built his personal fortune on a series of panics stretching back to the mid 1970's.

Most recently, the panic over avian flu has been fanned almost universally by news outlets, despite expert caution that the virus itself has yet to mutate into any form transmittible between humans or between birds and humans.

Nonetheless, the Government has stockpiled two billion dollars worth of Tamiflu. This drug was developed a decade back by Giliad, of which Rumsfeld was the CEO, the company then transferring all marketing and sale rights to the Roche Company.

Earlier, the current Secretary of Defense successfully marketed aspartame, a suspected carcinogen, as "Nutrasweet," on which he earned some ten million. Before that, he exploited scare tactics on the swine flu, to the extent that President Ford ordered massive inoculations in 1976. When fifty people died from the drug, its administration was suspended, but not before Mr. Rumsfeld pocketed an estimated five million.

Much of the swine flu story and its dubious provenance has been documented by a Johns Hopkins medical professor, Arthur Silverstein, in his book Pure Politics and Impure Science, subtitled The Swine Flu Affair (JHU Press,1984). His account emphasizes how President Ford's desire to win election on his own rendered him susceptible to pressure from the pharmaceuticals to inoculate all Americans, 220 million people, against the Swine flu despite only one clearly documented fatality.


It became a $135 million program which had reached 40 million before the accumulation of fatalities and a linkage to several cases of Guillain-Barre syndrome or paralysis saw suspension of the vaccine. The pharmaceutical companies had pre-arranged for the government to assume any liabilities.

Aspartame had such a mixed record in various lab tests that the FDA refused approval several times. However, with the election of Ronald Reagan, Arthur Hayes Hull, Sr., a friend of Rumsfeld, became a commissioner on the FDA.

Another crony appointment secured the votes necessary for approval. Today a $330 million class action lawsuit under RICO provisions mentions Rumsfeld as the CEO of G.D. Searle Company in 1977.

The current scare, commented NBC News' chief science and health correspondent Robert Bazell just this past February, closely resembles the 1970's scare, except this time around the price tag in Bush's request for funding is $7.1 billion.


Is the entire American media machine really that slow, as is suggested, or could it, just possibly, be intentional? Hmmm.

Irony?

Ever wonder what's happening with Saddam Hussein? Remember all the hoopla, when the man that George W. Bush in 2003 said "has proven he is capable of any crime," was finally dragged out of his so-called "spiderhole" amid promises of peace and justice for the Iraqi people?

There have been little bits and pieces that I have seen either in the newspaper or on television newscasts, giving the impession that to this day, the trial in Iraq charging Mr. Hussein with war crimes dating back 15 years is still in progress.

Today, I decided to see if I could find any information on what was happening. There didn't seem to be much current information from the normal news sources, but I did manage to find an article, published by Jurist (a Web-based legal news and real-time legal research service based out of the University of Pittsburgh Law School) entitled A Farce of Law: The Trial of Saddam Hussein.

The article is written by Curtis Doebbler, an American member of Saddam Hussein's legal defence team. Mr Doebbler claims that Hussein's trial is unfair and orchestrated by the United States, and that the rule of law has been irreparably damaged as a result.

From the article:

The violations of unfair trial are too numerous to mention here, but include almost every provision in article 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights that could be violated at this juncture of the proceedings.

The inequality of power can be illustrated simply in dollar values. The United States has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars supporting the prosecution of the Iraqi President; the defense lawyers are working as volunteers with hardly enough money to travel to Iraq. The inequality of power can also be illustrated in minutes, days, weeks, and months. The prosecution alleges to have been collecting evidence since at least 1991 — which, of course, could only be true if it were the United States government doing the collecting — and has at least been doing so since April 2003 when dozens of American lawyers and Iraqis who had not lived in Iraq for years were shuttled in to build a case. The defense lawyers, despite requesting visits with their client since December 2003 when he was detained, have to date not been allowed the confidential visits that are necessary to begin to prepare a defense. No visits were allowed with the most senior lawyers until after the trial had started and
at each visit American officials exercise the authority to read any materials brought into the visiting room despite the fact that all meetings remain under close audio and visual surveillance. As if this were not enough, evidence has been withheld from the defense lawyers. They have been denied access to investigative hearings; they have been denied prior notice of witnesses, and they are prevented from even visiting the site of the alleged crime.

All of these rights of the defendant are part of the right to a fair trial under both Iraqi law and international law. This law is merely violated with impunity. The extent of this impunity was evidenced on 24 January of this year when judicial clerk Riza Hasan attempted to return a more than fifty-page brief that had been submitted to the IST claiming that “the judges did not want it.” Perhaps he was explaining why none of the eight motions which have been before the IST for months, including motions on illegality of the IST and disqualification of specific judges, have never received a written reply.

The interference with the independence of the tribunal has permeated all its aspects. Four out of five judges who started the cases have been removed, two by publicly announced interference connected to the United States occupying powers. In September 2005, four prominent statesmen wrote the UN Secretary-General advising him of the threat to participants in the trial in Iraq. These warnings were ignored. Several weeks later two defense lawyers were murdered in a manner suggesting possible involvement of the authorities in Iraq. More recently a possible defense witness was killed when his whereabouts were disclosed to US authorities. Even US President George W. Bush has declared that the trial is on track and that the Iraqi President will be executed.

Such statements coming from judges of the IST also indicate a clear lack of impartiality. In a film by Jean-Pierre Krief for Arte France and KS Visions that was shown in France in 2005, a judge of the tribunal states that the Iraqi President who was then about to go on trial before them had “persecuted the Kurds. He killed them, wiped many of them out. He also used chemical weapons with the aim of committing genocide against this race, against this people, to eradicate them as a nation. He also went after the Shiites due to their religious beliefs.” Another judge states that the President is “one of the worst tyrants in history.” These are not the statements of an impartial judge who in the inquisitorial system of justice is both the evaluator of law and fact.

It certainly seems like there are good reasons that this not be allowed to reach a mainstream audience. There are still those who are not aware of the complete lack of respect for international law or human rights shown by the current US administration. Make no mistake, this is a group that is going to unheard of lengths to dupe all of us into allowing a power scheme like no other come to fruition.

Friday, May 05, 2006

US: Government creating "climate of torture"

This is the title of a new report published by Amnesty International that was released simultaneously in the US and the UK on May 3rd.

Some excerpts:

"Although the US government continues to assert its condemnation of torture and ill-treatment, these statements contradict what is happening in practice," said Curt Goering, Senior Deputy Executive Director Of Amnesty International USA. "The US government is not only failing to take steps to eradicate torture it is actually creating a climate in which torture and other ill-treatment can flourish -- including by trying to narrow the definition of torture."

The report reviews several cases where detainees held in US custody in Afghanistan and Iraq have died under torture. To this day, no US agent has been prosecuted for "torture" or "war crimes". "The heaviest sentence imposed on anyone to date for a torture-related death while in US custody is five months -- the same sentence that you might receive in the US for stealing a bicycle. In this case, the five-month sentence was for assaulting a 22-year-old taxi-driver who was hooded and chained to a ceiling while being kicked and beaten until he died," said Curt Goering.

"While the government continues to try to claim that the abuse of detainees in US custody was mainly due to a few 'aberrant' soldiers, there is clear evidence to the contrary. Most of the torture and ill-treatment stemmed directly from officially sanctioned procedures and policies -- including interrogation techniques approved by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld," said Javier Zuniga, Amnesty International's Americas Programme Director.

The report also lists concerns surrounding violations of the Convention against Torture under US domestic law, including ill-treatment and excessive force by police, cruel use of electro-shock weapons, inhuman and degrading conditions of isolation in "super-max" security prisons and abuses against women in the prison system -- including sexual abuse by male guards and shackling while pregnant and in labour.

"The US has long taken a selective approach to international standards, but in recent years, the US government has taken unprecedented steps to disregard its obligations under international treaties. This threatens to undermine the whole framework of international human rights law -- including the consensus on the absolute prohibition of torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment," said Javier Zuniga.

Thursday, May 04, 2006

Justice, American-Style

I opened the google news page this morning and saw this headline:

9/11 families glad Moussaoui won't die a martyr


Reading down the article a bit, it was specified that,

[f]amily members of victims of the September 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington hailed a Virginia jury's decision to put al-Qa'ida conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui in jail for life rather than make him a martyr through execution.

Elizabeth Jordan, 37, who also lost her husband in the terrorist attacks, said life in prison was appropriate because Moussaoui "doesn't value death or see it as anything wrong".


Although this does not necessarily represent the majority of opinions in America, it really struck a chord with me, reminding me of the seeming "Biblical Punishment" (A legitimate, biblical function of government is to punish those who do wrong. And when they do, they function as God’s agents to punish evil. That is part of how God administers justice.) justice style that permeates the US, setting it apart from other places where a functioning society/rehabilitation of criminals might be the desired product of the justice system.

It seems to me that the death penalty is a prime example of this mentality of an "eye for an eye". In the case of Moussaoui, in which it has been implied that on some level he was seeking martyrdom through death for some cause, it would no longer be desirable to kill this person, as this would not be inflicting the most hardship on this person. Nevermind his mental condition, nevermind that during the trial, he had a stun belt under his clothing in case he got out of line, severly impairing a sense of fair trial, some evil has been commited and it is necessary to find someone to inflict the most punishment possible on.

This type of mentality severely hinders the argument for the death penalty that its purpose is to remove those who are beyond help from society permenently. Why not just find out what a person's biggest fear is and subject them to it for the rest of their life. That'd show 'em.

Tuesday, May 02, 2006

What Climate Change?

For those who have been peripherally paying attention to the Conservative government's withdrawal from Canada's involvement in the Kyoto Protocol and development of a "made in Canada" solution as part of the Asia-Pacific Partnership and are thinking, well, maybe they have a better solution that is more suited to Canada's specifics, it seems this is merely hopeful.

From April 26th:

It is not legally binding and does not set caps on carbon emissions.

"The key principles of the Asia (Pacific) Partnership are very much in line with where our government wants to go," [Environment Minister Rona] Ambrose said at a briefing yesterday.


This is akin to saying:

"Well, we think the Kyoto Agreement doesn't really suit Canada's direction at this point. We're all for doing our part to help out the planet we're in the process of destroying, except maybe we could try some other approach that doesn't involve any incentive to change or targeted results. But we're still really interested in trying something. Maybe we can still get an A for effort even if nothing actually happens."

The David Suzuki Foundation adds a little more to the issue:

“The Asia-Pacific Partnership is little more than smoke and mirrors,” said Dale Marshall, the Foundation’s Ottawa-based climate change policy analyst. “The pact contains no targets, no timelines, no penalties and favours a voluntary approach to addressing greenhouse gas emissions.”

On Tuesday, federal Environment Minister Rona Ambrose said Canada is considering joining the breakaway group of six countries – the United States, India, China, Australia, South Korea and Japan – which joined forces last July. Researchers for the Australian government have concluded that full implementation of the Asia-Pacific Partnership alone would still result in a doubling of global emissions by 2050.



Those in the Conservative Party have been quick to point out that under the previous Liberal government, emissions have increased 24.4% above 1990 levels. Now doesn't seem exactly the best time to pull the "Well they did it, why shouldn't we be allowed to" argument when a quarter of the species on the planet (and subsequently billions of humans) face extinction in the next 40-odd years due to climate change, according to Nature magazine and the UN.

Attack Ad Proves True

Remember all the controversy back during the winter 2005-2006 election campaign when someone in the Liberal camp accidently let slip one of their attack ads that was never meant to be aired? It mentioned something about the Conservatives allowing "Soldiers with guns. In our cities. In Canada." The Liberals were subsequently publicly embarrassed, with the event no doubt bolstering the Conservative campaign. I felt a bit sorry for the Liberal party, as it was not officially meant to be released (according to party officials).

Anyways, it's been a few months since the voters elected a Conservative minority government and then this, from the CBC website:

More than 500 soldiers carrying guns will fan out through Winnipeg streets beginning Sunday, in the largest urban-warfare training exercise in the Canadian military's history.

The military says it's important because soldiers are finding themselves patrolling civilian areas more often, in places like Afghanistan.

Letters have been sent to 58,000 homes in three neighbourhoods where the drills will take place.

Now I have to say I'm surprised that this is taking place, but I'm even more surprised how relatively scarce this story is in the media. After the hoopla surrounding the Liberal campaign ad, there's nary a mention of the bizarre prophecy and the event itself. Yes, there is the article cited above, but a google news search for "soldiers" and "Winnipeg" only yields 9 results, a significantly low number in my opinion.

And while the drill is being performed with the intent of bolstering the urban technique of the military for increasing urban operations in places like Afghanistan, I have to say that this exercise raises my eyebrows and makes me think of our neighbours to the south and our new Prime Minister's ambitions to further integrate with and emulate them. The US has been waging class warfare on its own citizens for decades and as a consequence has the world's largest prison population (absolute & per capita) and an elaborate apparatus for suppressing domestic dissent. With all of Stephen Harper's talk about getting tough on crime, we should all be keeping these things in mind. Canada has not been a militaristic society and normalizing a domestic military presence has many intended and unintended consequences.

This is by no means to say that I think this is what will happen or that there is even any intent in this direction, but given the bizarre lack of media reference so far and the fact that this event is unprecedented, it seems worthy of note.

Monday, May 01, 2006

One of Many Examples

I sure hope that Canada's war on terror/democracy spreading/nation building/insert other lie here efforts in Afghanistan go at least as well as America's effort to help rebuild the lives of the Iraqi people.

From yesterday's New York Times:

A $243 million program led by the United States Army Corps of Engineers to build 150 health care clinics in Iraq has in some cases produced little more than empty shells of crumbling concrete and shattered bricks cemented together into uneven walls, two reports by a federal oversight office have found.
The reports, released yesterday, detail a close inspection of five of the clinics in the northern city of Kirkuk as well as a sweeping audit of the entire program, which began in March 2004 as a heavily promoted effort to improve health care for ordinary Iraqis. The reports say that none of the five clinics in Kirkuk and only 20 of the original 150 across the country will be completed without new financing.
Whatever the causes, the impact of the failure on the American effort to rebuild Iraq is enormous, said the inspector general, Stuart W. Bowen
Jr.

"This was the most important program in the health sector," Mr. Bowen said in an interview. "It sought to fulfill a strategy to get health services to rural and remote poor in Iraq."



Now the lead contractor Parsons, and its subcontractors have a quarter of a billion dollars of the US public's money and the Iraqi's have, well, not a hell of a lot, but I guess they must be getting used to that.

How Could Anyone Take US "Democracy-Building" Seriously?

WASHINGTON -- President Bush has quietly claimed the authority to disobey more
than 750 laws enacted since he took office, asserting that he has the power to
set aside any statute passed by Congress when it conflicts with his
interpretation of the Constitution.


Among the laws Bush said he can ignore are military rules and regulations,
affirmative-action provisions, requirements that Congress be told about
immigration services problems, ''whistle-blower" protections for nuclear
regulatory officials, and safeguards against political interference in federally
funded research.

Phillip Cooper, a Portland State University law professor who has studied
the executive power claims Bush made during his first term, said Bush and his
legal team have spent the past five years quietly working to concentrate ever
more governmental power into the White House.

''There is no question that this administration has been involved in a very
carefully thought-out, systematic process of expanding presidential power at the
expense of the other branches of government," Cooper said. ''This is really big,
very expansive, and very significant."

In his signing statements, Bush has repeatedly asserted that the Constitution gives him the right to ignore numerous sections of the bills -- sometimes including provisions that were the subject of negotiations with Congress in order to get lawmakers to pass the bill. He has appended such statements to more than one of every 10 bills he has signed.


''He agrees to a compromise with members of Congress, and all of them are there for a public bill-signing ceremony, but then he takes back those compromises -- and more often than not, without the Congress or the press or the public knowing what has happened," said Christopher Kelley, a Miami University of Ohio political science professor who studies executive power.


I know Bush's approval rating is low and getting lower, but this is pretty big. There's so much going on behind this current US administration, it's overwhelming. I'm hoping here that whatever can be used to rally public opinion in the US against this group will come to light in time for impeachment or whatever's coming so that Bush & Co. isn't just replaced with those that have escaped the net, but have the same agenda.

I know a lot of this isn't reported too much in the mainstream press, but there are very big things at stake. Bigger than at any point in human history previously.

Here's a list of examples of some of the signing statements that Bush has appended to Bills that he has first signed into law:

March 9: Justice Department officials must give reports to Congress by certain dates on how the FBI is using the USA Patriot Act to search homes and secretly seize papers.

Bush's signing statement: The president can order Justice Department officials to withhold any information from Congress if he decides it could impair national security or executive branch operations.


Dec. 30, 2005: US interrogators cannot torture prisoners or otherwise subject them to cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment.


Bush's signing statement: The president, as commander in chief, can waive the torture ban if he decides that harsh interrogation techniques will assist in preventing terrorist attacks.


Dec. 30: When requested, scientific information ''prepared by government researchers and scientists shall be transmitted [to Congress] uncensored and without delay."


Bush's signing statement: The president can tell researchers to withhold any information from Congress if he decides its disclosure could impair foreign relations, national security, or the workings of the executive branch.


Aug. 8: The Department of Energy, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and its contractors may not fire or otherwise punish an employee whistle-blower who tells Congress about possible wrongdoing.


Bush's signing statement: The president or his appointees will determine whether employees of the Department of Energy and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission can give information to Congress.


Dec. 23, 2004: Forbids US troops in Colombia from participating in any combat against rebels, except in cases of self-defense. Caps the number of US troops allowed in Colombia at 800.

Bush's signing statement: Only the president, as commander in chief, can place restrictions on the use of US armed forces, so the executive branch will construe the law ''as advisory in nature."


Dec. 17: The new national intelligence director shall recruit and train women and minorities to be spies, analysts, and translators in order to ensure diversity in the intelligence community.

Bush's signing statement: The executive branch shall construe the law in a manner consistent with a constitutional clause guaranteeing ''equal protection" for all. (In 2003, the Bush administration argued against race-conscious affirmative-action programs in a Supreme Court case. The court rejected Bush's view.)

Oct. 29: Defense Department personnel are prohibited from interfering with the ability of military lawyers to give independent legal advice to their commanders.

Bush's signing statement: All military attorneys are bound to follow legal conclusions reached by the administration's lawyers in the Justice Department and the Pentagon when giving advice to their commanders.

Aug. 5: The military cannot add to its files any illegally gathered intelligence, including information obtained about Americans in violation of the Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches.

Bush's signing statement: Only the president, as commander in chief, can tell the military whether or not it can use any specific piece of intelligence.

Nov. 6, 2003: US officials in Iraq cannot prevent an inspector general for the Coalition Provisional Authority from carrying out any investigation. The inspector general must tell Congress if officials refuse to cooperate with his inquiries.

Bush's signing statement: The inspector general ''shall refrain" from investigating anything involving sensitive plans, intelligence, national security, or anything already being investigated by the Pentagon. The inspector cannot tell Congress anything if the president decides that disclosing the information would impair foreign relations, national security, or executive branch operations.

Nov. 5, 2002: Creates an Institute of Education Sciences whose director may conduct and publish research ''without the approval of the secretary [of education] or any other office of the department."

Bush's signing statement: The president has the power to control the actions of all executive branch officials, so ''the director of the Institute of Education Sciences shall [be] subject to the supervision and direction of the secretary of education."