Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Horror or Whore:Witch is more Halloween

When did Halloween stop being about horror and start being about whore.

Its a comment I overhead a woman zombie say to her vampire friend on a bus last Halloween. We were crawling down a Granville Street packed with Vampy babes, with so much skin I felt like I was in the adult section. Dont get me wrong, eye candy can be a pleasant distraction on the bus. But its weird when the kiddies emulate these salacious costumes.

A friends 14 year old sister got a fake id to buy a sexy costume from the adult film+toy store. She said the lineup at each store on Granville ran down the sidewalk.

I wonder if this is something new. Is Halloween English North Americas Mardi Gras (Carnival). It seems like every womans costume is a sexy something, a sexy devil, a sexy witch, etc.

What I always liked about Halloween was that it allowed everyones inner freak to revel in an assumed identity fed by high doses of sugar. Halloween has always allowed plenty of room for sexy. The realm of vampires and monsters and many of the Halloweeny things could be sexy, one need only look at Pulp Magazine Covers of Old Comics to see how the image of sex lends itself to macabre and exotic haunted stories.

There are only a few general exceptions to the all halloween costumes are sexy rule. One is the zombie. The zombie is the truly asexual creature of Halloween and one of the more horrific. But the pure ghoulishness of zombies is not as fun as sexy costumes.

The ideal way to describe the tone of Halloween costumes for adults is a balance between the sexy camp of Rocky Horror Picture Show and the Horror of Evil Dead.

I have also noticed with this costume trend, that every other woman looks like Betty Page and there is nothing evil about that. Happy Halloween.

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Something you cant wear on your t shirt at the airport

ماهر عرار

Monday, October 30, 2006

Harpers a Staller and a Phuckhead

Stephen Harper is being a fuckhead.
He is deliberately playing this stupid little game with the electorate. The government doesn't support but must take a stance on certain important issues (the environment, universal health care, aboriginal rights, etc). Harper's Clean Air Act is bullshit & everyone knows it - the timetable is loose and vague and long, and effectively stalls any improvement on minimizing human generated carbon. The legislation lacks a clear outline of how the 50 year goals are to be achieved. Harper needs to stop stalling & do something other than figure out more ways to cut taxes in top income brackets.
Canadians want to go back to the Kyoto Protocols, which is still the most clearly articulated international effort. Prime Minister Harper if he wished to form another government, should cease his unholy alliance with Christian extremists, purge the party of the most dogmatic Straussian neo-cons & propose more legislation that his own pollsters show are in line with what Canadians value (Health Care, Education, Safety, Not going to War, Child Poverty, etc.) Otherwise he may go the way that the Republicans appear to be going. Harper needs to stop copying Bush or roll over to face a reinvigorated we are everything to everyone Liberal party.
A meet is taking place between Harper and NDP leader E Jack Layton. Maybe something good will come of it, maybe Harper will turn around and offer something more substantial than that kind of dogmatic drivel churned out by the Smarmy & Smug Calgary Conservative Thinktanker Types, weaselly idiots who speak in sloganisms like Ezra Levant, or like mega-asshole and Iraq invasion defender David Frum, (who will go down in history as contributing greatly to the destablisation of the world and proliferation of weaponry by coming up with dangerous phrases for Bush like, Axis of Evil.)
The Canadian voters did not elect the board of The Western Standard, a right wing pundit driven publication. Harper! Stop fuckin around, this is serious. Our environmental problems require immediate & in some cases, drastic changes, new technologies, etc or else climate change may create conditions we are not suited to, or in other words, we go extinct.

Speaking of the US, even as October US deaths in Iraq top 100, and with most Americans now opposed to what has amounted to a totally futile effort and utter waste of resources, this Congressional midterm election has been so far anything but boring. Bush is trying to continue his ad hominem jingoistic scare tactic attack method saying America loses if Democrats win. Much like that other Bullshit phrase youre either with us or against us and lets not forget if you are against the war you are helping the terrorists.

Meanwhile, Maher Arar, a Canadian ilegally deported to Syria then tortured (in secret prisions contracted by the CIA & US military), still has not recieved an apology. Not from Canada. Not from the US. I doubt the US will do it. Hubris. Remember what George Bush 1 said in response to a question on whether the US should apologize for accidentally shooting down Iran Air Flight 655, in which all 290 passengers died. He said this: "I will never apologize for the United States, ever. I don't care what the facts are."

In Mexico, Oaxaca, the standoff between protestors and police forces grows more violent.
What the hell is going on with Mexico.

Eat turmeric & curry. Science shows it helps prevent inflamation, especially arthritis. Traditional Asian medicine has used Turmeric to treat inflammatory disorders for hundreds of years.

See how fast the US can blow billions fighting in Iraq



Taxpayers in United States will pay $378.0 billion for the cost of war in Iraq. For the same amount of money, the following could have been provided:

  • 107,796,841 People with Health Care or
  • 6,435,412 Elementary School Teachers or
  • 51,873,199 Head Start Places for Children or
  • 161,204,628 Children with Health Care or
  • 2,940,426 Affordable Housing Units or
  • 38,024 New Elementary Schools or
  • 62,398,244 Scholarships for University Students or
  • 6,562,500 Music and Arts Teachers or
  • 8,458,741 Public Safety Officers or
  • 391,327,406 Homes with Renewable Electricity or
  • 5,681,007 Port Container Inspectors

Sunday, October 29, 2006

'Bring our troops home': Thousands turn out to support soldiers, denounce mission

Under the slogan "Support our troops, bring 'em home," as many as 500 demonstrators marched and hollered through the streets of downtown Ottawa yesterday, ending up at Parliament Hill to protest the Canadian military mission in Afghanistan and ask that the troops be pulled out immediately.

The Ottawa protest was one of many across Canada organized by the Student Coalition Against War, in which thousands demonstrated in a national day of action. Across the country, protests were held in 37 cities by antiwar groups, including the student coalition.

A total of 42 Canadian soldiers and one diplomat have been killed since the Canadian military deployed to Afghanistan in early 2002.

The protests came a day after a new poll conducted for the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute found that 55 per cent of Canadians support "conventional combat missions" as long as the cause is just and progress is being made. The survey revealed that Canadians, although divided, were willing to send troops on dangerous missions as long as they believed in the military's goals.

Despite being passionate in their opposition to the mission by chanting things like "health care, day care, anything but warfare," and "not in our name," those who gathered made it clear they are in support of the troops.

Police storm Mexico's embattled Oaxaca

OAXACA, Mexico -- For months, outgoing Mexican President Vicente Fox resisted repeated calls to send federal forces to quell protests and violence in this city, opting instead to try to negotiate a peaceful end to the standoff.

But after the deaths of an American and two local residents in protests on Friday, Fox sent in thousands of federal police who launched the first major offensive Sunday to end five months of unrest in a city that was once one of Mexico's top tourist attractions.

Armed with assault rifles and riot shields, the police stormed in, bypassing barricades, touching off fierce street battles and eventually taking back control of the city centre from protesters who had held it since May.

A human rights worker said a 15-year-old protester was killed but authorities did not immediately confirm his death.

As night fell, police seized control of city's central square, where the protests had been headquartered. Explosions could be heard regularly in outlying districts, as vehicles burned and demonstrators set off powerful fireworks.

Protesters said they had tried to contact the Interior Department late Sunday to negotiate, but were unable to reach anyone.

They also said electricity was cut to the radio station being used to transmit information to demonstrators.

Protest spokesman Roberto Garcia said 50 of their supporters had been arrested and police were searching houses, looking for leaders of the unrest. Human rights worker Jesica Sanchez said the 15-year-old boy was killed when he was hit by a tear-gas canister.

Earlier, as helicopters roared overhead, officers in black helmets entered the city from several sides, reinforced by armoured vehicles, trucks mounted with high-pressure water cannons and bulldozers. They marched up to a final metal barrier blocking the city centre, but pulled back as protesters armed with sticks attacked them from behind, hurling burning tires. The air filled with black smoke and tear gas.

Some demonstrators used syringes to pierce their arms and legs, then paint signs in their own blood decrying the police.

Protesters readied bottles filled with gasoline and other homemade bombs, but did not use them against police.

"I think their strategy isn't working," said protest leader Hugo Pacheco, who was leading a group against a column of police holding a position three blocks from the city centre. "I don't think this has worked for them because the people, we, the people, are right."

What began more than five months ago as a teacher's strike in this colonial southern Mexican city of roughly 275,000 spiralled into chaos as anarchists, students and Indian groups seized the central plaza and barricaded streets throughout the city to demand the ouster of Oaxaca state Gov. Ulises Ruiz.

Protesters accused Ruiz of rigging his 2004 election and using thugs to kill or crush political opponents. They say his resignation is not negotiable and they won't return home without it. The violence has driven tourists from one of Mexico's most popular destinations, forcing hotels and restaurants to close their doors.

Former Chief UN Weapons Inspector: Iraq War “Total Failure”

Meanwhile, former chief UN weapons inspector Hans Blix has issued some of his harshest criticism to date of the Iraq war. In an interview with a Danish newspaper this week, Blix calls the war “a pure failure.” Blix says although Saddam Hussein would still be in power had the US not invaded, “what we have gotten is undoubtedly worse.”

Rumsfeld to Media, War Critics: “Back Off”

Amidst rising criticism from Republican ranks and a deepening split with Iraqi leaders, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has issued a new message to critics of the Iraq war – “back off.” At a Pentagon briefing Thursday, Rumsfeld told reporters: "This is complicated stuff. It's difficult. We're looking out into the future. No one can predict the future with absolute certainty. So you ought to just back off, take a look at it, relax, [and] understand that it's complicated… but it will get worked out," he said. Rumsfeld’s comments come as increasing numbers of Republicans are calling for his dismissal. On Wednesday, Republican Senator Olympia Snowe of Maine said President Bush should have accepted Rumsfeld’s resignation when it was first offered. Republican Senator Mike DeWine of Ohio and Congressmember Anne Northup of Kentucky also called for Rumsfeld’s replacement this week. Northup said: "You cannot afford to lose the numbers we are losing now and just keep slugging away."

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

TV, film actors asked to take 25% pay cut


ACTRA, the Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Television and Radio Artists, said in a news release today that actor Gordon Pinsent, a member of the union's bargaining team, walked out of a meeting with film and television producers on Monday.

"Canadian producers told revered Canadian actor Gordon Pinsent and all Canadian performers that they deserve a 25 per cent pay cut, no residuals and worse working conditions," the union said in a statement.

"So Pinsent, at the front table of ACTRA's bargaining team, walked out of the talks on Monday."

(story cont'd)

Good news for civil rights: New Jersey court says gay couples have same rights as straight couples

PHILADELPHIA - New Jersey's high court stopped just short of legalizing gay marriage Wednesday, ruling that same-sex couples deserve the same rights as heterosexual ones, but punting the specifics to the Legislature.

Lawmakers have six months to expand the definition of marriage to include gay and lesbian couples or to come up with another term that carries the same weight.

The ruling resembles a 1999 Vermont Supreme Court decision that resulted in "civil unions" for same-sex couples. The Vermont court allowed lawmakers to reserve the term "marriage for the union of one man and one woman, but it required legislators to give gay and lesbian couples the same rights as married couples.

"Although we cannot find that a fundamental right to same-sex marriage exists in this state, the unequal dispensation of rights and benefits to committed same-sex partners can no longer be tolerated under our state constitution," Justice Barry T. Albin wrote for the New Jersey Supreme Court's majority.

Justice minister to review changes to anti-terrorism law

The federal government will review a court ruling that struck down part of the Anti-Terrorism Act and then see if an appeal is necessary, Justice Minister Vic Toews says.

Toews wants to study the Oct. 24 ruling, which he acknowledged "fundamentally" changes the definition of terrorism under the Criminal Code. Whereas terrorism once meant an act of public intimidation that was specifically fuelled by political, religious or ideological purposes, the motivation may no longer matter.

Critics say the decision to strike out the part of the law which deals with an accused's political, religious or ideological motivation may actually make the prosecution's job easier.

Liberal Derek Lee believes the clause including motivation should stay, or else the net would be cast too wide.

"A bunch of fishermen on their fishing boat trying to protect their fishing territory could in fact offend the anti-terror provisions of the code," he argued.

Ontario Superior Court Judge Douglas Rutherford severed the clause in the law dealing with ideological, religious or political motivation for illegal acts in the case against Mohammed Mohmin Khawaja, charged in connection with alleged involvement in a suspected bomb plot in Britain.

Rutherford found that the legal definition of terrorist activity explicitly tied terrorism to criminal activity motivated by beliefs, and infringed on key freedoms guaranteed in the Charter of Rights.

RCMP disputes Arar testimony???

Wayne Easter, the former solicitor-general who presided during the Arar ordeal, appeared to contradict earlier testimony from RCMP head Giuliano Zacardelli today when he answered questions at a commons committee.

“I was not informed that the RCMP had provided inaccurate information to the U.S.,” Easter told the MPs.

Easter said the issue was never raised with him by his American counterpart Attorney General John Ashcroft. Presumably when American investigators learned they had false information on Arar, Ashcroft would have been briefed on that information, Easter said, and he believes Ashcroft would have shared that with him.

“Attorney General Ashcroft…would have undoubtedly raised that point with me,” Easter said.
Asked whether he would have acted differently had he known earlier that Arar had no terrorist links, Easter said he didn’t want to answer hypothetical questions.

The committee is planning to recall Zacardelli to clarify his initial testimony and he will likely be asked about the contradictions provided today by his former political boss.

Canada Declares Afghan Hezb-i-Islami A Terrorist Group

OTTAWA, October 25, 2006 -- Canada has officially declared the Hezb-i-Islami party headed by former Afghan Prime Minister Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, to be a terrorist organization. A written statement from Canadian Public Security Minister Stockwell Day said Hezb-i-Islami has joined forces with Al-Qaeda and the Taliban, knowingly engages in terrorism, and seeks the overthrow of Afghan President Hamid Karzai. The official designation as a terrorist group allows Canadian authorities to seize any assets of Hezb-i-Islami in Canada and prosecute anyone in Canada who knowingly helps it.

Canada won't be a 'dumping ground' for sex offenders, says Ontario Premier

TORONTO and OTTAWA -- Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty lashed out yesterday at a U.S. judge for using Canada as a "dumping ground" for a convicted sex offender.

Mr. McGuinty urged the federal government to try to overturn an unusual punishment that will allow a teacher convicted of sexually abusing a 15-year-old student to return to Fort Erie, Ont., where he lives with his wife and three children.

Under a plea bargain approved Monday by a New York State court, Malcolm Watson, 35, a U.S. citizen, will spend three years on probation in Canada and enter the United States only to report to his probation officer.

In Ottawa, Rob Nicholson, Tory government house leader, expressed frustration that opposition parties are moving slowly in passing a host of justice bills, including one that would raise the age of sexual consent across Canada to 16.

"As the member of Parliament for Niagara Falls and Fort Erie, I was infuriated to see an American court decision deporting an individual, an American citizen, back to my constituency, a 35-year-old individual who was convicted of having sex with a 15-year-old," he said.

"In Canada, unless that person was in a position of responsibility or trust, that would be perfectly legal. So this is another example of where a bill like C-22, the bill to raise the age of consent for sex in this country to 16, should get the co-operation of all members of Parliament."

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Quote of the Day: Gore Vidal quotes one of the Founding Fathers

Politicians in Washington of all stripes, whatever the occasion, love to quote the Founding Fathers. But there's one quote you'll never hear. It's from James Madison. He said:

"Of all the enemies of public liberty, war is perhaps the most to be dreaded, because it comprises and develops the germ of every other. War is the parent of armies. From these proceed debts and taxes. And armies, debts and taxes are the known instruments for bringing the many under the domination of the few. No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare."

Facts about Child Poverty in our Shrinking World

The GDP (Gross Domestic Product) of the poorest 48 nations (i.e. a quarter of the world’s countries) is less than the wealth of the world’s three richest people combined.

Less than one per cent of what the world spent every year on weapons was needed to put every child into school by the year 2000 and yet it didn’t happen.

1 billion children live in poverty (1 in 2 children in the world). 640 million live without adequate shelter, 400 million have no access to safe water, 270 million have no access to health services. 10.6 million died in 2003 before they reached the age of 5 (or roughly 29,000 children per day).

51 percent of the world’s 100 hundred wealthiest bodies are corporations.

The poorer the country, the more likely it is that debt repayments are being extracted directly from people who neither contracted the loans nor received any of the money.

“Approximately 790 million people in the developing world are still chronically undernourished, almost two-thirds of whom reside in Asia and the Pacific.”

ccording to UNICEF, 30,000 children die each day due to poverty. And they “die quietly in some of the poorest villages on earth, far removed from the scrutiny and the conscience of the world. Being meek and weak in life makes these dying multitudes even more invisible in death.” That is about 210,000 children each week, or just under 11 million children under five years of age, each year.

Costs for Iraq war pass 330 billion dollars!!!!

Check out the link.

Protest Staged at NOAA Over Global Warming

In Maryland, the headquarters of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration was the scene of a protest yesterday over the Bush administration’s handling of global warming. Two protesters occupied a ledge above the building’s front entrance and unfurled a banner reading: “Bush Let NOAA Tell the Truth.” Other protesters on the ground blocked and occupied the building's main entrance. The demonstrators accused the agency of ignoring and actively suppressing science that details the threat of global warming.

Blix Criticizes U.S. For Refusing to Sign Nuke Test Ban Treaty

Former UN chief arms inspector Hans Blix said Monday that the world needs to make clear to North Korea that they are not trying to overthrow the regime as they try to persuade North Korea to stop developing nuclear weapons.
  • Hans Blix: "It might be more useful to say: "Look here, we are not out for regime change here, that is for the Korean people and for you to do. But the world is very concerned if you move on with the nuclear weapons. And we the outside world are willing to try to create conditions where you don't need them. We can give you assurances, on paper, that you will not be attacked from the outside, and that we will not try to change your regime."
Hans Blix also criticized the United States for promoting a double-standard.
  • Hans Blix: "Of course we all regret and even the Security Council condemns the tests, but we must remember then that they are condemned for doing something the US and other countries are reserving themselves the right to do. The United States has refused to ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. They keep test-ban test-areas open in the United States, so here is someone telling Korea, 'you must not do that, but we of course might do so in the future.'”

U.S. Drops to #53 on World Press Freedom Index List

Reporters Without Borders has released its fifth annual Worldwide Press Freedom Index and it shows the level of press freedom in the United States continues to fall. In 2002 the U.S. was rated as having the seventeenth freest press – now it is ranked fifty-third. Reporters Without Borders criticized the Bush administration for using the so-called war on terrorism to crack down on press freedoms. The report also criticized the United States for jailing journalists at home and abroad. Freelance journalist and blogger Josh Wolf remains in a San Francisco jail for refusing to hand over video to the police. Al Jazeera camerman Sami Al Haj has been locked up at Guantanamo for over four years. Associated Press photographer Bilal Hussein has been held in Iraq since April. Neither Al Haj or Hussein have ever faced charges. Reporters Without Borders found that the nations with the freest press were Finland, Iceland, Ireland and the Netherlands. North Korea was rated as the worst upholder of press freedom.

Increased chaos in Iraq, Bush changes course

On Monday Republican Senator Lindsey Graham said “We're on the verge of chaos, and the current plan is not working.”
The White House has been vague about how it is going to alter its Iraq policy but press secretary Tony Snow says that the president will no longer say he wants to “stay the course.”

65 Active Duty Soldiers Call for End of Iraq Occupation

The Bush administration is facing new opposition to the war in Iraq from within the U.S. military. For the first time since the invasion, a group of 65 active duty service members are formally asking Congress to end the U.S. occupation and bring the troops home. The soldiers are filing Appeals for Redress to members of Congress. Under the Military Whistle-Blower Protection Act active-duty troops can file and send a protected communication to a member of Congress regarding any subject without reprisal. One of the soldiers is Marine Sgt. Liam Madden of Rockingham Vermont who served in Iraq for seven months last year. He told a Vermont newspaper, "The war is being paid for by American people and they're not seeing any benefit from it, and neither are the Iraqi people. It doesn't make sense to me." The soldiers plan to publicly announce their campaign on Wednesday. Sgt. Liam Madden said they hope to collect two thousand appeals for redress and send them to Congress on Jan. 15 -- Martin Luther King Day.

Monday, October 23, 2006

NOW interview with Noam Chomsky

Noam discusses US foreign Policy in the run up to the election, Chavez, and news from the UN.
"Why is there a prolonged applause [when Hugo Chavez spoke at the U.N. last week]? Maybe it's because of the substance of what he said ... that the U.S. is a leading threat to peace in the world. That's not controversial."
Listen here.

Stop Genocide Now

Western pressure fails to move Sudan

Khartoum, expells UN envoy Jan Pronk because of comments made by Mr Pronk on his blog, janpronk.nl. A “somewhat bemused” Mr Pronk has been recalled to New York for talks with Kofi Annan, the UN Secretary-General, and will not return to Sudan.

The decision to order Mr Pronk out of the country raises the stakes sharply in the long-running dispute with the world body over the crisis in the vast western province, where an estimated 200,000 have died and more than two million have been driven from their homes in 3½ years of government-supported mayhem.

Darfur rebels go on attack as all-out war looms


HAROUN Abdullah Kabir stepped from one bloodied corpse to another on the parched battlefield. He searched the soldiers' decomposing faces for an aquiline nose, fair complexion or fine, straight hair: telltale Arab features.

Instead Kabir, a field commander of the Darfur rebels fighting the Arab-dominated Sudanese Government, found among the fallen only the dark-skinned faces of southern Sudanese and Darfurians. He looked away in disgust...

Friday, October 20, 2006

Nobel for micro credit

The selection of Muhammad Yunus as this year's winner of the Nobel Peace Prize puts a long-overdue stamp of international recognition on a century-old global movement to fight poverty by making credit available to very poor people to let them trade and barter their way up the economic ladder with dignity.

Over the past three decades, Yunus, a university economist, accomplished the seemingly impossible in his native Bangladesh by organizing very poor villagers into five-member credit circles and extending microcredit - creative loans of less than $309 on average - to do things like build a house, get a fishing boat, buy farm tools or pay for goods sold door to door.

There's no collateral behind the loans: personal ties between circle members creates pressure to repay loans.

Yunus' organization, the Grameen Bank (Grameen means "village" in Bengali) has loaned more than $5.7 billion to more than 6 million poor people - 97% of them women - and inspired similar projects around the world.

Austrian Removes 'Sexist' Urinals



(AP) An Austrian businessman announced Thursday that he would get rid of urinals shaped like a woman's mouth from a public toilet near Vienna's national opera, after facing pressure from politicians who demanded their removal.

The urinals, which are located in the "Opera Toilet," a lavishly decorated public restroom, feature thick, lipsticked lips, a set of teeth and a bright red tongue.

"We think that it's tasteless, misogynistic and offensive," Marianne Lackner, media spokeswoman for the Vienna Department of Women's Affairs told The Associated Press.

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

No news is good news: A Reminder of the Conservative No Show

A nail in the coffin of women's equality?

Funding to women's organizations and other equality-seeking groups was begun in the Trudeau era with the philosophy that government should support those who would otherwise have little voice at the federal level.

by Judy Rebick
October 16, 2006

In early October, the federal government announced dramatic changes to Status of Women Canada that will, in effect, eliminate federal funding to feminist organizations in Canada. Combined with the removal of the Court Challenges Program, these changes will end the era of Canadian democracy that recognized the need for state funding to marginalized groups. The Harper government has taken us one more step toward U.S.-style “democracy” where only the powerful have access to government.

The administrative cuts to Status of Women have received the most attention in the media but the changes to the government agency's mandate are much more significant. The word “equality” has been eliminated from the agency's mandate replaced by the word “participation.” In addition, funding for lobbying and research, exactly what the agency always funded, is no longer permitted.

The First Casualty of War is Grammar: 5 Years Later

Terry Jones (of Monty Python), "The First Casualty of War is Grammar" (source)


WHAT really alarms me about President Bush's "war on terrorism" is the grammar. How do you wage war on an abstract noun? It's rather like bombing murder.

Imagine if Bush had said: "We're going to bomb murder wherever it lurks. We are going to seek out the murderers and the would-be murderers, and bomb any government that harbours murderers."

It's hard for abstract nouns to surrender. In fact it's very hard for abstract nouns to do anything at all of their own volition - even trained philologists can't negotiate with them. It's difficult to find their hide-outs, useless to try to cut off their supplies.


The bitter semantic truth is that you can't win against these sort of words - unless, I suppose, you get them thrown out of the Oxford English Dictionary. That would show 'em. Admittedly, the Second World War was fought against fascism.


But that particular abstract noun was cunningly hiding behind the very real Nazi government. We simply had to defeat Germany to win. In President Bush's war, there is no such solution. Saying "We will destroy terrorism" is about as meaningful as saying: "We shall annihilate mockery."


Moreover, in its current usage, terrorism cannot be committed by a country. When America bombed a Sudanese pharmaceutical factory under the impression that it was a chemical weapons establishment, that was stupid. But it was not an act of terrorism because the US Government did it officially. And it apologised for it.


That's very important: no self-respecting terrorist ever apologises. It's one of the few things that distinguishes legitimate governments from terrorists. So, it was difficult for President Bush to know whom to bomb after the World Trade Centre outrage.


If Bermuda had done it, then it would have been simple: he could have bombed the Bahamas. It must have been really irritating that the people who perpetrated such a horrendous catastrophe were not a nation.


What's more, terrorists - unlike a country - won't keep still in one place so you can bomb them. They have this annoying habit of moving around, sometimes even going abroad. It's all very un-American (apart from the training, that is).


On top of all this, you have no idea who the terrorists are. It's in their nature not to be known until they've committed their particular act of terrorism. Otherwise, they're just plain old Tim McVeigh who lives next door, or that nice Mr Atta who's taking flying lessons.


So, let's forget the abstract noun. Let's rename this conflict the "war on terrorists"; that sounds a bit more concrete. But, actually, the semantics get even more obscure. What exactly does President Bush mean by terrorists? He hasn't defined the term, so we'll have to try to work out what he means from his actions.


Judging by those actions, the terrorists all live together in "camps" in Afghanistan. Presumably, they spend the evenings playing the guitar and eating chow around the campfire. In these "camps", the terrorists also engage in "training" and stockpiling weapons, which we can obliterate with our cluster bombs and missiles.


Nobody seems to have told the President that the horrors of September were perpetrated with little more than a couple of dozen box-cutters. I suppose the US could bomb all the stockpiles of box-cutters in the world, but I have a sneaking feeling that it's still not going to eradicate terrorists.


Besides, I thought the terrorists who crashed those planes into the World Trade Centre were living in Florida and New Jersey. I thought the al-Qa'eda network was operating in 64 countries, including America and many European states - which even President Bush might prefer not to bomb.


But no: the President, Congress, Tony Blair and pretty well the entire House of Commons are convinced that terrorists live in Afghanistan. And what is meant by: "We mustn't give in to the terrorists"? We gave in to them the moment the first bombs fell on Afghanistan.


The instigators of September 11 must have been popping the corks on their non-alcoholic champagne. They had successfully provoked America into attacking yet another poor country it didn't previously know much about, thereby creating revulsion throughout the Arab world and ensuring support for the Islamic fundamentalists.


Words have become devalued, some have changed their meaning, and the philologists can only shake their heads. The first casualty of war is grammar.


Noam Chomsky and Hassan Nasrallah

Noam Chomsky, groundbreaking linguist and veteran lefty, had dinner with Hassan Nasrallah. That’s right, Hassan Nasrallah. Now, we know that Chomsky and Nasrallah are likely to set off some alarm bells, but regardless of how you feel about the two, wouldn’t you like to be a fly on the wall for that conversation?

http://stream.publicbroadcasting.net/ros/open_source_060815.mp3

Does Bush Think War with Iran Is Preordained?

By Chris Hedges, Truthdig.


The Christian right sees an apocalyptic nuclear war with Iran as a vision set forth in the Bible. Bush himself may be a believer, too.

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The aircraft carrier Eisenhower, accompanied by the guided-missile cruiser USS Anzio, guided-missile destroyer USS Ramage, guided-missile destroyer USS Mason and the fast-attack submarine USS Newport News, is, as I write, making its way to the Straits of Hormuz off Iran. The ships will be in place to strike Iran by the end of the month. It may be a bluff. It may be a feint. It may be a simple show of American power. But I doubt it.

War with Iran -- a war that would unleash an apocalyptic scenario in the Middle East -- is probable by the end of the Bush administration. It could begin in as little as three weeks. This administration, claiming to be anointed by a Christian God to reshape the world, and especially the Middle East, defined three states at the start of its reign as "the Axis of Evil." They were Iraq, now occupied; North Korea, which, because it has nuclear weapons, is untouchable; and Iran. Those who do not take this apocalyptic rhetoric seriously have ignored the twisted pathology of men like Elliott Abrams, who helped orchestrate the disastrous and illegal contra war in Nicaragua, and who now handles the Middle East for the National Security Council. He knew nothing about Central America. He knows nothing about the Middle East. He sees the world through the childish, binary lens of good and evil, us and them, the forces of darkness and the forces of light. And it is this strange, twilight mentality that now grips most of the civilian planners who are barreling us towards a crisis of epic proportions.

These men advocate a doctrine of permanent war, a doctrine which, as William R. Polk points out, is a slight corruption of Leon Trotsky's doctrine of permanent revolution. These two revolutionary doctrines serve the same function, to intimidate and destroy all those classified as foreign opponents, to create permanent instability and fear and to silence domestic critics who challenge leaders in a time of national crisis. It works. The citizens of the United States, slowly being stripped of their civil liberties, are being herded sheep-like, once again, over a cliff.

But this war will be different. It will be catastrophic. It will usher in the apocalyptic nightmares spun out in the dark, fantastic visions of the Christian right. And there are those around the president who see this vision as preordained by God; indeed, the president himself may hold such a vision.

The hypocrisy of this vaunted moral crusade is not lost on those in the Middle East. Iran actually signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. It has violated a codicil of that treaty written by European foreign ministers, but this codicil was never ratified by the Iranian parliament. I do not dispute Iran's intentions to acquire nuclear weapons nor do I minimize the danger should it acquire them in the estimated five to 10 years. But contrast Iran with Pakistan, India and Israel. These three countries refused to sign the treaty and developed nuclear weapons programs in secret. Israel now has an estimated 400 to 600 nuclear weapons. The word "Dimona," the name of the city where the nuclear facilities are located in Israel, is shorthand in the Muslim world for the deadly Israeli threat to Muslims' existence. What lessons did the Iranians learn from our Israeli, Pakistani and Indian allies?

Given that we are actively engaged in an effort to destabilize the Iranian regime by recruiting tribal groups and ethnic minorities inside Iran to rebel, given that we use apocalyptic rhetoric to describe what must be done to the Iranian regime, given that other countries in the Middle East such as Egypt and Saudi Arabia are making noises about developing a nuclear capacity, and given that, with the touch of a button Israel could obliterate Iran, what do we expect from the Iranians? On top of this, the Iranian regime grasps that the doctrine of permanent war entails making "preemptive" and unprovoked strikes.

Those in Washington who advocate this war, knowing as little about the limitations and chaos of war as they do about the Middle East, believe they can hit about 1,000 sites inside Iran to wipe out nuclear production and cripple the 850,000-man Iranian army. The disaster in southern Lebanon, where the Israeli air campaign not only failed to break Hezbollah but united most Lebanese behind the militant group, is dismissed. These ideologues, after all, do not live in a reality-based universe. The massive Israeli bombing of Lebanon failed to pacify 4 million Lebanese. What will happen when we begin to pound a country of 70 million people? As retired General Wesley K. Clark and others have pointed out, once you begin an air campaign it is only a matter of time before you have to put troops on the ground or accept defeat, as the Israelis had to do in Lebanon. And if we begin dropping bunker busters, cruise missiles and iron fragmentation bombs on Iran this is the choice that must be faced -- either sending American forces into Iran to fight a protracted and futile guerrilla war or walking away in humiliation.

"As a people we are enormously forgetful," Dr. Polk, one of the country's leading scholars on the Middle East, told an Oct. 13 gathering of the Foreign Policy Association in New York. "We should have learned from history that foreign powers can't win guerrilla wars. The British learned this from our ancestors in the American Revolution and re-learned it in Ireland. Napoleon learned it in Spain. The Germans learned it in Yugoslavia. We should have learned it in Vietnam and the Russians learned it in Afghanistan and are learning it all over again in Chechnya and we are learning it, of course, in Iraq. Guerrilla wars are almost unwinnable. As a people we are also very vain. Our way of life is the only way. We should have learned that the rich and powerful can't always succeed against the poor and less powerful."

An attack on Iran will ignite the Middle East. The loss of Iranian oil, coupled with Silkworm missile attacks by Iran on oil tankers in the Persian Gulf, could send oil soaring to well over $110 a barrel. The effect on the domestic and world economy will be devastating, very possibly triggering a huge, global depression. The 2 million Shiites in Saudi Arabia, the Shiite majority in Iraq and the Shiite communities in Bahrain, Pakistan and Turkey will turn in rage on us and our dwindling allies. We will see a combination of increased terrorist attacks, including on American soil, and the widespread sabotage of oil production in the Gulf. Iraq, as bad as it looks now, will become a death pit for American troops as Shiites and Sunnis, for the first time, unite against their foreign occupiers.

The country, however, that will pay the biggest price will be Israel. And the sad irony is that those planning this war think of themselves as allies of the Jewish state. A conflagration of this magnitude could see Israel drawn back in Lebanon and sucked into a regional war, one that would over time spell the final chapter in the Zionist experiment in the Middle East. The Israelis aptly call their nuclear program "the Samson option." The Biblical Samson ripped down the pillars of the temple and killed everyone around him, along with himself.

If you are sure you will be raptured into heaven, your clothes left behind with the nonbelievers, then this news should cheer you up. If you are rational, however, these may be some of the last few weeks or months in which to enjoy what is left of our beleaguered, dying republic and way of life.

U.S. Warned on War Spending and Deficits

Even the neoliberals at the World Economic Forum are getting nervous about the sad state of the US economy.

One of the world's most exclusive business clubs warned the United States Tuesday that its open-ended national security and war expenditures, along with tax cuts that led to large budget deficits, could affect the country's status as a powerful economic force.

The Geneva-based World Economic Forum issued its 2006-07 Global Competitiveness Index (GCI) rankings and listed the United States in sixth place, down from the top spot, behind Switzerland, Finland and Sweden and just ahead of Japan.

The top 10 countries are all rich industrialised nations. They are Switzerland, Finland Sweden, Denmark, Singapore, the United States, Japan, Germany, the Netherlands and Britain.

The report says that with potentially even higher spending commitments in defence and homeland security, which comes with the U.S. war on terror and ongoing plans to lower taxes further, the U.S. faces difficult fiscal balancing.

"With a low savings rate, record-high current account deficits and a worsening of the U.S.'s net debtor position, there is a non-negligible risk to both the country's overall competitiveness and, given the relative size of the U.S. economy, the future of the global economy," said Augusto Lopez-Claros, chief economist of the World Economic Forum's Global Competitiveness Network.

The report says that the United States faces major institutional challenges because the quality of the country's public institutions fares worse than those of other rich nations in terms of transparency and efficiency, especially after the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina last year.

The report did praise the U.S. higher education system and said that the country remains the world leader in innovation.

The pro-market forum ranks countries based on specific criteria, including macroeconomic policies, market regulation, technological development and education.

The comprehensive annual survey is conducted by the WEF along with research institutes and business organisations in the countries covered by the report. This year's report was complimented with a poll of more than 11,000 business leaders in a record 125 economies worldwide.

The World Economic Forum is a loose grouping of the most powerful companies around the world and is best known for its annual meetings in the Swiss Alpine resort of Davos, where world leaders and top business executives gather to chart the financial course for the next year.

The admonition from such a pro-market establishment group could serve as a red flag on the direction of the U.S. economy. If international confidence in the U.S. economy continues to ebb, the U.S. dollar is likely to fall further and foreign investment will shrink.

The report was immediately seized on by the U.S. opposition party as evidence of counterproductive policies from the George W. Bush administration. Democrats, who will be competing with Bush's Republican Party for Congressional seats on Nov. 7, blamed the administration's economic policies for the deterioration in the U.S. ranking.

House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi said in a statement that Bush administration officials and Republican lawmakers "have run up record budget deficits in their quest to help the privileged few, given subsidies to companies to ship jobs overseas and failed to pursue an aggressive trade agenda on behalf of America's companies and America's workers."

"Nothing less than our economic leadership is at stake," she added.

The U.S. economy is menaced by large macroeconomic imbalances, particularly rising levels of public indebtedness associated with repeated fiscal deficits.

Economists say the country could see disorderly adjustment of such imbalances, including the historically high trade deficit. The U.S. ran a humongous trade deficit of nearly 791.5 billion dollars last year. The trade deficit hit 68 billion dollars in July, up five percent from June's record.

The running U.S. trade deficit is 820 billion dollars in 2006 -- keeping the United States on pace for a record annual trade deficit, for the fifth straight year -- far ahead of last year's record and approaching six percent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

A deficit that reaches four percent of the GDP is considered by economists to pose a threat to an economy's general stability by increasing prospects for high interest rates or sudden sell-offs of a country's currency.

The WEF noted the seriousness of those rates.

"What is unsustainable is the present growth of the U.S. deficit as a share of GDP," says the report.

"Maintaining a constant share deficit may require some depreciation of the dollar and a reduction in the trade deficit. It will also require greater effort on the part of the United States to reduce fiscal imbalances."

Source: IPS