Daily Kos

Website: http://lefti.blogspot.com
Email: leftiblog@hotmail.com

Publisher/Editor/Writer of Left I on the News, activist in various left-wing/progressive causes

Airline crimes of the (last) century

Thu Jul 03, 2008 at 09:35:40 AM PDT

There have been a number of famous attacks on airplanes in the last 50 years: the 1976 mid-air bombing of Cubana Flight 455 (the first in the Western Hemisphere) by mercenaries hired by CIA agents Luis Posada Carriles and Orlando Bosch, which took the lives of 73 people and whose perpetrators are to this day being protected by the United States, the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103, attributed (emphasis on that word) to Libyan agents, which took the lives of 270 people, and the 1983 mid-air shootdown of Korean Air Flight 007 by Russian jets as the plane strayed over Russian territory, which took the lives of 269 people.

The liberal assault on Iran

Wed Jul 02, 2008 at 04:23:10 PM PDT

Joseph Cirincione, the former head of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (I should probably put a "sic" after that) and now the head of the equally peaceful sounding "Plowshares Fund," has been consistent on Iran. Twice in 2006 (here and here), I wrote about his taking the "not if, but when" attitude toward Iran developing nuclear weapons. You might think the National Intelligence Estimate in late 2007 might have given him pause, but no, there he was on Democracy Now this morning, pushing the same line still, with statements like

Committee to Protect Journalists...doesn't

Tue Jul 01, 2008 at 01:39:09 PM PDT

The Committee to Protect Journalists has a fine-sounding name, but, like the even more scurrilous CIA-linked Reporters Without Borders (who trade on the respected name of Doctors Without Borders to ply their anti-communist agenda), their priorities have rather strong biases. On June 26, Palestinian journalist Mohammed Omer, a frequent guest reporter on KPFA's Flashpoints and Pacifica's Democracy Now!, was returning from receiving a prestigious journalism prize in Britain, when he was attacked, abused, and tortured by Israeli border agents as he attempted to re-enter Gaza. The attack received limited press coverage (Reuters), but has been largely ignored in the West.

War as an environmental disaster

Thu Jun 26, 2008 at 06:53:33 PM PDT

An article in USA Today today reports that the military is facing a $100 billion bill for repairs; no doubt that money has not been included in what we've been told is the "cost" of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But buried in the story is this nugget:

Humvees, for example, travel as much as 100,000 miles a year in Iraq, five times the peacetime rate.

Now there is an "as much as" in that sentence, and I don't know how many Humvees are in Iraq, but we also know that Humvees are not exactly high-mileage or low-emission vehicles, and just one Humvee driven for 100,000 miles is generating one heck of a lot of emissions and burning one heck of a lot of gasoline. I don't know if anyone has recently computed the amount of pollution being generated by American vehicles (including planes, of course, as well as Humvees, tanks, and everything else on the ground) in Iraq, nor the amount of non-renewable fossil fuels that have been burned up by that war (as well as in Afghanistan), but I think it's safe to say it's one heck of a large number.

Who said this, about what?

Tue Jun 24, 2008 at 09:12:33 PM PDT

"The perpetrators of these crimes have been able to live in freedom for so long. And some say why go after old men in their last years? Because, in fact, they should not have the opportunity to live out their lives without being held responsible for these horrendous acts. These murders are 30 or 40 years old. Obviously they're difficult to investigate and to prosecute because evidence has been lost or destroyed, witnesses and defendants have died, and memories have dimmed. We must act quickly to bring the long-overdue justice to these victims and their families."

The air we breathe: language in the media

Tue Jun 24, 2008 at 09:31:17 AM PDT

The corporate media spews out a daily stream of propaganda, but so much of it is taken for granted by is readership it's rarely seen as such. A typical example from the Washington Post today discusses al-Hurra, the Arabic-language television network financed by the U.S. government. Now at first, you might think this is a wonderful example of the "free press"; after all, the basis for the article is how "the station is widely regarded as a flop in the Arab world, where it has struggled to attract viewers and overcome skepticism about its mission." But in the course of reading that, you're forced to put up with such propagandistic nuggets as how al-Hurra is "the centerpiece of a U.S. government campaign to spread democracy in the Middle East" (as if!). You also read the preposterous assertion that "propaganda has become a primary front in the war against terrorism, with the United States and al-Qaeda each investing heavily to win over hearts and minds." Yeah, "propaganda" and several hundred billion dollars worth of bombs and bullets.

What is killing the people of the world?

Sun Jun 22, 2008 at 10:35:52 PM PDT

In the latest in a long-running series, we take note of yet one more piece of evidence that "terrorism" is one of the last things that requires attention if saving lives is one's concern:

The World Health Organization says more than 4,000 people die every day of water-borne diseases in developed and undeveloped countries.

It further warns that it will kill around 1.6 million people this year unless governments make a concerted effort to clean up their supplies.

Capitalist boosterism in extremis

Sun Jun 22, 2008 at 09:51:25 AM PDT

I was surprised to read in yesterday's paper: "prices at the gas pump are finally easing in California." Really? And the evidence? Brace yourself:

Diesel in California: down nearly half a cent. Gas costs in Oakland: down a quarter of a cent. Santa Cruz, Sacramento, Yolo, Merced, Santa Barbara: slight declines. The nationwide average is down slightly and the statewide average in California has fallen, albeit one-hundredth of a cent to $4.609 a gallon from $4.610 earlier this week.

Free mass transit! People (and the planet) before profits

Sat Jun 21, 2008 at 03:43:35 PM PDT

Whether it's private corporations or public operations like parks, schools, or mass transit, the operative philosophy in this capitalism run amok society is that everything must turn a profit (or at least break even). Imagine what would happen if it didn't. Well, you needn't imagine in the case of mass transit, because yesterday Bay Area transit agencies offered free rides (I think as a "marketing tool" rather than as a result of a "Spare the Air" day, because free ridership on the latter has been discontinued as "too costly") and here's what happened:

BART set a single-day record with an estimated 394,000 passengers, and Caltrain saw an 88 percent jump from its average weekday ridership.

Ridership on buses run by the Valley Transportation Authority increased 21 percent, with 123,993 riders compared with 102,500 for a typical Thursday. Light-rail ridership also soared, with 42,809 passengers up from 32,134 a week ago for a 33 percent jump.

Ferry ridership nearly doubled, and ridership on the ACE trains was up 17 percent.

Priorities, people!

Thu Jun 19, 2008 at 03:02:12 PM PDT

McClatchy has just published a major series detailing not only the extensive abuse of American detainees in Afghanistan (in particular) and elsewhere, but also the fact that a great many of the detainees were not only not terrorists of any kind, they were in fact allies of the U.S.!

How to cut the price of gasoline

Wed Jun 18, 2008 at 03:57:03 PM PDT

John McCain and George Bush say offshore oil drilling is the answer to the high price of gasoline. Actually George Bush assiduously avoided the words "offshore drilling" in referring to the subject; he kept talking about "access to the OCS" ("Outer Continental Shelf") because he knows the words "offshore drilling" are anathema to the public.

Here are two numbers to consider:

Oil company profits per gallon? $0.84. Fill up your tank with, say, 15 gallons? $12.60 profit to the oil companies, every time you fill up your tank.

Cuba: an "embargo" or a "blockade"?

Tue Jun 17, 2008 at 09:08:40 AM PDT

The latest episode in the all-out economic warfare being waged by the United States against Cuba that the former insists on calling a mere "embargo," but which examples like this make very clear deserves the name the Cubans use - "blockade" (or, to be precise, "bloqueo"):

A Somerset [U.K.] health shop selling Cuban sugar and a London tobacconist dealing in Habanos cigars are among British businesses told by a bank to cut their ties with the island or move their accounts.

Lloyds TSB has written to customers who have dealings with Cuba saying they will have take their accounts elsewhere, apparently in the wake of threats by the US government, which operates an embargo against Cuba.

The US has said it will prosecute any businesses that have any dealings with Cuba and also have a branch in the US.

BREAKING ON C-SPAN: Kucinich introducing impeachment

Mon Jun 09, 2008 at 04:16:56 PM PDT

Dennis Kucinich is speaking on the floor of Congress (and on C-SPAN) right now, introducing articles of impeachment.

Go, Dennis!

[As suggested in comments]:Congressman Dennis Kucinich is on the floor of the House of Representatives right now introducing 35 articles of impeachment against President George W. Bush.

Yes, 35.  He'll be reading for a while. [Update: at an hour and a half, he's up to #14 :-) ]

Support the Cuban Five!

Thu Jun 05, 2008 at 03:10:24 PM PDT

In another in a long series of outrageous decisions in the case, an appeals court has upheld the convictions of the Cuban Five, although it did order the reduction in sentences of three of them, including two of the three life sentences. You can read all about it at the website of the National Committee to Free the Cuban Five. I'd write more about it, but I've been working all day on a press conference that was held this morning, and now on the demonstrations, so a more insightful/detailed/scathing analysis will have to wait. Suffice it to say that the Cuban Five are heroes, now in their tenth year of outrageous imprisonment for the "crime" of trying to prevent acts of terrorism being committed by right-wing forces in Miami, actions that have been directed over the years not just at Cubans in Cuba but at Americans as well - close to 200 terrorist acts in Miami, 70 more in the New York-New Jersey area, and an additional 30 in Puerto Rico. It was to allow the continuation of such activities that the U.S. government arrested and imprisoned the Cuban Five, unarmed men whose only mission was to report on and prevent such activities.

U.S.: "We're the problem in Iraq"

Wed Jun 04, 2008 at 09:38:52 AM PDT

No, it's not a direct quote, or even a paraphrase. But what other meaning can you take from this:

The U.S. government has opened its first permanent office here for Iraqi refugees seeking to settle in the United States.
...
The office, which began interviewing applicants May 10, has already finished processing 80 embassy employees for departure.
...
"The whole goal is to provide greater access to people who are in trouble or in threat based on their association with the U.S.," said an American official in Baghdad.

Counting deaths in Iraq: 108 <> 2

Thu May 29, 2008 at 01:02:09 PM PDT

A report today says there were 108 Army suicides amongst active duty troops (by the way, note that that includes Army and Army National Guard only, not Marines or other forces), of which we are told that "about a quarter of the deaths occurred in Iraq."

Now take a look at the DoD confirmed death list, from which the conventionally cited count of (currently) 4084 U.S. military deaths in Iraq is taken. In 2007, you will find exactly two deaths listed as "suicide." There are four listed in 2006, a year in which we're told that by the current report that 102 suicides actually occurred (no breakdown on how many happened in Iraq or Afghanistan). Interestingly enough there are eight listed in 2005 (and one in 2004 and five in 2003). Sounds to me like pressure is being brought to bear not to list such deaths at all.

Brzezinski on Iran

Tue May 27, 2008 at 02:10:40 PM PDT

Zbigniew Brzezinski and William Odom have a major article in the Washington Post today calling for a more sensible policy on Iran. Two quotes:

Current U.S. policy toward the regime in Tehran will almost certainly result in an Iran with nuclear weapons. The seemingly clever combination of the use of "sticks" and "carrots," including the frequent official hints of an American military option "remaining on the table," simply intensifies Iran's desire to have its own nuclear arsenal. Alas, such a heavy-handed "sticks" and "carrots" policy may work with donkeys but not with serious countries. The United States would have a better chance of success if the White House abandoned its threats of military action and its calls for regime change.
...
The widely propagated notion of a suicidal Iran detonating its very first nuclear weapon against Israel is more the product of paranoia or demagogy than of serious strategic calculus. It cannot be the basis for U.S. policy, and it should not be for Israel's, either.

Bush remembers his victims...for a second

Mon May 26, 2008 at 05:14:46 AM PDT

In China, the country paused for three solid minutes to remember their dead. The customary time for remembering even a single dead person is a "minute of silence." But evidently that was too long for George Bush to remember 4587 people (Iraq+Afghanistan) that he sent to their deaths:

President Bush asked Americans to pay tribute to veterans by pausing on Memorial Day for "a moment of remembrance."


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