Fausta's blog

Faustam fortuna adiuvat
The official blog of Fausta's Blog Talk Radio show.

Sunday, April 30, 2006

Sunday blogging: Jazz Mentors

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Effective July 11, 2006, Fausta's blog moved to http://faustasblog.com. Please update your bookmark and your blogroll.
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Last night I went to a concert by the musicians who spent all day teaching the Jazz Mentors Program. After a day of teaching young musicians, the gentlemen performed wondefully for the students and their guests. Take a look at them (in alphabetical order):

Randy Brecker


Steve Cardenas


Dave Carpenter


Peter Erskine


Gil Goldstein


Clay Jenkins


Lou Marini


Bob Sheppard


It was a fantastic concert!

In related jazz news, the definitely unJazzy Jersey guy Bruce "Bellyache" Springsteen's at the New Orleans Heritage and Jazz Festival. Luckily Etta James, Herbie Hancock, Dave Bartholomew and Warren Haynes will be there, too.

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Friday, April 28, 2006

France: L'affaire Clearstream

or, is de Villepin on the way out?

Siegfried Mortkowitz reports that a Murky scandal threatens to topple French prime minister
[French Prime Minister Dominique de] Villepin is now suspected of involvement in a shadowy scheme to discredit his bitter rival, Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy.
. . .
French investigating magistrates are currently looking for the informer who in June 2004 sent one of their colleagues a list of 800 people and companies holding secret accounts at the Luxembourg-based financial clearing house Clearstream.

Included on the list were four former or current candidates for the French presidency, the neo-liberal Alain Madelin, former interior minister Jean-Pierre Chevenement, former finance minister Dominique Strauss-Kahn and Sarkozy.

The four men were all accused of having foreign bank accounts into which illegal funds had been channelled via Clearstream.

The judicial inquiry into the smear campaign was initiated after an investigation revealed that Sarkozy and the others were not guilty of the allegations. However, that raised the question of who sent the list and why.

Several French newspapers and the author of a controversial book about Clearstream, Denis Roberts, have suggested that the man who compiled the list and sent it to the magistrate was a 40-year-old Franco-Lebanese computer whiz named Imad Lahoud.

Lahoud is related to the pro-Syrian Lebanese President Emile Lahoud and, through his father-in-law, reportedly has close ties to French President Jacques Chirac.
Since Chirac made his feelings clear last year during the Hariri funeral, the Chirac-Emile Lahoud ties are strained - but that doesn't mean they've always been.
More significantly, he [Imad Lahoud] once worked for the French intelligence service DSGC and also collaborated with one of France's most successful spies, General Philippe Rondot.

Rumours carried by French media connected Villepin to the murky affair and the scheme to discredit Sarkozy, to damage his chances for the 2007 presidential elections.
After all, while Jacques views Villepin as his annointed heir, Sarkozy clearly challenged that. Jacques didn't take all this lying down: According to the French satirical weekly Le Canard Enchaîné, President Jacques Chirac had been listening in on his archrival Nicolas Sarkozy's phone calls. Following Chirac's stroke last September, Villepin's authority was challenged by Sarkozy at the weekly cabinet meetings during Chirac's absence. Siegfried Mortkowitz continues,
According to the former spy's statement, it was not Villepin who charged him with investigating the Taiwan frigate sale, but Defence Minister Michele Alliot-Marie, in November 2003.

Rondot said that he was given a computer printout at that time, by Villepin confidante Jean-Louis Gergorin, a top manager in the European aerospace conglomerate EADS, that supposedly contained a list of Clearstream clients, including the names of French politicians, whom he was told by the Defence Ministry to ignore.

However, Rondot said he was summoned by Villepin to a meeting on January 9 at which Gergorin was also present.

Rondot said that at this meeting Villepin, then foreign minister, 'informed me of instructions he had received on the subject of the Clearstream list from Jacques Chirac.'

Villepin then told him to go beyond the original instructions and investigate the politicians on the list.

'Mr Sarkozy's name was mentioned,' Rondot was reported to have told the magistrates, clearly contradicting Villepin's public statements.

More than that, notes Rondot made during the meeting suggested that Villepin was obsessed with Sarkozy.
Jacques, of course, categorically denied any involvement in an alleged smear campaign against Nicolas Sarkozy:
The Clearstream scandal has exposed the personal animosity at the top of the government, with Mr Sarkozy accusing the prime minister of sitting on a secret service report that cleared his name.
This animosity should come as no surprise to long-term readers of this blog; do bear in mind that Villepin, Sarko, and Chirac belong to the same political party, the UMP.

Clearstream, however, has become a civil plaintiff in the investigation by French magistrates of false allegations of money laundering by French executives and politicians, in an effort to protect the company's image.

As Mortkowitz explains,
However, coming so soon after the youth jobs law embarrassment, the growing scandal could be enough to put Villepin's position at the head of the French government at risk.

With one year to go in his presidency, Chirac may simply decide that he cannot afford to have his legacy tarnished by a prime minister that has no credibility.
Credibility, indeed.

The question is, if Villepin goes the way of Raffarin, who will Chirac appoint? The Interior Minister is the 2d-ranking post in the government, and Sarko holds that post.

L'affaire Clearstream is the top story in the France2 website, and in this this evening's newscast (both links in French).

In other Chirac news, Jacques's got a plan afoot to finance the PA through the World Bank, and denies funding a "Google killer", even as he announced Tuesday (April 25) a 2 billion euro (about $2.5 billion) plan to back a series of projects including one on a Franco-German search engine intended to rival Google.

Update, April 30 Fausta's blog's had it posted two days ahead of the rest.

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Sing it in . . . English!

The poorly "translated" (the appropriate term is loosely interpreted) "Spanish" (yet not quite in Spanish) version of The Star-Spangled Banner can be heard here.

Puerto Rican singers [who are American citizens from birth] Carlos Ponce and Olga Tañón, along with Wyclef Jean, hip-hop star Pitbull, Mexican jailbird Gloria Trevi, and others, took part in this excercise in bad taste and even worse translation for propangandistic purposes.

And whose idea was it? A Brit's!
British music producer Adam Kidron says that when he came up with the idea of a Spanish-language version of the U.S. national anthem, he saw it as an ode to the millions of immigrants seeking a better life.
And an ode to the prospect of millions of US$$ a British immigrant seeking a better life might make from this publicity stunt, too.

(The Husband says, "We took God Save the Queen, so maybe Kidron's returning the favor")

Update, Saturday, April 29
Beautiful Atrocities posts on Mexican jailbird Gloria Trevi.
Atlas Shrugs and Infidel Bloggers Alliance find that the official Aztlan website posts the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, stating,
"NO ES CUESTION DE CREER CIEGAMENTE, SINO VER Y CORROBORAR QUE LA INTENSION [sic] DEL SIONISMO POR DOMINAR AL MUNDO SE REPITE EN TODAS LAS EPOCAS Y EN TODOS LOS PAISES DEL MUNDO."
My translation:
"It's not a matter of believing blindly, but to see and corraborate [for yourself] that Zionism's intention to dominate the world repeats itself in all ages and in all countries of the world."

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The yellowcake connection, where to park while you're flying standing up, and today's other articles from Maria

Douglas Hanson asks some questions on the yellowcake connection:

Speaking of dealing in commodities, this whole affair brings us back to square one and Mary McCarthy. One of her previous employers was Beri, SA. Possibly by coincidence Beri provides a Mineral Extraction Risk Assessment service for up to 145 countries that are expected to show rapid growth in oil, gas, and mineral extraction capacity. If one had advance access to economic intelligence and had fostered close business ties over the years with uranium producers, huge financial gains would be possible. Could the Wilson-McCarthy-Africa connection may indicate another instance of US intelligence and Foreign Service personnel taking advantage of regulatory loopholes and lax security in third world countries for personal gain?

A. J. Strata read Hanson's article, and looks at Rockefeller, Joe Wilson and Niger Uranium, which also includes Paul Volker and Rockefeller's grandaughter Miranda Duncan.
Update It was obvious from the first that the press, in taking Wilson and Plame at their own estimation, was fashioning a rod for its own back.

Where to park while you're flying standing up?
Here:

I don't see any Hummers in that picture.
In any case, Traveling the Road to Wellness apparently doesn't include standing-room-only flights and stacked parking. Or a man who argued with workers at a Cleveland airport ticket counter on Thursday, before grabbing an officer's gun and shooting a patrolman.

More articles from Maria
'United 93' Ending Altered
A mini-controversy erupted this week over the concluding title card on writer-director Paul Greengrass' "United 93," which had apparently read during preview screenings, "America's war on terror had begun."

This title card was recently changed to, "Dedicated to the memory of all those who lost their lives on Sept. 11, 2001."
Because Christians won't issue a fatwa to kill you for doing stuff like this: 'Jesus with erection' ignites outrage. Student newspaper publishes drawings in response to Muhammad 'toons. (NOT suitable for work) The Jesus Cartoons. Dean has the Spirit.

Australian research shows mobile phones affect brain function especially if you are driving while talking. HANG UP, SHUT UP, AND DRIVE.

'No means yes' - Kenyan MP. I want to know what the American women's movement position is on this.

Test Set for Pacific Tsunami Warn System

Illegal Trade in Bodies Horrifies Loved Ones. Need, Cash and Loose Oversight Drive Grisly Practice

Maria also sent a link to My Heritage.org.

In a lighter mode,
more news about the cutest wild animals on earth: China Releases Panda Into the Wild

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China and Cuba: You heard it here first

In today's news: China Eyeing Cuba Offshore Oil
A shocking report aired on the Lou Dobbs show Thursday night revealed that Cuba has not only allowed China to drill but also to service an old Soviet refinery in Cuba while U.S. companies are locked out of the game. The Dobbs report also revealed that Venezuela's Castroite president, Hugo Chavez, has offered Chinese oil firms operating rights in his country.
Thursday, April 13, 2006 at this blog:
from the Caribbean strategic point of view, China would be the one to gain the most.
Update: Chavista mismanagement (and thieving) has left Venezuela with a $2 billion oil shortfall on its contracts. According to the Financial Times,
Venezuela, the world's fifth-largest oil exporter, has struck a $2bn deal to buy about 100,000 barrels a day of crude oil from Russia until the end of the year.

Venezuela has been forced to turn to an outside source to avoid defaulting on contracts with "clients" and "third parties" as it faces a shortfall in production, according to a person familiar with the deal. Venezuela could incur penalties if it fails to meet its supply contracts.

Documentation obtained by the Financial Times shows that the state-owned Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) made a financing arrangement this month with investment bank ABN Amro to facilitate the purchases of oil from Russia via Rotterdam.

PDVSA is believed to have dropped the Dutch bank after the Russian government agreed to provide Venezuela with an "open account" facility to buy the oil.
Any questions on transparency?
The move suggests a growing gap between Venezuela's declining domestic output and its expanding contractual obligations to international customers.

Luis Pacheco, a former planning director of PDVSA, said: "Why would Venezuela be buying crude oil from Russia? I would imagine it would be to meet obligations for light oil deliveries, but they are relatively small. Most of PDVSA's obligations are for heavy oil."

Under President Hugo Chávez, PDVSA's oil output has declined by about 60 per cent, a trend analysts say has accelerated in the past year because of poor technical management.

Mr Chávez's push to extend his influence throughout Latin America and the Caribbean with promises of cheap oil for friends and allies may be overstretching PDVSA's finances, however.

Venezuela currently supplies about 300,000 barrels per day of oil and products to Cuba, Nicaragua and others under favourable long-term financing arrangements.

This week, Venezuela signed a deal to send oil to town mayors in Nicaragua aligned with the leftwing Sandinista party.
We'll continue to keep an eye on the Caribbean maneuverings by all parties involved.

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Thursday, April 27, 2006

Dan on Dana, and today's articles from Maria

Dan Riehl compares Pulitzer winner Dana Priest 2002 versus 2005.
Update: Was McCarthy in cahoots with Dana Priest and was she used by Dana Priest, in an effort to conceal Priest's plagiarism and make it appear as if her 'reporting' was more credible than it actually was?

Also via Dan, Gary Sinese is leading the fundraising effort for the American Veterans Disabled For Life memorial on the Mall in Washington, DC. Their website is here.

Newton's posting on Cash-Strapped Gov't Days From Shutdown in Puerto Rico
Nearly 1,600 schools shuttered. Some 205,000 public workers unpaid. Most government offices closed.

The U.S. Caribbean territory is staggering under a nearly $740 million budget shortfall and heading toward a grim scenario Monday, when it will run out of cash to pay salaries and provide public services if local lawmakers don't approve a bailout plan.
Puerto Rico has a hugely bloated bureaucracy and its government's spending makes NJ look modest by comparison. As Newton said,
Let’s be honest: the cause of this whole mess was overall, long-term fiscal irresponsibility, plain and simple.
Meanwhile, here in NJ, we have Bob Menendez To Keep Kushner's Donations. Only Corzine has returned all Kushner aid. DynamoBuzz also posts about those low approval ratings.

Today's articles from Maria
CIA ROGUE'S SAD FANS

The Moussaui Myth

How far can you drive on a bushel of corn? Crunching the numbers on alternative fuels Take a look at the (pdf file) chart, and make sure to read the article.

In a lighter mode,
via Dave Barry, not quite suitable for watching at work, the cleaning hunk.

More blogging later today.
update My apologies. I'm still tied up with work.

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Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Fly standing my a**

When I was a lot younger I used to enjoy long flights. Back in the olden days of my youth, airlines had a reasonable amount of space between coach seats, they actually served you a meal (and if the flight was six hours long, two meals and a snack), and if you went on Lufthansa, they even brought you a hot washcloth to freshen up.

Nowadays airlines feel they've done their job by letting you sit in a cramped space (trust me, my legs are too long and my joints are achier than they were thirty years ago) and getting you to your destination in one piece. You and your luggage, however, may or may not be permanently separated.

So imagine my dismay when I watched last evening's France2 newscast (available until 2PM EST, click on Avions: la piste des économies). The report starts innocously enough with an engineer explaining how to make airline seats more like an instrument of torture than they already are lighter, in order to save fuel. Then they get down to the punch: flying in standing room only, with twenty-five inches of space between seats.

I thought I was having hallucinations from watching years' worth of France2 newscasts.

But nooo! Take a look:


Ready for takeoff? Even if it's standing room?
Airbus has been quietly pitching the standing-room-only option to Asian carriers, though none have agreed to it yet.
Of course, France2 only shows clips of Airbus's super-deluxe spacious lounge bar with grand piano, complete with waterfall. And who came up with the idea? Airbus. What I would like to see is Airbus come up with a Mythbusters-like crash test to find out just how many fractures Buster the crash-test dummy can get when his limbs fly through the 25" space you'd be standing on. If you go by the above picture, your collarbone, sternum, and ribs will be crushed by that piece of pipe holding you in place.

I also want to know who's going to make airplane cabins taller. If you're 5'9" or taller, you know what I mean.

"CATTLE-CLASS" travel has been given new meaning:
"It would be something like a bus shelter seat that you rest on for a while. You would have to make the cabin taller, and the backsides of people are in different places, so they would have to be adjustable. There is the question of how long can you stand . . . and what happens when you hit turbulence."
Excuse me!? "Bus shelter seat"? Here in America you can actually sit on "bus shelter seats".

I politely suggest the Airbus geniuses that came up with this idea be forced to fly standing up every time they travel.

Otherwise, their next thing will be that they'll hand you a parachute so you can sky-dive to your destination.

(my apologies to long-term readers of this blog, who have grown accustomed to a more genteel tone. I hope you understand why I resorted to this post's title)

UPDATE Barcepundit says that Airbus disputes report it is in discussion with Asian airlines.
However,
Based on the France2 televised report, and the London times story (which includes Airbus's denial) and graphic, I stand by my words. You decide if Airbus is denying the story due to the outrage it's caused (for instance, in my post) or whether the NYT was the one coming up with the story, as Airbus is now claiming.
The last thing Airbus needs right now is a public relations disaster.

Update 2: The visuals say Welcome to the future of air travel!

Update 3 Is this what inspired them?
The misericord or "mercy" is a ledge and bracket affixed to the underside of a choir seat. It comes into position to form a secondary high-level support when the choir seat is tilted up. Whereas ritual required choir members to stand during the mass, indulgence allowed them to rest their corporeality on the misericord without offending church decorum.
Compared to the London Times diagram, the design from Middle Ages looks ergonomic.
Update, Friday April 28 Hesperus for the Rest of Us

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The CIA, and today's articles from Maria

Allahpundit has been following the CIA leak(s) story and has everything (and more!) you wanted to know about the story. Today's WSJ has an editorial on Our Rotten IntelligenCIA:
There is little doubt that the Washington Post story on alleged prisons in Europe
-- a story on which, as I have pointed out, two EU investigations have found no evidence --
has done enormous damage--at a minimum, to our ability to secure future cooperation in the war on terror from countries that don't want their assistance to be exposed. Likewise, the New York Times wiretapping exposé may have ruined one of our most effective anti-al Qaeda surveillance programs. Ms. McCarthy denies being the source of these stories. But somebody inside the intelligence community was.
At the blogs:
Spanish of the apes: Zapatero's Socialists will actually introduce a declaration in Parliament calling to grant "human rights" (sic) to apes.
Just wait until those apes find out that they have to fly standing up.

Sigmund, Carl and Alfred link to Hirsi Ali's article Women go 'missing' by the millions
As I was preparing for this article, I asked a friend who is Jewish if it was appropriate to use the term "holocaust" to portray the worldwide violence against women. He was startled. But when I read him the figures in a 2004 policy paper published by the Geneva Center for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces, he said yes, without hesitation.

One United Nations estimate says from 113 million to 200 million women around the world are demographically "missing." Every year, from 1.5 million to 3 million women and girls lose their lives as a result of gender-based violence or neglect.
. . .
The Islamists are engaged in reviving and spreading a brutal and retrograde body of laws. Wherever the Islamists implement Shariah, or Islamic law, women are hounded from the public arena, denied education and forced into a life of domestic slavery.

Cultural and moral relativists sap our sense of moral outrage by claiming that human rights are a Western invention. Men who abuse women rarely fail to use the vocabulary the relativists have provided them. They claim the right to adhere to an alternative set of values - an "Asian," "African" or "Islamic" approach to human rights.

This mind-set needs to be broken
. A culture that carves the genitals of young girls, hobbles their minds and justifies their physical oppression is not equal to a culture that believes women have the same rights as men.
Dr. Sanity posts about Venezuela: Living in a gangsta's paradise. Red Flags on Venezuela's Electoral Roll analyzes the issue. A must-read.

Shrinkwrapped is Defining terms: the left

and don't miss No Amnesty for Amnesty, where Ron looks at the actual numbers.

Jim looks at (Fill in the Blank) Day.

Today's articles from Maria:
New hay fever jab to protect against the onslaught of an invisible enemy. In the meantime, go to your local allergist.

Magician David Copperfield robbed after show at Kravis Center in Palm Beach.

You probably know by now: Tony Snow to Be Named White House Press Secretary

Joseph Farrah dislikes Madeline "I can leg-press up to 400 pounds" Albright almost as much as I do. Bill Clinton sucked in his beer belly for his official portrait.

John Podhoretz writes about Osama's latest.

A 'CRACKDOWN' THAT WASN'T

One for the "well, whaddaya expect?" file: Life behind the scenes at "The Maury Povich Show" is fit for an episode of the sensational program . Maybe Maury should have had Dov Charney's lawyer prepare a disclaimer:
"American Apparel is in the business of designing and manufacturing sexually charged T-shirts and intimate apparel, and uses sexually charged visual and oral communications in its marketing and sales activities. Employees working in the design, sales, marketing and other creative areas of the company will come into contact with sexually charged language and visual images. This is a part of the job for employees working in these areas."
Lie down with dogs . . .

NOT-SO-GREEN LIFESTYLES OF THE RICH AND FAMOUS

How homosexual school clubs offer sex to students

More on the Chinese organ transplant trade.

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Tuesday, April 25, 2006

Reminds me of the old Nietzsche joke*

WHAT HAROLD BLOOM CAN TEACH GOD
*The joke goes,
Nietzsche: God is Dead.
God: Nietzsche is dead.
This week at The New Republic, James Wood reviews Harold Bloom's latest book. (No, not James Woods the actor, or James Woods of Family Guy, but James Wood the TNR senior editor.)

The full title of James Wood's review of Harold Bloom's latest book is What Harold Bloom Can Teach God: The Misreader
So "strength," in Bloom's vision, has always gone necessarily undefined, the more so as it has become his favorite approbation. Does it mean pragmatic success or aesthetic success? The Bible forces this question acutely on Bloom, and he ducks it. On the one hand, in pragmatic terms, the New Testament is the greatest "strong" misreading of a precursor text ever committed. On the other, it seems to Bloom a work palpably inferior to the Hebrew Bible. How, if this is the case, can it have been so successful? What can it mean to call it a "strong" misreading? Isn't this the equivalent of Arnold displacing Keats in the canon?

The proper solution to this conundrum would be to admit that the Bible confounds the explanatory power of Bloom's theory because aesthetics cede again and again to theology. Whatever reasons people over the centuries have had for worshipping Jesus rather than Yahweh, they have not been primarily aesthetic. Or more precisely, whatever the reasons the early Christians had for persevering with their Jewish heresy, they were not primarily aesthetic. "Strength" will have to mean a hundred things, few of them aesthetic. But this is what Bloom will not confess, because he sees the Bible, and especially Yahweh, only in aesthetic terms, as a great literary creation. So he blusters and throws insults instead.
After reading the review, I won't be reading Bloom's latest, Jesus and Yahweh (go ahead, I won't be linking to it). Bloom loves the Book of Mormon and all things Gnostic. Wood addresses Gnosticism:
Gnosticism solves nothing--that the positing of a false God or Demiurge is quite obviously not a "solution" to the problem of evil, but merely a dualism that does no more than move the problem, so to speak, somewhere else on the board.
Wood sums up Bloom's blinders in one sentence:
What a strange parochialism, that imagines everywhere only a literary mode of being!
For sure.

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Corleone, and today's articles from Maria

They picked him up in Corleone: PATHETIC END TO CAPO DI TUTTI CAPI'S REIGN

Apes go apesh*it: Chimps Sought in Attack on U.S. Tourists in Sierra Leone

Dissent or sedition?

Greenhouse, global warming - and some facts
Humans can only claim responsibility, if that's the word, for abut 3.4% of carbon dioxide emitted to the atmosphere annually, the rest of it is all natural
At the blogs:
Via Jay, Andrea Clarke wants to live.

Fjordman's posting on A New Oslo Peace Process?
Bruce Bawer, author of recently published book While Europe Slept: How Radical Islam is Destroying the West from Within, devotes a good deal of space to European media in his writings, which is appropriate. Norwegian Prime Minister and leader of the Labor Party, Jens Stoltenberg, has stated that "journalistic diversity is too important to be left up to the marketplace." The government is still running two out of Norway’s four national TV channels, and three of its national radio channels. NRK, the Norwegian equivalent of the BBC or Burka Broadcasting Corporation in the UK, complete with the same anti-American, anti-Israeli and pro-Islamic bias, was the only national TV channel in Norway until 1992, three years after the fall of the Berlin Wall. Leader of the right-wing Progress Party, Mr. Carl I. Hagen, has labelled NRK "ARK," or "Labor Party’s Broadcasting Company," since until the 90s, most of its leaders were former leading members of the Labor Party. In addition to this, something that would be unthinkable in the USA, Norwegian taxpayers actually subsidize commercial Norwegian newspapers. This is supposedly to ensure diversity of opinions. This system means that Norwegian taxpayers, whether they want to or not, subsidize the existence of Norwegian Communist newspaper Klassekampen (The Class Struggle), whose members in the 1970s strenuously denied any mass-murders done by Pol Pot and his comrades in Cambodia, denouncing these accusations as "capitalist lies" to slime a successful, Socialist nation. Norway’s only professor of journalism at the University level, Sigurd Allern, is a former leader of the Communist Party. He is today teaching critical thinking to aspiring journalists at the University of Oslo.
Venezuela's Picture of the Day: The fruits of tyranny

Monday, April 24, 2006

Discontents grow amid Hugo Chávez's “revolution”

says The Economist,
THREE teenage brothers were kidnapped with the family chauffeur on their way to school in Caracas on February 23rd. Forty days later, the bodies of all four were found outside the city. The discovery produced a wave of outrage, much of it directed against the government of Hugo Chavez, Venezuela's socialist president. Since he took office in 1999, the country's murder rate has almost tripled.

For once, the protests seemed spontaneous, despite the efforts of officials to pin them on their opponents. The opposition denounces--and has tried to topple--Mr Chavez for curbing democracy. But oddly it has failed to take up issues on which the president is most vulnerable, such as corruption, jobs and crime.

Caracas has become South America's most violent capital. Worse, the police are themselves suspects in many of the killings. The public prosecutor's office says it is investigating over 6,000 alleged "extra-judicial executions" by police. The brothers were kidnapped by men in police uniform, as was a businessman kidnapped and murdered last month. Two dozen policemen are currently awaiting trial for killing
three students, and wounding three others, who failed to stop at a roadblock.
If you think the poor are protected, you are mistaken:
The vast majority of murders take place in the anonymity of the slums, and never come to public attention. According to some accounts, gang-members have been recruited into the police to enforce political control rather than fight crime.
Thousands Protest Gov't Response to Crime in Venezuela. Venezuela News and Views has photos of the demonstration:

Publius Pundit has more, and don't miss Acuéstate por la vida.

What's next?
This is on the front page of today's WSJ: Chávez Plans to Take More Control Of Oil Away From Foreign Firms
Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez is planning a new assault on Big Oil, potentially taking a major step toward nationalization of Venezuela's oil industry that could hurt oil-company profits, reduce production and put further pressure on global oil prices.
Venezuela's Congress, made up entirely of Mr. Chávez's allies, is considering sharply raising taxes and royalties on foreign companies' operations in the Orinoco River basin, the country's richest oil deposit.
Forbes has more:
Chavez also wants to seize majority control of the four Orinoco projects and force private companies who run them to accept a minority stake, said the report, citing a top executive at state-run oil company Petroleos de Venezuela SA, or PdVSA.

If the latest initiative succeeds, it would eliminate the country's remaining privately managed oil fields, the report said.
Venezuela, which decided to withdraw from the Community of Andean Nations (a process that will take 5 years, which means that Venezuela must respect for the next five years all customs and trade agreements signed with other member states), now Venezuela Plans to Raise Trade Barriers Against Colombia, Peru (Update: Where Hugo goes, Evo follows). Colombia and Peru belong to the Community of Andean Nations. How will Venezuela keep to "all customs and trade agreements signed with other member states" while raising trade barriers against Colombia and Peru remains to be seen.

As Gateway Pundit said, Thank you, Jimmy Carter.

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Polyamory, the revolting shareholders, and today's articles from Maria

All Things Beautiful ponders "Big Love" and polyamory.

Philomathean posts on the NYT Shareholders Revolt. The readers have been voting for a while now.

Today's articles from Maria
Mark Steyn, a man after my heart: Nothing to fear but the climate change alarmists

'Nobel' lies on campus, as Rigoberta Menchu's scheduled to visit Oregon State University
In the late 1990’s, the story that informed Rigoberta’s secular sainthood came apart. Anthropologist David Stoll, in research confirmed by the New York Times, revealed that she had been lying all along. She wasn’t illiterate, but had been educated in a prestigious Catholic boarding school. The land dispute central to formulating her Marxism beliefs didn’t pit her family against wealthy landowners, but against their own relatives. Her brother Nicolas didn’t die of starvation, but was alive and well in Guatemala.
Read it all.

Three articles on the Holocaust: The Road To Neumburg, The Death March, and Does the Holocaust Still Matter?
One rule of thumb by which to measure the significance of the Holocaust is that it clearly matters to the enemies of the Jewish people - so much so that many would like to blot out its memory entirely.
Members of a New York City Islamist society who protested outside the Israeli consulate in Manhattan on Friday chanted threats about a second Holocaust and warned that Israel will be attacked with nuclear weapons. New Bin Laden Tape Says This Is A Crusader-Zionist War.

The UK's Telegraph looks at Hu

Europe squanders billions in aid for former Soviet states

Russia Warns Against Pressuring Iran. The other day I was wondering if nature will be doing the pressuring. At the Economist, Kremlin watchers wonder what Vladimir Putin is up to with Hamas and Iran
On the face of it, Russia's dalliance with Hamas, and patience with Iran, look odd, given Russia's own experience of Islamist terrorism, Iran's proximity to Russia's volatile north Caucasus, and the valuable role Russia enjoys as the region's sole official nuclear power. Dmitri Peskov, a Kremlin spokesman, insists that Russia's sensitivity on Iran is equal to America's.

But look closely, and their interests arguably differ. To the Kremlin, Iran has been a well-behaved neighbour, which has kept out of Chechnya, and the Russians want to keep it that way. Russia is less anxious than America about Israel's security. Dimitri Simes, of the Nixon Center in Washington, says a nuclear Pakistan, which America regards as an ally, is a bigger worry in Moscow than is Iran. Cash is also at stake: Russia is helping to build a nuclear plant for the Iranians. Last year it promised them a batch of ground-to-air missiles—though they have yet to be delivered, and won't be, if the Americans get their way.

More important than these concerns, however, may be another, uniquely Russian kind of interest. Dmitri Trenin, of the Moscow Carnegie Centre, says the Kremlin's aim in the Middle East is to show that "Russia is not a piece of furniture." Or, as one American administration official puts it, the message is, "We're back." Oil at $70 a barrel, he says, has inculcated "a self-confidence [in Moscow] that we haven't seen since the break-up of the Soviet Union". To prove it is not a piece of furniture, Russia needs to do something visibly different from America. And as Georgy Mirsky, a Moscow-based analyst, argues, for one reason or another the Middle East is the best place for Russia to do it.
Investment-wise, RICH AMERICANS SENDING
THEIR $ TO JAPAN, INDIA
, which have growing investment markets.

The path to self-defeat

Africa Malaria Day: Action or bombast?:
malaria deaths since the 1972 DDT ban may exceed the entire World War II death toll. It is a travesty worse than colonialism ever was, a human rights violation of monstrous proportions.
Also visit Africa Fighting Malaria

Update: One more time: Communism.Doesn't.Work.

On a lighter mode,
Arrivederci, Roma? Berlusconi bows out singing

Milk them wallabys! New penicillin found in wallaby milk. I wonder what Rocco would say to that.

Book corner:
Recommended by Maria


On the cover of the NYT Book Review:

Ms Gardner was a beautiful woman that used to visit the resort where my father worked.

From the WSJ, an FDR reader:



And don't forget
Carnival of New Jersey Bloggers #49
Carnival-small



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The Elgin Marbles

I know, everybody's talking about Osama's latest. Assuming it's Osama, of course.

So let's talk about something else instead. The Wall Street Journal had a nice article last Saturday by John Boardman, What Were the Elgin Marbles? And should they really go back to Greece? explaining the controversy.

There are four indoor spaces that have left a mark in my mind, and two of those are at the British Museum: The Sainte Chapelle in Paris, The Pantheon in Rome, the Reading Room of the British Museum, which also has the Elgin Marbles in the Duveen Gallery.

The Elgin Marbles include:
from the Parthenon: 247ft of the original 524ft of frieze, 15 of the 92 metopes, 17 pedimental figures; various pieces of architecture
from the Erechtheion: a Caryatid, a column and other architectural members
from the Propylaia: Architectural members
from the Temple of Athena Nike: 4 slabs of the frieze and architectural members.
Each of these items is a masterpiece.

They are beautifully displayed in a large room against a pale stone background, and after coming in from the bustling city and walking through room after room filled to the brim with beautiful antiquities, the effect is at once dramatic, breathtaking, calming, and inspirational. The room is quiet, and subtly lit, and the effect is that of stillness in time. By being in that room, you understand why "the marbles transformed scholarly attitudes to Greek art world-wide", to use John Boardman's words.

They transformed my mind to the point that, at moments of stress I am calmed by the very mental image of placing myself at the Duveen Galleries.

Because of that, I'd prefer that the British Museum keep them where they are now.

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Saturday, April 22, 2006

No need to panic on Earth Day

Breathe Easier
Since 1970, carbon monoxide emissions in the U.S. are down 55%, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Particulate emissions are down nearly 80%, and sulfur dioxide emissions have been reduced by half. Lead emissions have declined more than 98%.
More here.

Too bad the PRI isn't married to Larry David.

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Another bit of news you might have missed . . .

No Proof of Secret C.I.A. Prisons, European Antiterror Chief Says
Mr. de Vries said the European Parliament investigation had not uncovered rights abuses despite more than 50 hours of testimony by rights advocates and people who say they were abducted by C.I.A. agents. A similar investigation by the Council of Europe, the European human rights agency, came to the same conclusion in January — though the leader of that inquiry, Dick Marty, a Swiss senator, said then that there were enough "indications" to justify continuing the investigation.
Dick Marty, if the name sounds familiar, is the same guy that last year was saying the same thing, even when that arm of the vast right-wing consipracy, the NYT, put it this way,
Mr. Marty's findings to date amount to little more than a compendium of press clippings.
The Beeb, however, gave nearly 20 minutes of broadcast time to Mr. Marty back in January, and is reporting on the firing of Mary McCarthy, who was appointed by Sandy "docs in socks" Berger in 1998 (link via but Wizbang!), but nothing on the EU Antiterror Chief's conclusion of his investigation.

Update Was it a sting? Rick Moran examines the possibility and advises extreme caution.

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Friday, April 21, 2006

The egoísmo of the three amigos


In today's Wall Street Journal, Mary Anastasia O'Grady writes on A Venezuelan Rerun in La Paz: Mr. Morales is pulling a Chávez in Bolivia.
Chávez is also a vociferous supporter of Iranian nuclear aspirations and seeks to stir nationalist hysteria against the U.S. with daily warnings that an attack from the "empire" is imminent.
(Imminent enough for camoflage make-up, no less.)
Is there any doubt that if the mullahs get the bomb they will want to usetheir new power on behalf of their Western Hemisphere ally?
I have no doubt. Just last Saturday I posted the words spoken by Iranian Majlis Speaker Gholam-Ali Haddad-Adel
"Venezuela can play a role to link Iran with Latin American states while Iran can also be a good mediator for Venezuela's more connection with the Islamic world and the Middle East." He assessed as broad bilateral relations between Iran and Venezuela, saying activities of 90 Iranian companies in Venezuela shows promotion of cooperation.

"The Islamic Republic of Iran supports Venezuela's stand," the Iranian speaker said.
Ms O'grady continues:
Military ambition is not the only threat that Chávez represents to hemispheric security. There is also his obsession with ending pluralistic democracy around the region. Energized by his own success at home in consolidating power under the guise of legality, the enfant terrible from Caracas is now financing and guiding such power grabs in some of the region's weakest democracies.

Bolivia is his most advanced project, where democracy is collapsing in an all-too-familiar manner into authoritarian rule under president Evo Morales. If it succeeds, Bolivians will not get their very own strongman but instead a diluted version with Evo controlled by Hugo. The blended outcome, perhaps best described as egoismo [sic] is shaping up to be a political philosophy aimed at promoting the ambitions of one man across a continent rather than serving a nation.

Since taking office in January, Mr. Morales has purged the top generals in the Bolivian military and promised to nationalize the country's natural resources. Cuba has been given an active role in providing security agents and advisers to Evo's government. Over 500 Cuban doctors now spread Fidel Castro's word in Bolivia and the Cuban dictator is hosting trainees from Mr. Morales's Movement to Socialism (MAS) party in Havana. MAS trainees have been sent to Caracas as well. Further aping Hugo, Evo has prevailed in his goal of holding a national vote in July to form a constitutional assembly that will rewrite the law of land over the next year.
As I mentioned last Saturday, exporting Hugo's Bolivarian Revolution is costing huge amounts of money, which comes from the drug trade and, very clearly, from the oil trade. The connection to the drug trade was disputed by a commenter at Publius Pundit, who thinks this is a fabrication. Not so. Take a look at the news:
Miami Herald: Drug trade thrives at Venezuelan airport
At least one metric ton of cocaine per month, and smaller quantities of heroin, are exported to consumers through the country's principal airport, several foreign counter-drug officials who did not want to be identified because of the sensitivity of their investigations told The Miami Herald.

One of the officials also estimated that as much as $2 million is paid out monthly in bribes to airport officials, policemen and National Guard personnel who collaborate with the drug runners. One informant told another investigator that airport jobs go to those willing to participate in the scheme.

Counter-drug officials also say private airplanes that traffic drugs from Colombia to such nearby destinations as the Caribbean islands regularly pass through Maiquetia, landing there to get a change in identification numbers and perhaps a new paint job.
Reuters: Venezuela is a major point of transit for drugs smuggled from South America to the United States and Europe.

Jim Kouri, vice-president of the National Association of Chiefs of Police The enormous amount of corruption within the Venezuelan government coupled with its president's seizure and control of the press has made the country ripe for the transit of illegal drugs and other contraband.

Financial Times: Alarm over rise in Venezuelan drugs traffic
Venezuela is becoming the leading transit country through which the bulk of the world’s cocaine is smuggled to the US and Europe, according to foreign law enforcement officers.

Colombian authorities led by President Alvaro Uribe, who is strongly backed by Washington, have pushed Latin America’s oldest insurgency into the country’s more remote southern and eastern jungles. Consequently, the Farc is pushing its cocaine through Venezuela, sometimes with help from corrupt officers from the National Guard, the institution responsible for border and airport security.
Chavez's Venezuelan Drug Trade and Corruption

This morning Publius Pundit looks at VENEZUELA: A NEW MEDELLIN
As brave President Alvaro Uribe of Colombia crushes Marxist narcotraffickers in his own country, these same narcos are finding greener pastures by moving next door, to Hugo Chavez’s Venezuela. It represents a historic shift because Venezuela’s lawmen have fought Colombian drug traffickers like cougars. Today, these same dopers are now embraced by Hugo Chavez as Marxist allies in the struggle against U.S. "imperialism."
. . .
In a way, this development is not surprising. Given the Hugo Chavez is a man of money, rather than democratic institutions, and money, rather than institutions, is the source of all power for his dictatorship, it’s pretty natural that drug dealers should find a place in his regime. They speak the language of money, offer the enticements of money and best of all, they are unloved by the U.S.

But the consequences of this trend will be lethal for Venezuelam and here is why:

Just as crime has exploded in Venezuela, bringing on progressively more horrible murders and kidnaps of the young and the helpless, so has drug-trafficking, and the two trends are probably related.

As I have said earlier, Hugo Chavez doesn’t need a KGB to create totalitarian terror when he’s already got a government-facilitated atmosphere terror by the use of extreme lawlessness. Venezuelans are terrified to go out of their own homes at night. But foreign drug traffickers are finding an increasingly hospitable place to conduct their operations and make billions.

When they START making billions, they will be in a position to challenge Hugo Chavez’s Bolivarian state and create instead a narcostate, same as happened to Colombia and Afghanistan. When that happens, untold tyrannies and cruelties will take place, turning Venezuela into a living vortex of hell.

It will be very hard to get rid of, as both Mexicans and Colombians know. By allowing drug traffickers to use Venezuela as a base of operations, Hugo Chavez is playing with fire.
VCrisis looks at The Venezuela Connection
As drug shipments originating in Venezuela are increasingly seized by law enforcement authorities the world over, governments would do well in re-examining the role that the Venezuelan State, its Executive, military and officials have on this issue. It can not be rationally argued that Venezuelan authorities are merely overwhelmed by a surge of drug trafficking activities, for for said activities to augment there must be a well-oiled operational mechanism, employing a great deal of people, behind it. Tonnes of drugs just not materialize in ports, secret hangars or abandoned airstrips across the country, much less in purportedly well manned international airports. Success in drug trafficking requires a level of official support, or at the very least, leniency from authorities. Hence my conclusion that many government officials from the Chavez administration are deeply involved.
That's in Venezuela.

Since Hugo's revolution marches on in Bolivia, you can expect more of the same from Bolivia, in all aspects.

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Thursday, April 20, 2006

Hillary speaks, Larry listens

Larry Kudlow listened to Hillary's Big Government Nightmare
Hasn't Mrs. Clinton noticed the worldwide spread of free-market capitalism that has become such an enormous wealth creator across the globe - including Eastern Europe, India, China, and the rest of Asia? The economic growth principles of higher after-tax returns for work and investment, deregulation to limit government's reach, and the privatization of government-run companies have become almost commonplace following the Reagan-Thatcher revolution of 25 years ago. But Mrs. Clinton would have us turn the clock back in ways that even her husband didn't support. She defines her goals in terms of "a middle class life, education, health care, transportation, and retirement." But all this is nothing more than a massive dose of government spending and regulating - a sure prescription for humongous taxes and a declining economy.

No wonder the Chicago ballroom started to snooze. Mrs. Clinton's ideas electrified the audience about as much as a broken plug attached to an old land-line phone.

Why not employ the tax code to reward success rather than punish it? What about investor-owned savings accounts for health care, retirement, and education? Why not put pro-market consumer choice, rather than government, at the center of the 21st century economy? How about setting the fiscal stage so the non-rich can get rich?
Imagine New Jersey, 50 times, and you'll have Hillary's vision materialized.

The no-threat power station, and today's articles

Via The Dumb Ox's news headlines, Russian-built nuclear power station in Iran no threat: Moscow
"The building of the Bushehr nuclear power station does not threaten the non-proliferation regime," Rosatom nuclear agency head Sergei Kiriyenko told journalists in the Kyrgyz capital Bishkek.
Now, let's take Sergei's statement at face value, and look at another aspect of having a nuclear power station on top of prime seismic activity real estate (as Dymphna did the other day) since Amir Taheri wrote about it on April 5 (emphasis added):
IN the present state of scientific knowledge, it is still impossible to forecast earthquakes. Nevertheless, we know which parts of the globe are most likely to be struck. And in the center of perhaps the most active of these zones is the Iranian Plateau - where at least one nuclear reactors is now under construction, with more planned.

Over the past century or so, Iran has experienced more earthquakes than any other part of the globe - at least one tremor each day. Last week's earthquake in the south-central province of Lorestan is the latest reminder of that fact.

Since Iran started properly recording earthquakes in the late 1940s, it has suffered at least one "big one" every decade: Torud (1950s), Boein-Zahra (1960s), Tabas-Golshan (1970s), Qazvin (1980s), Rudbar-Tarom (1990s) and Bam (December 2003). By official estimates, these earthquakes claimed the lives of 126,000 people, injured a further 800,000 and made 1.8 million people homeless. At times, the damage from one quake amounted to more than 7 percent of the nation's GDP.
. . .
Several reports, including one by Stanford University, that expressed concern about locating nuclear power stations in earthquake zones were never published. Nor was there any public inquiry on how and why the Bushehr Peninsula - one of Iran's most quake-prone areas - was chosen as the location of the first nuclear power station.

The spot, known as Hellieh, was once the site of half a dozen villages. It was abandoned in the 1940s when a major earthquake wiped the villages off the map. Nearby are the remains of Siraf, the region's most important port until it was destroyed in earthquakes in the 10th and early 11th centuries.
. . .
When the program was revived in 1989, it was the turn of Tehran University's Geophysical Centre to raise concerns on grounds of safety. A study was commissioned by then-President Hashemi Rafsanjani in 1993 and completed in 1995. It has never been published, but parts have leaked - warning that the plant, as designed, might not withstand tremors of 7 or more on the Richter scale.
Those of you obsessed with global warming might want to ponder what will happen when billions of gallons of hot, radioactive water are poured into the Persian Gulf, or what will the effect of untreated radioactive waste be in the area.

Helen at EU Referendum points out that
Chernobyl showed up the political corruption and sheer mind-boggling inefficiency of the Soviet system. That is why it was the biggest nuclear disaster in history.
Compound the Chernobyl disaster with a major earthquake to the concerns on the water supply and the radioactive waste.

News junkies like myself should make The Dumb Ox their daily news stop.

At the blogs
Torture in Castro's Cuba. Watch the video.

The Mark Steyn vagina. As commenter paul (in lower case) put it,
You don't have to have Tourette's Syndrome to work at The Guardian, but it helps...
with my apologies to any Tourette's Syndrome patients out there.

Jeff Blanco stands by what he believes

"The first thing we want is tough border control," guess who said that. Flopping Aces (via Pajamas Media) has good news for him, and so does Jay. Jay also has a nominee for White House press secretary.

Today's articles from Maria
Joseph Farrah has Bad news in Afghanistan: Taliban regains control of much of country, Pakistan. And who's helping out?
Support for the Taliban in the form of munitions and money is coming from Iran and Russia.
who, of course, are too busy building a nuclear power station that does not threaten the non-proliferation regime.

Immoral, and contemptible

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Wednesday, April 19, 2006

Newsweek (heart) Zapatero

I'm guest blogging at Barcepundit. Go read it!

Art at the blogs, and Maria's article

The Dumb Ox now has a news headlines feature that is fantastic. BTW, that blog's title refers to St. Thomas Aquinas, in case you didn't know. TDO also refers us to a most beautiful display of Easter art at Eagle and Elephant (click on the photos), a new blog I added to the blogroll.

Nowhere near as lovely is the Whitney Biennial. Last week Clive Davis posted about it, including a link to James Panero's review, who said,
The derivations change, but what remains consistent is the badness the curators are always able to pull together.
I went, I saw, and trust me on this, Panero was being kind. The "art" had no new insights, no aesthetic value, no wit, no humor, not even novelty. The experience was as exciting as watching a display of stale bread. The Amazon editorial review says,
More than 100 artists and collaborative teams are included-recognized artists as well as those whose work has never before been seen in a major museum.
One can only hope they won't be seen again. Sissy Willis has more.
Update On second thought, a display of stale bread might have had some humor and metaphorical interest.
Update 2 Speaking of art . . .

Glad I wasn't there
All Passengers on NYC Cable Cars Rescued:
The passengers became stranded around 5:15 p.m. Tuesday
. . .
The rescue effort ended around 5 a.m. Wednesday.
Glad I wasn't there, II
Tom Cruise & Katie Holmes have Suri
"Suri," according to Cruise's news release, is a word with origins in both Hebrew and Persian. In Hebrew it means "princess," and in Persian, "red rose," the release said. (It also means "pickpocket" in Japanese, although the news release did not mention that.)
Makes you yearn for the days when people named their daughters Fausta.

Today's article from Maria
Criminolgy professor Mike Adams writes about A new definition of racism.

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Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Viva le Fleming!

Medievalist extraordinaire and all-around great guy, Dr. Fleming writes on The latest French revolution
What we laughingly call the "real world" can be a scary place. But as seniors hand in their theses and enjoy the last relaxed weeks before facing it, I have a few words of advice for graduates. Not a one of them is "Plastics." A Princeton diploma is, among other things, a testimony to a lifetime of privilege. It is never too early to start paying back. Do something serious, useful, daring and fun. Travel around, and use the foreign language we helped you learn. Invent something. Start a company. Teach something wholesome to somebody who needs it. Revel in your individuality and personal enterprise in a way that satisfies you by helping our needy world. Take some big risks, and fail a few times. Let your attitude be closer to that of an immigrant Mexican yard-worker than of a French bureaucrat. This country doesn't owe you a living, but it affords you unequalled opportunities to make a decent one. Work really hard. Create the wealth of the commonwealth. Combat social pathologies, illiteracy, epidemic disease and sanctified ignorance. Be "rich of holy thoght and werk." If you end up rich in dough as well, endow a Princeton chair and found a charitable foundation. Die happy.
As it turns out, due to the vagaries of the world wide web, I came across the article via ¡No Pasarán! even when the Daily Princetonian's issued a mile away from here.

Long-time Fausta's blog readers might remember Dr. Fleming.

Give the guy his own

Death cult: Ahmadinejad's Demons

People who want to look at "root causes" of terrorism would do well to examine the death cult aspects: Matthias Küntzel's article Ahmadinejad's Demons does:
At the beginning of the war, Iran's ruling mullahs did not send human beings into the minefields, but rather animals: donkeys, horses, and dogs. But the tactic proved useless: "After a few donkeys had been blown up, the rest ran off in terror," Mostafa Arki reports in his book Eight Years of War in the Middle East. The donkeys reacted normally--fear of death is natural. The Basiji, on the other hand, marched fearlessly and without complaint to their deaths.
. . .
...during the Iran-Iraq War, Khomeini appropriated the essence of the ritual as a symbolic act and politicized it. He took the inward-directed fervor and channeled it toward the external enemy. He transformed the passive lamentation into active protest. He made the Battle of Karbala the prototype of any fight against tyranny. Indeed, this technique had been used during political demonstrations in 1978, when many Iranian protestors wore funeral shrouds in order to tie the battle of 680 to the contemporary struggle against the shah. In the war against Iraq, the allusions to Karbala were given still greater significance: On the one hand, the scoundrel Yazid, now in the form of Saddam Hussein; on the other, the Prophet's grandson, Hussein, for whose suffering the time of Shia revenge had finally come.

The power of this story was further reinforced by a theological twist that Khomeini gave it. According to Khomeini, life is worthless and death is the beginning of genuine existence. "The natural world," he explained in October 1980, "is the lowest element, the scum of creation.
. . .
As Basij ideology and influence enjoy a renaissance under Ahmadinejad, the movement's belief in the virtues of violent self-sacrifice remains intact. There is no "truth commission" in Iran to investigate the state-planned collective suicide that took place from 1980 to 1988. Instead, every Iranian is taught the virtues of martyrdom from childhood. Obviously, many of them reject the Basij teachings. Still, everyone knows the name of Hossein Fahmideh, who, as a 13-year-old boy during the war, blew himself up in front of an Iraqi tank. His image follows Iranians throughout their day: whether on postage stamps or the currency. If you hold up a 500 Rial bill to the light, it is his face you will see in the watermark. The self-destruction of Fahmideh is depicted as a model of profound faith by the Iranian press. It has been the subject of both an animated film and an episode of the TV series "Children of Paradise." As a symbol of their readiness to die for the Revolution, Basij groups wear white funeral shrouds over their uniforms during public appearances.
. . .
The Basiji's cult of self-destruction would be chilling in any country. In the context of the Iranian nuclear program, however, its obsession with martyrdom amounts to a lit fuse. Nowadays, Basiji are sent not into the desert, but rather into the laboratory. Basij students are encouraged to enroll in technical and scientific disciplines. According to a spokesperson for the Revolutionary Guard, the aim is to use the "technical factor" in order to augment "national security."

What exactly does that mean? Consider that, in December 2001, former Iranian President Hashemi Rafsanjani explained that "the use of even one nuclear bomb inside Israel will destroy everything." On the other hand, if Israel responded with its own nuclear weapons, it "will only harm the Islamic world. It is not irrational to contemplate such an eventuality." Rafsanjani thus spelled out a macabre cost-benefit analysis. It might not be possible to destroy Israel without suffering retaliation. But, for Islam, the level of damage Israel could inflict is bearable--only 100,000 or so additional martyrs for Islam.

And Rafsanjani is a member of the moderate, pragmatic wing of the Iranian Revolution; he believes that any conflict ought to have a "worthwhile" outcome. Ahmadinejad, by contrast, is predisposed toward apocalyptic thinking.
. . .
The history of the Basiji shows that we must expect monstrosities from the current Iranian regime.
Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has warned his country's military would deal with any attack by "cutting the hand of the aggressor".

Now tell me that Iran's developing nuclear capabilities are for peaceful purposes. I refer you to Dr. Sanity

Update: via DL, New satellite imagery of Iran's nuclear sites - now on Google Earth.


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Skid row, the Swedish mobster, and today's articles from Maria

ACLU's victory is a loss for skid row
The 9th Circuit's decision will only reinforce the view of law enforcement authorities and mental health officials from outside Los Angeles that public drunks, drug users, homeless people and those suffering from mental illness belong not in their city, but in downtown L.A.
Jay has more.

VCrisis has a report on Venezuela: drug dealers paradise.

The Swedish mobster, and today's articles from Maria
A Pileup of Charges in the Case of the Totaled Ferrari:
According to Swedish police records contained in the prosecutors' court filing, Eriksson in the late 1980s and early '90s was involved in counterfeiting, assault and drug crimes tied to a Swedish underworld group in Uppsala, a city 50 miles north of Stockholm. He was sentenced to prison three separate times, according to the records.
I didn't even know they had mobsters in Uppsala.

Talking Trailer Trash
There are two Al-Kindis that relate to this story. One of them is the Al-Kindi Research Complex, "one of the largest and most secret arms project[s] in Iraq," located in Mosul. It looks like they mainly did missile research there, but also did nuclear and chemical weapons research at some point. This location is important because one of the two vehicles was found on their lot in April 2003. It's also important because the 2003 CIA report on the biolabs mentions that "Senior Iraqi officials of the al-Kindi Research, Testing, Development, and Engineering facility in Mosul were shown pictures of the mobile production trailers, and they claimed that the trailers were used to chemically produce hydrogen for artillery weather balloons." That's a logical answer for a technician in a rocketry plant that had missile test facilities, a wind tunnel, and a launch range.

The other Al-Kindi Company is located in Abu Ghraib, near Baghdad. Its full name is the Al-Kindi Company for the Production of Veterinary Vaccines. According to UNMOVIC, it is a declared and monitored site which produces a "variety of viral and bacterial veterinary vaccines, using basic glassware and techniques."
Illegal aliens recruit workers. While Maria's favorite, Bert Preluski, wants you to Wake up and smell the salsa, here's how you can send a brick. Timothy Birdnow calls for the closing of Plantation America

Mel Gibson's 'Apocalypto' Delayed. Can't say I've been waiting for it.

Bellevue Community College displays where it stands on racism.

Seoul man Alan Greenspan makes $200,000 for each speaking engagement so he can regret "irrational exhuberance". Nice gig if one can get it.

Dick Morris hurls the ultimate insult at Pres. Bush, calling him a Republican Jimmy Carter.

Hu's not coming to dinner at the White House, but the Gates were open. Meanwhile, Chinese dash hopes for researcher's release. China, Russia, and Qatar blocked a British-American motion at the Security Council to impose targeted sanctions against four Sudanese individuals accused of atrocities in Sudan's Darfur region. Last Thursday I pointed out that the current trend appears to be increasing cooperation between China and Russia as far as restraining the power of the USA, the EU, and Japan.

Who will be singing for Moammar Khadafy to commemorate the airstrike that killed 40 people? Lionel Richie and Spanish tenor José Carreras. Aren't they precious? Jeff has more on the festivities. Here in the USA the University of North Texas was planning to award an honorary degree to Adbel Al-Jubeir, a spokesman for Saudi Arabia, which sells amputation machines.

The cat's out of the bag wall

Librarian attacked by profs for promoting 'Marketing of Evil'


Ralph Peters looks at Euro-Losers. Jorge Valín examines French Naiveté, Total Losses, and the French mentality.

When I was sick last week I watched TV and I agree with Mona Charen that the level of vulgarity that now seems utterly ordinary is just unbelievable.

Because offending Catholics is easy and cheap, and Catholics don't blow up people: PETA staged a mock crucifixion in Vienna.