Saturday, November 15
(A) virtually been eliminated by Hamid Karzai's government and American forces.
(B) declined 30 percent, but eradication is not expected until 2008.
(C) soared 19-fold and become the major source of the world's heroin.
2. In Paktika and Zabul, two religiously conservative parts of Afghanistan, the number of children going to school:
(A) has quintupled, with most girls at least finishing third grade.
(B) has risen 40 percent, although few girls go to school.
(C) has plummeted as poor security has closed nearly all schools there.
The correct answer to both questions, alas, is (C). (New York Times) via Common Dreams
Wednesday, November 12
Media people have been detained, news equipment has been confiscated and some journalists have suffered verbal and physical abuse while trying to report on events. Yahoo News
Tuesday, November 11
For many of them, those lives have included service in the military. According to the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans, 33 percent of all homeless men are veterans, as is nearly one-fourth of the homeless population in general.
As the United States ships thousands of troops worldwide to fight the "war on terror," I find myself thinking about what joining the military and fighting for one's country really means. I am fascinated with warriors, probably because as a woman in America, it's an experience I'll probably never have. I wonder particularly what it's like to have served your country and now be living destitute on the streets.
I decided to find out. Over the last few weeks, I spoke with several homeless vets who I met through Dave Hanzel at St. Anthony's Dining Room in downtown San Francisco. Some of them saw combat duty, and others didn't.
I'm not here to weigh in on policy about homeless people -- what care or cash they should be given -- as much as I wish to give a glimpse into their lives. I hope you find the interviews compelling for no other reason than that they reinforce the idea that we are all connected in our humanity. Human life is fragile. We all suffer. And, yet, for some inexplicable reason, most of us carry on.
I've done my best to verify that what the people I talked to told me has some basis in fact. But, with the homeless, it's hard to identify people with certainty and even more difficult to track them down to check the facts. I leave it for you to decide for yourselves. I may even include some obvious tall tales because they're so entertaining. (By Amy Moon, Features Editor, SF Gate ) SF Gate
Monday, November 10
Zerline Aronin is blind in one eye and uses a walker for balance even inside her one-bedroom Capitol Hill apartment.
But she still cooks breakfast every morning � oatmeal with fresh fruit � before showering and making up the bed without a wrinkle.
By midday, she's out the door in sensible shoes, pushing her walker to beat the stoplight at a busy Madison Street intersection. It's a few blocks to feed a flock of waiting pigeons, then a few more to the grocery or over to the fire station to have her blood pressure checked. On an occasional Saturday she sets out to synagogue around the corner.
That's several miles a week � not bad for a 102-year-old. By Marsha King ), Seattle Times
Monday, October 27
Brown, nominated to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, has also come under fire from other sources, including the New York Times, which on Saturday described her nomination as "among the very worst ...of the many unworthy judicial nominees President Bush has put forward." The D.C. Circuit is widely considered to be the second-most important court in the United States, after the Supreme Court itself. (by Jim Lobe, One world Net via Common Dreams
Thursday, September 11
LeMonde
Into this vacuum stepped a 29-year-old resident of Baghdad, calling himself Salam Pax. His weblog documenting life in the Iraqi capital before, during and after the US-led invasion achieved world renown, and he now also writes a regular column in the Guardian.
On Friday Salam Pax will be live online on Guardian Unlimited. You can post your your questions and comments for him now, email questions to editor@guardianunlimited.co.uk and join the discussion live at 1.45pm on Friday September 12 Guardian Unlimited
Friday, July 4
Thursday, May 1
Joseph Amrine, a man who spent 18 years on death row for the murder of a fellow prisoner, and whose face was made famous in a Benneton ad, is going home. After years of appeals and execution dates, a period in which he saw the witnesses against him recant their testimony to no legal effect, the 47-year-old's life has been spared in a surprise ruling by the Missouri Supreme Court, which said, among other things: "It is difficult to imagine a more manifestly unjust and unconstitutional result than permitting the execution of an innocent person." Salon
Saturday, April 19
Thursday, April 17
BAGHDAD, Iraq (April 17, 2003 7:52 a.m. EDT) - A riot broke out at a bank Thursday after thieves blew a hole in the vault and dropped children inside to bring out fistfuls of cash. U.S. troops defused the situation by arresting the thieves and removing the money for safekeeping. [By CHRIS TOMLINSON, Associated Press] Nando Times
Wednesday, April 16
Monday, April 14
Saturday, April 5
Wednesday, April 2
Monday, March 31
Internet News
U.S. Troops Kill Seven Iraqi Women, Children in Car Thirteen women and children were inside the vehicle, four of whom were unhurt, the military said. Yahoo News
Sunday, March 30
Saturday, March 29
Friday, March 28
Thursday, March 27
Moderate groups like MoveOn.org and the National Council of Churches don't wholly disagree with this analysis, but their emphasis is on long-term goals and expansion. They see the war as resulting from a breakdown in education and democracy, and their aim is to spread the word about the Bush administration's foreign policy agenda through teach-ins, Web sites and church meetings. They also plan a parallel effort to work to elect progressive candidates who they hope will return a measure of accountability to government and start mending international institutions like the U.N.
Radicals want to shock people out of their torpor, moderates to coax them. In all likelihood, neither can do much to stop this war, but their successes or failures could help determine what follows it. Salon
Wednesday, March 26
�
Tuesday, March 25
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Gregory Dicum
March 25, 2003 �|� Pranas Ancevicius, my maternal grandfather, was intercepted by the German navy while trying to escape the Baltics for Sweden in 1944. An anti-Stalinist intellectual, Pranas had sensed the impending return of the Red Army to his native Lithuania. Caught between two loathsome regimes, he made his way to Nazi Berlin, where he hid with his family under cover of the right combination of documents.
In British Malaya, Lourdes Gnanadicassamy, my other grandfather, had divined the intentions of the Japanese Imperial Army in 1940. He packed the family off to India 18 months before his country descended into four years of Japanese occupation.
Enough of my ancestors have had to make the fateful decision to flee their homes -- and have done so at just the right moment -- that I have often wondered if I have inherited their uncanny sense of timing.
My life is comfortable -- like many of my forebears were, I am a happily married homeowner, a contributing member of civil society. I have suffered somewhat during this economic malaise, but there is food on the table, the occasional vacation, and talk of having a baby. My personal experience of life has been one of security and happiness, but for the first time my genes are getting nervous. As I examine the family histories and read each day's darkening headlines, I find that the question is no longer so abstract, or so leisurely: If it came right down to it, would I know when to go?
By the time my grandmother's family left Siberia, where they had been homesteading when she was born, the Bolshevik revolution was in full swing. Secret denouncements, property seizures, and disappearances were the order of the day. Surely if it came to that, I'd have been packing my bags too, right? Yet under the PATRIOT Act and sundry new regulations, secret military incarcerations, politically directed police forces, and whispers of torture have become daily news in our country. And here I still am, making mortgage payments, buying organic vegetables, listening to Wilco CDs. My great-aunt Anele Tamulevicius, whose husband was "disappeared" in Soviet-occupied Lithuania the day after their wedding, believed to her dying day that the violent vanities of the Old World should never infect the New. It may be too late for that wish.
Stasys Tamulevicius, my great-uncle, perhaps lacked the gene for political timing. A fatalist, he stayed on in Lithuania through the darkness of Soviet rule. In his day, the authorities kept a file on everyone -- following not just their political activities but also the most banal details of one's life, whatever they could get from neighbors or co-workers. It's hard not to think of him when I read about the Office of Information Awareness and its plan for a centralized database that would make a dragnet through all Americans as easy as a Google search. This kind of technology is already being used to screen passengers on Delta Airlines, which, in cooperation with the new Transportation Security Agency, checks passenger credit records and other seemingly irrelevant data prior to letting them fly.
And airlines aren't the only ones eager to facilitate the awareness of information. Recently, eBay's director of "law enforcement and compliance" announced that the company would turn over any of its volumes of information about users -- what they might have bought, or even just looked at -- to government agents without waiting for a subpoena. When the pretense of privacy evaporates, is it time to start pricing (offline) one-way tickets to New Zealand? Could be, but I haven't done it.
Of course, I know that I'm not the primary target of these new regulations. I'm not the one they're looking for. But then again, neither are a lot of other people who have suffered as a result of them -- or as a result of the paranoia that they seem to instill in ordinary citizens. It seems darkly comical when a man is arrested for wearing a "Give Peace a Chance" T-shirt. But it's horrifying when a crowd at a Chicago nightclub is so on edge that they kill 21 people while fleeing what they thought was a terror attack. Is this just our own version of the kind of malignancy that led to my great-uncle Vaclavas' death in 1943? He had constructed a clever escape tunnel beneath his house, but when the time came to use it, he found the exit had been blocked by a jealous neighbor. His body was found in a well a few days later. This is where the escalation of fear leads, and I wonder how far we have already gone down that murky path. Have my economy-class seatmates ever glanced at my dark complexion and silently considered how they might wield a plastic spoon against me to thwart my evil intentions? (I confess I've wondered how I might do the same to them.) Has anyone noticed the stream of leftist fundraising appeals that comes into my mailbox? In what files do essays like this get placed?
In increments we have become a different nation. Each step ruffles our feathers just a bit, but the ruckus dies down quickly and we are on our way to the next. Life goes on, and we find ourselves living in a different country without ever having moved.
In a nation of immigrants, we all have ancestors who decided it was time to go. Around the world, people make the decision every day, packing a few belongings onto a cart and walking away from the action, as is happening now in Kurdistan and Baghdad. What happens when it's our turn? Much has changed already; how much more will have to change before it becomes time for me to sell the house? Sew gold coins into the hem of my jacket as I gather the loved ones around me one last time? It's not here yet, but is the hour approaching when, once again, we might decide to bid farewell to yet another homeland?
For each of us, the point of no return is at a different place -- the subtle moment beyond which you are the one they're looking for. For the hundreds of Pakistanis seeking asylum at the Canadian border, that point has passed. For the desperate mobs jamming the Kuwait City airport, the moment is upon them. For me, it remains just a possibility. Salon
Sunday, March 23
Pro-democracy activist Dr. Nguyen Dan Que, a thorn in Hanoi's side for the past three decades who was released from nearly 20 years' jail in 1998, was arrested at his home in southern Ho Chi Minh City on March 17. Nando Times
Friday, March 21
Thursday, March 20
[This is link is to a online PDF file of this book]
...The features of this night among the, Rotarians were nothing funny, at least not funny, for they were the
patriotic addresses of Brigadier General Herbert Y. Edgeways, U.S.A. (ret.), who dealt angrily with the
topic Peace through Defense-Millions for Arms but Not One Cent for Tribute, and of Mrs. Adelaide Tarr
Gimmitch she who was no more renowned for her gallant anti-suffrage campaigning way back in 1919
than she was for having, during the Great War, kept the American soldiers entirely out of French caf�s by
the clever trick of sending them ten thousand sets of dominoes.
Nor could any social-minded patriot sneeze at her recent somewhat unappreciated effort to maintain
the purity of the American Home by barring from the motion-picture industry all persons, actors or directors
or cameramen, who had: (a) ever been divorced; (b) been born in any foreign county except Great Britain,
since Mrs. Gimitch thought very highly of Queen Mary, or (c) declined take an oath to revere the Flag, the
Constitution, the Bible, and all other peculiarly American istitutions....
...'They were all listening, agape. General Edgeways was completing his manly yet mystical rhapsody on
nationalism:
. . . for these U-nited States, a-lone among the great powers, have no desire for foreign conqust. Our
highest ambition is to be darned well let alone! Our only genuine relationship to Europe is in our arduous
task of having to try and educate the crass and igorant masses that Europe has wished onto us up to
something like a semblance of American culture ad good manners. But, as I explained to you, we must be
prepared to defend our shores against all the alien gangs of international racketeers that call themselves
governments' and that with such feverish envy are always eyeing our inexhaustible mines, our towering
forests, our titaic and luxurious cities, our fair and far-flung fields."
For the first time in all history, a great nation must go on arming itself more and more, not for conquest-
not for jealousy-not for war-but for peace! Pray God it may never be necessary but if foreign nations
don't sharply heed our warning, there will, as when the proverbial dragon's teeth were sowed, spring up
anarmed and fearless warrior upon every square foot of these United States, so arduously cultivated
and defended by our pioneer fathers, whose sword-girded images we must be ... or we shall perish!"...
..."I guess maybe some of the things I said in my former speech were kind of a little bit obvious and what
we used to call old hat when my brigade was quartered in England. About the United States only wanting
peace, and freedom from all foreign entanglements. No! What I�d really like us to do would be to come out
and tell the whole world: Now you boys never mind about the moral side of this. We have the power, and
power is its own exuse!...
..."I don't altogether admire everything Germany and Italy have done, but you've got to hand it to 'em,
they've been honest enough and realistic enough to say to the other nations, Just tend to your own
business,will you? We've got strength and will, and for whomever has those divine qualities it's not only
a right, it's a duty, to use 'em Nobody in God's world ever loved a weakling, including that weakling
himself!.
And I've got good news for you! This gospel of clean and aggressive strength is spreading
everywhere in this country among the finest type of youth. Why today, in 1936, there's less than 7 per
cent of collegiate institutions that do not have military-training units under discipline as rigorous as the
Nazis, and where once it was forced upon them by the authorities, now it is the strong young men ad
women who themselves demand the right to be trained in warlike virtues ad skill for, mark you, the girls,
with their instruction in nursing and the manufacture of gas masks and the like, are becoming every whit
as zealous as their brothers. And all the really thinking type of professors are right with 'em!
Why, here, as recently as three years ago, a sickeningly big percentage of students were blatant
pacifists, wanting to knife their own native land in the dark. But now, when the shameless fools and the
advocates of Communism try to hold pacifist meetings, why, my friends, in the past five months, since
January first, no less than seventt-six such exhibitionistic orgies have been raided by their fellow students,
and no less than fifty-nine disloyal Red students have received their just deserts by being beaten up so
severely that never again will they raise in this free countrv the bloodstained banner of anarchism That, my
friends, is NEWS!"...
{By Sinclair Lewis, 1935]
Wednesday, March 19
Columbia Data Recorder Found
Investigators found the Orbiter Experiment Supports Systems Recorder intact near Hemphill, Texas, officials said. The recorder, sources told ABCNEWS, starts 10 minutes before Columbia's descent and measures the ship's temperature, aerodynamic pressure and other data. The information would not have been transmitted to NASA mission control during the flight. ABC News
Tuesday, March 18
Sunday, March 16
Saturday, March 15
For the calculations and paperwork, Jackson-Hewitt charged Payne a $179 tax preparation fee. For the loan, Jackson-Hewitt charged her a $25 handling fee, a $55 application fee and a $42 loan finance fee. ... But for such refund anticipation loans, 135.7 percent is comparatively low, according to a study released by the Consumer Federation of America in January. It found APRs for two-week refund loans like Payne's that ranged from 67 percent to 774 percent. Detroit Free press
high fever (>38oC)
AND
one or more respiratory symptoms including cough, shortness of breath, difficulty breathing
AND one or more of the following:
close contact* with a person who has been diagnosed with SARS
recent history of travel to areas reporting cases of SARS.
(Reports to date have been received from Canada, China, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of China, Indonesia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Viet Nam. Early today, an ill passenger and companions who travelled from New York, United States, and who landed in Frankfurt, Germany were removed from their flight and taken to hospital isolation.)
World Health Organization
Thursday, March 13
International Herald Tribune
Wednesday, March 12
Serbian Prime Minister Is Assassinated Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic - who spearheaded the revolt that toppled former President Slobodan Milosevic in October 2000 - was assassinated Wednesday by gunmen who ambushed him outside the government complex.
...Djindjic appeared to have been targeted last month, when a truck suddenly cut into the lane in which his motorcade was traveling to Belgrade's airport. The motorcade narrowly avoided a collision, and Djindjic later dismissed the Feb. 21 alleged assassination attempt as a "futile effort" that could not stop democratic reforms.
"If someone thinks the law and the reforms can be stopped by eliminating me, then that is a huge delusion," Djindjic was quoted as saying by the Politika newspaper at the time. MyWay AP News
Tuesday, March 11
My Way News
Monday, March 10
Version 1.4.1 (26.1 MB) adds the following enhancements :
� Improved Java applet support for Safari and other web browsers that support the Java Internet Plug-In.
� incorporates over 60% more features than the previous release, 1.3.1. Improvements include support for new native I/O, XML and Web Services technologies, more security APIs, Unicode 3.0 support
� Java applications take better advantage of Aqua and Quartz Extreme.
� Java applications now fully leverage the built-in Universal Access features of Mac OS X v10.2.
� Java applications can now be controlled through AppleScript, via the new UI Scripting technology (http://www.apple.com/applescript/GUI/).
For more details on this update, please visit: Apple Java or Java.Sun.com
Comment and analysis from Sydney, Beijing, New Delhi, London, Tel Aviv, Sofia, Munich, Ottawa, Toronto, Cairo, Madrid, Karachi, and Budapest World Press Review
{You may get a pop up asking to install a Korean language pack , you may select cancel as this link is in English.}
Sunday, March 9
The Bush administration's relentless unilateral march towards war is profoundly disturbing for many reasons, but so far as American citizens are concerned the whole grotesque show is a tremendous failure in democracy. An immensely wealthy and powerful republic has been hijacked by a small cabal of individuals, all of them unelected and therefore unresponsive to public pressure, and simply turned on its head. It is no exaggeration to say that this war is the most unpopular in modern history. CounterPunch