
What Bush and McSame were doing while New Orleans drowned.
Remind them of it.
Often.
Stuff and Nonsense: Paranoia, Poetry, Politics, Popular Culture, Science and Assorted Weirdness
Gustav disrupts McCain's Republican convention
(Poor Baby. Of course a couple of million 'evacuees'/refugees might argue about who is having what disrupted)
(Much to McSame's relief we might add)
(Well the country is better off for that at least)
(But only Republicans. The rest of us can go fish (probably along the new Gulf shore just south of Memphis))
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My little meditation on another September day a few years back....

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
-- The First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America
The whole country is a "free speech zone". Get it NeoThug assholes?
Supposedly police intimidation of legitimate protest only happens elsewhere, or so we were led to believe by all the tut-tutting during the Olympics.
And to those who say that "well, something must have been behind it" I say, the police showed no warrants, forcibly entered homes in armed gangs, made unreasonable seizures of personal property, intimidated journalists, and arrested lawyers ... so how is this any different from what went down in China?
The NeoThugs are so afraid of answering for their behaviour that they ran from the very idea that a group of college kids might protest them. I guess McSame and the Rezident might have their feelings hurt or something if they realized someone disagreed with them.
What a bunch of totalitarian imbeciles.

from Glenn Greenwald: Conclusive evidence of Federal involvment in the raids in Minneapolis.
from OpEdNews:
Protesters here in Minneapolis have been targeted by a series of highly intimidating, sweeping police raids across the city, involving teams of 25-30 officers in riot gear, with semi-automatic weapons drawn, entering homes of those suspected of planning protests, handcuffing and forcing them to lay on the floor, while law enforcement officers searched the homes, seizing computers, journals, and political pamphlets. Last night, members of the St. Paul police department and the Ramsey County sheriff's department handcuffed, photographed and detained dozens of people meeting at a public venue to plan a demonstration, charging them with no crime other than "fire code violations," and early this morning, the Sheriff's department sent teams of officers into at least four Minneapolis area homes where suspected protesters were staying. (more)
This kind of police intimidation has become a staple of cities hosting the Republican National Convention. It was rampant in NYC in '04 and done in plain view in Miami in '00. Apparently the mere idea of protest is now a crime as most of those being arrested are being charged with "conspiracy to riot" simply for being at meetings where protests were being discussed. This is a rather novel interpretation of the First Amendment's guarantee of the right to peaceably assemble. My guess is that the NeoThugs think that right applies to model building or something.
More from Glenn Greenwald of Salon, including video. Police have been seizing computers, personal papers, flyers, diaries....
..and he still owns a large block of stock options in the scum.
from BBC:
A Nepalese man and relatives of 12 others who were killed in Iraq four years ago are suing American firm KBR on charges of human trafficking.
The men were recruited in Nepal to work in a hotel in Jordan, but were later told they would have to work at a US air base in Iraq, their lawyers said.
Twelve of the men were kidnapped and killed by Islamic militants while being transported inside Iraq.
The 13th man was made to work against his will at the air base, lawyers said.
The execution-style killing of the hostages was recorded by the extremists and posted on a website.
The incident sparked riots in Nepal with angry demonstrators targeting a mosque, some government buildings and offices of employment agencies.
At least two people were killed in the protests.
'Passports seized'
The lawsuit filed in the US District Court in Los Angeles on Wednesday alleged "that the illicit trafficking scheme... was engineering by KBR and its subcontractor", identified as Daoud & Partners.
The men, between the ages of 18 and 27, were recruited "to work as kitchen staff in hotels and restaurants in Amman, Jordan", said a statement from Cohen, Milstein, Hausfeld & Toll, one of the law firms handling the case.
Some recruitment agencies are blamed for sending workers to Iraq
But once they arrived in Jordan "they were not provided the expected employment," the statement said.
Their passports were seized, and they were told they were being sent to Iraq "to provide menial labour" at the Al-Asad air base, it added.
"For 15 months, the 13th man Buddi Prasad Gurung, was held in Iraq against his will, before KBR and Daoud allowed him to return home to Nepal," the statement said.
"It doesn't appear that any of them knew they were going to Iraq," news agency Reuters quoted attorney Matthew Handley as saying.
KBR would not comment on the lawsuit, but in a statement, the company said it "in no way condones or tolerates unethical or illegal behaviour".
Nepal banned its citizens from going to Iraq to work there in 2003 because of safety concerns.
But a lack of employment opportunities back home meant that private recruitment agencies continued to send Nepalese workers to Iraq through countries like Jordan and Kuwait.
from BBC:
China's state-owned oil firm CNPC has agreed a $3bn (£1.63bn) oil services contract with the government of Iraq.
The two parties renegotiated a 1997 deal to pump oil from the Ahdab oilfield, the Iraqi oil minister said.
Under the new deal, output from the oilfield will be 110,000 barrels per day, up from the 90,000 barrels forecast in the original deal.
The deal is the first major oil contract with a foreign firm since the US-led war in Iraq, reports say.
As security improves, Iraq - which has some of the biggest oil reserves in the Middle East - is trying to bring in foreign oil companies to boost crude output.
It needs billions of dollars of investment after years of war and sanctions.
Other foreign oil companies, such as Royal Dutch Shell and Exxon Mobil, are also negotiating deals with the Iraqi government.
The Iraq government says its aim is to increase crude oil production from the current 2.5m barrels per day to 4.5m by 2013.
Final agreement
Production is set to begin at the Ahdab oilfield three years from now and the contract will run for 20 years.
"Finally we have reached an agreement," Hussain al-Shahristani, the Iraqi oil minister told Reuters.
"The total investment of the project is expected to be about $3bn."
CNPC would own 75% of a joint venture to be set up for the contract, with the remainder held by Iraq's Northern Oil Company.
The field is located in Wasit province, 160 kilometres (100 miles) south of Baghdad, in a Shiite-dominated area that has seen sporadic violence.


Mark Serreze, a scientist from the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colorado was quoted by Reuters:
Serreze also told the AP that:
We could very well be in that quick slide downward in terms of passing a tipping point. It’s tipping now. We’re seeing it happen now.
The same article quoted NASA ice scientist Jaw Zwally as saying that within 5-10 years the Arctic could be ice-free in the summer. He added that this also means that:
McCain said in 2006 that he would repeal Roe v. Wade.
His campaign website calls for overturning Roe, returning the issue of abortion to the states, and then building "the necessary consensus to end abortion at the state level."
"I will be a pro-life president and this presidency will have pro-life policies," he told Pastor Rick Warren this month.
Planned Parenthood and NARAL have both given him a zero rating on abortion issues. According to NARAL, of 130 congressional votes by McCain related to reproductive freedom, 125 have been against abortion. "I've got a consistent zero from NARAL throughout all those years," he trumpets.
On other reproductive health issues, McCain toes the right-wing line, having voted against requiring health care plans to cover birth control, comprehensive sex education, public education for emergency contraception, and restoring Medicaid funding for family planning for low-income women.
"The guy I really respect on this is Dr. Coburn," McCain told the New York Times in March 2007, referring to the vociferously anti-abortion Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK).
McCain has also supported anti-women's rights judges such as Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas.
from the dreaded (and dreadful) NewsMax:
This new book -- "The Case Against Barack Obama" -- will be released next week. It is published by the same group that brought you "Unfit for Command: Swift Boat Veterans Speak Out Against John Kerry." This new book about Barack Obama could change the outcome of the election.
Oh OH! These slimy sleezemongers are at it again. What do you want to bet Mr. Maverick Republican won't have the balls to denounce it?
from New York Times Magazine:
For the last two decades, most of your fiction has veered toward science fiction, which has disappointed literary critics like Harold Bloom.
I can’t be bothered with Bloom. A lot of people think some of my best writing is in science fiction, and they are just as significant as bloody Bloom.

from IHT:
By Michael Cooper
BELLEVILLE, Michigan: Senator John McCain has spent the week trying to tell people that he feels their economic pain. So it was more than a little unhelpful when one of his top economic advisers was quoted as saying that the United States was only in a "mental recession" and that it had become a "nation of whiners."
from MoJo:
Where Credit Is Due: A Timeline of the Mortgage Crisis
By Nomi Prins
A field guide to the loan sharks and politicos who got us into the predatory lending mess
It's interesting how often a certain Arizona Senator's name and the names of prominent advisors to same appear in this mess. One thing for sure, it goes a long way toward validating McCain's self description as knowing nothing about the economy.
