Tuesday, September 30, 2003

The beginning of the end of the Bush Regime...


David Corn of The Nation broke this story way back in July and the mainstream press is just now picking it up. The Republicans in Congress impeached President Clinton for lying about extramarital sexual relations. This is much more serious; I wonder what they will do about this--a matter of national security.

Does anyone really believe that John Ashcroft will conduct a fair an unbiased investigation? Uhhh...no. If there was ever a time for a special investigator to be appointed this is it.

White House spokesman Scott McClellan spent yesterday telling the White House press corps to let him know if they have any information about "the leak."

This whole thing started because Bush lied about the Iraq-Niger-uranium connection. Ambassador Wilson exposed the lie and the Bush Administration took revenge. Now puppetmaster Karl Rove is probably busy covering his tracks and coming up with more lies that will eventually bring down the Bush Regime.


    Justice Dept. Probes Leak of CIA Agent's Identity

    By Steve Holland

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department said on Tuesday it had opened a criminal investigation into the leak of a CIA official's identity in a case that could revive charges the White House overstated pre-war intelligence on Iraqi weapons.

    Justice Department lawyers notified the White House counsel's office on Monday night that they had begun a probe into "possible unauthorized disclosures concerning the identity of an undercover CIA employee," according to a memo sent to White House staff by counsel Alberto Gonzales.
    (more)

Monday, September 29, 2003

Lawnmower Man sets new record...

7:00 am

7:00 am!!!

Why would someone mow the lawn at 7 o'clock in the morning? I'm not a morning person and I am usually sleeping at that time. This morning I thought that I was having a bad dream but I looked out the window and there was an old man in a white tee shirt pushing a power mower around his yard.

It was bad enough that he mowing, but he kept running over sticks or stones or something. So every few minutes the sound of grinding metal pierced my semiconscious brain.

Sunday, September 28, 2003

Baseball Notes

  • Congratulations to the Tigers on their 43rd win of the season - I saw one of their 119 losses and one of Bonderman's 19 losses.

  • Congratulations to the Cubs and the Red Sox, both made it to post season this year. Wouldn't that be quite a World Series, one of them would have to win.

  • Goodbye Veterans' Stadium! After 33 years the Phillies get a real ballpark--with real grass!



On the Fightin' Phils...

The press is calling for Larry Bowa to be fired. In three seasons at the helm Bowa has not made it to the playoffs, but in his first season the Phils finished two games back of the Braves, last year they got off to a bad start but finished strong, and this year it came down to the final week of the season. I look for Bowa to be back next season and to be there well beyond that.

Jim Thome had an outstanding year. Unless Barry Bonds hits two homeruns today Thome will lead the league in homers. He is also one the best guys in the game.

After a great season last year Pat Burrell struggled all season. The Philly fans who are known for booing Santa Claus even cheered on Burrell throughout the year. Finishing the season just above the Mendoza Line, he has a long off season ahead of him.

I am looking forward to the 2004 season at the new ballpark. My second big league game was at the Vet (the first was at Shea, Mets vs. Expos). Usually once or twice a season my dad and my uncle would take my brother and me to a Phillies game and I was at game six of the 1993 World Series at the Vet. Next year I hope to take my dad to a game at the new park.

Saturday, September 27, 2003

"Vive la revision!"

A preeminent historian takes on Dubya's use of the term "revisionist history." Finally. Of course it is in the American Historical Association's newsletter so nobody but historians will see it.


    This summer the Bush administration thought it had discovered a surefire tactic to discredit critics of its Iraq adventure. President Bush followed the lead of his national security adviser Condoleeza Rice to accuse such critics of practicing "revisionist history." Neither Bush nor Rice offered a definition of this phrase, but their body language and tone of voice appeared to suggest that they wanted listeners to understand "revisionist history" to be a consciously falsified or distorted interpretation of the past to serve partisan or ideological purposes in the present. ...(read more)

Trickle-down economics at work...

Hey, at least the wealthiest Americans have a little more in their bank accounts thanks to the Bush tax cuts.
    Poverty Rate Rises for Second Year in Row
    Fri Sep 26, 7:27 PM ET

    By GENARO C. ARMAS, Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON - Poverty rose for a second straight year in 2002 as 1.7 million more people dropped below the poverty line, according to Census Bureau (news - web sites) estimates released Friday that provided fresh evidence of the struggling economy's effect on Americans' pocketbooks.

    The poverty rate was 12.1 percent last year, an increase from 11.7 percent in 2001 even though the last recession ended in November 2001. That meant nearly 34.6 million people were living in poverty.

    Before the two years of increase, poverty had fallen for nearly a decade to 11.3 percent in 2000, its lowest level in more than 25 years.
    (read more)

Friday, September 26, 2003

More Lies...

  • "He (Saddam Hussein) has not developed any significant capability with respect to weapons of mass destruction. He is unable to project conventional power against his neighbors. So in effect, our policies have strengthened the security of the neighbors of Iraq, and these are policies that we are going to keep in place."
    -- U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell, February 2001


  • "Iraq's weapons of mass destruction are a real and present danger to the people of Iraq, to its neighbors and to the world."
    -- U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell, February 2003


  • "I didn't change my assessment... I did not say he (Iraqi President Saddam Hussein) didn't have weapons of mass destruction."
    -- U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell, September 2003


Thursday, September 25, 2003

Ted Rall on Bush

I love this guy...

Copyright © 2003 Ted Rall
Ted Rall



WHY WE HATE BUSH

It's the Stolen Election, Stupid

by Ted Rall 9/23/2003
NEW YORK--"Have the Democrats totally flipped their lids?" asks David Brooks in The Weekly Standard, quasi-official organ of the Bush Administration. "Because every day some Democrat seems to make a manic or totally over-the-top statement about George Bush, the Republican party, and the state of the nation today."

True, Democrats loathe Dubya with greater intensity than any Republican standard-bearer in modern political history. Even the diabolical Richard Nixon--who, after all, created the EPA, went to China and imposed price controls to stop corporate gouging--rates higher in liberal eyes. "It's mystifying," writes Brooks.

Let me explain.

First but not foremost, Bush's detractors despise him viscerally, as a man. Where working-class populists see him as a smug, effeminate frat boy who wouldn't recognize a hard day's work if it kicked him in his self-satisfied ass, intellectuals see a simian-faced idiot unqualified to mow his own lawn, much less lead the free world. Another group, which includes me, is more patronizing than spiteful. I feel sorry for the dude; he looks so pathetic, so out of his depth, out there under the klieg lights, squinting, searching for nouns and verbs, looking like he's been snatched from his bed and beamed in, and is still half asleep, not sure where he is. ...
(read more)

Bush LIES...


from "A Thousand Points of Plan" by By Dana Milbank, washingtonpost.com:
    BAD EXAMPLE: When Bush was stumping for his "jobs and growth" tax cut proposal in April, he went to Timken Co., a maker of steel bearings in Canton, Ohio. "The greatest strength of the American economy is found right here," Bush said then, predicting the tax cut would bring "more money for investment, more money for growth, and more money for jobs."

    A month later, Bush signed a $350 billion tax cut, less than he wanted but still what he called "a bold package." And Timken? The company announced last week that it is cutting 900 jobs and lowering its earnings forecasts.

    MOVING TARGET: "Acting pursuant to the Constitution and Public Law 107-243 [congressional authorization for military force in Iraq] is consistent with the United States and other countries continuing to take the necessary actions against international terrorists and terrorist organizations, including those nations, organizations, or persons who planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001."

    -- President Bush, March 18 letter to Congress.

    "We've had no evidence that Saddam Hussein was involved with the September 11th."

    -- President Bush, Sept. 17.


"Wha' the hey?"

Molly sums it up pretty well
    Fear and loathing in America
    Molly Ivins - Creators Syndicate

    09.23.03 - AUSTIN, Texas -- Among the more amusing cluckings from the right lately is their appalled discovery that quite a few Americans actually think George W. Bush is a terrible president.

    Robert Novak is quoted as saying in all his 44 years of covering politics, he has never seen anything like the detestation of Bush. Charles Krauthammer managed to write an entire essay on the topic of "Bush haters" in Time magazine, as though he had never before come across such a phenomenon.

    Oh, I stretch memory way back, so far back, all the way back to -- our last president. Almost lost in the mists of time though it is, I not only remember eight years of relentless attacks from Clinton-haters, I also notice they haven't let up yet. Clinton-haters accused the man of murder, rape, drug-running, sexual harassment, financial chicanery and official misconduct, and his wife of even worse. (read more)

Tuesday, September 23, 2003

"The United States Can Do Whatever The Hell It Wants"

    Apart from the invented links between Iraq and Al Qaida, we had the manufactured frenzy about Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction. George Bush the Lesser went to the extent of saying it would be "suicidal" for the U.S. not to attack Iraq. We once again witnessed the paranoia that a starved, bombed, besieged country was about to annihilate almighty America. (Iraq was only the latest in a succession of countries - earlier there was Cuba, Nicaragua, Libya, Grenada, and Panama.) But this time it wasn't just your ordinary brand of friendly neighborhood frenzy. It was Frenzy with a Purpose. It ushered in an old doctrine in a new bottle: the Doctrine of Pre-emptive Strike, a.k.a. The United States Can Do Whatever The Hell It Wants, And That's Official.

    -- Arundhati Roy, May 13, 2003
    from her speech Instant-Mix Imperial Democracy (Buy One, Get One Free)


"The Greatest Love Story of the 20th Century" by Sarah Vowell

Sarah Vowell's essay on Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash was on This American Life on Sunday

*listen* start at 47:40 (10 min)

Sunday, September 21, 2003

Saturday, September 20, 2003

Top 1% could show their PATRIOTISM...

...by insisting that they not receive the Bush targeted tax break for the wealthiest Americans. By doing so they could pay for their war. They should also insist that BushCo accounts for the $1.5B in federal funds that is unaccounted for each moth in Iraq.

Anyhow read this:
    Published on 9/15/2003 in the USA Today
    Tax wealthy to pay for Iraq war
    by Robert B. Reich

    President Bush says he will ask Congress for $ 87 billion in emergency spending for military and intelligence operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. That's on top of the $ 79 billion Congress already has approved to pay for the war and its immediate aftermath. Neither of these figures includes an estimated $ 50 billion more that will be needed to rebuild Iraq, or any additional expenditures we may need for homeland security.

    How can we afford all this?

    This coming fiscal year's federal budget deficit already is approaching $ 500 billion. Add in the extra spending, and it's close to $ 600 billion. And that's just one year's tab. The total over all the years it will take to stabilize both Iraq and Afghanistan and win the war against terrorism is likely to be far higher.
    (read more)

Dept. of Homeland Security is on the job...


From NewsNet5:

    Officials Say Cloistered Nuns Are Security Risks

    CLEVELAND -- Two Cleveland nuns pray day and night, but it may not be enough to keep them from being deported.

    NewsChannel5 reported that the Department of Homeland Security is ordering two Korean sisters out of the country, saying they don't qualify for visas. But the cloistered nuns are hoping a higher power will intervene.

    The women live as cloistered nuns with the order of the Poor Clares of Perpetual Adoration on Euclid Avenue in Cleveland. Inside, the nuns pray for the entire world 24 hours a day. They never leave the church except for when they need medical care, and they have almost no contact with the outside world.

    But on Friday, they spoke with NewsChannel5 behind steel bars in the visitors' parlor. The bars are a symbol to their commitment to God, prayer and their separation from society.

    Sister Mary Cecilia and Sister Mary Catherinia, of Korea, must now deal with the outside world. The Department of Homeland Security said the sisters are security risks. Both Korean sisters may be deported because the U.S. Immigration Service said they don't qualify for religious worker visas.
    (read more)

Friday, September 19, 2003

Arrrr! me mateys...

Avast! It's International Talk Like a Pirate Day.

Conservatism 101

Thanks to Joel for this:
    Right Stuff: conservatism made simple

    By Jim Spencer, Denver Post Columnist

    Lately, Colorado Gov. Bill Owens and Senate President John Andrews have been criticized for trying to force state colleges to hire more conservative professors.

    Guys, I feel your pain.

    This society is awash in such anti-conservative programs as Social Security, Medicare and government-mandated minority rights.

    That's why I propose a new college course called The Right Stuff.

    Today, I offer an outline of this course free of charge. Tomorrow, in keeping with free markets, it'll cost you $1,500.
    (read more)

Thursday, September 18, 2003

Let's get our story straight...

  • “We’ve had no evidence that Saddam Hussein was involved with September the 11th.”
    George "Dubya" Bush, September 17, 2003


  • “It’s not surprising people make that connection.”
    Vice President "Uncle Dick" Cheney, Meet the Press 9/14/2003
    (referring to Iraq and the9/11 attacks)

  • "We learned more and more that there was a relationship between Iraq and al-Qaeda that stretched back through most of the decade of the ’90s"
    Vice President "Uncle Dick" Cheney, Meet the Press 9/14/2003

Gee, where where would people get that idea? Maybe from the Bush administration, which has spent the last year telling us that Iraq was involved. And people are stupid enough to believe them.

A new day...


Yesterday I was obviously a little cranky; thus the post below is to lighten the mood. :-)


400 million-year-old Penis Found!


via Dave Barry's Blog:
    World's Oldest Genitals Found in Scotland
    Wed September 17, 2003 02:02 PM ET
    LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists have discovered fossils of the world's oldest genitals -- belonging to 400 million-year-old insects -- in ancient rocks in Scotland.

    The penis of the ancient harvestmen insects, commonly known as a daddy-long-legs, was two-thirds the length of the body and remarkably similar to the modern-day species, New Scientist magazine said Wednesday.

    "The discovery of the world's oldest genitals proves that little has changed over the last 400 million years -- at least for daddy-long-legs," the magazine said.

    Jason Dunlop and a team of researchers from Humbolt University in Berlin, Germany, who will present their findings at a conference in Aberdeen, also uncovered a long egg-laying organ called an ovipositor from a female.

    "As well as genitals, the fossils have the oldest known arachnid respiratory system, suggesting harvestmen's ancestors had long since crawled out of the sea and learned to breathe," the magazine said.

    Harvestmen arachnids are sometimes mistaken for spiders but they are more closely related to ticks or mites because they do not spin webs.

    The previous oldest penis, which dated back 100 million years and was found in Brazil, belonged an ostracod, an early crustacean related to crabs, shrimps and water fleas.

Wednesday, September 17, 2003

The United States: A Deist Nation?

I know that I have written about this before but it continues to bother me. Every time that some right-wing christian wants to justify prayer in school or public display of the Ten Commandments they argue that the Founding Fathers were christians and that this is a christian country. They point to a mention of of "God" and "Creator" in The Declaration of Independence to support their assertion.

In fact, "God" is preceded by "Nature's" as in the "watchmaker" god of the deists. That is, a god who set down the laws of nature and set things in motion but then was hands-off. This is the god that Jefferson believed in not the God of the Baptists or Catholics or Anglicans.

In his letter of April 1803 to Doctor Benjamin Rush Jefferson states
    I am a Christian, in the only sense [Jesus] wished any one to be; sincerely attached to his doctrines, in preference to all others; ascribing to himself every human excellence; & believing he never claimed any other.
Jefferson also says that he is opposed to "the corruptions of Christianity" and in his attached Syllabus and later in a letter to William Short he disputes the divinity of Jesus.

While Jefferson believed in the teachings of Jesus he was not an admirer of christianity. He called Paul the "first corruptor of the doctrines of Jesus" and believed that Jesus was "a great Reformer of the Hebrew code of religion" and places him in a line of philosophers such as Pythagoras, Socrates, Epicurus, Cicero, Epictetus, Seneca, Antoninus.

Jerry Falwell would have you believe that Jefferson, Washington, Franklin and others were christians but it is just not true. Jefferson's version of christianity would be closer to what Jesus taught than the version of "christianity" that Falwell teaches. Jesus taught forgiveness, philanthropy, peace, and kindness not hate and "with us or with the terrorists."

So the next time someone from the "christian" right tells you that the United States is a christian country founded by christians please point them to Jefferson's letters to Rush and Short. They can read Jefferson's own words and see that he says christianity "resulted from artificial systems, invented by ultra-Christian sects, unauthorized by a single word ever uttered by [Jesus]." Those artificial systems include Jesus' miraculous powers, his deification, the Trinity, original sin, etc.

The Word...

For my right-wing evengelical christian friends, here it is in a form that you can understand:

The Gospel of Supply Side Jesus

Tuesday, September 16, 2003

$87,000,000,000.00

That is one million dollars times 87,000.

From The Boston Globe:
    A better use for our $87b

    By Jeffrey D. Sachs, 9/13/2003

    THE WORLD IS out of kilter when President Bush asks for $87 billion for Iraq and only $200 million for the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. The administration displays profound confusion regarding national security as well as moral purpose. It is ready to pump tens of billions of dollars into a middle-income oil-rich country of 24 million people, while utterly neglecting 500 million impoverished Africans, 10 million of whom will actually die this year of extreme poverty, too poor to buys the drugs, bed nets, fertilizers, tube wells, and other basic contrivances that could keep them alive. (read more)

Ashcroft is a "nutjob"

This man is the chief law enforcement officer in the United States...

...and a parttime gospel singer/songwriter.

Monday, September 15, 2003

Tax Cut for the Wealthy

From "Meet the Press" Sunday, September, 14, 2003:
    MR. RUSSERT: If you froze the tax cut for the top 1 percent of Americans, it would generate enough money to pay for the $87 billion for the war, if you did it for just one year. Would you consider that?

    VICE PRES. CHENEY: I think it'd be a mistake, because you can't look at that without considering what its impact would be on the economy. An awful lot of the returns in that top bracket are small businesses, and they provide an awful lot of the job growth in this economy. If you're going to go increase taxes on small businesses, you're going to slow down the extent to which we're able to reduce unemployment. So I think it's a serious mistake; the wrong time to raise taxes.

If they keep saying it they think that people will believe them. How many small business owners are in the top one percent? Not many. How many hairdressers do you know that are multi-millionaires? Carpenters? Plumbers? Daycare owners? The vast majority of American small businesses are these types of jobs, and they won't benefit from the Bush tax cuts.

Sunday, September 14, 2003

Man in Black

    Well, you wonder why I always dress in black,
    Why you never see bright colors on my back,
    And why does my appearance seem to have a somber tone.
    Well, there's a reason for the things that I have on.

    I wear the black for the poor and the beaten down,
    Livin' in the hopeless, hungry side of town,
    I wear it for the prisoner who has long paid for his crime,
    But is there because he's a victim of the times.


    -- Johnny Cash, "Man in Black"


Friday, September 12, 2003

Some thoughts and reflections...

    Peace with all the world is my sincere wish. I am sure it is our true policy, and am persuaded it is the ardent desire of the government.
    -- George Washington


I spent much of yesterday at home, alone. When I got up I watched a few minutes of the news and then turned off the radio and television. I tried to get some work done, but then I remembered what I was doing two years ago.

It was a beautiful September morning, a bright blue sky, I got a cup of coffee and I sat down at my computer. The first thing I saw was an AP headline about the World Trade Center being on fire, so I turned on the television. There it was, the now familiar picture of the twin towers with smoke billowing from them.

I spent that day in this room watching and feeling helpless. Like a lot of people, I wanted to do something but what could we do? When I was a kid and the river started to rise we would put on our boots and walk to help the men fill sandbags to protect our neighborhood. But, this was hundreds of miles away and yet right there in my living room. And looking back now I think that may have been the beginning of my current bout of depression.

The horror of seeing first people jumping to their deaths and then both buildings collapse sticks with me. Even more frightening than seeing the collapse were the shots of people on the street watching. The looks on their faces as the first tower started to fall and their screams were just terrible. As were the scenes of people running up the street being pursued by a giant cloud of dust and debris.

In the days that followed there were services on campus and at local churches. I wanted to go but I could not get myself to leave my home. I am not a religious person, and coming from a Congregationalist background, I have always viewed the church more as a community center than a worship center. Sure there was a service every Sunday morning but the things that I remember about my little country church are the picnics and the bloodmobiles and packing boxes of food for the elderly, community-centered more than faith-centered events.

Those of us whose political leanings skew to the left are ridiculed by our flag-waving rightist counterparts. We are accused of treason, of blaming America for everything and being unpatriotic; but in fact we love this country as much as anyone. I feel the same way about patriotism as I do about religion: that actions speak louder than words. You don't need to make a big show of your patriotism (or religion), just participate and do your civic duties and protect the rights of everyone. Putting a U.S. flag sticker on the back of your SUV shows that you are just as much of a hypocrite as someone who prays in public.

A few years ago I spent some time in France. I remember seeing machine gun armed patrols in the train stations and airports. At the time I thought how scary it must be to live in a society where you have to worry about such things. On that same stay I picked up the Herald Tribune and saw that a former professional wrestler had been elected Governor of Minnesota.

So here we are two years after our country was attacked. We are back to mindless "reality" shows and rappers are rapping about about their platinum jewelry and the size of the rims on their Lincoln Navigators. Meanwhile, our leaders are fighting a war that they planned years ago in order to secure a source of oil. We say that the rule of law should prevail throughout the world and human rights should be respected, yet our government refuses to join in the International Criminal Court, we are holding hundreds of prisoners at Camp X-Ray at Guantanamo Bay, and we are holding American citizens in a military brig without charges, without due process, and without access to legal counsel.

Instead of waving a flag and yelling "let's roll" or dumping French wine and smashing Dixie Chicks CDs, people should take a closer look at what we are doing around the world and here at home. This land was colonized by people who fled from state imposed religion yet we are constantly told that this is a christian country. The founding fathers crafted a Constitution that allowed for rule by the majority but protected the rights of the minority. They recognized that human beings have basic rights that are not given to us by a government but rather they are inherent. Now we have an adminstration in power that loves secrecy. They think that they know best and anyone that questions them is a traitor.

I think that the September 11th attacks made me more aware of the advantages and disadvantages of living in a free society. Also that if we value our freedom we cannot let anyone one take it away, not terrorists and not our federal government. Now that I have rambled and gone off in too many directions I'll quit. So let me know what you think, tell me why I am stupid and naïve.

Thursday, September 11, 2003

Tuesday, September 09, 2003

A Busy Day at the Feeder

It has been an extremely busy day at the bird feeder. Normally the finches frequent it, an occasional sparrow stops by, and the cardinals pick up what the others drop. Here is what I have seen at my window so far today:

In addition there are the other birds that don't come to the feeder:
If you could play all of those songs at once you would have an idea of what it sounds like around here during the day. At night it is just as noisy. To get an idea of what it sounds like here at night you should turn up the sound as high as you can and click here. I prefer the bird songs to the cicadas, the birds are better looking also.

Monday, September 08, 2003

War on Terror

How are we doing?
  • Osama bin Laden - alive and free
  • Saddam Hussein - alive and free
  • Al Qaeda - thriving
  • Mulluh Omar - alive and free
  • Taliban - re-emerging
  • WMD - nope
  • Jose Padilla - American citizen, still being held as "enemy combatant," incommunicado and without charge
  • 287 US troops killed in Iraq
  • 1,450 US troops wounded in Iraq



TERROR! Be Afraid!

While Dubya and Rummie fight their war in Iraq, Ashcroft continues to press for expansion of the UPA to make it easier for him to spy on Americans here on the homefront.
    "The accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same hands ... may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny."

    -- James Madison, Federalist No. 47


Read this:

    Fierce Fight Over Secrecy, Scope of Law

    Amid Rights Debate, Law Cloaks Data on Its Impact

    By Amy Goldstein
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Monday, September 8, 2003; Page A01


    In Seattle, the public library printed 3,000 bookmarks to alert patrons that the FBI could, in the name of national security, seek permission from a secret federal court to inspect their reading and computer records -- and prohibit librarians from revealing that a search had taken place.

    In suburban Boston, a state legislator was stunned to discover last spring that her bank had blocked a $300 wire transfer because she is married to a naturalized U.S. citizen named Nasir Khan.

    And in Hillsboro, Ore., Police Chief Ron Louie has ordered his officers to refuse to assist any federal terrorism investigations that his department believes violate state law or constitutional rights.

    (read more)

Sunday, September 07, 2003

Protect overtime pay:

Tell your senators to block the Bush overtime take away.

Michigan J. Frog

I saw one of my favorite animated shorts was on this morning. It is called "One Froggy Evening" and stars Michigan J Frog as a singing and dancing frog.

An out-of-luck man rescues the frog from a building that is being demolished and he thinks that the frog will make him rich. The man decides to put on a show but he discovers that the frog only performs when nobody else is around.


Friday, September 05, 2003

Quote for Today:

    You teach a child to read, and he or her will be able to pass a literacy test.

    - George W. "The Education President" Bush,
    Newsweek, March 5, 2001

Poem of the Day:

I Took a Piece of Plastic Clay
by: Author Unknown

I took a piece of plastic clay
And idly fashioned it one day-
And as my fingers pressed it, still
It moved and yielded to my will.


I came again when days were past
The bit of clay was hard at last.
The form I gave it, still it bore,
And I could change that form no more!


I took a piece of living clay,
And gently fashioned it day by day,
And molded with my power and art
A young child's soft and yielding heart.


I came again when years were gone:
It was a man I looked upon.
He still that early impress bore,
And I could fashion it never more.



Spoken on the Senate floor today by Senator Robert Byrd (D-WV) while arguing for his amendment to a funding bill for the "no child left behind" program.

Thursday, September 04, 2003

Quote of the Day


    "I have a theory, and it's an accurate one, that most people who go to prison are losers"
    -- Rep. Bill Janklow (R-SD), June 2003


Oil = Influence

While Americans were trapped in airports and pulling bodies from rubble in the days following September 11, 2001, BushCo approved a getaway flight for Saudis in the US. Apparently on September 13, 2001, a plane made stops in at least ten American cities to pick up Saudis and take them out of the country. All of this while US airspace was "closed."

See: Bin Laden family's US exit 'approved' by BILL ANDREWS

Right WingNut Judicial Nominee Gives Up

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Miguel Estrada, after two years of waiting for U.S. Senate confirmation, has decided to withdraw from nomination to a federal appeals court, a source close to the Washington attorney said on Thursday. (more)

Wednesday, September 03, 2003

Bush: Working Hard for Big Business

In case you missed Federal Register Volume 68, Number 61, the Bush Administration is making it easier for big business to avoid paying overtime.1

Bu$hCo even shows employers how to get more workers to qualify for "exemption from minimum wage and overtime pay for executive, administrative, professional, outside sales and computer employees." It goes so far as to give big business four options when employees work more than 40 hours per week and explains that "employers affected by the proposed rule would be expected to choose the most cost-effective compensation adjustment method." (pg 15576)

Of course I fall under one of the exemptions (old rules and new), not that I am concerned about it for myself, but a woman who is a department manager for a retail store with two other employees in her department qualifies for the exemption.2 Under the new rules anyone who makes at least $425 a week and has some kind of supervisory duty or a "skill" is exempt.

    1see The Grinch that stole Labor Day by Greg Palast

    2 Example: If the woman currently earns $10.65/hour over a 40 hour work week she would make $426 (and maybe get 5 vacation days after a year, but that's another story). Under the new 'white collar' exemptions she qualifies as exempt and is not entitled to overtime pay. Or, since she would complain about that, they could give her a new title and make her salaried at, say $450/wk and require that she works six eight-hour days per week.


*** UPDATE ***
Protect Overtime Pay: Tell Your Senators to Block the Bush Overtime Take Away

September Baseball

When Major League Baseball instituted a realignment from two to three divisions in each league I was totally against it. The main reason was the wild card. For those of you who are not sports fans (you have probably already stopped reading but anyhow) the wild card spot in the playoffs goes to the team in each league with the best record but did not win its own division.

I thought that this would degrade the World Series because a team that did not even win its own division could win the World Series. Would baseball become like hockey and basketball where they play a whole season to eliminate a few teams? Okay, I overreacted.

The Phillies are currently atop the National League Wild Card standings. At 13 games behind Atlanta there is realistically no hope for the Phils to win the Eastern Division but here it is after Labor Day and and the season is still exciting, not only for Philly fans but there are seven teams within five games in the National League.

Quote of the Day:

      "Like most Americans, I hate paying taxes, but I love my roads, my garbage pick-up, and my federal prison system. Public Education? Eh, I home school."
      -Stephen Colbert. The Daily Show


Tuesday, September 02, 2003

Quote of the Day:


    If you have a particular faith or religion, that is good. But you can survive without it.
    - Dalai Lama

Army of One


Monday, September 01, 2003

Celebrate Labor Day...

...in Bush's America

UPA at work

Read this from The Palestine Chronicle

    Secret Saudi History

      "I smiled at my own joke, but the clerk's smile disappeared. 'Ask again,' he hissed, 'and I will call security to remove you from the building and have you barred as a security risk ..'"

    By Sarah Whalen, Professor at Loyola University School of Law

    "I'm sorry," the clerk at the U.S. National Archives says: "You can't see the Saudi Arabian documents." I'm surprised. All the National Archive's documents are already reviewed and then declassified or removed. In theory, whatever's there is no longer secret.

    Until 9/11.

    "It's part of the Patriot Act," the clerk averred, referring to Public Law 107-56, the hastily-passed legislation entitled, "Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001."

    (read more)