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Thomas Paine

To argue with a person who has renounced the use of reason is like administering medicine to the dead.

Monday, October 5, 2009

The Bankrupt Nation at War

A manual water pump in ChinaImage via Wikipedia
 Iran nuclear enrichment deal in works: Russia
Russia's foreign minister said Monday a deal to help enrich uranium for Iran is in the works but has yet to be finalized, a development that could help resolve the latest concerns over Iran's nuclear program.
( That's much more diplomatic than saying 'Defuse the Bullshit' )

Vitamin D May Help Prevent Falls
http://www.webmd.com/healthy-aging/news/20091002/vitamin-d-may-help-prevent-falls?src=RSS_PUBLIC
Studies Show Taking Vitamin D Supplements May Cut Fall Risk After Age 65, if Dose Is High Enough

Why Medical Malpractice Is Off Limits
A few thousand trial lawyers have a lock on Democrats, who refuse to consider any legal reform.

The American Economy Is Not Coming Back

By Dave Lindorff
President Barack Obama and his economic team are being careful to couch all their talk about economic stimulus programs and bank bailout programs in warnings that the economic downturn is serious and that it will take considerable time to bounce back.

I’m reminded of an experience I had with Chinese medicine when I was living in Shanghai back in 1992. I had come down with a nasty case of the flu while teaching journalism at Fudan University on a Fulbright Scholar program. A Chinese colleague suggested I go to the university clinic. When I told him there wasn’t much point since doctors couldn’t do much for the flu besides recommend fluids and bed rest, he said, “That’s Western doctors. You could go to the Chinese medicine doctors at the clinic. They can help you.”  I figured, what the hell, and we went.  The doctor inquired into the lurid details of my illness—how my bowel movements looked, the color of the mucus in my nose, etc.  He didn’t really examine me physically. Then he prescribed an incredible number of pills and teas and sent me home with a huge bag of stuff, and instructions on the regimen for taking them through the course of each day.  I followed the directions dutifully, and my colleague came by each day to check on my progress.  By the fifth day, when I was still running a fever and feeling terrible, I told him I didn’t think the Chinese medicine was working.  He replied confidently, “Chinese medicine takes a long time to work.”

I laughed at this.  “Sure,” I said. “But the flu only lasts a week or so, and now, when I get better, you’ll say it was the Chinese medicine, right?” 

He smiled and agreed. “Yes. You are right.”...
years in an unreal economy, propped up by easy credit which inflated the value of real estate to incredible levels, and which led people to spend way beyond their means.  Ordinary middle-class working people have been encouraged to buy obscenely oversized homes at 5% down, or even no down payment. They have been lured into buying cars the size of trucks, one for each driving-aged member of the family (in our town, so many high school kids drive to school that the school ran out of parking spaces and the yellow school buses, largely empty on their runs, are referred to by the students as the “shame train,” an embarrassment to be seen riding).  They’ve installed individual back-yard swimming pools, unwilling to share the water with their neighbors in community pools. Boring faux ethnic restaurant franchises of all kinds have befouled the landscape, filling up with families too stressed out to cook, and willing to endure over-salted, over-priced and tasteless cuisine and tacky plastic décor night after night.

Now this is all crashing down.  Property values are in free-fall. Car sales have fallen off a cliff.  Joblessness is soaring (At present, it’s approaching an official rate of 8%, but if the methodology used in 1980, before the Reagan administration changed it to hide the depth of that era’s deep recession, were applied, it would be 17% today, or one in seven workers).

Eventually, the economic slide will hit bottom and begin its slow climb back, as all recessions do, but there will be no return to the days of $500,000 McMansion developments, three-car garages and a new car every two or three years for both parents plus a car for each highschooler. Not only will banks no longer be able to offer such credit to clients. People, having been burned, will not be willing to borrow so much.  Company health care benefits, pension programs or 401(k) matching programs that were slashed during this downturn will not be restored when the economy picks up again.

Over the last 20 years, America has degenerated into a nation of consumers, with 72 percent of Gross Domestic Product (sic) now being accounted for by consumer spending—most of it going for things that are produced overseas and shipped here.

That is not an economic model that is sustainable, and it is a model that has just suffered what is certainly a mortal blow.

High Tech Airships Making a Comeback
US Army is planning to deploy an unmanned airship called the LEMV which can spend up to 3 weeks at an altitude of 20,000 feet (6,100 m) with a 2,500 pound (1,134 kg) payload of surveilance equipment by the middle of 2011.


This Can't Be Happening!

It's Congress: Don't Forget to Wash Your Hands After Hearings
Wed, 09/30/2009 - 14:56 — dlindorff

Some years ago, my wife and I, together with our young daughter, took a circuitous summer train trip through France, Italy, Austria and Germany. The last leg was an overnight express from Berlin that deposited us at the Gare du Nord in Paris just at sunrise. Feeling washed out from the ride, we made our separate ways to the facilities. I was standing at the urinal with a bunch of other men, relieving myself, when I heard this awful groaning coming from a stall. The groaning grew louder and more painful sounding. Some guy was obviously having a terrible time with his bowels.

Read more

Look Out Below! They Call this Season 'Fall' for a Reason
Mon, 09/28/2009 - 14:46 — dlindorff

So now it turns out that the whole Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP) was a flop or more likely a scam. Remember Bush Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson telling us last September that credit markets had locked up, and then, after half of the $750 billion that he extorted out of Congress was handed out to Wall Street firms, new President Barack Obama justifying the spending of the second half of the money because we needed to “get the banks lending again”?

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The Best Health 'Reform' Money Can Buy
Thu, 09/24/2009 - 18:21 — dlindorff

When the White House or Democrats in Congress talk about health care reform, and about wanting to preserve the central role of the private insurance industry in health care, it pays to look at just what it is that they they’re so anxious to preserve.

According to the Health and Human Service’s department’s National Health Expenditures report, private insurers will pay out $854 billion in medical claims for health insurance policyholders this year. That represents about one-third of the nation’s estimated $2.5-trillion medical care bill for this year. But that’s not the whole story. The premiums paid for those claims payments will total $1.2 trillion, which includes $179 billion in “administrative” costs (21% or over $1 out of every $5 dollars spent on health care) and another 150 billion in profits (a tidy 15% return). That is money that was paid out in premiums by individuals and by employers (who every year are shifting more of the cost of health coverage onto employees).

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The New York Times Trashes Single-Payer Health Reform
Mon, 09/21/2009 - 20:48 — dlindorff

In an article in the Sunday New York Times, headlined “Medicare for All? ‘Crazy,’ ‘Socialized’ and Unlikely,”reporter Katherine Q. Seelye did her best to damn the idea of government insurance for all with faint praise.

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Thoughts on Saving an Old Barn
Wed, 09/16/2009 - 20:00 — dlindorff

Corporations have no more place in a democracy than carpenter ants and mold have in the beams of an old barn

For the last two weeks, I’ve been contemplating the mysteries of a post-and-beam barn, trying to work out how to rescue the long-ignored structure from the fate of many barns of its vintage (probably about 150 years old), which is total collapse.

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In Praise of Joe Wilson: What's Wrong with Calling Out Liars in Congress?
Fri, 09/11/2009 - 15:51 — dlindorff

Liberals are acting all righteous and offended that a member of the Republican opposition, Rep. “Joe” Wilson of South Carolina, would deign to besmirch the “dignity of the presidency” by calling out “Liar!” in the middle of President Obama’s address to a joint session of Congress on Wednesday evening.

But what’s wrong with that? Whatever the veracity of Obama’s claim that his proposed health care “reform” would not pay for the health care of illegal immigrants residing in the US (and one can only hope that statement was fatuous, because at a minimum we would certainly want the government to pay for the care of an illegal immigrant in childbirth, or of an illegal immigrant who came down with a contagious disease), and even if Rep. Wilson is a racist bozo who wrongly thinks or wants to imply that Obama's plan would be out there enrolling undocumented workers in the millions at taxpayer expense, why shouldn’t members of Congress call out a president if they think he’s lying to them from the podium?

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Censorship American Style: Hide the US War Dead from the American People
Wed, 09/09/2009 - 18:28 — dlindorff

The Obama administration's freak out, as expressed by Defense Secretary Robert Gates, over the Associated Press Agency's belated circulation of a photograph of a dying US soldier in Afghanistan, Lance Cpl. Joshua Bernard, is the latest of example of the hypocrisy of US authorities who claim to be concerned about the feelings of American military families, while really simply desiring to censor the war's horrors from the eyes of the American people.


Lance Cpl. Josua Bernard, fatally wounded in Afghanistan

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10 Questions: How Many Democrats Does It Take to...
Mon, 09/07/2009 - 20:25 — dlindorff

Question: How many Democrats does it take to change a light bulb?

Answer: In Theory, one. But to hear the Democrats tell it, at least 60, because they claim that even 59 of them aren't enough to keep 40 Republicans from pushing them off the stepladder (although for the prior eight years, far fewer than 60 Republicans always seemed to be able to manage the job).

Question: How may Democrats does it take to kill a good idea?

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'My Fellow Americans...': The Speech President Obama Should Give to Congress Next Week
I stand before you a chastened president. I made a mistake. Two mistakes really. (wild applause from Republican side)

I thought that Congress could do its job and through the deliberative process, produce a health care reform plan that would win broad support across the aisle and among all of you. But I’m afraid that I was wrong. Health care is an enormous industry—maybe the biggest and most powerful industry in the country—and it has far too much power in this capital. Literally thousands of lobbyists, carrying tens of billions of dollars in campaign contributions—have invaded these halls (and my house!) (relieved laughter)and distorted the process, and in the end have stymied reform. (some hissing)....I told the American Medical Association that while single-payer medical plans, where the government is the insurer, might work well in other countries, the idea of government running health care was not part of our American tradition. In fact, it is, and has been since 1965, when President Lyndon Johnson signed into law the Medicare program. Medicare is a classic example of an excellent single-payer program--one of the largest in the world--and polls and surveys show it is enormously popular with older and disabled Americans. Medicare has relieved our parents and grandparents from the fear that they will not get medical care when they stop working, and it has lifted the enormous burden and worry off of younger Americans over how to pay for the care of their elders, and it has done this with enormous efficiency, all while allowing recipients to choose their own doctors and hospitals.



The rabble blogs



  • The fake 2010 Winter Olympics
    October 5, 2009
    | By
    Word of the Rings
    |
    It appears that the "fake" factor is alive and well when it comes to preparing for the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics.




  • johnbon's picture
    October 5, 2009
    | By
    johnbon
    |
    Last Wednesday, the Recession Relief Coalition held a soup line rally outside the Finance Minister's regional office in Toronto demanding reforms to EI and social assistance.




  • Dave.Markland's picture
    October 4, 2009
    | By
    Dave.Markland
    |
    Canadian forces shot two teenagers while a Dutch jet killed a family.




  • Dave.Markland's picture
    October 4, 2009
    | By
    Dave.Markland
    |
    Canada's General Vance again finds himself lashing out at Afghan children who don't show sufficient respect for Canadian forces.




Dear American Neighbours:


Canadians have been watching and reading about your national debate over how to reform your health care system. Normally, of course, we would not attempt to intervene or influence you. But Canadians are shocked that their health-care system -- called Medicare -- has been used to frighten Americans. Some of what has been said about our Medicare system are outright falsehoods -- like the claim that we can't choose our own doctors or that government "bureaucrats" can deny us needed treatment.

We want you to know the truth so that when you make up your mind it will be on the basis of facts, not falsehoods. This page has testimonials from ordinary Canadians, from health professionals, links to websites explaining our Medicare and links to campaigns in your own country fighting for reform.

A new vision for community media

Unbeknownst to most Canadians, cable companies and local community groups have been wrestling for control over community channel assets: the community groups want space on the TV dial and production resources; the cable companies want to call the shots, control the programming, and move their community channels in the direction of commercial television. Approximately $80 million collected annually from Canadians and earmarked for community programming, is at stake.

Meanwhile, the digital revolution is transforming citizens into media producers and every home computer into a virtual television station. In such a radically altered media environment, the question remains: what will community TV be in the 21st century?

Community media 2.0

Community television is a throwback to a time when cable technology was new and the web was not yet born. It allowed anyone to create a program that could be seen on cable. Community television was the YouTube of its day; but things have changed. Downloading and streaming have precipitated a complicated restructuring of the television industry, brought on in part by new viewing habits. Traditional TV now seems to be on the wane.

But there are some things that are harder for the Internet to replace. Most television takes more than one person to make. The Internet cannot replace the studio space, hands-on training and possibilities for in-person collaboration and mentorship that community television allowed for. And it won't replace the sense of place provided by a community production studio; a space where people can gather, work, learn and create together. ( More )

color theory
A heaping helping of eye candy for the sugar-needy. This community is a mecca for photographers eager to share and get feedback on their original work. It's also a great place to go sight-seeing when you’re weary of shades of gray. If you love vivid, evocative photos bathed in rich, atmospheric hues, you're in for a visual re/treat.

truthdig

Celebrating Slaughter: War and Collective Amnesia

By Chris Hedges — War memorials and museums sanitize the savage instruments of death that turn young soldiers into killers, and small villages in Vietnam or Afghanistan or Iraq into hellish bonfires.


By Eugene Robinson — How to proceed in Afghanistan will be among the most difficult and fateful decisions that President Obama ever makes. But he’s the one who has to

War Kills Off Great Reform Movements
By E.J. Dionne — The hawks urging President Obama to escalate the war in Afghanistan have no interest in his domestic policy. The 20th century is a graveyard of good ideas that lost out to war.

Pox Americana: The Real Cost of Bailing Out Wall Street
By Matt Bivens, TomDispatch — In the 20th century, smallpox killed more people than all of that bloody century’s wars combined. It cost $300 million to eradicate the disease. What might have been achieved with the $4 trillion we gave Wall Street?




By Joe Conason — Listening closely to the politicians with the most clout in the debate over health care, it is startling to discover how little they actually seem to know about the subject.





Immigration Is a Win-Win-Win


An independent report commissioned by the U.N. has found that immigration is simply good economics for everyone involved. The world’s billion migrants actually boost employment in their destination communities while improving conditions back home.

Top Psychologists Analyze Themselves
woman with suitcase
Psychologists are people too, and they’re prone to having quirks and neuroses despite their extensive training on the various facets of the human psyche. The British Psychological Society prodded 23 top psychologists to ‘fess up to their own blind spots and inconsistencies on the organization’s blog. Analyze away.


The New York Philharmonic was all set to fly into Cuba and jam, until the Treasury Department decided the patrons footing the bill couldn’t go. That’s pretty insulting to Cuba, considering that the same posse of musicians and rich people was cleared for a trip to North Korea.

Carbon Market Begs to Be Robbed

The U.N. is pioneering a carbon market that would allow rich countries to pay poor countries not to cut down forests. It’s just the kind of feel good program that could save the planet—or make loggers and organized criminals filthy rich.

Drinking Liberally in New Milford

 A Politician That Might Just Do What He Promises?
John Stewart on Healthcare
Score One For The Working Families Party in NYC
A Connection Between Sleep and Alzheimer's?
Senator Chris Dodd on Obama's Afghanistan Strategy
 General Petraeus re-wrote the doctrine for dealing with counterinsurgencies:
The first chapter of Petraeus's manual calls for a "force ratio" of 25 counterinsurgents (here meaning US, allied, and Iraqi soldiers and police) per 1,000 residents. In Baghdad that would require a total force of 120,000. But even with the additional 17,500 US troops President Bush has called for, and a reallocation of Iraqi troops from the North to Baghdad, the total force will be approximately 80,000, a full third less than what the manual prescribes.
I was shooting from the hip and based on my faulty memory, but the numbers I was talking about were sufficiently close to make the point. Thinking in terms of the situation in Afghanistan a quick look at the math tells you what you need to know.

The population of Afghanistan is 28,150,000 according to wikipedia - And the math based on 25 soldiers per thousand residents?

703,750

By Genral Petraeus' own standard that is how many soldiers would be needed to effectively stabelize Afghanistan. Accounting for US, UN and even the Afghanistan soldiers that have been trained up to provide security there are nowhere near enough. And there will never be anywhere near enough without a draft. That is an 800 pound guerilla that nobody will address.

Little wonder why Obama may be suffering from buyer's remorse on campaign statements and early decisions after he was sworn in.


Gaza War  Some Unpublished Photos from Israel's Holocaust in Gaza
Israel to kill in U.S., allied nations 

"Dead Dogmas of the Past" Richard Sale

Sic Semper Tyrannis

My Photo( *We all know how that 'attributed to' business works now, I trust. You have to love Google plugins that will translate from any language into yours ! Good thing : representing oneself eloquently in Persian/Farsi does nothing for 'translations' manufactured out of whole cloth. I couldn't even find Ahmadinejad's quotes without knowing the exact name of the blog cataloguing them. Note the story about Russia being prepared to enrich fuel for Iran : something they have suggested before!   Opit)



 Join us!
Chain for Peace in the World


Sunday, 4. October 2009, 08:35:55

citizen, peace, people, world ...
I always wanted to do something for Peace on Earth, and today I found a way thanks to that blog and the artists I know who already did, for example, a song for peace




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