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September 30, 2006

Bunk debunked.

Rolling Stone : The Hopeless Stupidity of 9/11 Conspiracies

... I have two basic gripes with the 9/11 Truth movement. The first is that it gives supporters of Bush an excuse to dismiss critics of this administration. I have no doubt that every time one of those Loose Change dickwads opens his mouth, a Republican somewhere picks up five votes. In fact, if there were any conspiracy here, I'd be far more inclined to believe that this whole movement was cooked up by Karl Rove as a kind of mass cyber-provocation, along the lines of Gordon Liddy hiring hippie peace protesters to piss in the lobbies of hotels where campaign reporters were staying.

Secondly, it's bad enough that people in this country think Tim LaHaye is a prophet and Sean Hannity is an objective newsman. But if large numbers of people in this country can swallow 9/11 conspiracy theory without puking, all hope is lost. ...

Language a bit strong, but he does a good job of demolishing the "Loose Change" nonsense.

September 29, 2006

your tax dollars at work

This Is What Waterboarding Looks Like

As Congress has debated legislation that would set up military tribunals and govern the questioning of suspected terrorists (whom the Bush administration would like to be able to detain indefinitely), at issue has been what interrogation techniques can be employed and whether information obtained during torture can be used against those deemed unlawful enemy combatants. One interrogation practice central to this debate is waterboarding. It's usually described in the media in a matter-of-fact manner. The Washington Post simply referred to waterboarding a few days ago as an interrogation measure that "simulates drowning." But what does waterboarding look like?

Below are photographs taken by Jonah Blank last month at Tuol Sleng Prison in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The prison is now a museum that documents Khymer Rouge atrocities.

[more at link]

Waterboarding can also be seen in the Robin Williams movie Jakob the Liar.

September 22, 2006

home run

The American Prospect

THE SILENT PARTY.

You worthless passel of cowards. They're laughing at you. You know that, right?

The national Democratic Party is no longer worth the cement needed to sink it to the bottom of the sea. For an entire week, it allowed a debate on changing the soul of the country to be conducted intramurally between the Torture Porn and Useful Idiot wings of the Republican Party, the latter best exemplified by John McCain, who keeps fashioning his apparently fathomless ambition into a pair of clown shoes with which he can do the monkey dance across the national stage. They're laughing at him, too.

The New York Times has the right of it here, limning the pathetic gullibility at the heart of the "compromise." There is nothing in this bill that President Thumbscrews can't ignore. There is nothing in this bill that reins in his feckless and dangerous reinterpretation of the powers of his office. There is nothing in this bill that requires him to take it -- or its congressional authors -- seriously. Two weeks ago, John Yoo set down in The New York Times the precise philosophical basis on which the administration will sign this bill and then ignore it. The president will decide what a "lesser breach" of the Geneva Conventions is? How can anyone over the age of five give this president that power? And wait until you see the atrocity that I guarantee you is coming down the tracks concerning the fact that the president committed at least 40 impeachable offenses with regard to illegal wiretapping.

And the Democratic Party was nowhere in this debate. It contributed nothing. On the question of whether or not the United States will reconfigure itself as a nation which tortures its purported enemies and then grants itself absolution through adjectives -- "Aggressive interrogation techniques" -- the Democratic Party had…no opinion. On the issue of allowing a demonstrably incompetent president as many of the de facto powers of a despot that you could wedge into a bill without having the Constitution spontaneously combust in the Archives, well, the Democratic Party was more pissed off at Hugo Chavez.

This was as tactically idiotic as it was morally blind. On the subject of what kind of a nation we are, and to what extent we will live up to the best of our ideals, the Democratic Party was as mute and neutral as a stone. Human rights no longer have a viable political constituency in the United States of America. Be enough of a coward, though, and cable news will fit you for a toga.

However, because I know it is vital for the Democrats to "recapture" the good Christian folks, there's a passage from Scripture that seems apropos: "When Pilate saw that he could prevail nothing, but that rather a tumult was made, he took water, and washed his hands before the multitude, saying, I am innocent of the blood of this just person: see ye to it."

-- Charles P. Pierce

beneath contempt

Insurance Horror Stories - New York Times

By PAUL KRUGMAN

“When Steve and Leslie Shaeffer’s daughter, Selah, was diagnosed at age 4 with a potentially fatal tumor in her jaw, they figured their health insurance would cover the bulk of her treatment costs.” But “shortly after Selah’s medical bills hit $20,000, Blue Cross stopped covering them and eventually canceled her coverage retroactively.”

So begins a recent report in The Los Angeles Times titled “Sick but Insured? Think Again,” which offers a series of similar horror stories, and suggests that these stories represent a growing trend: more and more health insurers are finding ways to yank your insurance when you get sick.

This trend helps explain something that has been puzzling me: why is the health insurance industry growing rapidly, even as it covers fewer Americans?

Between 2000 and 2005, the number of Americans with private health insurance coverage fell by 1 percent. But over the same period, employment at health insurance companies rose a remarkable 32 percent. What are all those extra employees doing?

Now we know at least part of the answer: they’re working harder than ever at identifying people who really need medical care, and ensuring that they don’t get it. In the past, they mainly concentrated on screening out applicants likely to get sick. Now, it seems, they’re also devoting a lot of effort to finding pretexts for revoking insurance after they’ve already granted it. They typically do this by claiming that they weren’t notified about some pre-existing condition, even if the insured wasn’t aware of that condition when he or she bought the policy.

Welcome to the ugly world of American health care economics.

Health care is poised to become America’s largest industry. Employment in manufacturing, which once dominated the economy, has fallen 18 percent since 2000, to 14.2 million. Meanwhile, employment in the private health services industry has risen 16 percent, to 12.6 million. Another 1.3 million people are employed at government hospitals. So we’re quickly approaching the point at which more Americans will be employed delivering health care than are employed producing manufactured goods.

Yet even as health care becomes the core of the American economy, our system of paying for health care remains sick, and is getting sicker.

Because everyone faces some risk of incurring huge medical costs, only the superrich can afford to be without health insurance. Yet private insurers try to refuse coverage to those most likely to need it, and deny payment whenever they can get away with it.

The point isn’t that they’re evil or greedy (although you do wonder how the people who cut off the Schaeffers can look themselves in the mirror). The fact is that cruelty and injustice are the inevitable result of the current rules of the game. Blue Shield of California is a nonprofit insurance provider, yet as a spokesman put it, if his organization doesn’t follow the for-profit practice of selectively covering only the healthiest people, “we will end up with all the high-risk people.”

Now, before you panic about the state of your own coverage, you should know that the horror stories in The Los Angeles Times article all involve individual insurance; if your coverage comes via your employer, you’re reasonably secure against sudden cancellation.

But employment-based insurance is in rapid decline, as employers balk at the cost and more and more companies adopt Wal-Mart-style minimal-benefit policies. That’s why many people are turning to individual insurance — only to find out, in some cases, that they didn’t get what they thought they paid for.

And here’s the thing: it’s all unnecessary.

Every other wealthy nation manages to provide almost all its citizens with guaranteed health insurance, while spending less on health care than we do. And there’s no mystery why: we’re paying the price for pointless, destructive reliance on private insurers. Medicare, which is a universal health insurance program for older Americans, spends less than 2 cents of every dollar on administrative costs, leaving 98 cents to pay for medical care. By contrast, private insurance companies spend only around 80 cents of each dollar in premiums on medical care; much of the remaining 20 cents is spent denying insurance to those who need it.

If we had a universal system — Medicare for everyone — there would be no more horror stories like those reported by The Los Angeles Times. And we’d almost certainly spend less on health care than we do now.

September 21, 2006

full circle, and then some

BBC NEWS | Middle East | Iraq torture 'worse after Saddam'

Torture may be worse now in Iraq than under former leader Saddam Hussein, the UN's chief anti-torture expert says.

Manfred Nowak said the situation in Iraq was "out of control", with abuses being committed by security forces, militia groups and anti-US insurgents.

Bodies found in the Baghdad morgue "often bear signs of severe torture", said the human rights office of the UN Assistance Mission in Iraq in a report.

The wounds confirmed reports given by refugees from Iraq, Mr Nowak said.

He told journalists at a briefing in Geneva that he had yet to visit Iraq, but he was able to base his information on autopsies and interviews with Iraqis in neighbouring Jordan.

"What most people tell you is that the situation as far as torture is concerned now in Iraq is totally out of hand," the Austrian law professor said.

"The situation is so bad many people say it is worse than it has been in the times of Saddam Hussein," he added. ...

September 16, 2006

Heckuva job, Pervie

Telegraph | News | US outraged as Pakistan frees Taliban fighters

Pakistan's credibility as a leading ally in the war on terrorism was called into question last night when it emerged that President Pervez Musharraf's government had authorised the release from jail of thousands of Taliban fighters caught fighting coalition forces in Afghanistan.

Five years after American-led coalition forces overthrew the Taliban during Operation Enduring Freedom, United States officials have been horrified to discover that thousands of foreign fighters detained by Pakistan after fleeing the battleground in Afghanistan have been quietly released and allowed to return to their home countries. ...

September 12, 2006

am I a bad person for finding this funny?

I had yet another MRI today and felt a bit wonky afterward, so I Googled "MRI side effects" and found this:

MRI side effects | The Medical Blog Network

I recently had an MRI, this is the third or fourth, any time I go though the anti-theft devices at stores. The alarm sounds when I have nothing on me. If anyone can help please email me at xxxx@yahoo.com thanks

---------------
Magnetism
Submitted by Dr. Rob Lamberts on Thu, 01/05/2006 - 7:02pm.

The test to see if you have become magnetized is to float in the water on your back and see if your head points to north.

I had one bipolar patient become unipolar in this way. She also became very attractive.

Robert Lamberts, MD

Evans Medical Group

September 11, 2006

hey, I think it's funny

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But, then again, I'm very tired.

You can buy it on a t-shirt here.

A sort of explanation here.

September 10, 2006

cheer up -- they make passable paperweights

The Observer | UK News | Why the iPod is losing its cool

... The iPod, the digital music player beloved of everyone from Coldplay's Chris Martin to President George Bush, is in danger of losing its sheen. Sales are declining at an unprecedented rate. Industry experts talk of a 'backlash' and of the iPod 'wilting away before our eyes'. Most disastrously, Apple's signature pocket device with white earphones may simply have become too common to be cool. ...

Or maybe folks have finally figured out what I've been saying for years: If your music sounds good on a iPod, you're listening to crap.

September 9, 2006

Pie!

What Columbus needs

Steve Abbott
Coordinator, the Poetry Forum at Larry’s; professor, Columbus State Community College

First, Columbus needs a grander vision, one that looks farther into the future and allows it to take on multiple projects at once and see the building of a community as a long-term project that demands insightful and possibly uncomfortable decisions that will take decades to realize. Our political and business leaders need to think on a longer and larger view. For example, for more than 25 years local leaders have avoided confronting the issues of mass transit and urban sprawl. The result has been increasing de-urbanization and stretching of public services over a larger area, increasing costs and straining the capacity of local government to meet community needs. This has occurred at the same time that the city is working to reinvigorate the urban core, with the result that city goals work at cross purposes. While leaders have dithered, available land and federal support for mass transit has disappeared. The growth of local businesses is limited by how much parking is available near them, so mass transit cannot be ignored. Relying on cars for every transport need has imprisoned the young and the old in our suburbs and turned parents into taxi services.

We have to recognize and develop our local school system, from kindergarten to college, as an EDUCATION system, not simply a glorified form of job training. Although job training is important, the function of schools at all levels must be to create informed citizens who understand how to be part of a great experiment in self-government. It’s amazing to observe that people in countries far less democratic than our own are more active in participating in controlling their own lives than our own citizens. Life is about more, the poet Wordsworth noted, than “getting and spending.” It’s time we taught students that THEY are the government, not some group of businesspeople and the politicians they dine with.

Finally, Columbus needs a Public Clown. This individual’s job would be to attend public political, civic and athletic events in the garb of a jester and whose purpose would be to challenge, on behalf of thinking people, the fatuous proclamations of public figures. The Public Clown (PC for short, to note his role in confronting the renewed political correctness of invoking God for every lame purpose, and even a few venal ones) would sound an obnoxious, fartlike horn at the mention of God or “values” in any political speech or after-game sports interview. If the speaker continued, the PC would slap a cream pie in the speaker’s face, and the evening news could devote a brief segment of each newscast to the day’s PC actions in place of the endless self-promotional and cross-promotional “stories” run on local TV.

Steve has been a friend for more than 35 years, and he's absolutely right. But he left out the most important thing Columbus needs to do: de-emphasize football. Because without football, Columbus would have to at long last grow up, look around, and realize what a mess the city's become. Yeah, right. Rah rah.

September 8, 2006

just asking

Is there anything derogatory I could say about Thomas Kincade and his wretched "art" that would prevent Google ads for his kitschy schlock from appearing on this page? Guess not.

Anyway, don't buy it. Anyone with a smidgen of taste will make fun of you behind your back. And I happen to know that Jesus thinks he's a cheap hack.

September 1, 2006

scary picture of the day

gates.jpg