Want to convey your political message on the cheap?

The inventive minds at freeway blogger have one solution: With some ordinary cardboard (taken from big box retailers' dumpsters, of course), some poster paint, and a bungee cord, you too can reach a captive audience of thousands in the span of a few minutes. In the age of corporately owned…

Continue ReadingWant to convey your political message on the cheap?

Bush tells us he is “winning the war on terrorism.” I wonder what he considers losing.

Just when we thought the chaos in Iraq was about as bad as it could be, darned if the violence in Baghdad hasn't managed to increase by 40% in just the past week: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060720/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq

Continue ReadingBush tells us he is “winning the war on terrorism.” I wonder what he considers losing.

The magnitude and the music make war AOK

My government’s violent occupation of Iraq has not flustered me nearly as much as the nonchalance of half of America.  Why are so many Americans utterly complacent about the wretched and rampant killing going on in our names?  Is it possible that we have become confused and seduced by the magnitude of the killings and by the music?  Allow me to explain.

First, the magnitude.  Stalin’s well-cited quote comes to mind: “The death of one man is a tragedy, the death of millions is a statistic.”  Perhaps the immoral nature of Bush’s aggression would be clearer had Bush caused the death of only one man.  Imagine this hypothetical: 

President Bush looks out the window of the oval office and sees a man wearing a backpack walking down the sidewalk.  In a dry-drunkish paranoid moment, Bush tells his security officers that the man walking down the sidewalk has nuclear weapons grade aluminum tubes in his backpack and orders his guards to capture “that terrorist.”  While capturing the man with the backpack (it turns out to be empty), a U.S soldier is accidentally shot by friendly fire of a fellow soldier.

It is later disclosed that, one minute before giving his order to capture the man, a former ambassador had advised Bush the man wearing the backpack had just been searched and that he was not carrying anything dangerous.  Then it came out that Bush and his highest advisers had intentionally blown the cover of a CIA agent to discredit the former

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Continue ReadingThe magnitude and the music make war AOK

ABC and CBS ignore Wilson-Plame lawsuit

MediaMatters reports that these two major news networks failed to report that ex-CIA officer Valerie Plame had filed a lawsuit against Dick Cheney, Scotter Libby and Karl Rove.  Plame's lawsuit accuses the threesome of leaking her identity as a CIA operative, thus ending her career.  This leak of Plame's career…

Continue ReadingABC and CBS ignore Wilson-Plame lawsuit