CONTENTS / BLOG (16), Just World Campaign

• "Mosul election staff quit en masse," and other newslinks.

Iraq / Irak flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Information Clearing House (An alternative independent non-commercial source for news, information and insight), e-mailed January 1, 2005
   WORLDWIDE:
   IRAQ: Mosul election staff quit en masse: The entire staff of the independent electoral commission in the Iraqi northern city of Mosul, amounting to about 700 employees, have resigned amid growing violence in the country. http://english. aljazeera.net/ NR/exeres/74 DCC874-441 A-41DC-9598- 14D149909 BFD.htm , 15:19 Makka Time, 12:19 GMT, Friday 31 December 2004; http://snipurl.com/bp5f
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This series begins at: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/cont.htm 
   Iraqi National Guardsman Killed Near Falluja: An Iraqi National Guardsman was found shot dead near Falluja Friday with a note on his body warning others against working with U.S.-led forces. - http:// snipurl. com/bp5d
   Humvees linked to 1 in 5 U.S. deaths in Iraq: Throughout the 21-month war, no other piece of military materiel has been associated with so many U.S. fatalities. - http://shns.abc15.com/shns/story.cfm?pk=HUMVEES-12-30-04&cat=II , http:// snipurl. com/bp5g
   Violence Against Troops in Iraq Takes Toll: The number of attacks on U.S. and allied troops grew from an estimated 1,400 attacks in September to 1,600 in October and 1,950 in November. - http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,1280,-4702255,00.html , http:// snipurl. com/bp5h
   Profits Clothed in Sadness: A Southern town benefits by supplying the troops in Iraq, but for many with loved ones at risk, the work has its downside. http://fairuse.1accesshost.com/news2/latimes477.html
   Faces of the fallen: These photographs are grouped in solemn rows without statistics to show the extent of U.S. military losses (in Iraq) in one view. - http://www.duckdaotsu.org/valor.html
   Cartoon of the week: http://cristianfleming.org/index.php?d=12/30/04
   Dead Soldier's Dad Finds No Enemy in Iraq: Fernando Suarez del Solar is a busy man. He is busy opening boxes, counting pills, counting bandages; he is busy checking everything in the boxes that come addressed to him from all over the United States. - http://www.ipsnews.net/new_nota.asp?idnews=26852
   Time to leave Iraq: The Bush administration's New Year's resolution should be to pull out of Iraq. Already, the United States has lost 1,300 soldiers, and 10,000 U.S. soldiers have been wounded, at a rate now of almost 1,000 a month. - http://www.madison.com/wsj/opinion/others/index.php?ntid=22647&ntpid=1 , http://snipurl.com/bp5k
   Paul Craig Roberts: Forget Torture; It's the Sex That Matters: What defines conduct unbecoming an officer? - http://www.counterpunch.com/roberts12302004.html
   'Civilization' vs. 'Barbarism': An Interview with Noam Chomsky: "It's not correct that the media haven't reported the war crimes. They often report them and celebrate them. Take for example the invasion of Fallujah.." - http://207.44.245.159/article7580.htm
   Not a good way to start a democracy: Serious questions must be asked about US influence in Ukraine. - http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1381165,00.html , http://snipurl.com/bowc .
   In case you missed it: Dick Cheney's Song of America: The Plan is for the United States to rule the world. The overt theme is unilateralism, but it is ultimately a story of domination. It calls for the United States to maintain its overwhelming military superiority and prevent new rivals from rising up to challenge it on the world stage. It calls for dominion over friends and enemies alike. It says not that the United States must be more powerful, or most powerful, but that it must be absolutely powerful. - http://207.44.245.159/article1544.htm
   In case you missed it: After Iraq it is Venezuela: While the whole world is focused on America and the Euro zone for the super power challenges, both these powers are looking small when you combine the powers of the new coalition Putin is building with India, China, Russia and Brazil. Add to that Venezuelan oil that supplies America a substantial crude oil, and now you have the actual scenario of confrontation. - http://www.indiadaily.com/editorial/11-27b-04.asp
   UN asks Israel to stop violating Lebanese airspace: Israeli warplanes flew over large parts of Lebanon on Thursday, the Lebanese Army said, prompting the United Nations to again urge the Jewish state to stop sending its military aircraft over this Arab country in breach of the UN-drawn Lebanese-Israeli border. - http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1104376739216 ; http://snipurl.com/bp5n .
   Israel in 'Very Difficult Position' Over Chinese Drone Repair, Diplomat Says: Israel is in a "very difficult position" over an American demand that Israel not return Harpy drones to China that were sent here for servicing, an Israeli diplomat said on Thursday following the visit of the Chinese deputy prime minister here this week. - www.cnsnews.com/ ViewForeignBureaus. asp?Page=%5CForeign Bureaus%5Carchive%5C200412% 5CFOR20041230a.html ; http://snipurl.com/bp5o .
   Forgers 'tried to rewrite biblical history': Hundreds of biblical artefacts in museums all over the world could be fakes, it has emerged after Israeli investigators uncovered what they claim is a sophisticated forgery ring. - http://www.guardian.co.uk/religion/Story/0,2763,1381272,00.html .
   Did FBI Use Pentagon Analyst to 'Sting' AIPAC? Jewish newspapers are reporting the FBI used the Pentagon's top Iran analyst in a "sting operation" to pass "foreign policy strategic information to two AIPAC officials." - http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4§ion=0&article=56830&d=31&m=12&y=2004 , http://snipurl.com/bp5p .
   Israeli hubris vs. the US: The latest spy tale in Washington, DC, involving Larry Franklin, an intelligence analyst at the Defense Department, and some of Israel's most important lobbyists in America, is becoming deeper by the week. - http://metimes.com/articles/normal.php?StoryID=20041226-040954-7609r .
   The Bush administration is shameless.: $13.6 billion in emergency funding to Florida in response to the four hurricanes and 100 people dead. $35 Million for the victims of the tsunami and over 100,000 dead. - http://www.answercoalition.org/ .
   The stingy U.S./An appalling performance: As the Bush administration is wont to say, actions speak louder than words, and America's actions in recent days have painted the United States as a rich, self-absorbed and uncaring nation that had to be shamed into anything approaching appropriate concern about this catastrophe. - http://www.startribune.com/stories/561/5160305.html
   Private US donations pour in: Americans have given at least $21.5 million to emergency funds for Asian tsunami disaster victims while the Bush administration grapples with accusations that it has been stingy. - http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/E00EB28F-762B-4D0C-992C-E060DA4FA9DF.htm , http://snipurl.com/bp5r
   Global analysts dispute perceived US generosity: On a per capita basis and as a percentage of the nation's wealth, America's emergency relief in Asia and development aid to poor countries actually ranks at the bottom of the list of developed nations, - http://www.boston.com/news/world/asia/articles/2004/12/31/global_analysts_dispute_perceived_us_generosity?mode=PF ; http://snipurl.com/bp5s .
   UK: $36m in 24 hours: Shocked by the devastation caused by the tsunami, Britons responded yesterday with unprecedented generosity to the appeal for donations. - http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia/story.jsp?story=597025
   Canada increases tsunami aid to $40 million. - http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/print/CTVNews/1104355151375_99764351/?hub=Canada&subhub=PrintStory ; http://snipurl.com/bp5t .
   China Increases Tsunami Aid Sharply to $63 Million: At a little over $63 million, Beijing is now the third biggest monetary donor behind Britain and Sweden. The United States has made an initial pledge of $35 million. - http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=7213090 , http://snipurl.com/bp5u .
   Tsunami: How to help: Not sure how to help, but there are people who know what to do and are directly on the scene. These people can make your dollars work in ways most of us have never had to think about. - http://bobharris.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=314&Itemid=2 , http://snipurl.com/bp5v .
   Christian fundamentalist organizations appear to be suffering from a compassion deficit: Organizations which are amazingly quick to organize to fight against same-sex marriage, a woman's right to choose, and embryonic stem cell research are missing in action when it comes to responding to the disaster in southern Asia. None of their web sites are actively soliciting aid for the victims of the earthquake/tsunami. - http://www.workingforchange.com/printitem.cfm?itemid=18309 . [CHECK if this is genuine. Anyway, such bodies as Austcare and Freedom From Hunger in Australia, for example, are actually combined Churches' bodies.]
   Thanks God for the tsunami and 2,000 dead Swedes!!!: Westboro Baptist Church leaders have released the following statement regarding the tsunamis which hit Southeast Asia earlier in the week. - http://rawstory.rawprint.com/1204/westboro_tsunami_statement_1230.php , http://snipurl.com/bp5w . [CHECK if this is genuine: The leaflet showed a URL of an anti-religion group.]
   Intimidation, Politics and Drug Trade Cripple U.S. Medicine: While the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is supposed to safeguard the nation's medical products, documentation, interviews and recent drug debacles depict a brutally different reality, with the Vioxx scandal alone estimated to have resulted in 30,000-55,000 U.S. deaths. - http://ipsnews.net/interna.asp?idnews=26874
   Eli Lilly Said to Know of Prozac Risks: A British medical journal said Friday that it had given U.S. regulators confidential drug company documents suggesting a link between the popular anti-depressant Prozac and a heightened risk of suicide attempts and violence. - http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/B/BRITAIN_PROZAC?SITE=VTBUR&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT ; http://snipurl.com/bp5z .
   Thomas tops on high court in acceptance of lavish gifts: Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has accepted tens of thousands of dollars worth of gifts since joining the Supreme Court, from $1,200 worth of tires to valuable historical items and a $5,000 personal check to help pay a relative's education expenses. - http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/nation/2972139 ,
   In case you mised it: Noam Choamsky: Preventive War 'The Supreme Crime': Iraq: The invasion that will live in infamy. - http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4416.htm
   Empty Pew: Why W. Doesn't Go To Church: What most--including many of the president's fiercest supporters--don't know, is that Bush doesn't go to church. - http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?pt=vKO1twmWG2Uvnyi2qoWQfW%3D%3D , http://snipurl.com/b4q0 .
   QUOTATIONS: "Our only political party has two right wings, one called Republican, the other Democratic. But Henry Adams figured all that out back in the 1890s. 'We have a single system,' he wrote, and 'in that system the only question is the price at which the proletariat is to be bought and sold, the bread and circuses'." - Gore Vidal - The Decline and Fall of the American Empire
   " The liberty of a democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to the point where it becomes stronger than the democratic state itself. That in its essence is fascism - ownership of government by an individual, by a group or any controlling private power. " - President Franklin Delano Roosevelt
   "We stand for the maintenance of private property... We shall protect free enterprise as the most expedient, or rather the sole possible economic order." - Adolph Hitler
   "If a baseball player slides into home plate and, right before the umpire rules if he is safe or out, the player says to the umpire - 'Here is $1,000.' What would we call that? We would call that a bribe. If a lawyer was arguing a case before a judge and said, 'Your honor before you decide on the guilt or innocence of my client, here is $1,000.' What would we call that? We would call that a bribe. "But if an industry lobbyist walks into the office of a key legislator and hands her or him a check for $1,000, we call that a campaign contribution. We should call it a bribe." - Janice Fine - Dollars and Sense magazine.
   This web site represents the effort of one person. I need your help to offset the costs associated with site hosting and bandwidth usage. If you find this site informative please help by clicking here http://www. information clearinghouse. info/support.htm
   WEB SITE: http://www. information clearinghouse. info . To help support ICH using PayPal click here. http://tinyurl.com/v1l8 . Or if you prefer to send a check/cheque or money order, Tom, PO Box 365 Imperial Beach, CA 91933. USA. [Jan 1, 2005]

• "A 'Long War' Against Whom?" and other newslinks.


   Information Clearing House (An alternative independent non-commercial source for news, information and insight), e-mailed January 2, 2005
   WORLDWIDE: A 'Long War' Against Whom? By Robert Parry - For the next generation or more, it appears the American people will be asked to sacrifice their children, their tax dollars and possibly the remnants of their democracy to what a top U.S. commander now candidly calls the "Long War." - http://207.44. 245.159/article 7582.htm
   Seven killed in Iraqi suicide attack: A suicide car bomber has killed seven people, five of them Iraqi National Guards. - http://snipurl .com/bpl3
   Zarqawi group says killed five Iraqi National Guard: Militants from a group led by Al Qaeda ally Abu Musab al-Zarqawi said they had killed five men and warned those who work with the US-backed government they faced the same fate. - http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticle.asp?xfile=data/focusoniraq/2005/January/focusoniraq_January8.xml§ion=focusoniraq http://snipurl.com/bpl4
   Police find beheaded bodies: IRAQI police found beheaded two bodies in western Baghdad today along with a note that said they were truck drivers killed because they were working with the US military. - http://www.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,4057,11833149%255E401,00.html , http://snipurl.com/bpl5 .
   Marine Killed in Al Anbar (Fallujah) During Operations: One Marine assigned to the I Marine Expeditionary Force was killed in action Friday, Dec. 31 while conducting security and stabilization operations in the Al Anbar Province. - http://www.cjtf7.com/media-information/January/050101c.htm
   Clashes around Baghdad: Fighting between US forces and armed groups has continued in and around the Iraqi capital, intensifying on the road leading to Baghdad airport. - http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/2969BFDD-CC68-4B9C-BDF5-EFF6075E1B71.htm , http://snipurl.com/bpl8
   Post-9/11 conflicts send 1 million to battle zones: Nearly 1 million members of the U.S. armed forces have been deployed to Iraq, Afghanistan and other danger zones since the September 11 terror attacks, and almost a third of them have been sent more than once, figures released by the Pentagon show. - http://www.washingtontimes.com/functions/print.php?StoryID=20041230-111258-1607r , http://snipurl.com/bplh
   Goodbye to 2004, another year of living stupidly: Never in the memory of the living generation have the errors, falsifications and unreason of policy come in such rapid and overwhelming succession that each buries its predecessor before it's even partially absorbed, much less understood. - http://www.sacbee.com/content/opinion/story/11889222p-12776129c.html , http://snipurl.com/5mw9 .
   US Applying 'Israeli Tactics' in Felluce : It has recently been discovered that US and Iraqi forces have been using a method of demolishing houses in Felluce (Fallujah) that Israelis have also used on Palestinian homes. - http://www.zaman.com/?bl=international&alt=&trh=20041231&hn=15180 , http://snipurl.com/bpl9
   Bungled Israeli killing revealed : Papers released at the National Archives in London have revealed the details of a political murder by Israeli secret services 30 years ago. - http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4138021.stm
   Daniel Pipes Favors Concentration Camps: That the Revisionist-Zionist extremist Daniel Pipes has fond visions of rounding up Muslim Americans and putting them in concentration camps isn't a big surprise. That a mainstream American newspaper would publish this David-Dukeian evil is. Of course, this is also a man that President Bush appointed to a temporary vacancy at the United States Institute of Peace. - http://207.44.245.159/article7581.htm
   Wag the dog: Official says Sharon weighed war during probe : Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon considered launching a war in the Middle East to divert attention from a police investigation into allegations that he accepted bribes, an Israeli newspaper reported. - http://www.worldtribune.com/worldtribune/breaking_4.html
   A View from Syria on the Palestinian Right to Return: "What's the use of having international law on our side when it's not upheld by the ruling powers?" - http://www.counterpunch.com/hassen12312004.html
   U.S. Aid To Israel Must Become Conditional. - http://www.theday.com/eng/web/news/re.aspx?re=47857031-4A1D-4EB6-BB31-DA64AF76FCBA , http://snipurl.com/bplb
   Iraq Vs. Tsunami: The Duplicity Of The Media : This is where the western press really excels: in the celebratory atmosphere of human catastrophe. Their penchant for misery is only surpassed by their appetite for profits. Where was this "free press" in Iraq when the death toll was skyrocketing towards 100,000? - http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=21&ItemID=6941 , http://snipurl.com/bplc
   US military aid role a first in Indonesia: In a groundbreaking piece of diplomacy, US soldiers will for the first time touch down on Indonesian soil in an operational capacity. - http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/4A0A0C42-C6C4-42A8-8B5D-5BAC00C99BA2.htm , http://snipurl.com/bplk
   US pledges $US 350m in tsunami aid : The pledge was made just before talks between senior US and UN figures on co-ordinating aid efforts. - http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4138763.stm
   Regarding the "stinginess" of American aid : Here's the ranking of countries by relief aid per capita per day. - http://www.danieldrezner.com/archives/001805.html
   Western Governments can do more to help tsunami victims : ... If our governments could mobilize resources, the media, and in some cases popular support, like they do for illegal wars of conquest and occupation, tens of thousands more lives could possibly be saved. = http://asiantsunami.blogspot.com/
   China May Be Offered Stake in Yukos Subsidiary: A senior Russian official said on Thursday that China's state oil company could be offered 20 percent of a giant subsidiary of the oil company Yukos that was confiscated and sold 11 days ago. - http://www.wilmingtonstar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20041231/ZNYT01/412310345/1004/local ; http://snipurl.com/bpld .
   Does America Get What It Deserves?: "Time" magazine named President George W. Bush "Man of the Year" for 2004, an honor previously bestowed on Adolf Hitler (1938), Josef Stalin (1942) and the Ayatollah Khomeini (1979). Congratulations and good for him. - http://www.niagarafallsreporter.com/editorial183.html
   Paving the way for the bioweapons of the future? A growing number of microbiologists, nonproliferation experts, and former government officials say there may be a dark side to the biodefense push: With poor oversight, government-funded scientists could actually be paving the way for the next generation of killer germs-and given the explosion of research, there is no way to keep track of what is being done. - http://www.motherjones.com/news/outfront/2004/03/02_400.html
   Bush allies prepare for Social Security battle: With Bush planning to unveil the details of his Social Security plan this month, several GOP groups close to the White House are asking the same donors who helped re-elect Bush to fund an extensive campaign to convince Americans - and skeptical lawmakers - that Social Security is in crisis and that private accounts are the only cure. - http://www.bradenton.com/mld/bradenton/news/local/10541236.htm
   Lautenberg Calls on Social Security Administration to Cease Telephone Propaganda Aimed at Scaring Seniors: As President Bush begins to sell his Social Security privatization plan with claims of a looming Social Security "crisis," the Social Security Administration is forcing callers to their 800 number to listen to inaccurate propaganda with a "crisis". - http://lautenberg.senate.gov/~lautenberg/press/2003/01/2004C23848.html , http://snipurl.com/bple
   Lobbyists Descend on Cabinet Picks: Long before they start their new jobs, President Bush's Cabinet picks are getting close attention from lobbyists who follow the smallest moves from start to finish - even urging senators to ask specific questions at confirmation hearings. - http://washingtontimes.com/national/20041230-111258-7999r.htm
   Shame Of The Democrats: Watch the video of the January 6, 2001 refusal of any member of the U.S. Senate to join those members of the House of Representatives who tried to challenge Florida's fraud-obtained electoral votes. - http://makethemaccountable.com/misc/DemocratsShame2001.htm
   I Am Hope: The flame of hope should never go out from your life. Flash presentation. - http://i.euniverse.com/funpages/cms_content/2529/4candles.swf
   QUOTATIONS: I hope ever to see America among the foremost nations of justice and liberality. - George Washington.
   At least two thirds of our miseries spring from human stupidity, human malice and those great motivators and justifiers of malice and stupidity, idealism, dogmatism and proselytizing zeal on behalf of religious or political idols. - Aldous Huxley.
   Justice is conscience, not a personal conscience but the conscience of the whole of humanity. Those who clearly recognize the voice of their own conscience usually recognize also the voice of justice. - Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
   We are reluctant to admit that we owe our liberties to men of a type that today we hate and fear -- unruly men, disturbers of the peace, men who resent and denounce what Whitman called 'the insolence of elected persons' -- in a word, free men. - Gerald W. Johnson.
   Liberty can not be preserved without general knowledge among people." - (August 1765) John Adams.
   Peace & Joy - Tom [Jan 2, 05]

• The "Vietnam jungle" in the Iraq desert; We never learned why we lost the Vietnam War, and now we're losing another Asian War.


   Intervention Magazine, "The Jungle in the Desert," www.intervention mag.com/cms/ modules.php? op=modload&name= News&file= article& sid=964 ; By Stewart Nusbaumer, Posted Tuesday, January 4, 2005
   Stewart Nusbaumer is editor of Intervention Magazine. He served with the U.S. Marine Corps in Vietnam on the DMZ. You can email him at Stewart@interventionmag.com
   UNITED STATES: With the proliferation of the Internet and the spread of political polarization, there has been an explosion of know-it-alls in America. Those who know what America should and shouldn't do, what will happen tomorrow and what won't happen next year. They know everything.
   Yet, those who claim the greatest certainty often possess the least knowledge. In full hubristic certainty, the Neocons and others in the Bush Administration guaranteed the Iraq War would be "quick and easy." That was two years ago. That was before 1,300 Americans and 100,000 Iraqis were dead.
   First we were told that when Saddam Hussein was overthrown, the fighting would stop. That was twenty-one months ago. Then, when Saddam Hussein the fugitive was captured, the insurgency would collapse. He was captured over twelve months ago. Then, when authority was transferred to the Iraqi government, the Iraqi military would take over the fighting. That was nearly ten months ago. Then, when Fallujah was occupied, the resistance would be defeated. The city was destroyed over two months ago.
   From defeating the Iraqi military to capturing Saddam Hussein to Iraqi control of the country to destroying a city, each promise has disappeared in fresh pools of American and Iraqi blood.
   Desperate, the U.S. is still pinning its hope on the Iraqi troops becoming the security forces and on the upcoming elections creating a credible local government. But Iraqization has shown itself to be an utter failure, as Vietnamization was an utter failure, and elections under the control of foreign occupiers never deter exploding resistance movements.
   The United States does have its accomplishments in Iraq. It has fueled a vicious insurgency, where none existed, and it has greatly expanded the number of corpses throughout the country. This is not, however, what the advocates of the "quick and easy" so confidently predicted.
   "There was no adequate operational plan for stability operations and support operations," writes Major Isaiah Wilson, a former researcher for the Army's Operation Iraqi Freedom Study Group and later the chief war planner for the 101st Airborne Division in Iraq.
   At Cornell University, discussing the Iraq War, Major Wilson said: "U.S. military planners, practitioners and the civilian leadership conceived of the war far too narrowly." Scheduled to teach at the U.S. Military Academy next year, the historian and strategist believes that the top war-planners suffered from "stunted learning and a reluctance to adapt."
   "Similar criticism has been made before," writes Thomas Ricks in the Washington Post, "but until now [has] not been stated so authoritatively and publicly by a military insider positioned to be familiar with top-secret planning."
The Roots of the Mistake
   "There was too much of an analogy with the occupation of Germany and Japan," former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger complained to Wolf Blitzer on CNN. What Henry Kissinger did not complain about was that there was too much of an analogy with the Vietnam War, and how that past quagmire could be reproduced in Iraq. For Henry Kissinger and the Neocons, the Vietnam War is forgotten history.
   "Sir," an email to me began:
   As a Canadian I am totally puzzled why Americans never learn from their past mistakes, unless Americans cannot admit their mistakes. Has anyone in Washington come out publicly and said the Vietnam War was a mistake, beside the mothers who lost their sons and those soldiers who came home minus an arm or leg? What was that war all about anyway? To this day I still have not heard a satisfactory answer.
   More than 58,000 Americans killed in a losing war against "a rag-tag 3rd rate military force" (as the Vietnamese resistance was described by self-confident U.S. officials), and the post-war discussion during the 1970s and 1980s in America was obscurant, distorted, and terribly short. Instead of a dialogue to understand why 58,000 Americans died in vain in Vietnam, Americans had a vicious blame-game to obscure the reasons why 58,000 Americans died in vain in Vietnam. Instead of the truth, it was obfuscation; instead of accountability, scapegoats.
   It was claimed that those long-haired antiwar demonstrations, "the war at home," brought about our defeat in Vietnam. That the press was complicit: the liberal press was defeatist, and this defeated our noble effort in Southeast Asia. And the politicians, those back-stabbing Washington politicians, refused to allow our military to win the war.
   Not blamed were those who advocated the failed U.S. intervention in that far-off civil war; those who designed the bankrupt U.S. strategy that was mostly fantasy; those who ignored the great power of Vietnamese nationalism, which in the end defeated our internationalism, or if you prefer our imperialism.
   It was their country and they outlasted us in their country. Never underestimate the power of nationalism, even in this global world, to ignite the "rag-tag armies."
   George Santayana once wrote, "Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it." It is an old adage, yet has contemporary meaning for an arrogant nation that continues to overestimate its own power and underestimate the power of the "rag-tag armies."
   Santayana, however, was too kind for German philosopher George Wilhelm Hegel: "What experience and history teach is this--that people and governments never have learned anything from history, or acted on principles."
   As we look at the unfolding disaster in Iraq, we see that America never learned from the Vietnam War. Americans never even learned that you never commit your troops to a war that has not been thought through. This is more than not acting on principle, Hegel would say this is a crime. And he is correct.
Back to Vietnam
   The U.S. war planners underestimated the Iraqis' will to resist and they underestimated the insurgents' ability to develop a wartime strategy. After "shock and awe," the resistance would surely be reduced to a "rag-tag resistance," right? The planners overestimated the U.S. military's technology and firepower, which they always do. Twenty-one months into this war, the world's most powerful military is stymied, unable to halt the expanding Iraqis insurgency and the rising number of American dead.
   Those who planned this war knew as much about Iraq as those who planned the Vietnam War knew about Vietnam, which is why Iraq will end as Vietnam ended. In America's defeat.
   For those of us who fought in Vietnam and reflected on that disastrous war, we knew America could not win in Iraq. Many Americans came to that conclusion without having served in Vietnam. But not the Bush Administration and the Neocons, and not most Americans, who went along with the invasion and occupation of Iraq. For these Americans, the Vietnam War never happened and Iraq would be "fast and easy."
   The Canadian asked, in reference to the Vietnam War, "What was that war all about anyway?"
   Major Wilson said, the Iraq War planners had "stunted learning."
   And now retired Army General Donald Shepperd, speaking on CNN, says: "It doesn't look like there is light at the end of the tunnel."
   Yes, the Iraq tunnel is dark. Very dark. As dark as the Vietnam tunnel was dark. [By courtesy of Michael P, Jan 10, 05]
   [COMMENT: The author writes "The U.S. war planners underestimated the Iraqis' will to resist" - he forgets to mention the foreign fighters. COMMENT ENDS.]
   [DOCTRINE: 002.191 - And kill them wherever you find them, and drive them out from whence they drove you out, and persecution is severer than slaughter, and do not fight with them at the Sacred Mosque until they fight with you in it, but if they do fight you, then slay them; such is the recompense of the unbelievers. http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/quran/002.qmt.html#002.191 .
   005.033 - The punishment of those who wage war against Allah and His apostle and strive to make mischief in the land is only this, that they should be murdered or crucified or their hands and their feet should be cut off on opposite sides ... http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/quran/005.qmt.html#005.033 . DOCTRINE ENDS.] [Jan 4, 05]

• A new era for land tax.


   The Australian Financial Review, by Alan Mitchell, Economics editor, Wednesday, January 5, 2005
   AUSTRALIA: As hundreds of horrified NSW residents face their first land tax liability, Howard government backbenchers are calling on the Prime Minister to use his majority in the Senate to embark on a new round of tax reform.
   In Australia, one of the least heavily taxed of the high-income OECD economies, tax reform is never far from the surface of the political debate. [...]
   But what direction should future tax reform take? In recent years, key themes of the tax debate have been the complexity of the taxation law, Australia's heavy dependence on taxes on internationally mobile capital, our relatively high top marginal income tax rate, and, more recently, the heavy emphasis on the taxation of current income rather than assets.
   Unfortunately, fixing one perceived problem with the taxation system often comes at the cost of making other problems worse. Everybody's favourite example of complexity is the Income Tax Assessment Act, which has grown from 120 pages in 1936 to about 7000 pages today. [...]
   A major reason for the complexity of the tax law is the tax avoidance industry.
   Discriminating in favour of internationally mobile capital, as advocated by business, would also add to the complexity of the taxation system. ***
   The failure to tax assets and capital gains comprehensively contributed to the property price bubble. And that bubble, in turn, has further distorted the distribution of wealth. [...]
   Of course, suggestions that Australian governments should reintroduce general wealth taxation will raise fears that people will react by investing their savings overseas.
   For that reason, it is likely that governments will turn back to one of the oldest forms of revenue raising: the taxation of the unimproved capital value of land.
   The Carr government's decision last year to broaden its land tax base could be the start of something very big.# [Read more below]
[Jan 5, 05]
• Current land tax is only redistribution, not reform.
   E-mail letter to The Australian Financial Review, from John Poulter, January 5, 2005
   PORTARLINGTON (Victoria) Australia:
   With reference to Alan Mitchell's article in the AFR 5 Jan 2005 "A new era for land tax," the current system of Land Tax used by the states is purely a socialistic form of wealth redistribution and should be abolished in favour of a unilateral system of Site Rent based on the value of land owned.
   I trust that by advocating the raising of the Federal Governments total revenue through a Tax on the Unimproved Capital Value of Land you are in reality referring to the collection of the Site Rent.
   Such a system will allow all sections of the economy including Labour to work at their optimum efficiency and not be penalised by a tax on their efforts.
   Industry will be unshackled from this current regressive tax regime and allowed to get on with their role as the co-producer of goods and delivery of services.
   The collection of the Site Rent will also bring into production land currently held vacant, thus lowering its price and making the Australian dream of home ownership possible for all. Australia will truly then become the lucky country. [Slightly modified] [Jan 5, 05]
• We Are All Torturers Now.

We Are All Torturers Now

   The New York Times, www.nytimes. com/2005/01/06/ opinion/06 danner.html? oref=login , By MARK DANNER, OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR, January 6, 2005
   NEW YORK: *Mark Danner is the author of Torture and Truth: America, Abu Ghraib and the War on Terror."
AT least since Watergate, Americans have come to take for granted a certain story line of scandal, in which revelation is followed by investigation, adjudication and expiation. Together, Congress and the courts investigate high-level wrongdoing and place it in a carefully constructed narrative, in which crimes are charted, malfeasance is explicated and punishment is apportioned as the final step in the journey back to order, justice and propriety.
   When Alberto Gonzales takes his seat before the Senate Judiciary Committee today for hearings to confirm whether he will become attorney general of the United States, Americans will bid farewell to that comforting story line. The senators are likely to give full legitimacy to a path that the Bush administration set the country on more than three years ago, a path that has transformed the United States from a country that condemned torture and forbade its use to one that practices torture routinely. Through a process of redefinition largely overseen by Mr. Gonzales himself, a practice that was once a clear and abhorrent violation of the law has become in effect the law of the land.
   Shortly after the 9/11 attacks, Americans began torturing prisoners, and they have never really stopped. However much these words have about them the ring of accusation, they must by now be accepted as fact. From Red Cross reports, Maj. Gen. Antonio M. Taguba's inquiry, James R. Schlesinger's Pentagon-sanctioned commission and other government and independent investigations, we have in our possession hundreds of accounts of "cruel, inhuman and degrading" treatment - to use a phrase of the Red Cross - "tantamount to torture."
   So far as we know, American intelligence officers, determined after Sept. 11 to "take the gloves off," began by torturing Qaeda prisoners. They used a number of techniques: "water-boarding," in which a prisoner is stripped, shackled and submerged in water until he begins to lose consciousness, and other forms of near suffocation; sleep and sensory deprivation; heat and light and dietary manipulation; and "stress positions."
   Eventually, these practices "migrated," in the words of the Schlesinger report, to Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, where for a time last spring the marvel of digital technology allowed Americans to see what their soldiers were doing to prisoners in their name.
   Though the revelations of Abu Ghraib transfixed Americans for a time, in the matter of torture not much changed. After those in Congress had offered condemnations and a few hearings distinguished by their lack of seriousness; after the administration had commenced the requisite half-dozen investigations, none of them empowered to touch those who devised the policies; and after the low-level soldiers were placed firmly on the road to punishment - after all this, the issue of torture slipped back beneath the surface. Every few weeks now, a word or two reaches us from that dark, subterranean place. Take, for example, this account, offered by an unnamed F.B.I. counterterrorism official reporting in August, more than three months after the Abu Ghraib images appeared, on what he saw during a visit to Guantánamo:
   "On a couple of occasions, I entered interview rooms to find a detainee chained hand and foot in a fetal position to the floor, with no chair, food or water. Most times they had urinated or defecated on themselves, and had been left there for 18-24 hours or more...When I asked the M.P.'s what was going on, I was told that interrogators from the day prior had ordered this treatment, and the detainee was not to be moved. On another occasion...the detainee was almost unconscious on the floor, with a pile of hair next to him. He had apparently been literally pulling his own hair out throughout the night."
   This is a fairly mild example when judged against the accounts of the "abuses" that have entered the public record. I put quotation marks around the word "abuses" because most of these acts - as the F.B.I. agent acknowledged ("the interrogators from the day prior had ordered this treatment") - were in fact procedures, which would not have been possible without policies that had been approved by administration officials.
   In the next few days we are likely to hear how Mr. Gonzales recommended strongly, against the arguments of the secretary of state and military lawyers, that prisoners in Afghanistan be denied the protection of the Geneva Conventions. We are also likely to hear how, under Mr. Gonzales's urging, lawyers in the Department of Justice contrived - when confronted with the obstacle that the United States had undertaken, by treaty and statute, to make torture illegal - simply to redefine the word to mean procedures that would produce pain "of an intensity akin to that which accompanies serious physical injury such as death or organ failure." By this act of verbal legerdemain, interrogation techniques like water-boarding that plainly constituted torture suddenly became something less than that.
   But what we are unlikely to hear, given the balance of votes in the Senate, are many voices making the obvious argument that with this record, Mr. Gonzales is unfit to serve as attorney general. So let me make it: Mr. Gonzales is unfit because the slow river of litigation is certain to bring before the next attorney general a raft of torture cases that challenge the very policies that he personally helped devise and put into practice. He is unfit because, while the attorney general is charged with upholding the law, the documents show that as White House counsel, Mr. Gonzales, in the matter of torture, helped his client to concoct strategies to circumvent it. And he is unfit, finally, because he has rightly become the symbol of the United States' fateful departure from a body of settled international law and human rights practice for which the country claims to stand.
   On the other hand, perhaps it is fitting that Mr. Gonzales be confirmed. The system of torture has, after all, survived its disclosure. We have entered a new era; the traditional story line in which scandal leads to investigation and investigation leads to punishment has been supplanted by something else. Wrongdoing is still exposed; we gaze at the photographs and read the documents, and then we listen to the president's spokesman "reiterate," as he did last week, "the president's determination that the United States never engage in torture." And there the story ends.
   At present, our government, controlled largely by one party only intermittently harried by a timorous opposition, is unable to mete out punishment or change policy, let alone adequately investigate its own war crimes. And, as administration officials clearly expect, and senators of both parties well understand, most Americans - the Americans who will not read the reports, who will soon forget the photographs and who will be loath to dwell on a repellent subject - are generally content to take the president at his word.
   But reality has a way of asserting itself. In the end, as Gen. Joseph P. Hoar pointed out this week, the administration's decision on the Geneva Conventions "puts all American servicemen and women at risk that are serving in combat regions." For General Hoar - a retired commander of American forces in the Middle East and one of a dozen prominent retired generals and admirals to oppose Mr. Gonzales - torture has a way of undermining the forces using it, as it did with the French Army in Algeria.
   The general's concerns are understandable. The war in Iraq and the war on terrorism are ultimately political in character. Victory depends in the end not on technology or on overwhelming force but on political persuasion. By using torture, the country relinquishes the very ideological advantage - the promotion of democracy, freedom and human rights - that the president has so persistently claimed is America's most powerful weapon in defeating Islamic extremism. One does not reach democracy, or freedom, through torture.
   By using torture, we Americans transform ourselves into the very caricature our enemies have sought to make of us. True, that miserable man who pulled out his hair as he lay on the floor at Guantánamo may eventually tell his interrogators what he knows, or what they want to hear. But for America, torture is self-defeating; for a strong country it is in the end a strategy of weakness. After Mr. Gonzales is confirmed, the road back - to justice, order and propriety - will be very long. Torture will belong to us all. # Special Offer: Home Delivery of The Times from $2.90/week. [Subject to U.S. conditions]
   [RECAPITULATE: "By using torture, the country relinquishes the very ideological advantage - the promotion of democracy, freedom and human rights - that the president has so persistently claimed is America's most powerful weapon in defeating Islamic extremism. One does not reach democracy, or freedom, through torture." ENDS.]
   NOTE: This article is also at Submit / Chronology 3, Torturers, and is listed towards the foot of Contents 7. [Jan 6, 05]

• Clamping Down on Freedom of the Press; What lessons does Watergate offer for today's beleaguered media?


   The Centre for Public Integrity, International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, www.public integrity.org/ report.aspx? aid=426&sid= 100 , Commentary By Charles Lewis (re-run of November 22, 2004 article), January 08, 2005
   The clamp-down on the freedom of the press by the executive and judicial branches of the U.S. government, begun in the wake of September 11 attacks, is getting worse, as the legal troubles of Jim Taricani, Judith Miller and Matthew Cooper indicate. On November 18, Taricani, a veteran investigative reporter of NBC affiliate WJAR, was convicted of criminal contempt for refusing to name the source that leaked to him an F.B.I. videotape linked to a high-profile Providence corruption probe involving Mayor Vincent A. Cianci Jr. Taricani, a long-time heart patient, will be sentenced on December 9, and he faces up to 6 months in prison. A couple of reporters from two of the nation's best-known publications, Miller of The New York Times and Cooper of Time magazine, are facing jail time for their refusal to disclose confidential source information to the grand jury searching for the White House official who leaked the name of a CIA operative. At least eight journalists have been found in contempt of court for refusing to identify sources. Center for Public Integrity Executive Director Charles Lewis explores the eerie similarity between today's suppression of press freedom and Watergate.
   WASHINGTON, November 22, 2004 -- The tension between power and the press, between spinning and searching for truth, between disinformation and information, is of course endemic to the human condition itself. And in trying times like these, when it occasionally looks like things are going to hell, it is strangely consoling to recall that actually others before us also have traveled on what must have seemed to be the road to perdition.
   For example, 33 years ago, a President and his administration were prosecuting a difficult, unpopular war thousands of miles away on foreign soil, keenly attempting without great success to control the media's access to information, particularly of the unfavorable kind. Two newspapers, the New York Times and the Washington Post, each began publishing a leaked, secret Defense Department history of the Vietnam War that dramatically revealed government deception and incompetence. The Nixon administration went into federal court against the two news organizations, separately, and, citing national security and charging treason, managed to halt publication of the "Pentagon Papers" until the U.S. Supreme Court, on June 30, 1971, sided with the First Amendment by a vote of 6-3.
   While Washington Post executive editor Ben Bradlee was, among others, understandably exultant and relieved, he also recognized, as Bradlee later recalled in his memoir, A Good Life, that he had just stared into the abyss, "For the first time in the history of the American republic, newspapers had been restrained by the government from publishing a story -- a black mark in the history of democracy --- What the hell was going on in this country that this could happen?"
   Certainly a common refrain among many journalists these days as well, but to finish the flashback, the Pentagon Papers episode obviously was just the beginning. Bradlee at the time did not know the answer to his own question, except that "the Cold War dominated our society,--- and the Nixon-Agnew administration was playing hardball." While Vietnam wore on for a few more years, Richard Nixon seethed and the White House siege mentality worsened.
   Two days before the historic Supreme Court case, the whistleblower who had leaked the Pentagon Papers, Daniel Ellsberg, was indicted on federal charges of conspiracy, espionage, theft of government property and the unauthorized possession of "documents and writing related to the national defense." The day after the high court decision, White House Special Counsel Charles Colson asked former CIA operative E. Howard Hunt whether "we should go down the line to nail the guy [Ellsberg] cold."
   The Pentagon Papers obsession spawned the White House Special Investigations Unit, the infamous "Plumbers" unit, who, among other misadventures, weeks later broke into Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office, looking for dirt. And the poisonous paranoia didn't stop there but extended to other burglaries, including the Democratic Party national headquarters at the Watergate complex, electronic surveillance, misuse of confidential tax return information against perceived political enemies, mail fraud, obstruction of justice and an astonishing array of other illegal government abuses of power, ultimately exposed, prosecuted and culminating in the only resignation of a sitting U.S. president.
   The Pentagon Papers case and the Watergate scandal still represent U.S. history's high-water mark in the longstanding struggle between raw political power and democratic values, poignantly affirming the public's right to know about its government. They still represent the bleakest moments and the loftiest triumphs of journalism in contemporary America, an invaluable perspective today as we ponder the future and assess the tectonic damage to our long-cherished freedoms of speech and information in the past three, disquieting years in the wake of the devastating, unimaginable carnage of September 11, 2001.
   Suddenly, despite living in the most powerful nation on earth, we all faced a shattering if all-too-familiar realization of our own human vulnerabilities, including the quite palpable fear for our own personal safety, indelibly seared into our collective consciousness. While the Vietnam and Watergate era was quite extraordinary, most Americans, including journalists, never had the sense that their physical wellbeing was potentially at risk. Juxtapose our pervasive sense of insecurity and the patriotic and visceral, survival-related instinct to do anything to thwart "terrorism," with a President and administration which assumed power with a well-documented predisposition to tightly manage and control information, and it is not difficult to understand the current, wholesale assault on openness and government accountability today.
   Indeed, let us not forget the hard-wiring, lifelong sensibility that Watergate and the Nixonian animosity and adversarial culture toward the news media unavoidably had to have on three rising Republicans: George W. Bush, Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney. Bush's father, George H.W. Bush, was personally close to Nixon and was chairman of the Republican National Committee at the time of the resignation. Rumsfeld and Cheney not only served in the Nixon administration, but the two men were also in President Gerald R. Ford's White House, as successive chiefs of staff.
   As defense secretary in the first Bush administration, Cheney was one of the architects of the controversial Persian Gulf War media restrictions, as Jacqueline Sharkey documented in the 1992 Center for Public Integrity report, Under Fire: US Military Restrictions on the Media from Grenada to the Persian Gulf. From the military and public relations debacle of Vietnam, Cheney and others in the Pentagon and White House recognized the usefulness of trying "to hide the true face of war by controlling the images of the conflict," including caskets at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware. In the U.S. military conflicts in Grenada, Panama and the Persian Gulf during the 1980s and early 1990s, the media thus was constrained from the actual field of action, thereby substantially preventing those Vietnam-reminiscent pictures of body bags in American TV living rooms.
   In the weeks and months prior to September 11, 2001, the secrecy obsession and aggressive control tactics by the new Bush administration had already become apparent. For example, instead of turning his gubernatorial papers over to the Texas State Library and Archives, as tradition would have it, Gov. Bush, in his last hours, tried to shelter his official records inside his father's presidential library at Texas A&M University, outside the jurisdiction of the strong Texas public information law. He was overruled by the state attorney general and they fortunately are accessible to the public.
   In the summer of 2001, Vice President Cheney refused to release basic information about meetings he and other administration officials had held -- on government time and property -- with energy company executives to help formulate federal policies, a position on which he remains steadfastly adamant.
   And a month before September 11, the Justice Department secretly subpoenaed Associated Press reporter John Solomon's home telephone records. As Solomon, the AP deputy Washington bureau chief, told me, "The Justice Department has indicated to us that they were actually trying to stop the publication of a story that I was working on and tried to find out who I was talking to and cut off the flow of information. So it does get into the issue of prior restraint, along with First and Fourth Amendment issues."
   As we all know too well, in the weeks immediately following September 11th, the Bush administration obtained passage of the USA Patriot Act, with no public debate or amendments, among other things, giving federal authorities more power to access email and telephone communications. The federal government detained hundreds of people indefinitely without releasing the most basic information about them. Attorney General John Ashcroft described the news blackout in Orwellian fashion, "It would be a violation of the privacy rights of individuals for me to create some kind of list." Usually open U.S. immigration proceedings were closed to the public, and separately, the Attorney General sent a chilling, unprecedented directive throughout the government, "When you carefully consider FOIA requests and decide to withhold records, in whole or in part, you can be assured that the Department of Justice will defend your decisions" --- And President Bush quietly signed Executive Order 13233, overriding the post-Watergate 1978 Presidential Records Act and sharply reducing public access to the papers of former presidents, including his father's.
   In the war in Afghanistan, journalists were severely limited in their access to field of action. As the Reporters Committee on Freedom of the Press noted in its excellent report, Homeland Confidential, "In effect, most American broadcasters and newspaper reporters scratched out coverage from Pentagon briefings, a rare interview on a U.S. aircraft carrier or a humanitarian aid airlift, or from carefully selected military videos or from leaks . . . The truth is, the American media's vantage point for the war has never been at the frontlines with American troops."
   Indeed, who can forget December 6, 2001, when Marines locked reporters and photographers in a warehouse to prevent them from covering American troops killed or injured north of Kandahar, Afghanistan? And while embedded reporters enjoyed far greater access -- and danger -- in Iraq, many news organizations, including the New York Times and the Washington Post, have recently been introspective or even mildly apologetic for their over-reliance on official statements in the lead-up to the war.
   But, meanwhile, it is hard to overstate the fear and paranoia of an entire, terrorized nation. Within six months of September 11th, in 300 separate instances, federal, state and local officials restricted access to government records by executive order, or proposed new laws to sharply curtail their availability, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. More recently, sunshine activists are most alarmed about the Homeland Security Act, especially its Protected Critical Infrastructure Information (PCII) section. Former Miami Herald managing editor Pete Weitzel recently described it in The American Editor as a "black hole" for almost boundless censorship. The ranking Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, Patrick Leahy, called the move -- which would create an entirely new level of secrecy and a system of binding nondisclosure agreements effectively muzzling millions of state and local officials and private contractors -- "the single greatest rollback of FOIA in history."
   The American people unfortunately are not as informed, concerned, or supportive about this deepening crisis as they ought to be. A national poll sponsored by the Chicago Tribune on First Amendment issues in late June found that roughly half of the public believe there should have been some kind of "press restraint" on coverage of the Abu Ghraib prison abuse scandal in Iraq -- somewhat ironic considering that the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Richard Myers, personally had implored CBS's 60 Minutes II to keep its expose off the air in the name of national security, which the network actually did voluntarily until learning that investigative reporter Seymour Hersh would be publishing the story in The New Yorker. In general, according to Charles Madigan, editor of the Tribune's Perspective section, fifty or sixty percent of the public "would embrace government controls of some kind on free speech, particularly when it has sexual content or is heard as unpatriotic."
   This ambivalence in which at least half of the country equates draconian security and secrecy measures with their own safety is quite serious and very possibly insurmountable. Tom Blanton, executive director of the National Security Archive in Washington wrote in National Security and Open Government, "The government has successfully framed the debate after 9/11 as terrorism fighters versus civil libertarians, as soldiers versus reporters, as hawks versus doves. In wartime, the poundage of the former will always outweigh the latter. --- We need to place openness where it belongs, not only at the center of our values, but also at the center of our strategy for security."
   Both the Congressional September 11th investigation and the 9/11 Commission appointed by President Bush separately documented extensive "intelligence hoarding" and petty bureaucratic turf wars inside the government, excessive secrecy for all the wrong reasons and the dire consequences of not sharing information. But beyond that, the ignorance of the body politic was anything but blissful. The 9/11 Commission concluded, "We believe American and international public opinion might have been different -- and so might the range of options for a president -- had they [the American people] been informed of [the growing al Qaeda danger]."
   It is a powerful message still substantially untold but essential to understanding and preserving freedom of the press as we know it. Indeed, the situation is so foreboding that the Associated Press has taken the unusual step of proposing an industry-wide lobby to "identify and oppose legislation that puts unreasonable restrictions on public information." AP stepped forward after seven national journalism groups and the National Freedom of Information Coalition had already joined to form the Coalition of Journalists for Open Government.
   At the Center for Public Integrity, we have found that nothing resonates more with the American people than the straight skinny itself about the powers that be. When we obtained a secret draft of the Domestic Enhancement Security Act of 2003, better known as "Patriot II," we posted it in its 100-plus page entirety on our Web site, www.publicintegrity.org , over the objections of the Justice Department. Because of the public furor over some of its controversial provisions -- including internal GOP frustration on Capitol Hill that the secretive Attorney General and his staff had kept them in the dark for nearly half a year -- the draft bill was dead within months (although the Bush administration has been trying to push a few provisions separately).
   Or, noticing that no one was terribly helpful or definitive about the awarding of billions of dollars in government contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan, we decided to go to work, filing 73 FOIAs and, when necessary, successfully suing the State Department and the Army for the contracts. Six months later, our report, Windfalls of War, revealed all of the major known contractors and contracts, and the fact that Vice President Cheney's former company, Halliburton, and its subsidiaries had gotten by far the most taxpayer money, some of them with no other bidders. Our approach now on any issue is to push back and appeal on any stonewalling that elevates our blood pressure. In other words, appeal early and often -- it's the principle of the thing, and you just might win.
   Besides educating the American people about the Vietnam War, the greatest result of courageous publication of the Pentagon Papers was the confidence it imbued in newsrooms all across America. Inside the Washington Post, years later Bradlee recalled, "a sense of mission and agreement on new goals, and how to attain them. --- After the Pentagon Papers, there would be no decision too difficult for us to overcome together."
   And Solicitor General Erwin Griswold, who argued the government's case against the Post and the Times before the Supreme Court, later acknowledged in an op-ed what many had suspected all along, "I have never seen any trace of a threat to the national security from the Pentagon Papers' publication."
   As Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart wrote in the Pentagon Papers case, words we should all remember, "In the absence of governmental checks and balances present in other areas of our national life, the only effective restraint upon executive policy and power in the areas of national defense and international affairs may lie in an enlightened citizenry -- in an informed and critical public opinion which alone can here protect the values of democratic government." # [Jan 8, 05]

• Mamdouh Habib to be released.

[No trial, but held for three years]
   The Sunday Times On-Line (Western Australia), www.sundaytimes. news.com.au/ common/story_ page/0,7034, 11915771% 255E421, 00.html , By Martin Chulov and Trudy Harris, dated 12jan05 but on website 11.20pm WA time on January 11, 2005
   AUSTRALIA: ACCUSED Australian terrorist Mamdouh Habib will be released from Guantanamo Bay detention centre within days and return to Australia a free man after being held for three years without being charged.
   Attorney-General Philip Ruddock made the dramatic announcement last night [on Jan. 11] after receiving advice from the US that Habib could not be prosecuted, despite the grave allegations against him.
   Mr Ruddock said in Sydney that Australian counter-terrorism laws could not be used to prosecute Habib, despite the Government's conviction that he had trained with al-Qaeda and had prior knowledge of the September 11 attacks.
   The Attorney-General said last night he was disappointed with the Americans' handling of the Habib case, which Canberra had repeatedly asked to be dealt with quickly.
   Habib's alleged activities in Afghanistan from mid to late 2001 occurred prior to the time in which he could be prosecuted under Australian counter-terrorism laws promulgated in July 2002.
   Mr Ruddock last night appeared to rule out any retrospective changes to federal laws, but said Habib would remain under the intense scrutiny of ASIO and the Australian Federal Police.
   "It remains the strong view of the United States that, based on information available to it, Mr Habib had prior knowledge of the terrorist attacks on or before September 11, 2001," Mr Ruddock said. "Mr Habib has acknowledged he spent time in Afghanistan, and others there at that time claim he had trained with al-Qaeda."
   Specific offences of training, funding or associating with a terrorist group did not exist under Australian law at the time Habib was captured.
   Habib's wife, Maha, said last night that she was overwhelmed with the news after a difficult few years for her and their four children.
   She had sat her two youngest children down at their house in southwestern Sydney just before 8pm to tell them the good news, just minutes after the Department of Foreign Affairs told her  their father would be freed from the US naval base in Cuba.
   "They couldn't believe it. The youngest (Hajer) kept saying 'when is he coming? How many sleeps?'," Mrs Habib said. "I just wasn't prepared for this.
   "I rang the two older ones and said 'come home and I will tell you some good news'."
   Habib's Sydney lawyer, Stephen Hopper, said his client's release was long overdue.
   "We think it's about time," Mr Hopper said.
   "It vindicates what we have said all the time, that he is innocent and he has been unlawfully detained in Guantanamo, and since his arrest in Pakistan."
   Mr Hopper said he understood an Australian delegation would travel to the US to work out the logistics of bringing Habib home.
   "We believe he will be brought home soon. I would imagine it would be weeks, not months."
   There was renewed concern late yesterday about Habib's psychological state, with fears raised that he was refusing to co-operate with authorities who had told him of his imminent release.
   The Australian has previously reported that Habib believes his family has been killed and that he will remain in detention until he dies.
   Habib, who was captured in Pakistan in 2001, has alleged he was tortured in the presence of Australian and American officials in Pakistan.
   Mr Ruddock has denied allegations that Habib was tortured in the presence of any Australian official.
   He said last night that the second Australian in Guantanamo Bay, David Hicks, would still be prosecuted. Unlike Habib, the American military has already laid three charges against him.
   Hicks's father, Terry, said last night that Habib's imminent release proved Canberra had the power to secure the release of his son, whose is due to face a trial by a US military commission in early March.
   Mr Hicks said he believed the Government was not doing all it could to bring home his son.
   "I still think it comes down to the fact that the Australian Government, if they asked for David back, they (the US) would probably send him," Mr Hicks said.
   Despite Habib's imminent freedom, Australian officials last night privately held out hope that he might still be prosecuted - pointing to charges recently laid against Melbourne taxi driver Jack Thomas.
   One source described the Thomas prosecution as a test case with potentially serious repercussions for Habib. Both men are alleged to have trained with al-Qaeda in Afghanistan at the same time.
   The announcement of Habib's release follows confirmation early yesterday that the US is negotiating the transfer of prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay.
   Since the camp opened three years ago, more than 200 prisoners have been transferred to their home countries to be held or released. The number of "enemy combatants" to be transferred is still "in the realm of speculation", said Pentagon spokesman Major Michael Shavers, adding: "We've moved people out, but I would not characterise it as an acceleration of the process. That said, we aren't looking to hold people at Gitmo indefinitely, which leads to the negotiations we talked about."
   A senior US defence official told Britain's Financial Times that 25 per cent of Guantanamo prisoners were still of intelligence value.
   Britain was early today expected to announce that the last four Britons held in Guantanamo would be released from US detention.
   But it was not immediately clear when the four - Moazzam Begg, Feroz Abbasi, Martin Mubanga and Richard Belmar - would be released. [Jan 11/12, 05]

• Habib free, Hicks next, remainder soon.


   The West Australian, Letter by John C. Massam, Greenwood (WA), p 25, Thursday, January 13, 2005
   PERTH: Habib to be freed is wonderful news. Hicks ought to be next. The whole of the illegal Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib prison system ought to end in trials for all those responsible, including US and Australian officials and politicians. [Jan 13, 05]

• [Habib disgraceful imprisonment against justice, decency and law.]


   The West Australian, "Disgraceful," Letter from Ben Corry, Cottesloe (WA), p 25, Thursday, January 13, 2005
   PERTH: The US Government's decision to release Mamdouh Habib from imprisonment at Guantanamo Bay highlights a disgraceful period of US and Australian history.
   It is a disgrace that someone can be detained for nearly three years without charge, all the more so because his innocence appears to have been proved by the inability of the US to concoct even a charge during that time. It goes against every principle of justice, decency ad law.
   It has also been a disgrace that the Australian Government did not put pressure on the US either to charge or release Mr Habib. The Howard Government was willing to stand aside and watch the US flagrantly ignore international law while an Australian citizen was abandoned to suffer the consequences. [Jan 13, 05]

• Abu Ghraib abuse 'creative'; strongest defence witness barred.

[Graner] - Naked stack 'cheerleader pyramid'. Claims of brutal beatings.
   Yahoo! News, "Expert tells Abu Ghraib case that alleged abuse was 'creative'," http://sg.news.yahoo.com/050112/1/3ptgx.html , Agence France Presse, 8:55 AM, Thursday January 13, 2005
   UNITED STATES: A witness at the trial of the alleged Abu Ghraib prison abuse ringleader hailed the stacking up of naked detainees as "a creative technique" and said he too would have photographed it.
   But the defense suffered several setbacks as witnesses it called denied that any orders had been given to conduct the kind of brutal beatings and sexual humiliations for which Specialist Charles Graner is being court-martialed at the Fort Worth army base in Texas.
   The strongest testimony in favor of the military policeman was not presented before the jury as the judge ruled after hearing it that it was not relevant.
   Thomas Archambault, a self-styled prisoner restraint expert, said Graner, had "used good foresight" in the way he dealt with the detainees.
   He said piling the naked prisoners on top of each other was "a very creative technique," but admitted it did not appear in any training manual. In questioning the witness, defense lawyer Guy Womack referred to the human stack as "a cheerleader pyramid."
   Archambault, who runs a consultancy, said that given the circumstances, he saw nothing wrong with the fact soldiers took pictures of the naked prisoners.
   "Based on the stress these soldiers had gone through, a filthy stinking environment and the fact these prisoners killed American soldiers, I think I would have done the same thing," the former police officer said.
   The court also heard more claims of brutal beatings of prisoners by Graner and other prison guards.
   In a videotaped deposition played in court, Iraqi detainee Mohanded Juma responded in the affirmative when asked whether Graner had beaten him with a chair until it broke, kicked him unconscious, choked him, thrown pepper into his eyes and forced him to eat food out of his cell's toilet.
   The defense called several military policemen to the witness stand in a bid to demonstrate Graner was just following orders to control prisoners and soften them up for interrogation.
   But several of the soldiers conceded their duty at Abu Ghraib was to protect the detainees and admitted they had never received orders to conduct abuses such as those Graner has been charged with, which include forcing prisoners to masturbate and simulate oral sex.
   The court was also told that around the time of the alleged abuses, in November 2003, Graner was reprimanded by a superior after a prisoner claimed that wounds on his face were the result of a beating by the soldier.
   But the document also showed that Graner was praised for generally doing "a good job"
   Graner, 36, has pleaded not guilty to the five charges, which include maltreatment of prisoners and assault, and which carry a maximum sentence of 17 and a half years' imprisonment.
   The heavyset, bespectacled soldier, who in earlier days smiled and chatted with reporters as he emerged from the courtroom, was far more subdued Wednesday and referred all questions to his lawyer.
   Womack was also less upbeat than he had been in recent days. "When you try enough cases, you know they don't all go the way you want them to," he said after the court adjourned for the day.
   The court-martial is expected to finish by the end of the week.
   It comes amid allegations that prisoner abuses also occurred elsewhere in Iraq, as well as in Afghanistan and at the US detention camp in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. [Bolding added]
   [DOCTRINE:
   2 - 3 - 4:18 - He has sent me to proclaim liberty to captives.
   2 - 3 - 6:31 - Treat others as you would like people to treat you.
   2 - 19 - 13:3 - Remember them that are in bonds, as bound with them ...
   4 - 47.4 - Strike off the heads of the disbelievers; then after making a wide slaughter among them, carefully tie up the remaining captives ( www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/quran/047.qmt.html#047.004 ). DOCTRINE ENDS.] [Jan 13, 05]

• Guilty of piling up naked prisoners, etc..


   Electronic news media, January 15, 2005
   UNITED STATES: A US operative, Specialist Charles Graner, shown in photographs as being involved in brutal and degrading treatment of prisoners at Abu Ghraib, Iraq, has been found guilty. [Jan 15, 05]

• US abuse soldier gets 10 years jail.

United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Iraq / Irak flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   The West Australian, p 11, Monday, January 17, 2005
   DALLAS (Tex) USA - The mother of a United States soldier jailed for 10 years says his superiors should be put on trial and claimed President George Bush had convicted her son before his court martial even started.
   Charles Graner was punished "for something he was told to do", his mother said outside the courtroom at the Fort Hood army base in Texas as her son was led away from the courtroom in hand and leg shackles.
   "My son was convicted the day President Bush went on TV and said that seven bad apples disgraced the country," Irma Graner said. "But Bush and (Defence Secretary Donald) Rumsfeld are the ones who disgraced the country."
   Graner is among the seven military police reservists who have been charged in connection with the abuses. A military intelligence soldier also was charged in the scandal.
   The 10-man military jury sentenced Graner to 10 years in prison and a dishonourable discharge from the army, after finding him guilty of beating prisoners, piling them naked on top of each other and forcing them to masturbate.
   The 36-year-old military policeman was seen as the ringleader of the abuses that caused worldwide outrage and tarnished the image of the US.
  
[Picture of man in army dress uniform, smiling, handcuffed and shackled, being led by man in camouflage uniform and beret]

Still smiling: Spc. Charles Graner is led away in hand and leg shackles to begin his 10-year jail term. The military police reservist was featured in many of the photographs of prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib jail in Iraq. Photo: AP

Asked how he felt about the sentence, Graner simply said: "I was a soldier, if I did anything wrong, here I am."
   Asked about how he would cope with a decade behind bars, he said, "I'll be smiling."
   He answered "no" to journalists who asked if he had any regrets.
  But earlier in the day, as he addressed the jury before sentencing at the court martial, he expressed remorse for the first time.
   "I did what I did," he told the jurors. "A lot of it was wrong, a lot of it was criminal.
   "I did not enjoy it," he said.
   While the prosecution portrayed him as a depraved thug who beat and humiliated detainees for sport, Graner insisted he was merely following orders to soften up prisoners for interrogation.
   He said he thought at the time that those orders were lawful, though he now realised they were not.
   Asked why he was grinning on some of the photographs of naked detainees taken by Graner and other soldiers at Abu Ghraib prison, Graner said: "I'm smiling now; it's a nervous smile." # [Bolding added] [Jan 17, 05]

• Self-styled Christian boasted of beating Iraqis.


   The West Australian, p 11, Monday, January 17, 2005
   DALLAS: The trial of Abu Ghraib abuse ringleader Charles Graner revealed a man who put a "What Would Jesus Do?" sticker on his truck yet boasted that beating Iraqi prisoners was a "good upper-body workout".
   "He was kind of like an overpowering personality," testified Sgt Joseph Darby, a whistleblower who gave investigators photos of the abuses. "Most people wanted to be around him or associated with him."
   He quoted Graner, once a civilian prison guard, saying: "The Christian in me says it's wrong, but the corrections officer in me says I love to make a grown man piss himself."
   Graner, 36, made small talk and jokes throughout the trial, constantly changing his appearance - with hats, haircuts, or a moustache - so that he looked different in court than in the abuse photos.
   Graner had affairs with at least two women soldiers in Iraq. Lynndie England, with whom he later fathered a child, and Megan Ambuhl, were present in a photograph in which England holds a leash around the neck of a naked prisoner.
   He repeatedly beat prisoners and boasted about it in emails home. "Good upper-body workout but hard on the hands," he wrote in an email with a photo from a now notorious night when he stacked seven prisoners into a naked pyramid. They were later forced into sex acts.
   "It is all about their own sexually depraved humour," prosecutor Capt. Chris Graveline said.
   His parents said Graner was a typical American kid, playing baseball and bowling, and a devoted father to his children, 11 and 13.
   But what happened at Abu Ghraib damaged the US image abroad and could take years to undo.# [Jan 17, 05]

• Religious Liberty Advocates Applaud Religious Freedom Victory In Sweden.


   Crosswalk - Religion Today Summaries , http://www. crosswalkmail. com/rnamrz_ igfxxgt.html , by Dan Wooding, Assist News Service, Feb 15, 2005
   UNITED STATES and SWEDEN: Christian Legal Society and Advocates International have applauded a Swedish court's decision reversing Pastor Ake Green's "hate speech" conviction for preaching what he considered to be the biblical view of homosexual conduct.
   The Swedish Court of Appeal held that principles of freedom of expression protected those speaking on controversial topics from criminal prosecution.
   After preaching a sermon about the Bible's condemnation of homosexual conduct and other sexually immoral conduct, Green was accused of inciting hatred and showing contempt in violation of Sweden's hate speech laws.
   Samuel B. Casey, Executive Director and CEO of Christian Legal Society, said, "We are grateful for Pastor Green's resolve and for the Swedish court's sensible decision."
   Casey went on to say, The Christian Legal Society, founded in 1961, is the national membership organization of Christian attorneys, judges, law professors and law students, as well as supportive laypeople in all fifty states.
   They are organized in more than 1100 cities into attorney chapters, law student chapters, and fellowships throughout the United States. Read the latest news here . [Feb 15, 2005]

• Iraq's Perilous Election and the Need for Exit Strategies.


   Power and Interest News Report (PINR), http://www.pinr.com , content@pinr.com , Report Drafted By: Erich Marquardt , January 17, 2005
   IRAQ: Just two weeks from Iraq's general elections that decide who will sit on the 275-member national assembly, Baghdad's course toward that end grows more perilous each day. Attacks on U.S. forces have grown deadlier; ambushes of Iraq's budding security forces are increasingly successful; the marginal stability that presently exists is being further threatened by the lethal insurgent targeting of politicians and government figures; intelligence reports show that the insurgency is growing stronger with each passing day.
   The electoral quest has proven to be so messy that it is difficult to conclude that the elections will bring enough peace and stability to alter significantly the present dynamic in Iraq. Attacks on U.S. Troops and Iraqi Security Forces Since the beginning of the insurgency in 2003, attacks on U.S. forces have swelled, increasing in deadliness and effectiveness. Each day, attacks are initiated throughout the country, highlighting its instability. On January 3, a suicide car bomber drove his vehicle into a checkpoint near the Baghdad offices of Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi's political party, the Iraqi National Accord.
   Hours later, another explosion brought casualties at a checkpoint entrance to the Green Zone, the most heavily fortified area of Iraq containing the headquarters of the Iraqi government and the U.S. embassy. Just a few days later, on January 6, a suicide car bomber exploded his vehicle outside a police academy near Baghdad during its graduation ceremony, killing 20; that same day, a suicide attacker killed five policemen, and insurgents also assassinated a police colonel on his way to work.
   The following day, a roadside bomb took the lives of seven American soldiers. On January 10, Baghdad's deputy police chief, General Amer Ali Nayef, was gunned down outside of his home. In the midst of these incidents, executed bodies of Iraqis have been turning up all around the country, with one recent discovery in Mosul where the bodies of 18 civilians were discovered, executed because they sought work at an American military base. That same day, three Jordanian truck drivers were found near Ramadi, executed and left with a note attached to their bodies, warning, "This is the fate of anyone who cooperates with the Americans."
   Without a clear enemy to fight, U.S. forces have been thrust into a situation where they are targeted by unseen enemies who use explosives to strike at U.S. convoys covertly. When these enemies are seen, it is often during a suicide mission where an insurgent drives a car bomb into a U.S. checkpoint. These attacks are not meant to cast serious blows on the U.S. occupation, but are intended to erode slowly the resolve of the Americans.
   Along with the targeting of American soldiers, the killings of Iraqi security forces continue to take a toll on those Iraqis fighting on the side of American troops. According to Iraq's Interior Ministry, more than 1300 policemen were killed during the last four months of 2004. These soldiers have become easy targets for Iraqi guerrilla groups that realize one of Washington's central aims in the country is to create viable, indigenous security forces; when compared with U.S. forces, these units are often easier to kill and to defeat due to their questionable dedication and substandard training.
   Iraqi security forces have fallen prey to many different methods of attack, from suicide car bombings to mass executions by insurgent forces. Just recently, insurgents practiced a modified method of attack and packed a beheaded corpse with explosives, blowing apart the policeman who arrived to investigate the scene. Indeed, in November, insurgents attacked police and national guard units in Mosul, successfully taking control of certain parts of the city. Because of these gains, U.S. forces have now been assigned to every police station in Mosul in order to prevent another situation where Iraqi security forces desert when attacked by insurgents.
Insurgency Creates Heightened Level of Instability
   The surging attacks by guerrillas in the last months are part of a strategy to create massive instability throughout Iraq in an effort to prevent or discredit the January 30 general elections. The other element of the insurgent strategy is the targeting and killing of politicians and government figures participating or working with U.S. forces. A series of assassinations and assassination attempts have made the prospect of participating in the U.S.-fostered political process extremely risky, a reality that grows more and more precarious with each passing day.
   For instance, on January 4, the governor of Baghdad province -- Ali al-Haidari -- while traveling in a three-vehicle convoy in the northern Baghdad neighborhood of Hurriyah, was assassinated by insurgents. The murder of al-Haidari is significant since he is the most senior figure to be assassinated by insurgents since the killing of the former president of the Iraqi Governing Council, Abdel-Zahraa Othman, in May 2004.
   The assassination of al-Haidari accentuates the ability of insurgents to launch carefully planned, strategic attacks aimed at crippling the political process. Furthermore, the assassination of such a significant figure speaks to the ability of the insurgency to receive inside information provided by members of the Iraqi security forces. The head of the Baghdad division of the Iraqi National Guard, Major General Mudhir Abood, told reporters that members of his paramilitary police force have leaked classified information to insurgent groups.
   This type of behavior is a trend that is often observed when outside powers attempt to build indigenous security forces in a country facing an insurgency. It was best witnessed during the U.S. intervention in Vietnam, when U.S.-trained members of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (A.R.V.N.) supplied both classified information and military equipment to the insurgent forces that made up the Viet Cong.
   In addition to attacks on Iraqi politicians, insurgents have also attempted to exploit the sectarian rifts within Islam. Attacks against Shi'a power groups participating in the upcoming elections have been pervasive; the motives behind these attacks lie in the interests of the Sunni Arab minority who aim to prevent Iraqi Shi'a from using their majority status in the country to consolidate political power in the upcoming elections.
   Assassination attempts against Shi'a political leaders occur frequently, such as the December 27 Baghdad car bombing directed at the offices of Shi'a leader Abdel Aziz al-Hakim, head of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq, one of the most prominent Shi'a political parties. More recently, on January 12, gunmen killed Sheik Mahmoud Finjan, a representative of Shi'a leader Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani.
   All of these attacks by various insurgent groups are meant to create a heightened level of instability to prevent the January elections from occurring, or, if this is not possible, to create conditions where the turnout for the elections is so poor that their results cannot be considered representative of the population.
   While the elections are still scheduled to proceed, the insurgents have been fairly successful in their strategy. On January 6, Lieutenant General Thomas Metz, the commander of American ground forces in Iraq, admitted that vital areas of four of Iraq's 18 provinces are not secure enough for citizens to vote; the provinces -- Al Anbar, Nineva, Salahadin and Baghdad -- are all Sunni-dominated areas and contain 50 percent of the country's population.
   Indeed, the continuing violence and Washington's recognition of its lack of control is leading many Iraqis to question whether the dangers inherent in voting are worth the end result.
Insurgency Steams Ahead
   These developments speak to Washington's failure to quell an insurgency that is rapidly growing in depth and size. In November 2003, U.S. General John Abizaid, commander of U.S. Central Command, estimated that the insurgency "does not exceed 5,000" fighters. Now, in January 2004, new estimates place the insurgency at more than 200,000 fighters and active supporters -- a major increase from Abizaid's previous claims of 5,000.
   General Muhammad Abdullah Shahwani, the director of Iraq's new intelligence services, said on January 3 that "the resistance is bigger than the U.S. military in Iraq. I think the resistance is more than 200,000 people." The growth within the insurgency's ranks was foreseeable in the months after the initial U.S. invasion ended, when U.S. forces failed to create levels of stability acceptable to the bulk of the Iraqi population.
   Partly due to inadequate troop levels, Washington failed to eliminate the lawlessness that arose immediately after the ouster of Saddam Hussein and the Ba'ath Party. In addition, basic services such as electricity were not restored at a quick enough pace to inspire confidence in the occupying forces. As summarized by Shahwani, explaining the motivations behind many of the insurgents, "People are fed up after two years without improvement. People are fed up with no security, no electricity, people feel they have to do something."
   Another factor that likely contributed to the growth of the insurgency was the Shi'a rebellion led by Moqtada al-Sadr in April 2004. Al-Sadr's Mehdi Army engaged U.S.-led forces and, while greatly outmatched by U.S. firepower, managed to expose the weakness of Iraq's security forces, which were largely unable to repel attacks from al-Sadr's militia.
   Al-Sadr's uprising, which did not even have the active support of a majority of Iraq's Shi'a, dramatically revealed the power that Iraqi Shi'a could choose to exercise should they feel that their interests are being violated. This ominous development, which emboldened the insurgents, accelerated Iraq's instability by raising doubts over Washington's level of control.
   Finally, another important factor explaining Iraq's present instability is one that came into existence in March 2003, when the initial invasion was set in motion. By choosing to invade Iraq, the Bush administration decided to intervene in a country that suffers from broad sectarian rifts that have existed since its creation.
   Iraq's political questions have yet to be answered, for there is still no understanding on how the three main power groups within the country -- Sunni Arabs, Sunni Kurds, and Shi'a Arabs -- will share power. In fact, the only factor that has kept Iraq from falling into some form of serious civil war during the past 84 years is the country's historical legacy of authoritarian governments that suppress all forms of dissent.
   With the elimination of Saddam Hussein and the Ba'ath Party, the failure to immediately construct a new government that was either accepted by the bulk of the population or acted authoritatively to quash dissent resulted in the sectarian violence surfacing today.
   The preceding factors help to explain why insurgents were not immediately marginalized by the bulk of the Iraqi population and have been able to grow in strength and effectiveness. Some insurgents are supported out of Iraqi nationalism and anger over the actions of the U.S. government in invading and occupying Iraq, while others are supported because they are pursuing the interests of their particular religious/ethnic sect.
   These conditions impose an almost impossible hurdle for the United States to jump. As stated by James Dobbins of the Rand Corporation and printed in the January edition of the influential publication Foreign Affairs, "The beginning of wisdom is to recognize that the ongoing war in Iraq is not one that the United States can win. As a result of its initial miscalculations, misdirected planning, and inadequate preparation, Washington has lost the Iraqi people's confidence and consent, and it is unlikely to win them back."
Exit Strategies
   The present conditions in Iraq are turning more and more undesirable for U.S. interests. Troop losses are turning American public opinion away from the conflict, with 50 percent of Americans now saying it was a mistake to send U.S. troops into Iraq; the economic costs involved are skyrocketing, with the war costing thus far $130 billion, well above the Bush administration's initial estimates of $50-$60 billion; and the military is overextended and has therefore inadvertently decreased the potential threat of U.S. military action elsewhere in the world, which works potentially to weaken U.S. power.
   As a result of deteriorating conditions, the Pentagon announced on January 6 that it would be dispatching retired four-star Army General Gary E. Luck to Iraq in order to carry out a review of the military's entire Iraq strategy. In light of all these developments, Washington needs to concentrate on both short-term and long-term exit strategies that will scale back its level of present involvement. Washington will find difficulty in discovering exit strategies that do not damage U.S. interests.
   One potential exit strategy is a mass influx of U.S. troops into the country. This strategy has been pushed by members of Congress, in addition to former presidential candidate John Kerry. Much of the instability that reigns today is a result of the initial Bush administration decision to use as few troops as safely possible to occupy post-Saddam Iraq. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld assured in February 2003, before the invasion, that "The idea that it would take several hundred thousand U.S. forces I think is far from the mark."
   However, in that same month, General Eric K. Shinseki, the former chief of staff of the U.S. Army, advised that "Something on the order of several hundred thousand soldiers, are probably, you know, a figure that would be required. We're talking about post-hostilities control over a piece of geography that's fairly significant with the kinds of ethnic tensions that could lead to other problems."
   But the decision to use as few troops as possible for the occupation created conditions where insurgents were better able to plan and execute scattered attacks on U.S. forces, testing to find weak points in the American military's defenses. Insurgents were also able to execute attacks on politically significant targets, such as oil pipelines and crowded market squares; these attacks weaken confidence in the occupying troops and create heightened levels of instability.
   Nevertheless, while in 2003 more troops on the ground may have prevented the rapid growth of the insurgency -- by giving it less freedom to organize and plan attacks -- it is doubtful that it would have the same effect now. The insurgency has grown so large that an influx of troops could merely mean more targets for the insurgents to attack. Furthermore, present troop levels in Iraq are already straining the U.S. military to a degree where any increase in deployment could damage U.S. interests and defenses elsewhere.
   U.S. Army Reserve and National Guard soldiers already make up 40 percent of U.S. troops in Iraq, soon to be increased to 50 percent. Both of these military divisions have seen a shortfall in recruiting targets during the past few months, as many Americans are hesitant about making a decision that could cause them to be mobilized for two straight years.
   The exhaustive use of the military led Lieutenant General James Helmly, head of the U.S. Army Reserve, to announce that that the reserve was "rapidly degenerating into a 'broken' force." Retired four-star Army General Barry McCaffrey agreed, saying in early January, "The Army's wheels are going to come off in the next 24 months. The data are now beginning to come in to support that."
   The Pentagon has already pulled some of its troops from South Korea to redeploy them to Iraq, and military officials are now mulling over whether to increase permanently the active duty Army force from 482,000 to 512,000 -- an increase that will cost an additional $3 billion a year; on top of these proposed changes, the Pentagon is also debating whether to change its National Guard and Reserve mobilization policy to allow reserve soldiers to be mobilized for more than two years of active service.
   Yet, as stated earlier, even with these changes and an influx of troops to Iraq, the U.S. will have difficulty overcoming the insurgency. Dr. Max Manwaring, a research professor of military strategy at the U.S. Army War College, recently told the Power and Interest News Report that, barring a significant change of events, the insurgents will eventually "take control of the state." Manwaring argues that his studies of post World War II insurgencies show that "the more intense and voluminous the military actions of the intervening Western power, the more likely the incumbent government was to lose to the insurgents," and that "the more the intervening power escalated the numbers of its forces in response to a deteriorating situation, the worse [the situation] got."
   Another exit strategy -- one that is presently being employed by the Bush administration -- is to create viable Iraqi security forces to replace U.S. forces quickly in establishing stability. This policy, already coined "Iraqification," is similar to the failed "Vietnamization" policy of the 1960s and 1970s employed during the U.S. intervention in Vietnam. This strategy is a must in order for the United States -- at some point in the future -- to begin to shift its forces out of Iraq; even if Washington is still set on a long-term commitment in Iraq, it must generate for itself the option of pulling troops out of the country to deploy them elsewhere.
   Furthermore, the cold reception that U.S. troops received by the bulk of the Iraqi population means that a high-profile American presence should be avoided for risk of fueling the insurgency. As explained by Dr. Steven Metz, chairman of the Regional Strategy and Planning Department of the U.S. Army War College, to the Power and Interest News Report, this "argument is based on the assumption that it is the American presence itself that fuels support for the insurgency, so the less that presence, the less support for the insurgency."
   It appears that Washington is coming to terms with this necessity. General George W. Casey, the top U.S. military commander in Iraq, is now considering expanding a program where U.S. military personnel act as advisers to Iraqi security forces. As was the case during U.S. involvement in Vietnam, when U.S. advisers are present during engagements between Iraqi security forces and insurgents, the security forces are more effective. The drawback to this expansion, however, is that it takes American troops away from units that could be used to launch offensives on insurgents.
   Nonetheless, enhancing the effectiveness of Iraqi security forces is of utmost necessity for the United States. Speaking to the New York Times, commander of U.S. forces in northern Iraq, Brigadier General Carter Ham, explained that "The development of Iraqi security forces is, in my view, necessarily the main effort." Ham commented on the proposed adviser expansion program, arguing that "It's time to apply it on a larger scale. It seems to me that this is something we want to start doing in the immediate post-election period."
   But, while the "Iraqification" strategy is imperative, there is no guarantee that it will be any more successful than it was during the Vietnam intervention. The success of this policy hinges on whether the United States can marginalize Iraqi guerrilla forces and prevent them from gaining further support among the civilian population.
   Once again, this strategy had a better chance for success early into the intervention, before the rapid growth of the insurgency. Now, the situation somewhat resembles failed U.S. attempts in Vietnam, where U.S.-trained indigenous forces were less resolute and poorly trained when compared to their enemy counterparts; for instance, in Iraq's most violent provinces, desertion rates among U.S.-trained Iraqi security forces is growing. In a December 19 interview with the American television program "Meet the Press," Senator John W. Warner, the Republican head of the Armed Services Committee, warned that the "raw material is lacking in the willpower and commitment after [Iraqi security forces] receive this training to really shoulder the heavy responsibilities." Indeed, the Bush administration's quarterly update to Congress on Iraq stated "While Iraq's security forces have shown considerable progress during this last quarter, the overall performance of these forces has been mixed when put to the test."
   The one major difference between the situation in Vietnam and Iraq -- which is a positive sign for American efforts -- is that in Iraq the only fighters threatening Iraqi security forces are that of guerrilla forces, with limited organizational cooperation between the different militias; unlike Vietnam, there is no organized state military that presently threatens Iraqi security forces comparable to what A.R.V.N. faced from the North Vietnamese Army. Without an organized army to face, the situation in Iraq appears to be less challenging than in Vietnam; Iraqi security forces and the U.S. military can concentrate solely on preventing an internal revolution.
   The final exit strategy is the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq's cities, allowing the different Iraqi factions to work out a power-sharing arrangement themselves. As part of this strategy, a greatly reduced number of American troops would still occupy a small number of fortified bases in order to protect Iraq from attacks by outside states, along with preserving the ability to launch quick strikes against critical targets. Pressure for this strategy is building; Secretary of State Colin Powell is now arguing that American troops will begin leaving Iraq this year, provided that Iraq's security forces are able to take on a larger security role.
   Upon a withdrawal, a number of outcomes could occur. One such outcome could result in the division of Iraq into three separate autonomous regions, with the Sunni Kurds inhabiting northern Iraq, Sunni Arabs controlling central Iraq, and Shi'a Arabs ruling over southern Iraq. This outcome would cause a series of problems: Turkey, and other neighboring states, would be agitated over Kurdish autonomy; central Iraq would crave the rich oil fields to its north and south, and the Shi'a of southern Iraq may gravitate politically toward Iran. Such an outcome could result in tumultuous civil warfare throughout Iraq for years to come.
   Upon an American withdrawal, there is also the possibility that a dominant power group within Iraq would be able to consolidate control over the entire country. While the Kurds have little capability for this, the Sunni and Shi'a Arabs do. A return to Sunni Arab-based rule would result in a major uprising by the Shi'a in light of the country's current power vacuum. And control by the Shi'a, which would be violently resisted by Iraq's Sunnis, would likely seek assistance from Iran.
Conclusion
   The United States is facing an increasingly complicated intervention in Iraq. Washington is presently focused on creating as much stability as possible before the upcoming general elections on January 30. Nonetheless, a heightened level of violence is occurring and there are still doubts over whether the elections will be able to proceed as scheduled. For instance, on January 3, Iraqi Defense Minister Hazim Shalan advised that the elections could still be delayed, provided that such a delay would result in a higher participation rate from Iraq's Sunni Arab population. Until this is decided, or until the elections occur, little will change in regards to the Bush administration's Iraq policy.
   After the elections, however, the administration will have to examine its viable exit strategies critically. While the best case scenario is the creation of a popular democratic government, the odds of this occurring are now highly unlikely. While it would be disadvantageous to U.S. interests for Washington to completely withdraw from Iraq, it may be even more disadvantageous to remain. In the words of former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, "We will have to decide to what extent we want to be involved in what may become a civil war [after the elections]."
   While one potential exit strategy is increasing U.S. troop levels in Iraq to foster conditions of stability, the overarching present strategy is to create viable Iraqi security forces. The failure to create viable Iraqi security forces will mean the failure of the intervention. If Washington's best exit strategies are unsuccessful, then, for the sake of its interests in the Middle East, the United States must withdraw the bulk of its forces and reluctantly offer support to whichever Iraqi powerbroker has the best ability to stabilize Iraq, even if that stabilization takes place violently.
   Report Drafted By Erich Marquardt
   The Power and Interest News Report (PINR) is an analysis-based publication that seeks to, as objectively as possible, provide insight into various conflicts, regions and points of interest around the globe. PINR approaches a subject based upon the powers and interests involved, leaving the moral judgments to the reader. This report may not be reproduced, reprinted or broadcast without the written permission of inquiries@pinr.com . All comments should be directed to content@pinr.com .
   PINR is presently used in courses at Princeton University, Purdue University, Miami of Ohio, and Australian National University.
   [COMMENT: This author can see part of the problem is putting groups that hate each other inside one "pot." Isn't it strange that the Insiders won't consider dividing Iraq into its constituent parts -- Sunni Arabs, Sunni Kurds, and Shi'a Arabs -- and even setting aside an area or some safety system for the Christians, so-called Assyrians? Can you draw any conclusions from this refusal to be sensible?
   Notice the huge amounts of explosives used in the assassinations? It does look like a well-financed operation. And guess who sells the explosives to the insurgents / holy warriors / freedom fighters! The Insiders, of course. They make money supplying the insurgents, AND the Coalition of the Killing! COMMENT ENDS.] [Jan 17, 05]

• Police face Mickelberg damages.


   The West Australian, by Sean Cowan, p 32, Tuesday, January 18, 2005
   PERTH (WA) Australia: Taxpayers could be forced to foot the legal bill for six former and serving police officers accused of giving tainted evidence against the Mickelberg brothers in the Perth Mint swindle case.
   Ray and Peter Mickelberg are already suing the State of WA, claiming $13.6 million ... over the actions of former CIB chief Don Hancock, self-confessed corrupt former detective Tony Lewandowski and four others who allegedly covered for the pair. ... {Jan 18, 05]

• Diggers injured in embassy blast.

Iraq / Irak flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
   The Sunday Times Online, Perth, W. Australia, www.sundaytimes. news.com.au/ common/story_ page/0,7034, 11987676% 255E401,00.html , with AAP, January 19, 2005
   IRAQ: TWO Australian soldiers have been injured after a suicide car bomb exploded close to the Australian embassy in central Baghdad.
   Two people and another seven people were wounded in the blast, witnesses said.
   The defence department said the soldiers received minor injuries in the blast, while a Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) spokeswoman said all embassy and Australian Defence Force staff had been accounted for.
   [To view, visit: Picture]
   "Their injuries are not life threatening and they are personally contacting their next of kin," the defence department said in a statement.
   Australian and coalition soldiers were working with the Iraqi police and had secured the site of the bombing, the department said.
   "The (Australian Defence Force) security detachment is continuing with its task of providing security to the Australian embassy and staff in Iraq,'' it said.
   Witnesses said two dead bodies were taken away, one of them a young sanitation worker who had just stepped outside of his truck when the bomb exploded.
   The bomb exploded at 7:05 am (1505 AEDT) outside the soldiers' barracks, a seven-floor building across the street from the embassy.
   No damage had been done to the Australian embassy, the DFAT spokeswoman said.
   However, the force of the blast had blown out the windows in the residences of the embassy staff.
   US troops sealed off the area after the blast.
   About 30 minutes later, a second suicide car bomb exploded outside a police headquarters in eastern Baghdad.
   Six people died in the second blast, witnesses said.
   A further 30 minutes later, a third suicide car bomb exploded outside an Iraqi army base in the west of the city, killing two people and wounding five, police and hospital sources said.[...] [Jan 19, 05]

• British troops 'abused captured looters'.


   The West Australian, THE TELEGRAPH GROUP, LONDON, p 11, Thursday, January 20, 2005
   BERLIN: British troops abused and sexually humiliated Iraqi prisoners in a series of "shocking and appalling" incidents after the Iraq war, a court martial in Germany has heard.
   One or more soldiers from 1st Battalion, the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers, forced two captured Iraqi looters to strip naked and simulate sexual acts, the hearing was told.
   Another soldier, Lance-Cpl Mark Cooley, 25, trussed up an Iraqi man in cargo netting and dangled him from the tines of a fork-lift truck which he then drove about.
   Lance-Cpl Cooley also simulated kicking and punching an Iraqi in order to pose for a photograph he could show friends at home, the court heard.
   This followed orders allegedly given by the officer in charge to deter looters by "working them hard", an order allegedly contravening the Geneva Convention.
   Military police have investigated 160 alleged cases of death, injury or ill-treatment of Iraqis.
   The court martial, at the regiment's German base at Innsbruck, is one of four cases set for trial. Ten others are being considered.
   The panel of seven officers, who make up the jury, was shown 22 photographs of the alleged offences, said to have occurred at a warehouse near Basra on May 15, 2003.
   Evidence emerged after Fusilier Gary Bartlam took a film containing 15 of the photographs to a processor in Britain. He was convicted of unspecified charges at a separate trial.
   Also on trial are Lance-Cpl Darren Larkin, 30, and Cpl Daniel Kenyon, 33.
   British Prime Minister Tony Blair said he was shocked and appalled by the photographs but insisted the majority of troops in Iraq behaved honourably.
   "Whilst we express, in a unified way I know, our disgust at those pictures, I hope we do not allow that to tarnish the good name - fully deserved - of our British armed forces," he told Parliament.#
  [Pictures] One shows a man in shorts standing on a man lying down, seemingly with his right foot on his hip and his left foot on his head. The other picture shows a man in black crouched down, taking a swing at a man lying on his side, with the upper part of his body in a big net. Caption: On trial: Photographs purporting to show Lance-Cpl Larking, left, and Lance-Cpl Cooley abusing Iraqis.  Pictures: Associated Press  
   [COMMENT: This news report might have been a fraud. This newspaper put "abused captured looters" into quotation marks in the headline. I hope it was good journalistic practice by the sub-editor, quoting the words as received. Let us hope also s/he did not remove the quotation marks, because s/he might have remembered the full looting story -- it had been deliberately permitted by the Occupying Powers. AND, the people captured might have been ordinary citizens just going about their business!
   Who could forget the television images of the United States troops standing idly by as the looters sauntered in and out of buildings? Who could forget the weeping of the woman curator of the famous Museum of Antiquities? One US officer told the television reporter that the looting was part of the Iraqis' new-found freedom. An ordinary soldier or officer is unlikely to have said that unless some higher-ups told him how to explain such a breach of law and order. Looters in other wars have been shot on sight by ruthless occupiers, or fired at and/or arrested by more civilised occupiers.
   So "careless" were the Occupying Forces that, after they smashed open the locks on a locked warehouse, when they found it full of explosives and ammunition, they went away, leaving it unguarded. After the insurgency broke out and someone remembered to check the storehouses, they were empty. Washington tried to tell lies about this, but the old film of the US soldiers smashing the locks were promptly put back on the television screens. Leaving the explosives unguarded was deliberate sabotage of the normalisation process.
   It is suspected that the looting also was deliberately permitted, on orders from London and Washington, ostensibly so that the Iraqi general public, particularly the respectable and the middle and upper classes, would be completely demoralised, and so would meekly accept privatisation, finance capitalism, high unemployment, and "competition policy". This policy, like the Nazi and Allied bombing of cities, and the Soviet persecution of people in the nations they occupied, only served to swing people's loyalties and beliefs over to resist those attacking them, even if they had been sympathetic previously. It is assumed that Canberra, Australia, was not even thought worthy of being told of the policy. Canberra, after all, is there to bark on command from The City and Wall Street.
   The REAL aim of permitting the looting is to help flood the West with unfortunate Iraqi refugees, most of whom who will not be able to fit in to non-Muslim countries, and can then be manipulated as a force for more disorders.
   Readers, I hope you enjoyed these words in the first sentence -- "after the Iraq war". The prosecutor in a British camp trial in Innsbruck might have used those words in the courtmartial, but sensible people know that it is not yet "after" the Iraq war. It continues every day. At present it is intensifying, as the laughable "elections" in a few days grind along towards disaster.
   And, readers, did you savour the euphemism in the alleged order of the officer to deter looters by "working them hard" (par 5). Language is a gift, isn't it?
   PM Blair's statements (last two pars) are the pompous statements expected of PMs, even if they gave the orders to torture and humiliate POWs. Blair's policies of torture and degradation have put at risk every British soldier who takes part in actions anywhere in the world. Global, yes, because thanks to postwar immigration policies and practices, there are trainees in the arts of terrorism in nearly every country nowadays.
   ANOTHER NOTE: Even though everyone ought to admire and thank the Anglo-Celts for hanging on in World War II against the Nazis until rescued by the Soviet and US forces, isn't it time that the British regiment gave up its German base at Innsbruck? The anti-Nazi and anti-Shinto wars ended about 60 years ago! Hitler, like Mussolini, the darling of Big Business in his heyday, and hailed as a Messiah by many, is unlikely to rise from the dead! -- JWC, 26 Jan, 05 COMMENT ENDS.] [Jan 20, 05]

• Taysir Alluni: A reporter behind bars

  Afghanistan flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Spain flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Aljazeera Net (Arabic independent TV), http://english. aljazeera.net /NR/exeres/0C9 4F820-9232-41AC- B01D-81DE05 7F7FE4.htm , 12:36 Makka Time, 9:36 GMT, Tuesday, January 25, 2005
   Taysir Alluni could never have suspected that the 9/11 attacks and the US war against Afghanistan in its hunt for al-Qaida and Taliban leaders would dramatically change his life.
   Alluni, who began his career as an Arabic translator for a news agency in Granada, Spain, is credited as being the only journalist based in Afghanistan in October 2001 to show the world what the US war machine was doing to one of the world's poorest countries.
Dead man on his back. Aljazeera pic. Some images from Afghanistan were too distressing to show

   By then working for Aljazeera, Alluni was able to capture images of civilian victims in the destitute villages of Afghanistan and the miserable streets of Kabul. His coverage triggered international outrage over the US action in Afghanistan.
   Alluni's work in that war-torn country came to an end when US forces bombed Aljazeera's Kabul office just hours before the Northern Alliance entered the Afghan capital. While many say the office was deliberately targeted, Aljazeera keeps an open mind, while still asking for an official investigation.
   Alluni left Kabul shortly before his office was bombed, following the Taliban retreat and reporting on it. Much of what he witnessed was too distressing to show and he was himself assaulted. "Scenes that, I'm sorry, I could not describe to anybody," he said.
   Beaten and mugged, Alluni has not said who attacked him but described the incident as leaving him "in deep psychological shock".
Back to Qatar
   Alluni returned to Doha, Qatar, exhausted and with mixed emotions
   Although professionally satisfied at being able to report the war - reportage that earned him international recognition - the images of suffering were painful to carry.
   A respected member of staff, the appreciation he received from his colleagues back in Doha helped Alluni recover from his stint in Afghanistan and surgery he underwent in the Qatari capital.
To war zone once more
   Despite his deteriorating health, Alluni headed to Baghdad in the second week of the US war on Iraq in March 2003 on his next assignment.
   While reporting there, he once more narrowly escaped a US bombardment. That he survived the US bombing of the Aljazeera Baghdad bureau is little short of a miracle. Aljazeera continues to pursue an official response to this attack - an onslaught that killed his colleague, Aljazeera reporter Tariq Ayub.
Behind bars
   When US President George Bush officially declared the Iraq war over, Alluni chose Spain as his destination for a holiday, thinking that his Spanish citizenship would help him avoid harassment and facilitate his movements.
Mr Taysir Alluni. Aljazeera pic. Taysir Alluni has a serious heart condition and has had surgery

   His hopes proved to be unfounded. Syrian-born Alluni, a father of five, was arrested in September 2003 at his home in Granada. He is accused of being a member of a group in Spain belonging to al-Qaida.
   Alluni was bailed on medical grounds about a month later. He has a serious heart condition.
   However, he was re-arrested in November 2003 for fear he may flee the country while awaiting trial.
   He remains behind bars, a situation that has sparked outrage among Arab human rights groups, journalists and colleagues, who describe this controversial prosecution of this very modern Arab icon as nothing more than an attack on the freedom of the press.
CLICK http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/127CA659-BC10-4E1C-9EB2-51744C2197D7.htm to view Aljazeera's in-depth coverage
   [COMMENT: Ah, the "Christian" Spaniards, left-wing or right-wing, know how to exact revenge, just like their desert rivals! And like the Red offshoots. ENDS.] [Jan 25, 05]

• STUDENTS, STEELWORKER, FARMER, RETIREE SENTENCED TO FEDERAL PRISON; Eight Other Defendants - Including Two High School Students - Await Trial for Nonviolent Actions to Close School of the Americas.


   SOA Watch Update - from Columbus, Georgia; Trial Log #2, January 25, 2005
   UNITED STATES: Yesterday, January 24, five human rights advocates -- including a chaplain, students, a Steelworker, a farmer and a 79-year-old retiree -- were sentenced to three months in federal prison and fines of up to $500 for their acts of nonviolent civil disobedience calling for the closure of the US Army's School of the Americas (SOA/ WHINSEC). Another defendant was sentenced to one year of probation with a $1,000 fine. Eight of their co-defendants -- two of whom are high school students -- will continue their trials tomorrow.
   "It's a sad day when peace protestors go to prison," said Liz Deligio, 28, a chaplain and student from Chicago, Illinois sentenced to three months in prison, "and the perpetrators of human rights violations will never see the inside of a courthouse -- let alone a jail."
   This morning, trials continue. Court commenced at 9 am, with Alice Gerard's trial continuing from yesterday. Supporters have packed the tiny courtroom, and a number of them were turned away due to lack of space. The SOA Watch website, www.SOAW.org , is being regularly updated. Continue to check throughout the day for the latest in the judicial proceedings.
   To read more about the SOA 14 and what steps you can take to support them, visit .
   Leaving the courthouse yesterday, defendant Liz Deligio commented, "The spirit of hope and the courage of the defendants rose above the punitive verdicts handed down in court."
   THE 14 SOA/ WHINSEC DEFENDANTS:-
   ADJUDICATED
  • Liz Deligio, 28, Chicago, IL -- 3 months in prison; $500 fine
  • Meagan Doty, 22, St. Louis, MO, student in Dayton, OH -- 3 months in prison, $500 fine
  • Tom MacLean, 79, Ashfield, MA -- 3 months in federal medical facility
  • Elizabeth Nadeau, 27, Minneapolis, MN -- 3 months in prison; $500 fine
  • Mike Ring, 65, Wall, NJ -- 1 year of probation; $1,000 fine
  • Dan Schwankl, 31, Siler City, NC -- 3 months in prison; $500 fine
       AWAITING TRIAL
  • Robert "Nashua" Chantal, 52, Americus, GA
  • Brian DeRouen, 27, Fairfield, CA, student in Dayton, OH
  • Ron Durham, 24, Chicago, IL
  • Alice Gerard, 48, Buffalo, NY
  • Sr. Lelia "Lil" Mattingly, 63, Maryknoll, NY
  • Aaron Shuman, 32, Oakland, CA
  • And two minors.
       To read more about this list visit http://lists.mutual aid.org/mailman/ listinfo/soaw
       SOA Watch ~ PO Box 4566 ~ Washington DC 20017 ~ (202)234-3440 ~ www.soaw. org ~ info@soaw.org
       [COMMENT: Most people around Earth probably don't even know what this training camp is doing, and some who do don't care! COMMENT ENDS.] [Jan 25, 05]
    • Judge shot to death in daylight while driving.
       Electronic news media, Wed, Jan 26, 2005
       IRAQ: An Iraqi judge was murdered in his car in broad daylight.
       The elections are only days away.
       [COMMENT: Dm-ahcracy is jus' grand! Whoopee! Ah hope dohz Flahrida folk will come and count dohz votes! Who said the Iraqi resistance is against foreigners? It's against civilisation! Around this time some parts of the Islamic world celebrated a holy season, which entailed the sacrificing of sheep. COMMENT ENDS.] [Jan 26, 05]
    • All melding happily -- or are there lawless spots?
       The West Australian, "In short," Letters to Editor, p 20, Friday, January 28, 2005
       PERTH (WA) Australia: How interesting that three of the four recipients of Australian of the Year awards were born overseas. It shows what a diverse and integrated society we are. Just after reading this I was listening to the Seekers singing "I am, you are, we are Australian". Surely this would be a much more appropriate song for our anthem, reflecting all the people who now make up this wonderful country.  Pamela Burt, Nedlands
       Happy Australia Day? I returned to my office yesterday morning to find broken glass and rubbish everywhere, gardens damaged, signs and walls vandalised. It will cost $1000 to repair the damage.
       Why do people do these things? Where is the respect for others? John Howard jawbones about our great country, the freedom we have, the friendly spirit of Australia.
       Take a closer look, Mr Howard, there are plenty of scumbags who don't feel the same way. City of Perth, what are you doing to cover the extra costs this "friendly day" imposes on small businesses like ours?  Paul Chapman, South Perth.
       I have returned to Perth after living away for 3 1/2 years. The first day back I read in The West Australian about bikie gang violence and John Kizon complaining about a police vendetta. I guess some things just never change.  Patrick F. Whalen, Perth. [Jan 28, 05]
    • Western Australian State election to be on Saturday, February 26, 2005. [Jan 28, 05]
    • Ex-officer describes lewd tactics at Guantanamo.  United States of America flag; www.edwardmooney.com/miniflags  Cuba flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 

    Ex-officer describes lewd tactics at Guantanamo

       Globe and Mail (Canada), www.theglobe andmail.com/ servlet/story/ RTGAM.20050128. wxsexx0128/BN Story/ Internat ional , By PAISLEY DODDS, Associated Press, Friday, Jan 28, 2005
       SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO -- Female interrogators tried to break Muslim detainees at the U.S. prison camp in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, with sexual touching, by wearing a miniskirt and thong underwear, rubbing a prisoner's back with her breasts and in one case, smearing a Saudi man's face with fake menstrual blood, according to an insider's written account.
       A draft manuscript obtained by The Associated Press is classified as secret pending a Pentagon review for a planned book detailing ways the U.S. military used women as part of tougher physical and psychological interrogation tactics to get terror suspects to talk.
       It's the most revealing account so far of interrogations at the secretive detention camp, where officials say they have halted some controversial techniques.
       "I have really struggled with this, because the detainees, their families and much of the world will think this is a religious war based on some of the techniques used, even though it is not the case," said the author, former Army Sergeant Erik Saar.
       Sgt. Saar didn't provide the manuscript, but confirmed the authenticity of several draft pages. He worked as an Arabic translator at the U.S. camp from December, 2002, to June, 2003. At the time, it was under the command of Major-General Geoffrey Miller, who had a mandate to get better intelligence from prisoners, including alleged al-Qaeda members caught in Afghanistan.
       Sgt. Saar said he witnessed about 20 interrogations. About three months after his arrival, he started noticing what he called "disturbing" practices.
       One female civilian contractor used a special outfit that included a miniskirt, thong underwear and a bra during late-night interrogations with prisoners, mostly Muslim men who consider it taboo to have close contact with women who aren't their wives.
       Beginning in April, 2003, "there hung a short skirt and thong underwear on the hook on the back of the door" of one interrogation team's office, the draft says. "Later, I learned that this outfit was used for interrogations by one of the female civilian contractors . . . on a team which conducted interrogations in the middle of the night on Saudi men who were refusing to talk."
       In another case, Sgt. Saar describes a female military interrogator questioning an unco-operative 21-year-old Saudi detainee who allegedly took flying lessons in Arizona before the Sept. 11 terror attacks.
       "His female interrogator decided that she needed to turn up the heat," Sgt. Saar wrote. She repeatedly asked the detainee who had sent him to Arizona, telling him he could "co-operate" or "have no hope whatsoever of ever leaving this place or talking to a lawyer."
       The female interrogator wanted to "break him," he added, describing how she removed her uniform top to expose a tight-fitting T-shirt and began taunting the detainee, touching her breasts, rubbing them against the prisoner's back and commenting on his apparent erection. The detainee spat in her face, the manuscript recounts.
       The interrogator left the room to ask a Muslim linguist how she could break the prisoner's reliance on God. The linguist told her to tell the detainee that she was menstruating, touch him, then make sure to turn off the water in his cell so he couldn't wash.
       The interrogator used ink from a red pen to fool the detainee, Sgt. Saar says. "He began to cry like a baby," the draft says Lieutenant-Colonel James Marshall, a spokesman for U.S. Southern Command, refused to say whether the military has a specific strategy to use women to interrogate Muslim suspects.
       "U.S. forces treat all detainees and conduct all interrogations, wherever they may occur, humanely and consistent with U.S. legal obligations, and in particular with legal obligations prohibiting torture," he said.
       The book is due out this year.# By courtesy of www. information clearing house. info Information Clearing House. [Bolding added]
       [COMMENT: Ah, but don't be disturbed! President Bush has prayers at the start of each Cabinet meeting! You will have noticed the words "Beginning in April, 2003". Is it possible these devilish tricks had been planned? Wonder if they LEARNT it at the SOA training centre, or did they just improvise? Bet they didn't learn to think like that at church! But they ARE getting these Muslims to have a bigger hate than even their Islamic teachers had put there.
       We wonder if all those U.S. "fundamentalist Christians", some of whom are belatedly having second thoughts about the Bush gang's real devotion to their idea of marriage rules, went along happily decades ago with the equality merchants who insisted it was women's RIGHT to go to war. Surely, then, it must be a woman's right to handle her private parts with anyone she likes, even if he is a prisoner of war, or whatever title Bush's Administration gives them. The Red Cross believes the Abu Ghraib prisoners have been given treatment tantamount to torture, in a system, not just the actions of a few, from early in the Iraq war.
       Author Sergeant Erik Saar said it might look to the victims like a religious war, but he doesn't believe it is. In fact, it is -- but it's a war between sects of the eye-for-eye religion, whether some followers know it or not, with third and fourth viewpoints to get the main blame. The general public of the Coalition of the Willing DOES deserve some blame, for apathetically allowing or actively supporting the re-election of warmongers. COMMENT ENDS.] [Jan 28, 05]

    • [The US fantasy of freedom in prisons without hope of a jury; giving aid to the world's dictators]


       The Guardian Weekly (Britain), "A fantasy of freedom," www.guardian. co.uk/guardian weekly/story/ 0,12674,139 9075,00.html , by Gary Younge, ~ Jan 28, 2005
       LONDON: There is one tiny corner of Cuba that will for ever America be. It is a place where innocent people are held without charge for years, beyond international law, human decency and the mythical glow of Lady Liberty's torch. It is a place where torture is common, beating is ritual and humiliation is routine. They call it Guantanamo Bay.
       Last week the incoming US secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice, listed Cuba, among others, as "an outpost of tyranny". A few days later President Bush started his second term with a pledge to unleash "the force of freedom" on the entire world. "The best hope for peace in our world is the expansion of freedom in all the world," he said.
       You would think that if the Americans are truly interested in expanding freedom and ending tyranny in Cuba, let alone the rest of the world, Guantanamo Bay would be as good a place to start as any. But the captives in Guantanamo should not ask for the keys to their leg irons any time soon. Rice was not referring to the outpost of tyranny that her boss created in Cuba, but the rest of the Caribbean island, which lives in a stable mixture of the imperfect and the impressive.
       In short, while the US could liberate a place where there are flagrant human rights abuses and over which it has total control, it would rather topple a sovereign state, which poses no threat, through diplomatic and economic and possibly military warfare that is already causing chaos and hardship.
       Welcome to Bush's foreign policy strategy for the second term. His aim is not to realign the values at Guantanamo so that they are more in line with those championed by the rest of the world. It is to try to realign the rest of the world so that it is more in keeping with the values that govern Guantanamo, where human rights and legal norms are subordinated to America's perceived interests.
       Under this philosophy the Bush administration understands the words "tyranny" and "freedom" in much the same way as it understands international law. They mean whatever the White House wants them to mean. Bush is happy to support democracy when democracy supports America, just as he is happy to dispense with it when it does not. Likewise, when tyranny is inconvenient, he will excoriate it; when it is expedient, he will excuse it.
       Take Uzbekistan, one of the most repressive regimes in central Asia. In April 2002 a special UN rapporteur concluded that torture in the country was "systematic" and "pervasive and persistent ... throughout the investigation process". In the same year Muzafar Avazov, an opposition leader, was boiled alive for refusing to abandon his religious convictions and attempting to practise religious rites in prison.
       In 2003 Bush granted a waiver to Uzbekistan when its failure to improve its human rights record should have led to its aid being slashed. In February 2004 the US secretary of defence, Donald Rumsfeld, visited the country's dictator, Islam Karimov, and said: "The relationship [between our countries] is strong and growing stronger. We look forward to strengthening our political and economic relations."
       The US continues to shower the country with aid, docking a mere $18m last year (about 20% of the total) after expressing "disappointment" that Karimov had not made greater strides towards democracy. Pan down the shopping list of tyrannical states in Rice's in-tray (Iran, Burma, North Korea, Zimbabwe, Belarus, Cuba) and you will find no mention of Uzbekistan. Why? Because Uzbekistan, with an estimated 10,000 political prisoners, hosts a US military base that offers easy access to Afghanistan and the rest of the region.
       So for every tenet that Bush claimed last week to hold dear, it was possible to pick out a country or place he is bankrolling or controlling that is in flagrant violation, and where he could improve conditions immediately if he wished. The point is not that the US should intervene in more places, but that it should intervene consistently and honestly or not at all.
       Bush's inauguration speech was packed with truisms, platitudes and principles that appear reasonable at first glance. The trouble is, they are contradicted by the reality he has created. As he delivered his address, you could almost whisper the caveats. "America will not pretend that jailed dissidents prefer their chains [apart from in Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay], or that women welcome humiliation and servitude [apart from in Saudi Arabia] or that any human being aspires to live at the mercy of bullies [apart from Uzbekistan and Israel]."
       Such hypocrisy is not new. When Bush said, "Our goal instead is to help others find their own voice, attain their own freedom and make their own way," nobody imagined that he was referring to the Bolivian peasants fighting oil price hikes and globalisation or the landless Venezuelans taking over farms.
       The agenda for a second Bush term represents not a change in direction but an acceleration of the colossal and murderous folly that he, and most of his predecessors, have pursued. The damage that this selective notion of liberty inflicts on the rest of the world should by now be pretty clear. Meanwhile a global poll for the BBC last week showed the US more isolated than ever, with people in 18 out of 21 countries saying that they expect a second Bush term to have a negative impact on peace and security.
       What is less clear is whether most Americans understand that this isolation leaves them more vulnerable to attack. Rice last week promised "a conversation, not a monologue" with the rest of the world. But as the situation in Iraq shows, conversations that start with "D'you want a piece of this?" rarely end well for anybody.
       Osama bin Laden and the Taliban have shown that the tyrants the US supports today can easily turn against it tomorrow while fostering resentment among their victims. Yet the idea that the US is a civilising force endowed with benevolent intentions is still as prevalent within the US as it is rejected outside it.
       Indeed, Tony Blair seems to be the only foreign leader who still holds to the mixture of wishful thinking, wilful ignorance and warped logic behind the idea that Bush is leading humanitarian interventions at the barrel of a gun.
       When questioned about the prospects for Bush's second term, the British prime minister was upbeat. "Evolution comes with experience," he said. The fact that Bush does not believe in evolution has long been known. Only now are we discovering how little Blair learns from experience. (By courtesy of Information Clearing House.) [Bolding added] [~ Jan 28, 05]

    • [Fake menstrual blood, skimpy underwear, taunting prisoners of war.]


       The Weekend Australian, "Female interrogators 'taunted terror suspects'," AP, page 11, January 29-30, 2005
       SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO - FEMALE interrogators tried to break Muslim detainees at the US prison camp in Guantanamo Bay by sexual touching, wearing miniskirts and thong underwear and, in one case, smearing a Saudi man's face with fake menstrual blood, an insider has stated.
       The reports follow claims that Sydney man Mamdouh Habib, who arrived home yesterday after being kept three years in the camp without charge, was tied down while a woman dripped menstrual blood on him after he refused to co-operate with interrogators.
       A draft manuscript obtained by Associated Press details how the US military used women as part of physical and psychological interrogation tactics designed to make suspected terrorists talk.
       The author is a former US army sergeant, Erik Saar, 29, who worked as a translator at the camp in Cuba from December 2002 to June 2003.
       He told AP he witnessed about 20 interrogations and said that about three months after his arrival he started to notice disturbing practices.
       One female civilian contractor used a special outfit that included a miniskirt, thong underwear and a bra during late-night interrogations with prisoners, mostly Muslim men who consider it a sin to have close contact with women who are not their wives.
       Beginning in April 2003, "there hung a short skirt and thong underwear on the hook on the back of the door" of one interrogation team's office, Saar writes. [...]
       Some Guantanamo prisoners who have been released say they were tormented by prostitutes, and a similar claim was made this week by Habib's lawyer Steven Hopper. [...]
       His book, titled Inside the Wire, is due out this year.#
       (Picture -- Wired: A detainee washes before praying in his Guantanamo cell) [Bolding added] [Jan 29-30, 2005]

    • THEIR GOVERNMENT AT WORK; Women told, 'Work in brothel, or else'; German law forces out-of-work females to take sex jobs or lose unemployment.

    Germany flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
       WorldNetDaily.com , www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=42615 , Posted 1:00 a.m. Eastern, January 30, 2005
       GERMANY: A provision in the German welfare system is forcing out-of-work women to chose between taking jobs in the sex industry or losing their unemployment benefits.
       Once one of the most generous systems in Europe, Germany's unemployment program has been reformed to require those out of work to take jobs for which they are qualified, or lose benefits. In the case of women, females below the age of 55 who have been out of work for a year or more must take any available job offered.
       The full legalization of prostitution two years ago -- with brothel owners now paying taxes and employee health insurance -- has created an awkward situation at German job centers where employers can access the official government database of those seeking work, reports the London Telegraph.
       One 25-year-old waitress, an unemployed information technology professional, had indicated a willingness to work in a bar at night and had past experience working in a cafe. A potential employer, finding her profile promising, contacted the job center about hiring her. Only after the young woman called to inquire about the job did she learn the employer was a brothel. When she refused the position, she was threatened with cuts to her unemployment benefits.
       Centers that do not penalize job seekers who refuse offered positions are subject to lawsuits by the employers.
       "There is now nothing in the law to stop women from being sent into the sex industry," says Merchthild Garweg, a Hamburg lawyer. "The new regulations say that working in the sex industry is not immoral any more, and so jobs cannot be turned down without a risk to benefits."
       Garweg notes that women who have past experience as telemarketers or call service workers have been offered positions with telephone-sex services. New laws permit sex-oriented employers to advertise in the job centers and provide for the suing of job centers that refuse to accept their ads.
       When the German government crafted the recent welfare reforms, brothels were initially considered for exclusion, but they were believed too difficult to distinguish from bars. Their inquiries for potential workers are treated no differently than those from grocery stores or schools.
       "Why shouldn't I look for employees through the job center when I pay my taxes just like anybody else?" asked one central Berlin brothel owner who has been using the local database to find prospective workers.
       The German experience closely follows that of the Netherlands, according to the Coalition Against Trafficking in Women. Following the 2000 legalization of prostitution by the Dutch and the registration of prostitutes, brothels began using official job centers to find new employees.
       Garwig believes pressure on job centers to meet employment targets is only going to make the current situation worse.
       "They are already prepared to push women into jobs related to sexual services, but which don't count as prostitution," she says.
       "Now that prostitution is no longer considered by the law to be immoral, there is really nothing but the goodwill of the job centers to stop them from pushing women into jobs they don't want to do."
       Last year, the German federal government announced that it would be fining employers that failed to hire trainees -- a measure to be applied to brothels as well as other employers. Brothels failing to hire one apprentice for every 15 employees will be fined for failing to promote the sex industry.
       Germany legalized prostitution in 2002 in the belief it would slow down the trafficking in women and reduce the role of organized crime in the profession. Instead, government is expanding the sex industry by guaranteeing a steady stream of new recruits, some willing and some not.#
       [COMMENT: The slippery slope leads only downwards, whether it is the idea that whoremongers can sue job centres, or that torture can be called "stress" treatment, or that women can take part in gender-degradation in US illegal prisoner-of-war prisons, when torture fails (as it must). COMMENT ENDS.] [Jan 30, 05]

    • Menstrual blood. Who, who are the terrorists?
       Letter to Editors of some papers, Tuesday, February 1, 2005
       AUSTRALIA: The Canadian paper Globe and Mail reported on Friday (28/1) in an item headed "Ex-officer describes lewd tactics at Guantanamo" that a female interrogator let menstrual blood drip onto the released prisoner of war, Mamdouh Habib of Sydney.
       What holy book do Bush, Blair and Howard follow that allows such a demeaning action between the sexes? Who are the terrorists? #
       REFS: Globe and Mail (Canada), Jan 28, 2005, www.theglobe andmail.com/ servlet/story/ RTGAM.2005 0128.wxsexx 0128/BNStory/ International ; The Weekend Australian, p 11, Jan 29-30, 2005. [Feb 1, 2005]
    • Israeli Official Orders Halt to Land Seizures. Israel flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Palestine Authority flag; Palestine Authority website 
       National Public Radio (USA), "All Things Considered," www.npr.org/ templates/story/ story.php? storyId= 4474419 , February 1, 2005
       JERUSALEM, Near East: Israel's attorney general tells the government it cannot seize land in East Jerusalem owned by Palestinians who reside in the West Bank. Attorney General Menachem Mazuz said the confiscations would violate international law and have grave diplomatic repercussions for Israel.
       [COMMENT: How many international treaties, UN rulings, and their own laws have Israel and their Arab foes broken since the 1940s? COMMENT ENDS.] [Feb 1, 2005]

    • Army 'short of bullets'.

    Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
       The West Australian, p 14, Wednesday, February 2, 2005
       AUSTRALIA - The Australian Army is undermanned and so poorly equipped it does not have enough bullets to train its soldiers properly, a new report from the Australian National Audit Office has found.
       The report says the lack of proper training has damaged the army's ability to keep its troops properly prepared.
       It also found major problems in buying equipment, with 38 per cent of all purchasing projects at risk of delays. The Defence Materiel Organisation, set up to try to remedy the problem, says delays are a major reason the cost of buying Defence items blows out.
       The report says the army needs to address personnel numbers, skills, availability and serviceability of equipment and the time it takes to bring equipment online. The Defence Department says it agrees with the summary and is bringing in its key recommendations.
       The army aims to be able to provide five battalions and a commando unit at 90 days notice, but the report says shortages of personnel mean it would be difficult to do.
       It also found a decline in numbers of the Army Reserve and that 20 per cent of reserve personnel did not parade for duty in a given year.
       The number of regular army soldiers has increased slightly to 25,455 since 2000 but the number of reserves has dropped from 17,903 to 16,882.
       [COMMENT: Let us hope some dopey conservative MP does not complain that this newsitem is helping terrorism! But, in a sense, it shows the hollowness of the Liberal and National Parties Coalition bluff that they are "strong" on defence. Most of the perceptions of the public about this Australian Coalition are just plain wrong! COMMENT ENDS.] [Feb 2, 05]

    • Torture, now it's period blood -- who are the terrorists?
       E-mail sent to various Australian politicians, Thursday, February 3, 2005.
       AUSTRALIA - Dear representative of the people,
       The news "Female interrogators taunted terror suspects" (Weekend Australian 29-30/1) where menstrual blood was dripped on to released prisoner of war, Mamdouh Habib of Sydney, while in US hands, leads me to ask: Who are the terrorists?
       Torture is being practiced by both UNITED STATES and BRITISH forces, the news media report, and the RED CROSS has been complaining about, at least the Abu Ghraib prison, since at least early after the unauthorised Iraq invasion.
       Could Bush, Blair, and Howard (all of whom say prayers in public office) quote to me the New Testament book that encourages such demeaning actions between the genders? For that matter, even a quote from the Old Testament, if you please!!!
       Does it conform with Magna Carta, the Habeas Corpus Act, the American Declaration of Independence, the Geneva Conventions -- and good old-fashioned courtesy? Or does it come from the Dark Side?
       Do you believe that sergeants and suchlike other ranks would dare to torture and degrade, unless there was a clearance from the desks where "the buck stops"?
       Are YOU willing to publicly disassociate yourself from these evil orders and practices?
       [COMMENT: Up to February 12, only one Federal or State politician had replied. Put not your trust in politicians! He was David Oldfield, one of the two Davids who, it is thought, were in charge as One Nation and Pauline Hanson went into a form of dictatorship and a period of disputed internal elections. He SUPPORTED the torturing. COMMENT ENDS.] [Feb 3, 05]

    • Swedish Pastor wins Appeal of Hate Crimes Conviction. Sweden flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
       LifeSiteNews.com, February 11, 2005
       STOCKHOLM (LifeSiteNews.com) - The Swedish pastor convicted of a hate crime for preaching against homosexuality in 2003 has had his conviction overturned on appeal.
       Ake Green, the pastor of a Swedish Pentecostal church in Kalmar, Sweden, was sentenced in July to one month in prison by a Swedish court for inciting hatred against homosexuals. Green was prosecuted in January 2004 for "hate speech against homosexuals" for a sermon he preached citing Biblical references to homosexuality.
       The Goeta Appeals Court said that although the court disagrees with Green's opinions on homosexuality, it is not a crime to preach about it.
       "The purpose of making agitation against gays punishable is not to prevent arguments or discussions ' about homosexuality, not in churches or in other parts of society," the ruling said, as reported by the AP.
       "We'll see how far this gets me," Green said. "But right now I'm very happy." Green told the AP he was not concerned about having to do jail time, but rather, about having "the freedom to preach God's word."
       (By courtesy of Fidelity magazine www.j23.com.au , Melbourne, Australia, pp 30-31, March 2005.) [Feb 11, 05]

    • Skills crisis linked to national IR policy.

    To The Australian Financial Review, from Australian National Organisation of the Un(der)employed. (ANOU), by Mary Jenkins (secretary), sent February 12, 2005
       FREMANTLE, WESTERN AUSTRALIA - If, as the Federal Government claims, unemployment is at an all time low, why is personal debt and levels of stress so high in Australia?
       Why is there a skills crisis and why are two thirds of workers earning less than $600 a week- hardly a living wage? The reason is Australia has the highest number of casual and part time workers in the OECD countries and the highest personal debt.
       Government and employers have failed to deliver skilled workers for projected projects due to come on line. Why? Because employers have failed to factor into their high profits the cost of payment of apprentices, TAFE fees, supply of tools and equipment needed in the workplace, mobile phones, use of vehicles etc. All these costs have been forced onto individuals through new workplace contracts. Now employers are bleating about a skills shortage that they created themselves.
       Since the 60's immigration supplied employers with the necessary skilled workers, but what about the next generations of workers? Government policy has forced the next generation into casual or part time low paid jobs.
       Government's education and training policies lacks commitment to train workers for new projects. The result has been an exodus of qualified TAFE lecturers, and a steady rise in TAFE costs to students. Employers, released of any responsibility to invest in training skilled workers for future projects still look to immigration to supply them skilled workers. A cheap and easy way for them.
       The National Industrial Relations policy cements the status quo for many workers. Instead of providing more jobs with a living wage to lift families out of the poverty trap Government IR policy will condemned a generation to casual part time low paid jobs.
       [COMMENT: Unemployment rates from about 1942 to about 1969 were about 1 to 2 per cent. When he was national secretary of the ACTU Mr Bob Hawke (later PM) scolded a Liberal-National Federal Government that if UE rose to 2 per cent the union movement would react strongly. The figures rose, and the Whitlam saga began in 1972.
       Unemployment rates are quite seriously understated, deliberately, in most developed economies, and grossly understated in the rest of the world. If a person has had an hour's work, or tells the statistician that he will be getting an hour's work in the next week or so, s/he is entered as "Not Unemployed." And that is why informed observers believe the Australian UE rate is really about double whatever the authorities announce. For years it has been 5 per cent (real figures about 10 per cent, but it rose alarmingly during part of a Labor Government's term). COMMENT ENDS.] [CONTACT: PO Box 1378, Bibra Lake WA 6965, 08 9418 2117. CONTACT ENDS.] [Feb 12, 05]

    • PM defies Bush over China arms.


       The Weekend Australian, www.theaustralian. news.com.au/common/ story_page/0,5744, 12223462 %255E601,00.html , by Greg Sheridan, Foreign editor, Page One, February 12-13, 2005
       AUSTRALIA: THE Howard Government has defied US efforts to dissuade the European Union from lifting its 15-year arms embargo on China, which Washington fears could transform the balance of power in the Taiwan Strait.
       The decision by Australia to rebuff the joint private and public lobbying by the US and Japan is the most serious strategic disagreement between Washington and Canberra in recent years.
       US officials had wanted to make the lobbying a joint effort by the US, Japan and Australia -- the three great Pacific democracies, the three strategic allies -- but the Howard Government refused.
       Foreign Minister Alexander Downer, fresh from meetings with his European counterparts, will not oppose the EU lifting the arms embargo, imposed after the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre.
       Instead, a spokesman for Mr Downer said this week that Australia hoped the Europeans would not sell arms that would destabilise the military balance in the Pacific.
      The Europeans say they will satisfy this request by imposing strict rules on what they sell to China and under what conditions.
       However, American officials suspect France is likely to sell high-tech military systems to China, which would hamper the US's ability to defend Taiwan should China attempt unification by force.
       The Europeans, following a visit to China by French President Jacques Chirac last October, have repeatedly said they will lift the embargo, but have not said when. Some speculation centres on the 30th anniversary of EU-China diplomatic relations, in May this year.
       US and Japanese officials believe that European rules on what they sell will be full of loopholes and ineffective.
       "Australia is important because it's a bellwether of how well the US coalition will hold," a US official said.
       Some US officials believe Australia has been bribed and bullied by Beijing.
       The Howard Government places a high premium on its relations with China, with which it is hoping to negotiate a free trade agreement.
       The Bush administration is generally so grateful to the Howard Government over its support on Iraq, Afghanistan and the war on terror that it will not make a public fuss. But it is deeply disappointed at the inability of Washington and Canberra to co-ordinate their China policy. This follows remarks last year by Mr Downer in Beijing that Australia would not be bound to support the US if Washington felt compelled to take military action against China to protect Taiwan.
       US officials, who spoke to The Australian on condition of anonymity, believe this statement sent out an unhelpful signal to China that "anything goes", though they accept this was not Mr Downer's intention.
       Analysts believe Beijing is not likely to seek from Europe main weapons platforms such as submarines and planes, but rather computer-based parts of systems that can be adapted to make weapons far more lethal.
       A high priority would be anything related to missiles. Computer-centred technologies that allow for miniaturisation and precise targeting are among the systems the Chinese are believed to want.
       It would make them far more formidable in the waters near their coast, especially near Taiwan, which remains the most likely military flash point with the US.
       It would be much more likely that China would then be able to sink US aircraft carriers. One US official was quoted in the European press this week as saying: "We are talking about the Europeans making it easier for the Chinese to kill Americans."
       Strategic analysts say China is pursuing four methods of obtaining military high-tech: indigenous development, intelligence efforts, purchase of Western dual-use civilian technology and direct purchase of military technology. [Bolding added]
       [COMMENT: And many inattentive old-fashioned people thought the Liberal Party in Australia was firmly against Communist oppression and aggression! Even their idol Robert Menzies thought trade in wool was more important than foreign policy imperatives like stopping Communist aggression, or even punishing Japanese war criminals! And what higher masters are leading the European Community ministers to desperately crave to sell weapons to those enemies of democracy in Beijing? Will Bush be able to withstand the pressure from the Insiders to also "compete" with Europe? The "level playing field" sometimes is more like a swamp. The Australian leaders are playing a double game, trying to have a trade agreement with both the United States and its rival, China. Another serious danger: Discerning readers know there is not much "free trade" in these trade agreements. COMMENT ENDS.] [Feb 12-13, 05]

    • Aussie troops in torture trials.


       The Sunday Telegraph (Australia), www.news.com.au/story/0,10117,12228433-421,00.html , By Simon Kearney, February 13, 2005
       AUSTRALIA: SOME of Australia's most elite troops and intelligence officers undergo training sessions that breach the Geneva Conventions, The Sunday Telegraph has learned.
       (Picture: Try clicking here.)
       The troops are subjected to sexual humiliation, threats of physical violence and sleep deprivation during the interrogation training at the Defence Intelligence Training Centre at Canungra, Queensland.
       In some instance, the soldiers are stripped, bound and blindfolded in officially-sanctioned torture sessions, Defence Minister Robert Hill told Parliament in a written statement last week.
       "Techniques that would not be permitted by the 1949 Geneva Conventions include personal verbal attack to lower morale and weaken the will to resist, and the employment of ploys and tricks such as impersonation, fake documents, and threat (only) of dire punishment," he said.
       Senator Hill detailed how the training - used to toughen up special forces and intelligence personnel - breached the 1949 Geneva Conventions.
       "Participants are not hooded, but may wear blackened ski goggles or airline sleeping masks," he said.
       "They are not bound in severely restrictive positions but may be handcuffed and seated, cross legged, but are made to stand and move at least every 20 minutes.
       "Participants will be threatened with physical and/or sexual abuse as a purely psychological ploy."
       The NSW Council for Civil Liberties (NSWCCL) has called for a judicial inquiry into the practice.
       "I think this is alarming and, if true, is disgraceful. What it warrants is an immediate, independent and open judicial inquiry," NSWCCL president Cameron Murphy told The Sunday Telegraph. [Feb 13, 05]
    • MPs asked if they oppose arming China, and selling dangerous uranium to the highest bidder.
       An elector, e-mail to supposedly "worthwhile" politicians, "1. Oppose arming China, 2. Nuclear sale," sent Sunday, February 13, 2005
       AUSTRALIA: Dear representative of the people
       (No answer came back from the gender degradation e-mail of recent days, so I will try these.) [ERROR -- CORRECTION: David Oldfield, MP, by e-mails of Thursday, 3 February 2005 11:18 and Tuesday, 8 February 2005 11:14 SUPPORTS the degradation of the prisoners whom he terms "low lifes", even though he was given the clue, which the Parliamentary Library could have looked up for him, that some of those incarcerated illegally were locked up because some criminals took advantage of the Coalition reward money to point out people at random for seizure. Furthermore, a number were kidnapped in countries away from the war zones, flown to Afghanistan, then flown to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, listed as "illegal combatants in Afghanistan"!!! Both Britain and the USA torture people they capture, thus setting a horrible bad example to over one billion people who follow a different faith to the one professed outwardly by Bush, Blair and Howard.]
       1. ARMING CHINA: Do you believe that France ought to be allowed to sell arms to the Beijing dictatorship, China? The dictatorship is persecuting Tibetans, other ethnic and cultural groups, Christians, and the Falun Gung. It poses a threat to what was in historic times an independent island state, Taiwan (Formosa).
       Or do you agree with PM John Howard's attitude, reported this weekend: - PM defies Bush over China arms. The Weekend Australian, www.theaustralian .news.com.au/ common/story_page/ 0,5744,1222346 2%255E601, 00.html , by Greg Sheridan, Foreign editor, Page One, February 12-13, 2005
       2. NUCLEAR TO HIGHEST BIDDER: Do you believe in allowing profit-takers to sell Australia's uranium suppliers to anyone overseas, thus removing our control over the world's most dangerous weapon of war and terrorist threat?
       I await your replies with interest.
       ETHICAL GUIDELINE: 2 - 3 - 16:13 [Feb 13, 05]
    • Canal flawed unless we tax unearned land profits.
       Letter e-mailed to various media, from GEORGIST EDUCATION ASSOCIATION INC, 2 Plain St, East Perth; John Massam, President, Greenwood, February 16, 2005
       PERTH (W. Australia): Neither of the major political groupings are offering realistic alternatives for the February 26 WA election, because there is an insufficient tax base.
       Governments have been allowing land tax to fall in real value, while the biggest players avoid income tax, and campaign at critical moments against stamp duty and other efforts to make them contribute to public purposes such as police, health, electricity and water.
       The parties have been promising less taxes at election after election, and breaking those promises, in spite of cutting down on all those elements of a civilised society
       Take a look at the windfall profits that will arise from the proposed water canal from the far north. Landholders in the towns and broad acres along its path there will be enriched as land values hold up, or rise.
       In reality, their unearned profits will come indirectly out of the taxes collected from the honest taxpayers all over the State.
       The thought of a possible canal bailout from Canberra ought to horrify sensible voters everywhere. Parliament House there cost triple what the Parliament had been told. [Feb 16, 05]

    • After fifteen years, the 'McLibel Two' can toast victory in their battle with a burger behemoth.

    European Union (EU) flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
       The Independent (Britain), http://news .independent.co. uk/uk/legal/story. jsp?story= 611488 , By Stephen Castle in Brussels, February 16, 2005
       BRUSSELS: Vindicated in the longest court battle in British legal history, David Morris and Helen Steel celebrated in the Strand yesterday - not with the customary champagne outside the High Court, but with a demonstration outside McDonald's.
       For 15 years the two activists from north London fought a case against the world's biggest burger chain which seemed doomed. Yesterday, the Goliath of the fast-food world and the Government were humbled when the European Court of Human Rights ruled that the two did not have a fair trial.
       Mr Morris, a former postman, hailed the ruling as a "total victory", adding: "It has been an empowering experience because it shows that ordinary people like us can stand up against seemingly impossible odds and win".
       True though that may be, it does not explain the importance of yesterday's court victory. The determination of two activists has shaken a multinational, stirred a debate about food and health and prompted a review of British libel law. Because of the "McLibel Two", the rich and powerful may no longer be able to go to court safe in the knowledge that everything is stacked in their favour.
       One of the most remarkable stories in British legal history is also the tale of how McDonald's committed one of the biggest own goals in the annals of corporate public relations.
       The story began when a pamphlet, "What's Wrong with McDonald's", was distributed which accused McDonald's of selling unhealthy food. Neither Mr Morris, now 50, nor Ms Steel, now 40, wrote the six-page flyer but both were members of an organisation which produced it called London Greenpeace (not related to the environmental group, Greenpeace).
       When they served a series of libel writs against activists, McDonald's had little reason to suspect the scale of their error. Three of the accused apologised to escape legal action and even Mr Morris and Ms Steel, who fought on, believed they were destined to lose.
       Mr Morris said yesterday: "We were told we did not have a cat in hell's chance ... but we decided that we had to fight because McDonald's were suing a lot of people and creating a climate of fear." With only occasional sessions of free advice from a sympathetic barrister, Keir Starmer, the two were forced back on their own resources.
       They had to co-ordinate their defence on Tube journeys on the way to court. The trial, which came to court in 1994, included 313 days of testimony, eight weeks of closing speeches and six months of deliberation.
       Mr Starmer said yesterday that the defendants "were extremely courageous. Most people would have backed down and everyone else, in fact, did."
       In the end the judge endorsed the leaflet's claim that McDonald's paid low wages to its workers, was responsible for cruelty to some of the animals used in its food products and exploited children through advertising campaigns.
       Nevertheless, the verdict was that the company had been libelled and it was awarded 60,000 in damages, later reduced to 40,000 on appeal. For the multinational this was a pyrrhic victory; never before had the corporation been subjected to so much scrutiny. Mark Stephens, a solicitor who advised the "McLibel Two", argues that, without their stand, the film Super Size Me [which shows the health effects of eating a diet of McDonald's food], could never have been shown in the UK.
       Yesterday's ruling in Strasbourg was against the Government rather than McDonald's because the "McLibel Two" successfully claimed that they were deprived a fair trial. The judges found that the "denial of legal aid to the applicants had deprived them of the opportunity to present their case effectively before the court".
       Though it is possible under recent British law for defendants in libel cases to receive legal aid, Mr Morris's lawyers say that none have so far done so. If it is to comply with this finding [which it must], the Government will have to ensure that in future a wider category of defendants are eligible for state-funded legal advice. Second, the court found that the damages were disproportionate, and Mr Morris and Ms Steel were awarded financial damages of EUR20,000 (13,700 Pounds) and EUR15,000 respectively.
       Mr Starmer concluded: "This has gone from three or four people in anoraks standing in the rain in Finchley on a Saturday afternoon, to the European Court in Strasbourg. Companies know that people without money cannot fight libel cases so they use the law to threaten everyone. It was only when someone stood up and said, 'We have nothing to lose', that they went from a position of weakness to one of strength."
    FOOD FIGHT: TAKING ON McDONALD'S
       1986: London Greenpeace, not connected with Greenpeace International, begins a campaign against the fast food industry, choosing McDonald's as the symbolic target. Mr Morris and Ms Steel distribute their leaflet outside a McDonald's in London.
       1990: McDonald's issues libel writ. Judges say later the chain had $30bn (15.6bn Pounds) global sales in 1995. Mr Morris is earning 65 Pounds a week; Ms Steel is out of work.
       1994: Trial begins on 28 June. Denied legal aid, the campaigners represent themselves.
       1997: Verdict is delivered on 19 June, making it the longest trial in English legal history. Judges uphold some allegations but rule the campaigners libelled McDonald's and order them to pay 60,000 Pounds in damages.
       1999: The original verdict is confirmed on appeal but damages are cut to 40,000 Pounds .
       2000: The pair tell European Court of Human Rights the trial breached their rights to a fair trial and freedom of expression.
       2004: The two are granted legal aid and the action is heard. They have still not paid the damages.
       Yesterday: The campaigners' appeal is successful.
       [COMMENT: Yes - this is a win for the grassroots. But the final stage - going to the Euro Court of Human Rights on the claim that the McLibel Two was entitled to legal aid is a beaut.
       So they did the greater part of their legal work themselves. The trial lasted three years and you can guess they spent more than one hour each day studying and researching the subject. Only a total of 1000 hours over the three years ? Not bl**dy likely !! Try 3000 or 4000 hours for starters. Remember the McLibel 2 probably didn't have a college/university education.
       And if they had been "granted" legal aid, what professional would have worked even 300 hours defending those clients against McDonalds.
       So what's the lesson? You want reform ?? You have to be prepared to do all the work yourself !!
       Basically the class of professionals is a hotbed of cold feet.
       Of course exceptions exist; Lynne Stewart is just one example to think about when YOU feel tired and depressed about YOUR possible ineffectiveness. The McLibel 2 were grassroots activists before Mr. Greed tried retaliating against them. Fifteen years later they are still active and -- neither McDonalds nor the lumbering legal system of England can remain unchanged.
       Here's a toast to David Morris and Helen Steel. -- Michael. COMMENT ENDS.] [Feb 16, 05]

    • DRESDEN - think Coventry, London.
       The West Australian, "DRESDEN," Letter by D.A.Smith, Maddington, p 21, Thursday, February 17, 2005
       PERTH: I have to ask, why all the mawkish sentiment about the bombing of Dresden (reports, 12/2)? As a woman who was a teenager in Britain during World War n, I have a few words to say on the subject of bombing.
       Let's not forget who started it. The Germans bombed Britain mercilessly and one city that springs to mind (apart from London, of course) was Coventry.
       Its beautiful cathedral was destroyed and the city was left in ruins. Many innocent people lost their lives all over Britain through the bombs dropped by German aircraft, and the VI and V2 bombs were the most evil of them all.
       Germany tried to bomb Britain into submission and failed. Now people are crying in their beer about being bombed in return and that innocent people suffered. Of course they did and always will as long as the leaders of countries go to war, regardless of what the people say.
       So what was the purpose of "celebrating" the anniversary of something that happened 60 years ago? It's scratching at an old wound to keep it bleeding. If the allies hadn't won the war, the Germans and Japs would have done - and God help us all if they had.#
       [COMMENT: Sadly, the German and Japanese people (most, but not all) of those times bear some responsibility for allowing themselves to be enthusiastic for wars of conquest, and the persecutions such as the Holocaust and the Burma Railway. Instead of an anniversary, which right-wingers misused for pro-Nazi recruiting, the German authorities ought to have had a day of mourning and apology for the millions of people the Hitler war killed, plus the resultant millions more murdered by the Soviet and Maoist forces who extended their conquests as a result. Will history record the guilt of the Australian and American people, who allowed warmongers to be returned to power in elections during 2004? - JWC, Feb 23, 05. COMMENT ENDS.] [Feb 17, 05]

    • DRESDEN ... and Rotterdam.
       The West Australian, Letter by Gerald Sidthorp, Fremantle, p 21, Thursday, February 17, 2005
       PERTH: Another anniversary of the bombing of Dresden. It was a terrible shame. It was also a shame that Rotterdam, in May 1940, was utterly destroyed. It was also a shame that London and many other UK cities were bombed day and night for longer than we care to remember.
       My wife and I went through the Blitz as young people before joining the Royal Navy. I took part in the D Day landings - we lost thousands.
       It was also a shame that Hitler's generals asked him in January 1945 to sue for peace because the war was lost. His answer was to have them shot or hanged with piano wire.
       Ask the relations of six million Jews who were starved, tortured, gassed and burnt about the "shame" of Dresden. Enough now of Dresden, let's move on. [Feb 17, 05]

    • CEC solutions to WA mismanagement.


       Dion Giles, Joondanna, to StopMAI WA list, http://groups. yahoo.com/ group/StopMAI _WA_list , February 19, 2005
       PERTH (W. Australia): The top-down nature of the CEC [Citizens' Electoral Councils] policies for WA are epitomised by the emphasis on global solutions rather than measures within the capacity of the people of WA which could make a difference. "Better constitutions" for Australia, global harmony, world socialist revolution, world population control, new Bretton Woods agreements etc may give a context in which some people may be persuaded to view matters which are within their capacity to influence substantially, but we are heading for an election in which the outcome which will make a difference locally, nationally and to a very slight extent globally.
       At a polling place in the recent national elections I had a yarn with a CEC guy who wasn't merely a hired HTV hand but actually belonged to the organisation. He hadn't a clue on any issues outside those designated by the CEC, and very little idea about those issues either. The CEC is, as Brian points out, a top-down organisation and its policies and the ignorance of its plebs reflect this.
       However we must remember that all parties competing in the WA election are to a greater or lesser extent top-down and fearful of democracy, and it is now more than a decade since any party which takes democracy seriously has run for election. So we have to choose among different authoritarians. The CEC has grandiose engineering schemes (including nuclear) beloved of technocrats, but its commitment to at least some elements of economic nationalism (Australians producing for Australians) puts it above the ruck.
       What damns the CEC (and damns every other party) is its tacit acceptance of the continued domination and ecological ruin of Australia by the squattocracy and other rural vandals engaged in the continued export of primary produce to the enrichment of a relative few (including foreign owned and controlled corporations) and to the devastation of our country.
       What also damns all the parties is their tacit acceptance of (and failure to confront) the trade-driven race to the bottom wages, working conditions, environmental care, social security, democratic control. Why for example has the CEC, or anyone else, no proposals for how the State might
       sabotage the AUSFTA with a view to making it unworkable?
       All told, I'll be placing the CEC above the corporate business parties in the Upper House voting, and it remains a toss-up among the alternative parties. And, of course, putting the Liberals last as always (though with increasing difficulty now that we also have TWO religious parties, CD and FF, seeking a place at the bottom).
       In the North Metropolitan Upper House seat there is a difficulty in the Democrat team. Pat Olver is a Lib and Giuseppe Coletti is not. Split vote, it looks like, with Olver going down among the Libs.
       Voting for upper houses is a bit like a game of snakes and ladders. -- Dion
       At 06:44 19/02/2005, Brian wrote:
       Dear colleagues,
       We're receiving statements like the following from the internationally controlled Citizens' Electorate Council which have a ring of truth but need careful consideration because of (a) their top-down origin and (b) unwholesome prescriptions like early reversion to nuclear energy and, I would suggest, an inferior concept of democracy. [rest snipped] [Feb 19, 05]

    • Esperanto exists for fairness, efficiency, friendship, and to save small languages.

    Esperanto - Universal Helper Language flag 
       Claude Piron c.piron@bluewin.ch of Switzerland , to The Daily Mail (London, England), Sat, Feb 19, 2005
       BRITAIN / SWITZERLAND: In his article "So what is the Gaelic for utterly pointless quango?" (4 February) Tim Luckhurst says: "The answer to misguided idealists who believe the world would be a better place if we all spoke Esperanto is that diversity of language nurtures diversity of thought and culture. Without it we are impoverished."
       While he is right about the usefulness of diversity of language for diversity of thought and culture, he is mistaken about the purpose of Esperanto. Esperanto has never had as its objective to replace the various languages and dialects; it rather aims at protecting them by distinguishing the global or international level from the national or local one.
       With fellow-citizens you use your mother tongue. But when you meet somebody from another culture, instead of thrusting your language on him or her or submitting to his or hers, you use Esperanto, a language which doesn't belong to any nation and which has been developed through a century of interactions among people with the most varied cultural, social and religious backgrounds.
       The experience of discussing with the utmost ease and on an equal footing with somebody from Japan, Brazil or Uzbekistan -- or with a Gaelic speaking Scot who's learned Esperanto -- is exhilarating.
       I've been experiencing that feeling for a few decades, and my enthusiasm has never abated. I don't think it's fair to call me a "misguided idealist" for my desire to share it with all inhabitants of our planet.
       What is impoverishing the world is the quasi-monopoly of English language culture (if the word "culture" can be applied to the Hollywood productions that make up 80% of TV programmes in many countries).
       As Tim Luckhurst explains, the prestige of English is killing many languages, beside Gaelic. But it is based on an illusion: that there is no alternative to it if you want to communicate with the whole world. Esperanto is such an alternative.
       Since it is easy -- I was more fluent in it after six months than in English after six years - your relationship to it is less constraining than with English, so you feel freer in the way you express your thoughts and feelings.
       And you avoid the risk of absorbing with the language a mentality associated to just one culture. I know many speakers of Esperanto. They all have a more varied, multidimensional outlook than people who master only their own language (plus, possibly, English).
       Like most speakers of Esperanto, I feel sad at the thought that another language, in this case Gaelic, appears to be condemned to death. If we want to avoid the triumph of English as a worldwide serial killer, it is imperative to promote a better awareness of what language is, what communication is, what culture is.
       The media have a responsibility in that field, as have the education authorities. Whether they will assume it or not, I cannot know. But if they do take it on, a small detail they'll have to deal with is what Esperanto is _really_ all about. -- Claude Piron, 22 rue de l'Etraz, CH-1196 Gland, Switzerland

    Esperanta versio
       En sia artikolo pri la gaela lingvo, Tim Luckhurst diras: "La respondo al la erarvojaj idealistoj, kiuj kredas, ke la mondo estus pli bona loko, se ni chiuj parolus Esperanton, estas, ke lingva diverseco nutras diversecon de pensado kaj kulturo.
       Sen ghi ni estas malrichigitaj." Dum li pravas pri la utileco de lingva diverseco por diverseco de pensado kaj kulturo, li eraras koncerne la celon de Esperanto. Chi-lasta neniam celis preni la lokon de la diversaj lingvoj kaj dialektoj; fakte, ghi deziras protekti ilin distingante la tutmondan aux internacian nivelon disde la nacia aux loka.
       Kun samlingvanoj vi uzas vian gepatran lingvon. Sed kiam vi renkontas iun el alia kulturo, anstataux trudi vian lingvon aux submeti vin al lia aux shia, vi uzas Esperanton, lingvon, kiu apartenas al neniu nacio kaj kiu disvolvighis tra jarcento da interagado inter homoj kun la plej diversaj kulturaj, sociaj kaj religiaj fonoj.
       La sperton diskuti kun pleja facileco kaj kiel egaluloj kun iu el Japanio, Brazilo aux Uzbekistano -- aux kun gaellingva skoto, kiu lernis Esperanton -- estas korshveliga.
       Mi spertas tiun senton jam iujn jardekojn, kaj mia entuziasmo neniam malviglighis. Mi kredas, ke ne estas juste nomi min "erarvoja idealisto" pro mia deziro kundividi tiun travivajhon kun chiuj samplanedanoj.
       Kio malrichigas la mondon, tio estas la kvazaux-monopolo de la anglalingva kulturo (se la vorto"kulturo" tauxgas por la holivudaj produktoj, kiuj, multlande, konsistigas 80 elcentojn el la televidprogramoj). Kiel klarigas Tim Luckhurst, la prestigho de la angla mortigas multajn lingvojn, apud la gaela.
       Sed ghi bazighas sur iluzio, nome, ke ne ekzistas alternativo, se vi volas komuniki tutmonde. Esperanto estas tia alternativo. Char ghi estas facila -- mi regis ghin pli bone post ses monatoj ol la anglan post ses jaroj -- via rilato kun ghi estas malpli rigida, truda, ol kun la angla, tiel ke vi sentas vin pli libera en la esprimado de viaj pensoj kaj sentoj.
       Kaj vi evitas la riskon sorbi kun la lingvo la pensmanieron de nur unu kulturo. Mi konas multajn uzantojn de Eo. Chiuj havas pli diversan, multadimensian vidmanieron ol homoj, kiuj regas nur la propran lingvon (plus, eventuale, la anglan).
       Kiel la plimulto el Eo-uzantoj, mi sentas min malghoja che la penso, ke jen plia lingvo, chi-kaze la gaela, aperas kondamnita je morto. Se ni volas eviti la triumfon de la angla kiel tutmonda seria murdisto, estas nepre necese, ke ni favoru pli bonan konscion pri tio, kio lingvo estas, kio komunikado estas, kio kulturo estas.
       La amaskomunikiloj havas respondecon tiurilate, same kiel edukaj auxtoritatoj. Chu ili prenos ghin sur sin aux ne, mi ne povas scii. Sed se ili ghin alprenos, eta detalo, kiun ili devos pritrakti, estas: pri kio reale temas tiu Esperanto. -- CP
    (Checked by AVG Anti-Virus, Version: 7.0.300 / Virus Database: 266.1.0 - Release Date: 18/02/2005) (SPAMfighter for private users; Try www.SPAMfighter.com for free now!) (Passed on by Debra McCarney, Perth, 20 Feb 05) ["x" has been added to differentiate "u" from accented "u", substituted elsewhere as u^, u~ or ux] [Feb 19, 05]

    • Scott Ritter Says US Attack on Iran Planned for June.

    United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Iran (Persia) flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
       United for Peace of Pierce County (Washington State, USA), http://globalresearch. ca/articles/JEN 502A.html , By Mark Jensen, Saturday, February 19, 2005
       UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: Scott Ritter, appearing with journalist Dahr Jamail yesterday in Washington State, dropped two shocking bombshells in a talk delivered to a packed house in Olympia's Capitol Theater. The ex-Marine turned UNSCOM weapons inspector said that George W. Bush has "signed off" on plans to bomb Iran in June 2005, and claimed the U.S. manipulated the results of the recent Jan. 30 elections in Iraq.
       Olympians like to call the Capitol Theater "historic," but it's doubtful whether the eighty-year-old edifice has ever been the scene of more portentous revelations.
       The principal theme of Scott Ritter's talk was Americans' duty to protect the U.S. Constitution by taking action to bring an end to the illegal war in Iraq. But in passing, the former UNSCOM weapons inspector stunned his listeners with two pronouncements. Ritter said plans for a June attack on Iran have been submitted to President George W. Bush, and that the president has approved them. He also asserted that knowledgeable sources say U.S. officials "cooked" the results of the Jan. 30 elections in Iraq.
       On Iran, Ritter said that President George W. Bush has received and signed off on orders for an aerial attack on Iran planned for June 2005. Its purported goal is the destruction of Iran's alleged program to develop nuclear weapons, but Ritter said neoconservatives in the administration also expected that the attack would set in motion a chain of events leading to regime change in the oil-rich nation of 70 million -- a possibility Ritter regards with the greatest skepticism.
       The former Marine also said that the Jan. 30 elections, which George W. Bush has called "a turning point in the history of Iraq, a milestone in the advance of freedom," were not so free after all. Ritter said that U.S. authorities in Iraq had manipulated the results in order to reduce the percentage of the vote received by the United Iraqi Alliance from 56% to 48%.
       Asked by UFPPC's Ted Nation about this shocker, Ritter said an official involved in the manipulation was the source, and that this would soon be reported by a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist in a major metropolitan magazine -- an obvious allusion to New Yorker reporter Seymour M. Hersh.
       On Jan. 17, the New Yorker posted an article by Hersh entitled The Coming Wars (New Yorker, January 24-31, 2005). In it, the well-known investigative journalist claimed that for the Bush administration, "The next strategic target [is] Iran." Hersh also reported that "The Administration has been conducting secret reconnaissance missions inside Iran at least since last summer." According to Hersh, "Defense Department civilians, under the leadership of Douglas Feith, have been working with Israeli planners and consultants to develop and refine potential nuclear, chemical-weapons, and missile targets inside Iran. . . . Strategists at the headquarters of the U.S. Central Command, in Tampa, Florida, have been asked to revise the military's war plan, providing for a maximum ground and air invasion of Iran. . . . The hawks in the Administration believe that it will soon become clear that the Europeans' negotiated approach [to Iran] cannot succeed, and that at that time the Administration will act."
       Scott Ritter said that although the peace movement failed to stop the war in Iraq, it had a chance to stop the expansion of the war to other nations like Iran and Syria. He held up the specter of a day when the Iraq war might be remembered as a relatively minor event that preceded an even greater conflagration.
       Scott Ritter's talk was the culmination of a long evening devoted to discussion of Iraq and U.S. foreign policy. Before Ritter spoke, Dahr Jamail narrated a slide show on Iraq focusing on Fallujah. He showed more than a hundred vivid photographs taken in Iraq, mostly by himself. Many of them showed the horrific slaughter of civilians.
       Dahr Jamail argued that U.S. mainstream media sources are complicit in the war and help sustain support for it by deliberately downplaying the truth about the devastation and death it is causing.
       Jamail was, until recently, one of the few unembedded journalists in Iraq and one of the only independent ones. His reports have gained a substantial following and are available online at dahrjamailiraq.com .
       Friday evening's event in Olympia was sponsored by South Puget Sound Community College's Student Activities Board, Veterans for Peace, 100 Thousand and Counting, Olympia Movement for Justice & Peace, and United for Peace of Pierce County. [Feb 19, 05]
    • Israel to withdraw many settlements from Gaza Strip, and some from elsewhere.
       Electronic media Feb 21 or 22, 2005
       JERUSALEM: Israel's PM Sharon has won acceptance of a plan to dismantle many settlements in the Gaza Strip, and some for elsewhere in Palestine.
       Israeli resistance groups sprang into action, one women's group threatening to stop traffic all over Israel and in the occupied territories.
       [COMMENT: How many "settlements" of the problem of the "settlements" have we seen? The settlements are paid for by Israeli government money, yes, just like the Council Houses in Britain, Housing Trusts elsewhere, and State Housing Commissions and First Home Owners' Loan Schemes in Australia! Much of Israel's source money comes from the United States, which has many Zionists (including Gentile ones) in high places. The cost of GUARDING the settlements, and the roads leading to and from them, is horrendous in human lives, and money (indirectly by courtesy of the US taxpayer). Most keen observers will only believe that Israel will leave the settlements, if they see it! And if they REMAIN out of the Arab land. COMMENT ENDS.] [Feb 21 or 22, 05]

    • Howard sends more to Iraq war/occupation.
       Electronic media, Tuesday, February 22, 2005
       AUSTRALIA: PM John Howard declares he will send an extra 450 Australian troops. This will assist the continuance of the illegal occupation of Iraq.
       He claims that the fledgling Iraq democracy is at the tilting point
       [COMMENT: The number of insurgent attacks, greatly aided by Coalition incompetence and outrageous policies, plus disgraceful "religious" leadership on most sides, is doubling and tripling as the months go on. Mr Howard, shortly after embarking on this Anglo-American grab for oil and power, claimed that the Australian forces would be in Iraq "for months, not years." This has proved, like the Liberal-National parties promises about Vietnam, and the "children overboard" lies, to be dishonest. COMMENT ENDS.] [Feb 22, 05]

    • Greens Party WA 'Apology' advertisement in The West Australian.
       The West Australian, ? February 21, 2005
       WESTERN AUSTRALIA:

    Greens Party WA *Apology* advertisement in *The West Australian*
    www.crikey.com. au/images/2005/02/21 -108S91AXN00.jpg
    Greens WA: http://wa.greens.org.au
    [? Feb 21, 05]

    • Control Room; Between Iraq And A Hard Place.

    Iraq / Irak flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Qatar flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
       XPress magazine (Perth, W. Australia), by Tim Stewart, p 9, Feb 24, 2005
    Directed by Jehane Noujaim
       PERTH: It's the height of the American-led invasion of Iraq, and US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeid is outraged. Scowling down at the gathered press from his pulpit in the Pentagon, Rummy is incensed that Al-Jazeera, an increasingly popular Arab satellite news network based in Doha, Qatar, had the audacity to broadcast images of dead and captive American soldiers on television - which clearly violates the Geneva convention on the humane treatment of prisoners of war. After weeks of seeing Iraqi women and children blown to bits by American bombs. Sudanese journalist Hassan Ibrahim looks up from his coffee in the station's tiny cafeteria and sighs wearily. "Oh, so now we've got a convention?"
       After working as a photographer and filmmaker in Egypt, where she was born and raised, in 1990 Jehane Noujaim moved to the USA, graduating from Harvard in 1996. Her first feature documentary, Startup.com , captured the perilous life cycle of an IT company during the heady, boom-and-bust days of the mid to late '90s. With Control Room Noujaim employs her understanding of both Western and Arab viewpoints to examine the coverage of the Iraq war by the Al-Jazeera network, as well as the distribution of information (or lack of it) by the US Army's Central Command.
       While hardly an anti-American crusade, what Control Room does very effectively is show how certain events can be reported remarkably differently, depending on your perspective and political agenda. The best example here is the 'Saddam Hussein statue' scene that was relayed around the world by the waiting media. Like the heavily fictionalised Jessica Lynch 'rescue' story, the sounds and images of Iraqis dancing around the toppled monument were a military PR exercise par excellence. What the Western world never saw, however, was the wide-angle view from an Al-Jazeera camera, which showed a town square teeming with camera crews and reporters but otherwise deserted by Iraqi civilians (who probably valued their lives more than their liberty). Media crews had been advised to turn up at a given time and they weren't disappointed. Right on cue, a procession of young men (no women) are [sic] escorted by the US military to the statue. Several Iraqi journalists point out that the men's accents are foreign and that they are most likely ring-ins.
       Oddly enough, there's Rumsfeld up there on the news, accusing Al-Jazeera of deliberately stirring-up the natives by manufacturing phoney images of civilian carnage after another 'surgical strike'. Sadly, however, the attacks are not simply verbal - less than 24 hours before the statue-toppling spectacle was broadcast around the world, three Arab journalists were killed by American forces in separate incidents, two of which involved strikes on Al-Jazeera and its rival network Abu Dhabi's Baghdad offices. The Americans claimed they were returning hostile fire from the positions they fired upon - positions that had been supplied to the Pentagon months previously - but once again, independent video footage raises many worrying questions about the American version of events.
       Shot while discretely [? discreetly] following a number of interesting characters (both Arab and American) over the course of their duties, Control Room has an unlikely star in Central Command Press Officer Lt. Josh Rushing. Young, idealistic and passionate, Rushing clearly believes in the message he's delivering at every possible opportunity - that America only wants to help Iraq out, and that Saddam Hussein posed a serious and immediate threat to the rest of the world - but what's encouraging is that over time he begins to realise that maybe there is another point of view after all. It's a blinding glimpse of the obvious, of course, but a good start in the right direction nonetheless.
       Control Room is screening at the Somerville Auditorium from Wednesday, March 2, to Sunday, March 6.
       Perth International Arts Festival. [Bolding added] [Feb 24, 05]

    • Alleged deceiver goes into hiding on poll eve.

    [Electoral misbehaviour.]
       The West Australian, "Labor MP goes into hiding on poll eve," www.thewest. com.au/20050226/ news/general/ tw-news-general -home-sto 130564.html , by MONICA VIDENIEKS and WENDY PRYER, p 1, Saturday, February 26, 2005
       Man waving hat PERTH (W. Australia): The final hours of the State election campaign took an extraordinary twist last night when Labor's member for a key marginal seat went into hiding and the Liberals prepared to take Supreme Court action over the distribution of how-to-vote cards in that electorate.
       Riverton MLA Tony McRae went to ground in the wake of claims by a local nurse, Choy Chan Ma, 50, that she was misled into standing as an Independent candidate with her preferences going to Labor.
       The Liberal Party has complained to the Corruption and Crime Commission and the WA Electoral Commission, claiming that Mr McRae, in his role as a public officer, or possibly his staff, had breached the misconduct provisions of the CCC Act. It has demanded an investigation.
       Liberal lawyers were preparing a case for a Supreme Court injunction which they hoped to lodge either last night or this morning.
       "We believe that without the CCC being able to clarify this matter it makes the election in a crucial seat like Riverton extremely difficult for the electors," WA Liberal Party director Paul Everingham said. "Win, lose or draw we will be pursuing this matter after the election."
       ALP State secretary Bill Johnston said he was assured the Labor Party had no case to answer in respect to Ms Ma's claims. "No money of the Labor Party has been used to support her campaign, no members of the Labor Party have failed to comply with our rules and I am not aware of any member of the Labor Party's involvement in drawing up her how-to-vote cards," Mr Johnston said.
       He said Gerard Sin, of Maddington, who authorised Ms Ma's how-to-vote card, was not a Labor Party member. The West Australian could not contact Mr Sin yesterday.
       The allegations come after Ms Ma complained to the Electoral Commission that she unwittingly became an Independent candidate after signing a form in Mr McRae's office.
       She realised the form was an official enrolment when relatives told her that she featured in newspaper advertisements as a candidate.
       Ms Ma has told the Electoral Commission she did not know who paid her $250 nomination fee and could not explain how advertisements and how-to-vote cards had been printed in her name.
       Ms Ma is a Chinese-Malaysian living in the electorate, where Malaysians and Indians account for 30 per cent of the population.
       Mr McRae did not return calls from The West Australian yesterday. In a written response on Thursday, he said he had asked Ms Ma to direct her preferences to him. Ms Ma denies being asked about preferences.#
       [COMMENT: With a similar attitude as exhibited during the great 1989 ALP WA electoral fraud, the electoral officials were reported as saying that no law had been broken! And they would not be making any more inquiries. By Sunday Feb 27 it seemed that Ms Ma had received a few hundred votes, and if most of her second preferences went to the ALP his victory was assured. COMMENT ENDS.] [Feb 26, 05]

    • US out of Iraq now. International Days of Action
       Carol Norris weblog, Heads up, rabble! http://carolnorris.blogs.com/weblog/ , Sighted Feb 27, 2005
       UNITED STATES:
    MARCH 19 and 20, 2005
    US Out of Iraq Now poster. Carol Norris blog http://carolnorris.blogs.com/weblog/
    Endless war and repression? Not in our name!
    Speak Out Against Two Years of Death, Chaos and a Blank Cheque for Endless War and Occupation!
    March 19th & 20th, 2005
    (Link provided by MichaelP, 27 Feb 05) [Feb 27, 2005]
    • Votes stolen in the Wild West. [Electoral - false alarm?]
       Electronic mass media, Sunday, February 27, 2005
       WANNEROO (W. Australia): Hundreds of Upper House votes were stolen at Wanneroo, a northern suburb of the capital city, Perth, it was reported today. This could affect the ability of the re-elected State Labor Government led by Geoff Gallop to get bills through the Upper House, which usually contains members of minor parties, because it is elected by proportional representation. [Feb 27, 05] [They turned up fairly soon, supposedly not tampered with.]
    • Stolen ballot papers under investigation.
       Australian Broadcasting Corporation radio news, www.abc.net. au/news/ newsitems/ 200502/ s1312300.htm , Last Update: 10:04am (AEDT), Monday, February 28, 2005.
       WANNEROO (Perth suburb): The State Electoral Commission is seeking legal advice about how to respond to the theft of nearly 700 ballot papers after the state election.
       A bag of North Metropolitan Legislative Council ballot papers was stolen from the car of the polling place manager at the Wanneroo Senior High School in the early hours of yesterday morning.
       Acting WA electoral commissioner Warwick Gately says ballot papers have not been stolen in Western Australia before and the matter may have to go to a court of disputed returns.
       He says the papers had been counted.
       "There were 204 that were informal, there were 366 that weren't ticket votes, there were 118 non-ticket votes, this issue for us is to whether those non-ticket votes in particular could be admitted to a count," he said.
       [COMMENT: The 366 non-ticket votes were the most precious in those votes - cast by people who try to THINK. The Frauding of Votes would be a suitable post-election gift for someone near and dear to you! Click www.hschapman.org/ COMMENT ENDS.] [Original radio report heard on Sun Feb 27, 05] [Feb 28, 05]

    • Ballot papers recovered, supposedly still sealed. [Electoral]
       Australian Broadcasting Corporation television news, www.abc.net. au/news/ , Around 7.00 pm, Sunday, February 28, 2005
       PERTH (W. Australia): The missing ballot papers, allegedly taken from a car of an electoral officer, have been recovered, the Electoral Commission says.
       A spokesperson said that they seemed to be still sealed. If so, they would be admitted to the count. [February 28, 2005]
    • Postal voting is an invitation to fraud, says judge. [Electoral fraud]
       Times Online (Britain), www.timesonline. co.uk/article/0,, 2-1537754,00.html , By Dominic Kennedy and Jill Sherman, March 23, 2005
       BRITAIN: A JUDGE declared yesterday that Britain's electoral system is now an "open invitation to fraud". The crisis engulfing the postal voting system risks provoking a spate of legal challenges in narrowly won seats after polling day.
       The Government, which has consistently defended the postal vote system, changed the law in 2000 to make voting easier and to help to boost turnout.
       But the changes also make it much easier for ballot papers to be filled out fraudulently and to be sent to the same address.
       The Electoral Reform Society called for urgent legal safeguards including individual registration after Richard Mawrey, QC, the election commissioner presiding over hearings into alleged electoral fraud in Birmingham, condemned the postal voting system.
       "Even if I came to the conclusion that the respondents in both cases were entirely innocent, I would not neglect to point out that the law as it stands at the moment is an open invitation to fraud," the judge said yesterday.
       "It seems to me that I could not come to any other conclusion, given the material that we have before this court with this case. Someone who was so inclined could defraud the system."
       He gave warning that he would deliver his judgment "unless prevented by forces beyond my control" on April 4, which will be an embarrassment to the Prime Minister, because it is the day he is expected to go to Buckingham Palace and call an election.
       The Liberal Democrats called yesterday for emergency measures to guard against fraud at the election.
       "Ministers must make a statement to the House of Commons to avoid chaos during the general election," Ed Davey, the Lib Dems spokesman for local government, said.
       "We will need the Election Commission to provide independent monitoring of how postal voting operates and it is going to be vital for postal votes to be counted separately so monitors can detect whether systematic fraud has taken place."
       The first election court to investigate corruption for more than a century has heard four weeks of allegations of what were described by Ravi Sukul, the petitioners' counsel, as "widespread and naked cheating".
       Hundreds of voters are said to have had their ballots stolen by Labour and Liberal Democrat vote-riggers in last year's elections in Birmingham. All the accused deny wrong-doing.
       The judge is hearing petitions calling for the overthrow of six Labour councillors in two wards in Birmingham.
       A spokesman for the Electoral Reform Society said yesterday that, whatever the outcome, the judge's ruling on April 4 could lead to a spate of challenges at the general election.
       "Everyone will be looking more closely at election results with a view to challenging them if they are tightly fought," the spokesman said.
       "Whether a future judge is likely to decide a case on what Richard Mawrey said is another thing. But people will no longer get away with saying this (fraud) could not happen in the UK."
       Both the Liberal Democrats and the Electoral Reform Society support individual registration but the Government has said that this could reduce voters by 1.5 million.
       A report from the Commons Committee on the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister and the Department for Constitutional Affairs is expected to call today for more safeguards against fraud while encouraging voter participation. [Mar 23, 05]

    • The Undoing of America; Gore Vidal on war for oil, politics-free elections, and the late, great U.S. Constitution.


       Information Clearing House, www.information clearinghouse. info/article 8347.htm , by Steve Perry, Mar/23/05
       LOS ANGELES - - For the past 40 years or so of Gore Vidal's prolific 59-year literary career, his great project has been the telling of the American story from the country's inception to the present day, unencumbered by the court historian's task of making America's leaders look like good guys at every turn. The saga has unfolded in two ways: through Vidal's series of seven historical novels, beginning with Washington DC in 1967 and concluding with The Golden Age in 2000; and through his ceaseless essay writing and public appearances across the years. Starting around 1970, Vidal began to offer up his own annual State of the Union message, in magazines and on the talk circuit. His words were always well-chosen, provocative, and contentious: "There is not one human problem that could not be solved," he told an interviewer in 1972, "if people would simply do as I advise."
       Though it's a dim memory now, Vidal and commentators of a similarly outspoken bent used to be regulars on television news shows. Vidal's most famous TV moment came during the 1968 Democratic Convention, when ABC paired him with William F. Buckley on live television. On the next to last night of the convention, the dialogue turned to the question of some student war protesters raising a Vietcong flag. The following exchange ensued:
    Vidal: "As far as I'm concerned, the only sort of proto- or crypto-Nazi I can think of is yourself. Failing that, I'll only say that we can't have--"
    Buckley: "Now listen, you queer, stop calling me a crypto-Nazi or I'll sock you in the goddamn face and you'll stay plastered."
       That was TV in the pre-Information Age for you. These days Vidal, who put his Italian villa on the market a few months ago and moved full-time to his home in Los Angeles, speaks mostly through his essay writing about the foreign and stateside adventures of the Bush administration. In the past five years he has published one major nonfiction collection, The Last Empire, and a book about the founding fathers called Inventing a Nation: Washington, Adams, Jefferson. But mainly he has stayed busy producing what he calls his "political pamphlets," a series of short essay collections called Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace: How We Got to Be So Hated (2002), Dreaming War: Blood for Oil and the Cheney-Bush Junta (2003), and Imperial America: Reflections on the United States of Amnesia (2004). Last month at Duke University, he produced a short run of On the March to the Sea, an older play about the Civil War that he has rewritten entirely.
       I spoke to Vidal, who will turn 80 this October, by phone from his home in Los Angeles on March 9.
       City Pages: I'll start with the broadest of questions: Why are we in Iraq, and what are our prospects there at this point?
       Gore Vidal: Well, let us say that the old American republic is well and truly dead. The institutions that we thought were eternal proved not to be. And that goes for the three departments of government, and it also goes for the Bill of Rights. So we're in uncharted territory. We're governed by public relations. Very little information gets to the people, thanks to the corruption and/or ineptitude of the media. Just look at this bankruptcy thing that went through--everybody in debt to credit cards, which is apparently 90 percent of the country, is in deep trouble. So the people are uninformed about what's being done in their name.
       And that's really why we are in Iraq. Iraq is a symptom, not a cause. It's a symptom of the passion we have for oil, which is a declining resource in the world. Alternatives can be found, but they will not be found as long as there's one drop of oil or natural gas to be extracted from other nations, preferably by force by the current junta in charge of our affairs. Iraq will end with our defeat. 
       CP: You've observed many times in your writing that the United States has elections but has no politics. Could you talk about what you mean by that, and about how so many people have come to accept a purely spectatorial relationship to politics, more like fans (or non-fans) than citizens?
       Gore Vidal: Well, you cannot have a political party that is not based upon a class interest. It has been part of the American propaganda machine that we have no class system. Yes, there are rich people; some are richer than others. But there is no class system. We're classless. You could be president tomorrow. So could Michael Jackson, or this one or that one. This isn't true. We have a very strong, very rigid class structure which goes back to the beginning of the country. I will not go into the details of that, but there it is. Whether it's good or bad is something else.
       We have not had a political party since that, really, of the New Deal of Franklin Roosevelt, who was a member of the highest class, an aristocrat who had made common cause with the people, who were in the midst of depression, not to mention the Dust Bowl, which had taken so many farms in the '30s. We were a country in deep trouble, and he represented those in deep trouble. He got together great majorities and was elected four times to the presidency. And launched us on empire--somewhat consciously, too. He saw to it that the European colonial empires would break up, and that we would inherit bits and pieces, which we have done.
       If we don't have class interests officially, then therefore we have no political parties. What is the Republican Party? Well, it used to be the party of the small-town businessman, generally in the Middle West, generally sort of out of the mainstream. Very conservative. It now represents nothing but the gas and oil business. They own it. And the people who go to Congress are simply bought. They are lawyers who are paid to represent Halliburton, big oil, big banking. So the very rich corporate America has a party for itself, the Republican Party. The Democrats don't have much of anything but a kind of wistful style. They just want everyone to be happy, and politically correct at all times. Do not hurt other people's feelings. They spend so much time on political correctness that they haven't thought of what to do politically about anything. Like say "no" to these preemptive wars, which are against not only the whole world's take on war and peace, but against United States history.
       This is something new under the sun--that a president, just because he feels like it, can declare war on anybody. And Congress will go along with him, and the courts will support him. The founding fathers would be mortified if they saw what had happened to their handiwork, which wasn't very great to begin with but is now done for. When you have preemptive wars, and you have ambitious companies like Bechtel who will build up what, let us say, General Electric has helped to destroy with its weaponry--these interests are well-represented.
       There is no people's party, and you can't even use the word. "Liberal" has been demonized. A liberal is a commie who's also a pedophile. Being a communist and a pedophile, he's so busy that he hasn't got time to win an election and is odious to boot. So there is no Democratic Party. We hope that something might happen with the governor of Vermont, and maybe something will or maybe it won't. But we are totally censored, and the press just follows this. It observes what those in power want it to observe, and turns the other way when things get dark. Then, when it's too late sometimes, you get some very good reporting. But by then, somebody's playing taps. 
       CP: Has the media played a role in transforming citizens into spectators of this process?
       Vidal: Well, they have been transformed, by design, by corporate America, aided by the media, which belongs to corporate America. They are no longer citizens. They are hardly voters. They are consumers, and they consume those things which are advertised on television. They are made to sound like happy consumers. Listen to TV advertising: This one says, "I had this terrible pain, but when I put on Kool-Aid, I found relief overnight. You must try it too." All we do is hear about little cures for little pains. Nothing important gets said. There used to be all those talk shows back in the '50s and '60s, when I was on television a great deal. People would talk about many important things, and you had some very good talkers. They're not allowed on now. Or they're set loose in the Fox Zoo, in which you have a number of people who pretend to be journalists but are really like animals. Each one has his own noise--there's the donkey who brays, there's the pig who squeals. Each one is a different animal in a zoo, making a characteristic noise. The result is chaos, which is what is intended. They don't want the people to know anything, and the people don't.
       CP: You wrote at the end of a 2002 essay that so-called inalienable rights, once alienated, are often lost forever. Can you describe what's changed about America during the Bush years that represent permanent, or at least long-term, legacies that will survive Bush?
       Vidal: Well, the Congress has ceded--which it cannot do--but it has ceded its power to declare war. That is written in the Constitution. It's the most important thing in the Constitution, ultimately. And having ceded that to the Executive Branch, he can declare war whenever he finds terrorism. Now, terrorism is a wonderful invention because it doesn't mean anything. It's an abstract noun. You can't have a war against an abstract noun; it's like having a war against dandruff. It's meaningless.
       But you can terrify people. The art of government now, the art of control as practiced by the current junta, is: Keep the people frightened. It's exactly what Adolf Hitler and his gang did. Keep them frightened: The Russians are coming. The Poles are killing Germans who live within the borders of Poland. The Czechs are doing the same thing in the Sudetenland. These are evil people. We must go after them. We must save our kin.
       Keep everybody frightened, tell them lies--and the bigger the lie, the more they'll believe it. There's nothing the average American now believes (because he's been told it 10,000 times a day) that is true. Now how do you undo so much disinformation? Well, you have to have truth squads at work 24 hours a day every day. And we don't have them.
       CP: I'd like to ask you to sketch our political arc from Reagan down to Bush II. It seemed to me that Reagan took a big step down the road to Bush when he was so successful in selling the ideology of the market, the idea that whatever the interests of money and markets dictated was the proper and even the most patriotic course--which was hardly a new idea, but one that had never been embraced openly as a first principle of politics. Is that a fair assessment?
       Vidal: He was small-town American Republican, even though he started life as a Democrat. He believed in the values of Main Street. Sinclair Lewis's novels are filled with Ronald Reagans, though Babbitt doesn't get to the White House. But this time Babbitt did. So it was very congenial for Reagan to play that part, not that he had a very clear idea of what his lines were all about. Those who were writing the scenarios certainly knew.
       I'd say the downward skid certainly began with Reagan. I came across a comment recently, someone asking why we had gone into both Grenada and Panama, two absolutely nothing little countries who were no danger to us, minding their own business, and we go in and conquer them. Somebody said, well, we did it because we could. That's the attitude of our current rulers.
       So they will be forever putting--what they do is put us all at risk. You and I and other civilians are going to be the ones who are killed when the Moslems get really angry and start suicide-bombing American cities because of things the Bush/Cheney junta has done to them. We will be the ones killed. Bush/Cheney will be safe in their bunkers, but we're going to get it. I would have thought that self-interest--since Americans are the most easily terrified people on earth, as recently demonstrated over and over again-- we would be afraid of what was going to befall us. But I think simultaneously we have no imagination, and certainly no sense of cause and effect. If we did have that, we might know that if you keep kicking somebody, he's going to kick you back. So there we stand, ignoring the first rule of physics, which is that there is no action without reaction.

       CP: Didn't the previous successes of our economy and our empire, post WWII, condition people to expect that consequences were for other people in other places?
       Vidal: Well, wishful thinking, perhaps. I spent three years in World War II, and it was a clear victory for our team. But it was nothing to write Mother about, I'll tell you. Walt Whitman once said, of the Civil War, that it is a lucky thing the people will never know what happened in the war. One can think of a lot of things, one can imagine a lot of things, but...
       The sense that there are no consequences--that can happen if you keep the people diverted. Television changed everything. Some 60 or 80 percent of Americans still think Saddam Hussein was a partner of Osama bin Laden. They hated each other, and they had nothing to do with each other. Saddam had nothing to do with 9/11. But if you keep repeating it and repeating it--and Cheney still does; nobody's switched him off, so he just babbles and babbles like a broken toy--how are they to know otherwise? Yes, there are good journals here and there, like The Nation, but they're not easily found. And with our educational system, I don't think the average person can read with any great ease anything that requires thought and the ability to exercise cause-and-effect reasoning: If we do this to them, they will do that to us. We seem to have lost all track of that rather primitive notion that I think people all the way back to chimpanzees have known. But we don't.

       CP: In your latest book, Imperial America, you refer to Confucius's admonition to "rectify the language." In that regard I'm wondering about the Clinton years, and about the success of the Clinton/Morris strategy of "triangulation," which mainly consisted of talking to the left and governing to the right. Did that play a role in setting the stage for a figure like Bush, who throws around words like "democracy" and "freedom" when they bear no relation to reality?
       Vidal: Well, certainly it did. Clinton represented no opposition to this. He was so busy triangulating that he was enlisting under the colors of the other team, hoping to pick up some votes. I don't think he did, but he got himself reelected by not doing the job of an opposing political party. In other words, the Republican Party as it now is funded, is the party of corporate America, which is no friend to the people of America. Now that's a clear division. The people of America, if you ever run for office, you find out they're very shrewd about figuring out who's getting what money, and who's on their side. But you have to organize them. You have to tell them more things than they get to know from the general media.
       Clinton just gave up. Also, to his credit, or rather, to explain him, the Republican Party realized that this was the most attractive politician since Franklin Roosevelt, and that he had a great, great hold over people. They also realized that if he got going, we really would have National Health--we would actually become a civilized country, which we are nowhere near. I mean, we're in the Stone Age again. He was working toward it, and they saw he had to be destroyed. Later they got a cock-sucking interlude to impeach him. If I were he, I would have called out the Army and sent Congress home.
       CP: Really.
       Vidal: Yes, really. They went beyond anything in the laws of impeachment. They have to do with the exercise of your powers as president, abuses of power as president. He wasn't abusing any powers. He was caught telling a little lie about sex, which you're not supposed to ask him about anyway, and he shouldn't have answered. So they use that: oh, perjury! Oh, it's terrible, a president who lies! Oh, God--how can we live any longer in Sodom and Gomorrah? You can play on the dumb-dumbs morning, noon, and night with stuff like that. 
       CP: Clearly Bush does represent something radical and new, and there's been an understandable tendency on the part of people who don't like where the country is going to focus their outrage exclusively on Bush and the Republicans. But don't the media and the Democrats come in for a great deal of blame for creating the political vacuum in which he rose?
       Vidal: Well, the media is on the other side. The media belongs to the big money, and the big money, their candidates, their party, is the Republican Party as now constituted. So everybody is behaving typically [in media]. What isn't typical is a Democratic Party that has also sold out. There are just as many lobbyists and propagandists there as on the other side. They're never going to regain anything until they remember that they're supposed to represent the people at large,  and not the very rich.
       But they need the very rich in order to be able to run for office, to buy television time. I'd say if you really want to date the crash of the American system, the American republic, it was in the early '50s, when television suddenly emerged as the central fact of American life. That which was not televised did not exist. And any preacher, because religion is tax-free--I would tax all the religions, by the way--any evangelical who wants to get up there and say, send me millions of dollars and I will cure you of your dandruff, he gets to spend the money any way he likes, and there's no tax on it. So he can have political action groups, which he's not supposed to have but does have. So you have all that religious money, and then you have the enormous cost of campaigning, which means every politician who wants to buy TV time has got to sell his ass to somebody. And corporate America is ready to buy.
       CP: Likewise, there's a great tendency among his detractors to call Bush stupid. You've called him "dumb," albeit not as dumb as his dad. But I'm recalling what you wrote about Ronald Reagan years ago in your review of the Ronnie Leamer book about him: that no one who's stupid aces every career test he faces. The same is clearly not true of George W. Bush, who had failed in a lot of things before he entered politics. But he hasn't failed in politics. Do you think Bush possesses a kind of intelligence akin to Reagan's in that regard, or is that giving him too much credit? How do you think his mind works?
       Vidal: I should think very oddly. He's dyslexic, which means--it's a problem of incoherence. I have some dyslexia in my family, and they can be reasonably intelligent about most things, but they have problems with words, the structure of language. Not really getting it. There's an inability to study anything. Sometimes they also have an attention deficiency and so on.
       I would say that he is undisturbed by these things. His is a mind totally lacking in culture of any kind. I'm not talking about highbrow culture, just knowledge of the American past, and our institutions. He's got rid of due process of law, which is what the United States is based upon. Once you can send somebody off and put them in the brig of a ship in Charleston Harbor and hold them as long as you like uncharged, you have destroyed the United States and its Constitution. He has done those things.
       CP: How did so many Americans come to embrace and even celebrate these bullying, anti-democratic displays of authoritarian, censorial governance? There's a palpable sense of mean- spiritedness about a good deal of public sentiment, it seems.
       Vidal: I wouldn't call it the public. There are groups that rather like it. And these are the same groups that don't like black people, gay people, Jews, or this or that. You always have that disaffected minority that you can play to. And it helps you in states with small populations. If you get eight of those states, you don't get much of a popular vote, but you can get the Electoral College--a device that our founders made to make sure we never had a democratic government. In other words, I don't blame the public. He's not popular. I've just been reading a report on Conyers's trip to Ohio with his subcommittee's experts. Ohio was stolen. The Republican Congress will never have a hearing on it. But I think attempts are being made to publish the details of what was done there, and elsewhere too in America.
       In other words, I put the case that Bush was never elected--not in 2000, and not in 2004. This is a new game in the world. Through the magic of electronic voting, particularly through Mr. Diebold and friends, you can take a non-president and make him president. But how to keep the people, including the opposition who should know better, so silent, this introduces us to a vast landscape of corruption which I dare not enter. 
       CP: I saw a recent CIA report that referred to the United States as a "declining superpower." To your knowledge, has the government ever said so before?
       Vidal: Well, their style is hortatory and alarmist. And I think they say we're declining every day and every minute. We must do this, we must overthrow this government, we must do that, stop China. Why not nuke China? [The American right] was all set to do that at one point, I remember. William F. Buckley Jr. was in favor of a unilateral strike at their nuclear capacity. A whole bunch of people, moderately respectable, were in favor of that. It all comes from propaganda. It all comes from knowing how to use the media to your own ends, and keep the people frightened.
       It was very striking--before the inauguration, CNN showed a bunch of inaugural addresses starting with Roosevelt. Roosevelt was a master politician. What theme does he hit first? "We have nothing to fear but fear itself." Well, that's it. He intuited it, having followed the Nazis and knowing how Hitler was putting together his act, which was creating fear in the Germans of everybody else so he could mobilize them and make the SS. Roosevelt was saying that it was this unnameable fear that we had to watch out for. Then we skip over to Harry Truman, a real dunce, but there was a genius behind him in Dean Acheson. We jump over to him, and he is declaring war on communism, all over the world. They're on the march! Wherever you look, there they are, and we must be on our guard!
       He instituted loyalty oaths for everybody--for janitors in high schools as well as members of the cabinet. Unthinkable, the distance from Roosevelt to his admittedly despised successor. We've gone from, we must not succumb to fear itself, to the next one saying, oh, there's so much to be afraid of! We must arm! We must militarize America and its economy, which he did. 
       CP: One theory about the reason the US invaded Iraq concerns currency--the fear that European deals for Iraqi oil might lead to oil's being denominated in euros rather than dollars. Do you think that notion holds any water?
       Vidal: I do. Perhaps more oil than water, but yes, that's what it's about--the terror that Europe...Europe, after all, is more populous than the United States, better educated, better quality of life for most of its citizens. And it has actually achieved, here and there, a civilization, which we haven't. There's a lot of nasty response on the part of those Americans who are eager for more oil, more money, more this, more that, to put Europe down, to regard Europe as a rival and perhaps as an enemy. It was America that saw to it that we got a weak dollar, though. The Europeans had nothing to do with it. In fact they were rather appalled, because they own an awful lot of treasury bonds that will be worthless one day.
       So yes, it was a power struggle. Ultimately the whole thing is about oil. We should be looking to hydrogen, or whatever is the latest replacement for fossil fuels. All the money we put into these wars in the Middle East, we should have put into that. Then we wouldn't be so desperate at the thought that in 2020, or in 2201 or whenever, there will be no more oil. 
       CP: Talk a little more about public education's decay in the current scene. Much of the Bush administration's spending on No Child Left Behind is earmarked for private corporate tutors.
       Vidal: I don't think Bush himself is particularly relevant to any of this, since he avoided education entirely throughout his life. Which gives him a sort of purity. He was a cheerleader at Andover, where he learned many skills that have been very useful to him since.
       The educational system was pretty good once. I never went to a public school, and the private schools here are generally good, though we are also better indoctrinated than the public schools. It certainly got bad around the '50s. Just as we became a global empire, the first thing I was struck by was that they stopped teaching geography in public schools. Now here we are a global power, and nobody knows where anything is. I loved geography when I was a kid. It's really the way to get to know the world. The success of Franklin Roosevelt was that he was a great philatelist. He collected stamps, and he knew where all the countries were and who lived in them. Now we have people who don't know where anything is. I remember a speech Bush gave in which he was reaching out not only to the "Torks" but the "Grecians" at some point. We live in total confusion time.
       There is also something in the water--let us hope it was put there by the enemy--that has made Americans contemptuous of intelligence whenever they recognize it, which is not very often. And a hatred of learning, which you don't find in any other country. There is not one hamlet in Italy in which you can fail to find kids desperate to learn. Yes, there are areas where they might be desperate to become members of the Mafia, but that's because they don't have any money. And a country like Italy is not rich, not as rich as we are. But there isn't a kid in Italy who can't quote Dante. There's no one in America now who knows who Shakespeare is, because they stopped teaching him in high schools. So we are out of it. And no attempt is being made to put us back into it.
       CP: When does this current bout of foreign adventurism end? You've said in other interviews that it ends with us going broke. Can you explain?
       Vidal: I haven't changed my line. We don't have the money for these adventures. We don't even have the money to operate those prisons which are the delight of Iraq. All we were doing at Abu Ghraib was export what we do to our own people in our own prisons, you know. We are sharing with the rest of the world penology-- in every sense. No, there isn't the money to do it. And the few who are making most of the money are probably investing it elsewhere, preparing islands for themselves to escape to. And then their followers, who are not very many, will be experiencing rapture. They won't be here. 
       CP: Is there any winning back some semblance of the older republic at this point?
       Vidal: You have to have people who want it, and I can't find many people who do. 
       CP: What can average people do about this state of affairs at present, if anything?
       Vidal: Well, some of the internet has been very useful. Radio has been very useful. There are means of getting things across. It's why I write those little books of mine, the pamphlets as I call them. Our first form of politics was pamphleteering in the 18th century. They serve a purpose--more pamphlets, more readers, more this, more that. There's a battle to do an interesting kind of guide to the American centuries, and how we got where we are and how we can get out of it. I'm engaged with some people working on that. Further, deponent sayeth not.
       ©2004, City Pages Media, Inc.
    (In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. Information Clearing House has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is Information Clearing House endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
    [Mar 23, 05]

    • Fraud and Privacy Concerns accompany talk of mandatory statewide vote-by-mail efforts.

    [Electoral fraud] United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Britain and Northern Ireland, United Kingdom flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
       Election Reform Monitor, www.effwa.org/erm/ERM_04052005.PDF , Volume 1, Number 1, April 5, 2005
       UNITED STATES: Washington legislators are moving head-long into some dangerous territory with their advocacy of mail-in voting.
       The Senate wants to encourage counties to move in that direction, but the House wants to make it mandatory.
       Nearly 70 percent of Washington's voters already use the "no-fault" absentee voter option. It is popular with both Republicans and Democrats alike for its convenience and "voter friendly" facade.
       But, as we have seen from the calamity of the 2004 gubernatorial election--particularly in King County--voting by mail (including absentee voting) is highly susceptible to fraud, ballot stuffing, "coached" voting and other forms of vote mining.
       Just this week, further verification of the dangers of mail-in voting were revealed in the United Kingdom, where Election Commissioner Richard Mawrey has been investigating a case of vote-rigging in Birmingham's 2004 local elections. Judge Mawrey said evidence of "massive, systematic and organized fraud" had made a "mockery" of the election and ruled that not less than 1,500 votes had been cast fraudulently. ...
       FACT: In the late 1980s, Toby Moffett won the Connecticut Democrat primary election for governor before losing by 43 votes after absentee ballots were counted. Four of his opponent's supporters were arrested for absentee vote fraud. But it was too late for the courts to order a new election. [Apr 5, 05]

    • [Liberal pre-selection alleged cheaters named.]

    [Electoral abuse.] Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
       The West Australian, "Liberal reject turns against party chiefs," By JESSICA STRUTT and ROBERT TAYLOR, p 13, Friday, April 8, 2005
       PERTH: Disgruntled Liberal turned Independent MLC Alan Cadby launched a scathing attack on senior officers of the WA Liberal Party yesterday, labelling their actions in last year's preselection battles as dishonest and corrupt.
       Under parliamentary privilege, Mr Cadby blamed former Kingsley MLA Cheryl Edwardes' husband Colin, Colin Barnett's former chief of staff Richard Ellis, party president Danielle Blain and senior vice-president Mathias Cormann for his demise and for manipulating branch politics.
       Dumped from the Liberal Party's Upper House ticket for North Metropolitan in favour of Peter Collier, Mr Cadby lashed out at preselection decisions in South Perth and Serpentine-Jarrahdale which he described as "rorting and corruption of the process".
       He accused Mr Edwardes of spreading rumours that he was useless at his job and others of believing he was too closely aligned to disgraced former senator and party powerbroker Noel Crichton-Browne.
       He said Mr Cormann's role should have been to work for the party.
       "In reality he's a nothing but yet this nothing was the chief organiser of the conspiracy to get rid of well-respected and long-serving members such as the Honourable George Cash, the Honourable Norman Moore and the Honourable Peter Foss," Mr Cadby said.
       "He had no interest in winning Government, only replacing these members with people who are part of this group and therefore would be compliant with his and his backers' wishes."
       In his clearest signal yet that he intends to support the State Government's one vote, one value legislation, Mr Cadby said that his being an Independent had probably given the Government the window of opportunity it needed to pass the legislation.
       Mr Edwardes hit back yesterday. "This guy needs to get a life, he needs to grow up," he said. "If he has all these serious allegations about me tell him to come out of the House."
       Mr Cormann said he did not comment on internal Liberal Party matters but had taken his responsibility as a preselection delegate seriously.
       Ms Blain said that there were winners and losers in every preselection.
       Liberal MLC Norman Moore told the Council it was sad that a former Liberal member felt it necessary to criticise the party publicly. [Apr 8, 05]
    • John Hemming applies for Judicial Review. [UK Postal voting electoral fraud.] Britain and Northern Ireland, United Kingdom flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
       Postal Voting Blogspot , http://postalvoting.blogspot.com/ , Monday, April 11, 2005
       BRITAIN: Favourite of this blog, John Hemming (who has quite a lot on his plate at the moment ), has posted details of his application for a Judicial Review http://johnhemming. blogspot.com/ 2005/04/ministers -ditched-vital -measures -to.html .
       Basically it will request the Privy Council (in the absence of the now-dissolved Parliament), to enforce a secure postal ballot, arguing the current rules breach the European Convention on Human Rights on the right to a free and fair election.
       It should be heard some time this week. We await with bated breath...
       posted by Voter at 11:14 PM | 0 comments [Apr 11, 05]

    Rich get $11b in handouts, tax breaks: welfare lobby.

    Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
       The West Australian, By ANDREW PROBYN, p 4, Tuesday, April 26, 2005
       CANBERRA: Wealthy Australians are reaping $11 billion a year in tax breaks and Federal Government concessions, according to an analysis by the Australian Council of Social Service.
       ACOSS claims poorly targeted welfare policies allow people earning more than $100,000 to benefit most from rebates on child care and private health insurance and broader tax breaks such as those for superannuation.
       "We have this notion now that we have to rein in pensions and benefits for those on the lowest incomes, yet at the same time, we are spending $2.6 billion on people who are earning $100,000-plus to prop up the private health insurance industry," ACOSS president Andrew McCallum said.
       He said the rich received $280 million a year in child-care rebates, almost $1.9 billion in superannuation tax breaks and $2.7 billion in capital gains tax discounts.
       "The universality of some of these policies is regressive in that it only favours high-income earners. These schemes suck dollars away from services for Australians on average and lower incomes," Mr McCallum said.
    WELFARE FOR THE RICH
    People earning more than
    $100,000 a year
    Capital gains tax discount
    Private health
    insurance rebate
    Tax breaks for
    employer superannuation
    Seniors tax offset
    Fringe benefits tax discount
    for company cars
    Tax break for executive
    "golden handshakes"
    Childcare rebate
    Cut in super surcharge
    for $100k+ salary earners
    $200-a-year seniors
    concessions allowance
    for self-funded retirees

    TOTAL:
    $2.7 billion

    $2.6 billion

    $1.9 billion
    $1.8 billion

    $1.2 billion

    $650 million
    $280 million

    $255 million


    $66 million

    $11.5 BILLION
    Peter Costello: Tough Budget expected to target
    benefits at the lower end of the scale. (Picture)

    SOURCE: ACOSS

       Treasurer Peter Costello's 10th Federal Budget a fortnight away is expected to have a heavy emphasis on the "welfare to work" transition for the long-term unemployed.
       As well as lowering the work test for people on disability pensions from 30 to 15 hours, the Budget is also expected to encourage sole parents back to work.
       Mr McCallum said ACOSS supported incentives that encouraged people to enter the workforce, but not if they were punitive.
       "When you pick on sole parents you are attacking their children by default because those who are on dual incomes can pick and choose how to structure their parenting arrangements but that is not available to sole parents," he said.
       Mr Costello was unavailable for comment yesterday but has already signalled that he supports greater workforce participation and a tightening of the disability pension.
       He told SBS Television's Insight program last week it was possible that the disability pension was being rorted by people claiming muscular injuries such as bad backs.
       "There are now one in eight men over 55 in Australia on the disability support pension," Mr Costello said. "A man with a bad back is on the disability support pension, exactly the same as a person who is, say, a quadriplegic.
       "There are men with bad backs who can't work, I accept that, and they should be on the disability support pension.
       "But do you think that one in eight men over 55 in Australia are disabled?" # [Apr 26, 05]

    • [Voting irregularity in Britain sees baby receiving postal ballotpaper; both pro-war parties argue over prior comfortable lies - Electoral fraud?].

    Britain and Northern Ireland, United Kingdom of, flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
    Eight-month-old girl oblivious to party clashes as officials send her card to vote in British election.

    Tories brand Blair a liar as poll heads for bitter close

       The West Australian, by JAMES BUTTON, p 28, Thursday, April 28, 2005
       LONDON: Kiera Spear has already received her polling card for the British general election but, at eight months old, she has no idea who to vote for.
       St Edmundsbury District Council in Suffolk, eastern England, said yesterday that there had been some confusion over Kiera's age, after it sent her the card entitling her to vote next Thursday.
       The confusion added to the tensions leading to a bitter end to the election campaign.
       Yesterday, Conservative leader Michael Howard unveiled a poster branding Prime Minister Tony Blair a liar.
       The poster shows a picture of Mr Blair grinning, but with his eyes avoiding the camera, next to a message: "If he's prepared to lie to take us to war, he's prepared to lie to win an election."
       The billboard was launched as two polls published yesterday suggested that the Conservative Party could still pull off an unlikely victory.
       A Financial Times poll showed that Labour held a 10 per cent lead among all voters but only a 2 per cent lead among people "absolutely certain" to vote.
       The Guardian newspaper published a Labour Party poll showing its lead down to 2 per cent and often less in 100 key marginal seats.
       Mr Howard, who said he was "two goals down" in the campaign, has chosen Mr Blair as his final campaign target because polls show widespread cynicism about the Prime Minister, especially over his role in taking Britain into the Iraq war.
       Calling Mr Blair a liar over Iraq is risky for the Conservatives because they supported the war but Mr Howard told a news conference: "Character is an issue in this election. It is about trust."
       He said the Government's dossier on February 2003 making the case for war was not based on authoritative intelligence, as Mr Blair claimed, but "pulled off the internet.
       Mr Blair accused Mr Howard of a deception of his own, saying his "two goals down" comment was "a classic strategy to say you cannot really win".
       "Why do they keep using the phrase, 'Send a message'?" Mr Blair said. "It's as if there was not an election happening.
       "That strategy deployed in Australia delivered a conservative government when people thought there would be a Labor government."
       It was not clear what Australian election Mr Blair was referring to. But Labour Party leaders have frequently alleged that the negative campaigning tactics employed by Mr Howard are driven by former Australian Liberal Party director Lynton Crosby, who is running the Conservative campaign.
       Meanwhile, Kiera's mother, Glenda Spear, said of the polling card sent to her daughter: "There must have been some mix-up. I'm sure I filled in the form properly. I thought it was hilarious."
    Picture - Vote mix-up: Officials say confusion over her age led to baby Kiera Spear receiving a polling card for the general election next Thursday. Picture: Associated Press.#
       [COMMENT: Ms Spear, it's not "hilarious." In Australia, in the United States, and now in the United Kingdom, switching over to easier enrolment and to postal voting (in the US to computerised voting, too) is yielding what the big parties and their backers want - more opportunity for electoral fraud. It's not "hilarious" because it is suspected by some people that such postal ballotpapers were, presumably, meant for New Labour voters, and the Spear name accidentally found its way on to a list, which staff then used to programme a computer to produce and mail the ballotpapers. For more on electoral fraud and electoral abuse, search this website and the Web. COMMENT ENDS.] [Apr 28, 05]

    • WA's strife-torn Liberal Party.

    [Electoral abuse, corruption. Membership and pre-selection cheating] Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
       Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), www.abc.net. au/stateline/ wa/content/ 2005/s1363 242.htm , Stateline, Reporter: Layla Tucak, Broadcast: May/06/2005
       PERTH, W. Australia: REBECCA CARMODY: First tonight, claims of skulduggery in the Western Australian Liberal Party. The success of the government's one vote, one value electoral reforms has unleashed a torrent of bloodletting. Faced with the prospect of a third term in opposition, furious members say they wouldn't be in this position if allegations of corruption had been properly examined. Some members are so angry, they've chosen to speak publicly for the first time. Layla Tucak reports.
       LORRAINE ALLCHURCH (LIBERAL PARTY MEMBER): I've lived through many cycles in the Liberal Party and I've never seen a cycle which is as corrupt as this one appears to be. I'm just shocked, and I must say to you I really wish I'd spoken out earlier.
       LAYLA TUCAK: Lorraine Allchurch is a well-known figure in the Liberal Party.
       LORRAINE ALLCHURCH: I've been involved with the Liberal Party 30 years along with a lot of really good, fine people and now I see the Liberal Party arriving in such a deplorable state.
       LAYLA TUCAK: She's been president of the Curtin division and the Nedlands branch and was also Richard Court's campaign manager at several elections. In keeping with party rules, Ms Allchurch would ordinarily keep her views to herself, but with the likely passing of one vote, one value electoral reform and the events that she believes led to its success, she can't stay silent any longer.
       LORRAINE ALLCHURCH: People like myself have spent 30 years working to keep the Liberal Party in power and in government, and now we will have reduced numbers and election campaigns will be longer and harder to win. If Alan Cadby had been allowed to continue on I feel fairly sure that we wouldn't have reached this stage.
       LAYLA TUCAK: Her concerns are largely about this man, Peter Collier - the former president of the Curtin division. In a few weeks, he'll take up the seat being vacated by dumped Liberal, turned Independent, Alan Cadby, but Mr Collier has a cloud hanging over his head. He's been accused of forging signatures on membership forms and using people's names without their consent. The alleged purpose: to stack branches to secure enough support for his own preselection in the lead-up to the 2001 election. Police have confirmed they're investigating the allegations for a second time. It has to be said here that Peter Collier flatly rejects the allegations, but he refused to go on camera in his own defence and that the alleged forgery happened some time ago.
       LORRAINE ALLCHURCH: It did happen five years ago, but after that there were a number of incidents as well. I mean, the things that I'm talking about happened over a four-year period starting five years ago.
       LAYLA TUCAK: Lorraine Allchurch says concerns about Mr Collier's endorsement were, last year, put to the party executive, including president, Danielle Blain and state director, Paul Everingham, but were ignored, even though Labor at the time sought to gain mileage out of the affair.
       JOHN QUIGLEY (LABOR MEMBER FOR MINDARIE): There is one event that has happened in recent times, however, that puts this terrible black cloud over these northern seats, and that is the endorsement for the upper house for this seat of the self-admitted perjurer, self-admitted liar, that crook, Peter Collier.
       LAYLA TUCAK: What evidence do you have that he forged signatures?
       LORRAINE ALLCHURCH: Well, I've got a whole folder of documentation here, which I'm happy to provide if it's ever necessary, and I observed all of those things myself. I had the opportunity to compare signatures with other documents and he also admitted to me on two occasions, publicly - well not publicly - on one occasion publicly and on another occasion in a private phone call, that he had forged signatures and he wished he'd never done it.
       LAYLA TUCAK: A private phone call, how did that come about? Just talk us through that - what he actually said to you.
       LORRAINE ALLCHUCH: The membership forms were presented to a Curtin division subcommittee meeting and we were advised that some of their signatures were false and I left that meeting, came home and rang Peter Collier and I asked him what had happened. I said, "Something's wrong; these signatures appear to be forged; what do you know about it?" At first he denied any knowledge of it. He indicated that someone else must have done it. And I said, "Why would this other person do it; he's not involved in the Liberal Party; he's a senior businessman?" So he backed off, and he was almost in tears and he said, "Well, I don't know what to say." That phone call ended, and a couple of days later, he rang me again and he was hysterical. He was crying and sobbing down the phone and he was saying to me, "My career is ended; my career is ruined, I won't be able to stand for the North Metropolitan Province, I will have to walk away from the Liberal Party." And I said, "What are you going on about, Peter?" and he said, "I wish I'd never done it; I wish I'd never used those names." I said, "Well, why did you do it?" He said, "Well, well, well, I thought they wanted to join." But there was no membership moneys to go with them and I was deeply distressed. I've never seen anything like it before.
       LAYLA TUCAK: So, what you're saying is that he admitted to you that he actually forged signatures and he thought his career was going to end because of that?
       LORRAINE ALLCHURCH: Yes, he did, and I had a friend in my house at the time who also overheard the same phone call. But there was another occasion when he admitted in public that he'd forged someone else's name, and that was at a Hackett branch meeting. A letter had been sent out by a young fellow who was an associate of his at Scotch College and he was the secretary of the branch. He sent a letter out and he signed the letter. When I compared the membership form signature and the signature on the letter they were totally different. I circulated that documentation to the meeting. A number of people viewed it. I then quizzed the secretary and asked him why the signatures were different. The poor secretary was devastated by all of this and looked to Peter Collier for help and guidance, and Peter Collier said in front of 30 people, "Don't be upset about it, I did it: I sent the letter out; I signed your name."
       LAYLA TUCAK: So, it wasn't the first time that he had done this?
       LORRAINE ALLCHURCH: Definitely not. He used my name without consent on 17 or 18 membership forms. He put my name down as a recruitment officer. I've never met the people; I've never seen them.
       LAYLA TACAK: So he admitted to forging people's signatures; he used your name on some of those applications without your consent -
       LORRAINE ALLCHURCH: Yes.
       LAYLA TACAK: - and we don't know whether there was ever any money received.
       LORRAINE ALLCHURCH: No.
       LAYLA TUCAK: These are the membership forms in question; they date back to 1999 and were investigated by the Appeals and Disciplinary Committee of the Liberal Party. At that meeting, Mr Collier elected not to speak. He was represented by a lawyer. Compare the signatures on the membership forms with those on the documents obtained by Stateline and there are clear differences. The Liberal Party even received a letter from one of the so-called new members, Peter Getgood. It states -
       Thank you for accepting me as a member of the Liberal Party in spite of the fact that I have not formally applied for membership . . .
       I do not wish to become a member of a political party at this time.
       This is the signature on his membership form - and this is his real signature.
       The State Director of the Liberal Party, Paul Everingham, declined to be interviewed on camera, but, in a telephone conversation he said the allegations had already been investigated and Peter Collier had been cleared. If that was the case, someone should have told Federal Justice Minister, Chris Ellison.
       JOHN QUIGLEY: I refer to "The West Australian" dated 6 December 2000 . . .
       LAYLA TUCACK: In that article, Senator Ellison is reported as saying Peter Collier admitted signing one of the membership forms, his excuse being that he thought the people had wanted to join and that he had been reprimanded.
       JOHN QUIGLEY: On evidence of the minister for state, Mr Ellison, my electors would have good grounds to go to court and seek a restraining order to restrain Mr Collier from carrying a pen in their electorate because if he comes into the electorate of Innaloo with a pen, whose signature is he going to defraud this time?
       LAYLA TUCAK: In this letter from the then president of the Rosalie-Shenton Park branch it is alleged Mr Collier handed over unsigned membership forms.
       JOHN QUIGLEY: He didn't even bother to forge them. He was getting blasé by this stage. He didn't even bother to forge the signature or, by that stage, perhaps it had twigged and there could be something highly improper in all this. He didn't sign them.
       LAYLA TUCACK: Peter Collier told Stateline he absolutely rejects any allegations that he forged signatures or used people's names without their consent. He said it's been dealt with by the party and he has no further comment to make. Some Liberal sources believe the allegations had been brought to life again by supporters of Alan Cadby who refused to accept the end of his parliamentary career and who are now intent on slinging mud.
       ALAN CADBY (INDEPENDENT MEMBER OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL): Deep down inside there is great disappointment and a little anger aimed towards, not the Liberal Party, but towards those few individuals who now seem to have control of the Liberal Party. The three people who, at the core of this action, were, as I said, Richard Ellis, Patrice Cormann and Colin Edwardes, but standing behind them were Senators David Johnson, Ian Campbell and Chris Ellison.
       LAYLA TUCAK: Liberal sources have told Stateline these people were aligned with the then leader, Colin Barnett. It's claimed they wanted Cadby out and Collier in to bolster support for Mr Barnett in the party to ward off any post-election leadership challenge from the likes of Matt Birney and Graham Kierath, who was seeking to re-enter Parliament at the time. Adding insult to injury for Cadby supporters, his replacement, Peter Collier, was recently nominated for a distinguished service award for his contribution to the Liberal Party.
       LORRAINE ALLCHURCH: I was positively amazed that someone would have the gall to nominate a person like that.
       LAYLA TUCAK: The story doesn't stop there. Just last month there was another intriguing twist. State Director, Paul Everingham made a complaint to the police as well as the Corruption and Crime Commission about long-time party member, Rick Mincherton. It was about a private conversation the pair had had in which Mr Mincherton suggested Alan Cadby might vote against one vote, one value if those responsible for his dumping, including president, Danielle Blain, and Peter Collier, resigned. Mr Mincherton said in conversation Mr Everingham wanted him to develop the idea.
       RICK MINCHERTON (LIBERAL PARTY MEMBER): He actually laboured on the point of how serious this one vote, one value is going to be to the future Liberal Party. He then said to me, "Can I get something to put before the party, like a proposition or a deal?"
       LAYLA TUCAK: But Mr Mincherton changed his mind after receiving advice that it could be seen as trying to influence an MP's vote, which is illegal. He rang Mr Everingham the next day and told him to forget about it. But Mr Everingham didn't. The state director complained to both the CCC and the police. He says it was on the advice of Liberal party lawyers and someone leaked it to the media. Both authorities said there was no evidence to justify an investigation.
       Do you feel like you were set up?
       RICK MINCHERTON: Absolutely, of course I do.
       LAYLA TUCAK: The Cadby-Collier affair has unleashed a torrent of bloodletting, mostly private, but some of it very public.
       ALAN CADBY: There was a definite distinction between sharp political manoeuvrings and blatant dishonesty and corruption that would not pass the test of any moral or legal scrutiny.
       LAYLA TUCAK: Mr Cadby was speaking about the preselection for the blue-ribbon seat of South Perth and how one branch was controversially ruled ineligible to participate in the voting process. This week Ken McGovern, the former vice-president of the South Perth branch, which was struck out, spoke to Stateline.
       KEN McGOVERN (FORMER VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE SOUTH PERTH BRANCH OF THE LIBERAL PARTY): The South Perth branch was deliberately disenfranchised by the president and a group of people - a few people - who live outside the electorate. They decided to transfer in a number of members from other branches that lived in other electorates. The constitution of the party demands that 51 per cent of the members must reside in the electorate. When that doesn't happen the branch becomes disenfranchised for preselection purposes only.
       LAYLA TUCACK: He told how a meeting was called at the eleventh hour outside the electorate in Nedlands, which was highly unusual. With such little notice, delegates who would have fought the move couldn't attend. He also says they weren't told the purpose of the meeting.
       KEN McGOVERN: It would be ludicrous to suggest that the influx of members from outside the electorate was not done for any other purpose than to make the branch unconstitutional, or disenfranchised for preselection.
       LAYLA TUCAK: Mr McGovern says, despite these events, his preferred candidate, Tony Rocky, still won, but only just. However, a rival candidate successfully appealed on what Mr McGovern claims were spurious grounds. Instead of going back to rank and file members, the preselection went to state council.
       ALAN CADBY: Why did it go to the state council? That's quite easy. It went to the state council because of the likes of Patrice Cormann, Peter Collier, Colin Edwardes, supported by the Senators, Johnson, Campbell and Ellison, had control.
       LAYLA TUCACK: It ultimately led to the defeat of Tony Rocky. Complaints were made to the state executive, but Paul Everingham said he was satisfied that the way it happened was within the rules of the constitution. In a statement issued this afternoon Liberal Party President, Danielle Blain, who's currently overseas said, "All preselections were made in accordance with the constitution and endorsed by the state council." She says, "The allegations against Mr Collier were thoroughly investigated by the party's appeals and disciplinary committee, which ran over several weeks and that the committee unanimously decided the evidence was insufficient." But perhaps if one vote, one value was not successful, no-one would be making a fuss right now. It seems those within the party spilling the beans are doing so because they fear their party is undergoing, in their view, a cataclysmic shift. And not just in electoral boundaries but the unseen factional boundaries too and who is being blamed?
       LORRAINE ALLCHURCH: Well, the buck always stops at the top, as the saying goes, and so one would think the state president and the state director, for a start, would have to accept responsibility for four or five ghastly things that have happened on their watch. I can't recall another administration in recent times that have presided over such disasters, which will actually change the face of the Liberal Party.
       LAYLA TUCACK: Others say nothing short of an independent inquiry would suffice.
       RICK MINCHERTON: The only way you're going to get the truth is to have an at-arms-length inquiry instigated by an authoritative body such as the Department of Fair Trading or whatever its new name is that can clearly get to show that the Liberal Party's not running to its own rules.
       LAYLA TUCAK: And until something is done they believe the party will suffer.
       KEN McGOVERN: What decent person would put themselves forward to represent the people of an electorate knowing that the process is not kosher, that it can be dudded and made unconstitutional at any given time? All the work a man does can be overcome by a few power brokers. That is the problem in the party. For this situation in the state of Western Australia in the Liberal Party is a bit like Oliver Twist: there's always more.# [Emphasis added]
    http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/cont16.htm#strife
       [COMMENT: Lorraine Allchurch, who said "I've never seen anything like it before," ought to try the Website Search Engine on this website for electoral fraud and electoral abuse, or read the article "How Libs cater for Senate pals", The Sunday Times, p 33, Aug 4, 2002, which is at cater.htm, and page 2 of the same issue about how then-Senator Crane was cheated out of his senate seat by branch-stacking, and replaced by a former party president David Johnston. COMMENT ENDS.] [May 06, 2005]

    • [Leader of cheating party urges accused MP Collier to help police - Electoral abuse.]


       The West Australian, "Birney urges MP to aid police," by GRAHAM MASON, p 7, Tuesday, May 10, 2005
       PERTH, W. Australia: Liberal Party leader Matt Birney said incoming MLC Peter Collier should answer police questions on an investigation into claims of forged Liberal Party memberships.
       Mr Birney's comments were made after a second police investigation into the forgery claims against Mr Collier was dropped. It is understood that Mr Collier was interviewed by police recently with a lawyer present and refused to answer questions.
       "If he is definitely not answering questions then I would encourage him to do so," Mr Birney said.
       The forgery claims go back to 2000 when Mr Collier was accused of forging signatures in order to stack branches before the 2001 State election. He denied the accusation at the time.
       The Liberal Party's appeals and disciplinary committee and police investigated claims at the time and dismissed the matter.
       Liberal Party president Danielle Blain said the party's State management executive met at the weekend and had referred the matter to State council, the governing body of the Liberal Party.
       Mr Collier was elected to Parliament this year after a preselection battle in which Alan Cadby was dropped to the fifth position on the party's North Metropolitan ticket in favour of Mr Collier.
       Last week, former 30-year Liberal Party stalwart Lorraine Allchurch, who has served as president of the Curtin division and Richard Court's campaign manager, made a series of allegations on the ABC's Stateline program [www.abc.net. au/stateline/ wa/content/ 2005/s1363 242.htm] against Mr Collier. A statement by Mr Collier yesterday said he had commenced legal proceedings against Ms Allchurch and the ABC. He said he was seeking further legal advice. [May 10, 2005]

    • [Responding to Imminent Debt Crisis]

     
       David Keane, "Responding to Imminent Crisis," May 19, 2005
       PERTH, W. Australia:
       Australian Economic Trends
       Every three months, in March, June, September and December, the Reserve Bank of Australia publishes updates on vital indicators for the Australian economy, including Foreign Equity (foreign ownership of Australian assets), Foreign Debt, Domestic Credit and Gross Domestic Product. The first three of these items when added together, Foreign Equity + Foreign Debt + Domestic Credit comes to a grand figure which summarises the nation's total indebtedness, or Total Australian Debt. This total figure may be thought of as the credit card for the nation, including not just government indebtedness (which Treasurer Peter Costello keeps in check and boasts about), but also Australia's private sector indebtedness which particularly under the last five years of Liberal government has been permitted to escalate with seemingly no restraints.
       Australia's Gross Domestic Product, on the other hand, may be thought of as Australia's national income for both government and private sectors together. Every three months, as a service to the community, I access these Australian Reserve Bank data, extract the main items as mentioned above and work out two most significant figures, Total Australian Debt (= Foreign Equity + Foreign Debt + Domestic Credit), and the Total Australian Debt as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product. These figures show such an alarming trend that a few years ago I decided to publish and distribute them regularly every three months.
       In brief, this is what is being revealed.
  • From June 1995 to June 1999, Total Australian Debt was increasing at the rate of 10% of the GDP annually. In June 1999 Total Australian Debt stood at 190% of GDP.
  • From June 1999 to June 2003, Total Australian Debt was increasing at the rate of 15% of the GDP annually. In June 2003 Total Australian Debt stood at 251% of GDP.
  • From June 2003 to June 2004, Total Australian Debt was increasing at the rate of 25% of the GDP annually. In June 2004 Total Australian Debt stood at 276% of GDP.
  • And here's the most recent, exceedingly alarming information. In the quarter September 2004 to December 2004, Total Australian Debt increased at the rate of 50% of the GDP annually. In December 2004 Total Australian Debt stood at 291% of GDP.
       Let us compare the situation of a private citizen who earns A$1,000 a fortnight and spends A$1,500 a fortnight thus increasing his credit card by A$500 every fortnight, as a trend which he cannot escape from. You would be most concerned for that citizen's future welfare, considering that in a very short time, perhaps months, that citizen will become bankrupt with an unrepayable huge debt.
       Yet for the past several years treasurer Peter Costello has boasted of his wonderful economic management. He has been very selective of the information he admits to publicly. It is an easy ask for a government to so regularly provide such impressive figures for government expenditure when it is done at the expense of blowing out the national credit card with such crass disregard to the overall debt burden he is imposing upon Australia's youth. When Australia's economy crashes, it will not be the free spending baby boomers who will need to repay the national debt. The national debt will become the burden of today's teenagers, and they must bear the responsibilities of a bankrupt crippled economy being ruled by the policies of the International Monetary Fund.
       Many African nations, and Indonesia, Mexico, and Argentina have all passed through unmanageable debt crises after which their economies crashed, and they were taken over by International Monetary Fund administration, with the result of orienting all commerce and production towards the goal of optimum repayment of foreign debt while the national expenditure on education, health and social welfare is slashed to in many cases a third of the level of its more affluent and irresponsible days.
       John Howard and Peter Costello may boast of such wonderful standards of economic management. But history will regard them differently, as the promoters of the political/economic policy that directly caused the collapse of Australia's economy, leaving in their wake a highly indebted nation. They will be regarded as care-free spenders, burning up the nation's credit card.
       When will the crash occur? Public perceptions which guide the Australian and global stock markets still worship the globalisation and rationalist economic agenda, by which First World nations rapidly accrue unsustainable levels of indebtedness, escalating at exponential rates until like a pyramid banking scheme, the bubble of illusion bursts. The bubble is likely to burst when the US economy crashes, and then the public will understand that Australia's economy has been built upon empty promises of indefinite growth in consumption while little attention has been paid to the associated escalating debt.
       The US economy is likely to burst as a result of the public awakening to the massive scandal hidden within the world oil industry. With such rapid expansion in the Chinese and Indian economies, world oil consumption must inevitably peak over the next four years. But it will not be the world oil consumption peak that will cause the crash in the US economy. Already the world markets are panicking over the escalating rise in the price of oil, which has doubled over the past two years. This trend is bound to continue upwards in the future despite OPEC's recent increase in oil production quotas which has led to a very temporary pause in this trend. Such panic has caused the market to demand accountability of the oil companies.
       Shell was the first victim of this demand for openness. On 5/February/2005, the Royal Dutch/Shell Group "cut its 2002 published estimate of its total oil and gas holdings by one-third. It reduced its 2003 estimate of oil reserves by 1.4 billion barrels, or 9.8%, and admitted that two-thirds of its listed prospective wells in 2004 were in fact dry holes. Shell has been fined US$151.5 million for misleading stock markets. The US justice department is undertaking a criminal investigation. Given that company value is directly related to oil reserves, it is not surprising that Shell has lost its top tier credit rating. Oil companies have a vested interest in overstating reserves." (from speech by Queensland Parliamentarian Andrew McNamara, published 9/March/05 by Global Public Media).
       The sudden panic in the oil markets and market demand for accountability will force similar disclosures by other oil companies over the next 12 months. Oil industry authority Dr Colin Campbell has suggested that perhaps 50% or more of presently declared world oil reserve statistics are fictional, made up in response to the secretive competitive nature of this industry in the manic drive to optimise market share. All this is now being exposed publicly, and with each new scandal, the public and markets will insist on total accountability and openness throughout the global oil industry. It is quite possible that within a year, the public will awaken to the grand illusion of a boom in the global economy which is based upon fantasy. Then will the price of oil jump through the roof, exceeding US$100 a barrel, and the US economy will collapse, bringing collapse of the Australian and many other world economies in its wake. At the time of disillusionment, the Australian public will awaken to the hard reality that a national economy cannot be built upon escalating use of the national credit card, while neglecting manufacturing and infrastructure development.
       What then will happen cannot be remedied by a simple adjustment of economic policy, as happened in turning the Great Depression around through the adoption of Keynesian policy. This crisis reaches far, far deeper, and relates to the collapse of an aging, crystallised global civilisation and emergence of a new global civilisation. This can happen only through a profound switch of basic values to live by. We must release unconditionally our present dependence upon usury with its increasing debt and unbridled competition, and develop a new economic value system based upon the triple bottom line. That is, the new civilisation can only survive this massive crisis if it bases its values around sustainable economy, a sustainable global ecology, and a sustainable social agenda for all peoples in the world. We will no longer be able to think as a nation alone, but we must consider ourselves as one within a community of nations. Only that which is best for the world situation will also benefit Australia, and provide for us a foundation from which to build anew and provide hope for our young.
       Keys for National Transformation
       Accordingly, over the next two years, together with my quarterly article of the level of the Total Australian Debt, I will research and publish articles relating to pathways for national political/economic/social transformation.
       The first such article was released in March 2005, and was titled "The Invasion of Iraq and the Australian Constitution." It presents the argument that Australia's participation in the Iraq War is unconstitutional. It is an argument strongly supported by precedent set by decisions of the High Court justices themselves.
       The article being presently researched develops the argument that the invasion of Iraq was illegal under international law. These two articles combined together will form the basis for a challenge in the High Court against further participation in the war in Iraq. A plaintiff can be a person caused personal injury (such as a soldier being forced to fight in the war or injured as a result of the war) or a State government.
       When the legal argument is understood clearly, it will be realised by the public that State governments are equally complicit in the engagement in the Iraq War because they have surrendered to the Commonwealth areas of government constitutionally allocated exclusively to the States. Such a legal challenge is in no way anti-American, because the true spirit of America can only emerge as it expresses cooperative leadership, leading to right international relationships. Such relationships must hold a high respect for the rule of international law. By uplifting international law through the High Court, we thereby assist the United States in adopting its true role of cooperative world leadership.
       The article I plan to publish in September 2005 relates to the invalidity under Australian constitutional law of bilateral trade agreements. Two aspects of such agreements are the general dominance of such agreements over all aspects of State law, and the delegation of disputed matters in the trade agreements to international corporate tribunals. The High Court has never permitted matters related to the division of power between the Commonwealth and the States to be allocated to a judicial body higher than itself.
       The next article will discuss the present-day economic subservience of the States to Commonwealth decrees. This was never the case before the Second World War, and the situation changed only under the "hot war" purposive powers which were temporarily invoked by the Commonwealth during that war. The Commonwealth used these powers to force the States out of the area of collecting income tax. This arrangement was no longer constitutionally enforceable after the conclusion of the "hot war" crisis of the Second World War. The situation has continued not through legal requirement of the Australian Constitution, but rather through political and economic inertia. This is largely the result of the fact that sections 52 (ii) and 99 of the Australian Constitution would require that the States would need to act in unity if they were ever to reclaim their taxing powers.
       Further articles will relate to State government challenges to the National Competition Policy, and leadership by the States in initiating an Australian National Civil Forum, through which civil groups within Australia will be able to develop an independent citizen's voice, through which true sustainable values will be lifted up, and developed into national agendas impacting upon all aspects of political, economic, and social life in Australia. Such an independent social/political forum is vital if we are ever to lift up those true values through which correct and just economic sharing between the Commonwealth and States can be restored to a sane model.
       And finally I will use these articles to elevate the debate of the true values that can lead humanity towards sustainability, harmony and peace.
       Above all we must jettison our attachment to the value of perpetual increase in economic growth and consumption. Our entire economic philosophy must be reconstructed anew. Unless politicians also adopt such true and living values, then we must continue in our rapid advance towards the precipice.
       Mobilising a Movement In November 2000 I published over Internet a book that had taken me a few years to research. Its title is "Civil Representation in Australian Government", and it may still be accessed over internet at: http://www.nw. com.au/~ keane/civilrep/ . It is still as relevant today as it was in the year 2000.
       The book explores the possibilities for true participatory democracy and civil representation in national governments around the world, yet nevertheless focuses upon the Australian situation, because the movement for civil representation needs to work through practical agendas. The book develops an assessment of the realities of today's international scene in the economic and political arenas, and then proceeds to build a vision for a new economic political paradigm for a sustainable, harmonious and peaceful future form of government, in which "we the peoples" engage directly in those decisions that affect our lives.
       Above all, the book examines the pathways for practical and transformative action. In 2000, I invited the formation of a movement for total transformation, so that Australians might avoid the pain that would be the consequence of total economic collapse should we continue to follow the path of rationalist economics, a path that can only lead to the precipice. I disseminated these ideas broadly, but though several people expressed interest, no movement for transformation developed. The mass consciousness of most Australians was too strongly immersed in the values of indifference, affluence, and consumerism.
       Five years ago, there was too little desire for change. But now change is about to strike Australia in a manner akin to a hurricane devastating a tropical island. In a few years, all that had been deemed as strong and enduring will be struck down. Let no-one be misled by the illusion of optimism, for even a few weeks before the Wall Street collapse of 1929, the spin merchants were praising the economy as providing the most prosperous period in history. When the collapse comes, it will be silent and heralded only by a few. Then overnight, all affluence will be seen to be based upon illusion, as with the revealing of the true nature of a pyramid banking scheme, and then the edifices of giants will crumble.
       It took three years from the time of the Wall Street crash in 1929 for the full impact of the Great Depression to be felt comprehensively by the common person throughout the world. So it may be again that we might be granted a window of three years to develop a movement for political, economic and social transformation. Yet even now the signs abound that the time of collapse is near. These signs I discuss in my quarterly newsletter, "Recent Australian Economic Trends". They are now showing in abundance for those who have eyes to see.
       And so it is that I have discussed these matters with the Stop-MAI group in Perth, and we agreed to join forces, to seek to mobilise and develop a movement for political, economic and social transformation. The time for action is now, or the consequences will be too devastating to contemplate.
       In the past many groups, including Stop-MAI, have taken up the cause of public education and activism against injustice. Through their work and sacrifices, the way has been prepared, but even so the mass consciousness of most Australians has ever moved towards the precipice like a herd of lemmings. What new steps therefore need to be added to facilitate a successful movement that is effective in manifesting its dreams into actuality?
       Firstly, there is need for recognition, that at times of collapse of the forms of the dying civilisation, the people themselves, who until now had been deaf to words of warning, will suddenly become intensely invocative for practical pathways of solution. Let us take inspiration from the example of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. When he took office as US President in 1932, the nation was three years into the depression, and the people were despairing that democracy and capitalism had failed, leaving a choice only between communism and fascism. People had lost faith in the Democratic Party to which he belonged.
       Yet he had by then come to deeply empathise with the poor and the underprivileged. He was a man of vision, and spoke gently of a New Deal. Few then believed in his vision, though they responded to the genuine warmth of the man. And slowly he gained the confidence of the people, and set in motion radical reforms that would take years to bear fruit. And thus he was able to bring the people out of the Great Depression.
       Let us not despair. Though the Labor Party seems to have lost its way, at moments of profound crisis a leader will surely emerge to lift up true vision, and set in motion reforms that will transform our present state of acute crisis. Such leaders as Gough Whitlam and Don Dunstan are rare, but when they emerge they can transform a nation.
       Secondly, there is need for rapid dissemination of ideas that carry the seed in them for transformation. Only thus when the crisis comes, can the people move from despair to hope. This will need the mobilisation of action committees around the nation to distribute material to selected thinkers in fields of political and social influence. Distribution lists will need to be prepared for use at a moment's notice when the crisis comes. The thinkers of our nation must have clear choices presented before them when moments of crisis and decision come, and there will be many such occasions in the days to come.
       Thirdly, there needs to be recognised that the greatest opportunity for national transformation lies in the hands of State governments. This will surprise many people, for the States have in the past few generations been passive and submissive whenever the Commonwealth has eroded their powers. Australia is endowed with a powerful Constitution in the area of distribution of power between the Commonwealth and the States. Over the past few generations, the Commonwealth has grabbed more than its share of power than it is legally due, simply because the States have chosen to be submissive.
       It needs simply one State government or Premier to stand up with vision and challenge the present status quo. There is opportunity to challenge in the High Court over the Iraq War and thus elevate the values of right international relationship and non-aggression that are inferred in the Constitution. There is opportunity to challenge the nature of bilateral trade agreements in the High Court. There is opportunity to challenge the National Competition Policy which has so devastated State economies. There is opportunity for a Premier to lift up a vision of the States uniting so to demand reinstatement of Commonwealth-State equity in national taxation and expenditure priorities.
       There is opportunity for a single State government to initiate a Civil Forum within its State boundaries, so to inspire the adoption of a National Civil Forum. There is opportunity for a State Premier to initiate genuine participation by the people, so that the nation becomes once again inspired by true and living values and principles, and there emerges a neutral people's forum to arbitrate over ethical issues of division of the economic cake between the Commonwealth and the States.
       Fourthly, there is need to mobilise trade unions and action groups such as AFTINET to direct their campaigns against the inaction of State governments. For many generations, the Premiers have been blaming the Commonwealth for the multitude of woes allegedly forced upon them by unjust Commonwealth demands. But the real fault all the time has been with the docile acquiescence of the States. The real power in relation to wars such as Iraq, with the National Competition Policy, with the bi-lateral trade agreements, with the running down of hospitals and education lies with State governments, and yet they seem to be indifferent to the power they hold in their own hands. There needs to be mobilised a people's movement that will remind State governments of their responsibilities to take action and provide true leadership. Such State action will include direct challenge through the High Court on a multitude of fronts.
       Fifthly, there is need to awaken understanding in the people that in them lies true power. May the people demand participation in equal measure in political, economic and civil spheres. Only then will we see true democracy flourish in Australia. Any who wish to be placed upon my three-monthly newsletters, updating Australian Economic Trends, and including a regular article relating to opportunities for action in political, economic and social transformation, please send an email to me David Keane at keane@nw.com.au, and I will place your email on our automatic quarterly distribution list.
       And anyone wanting to participate in helping mobilise the movement for national transformation, please write to StopMAI secretary Mary Jenkins ( mjenkins@eftel.com ) or Citizens' Voice editor Dion Giles ( dgiles@central. murdoch.edu.au ). By DAVID KEANE, May 2005. [May 19, 05]
    • [Morgan Stanley, USA, defrauded mogul; punitive damages $US 850m]. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
       The West Australian, "NY bank faces big payout," p 45, Friday, May 20, 2005
       UNITED STATES: New-York based investment bank Morgan Stanley faces potential legal costs of $US1.4 billion ($1.83 billion) after a Florida jury yesterday decided it should pay billionaire investor Ronald Perelman $US850 million in punitive damages for defrauding him seven years ago.
       Three days ago the jury awarded Mr Perelmen [sic] $US604 million for his losses arising from the sale of his Coleman camping gear company to Sunbeam Corp, a Morgan Stanley client, in 1998.
       The sum is four times the $US360 million Morgan Stanley set aside for legal expenses.
       [COMMENT: Realistic historians can quote much material about the forerunner of Morgan Stanley's, J.P.Morgan Guaranty Company, alongside Kuhn, Loeb & Co, Rothschilds, etc. of previous centuries. However, the details of this 2005 case are not known to Just World Campaign, but a good Search Engine might reveal them. COMMENT ENDS.] [May 20, 05]

    • [Two academics backing torture, like the Australian government.]


       Herald Sun (Melbourne), "Torture: there's no harm," by Matthew Pinkney, pinkneym@ heraldsun. com.au , p 22, Monday, May 30, 2005
       AUSTRALIA: ***
       Last Thursday, about 100 staff and students held a protest, cum singalong, cum candlelit vigil at Deakin's Burwood campus.
       Their demonstration was designed to shame the university into condemning two of its academics, Prof Mirko Bagaric and lecturer Julie Clarke.
       The pair had penned a paper for a US law journal titled; Not enough (official) torture in the world? in which they argued that torture can be justified in a narrow range of circumstances.
       Their argument is a 2005 version of a philosophical chestnut that's been posed by thinkers across the ages.
       That is, can there ever be an ethical justification for harming or even killing someone if doing so will save the lives of many others? [...]
       Leaving aside the merits of the argument (and the fact many Australians would support their views), it's both depressing and absurd that students and lecturers should be demanding measures to stifle free speech and academic freedom.
       And let's hope for their own credibility that these protesters have also been campaigning against a government that doesn't just write about torture but tacitly supports it while thwarting international efforts to eradicate it. [...]
       ... Last year, Americans learned their Attorney-General John Ashcroft, senior legal advisers and President George W. Bush had been involved in a long and supposedly secret dialogue on ways to re-define torture to get around the "quaint" and "obsolete" provisions of the Geneva Convention. [...]
       SEVERAL of these memos sanctioned the torture of al-Qaida suspects at Guantanamo Bay, where Australian citizen David Hicks remains to this day.
       Australian authorities have consistently claimed they do not know what happens there, but the Ashcroft memos and the US Federal Court's finding the Guantanamo Bay justice system is a breach of the Geneva Convention, would give them a fair clue.
       Hicks claims to have been beaten for hours, denied food, injected with a variety of substances, and more. And yet Australia has metaphorically shrugged its shoulders.
       More tellingly, in 2002, Australia became one of eight nations to vote against a protocol designed to strengthen 1984 United Nations convention against torture.
       In doing so, we aligned ourselves with such human rights luminaries as China, Libya, Cuba and the Sudan.
       Even the US -- still reeling from 9/11 -- opted only to abstain.
       According to Australian National University Prof Hilary Charlesworth, it's the first time Australia has actively opposed the strengthening of the international human rights system.[...]
       [COMMENT: Are they "Liberal" and "National" Parties? Should they be renamed "Nazi" and "Communist"? COMMENT ENDS.] [May 30, 05]

    • [Whale warning ignored in 1950s, ejected; trade supervening?]

    Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn.  Japan flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
       The West Australian, "Whale warning ignored," Letter from Graham Chittleborough, Applecross (WA), p 20, Friday, June 10, 2005
       PERTH (W. Australia): For all his rhetoric, Federal Environment Minister Ian Campbell (Japan reveals whale kill case, 7/6) seems quite disinterested [uninterested] in consulting those who did the original research on southern stocks of humpback whales. When appointed by the Federal government early in the 1950s to advise whether the quotas (already set) for the southern stocks of humpback whales were in fact sustainable, within a couple of years I was warning they had been set far too high as the stocks in groups four and five were already declining.
       In fact, the total yearly catches of these groups of humpbacks were at least six times the estimated sustainable yield. Australian whaling interests and Canberra were informed at once, but rejected the advice. In fact, I was thrown off the Commonwealth-owned Carnarvon whaling station. By 1960, annual quotas could no longer be filled and by 1963 humpback whaling had collapsed. I estimated that complete protection for at least 40-45 years would be required for the stocks to recover.
       Now the stocks are well on the way to recovery the Japanese are suggesting that the humpbacks feeding in summer off the Australian Antarctic Territory are taking an inordinate share of the common food stock (krill), "potentially upsetting ecological balance", and depriving the other consumers of krill. So the Japanese want to cull humpbacks.
       Nothing could be further from the truth. Global warming is diminishing the formation of winter sea ice around Antarctica, interfering with oceanic water circulation and cutting off surface nutrients so vital to the production of krill - as I forecast decades ago.
       Now the Australian Conservation Foundation has issued a pamphlet warning that penguin colonies in the Antarctic have been reduced from 15,000 birds to some 9000 - so humpbacks must be feeling the pinch too, as well as krill-eating seals.
       Let's stop pussy-footing around We must face the realities of our situation - or are we too afraid of offending one of our big trading partners? # [Emphasis added] [Jun 10, 05]
    • [Chens could go to Taiwan (Free China).] Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn.  China (Beijing / Communist) flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Soviet Union / Russian Communist flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Taiwan (Republic of China, Taipei / Free China) Nationalist China / Formosa flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
       The West Australian, "In Short," Letter, p 20, Friday, June 10, 2005
       PERTH (W. Australia): How is it that the Howard Government is treating Chinese defector Chen Yonglin and his family so differently from the way the Menzies government treated [Soviet defector] Vladimir Petrov and his wife?
       The Petrovs were debriefed by our security organisations and there was a public inquiry. They were supported for life.
       Anyway, if it is [were] decided that the Chens are "queue-jumpers" they could be repatriated to Taiwan-China, under our one-China claptrap, where he would be honoured. # [Jun 10, 05]
    • [30,000 jobs risked for import dogma, endangering Australia's green clean pigmeat]. Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn.

    Cloud over smallgoods as pork ruled illegal

       The West Australian, by ANDREW MOLE, Page One, Thursday, June 16, 2005
       AUSTRALIA: WA retailers and wholesalers face the prospect of having to ditch millions of dollars worth of smallgoods, including sausages, bacon and polony, after the Federal Court yesterday declared many of them contained illegally imported pork.
       The ruling covers any products containing processed pork from a storing of countries, particularly the United States, Canada and Denmark, which are all known to have the devastating pig disease post weaning multi-systemic wasting syndrome.
    The West Australian
    Where does our
    food come from?

       Australia is one of three countries without PMWS. There is thought to be no health risk to humans from the disease, but in Europe outbreaks have killed eight million pigs and cost the pork industry $1.5 billion in the past four years.
       Justice Murray Wilcox's ruling applies to all processed pork imported since July 1 last year, when the Australian Quarantine and Inspection Service [AQIS] allowed the meat to enter Australia, meaning it could apply to huge amounts of smallgoods already on retailers' shelves.
       The ruling was the result of legal action started by industry body Australian Pork Limited in response to fears among pig farmers about the potential for PMWS to take hold.
       APL chairman Nigel Smith said his organisation would ask the director of animal and plant quarantine to immediately stop issuing pork import permits and prevent the release of imported products from freezer stores and waterfront storage.
       WA Pork Producers Association executive officer Russell Cox said: "This case has always been about keeping PMWS, which is an exotic and devastating disease, out of Australia. "
       However, the full implications of the decision were unclear last night.
       Federal Agriculture Minister Warren Truss refused to comment and a spokesman for AQIS declined to reveal what would happen to products already in shops.
       The spokesman would say only that the department acknowledged the court orders and was seeking urgent legal advice on their effects.
       If the decision survives any appeals, the question of who will foot the bill could create widespread legal actions against the Federal Government for its initial decision to allow the meat to be imported. Director of quarantine Joanna Hewitt has until June 25 to appeal. A department spokesman refused to comment.
       But Mr Cox said he suspected the pork industry had simply won the first two rounds of a 15-round fight.
       "The farm gate value of the pork industry in WA is $105 million - part of a $2.6 billion national industry- and it directly employs around 3000 people here and 30,000 plus nationally," Mr Cox said. "That has all been endangered by the decision to let this at-risk product into the country."
    > BUY LOCAL             6
    # [Jun 16, 05]
    • State of origin food labels vital: growers.

    State of origin food labels vital: growers

       The West Australian, by JENNIFER ELIOT, p 6, Thursday, June 16, 2005
       PERTH (W. Australia): Mandatory country of origin labelling is vital but so is compulsory State of origin labelling, according to the WA Fruit Growers' Association.
       Manjimup grower and association president Diane Fry said consumers had the power to protect WA's fruit and vegetable industry by demanding Food Standards Australia and New Zealand tighten labelling laws.
       FSANZ is reviewing labelling laws and is trying to push through new standards, which consumer groups and farmers say have been watered down and fail to offer consumers choice.
       Under the plan, FSANZ would have placed the onus on supermarket staff to inform customers of the origin of fruit and vegetables.
       "Mandatory country and State of origin labelling is the only way consumers can distinguish if products are from WA, Australia or imported," Mrs Fry said.
       "Farmers' groups can lobby for change, but if consumers start demanding as a united group, change is far more likely to occur.
       "The problem is that if we don't support our domestic markets, the bulk of the State's fruit and vegetables will be imported and that would be devastating for local growers.
       "We have the cleanest and best vegetables in the world."
    The West Australian     JOIN OUR CAMPAIGN
    WHERE DOES OUR FOOD COME FROM?
    I demand Food Standards Australia and New Zealand makes
    country of origin labelling compulsory on all fresh produce.
    Signed ................................. Name ......................................
    Address .................................................................................

    Sign this petition and send it to Where does our food come from?
    c/- The West Australia, 50 Hasler Road, Osborne Park 6017.

       Curtin University public health nutritionist Andrea Begley said locally grown, in-season fruit and vegetables outstripped imported products when it came to nutrition.
       "Fresh produce has the highest nutritional content and local produce that arrives at shops shortly after being picked is at its nutritional peak," Ms Begley said.
       "If people want quality fruit and vegetables, they are better off buying local products in season."
       Fruit and vegetable merchant John Mercer said "grown in WA" was a great marketing tool because, given the opportunity, West Australians wanted to buy local products.
       "Fruit and vegetables from WA could be in the shops one to two days after being picked and it could take imported products up to two or three weeks to make the journey," Mr Mercer said.
       "But all that means nothing if consumers cannot tell which products are from WA."
    [Picture of smiling man holding greengroceries in clear plastic bags, standing near crates of apples]
    Fresh is best: Fruit and vegetable wholesaler John Mercer says WA consumers deserve to know where the produce they buy is grown. Picture: John Mokrzycki
    # [Jun 16, 05]

    • Six-week Iraq horror over as Wood goes free.

    Iraq / Irak flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
       The West Australian, by BEN RUSE, Page One, Thursday, June 16, 2005
       CANBERRA: After a six-week nightmare held captive and threatened with death by Iraqi insurgents, Australian hostage Douglas Wood was freed yesterday in a dramatic operation involving Iraqi and United States forces.
       John Howard, who announced Mr Wood's release in Parliament late yesterday, did not reveal details of the rescue but Foreign Affairs Minister Alexander Downer said later he was taken by force.
       Mr Wood, a 64-year-old engineer seeking private contract work in Iraq, is a long-time resident of California and married to an American. He had been held by the Shura Council of the Mujahideen of Iraq group which had threatened to kill him if Australian troops were not withdrawn from Iraq.
       The Prime Minister maintained the Government's firm line of not negotiating with terrorists during Mr Wood's ordeal. He said no ransom had been paid.[...]
       Mr Wood's three brothers, Graham, Malcolm and Vernon, [of Australia] issued a statement saying they were delighted he had been released.[...]
       Mr Wood had been in poor health and suffered heart disease and high blood pressure which needed daily medication.
       Mr Downer said ... "It ended through some kind of military intervention. It was one of the options we had approved," he said.[...]
       For a more detailed version, click "Submit Chronology 2", and Search for "horror over". [Jun 16, 05]
    • [National dealer's $360m scandal leads to 16 mo prison.] [Duffy] Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 

    Judge jails 'arrogant' NAB forex dealer for 16 months

       The West Australian, by DANIELLA MILETIC, p 41, Thursday, June 16, 2005
       AUSTRALIA - Personal ambition, arrogance and a misguided sense of invincibility led Luke Edward Duffy to play a central role in one of the biggest corporate scandals in Australian history - a role that saw him sentenced to at least 16 months jail yesterday.
       The 35-year-old former head of National Australia Bank's foreign currency options desk has received a sentence of 29 months in prison with a minimum term of 16 months for his part in an alleged $360 million trading loss scandal. [...]
       Duffy, of the inner Melbourne suburb of Albert Park, yesterday covered his face with his hands after he heard the sentence. He had pleaded guilty to three counts of dishonestly using his position as an employee to gain financial advantages.
       Duffy, with three other former NAB traders, falsely claimed he had made a $37 million profit for the year to September 30, 2003, in an attempt to cover up a $5 million loss and avoid scrutiny. This left $42 million to recover. Between December 2003 and January 2004, losing bets on the Australian dollar helped the charade spin into "financial chaos". [...]
       Judge Chettle said the offences were well planned, sophisticated and involved big amounts of money. "The mixture of personal ambition, arrogance and corporate culture made you forget the legal responsibilities you had to the NAB, its management and its shareholders," he said. "You destroyed your prospects together with your reputation when you committed these crimes."
       In sentencing, he noted the pressure of Duffy's former job. "The offences were committed by you in a culture of profit-driven morality. To proceed, you had to take risks," he said.
    [Picture of man wearing suit and tie]
    Luke Duffy: Was told he had destroyed his prospects and his reputation.

       Judge Chettle acknowledged Duffy had repaid a net performance bonus of $129,338 he received based on his manipulated profits. He told Duffy that had he not co-operated in the investigation and agreed to give evidence against his three co-accused, his sentence would have been a four year and three month term of imprisonment with a minimum term of two years and three months. [...] [Jun 16, 05]
    • [Enron: JP Morgan Chase $US 2200m, Citigroup $US 2000m, Lehman's etc $US491.5m - knowingly defrauded investors. Banks allegedly negligent in WorldCom affair.] United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 

    JP Morgan Chase to pay $2.85b over Enron

       The West Australian, by JOE BEL BRUNO, p 41, Thursday, June 16, 2005
       NEW YORK: JP Morgan Chase has agreed to pay $US2.2 billion ($2.85 billion) to settle a class-action lawsuit over its role in helping Enron engineer an accounting fraud that hid billions of dollars in losses from investors.
       The agreement is the biggest settlement so far in the action, which has included banks, advisers and Enron executives connected to the energy trader's 2001 bankruptcy.
       It came just four days after Citigroup, the biggest US financial services company, agreed to pay investors $US2 billion to settle its lawsuit.
       Some 50,000 Enron stock and
    BIGGEST ENRON LOSERS
    JP Morgan $US2.2b
    Citigroup $US2b
    Lehman Brothers $US222.5m
    Bank of America $US69m
    *Agreements still pending with
    Barclays, Credit Suisse First Boston,
    Merrill Lynch, Toronto Dominion Bank,
    Royal Bank of Canada, Deutsche Bank
    and the Royal Bank of Scotland.
    bondholders led by the University of California's board of regents filed claims as part of the lawsuit, which could end up sparking the biggest US securities settlement on record.
       The lawsuit alleges that several banks and brokerages helped Houston-based Enron continue operations and raise money even as the company was imploding.
       The settlement is the sixth in the Enron debacle, with agreements still pending with Barclays, Credit Suisse First Boston, Merrill Lynch, Toronto Dominion Bank, Royal Bank of Canada, Deutsche Bank and the Royal Bank of Scotland.
       Authorities had earlier settled for $US491.5 million in deals with Lehman Brothers, Bank of America, Andersen Worldwide, Enron's outside directors and Enron's former vice chairman, Ken Harrison.
       "We continue to pursue other defendants, including other banks that have been charged with knowingly participating in the scheme to defraud Enron investors," said William Lerach, the lawyer representing the University of California, which lost $144.7 million when Enron declared bankruptcy.
       "Beyond today's agreement, the lawsuit continues to proceed very satisfactorily and further large recoveries are anticipated."
       The total Enron settlement could exceed the $US6.1 billion that more than a dozen Wall Street banks agreed to pay to settle allegations that they did not adequately examine WorldCom's financial health when they sold shares in 2000 and 2001.# [Bolding added] [Jun 16, 05]

    Book Review -  You Enjoy a Share of the earth's resources ..


       The West Australian Habitat (magazine), By Deryn Thorpe, p 14, Friday, June 17, 2005
       PERTH (W. Australia):
    BOOK REVIEW
    .......................................................................
    You Enjoy a Share of the Earth's Resources - Towards Sustainable Communities
    .......................................................................
    Self published by Reworking Tomorrow WA, $10 from Trevor Muller (9309 4581)
    .......................................................................
       This small, locally produced publication aims to get mainstream people thinking about ways they can become more environmentally conscious and live in a more sustaining environment.
       The book grew out of the lectures by futurist Robert Theobald, held by UWA Extension in 1997 and 1998, and chapters have been written by several environmentalists.
       Covering lifestyles, holidays, work and the way we educate our children, the book is a snapshot of different approaches to life and has been written by West Australians. Most chapters are followed by a comprehensive list of additional reading material available on websites and in books.
       The first two chapters, by Ross Mars, have practical examples showing how people are growing organic food in their backyards, dealing with household waste, saving water and using grey water.

     
       Richard Hammond looks at the Australian housing market and urges us to consider less mainstream options - such as housing co-operatives, co-housing (a group of houses arranged around a communally owned open space and "common house") and "new settlements", which are new forms of residential development on semi-rural land.
       Energy-efficient housing or passive solar homes are examined by Kevin Bartle.
       A comparison between traditional and community banking, and information on local exchange trading systems and community enterprises suggest ways that readers can make their money work in a more positive way for the community.
       Short chapters urge us to holiday within our own State, use transport other than cars and explain how the not-for-profit organisation WWOOF (Willing Workers on Organic Farms) operates.
       While no area is covered in great depth, the strength of this book is that it offers alternatives to the traditional way that most West Australians live and points out additional resources so that readers can follow up areas that interest them.
     
    DERYN THORPE
    [Jun 17, 05 ]

    • [Privatisation of coastline is aim at Port Coogee.]

    Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
       The West Australian, "No comparison," Letter from Marie Slyth, West Perth, p 18, Saturday, June 18, 2005
       PERTH (W. Australia): Your report (New life for Cockburn strip, 7/6) draws attention to Alannah MacTiernan's statement that development of this magnificent coastline will be  "better than Hillarys".
       For too long the Minister has compared the proposed Port Coogee private residential canal development to that at Hillarys, when from the outset there can be no comparison because the Port Coogee development is to be a private marina.
       In fact, Ms MacTiernan has failed to admit that should Port Coogee go ahead, a new era of privatisation of our coastline will commence. What was also omitted was the fact that the Coogee Coastal Action Coalition represents thousands of members of the community who all want to see development of the coastline proceed provided it is set back from the beach, but not a private residential canal marina built out into the open ocean to which public access will be denied.
       With regard to the close proximity impact of the proposed development on Coogee Beach (as well as our precious Federally listed shipwreck, the Omeo - also omitted), to quote Ms MacTiernan: "The proposed marina will have an impact on the coastal processes with the accumulation of sand along the northern breakwater and the reduction of sand flowing to Coogee Beach. However, the flow of sand is proposed to be managed by a sand-passing pipeline which is to be installed at the time of the marina construction."
       To date, evidence has proved that such sand by-passing pipelines do not work effectively. It is incredible that anyone could ever consider letting Perth's best family beach be damaged in any way.
       So why will the Minister not take into account the wishes of the whole community, including the thousands of people who swim at Coogee Beach, and look at an existing fair and sound coastal development plan which considers everyone, not just the wealthy few? # [Jun 18, 05]
       (See also letter "The truth about Port Coogee" by Robyn Scherr, Coogee, same date and page.)

    • US soldier sues over Guantanamo beating.

    [Spc. Baker volunteered to be treated like a POW in US hands]
       The West Australian, p 24, Monday, June 20, 2005
       WASHINGTON: A United States military policeman who was beaten by fellow officers during a botched training drill at the Guantanamo Bay prison for detainees in Cuba has sued the Pentagon for $15 million, alleging that the incident violated his constitutional rights.
       Specialist Scan Baker, 38, was assaulted in January 2003 after he volunteered to wear an orange jumpsuit and portray an un-co-operative detainee.
       Spc. Baker said the MPs, who thought he was an unruly detainee who had assaulted a US sergeant, inflicted a beating that resulted in a traumatic brain injury.
       Spc. Baker, a Persian Gulf War veteran who re-enlisted after the September 11 terror attacks, was medically retired in April 2004. He said the assault left him with seizures, blackouts, headaches, insomnia and other psychological problems.
       In the lawsuit filed in US District Court in Lexington, Kentucky, Spc. Baker demanded reinstatement in the Army in a position that would accommodate his medical disability. He said the Army had put him on medical retirement against his wishes.
       The Pentagon initially said Spc. Baker's hospitalisation following the training incident was not related to the beating. Later, officials conceded that he was treated for injuries suffered when a five-man MP "internal reaction force" choked him, slammed his head repeatedly off a concrete floor and attacked him with pepper spray.
       The drill was in a prison isolation wing reserved for al-Qaida and Taliban detainees who had attacked MPs or showered them with excrement.
       Spc. Baker said he was assured that MPs conducting the "extraction drill" knew it was a training exercise and he was a US soldier.
       As he was being choked and beaten, Spc. Baker said he screamed a code word, "red", and shouted: "I'm a US soldier."
       The beating continued, he said, until the jumpsuit was yanked down during the struggle, revealing his military uniform.
       Last June, a military spokesman said an internal investigation in February 2003 had concluded that no one was liable for Spc. Baker's injuries. [Bolding added]
       [COMMENT: If only he had known that the Geneva Conventions forbid questioning prisoners of war, he might not have volunteered to be beaten. And if the officers and other ranks had known, his life would not have been ruined - and perhaps thousands of prisoners might have been released or put on trial, instead of being tortured. There is a brave organisation fighting against the use of torture and murder by United States forces, and the training of other nations' forces to do the same. Some have been imprisoned in the USA recently for their forceful protests. COMMENT ENDS.] [Jun 20, 05]

    • Pastors reject apology order over Koran comments.

    Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
       Australian Broadcasting Corporation, www.abc.net.au/ news/newsitems/ 200506/s1397914. htm , 7:30pm (AEST), June 22, 2005
       AUSTRALIA: A Christian pastor found guilty of vilifying Muslims says he is prepared to go to jail in protest over Victoria's racial tolerance laws.
       Two pastors involved with the Catch the Fire Ministries were last year found to have vilified Muslims at a Christian conference, and on a website, by suggesting the Koran promotes violence and terrorism.
       The tribunal says an apology is appropriate. It has ordered the pastors to publish a statement acknowledging their legal breach and has requested an undertaking the comments would not be repeated.
       Outside the tribunal Pastor Daniel Nalliah said the legislation is flawed.
       "I will do everything I can, even if I have to go to prison, to make sure the vilification laws, the religious part of the vilification laws, be removed from the state of Victoria," Pastor Nalliah said.
       "Right from the beginning we have stated we will not apologise, we will go to prison for standing for the truth."
       However the Islamic Council of Victoria has welcomed the ruling. Waleed Aly from the council says the three-year legal battle was justified. "You've got to imagine that it's post September 11 Australia," Mr Aly said.
       "There's a lot of angst towards the Muslim community in the wider Australian community. "These sort of things are said, which if you speak to the Muslims who are concerned themselves, they were fearful. I mean this was a serious thing." But the Victorian Government has defended its religious tolerance laws.
       The Victorian Opposition believes the laws are dividing the community, but acting Premier John Thwaites says the legislation is appropriate. "We don't want to see people incited to hatred and so for that purpose I think it is sending the right message," he said.
       The case is now being reviewed by the Victorian Supreme Court.
    Free speech 'in danger'
       The Anglican Bishop of South Sydney says any attempt to introduce a religious vilification law in New South Wales could endanger free speech.
       The Independent MP Peter Breen says he will try to convince the Premier to support his private member's bill to outlaw religious vilification, claiming existing laws do not provide protection to Muslims.
       But the Premier Bob Carr yesterday branded the laws unnecessary and said they could be abused.
       Bishop Robert Forsyth says people should be allowed to conduct rigorous religious discourse.
       "But I don't want the law to enforce it because what will happen is what you are seeing in Victoria, is a person's deeply held conviction - sincerely held - will find themselves up before the courts for what is no more than just strong speech," he said.
       "And the effect will be to cower and prevent people from criticising us Christians, for example, or others.
       "And I don't think the law should do that. [Emphasis added] [Jun 22, 05]

    • [Senator Brian Harradine's farewell speech]


       Australian Federal Parliament's Hansard, http://parlinfoweb. aph.gov.au/piweb/ view_document.aspx? ID=2214193& TABLE= HANSARDS , June 22, 2005
       CANBERRA: [...]
       Our grasp on democracy is fragile indeed. It stands or falls not merely upon the values which it embodies and promotes but on the way that power is exercised, and to what end. I have always championed accountability to parliament. Senate estimates committee hearings are a key element in this process. The current trend towards the shielding of important decisions from parliamentary scrutiny by diverting them to unelected agencies or elites makes a mockery of transparency and accountability. It is for these reasons that I have challenged the lack of full accountability to the parliament of numerous publicly funded bodies.
       As an elected representative of the Australian people, I have defended true parliamentary democracy by demanding oversight of decisions, challenging the increasingly dominant smokescreen of commercial-in-confidence, using the mechanisms of the Senate to ensure that the true intentions of parliament are understood and enacted and questioning the growing dominance of the executive over parliament, sometimes using coordinating bodies like the Council of Australian Governments which, through lack of accountability to this chamber, pose immediate threats to the democratic process. Furthermore, I have affirmed the Senate's importance as a states' house. I have always understood that our parliament and our nation will be diminished if the smaller states are deprived of the fair go that is enshrined in our Constitution and in the workings of this parliament.
       The need to negotiate without abandoning fundamental principles in order to get controversial measures through the Senate has been a strong point of Australia's democracy. For example, it enabled me to help negotiate the Wik agreement through the parliament. This not only provided an equitable outcome for Indigenous Australians but also avoided a race based election. Though the dynamics of this place will change after 1 July, I urge the government and all senators to reflect upon the importance of these functions to the health of our democracy.[...]
       The whole VALEDICTORY is available as a PDF file, click: http://parlinfoweb. aph.gov.au/piweb/ Repository/Chamber/ Hansards/Linked/ 3992-1.PDF . That PDF document requires Adobe® Acrobat® Reader™ [Jun 22, 05]

    • Nuclear Industry to Receive More Than $10 Billion in Tax Breaks and Subsidies in Senate Energy Bill.


    Public Citizen Says Nuclear Power Doesn't Deserve More Taxpayer Handouts; 50-Year-Old Industry Should Stand on Its Own. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
       Public Citizen Critical Mass Energy and Environment Program, www.citizen.org/cmep , Contact: Michele Boyd (202) 454-5134, Erica Hartman (202) 454-5174; News Release e-mail, June 22, 2005
       WASHINGTON, D.C. - In a new cost analysis of the Senate energy bill, Public Citizen today said that the nuclear industry would stand to gain more than $10.1 billion in subsidies and tax breaks, as well as unlimited taxpayer-backed loan guarantees and other incentives.
       "The government should not be promoting the construction of new reactors, which will only add to the nuclear waste and security problems while costing taxpayers billions," said Wenonah Hauter, director of Public Citizen's energy program. "The nuclear industry is demanding cradle-to-grave subsidies, and the Senate energy bill is an attempt to give it to them."
       The $10.1 billion includes $5.7 billion in production tax credits and $4.4 billion in various subsidies, but does not include the potential costs of loan guarantees or the Price-Anderson Act, which puts taxpayers on the hook for potentially billions in cleanup costs in the event of a major accident or terrorist attack on a reactor.
       The production tax credits equal 1.8 cents for each kilowatt-hour of electricity from new reactors (up to 6,000 megawatts) during the first eight years of operation - costing $5.7 billion through 2025, according to the Energy Information Administration. However, only $278 million through 2016 is counted in the $18 billion in tax breaks in the bill, because most of the nuclear credits would be claimed after 2016. This means that the true cost of all the tax breaks, including those for non-nuclear industries, is more than $24 billion.
       Separately, the loan guarantees in the Senate bill could prove extremely costly to taxpayers. According to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), the risk of loan default by industry would be very high -- "well above 50 percent" -- leaving the public to pay as much as 80 percent of the cost of building a reactor. This provision authorizes "such sums as are necessary," but if Congress were to appropriate funding for loan guarantees covering six nuclear reactors, this subsidy could potentially cost taxpayers $6 billion (assuming a 50 percent default rate and construction cost per plant of $2.5 billion, as the CBO has estimated).
       Other subsidies for the nuclear industry in the Senate energy bill include:
  • Reauthorization of the Price-Anderson Act, extending the industry's liability cap to cover new nuclear power plants built in the next 20 years, which means in the event of an accident or attack, taxpayers would be liable for the remainder of the cost, estimated to be $600 billion for a single serious accident (2004 dollars).
  • Authorization of more than $432 million over three years for nuclear energy research and development, including the Department of Energy's Nuclear Power 2010 program to build new nuclear plants, and its Generation IV program to develop new reactor designs. Half the cost of applications for new reactors would be paid for by taxpayers, estimated to be as much as $87 million per reactor.
  • Authorization of more than $1.25 billion from FY2006 to FY2015 and "such sums as are necessary" from FY2016 to FY2021 for a nuclear plant in Idaho to generate hydrogen fuel. Hydrogen could be a clean fuel of the future, but using nuclear power to produce it negates the benefits.
       Existing reactors have been heavily subsidized for decades, receiving 56 percent of the federal energy supply research and development funding between 1948 and 1998, capped insurance rates and limited liability in the case of an accident, and billions in taxpayer bailouts in the 1980s.
       "Despite a pro-nuclear push by the Bush administration and some members of Congress, nuclear power is not an acceptable option for the future," said Hauter. "We have 'been there, done that' and it has been a failure. After more than 50 years, the problems of nuclear power are far from solved. In fact, they are more widely recognized than ever."
       In March, e-mails were released indicating that government scientists falsified data related to water infiltration and climate modeling for the proposed Yucca Mountain waste dump site; investigations are still ongoing. Also, recent reports by the National Academy of Sciences and the Government Accountability Office pointed out security vulnerabilities of the highly radioactive waste stored at reactor sites. The energy bill contains no requirements for improving security at these sites.
       Nuclear power has made headlines this year as proponents attempt to convince a wary public that nuclear energy can solve the global warming problem. Last week, nearly 300 environmental and public interest organizations sent a letter to Congress flatly rejecting nuclear energy as an "acceptable or necessary" solution to combat rising temperatures on the planet because it is an expensive, dangerous and polluting technology.
       "We urge the Senate to remove these unjustifiable subsidies, tax breaks and loan guarantees from the energy bill," Hauter said. "After 50 years, the nuclear industry should stand on its own. Instead of endless subsidies to nuclear companies, Congress should dedicate funds to harness the promise of energy efficiency and renewable technologies, such as wind and solar energy."
       Last month, Public Citizen released a new fact sheet series outlining the five fatal flaws of nuclear power: cost, waste, safety, security and proliferation (to read them, go to www.citizen.org/cmep/fatalflaws www.citizen.org /cmep/fatalflaws .) For more information about the subsidies and other incentives in the Senate energy bill, go to www.citizen.org/ documents/senate billnukeprovisions.pdf . For a copy of the statement opposing nuclear power, go to www.citizen.org/ documents/Group NuclearStmt.pdf .
       Yesterday, the Senate added Sen. Chuck Hagel's climate change amendment, which authorizes additional financial assistance through 2010, including direct loans, loan guarantees, a line of credit and production incentive payments, that could include new nuclear power plants.
       Public Citizen is a national, nonprofit consumer advocacy organization with 150,000 members. For more information, visit www.citizen.org
       Tell your senators to oppose this bill! http://action.citizen. org/pc/mail/oneclick_ compose/?alertid= 7707271 .# [Bolding added] [Jun 22, 05]

    • Speak Out Against Nuclear Power in Mississippi!


    SPECIAL NOTICE TO MISSISSIPPI ACTIVISTS .
       Public Citizen Critical Mass Energy and Environment Program, www.citizen.org/cmep , News Release e-mail, June 22, 2005
       UNITED STATES - This coming Tuesday, June 28, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) will host a public meeting in Port Gibson, Mississippi -- in Claiborne County -- to discuss Entergy's proposal to build two new reactors at the Grand Gulf nuclear plant along the Mississippi River. The meeting will allow members of the public to give transcribed, on-the-record comments about new reactors in Mississippi and their environmental, health and safety impacts.
       If possible, please attend this meeting to make your voice heard. Visible public opposition has the power to stop this nuclear expansion. For more information, visit www.citizen.org/ cmep/grandgulf .
       While the time allocated for each individual to give comments at the meeting will be only several minutes, the impact will be huge. This is the one and only public meeting to discuss the negative health, safety, and economic consequences the new reactors will have on Port Gibson and Mississippi. There's likely to be a substantial media presence there, so high turnout among opponents of the project will be important.
       The Grand Gulf plant is already a burden on the local population -- unjust tax laws prevent Claiborne County from recouping in taxes what they have to pay to provide emergency services. As a result, those services--from the police to fire fighters to hospital -- are not up to the appropriate standard, posing a hazard that extends beyond the county line. Even the NRC admits that with a new reactor, "It is not clear whether Claiborne County would receive property taxes, sales, and use taxes, or other taxes and public monies commensurate with the costs of its additional emergency management and public services obligations. The net financial burden may fall on local residents and taxpayers, most of whom are minority and low-income persons."
       As a nation, we can't afford to start down the road of nuclear power again, after a 30-year hiatus. Nuclear power continues to rely heavily on taxpayer subsidies because it is so expensive, and draft language in the energy bill in the current Congress indicates billions more dollars could be on the way. There is still no solution to the waste problem; the proposed nuclear waste dump at Yucca Mountain is in a downward spiral and wouldn't be large enough to hold waste from a new reactor even if it did go forward. Safety continues to be sacrificed in favor of higher profits by both the industry and the NRC. And security standards at nuclear plants are downright pathetic.
       Please help us put a stop to nuclear power once and for all by attending this public meeting from 7-10 p.m. at the Port Gibson City Hall, 1005 College Street, Port Gibson, MS. Please encourage family and friends to attend also. If you'd like to speak at the meeting, be sure to arrive at least 30 minutes early to register, or e-mail GrandGulfEIS@ nrc.gov .
       If you are unable to attend on Tuesday or don't wish to speak publicly, we encourage you to send written comments by July 14 via e-mail to the same address.
       For more information about the specific problems with a new reactor at Grand Gulf, visit www.citizen.org/ cmep/grandgulf . You can also direct questions to Brendan Hoffman of Public Citizen's Critical Mass Energy and Environment Program at bhoffman@ citizen.org or (202) 454-5130. # [Jun 22, 05]
    • [U.S. doctors linked to POW ‘torture’ at Guantanamo Bay].

    U.S. doctors linked to POW ‘torture’


    Guantanamo medical records misused - Basis of interrogators’ strategy: Report
       Toronto Star, www.thestar.com/ NASApp/cs/Content Server?pagename= thestar/Layout/ Article_Type1 &c=Article &cid=1119477015095 &call_pageid= 9683321 ; by Tanya Talaga And Karen Palmer, June 23, 2005
       GUANTANAMO BAY, US occupied area, Cuba: Medical records compiled by doctors caring for prisoners at the U.S. detention camp at Guantanamo Bay are being tapped to design more effective interrogation techniques, says an explosive new report.
       Doctors, nurses and medics caring for the approximately 600 prisoners at the U.S. naval base in Cuba are required to provide health information to military and CIA interrogators, according to the report in the respected New England Journal of Medicine.
       "Since late 2003, psychiatrists and psychologists (at Guantanamo) have been part of a strategy that employs extreme stress, combined with behaviour-shaping rewards, to extract actionable intelligence from resistant captives," it states.
       Such tactics are considered torture by many authorities, the authors note.
       Medical personnel belonging to the U.S. military's Southern Command have also been told to volunteer to interrogators information they believe may be valuable, the report adds.
       The report was published ahead of schedule last night on the journal's website "because of current public interest in this topic," the journal says.
       The report's authors -- Dr. Gregg Bloche, a physician who is also a law professor at Georgetown University in Washington, and Jonathan Marks, a London lawyer who is currently a fellow in bioethics at Georgetown's law centre -- say that while Guantanamo veterans are ordered not to discuss what goes on there, making it difficult to know how, exactly, military intelligence personnel have used medical information for interrogation, they've been able to assemble part of the picture.
       They suggest that interrogators at the camp, set up in 2001 to detain prisoners captured in Afghanistan and later Iraq, have had access to prisoners' medical records since early 2003.
    Guantanamo Bay prisoners in fenced yard SHANE T. MCCOY/AP
    Detainee medical records are being used to design more effective interrogation techniques at Guantanamo Bay, says a new report.

       That contradicts Pentagon statements that there is a separation between intelligence-gathering and patient care.
       William Winkenwerder, U.S. assistant secretary of defence for health affairs, said in a memo made public in May that Guantanamo prisoners' medical records are considered private -- as are American citizens'.
       However, "this claim, our inquiry has determined, is sharply at odds with orders given to military medical personnel and with actual practice at Guantanamo," the authors write.
       Using medical records to devise interrogation protocols crosses an ethical line, said Peter Singer, director of the University of Toronto's Joint Centre for Bioethics.
       "The goal for the physician is to care for the sick, not to aid an interrogation," he said. "Patients are patients and prisoners are prisoners and mixing those two things on the part of physicians who work in prisons is actually quite dangerous. Physicians are there for the benefit of patients and if they are seen to be there for some other purpose, it really blurs what they're doing."
       An Amnesty International Canada spokesman said the report gives serious pause to anyone who is following what happens at Guantanamo. 
       "This reinforces the necessity for a full, independent commission of inquiry into the detentions. What is going on and what rules are being violated," John Tackaberry said from Ottawa. 
       "The American government needs to accept its responsibility to expose what is actually happening and show the world they are following standards that are acceptable in terms of international law," he said.
       According to the authors, a previously unreported U.S. Southern Command policy statement dated Aug. 6, 2002, instructs health-care providers that communications from "enemy persons under U.S. control" at Guantanamo "are not confidential and are not subject to the assertion of privileges" by detainees.

    'The cruel and degrading measures ... have become a matter of national shame.'

    Dr. Gregg Bloche and Jonathan Marks, report's authors


    That policy memorandum also tells medical personnel they should "convey any information concerning ... the accomplishment of a military or national security mission ... obtained from detainees in the course of treatment to non-medical military or other U.S. personnel who have an apparent need to know the information," the authors found. The only limit on the policy is that caregivers cannot themselves act as interrogators, the authors say. But since the policy calls on caregivers to hand over information they think might be valuable, they are, in effect, part of Guantanamo's surveillance network and "dissolving the Pentagon's purported separation between intelligence gathering and patient care," they write.
       "An internal, May 24, 2005, memo from the Army Medical Command, offering guidance to caregivers responsible for detainees, refers to the 'interpretation of relevant excerpts from medical records' for the purpose of 'assistance with the interrogation process.'"
       The authors obtained the memo from a military source.
       The article states that at Guantanamo, the "fear-and-anxiety" approach to interrogation was often favoured.
       "The cruel and degrading measures taken by some, in violation of international human rights law and the laws of war, have become a matter of national shame," Bloche and Marks observe.
       "The global political fallout from such abuse may pose more of a threat to U.S. security than any secrets still closely held by shackled internees at Guantanamo Bay," they add.
       Canada's only known detainee in Guantanamo Bay is 18-year-old Omar Khadr. Documents filed in a Canadian court this week included two psychiatric assessments that concluded the teenager has a serious mental disorder and is at a high risk for suicide.
       Khadr is the second youngest son of Ahmed Said Khadr, who was considered before his death in 2003 to be Canada's highest-ranking Al Qaeda financier with close ties to Osama bin Laden.
       Omar Khadr was 15 when he was shot three times and captured at a suspected Al Qaeda compound in Afghanistan in July 2002, following a gun battle with U.S. troops.
       In February, his U.S. lawyer told reporters the teenager had been used as a human mop to clean urine on the floor and had been beaten, threatened with rape and tied up for hours in painful positions at Guantanamo Bay.
       Khadr's Canadian lawyer Dennis Edney said yesterday he has regularly raised concerns with Ottawa about the teen's treatment at Guantanamo and use of his client's medical records.
       "This conduct is a blatant disregard by both Canada and the U.S. to recognize the special status international treaties and human rights law accords children and youths," Edney said yesterday.
       On Tuesday, the Bush administration rejected a proposal to create an independent commission to investigate abuses of detainees at Guantanamo Bay. White House spokesperson Scott McClellan said the Pentagon has already launched 10 major investigations into allegations of abuse and the system was working well. 
       Mulugeta Abai, executive director of the Canadian Centre for Victims of Torture in Toronto, wasn't surprised by the journal report. "This is practised globally," he said. "This is very frustrating. A superpower that is considered a leader in many ways is losing its moral authority now, completely."
       The New England Journal of Medicine is the second respected journal to criticize U.S. interrogation techniques.
       The British medical journal The Lancet reported in August, 2004, that U.S. military doctors violated medical ethics as part of the interrogation regime at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison.
       "Not only were (they) aware of human rights abuses, they were actually complicit in them," University of Minnesota professor Steven Miles, who wrote the report, told the Toronto Star's Sandro Contenta. A Lancet editorial urged health-care workers to "now break their silence."
    With files from Michelle Shephard
    Copyright Toronto Star Newspapers Limited #
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    [June 23, 05]
    • US acknowledges torture at Guantanamo; in Iraq, Afghanistan - UN.

    US acknowledges torture at Guantanamo; in Iraq, Afghanistan - UN

       Information Clearing House, http://snipurl.com/ftb4 , which leads to www.information clearinghouse. info/article 9266.htm , By AFX News, Copyright © 2005 Agence France Presse, June/24/2005
       GENEVA, Switzerland (AFP): Washington has for the first time acknowledged to the United Nations that prisoners have been tortured at US detention centres in Guantanamo Bay, as well as Afghanistan and Iraq, a UN source said.
       The acknowledgement was made in a report submitted to the UN Committee against Torture, said a member of the ten-person panel, speaking on condition of anonymity.
       "They are no longer trying to duck this, and have respected their obligation to inform the UN," the Committee member told AFP.
       "They will have to explain themselves (to the Committee). Nothing should be kept in the dark."
       UN sources said it was the first time the world body has received such a frank statement on torture from US authorities.
       The Committee, which monitors respect for the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, is gathering information from the US ahead of hearings in May 2006.
       Signatories of the convention are expected to submit to scrutiny of their implementation of the 1984 convention and to provide information to the Committee.
       The document from Washington will not be formally made public until the hearings.
       "They haven't avoided anything in their answers, whether concerning prisoners in Iraq, in Afghanistan or Guantanamo, and other accusations of mistreatment and of torture," the Committee member said.
       "They said it was a question of isolated cases, that there was nothing systematic and that the guilty were in the process of being punished."
       The US report said that those involved were low-ranking members of the military and that their acts were not approved by their superiors, the member added.
       The US has faced criticism from UN human rights experts and international groups for mistreatment of detainees -- some of whom died in custody -- in Afghanistan and Iraq, particularly during last year's prisoner abuse scandal surrounding the Abu Ghraib facility there.
       Scores of US military personnel have been investigated, and several tried and convicted, for abuse of people detained during the US-led campaign against Islamic terrorist groups.
       At the Guantanamo Bay naval base, a US toehold in Cuba where around 520 suspects of some 40 nationalities are held, allegations of torture have combined with other claims of human rights breaches.
       The US has faced widespread criticism for keeping the Guantanamo detainees in a "legal black hole," notably for its refusal to grant them prisoner of war status and allegedly sluggish moves to charge or try them.
       Washington's report to the Committee reaffirms the US position that the Guantanamo detainees are classed as "enemy combatants," and therefore do not benefit from the POW status set out in the Geneva Conventions, the Committee member said.
       Four UN human rights experts on Thursday slammed the United States for stalling on a request to allow visits to terrorism suspects held at the Guantanamo Bay naval base, and said they planned to carry out an indirect probe of conditions there.
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       [COMMENT: The US forces are even beating and torturing their own soldiers. Specialist Scan Baker is suing them for an attack on him in January 2003, while acting as an unco-operative prisoner of war.-- The West Australian, p 24, Monday, June 20, 2005. COMMENT ENDS.] [Jun 24, 05]

    • [Slavery is wrong. Full stop.]
       From (Name withheld), Letter to On Target and New Times Survey, GPO Box 1052, Melbourne, Vic, 3001, Australia, June 24, 2005. (This was published by OT.)
       AUSTRALIA: Hello! OT June 24 05 pp 2-4 "Myths about Slavery" is a disgrace. SLAVERY IS WRONG. Yet instead of saying so, you comment about spelling.
       NTS pp 6-7 of June 2005 has an attack on religious sources, and a reply by Wallace Klinick.
       Well, I know that the New Testament (quoting from the OT) says at Luke 4:18 that Jesus said he had been sent "to preach deliverance to the captives ..."
       However, looking at the Concordances, we find that the NT seems to condone slavery. The book of Philemon is supposedly St Paul sending a slave Onesimus back to his "owner" Philemon. In another book, the Greek text tells slaves to "obey their masters."
       So, the NT has two contradictory views on slavery. No supporter of the LoR could lend OT of June 24 to any sensible reformer. SLAVERY IS WRONG.
       [COMMENT: The article condoning slavery had the usual defences of the Europeans enslaving African blacks and even whites, with the excuse that articles opposing it were designed to make whites feel guilty! No answer had been received by July 5, 2005. Readers could write to On Target and ask if the editor and the article's two authors would care to be short-term slaves to the letter-writers for, say, three months, to prove their sincerity. COMMENT ENDS.] [Jun 24, 05]

    • [Bullying, thuggery, in Labor Party - stalwart. Labor beyond repair or reform - Mark Latham]


       The West Australian, "Faulkner joins Labor bloodletting," by BEN MARTIN, p 19, Thursday, June 30, 2005
       SYDNEY (NSW) Australia: Labor stalwart John Faulkner used the launch yesterday of a book about Mark Latham's spectacular political downfall to accuse the Labor Party of thuggery, bullying and criminality.
       He criticised Labor's notorious factional system, saying it needed to learn from the mistakes of last year's election loss.
       "When maintaining factional power is put ahead of civility, decency, honesty, humanity or even legality, then bullying and thuggery become lazy substitutes for debate," Senator Faulkner said.
       The book about Mr Latham, Loner: Inside a Labor Tragedy, was a profoundly depressing read for-someone committed to the Labor Party, said Senator Faulkner, who recently stood down as Labor's Senate leader.
       Author Bernard Lagan was given access to Mr Latham in the lead-up to the election and maintained limited contact with the former leader after his dramatic resignation in January.
       "There has been no meltdown like it," Senator Faulkner said of Mr Latham's last days in politics when, secretly stricken with pancreatitis, he took leave and did not comment publicly about the Asian tsunami disaster. He wrote in an email later: "None of my verbiage could make any practical difference - bring back the dead, reverse the waves, organise the relief effort."
       The book quotes Mr Latham calling WA Premier Geoff Gallop an A-grade a**ehole whose bluster made no difference to anything, and labelling [Federal] Opposition Leader Kim Beazley a conservative, stand-for-nothing leader. Labor was a party beyond repair or reform, a conservative institution run by factional leaders, and in Mr Beazley got the leader it deserved.
       Mr Latham did not appear at the book launch.
       Dr Gallop refused to bite back at Mr Latham's name-calling. Instead, although he is a prolific reader, he said he probably would not read the book. But Attorney-General Jim McGinty described Mr Latham as an embittered individual who had turned his back on the Labor Party.
       Mr Beazley's response to Mr Latham's scathing assessment of his leadership was: "I've got three priorities at the moment. The first priority is to get a fairer tax system. The second priority is to ensure that our industrial relation system remains fair. And the third priority is not to read the book about Mark Latham." [Bolding added] [Jun 30, 05]
    • The row over numbers in the State ALP festers on - with warnings that it could hinder party resurgence. - Electoral preselection branch-stacking dishonesty alleged. Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
       PERTH (WA) Australia: A WA Cabinet minister is said to be behind the formation of three New Right branches of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) in the federal electorate of the Cowan MHR Graham Edwards. Branch-stacking is said to be rife, with some branches formed of people who are not ordinary rank-and-file ALP members.

    The row over numbers in the State ALP festers on - with warnings that it could hinder party resurgence

    Still stacks of problems over Labor's branches


       The West Australian, by ROBERT TAYLOR, "INSIDE STATE" feature, p 21, Thursday, June 30, 2005
       PERTH, Western Australia: The revelation this week that the ALP's national executive has ordered the party's WA branch to sort out unresolved membership issues or again risk intervention by a nationally appointed audit panel illustrates just how close to the surface factional tensions remain in W A.
       While the national directive was portrayed as a positive result for the WA branch by State secretary Bill Johnston, many on the Left of the WA ALP see it as part of a continuing push by the Right to chip away at the status quo which sees the Left in control of key party forums.
       Others can't see the point in revisiting an issue first raised 18 months ago by Right faction Senator Mark Bishop and has to a large degree been dealt with since.
       Some members of the Right have suggested that the only way to resolve the issues as demanded by the national executive is to call gatherings of the branches in dispute and cross-check with party records those who turn up.
       But since Senator Bishop first raised the issue of affiliated union numbers, which then quickly escalated to claims and counter-claims over community-based branches, there has been an audit of union numbers which all sides accepted.
       Today is also the second cut-off date since the allegations were first aired for the yearly registration of community branch members.
       "I just think it's a bloody joke and the party just needs to move on," said a prominent Left faction powerbroker, who declined to be named, yesterday.
       "The fact that some people still want to use it to settle old scores or whatever... I just think is unhelpful.
       "I'm all for stopping branch-stacking and making it only legitimate members can vote and all that kind of stuff, but you can do that by toughening up the rules."
       So why are elements on the Right still agitating for further examination of branch numbers and registration rules?

    Picture: Graham Edwards: Anger over three New Right branches in his electorate.
    Picture: John D'Orazio: Welcomed check on branches.
    Picture: Mark Bishop: First raised the stacking issue.

       The simple answer is numbers. The branches, either union or community, provide the delegates to the party's State executive which determines policy positions and conducts the all-important preselection contests.
       While the union audit saw the power of the left-wing Australian Manufacturing Workers Union and Miscellaneous Workers Union diminish slightly against the right-wing unions dominated by the Shop Assistants (Shoppies), the Left and its allies in the New Right are still believed to retain the majority of delegates at State executive.
       It is believed national shop assistants union secretary Joe de Bruyn moved the national executive motion and WA Shoppies boss Joe Bullock is reportedly insisting on tough action at the party's State administrative council. Senator Bishop is also aligned to the Shoppies.
       Mr Bullock was interstate and unavailable for comment yesterday. Federal Cowan MHR Graham Edwards, a Right member, claimed yesterday that branch-stacking stood in the way of the party's hopes for national resurgence.
       "You have to have branches that are made up of real people, that meet regularly and branches made up of people who are prepared to come out and work with you, for instance, at election tune," he said.
       "The truth is some of those branches are not capable of doing those things because the people are not rank-and-file ALP people. They are simply there to boost the numbers for people who feel that they have a need or want to control issues within the party. If we want to come back federally we've got to have people on the ground who can contribute to policy, who can criticise policy and who can advance the Labor Party at grassroots.
       "People who are going out and motivating committed people to join the party is not something I have a problem with. What I do have a problem with is people who are signed up simply to generate numbers when those people have no interest in the party and no interest in playing any role in the party."
       Although Premier Geoff Gallop told reporters this week that the issue was one for the lay organisation, it does have the potential to cause grief for his Government, primarily through the involvement of Justice Minister John D'Orazio.
       Mr D'Orazio's three New Right branches in Mr Edwards' Cowan electorate have been the focus of much of the Right's ire but yesterday Mr D'Orazio welcomed any scrutiny.
       "I welcome anyone coming and having a look at these branches, but more importantly what we need to do is get the party focused on working in the interests of the community to get the best outcome," he said.
       "I think it's about time we got on with doing what we're supposed to do. I think the State secretary's got this in hand and I expect it to be sorted out very soon."
       Mr D'Orazio conceded that numbers in the branches were down from before the allegations were first aired but said that was because "some people refused to rejoin the party on the basis that they're volunteers and they shouldn't be subject to this nonsense" [Bolding added] [Jun 30, 05]
    • [USA kidnapped Muslim clergyman in Italy, and gave him to Egypt prison.] Italy flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Egypt flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
       The West Australian, "US asked to hand over wanted agents," p 33, Thursday, June 30, 2005
       ITALY: Italian prosecutors will demand that the United States honour its treaty obligations with Italy and extradite more than a dozen suspected CIA operatives  to stand trial in Milan on charges of kidnapping a radical imam in Italy two years ago.
       Officials said the imam, Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr, better known as Abu Omar, was stopped while walking near his apartment in Milan and forced into a van, flown to a US air base in Germany and then on to prison in Egypt. [Jun 30, 05]

    • Conspiracy theorist has day in court.


       The West Australian, by Roy Gibson, p 39, Thursday, June 30, 2005
       PERTH (W. Australia): The State of WA does not exist and our politicians and judges have been acting illegally for the past 18 months - that was the controversial conspiracy theory advanced during an action in the Supreme Court.
       Brian William Shaw, of Rockingham, contended that when State Parliament passed a new Act in January last year dropping all reference to the "Crown" and the "Queen" it breached the Constitution. The State of WA became a non-legal entity and ceased to exist, he said.
       Mr Shaw, who says he is a Bible-believing Christian, alleged that it was all part of a conspiracy involving Freemasons and their grand plan to set up a Masonic republic. He has been expressing those views so long and so often that he has been declared a vexatious litigant by the Supreme Court - and Mr Shaw faced court on Tuesday in an unsuccessful attempt to appeal against that ruling.
       In the past, Mr Shaw has started private prosecutions against a host of public figures including a Supreme Court judge, Attorney-General Jim McGinty, Director of Public Prosecutions Robert Cock and Commonwealth DPP Damien Bugg, accusing them of perverting justice and treason.
       Mr Shaw alleges all politicians have committed treason and all members of the judiciary have been breaking the law.
       All prosecutions were dismissed because of a lack of evidence - prompting applications by Mr McGinty and Mr Bugg to the Supreme Court where Mr Shaw was declared a vexatious litigant. He now needs court approval to start legal proceedings.
       Representing himself, Mr Shaw submitted that he had been dealt with unfairly and repeated his claims that Parliament had breached the Constitution by removing references to Crown in various Acts.
       In his judgment, Justice John McKechnie rejected Mr Shaw's assertion that the judiciary was corrupt because it permitted Masonic activity.
       He also rejected an allegation he was biased because he knew most of the people involved in the case.
       Justice McKechnie said Mr Shaw appeared obsessed with Freemasonry and had "an irrational obsession that all people in authority are guilty of abusing their office".
       Mr Shaw had lodged 28 grounds of appeal but Justice McKechnie described them as embarrassing, incoherent, irrelevant, nonsense and hopelessly misconceived.
       But Mr Shaw had the last word "Can I appeal?" he asked.
    (Picture - Vexed question: Brian Shaw and supporters outside the Supreme Court, where Mr Shaw was declared a vexatious litigant. Picture: Iain Gillespie)
       [COMMENT: A number of people quietly opposed the removal of Queen and Crown from the WA laws, but few would have thought that any reformer would waste time trying to get the courts to declare that such changes made by the Parliament would be overturned by a court.
       It is a pity, because Mr Shaw (now almost paralysed from taking court action) and his backers might have been able, later, to take a case to court that was more likely to succeed.
       Mr Shaw's private prosecutions against such public figures as listed in the newsitem only wastes their time, and his.
       Similar reformers elsewhere in Australia have tried to get courts to declare that bank interest need not be paid because overdrafts have been created by bookkeeping entry, and there have been famous cases of people declaring their farm properties to be independent countries -- "principality" seems to be the favourite appellation .
       If these various people had spend their time trying to educate their fellow citizens on some of the basics of economics and politics, and even joined unions and/or political parties, and tried judicially to spread some realistic ideas, perhaps some better politicians might in future get into parliaments.
       Meanwhile, monarchists might buy the queen's-head stamps that are issued annually around the time of her official birthday (different to the public holiday in Western Australia), and join one or other of the pro-monarchist action groups, the pro-flag organisation, and so on.
       There is a saying "A man who is his own lawyer has a fool for a client." Yet he had about 50 followers outside court. (I can't find Mr B.W. Shaw of Rockingham in the telephone directory.) COMMENT ENDS.] [Jun 30, 05]
    ANCHOR LIST (After reading an article, use Browser's "Back" button to return to Anchor List)
    * Action = "International days of action; US out of Iraq now!" POSTER for March 19 and 20, 2005.
    * Esperanto = "Esperanto exists for fairness, efficiency, friendship, and to save small languages." Claude Piron of Switzerland , to The Daily Mail (England), Feb 19, 2005. BRITAIN / SWITZERLAND: In his article "So what is the Gaelic for utterly pointless quango?" (4 February) Tim Luckhurst says: "The answer to misguided idealists who believe the world would be a better place if we all spoke Esperanto is that diversity of language nurtures diversity of thought and culture. Without it we are impoverished." Esperanto has never had as its objective to replace the various languages and dialects; it rather aims at protecting them by distinguishing the global or international level from the national or local one.
    * Fraud Electoral = Electoral fraud in Britain and the United States. UNITED STATES: Washington legislators are moving head-long into some dangerous territory with their advocacy of mail-in voting. In the late 1980s, Toby Moffett lost the Connecticut Democrat primary election for governor because of absentee voting fraud. Four of his opponent's supporters were arrested for absentee vote fraud -- too late for the courts to order a new election. In a British 2004 local elections for Birmingham, mail-in voting had been "rigged" by at least 1,500 votes, an inquiry ruled this week. -- Election Reform Monitor, "Fraud and Privacy Concerns accompany talk of mandatory statewide vote-by-mail efforts," Volume 1, Number 1, April 5, 2005
    * Lewd = "Ex-officer describes lewd tactics at Guantanamo," Globe and Mail (Canada), AP, Jan 28, 2005. SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO -- Female interrogators tried to break Muslim detainees at the U.S. prison camp in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, with sexual touching, by wearing a miniskirt and thong underwear, rubbing a prisoner's back with her breasts and in one case, smearing a Saudi man's face with fake menstrual blood, according to an insider's written account. An interrogator used ink from a red pen to fool the detainee, former Army Sergeant Erik Saar says.
    * Morgan = Morgan Stanley, USA, defrauded mogul; punitive damages $US 850m. UNITED STATES: New-York based investment bank Morgan Stanley faces potential legal costs of $US1.4 billion ($1.83 billion) after a Florida jury yesterday decided it should pay billionaire investor Ronald Perelman $US850 million in punitive damages for defrauding him seven years ago. Three days ago the jury awarded Mr Perelmen [sic] $US604 million for his losses arising from the sale of his Coleman camping gear company to Sunbeam Corp, a Morgan Stanley client, in 1998. May 20, 2005
    * J P Morgan = JP Morgan Chase to pay $2.85b over Enron NEW YORK: JP Morgan Chase has agreed to pay $US2.2 billion ($AUD2.85 billion) to settle a class-action lawsuit over its role in helping Enron engineer an accounting fraud that hid billions of dollars in losses from investors. The agreement is the biggest settlement so far in the action, which has included banks, advisers and Enron executives connected to the energy trader's 2001 bankruptcy. -- The West Australian, June 16, 2005
    * Pork = Pork imports are illegal. [30,000 jobs risked for import dogma, endangering Australia's green clean pigmeat]. "Cloud over smallgoods as pork ruled illegal." AUSTRALIA: WA retailers and wholesalers face the prospect of having to ditch millions of dollars worth of smallgoods, including sausages, bacon and polony, after the Federal Court yesterday declared many of them contained illegally imported pork. The ruling covers any products containing processed pork from a storing of countries, particularly the United States, Canada and Denmark, which are all known to have the devastating pig disease post weaning multi-systemic wasting syndrome. Australia is one of three countries without PMWS. There is thought to be no health risk to humans from the disease, but in Europe outbreaks have killed eight million pigs and cost the pork industry $1.5 billion in the past four years. Australia stands to lose 30,000 jobs. - The West Australian, p 1, June 16, 2005
    * Responding = "Responding to Imminent Debt Crisis," by David Keane, May 19, 2005. PERTH: When the price of oil jumps through the roof, exceeding US$100 a barrel, the US economy will collapse, bringing collapse of the Australian and many other world economies in its wake. At the time of disillusionment, the Australian public will awaken to the hard reality that a national economy cannot be built upon escalating use of the national credit card, while neglecting manufacturing and infrastructure development. What then will happen cannot be remedied by a simple adjustment of economic policy, as happened in turning the Great Depression around through the adoption of Keynesian policy. This crisis reaches far, far deeper, and relates to the collapse of an aging, crystallised global civilisation and emergence of a new global civilisation
    * Strife = "WA's strife-torn Liberal Party." PERTH, W. Australia. Electoral corruption is blatant in the Western Australian Liberal Party. Lorraine Allchurch said: "I've lived through many cycles in the Liberal Party and I've never seen a cycle which is as corrupt as this one appears to be." Mr Collier has a cloud hanging over his head. He's been accused of forging signatures on membership forms and using people's names without their consent. The alleged purpose: to stack branches to secure enough support for his own preselection in the lead-up to the 2001 election. Police have confirmed they're investigating the allegations for a second time. It has to be said here that Peter Collier flatly rejects the allegations. -- Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), www.abc.net. au/stateline/ wa/content/ 2005/s1363 242.htm , Stateline, Reporter: Layla Tucak, Broadcast May 06, 2005
    * Torture = "We are all Torturers now" By Mark Danner, New York Times, Thursday, January 6, 2005. NEW YORK: The United States senators are likely to give full legitimacy to a path that the Bush administration set the country on more than three years ago, a path that has transformed the United States from a country that condemned torture and forbade its use to one that practices torture routinely.
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