George Carlin dies

Last week we lost Tim Russert, one of the best and brightest that the news industry had to offer. Yesterday we lost comedy’s best; George Carlin has died at the age of 71.

Carlin was one of the greatest, if not greatest influences on American comedy, and his social statements were invaluable. Carlin hosted the first ever “Saturday Night Live” and is still known for his “Seven Words”. I loved him for his appearance in “Dogma”, which is one of my favorite movies. I had the pleasure of seeing Carlin perform once, and will forever remember that event.


Award-winning comedian George Carlin dies

LOS ANGELES, California (CNN) — Comedian-actor George Carlin, known for his raunchy but insightful humor, died of heart failure Sunday in Los Angeles, his publicist said. He was 71.

Jeff Abraham said Carlin went into St. John’s Health Center on Sunday afternoon, complaining of chest pain. Carlin died at 5:55 p.m. PT, The Associated Press reported.

Carlin, who had a history of heart trouble, performed as recently as last weekend at the Orleans Casino and Hotel in Las Vegas.

“He was a genius and I will miss him dearly,” Jack Burns, who was the other half of a comedy duo with Carlin in the early 1960s, told the AP.

Full story here…

House Dems: It’s ok to spy on U.S. citizens…

…and we’ll gladly provide immunity to the telecoms that help them.

This is one of the reasons why I am a member of the ACLU. This legislation is unconstitutional and it is bereft of common sense. Once again Congressional Democrats are complicit in helping a morally bankrupt president get away with illegal activities.

This is also one of the reasons why I am no longer a Democrat.

Telecoms granted immunity in US wiretapping probe
Elana Schor in Washington
guardian.co.uk,
Friday June 20, 2008

In a major victory for the White House, the House of Representatives today passed a bill to grant legal immunity to phone companies that helped the Bush administration eavesdrop on US calls and emails after the 9/11 attacks. The measure was approved 293-129.

Democrats in Congress had previously refused to yield to White House demands that telecommunications companies such as AT&T and Verizon be spared from pending lawsuits related to their role in government wiretapping.

A six-month window for existing wiretap orders expires in August, leaving Democrats leery of charges from the administration that Congress had failed to fulfill its national-security responsibilities. Democrats ultimately agreed to a deal that is almost certain to meet the White House’s goal of immunising the telecom companies.
*****
Meanwhile, civil liberties groups and Democratic activists were openly furious at the party’s congressional leaders for giving ground to the Bush administration.

“Congress is moving so fast and so secretively that we only got a copy of this bill [yesterday],” Caroline Fredrickson, Washington director of the American civil liberties union, lamented in a letter to the group’s members.

“I can tell you it’s horrible. It contains vacuum cleaner-style surveillance that sweeps up the phone calls and emails of Americans. And it’s blatantly unconstitutional.”

Full story here…

McCain and Taxes

Here is a very good article on the hypocrisy of John McCain on taxes… and where his tax cuts will really go.

Taxes, Integrity and Character
Posted on Jun 18, 2008

By Joe Conason

Once upon a time, there was a fiscally and socially responsible senator named John McCain. Despite his presidential ambitions, the Republican from Arizona spoke out against the economic royalism of his party’s leadership in the White House and Congress, and simply said no.

He rejected the Bush tax cuts in 2001 because they provided an unearned bonanza for America’s wealthiest citizens while giving a pittance to the middle class and nothing to the working poor. To him, as a long-standing enemy of waste and profligacy, these proposals were not only unfair but also unwise.

“I cannot in good conscience support a tax cut in which so many of the benefits go to the most fortunate among us at the expense of middle-class Americans who need tax relief,” he said, joining courageously with Lincoln Chafee, then a senator from Rhode Island, as one of two Republicans who dared to cast such a crucial vote against president and party.

Now Chafee is no longer in the Senate, having lost reelection in 2006 after enduring a brutal primary challenge from the Republican right. And McCain, now driven by ambition rather than principle, has changed. He supports the tax cuts that his conscience once moved him to oppose—and indeed, he promises to deliver even more lucrative benefits to those who need relief least, at the expense of those who need it most.

Tax policy is rarely regarded as a character issue. It is possible to believe that rewarding the rich should be the main purpose of the tax code, and it is also possible to believe that taxation should advance rather than diminish equality—and it is possible for honorable people to argue either way. But in McCain’s case, the complete flip-flop and implausible explanation raise disturbing questions about his integrity. (That is particularly true of a candidate like McCain, who questioned the character of a primary opponent, Mitt Romney, for revamping his positions on abortion and other social issues.)

By the time McCain voted against the Bush tax cuts in 2001 and 2003 he had established a strong position against their regressive effects. That stance marked him as a true maverick in his own party and a straight talker who spoke for the national interest against his own personal interests. Running against George W. Bush in the 2000 GOP primary, he mocked the Texas governor’s “misplaced” bonanza for the affluent.

“Sixty percent of the benefits from his tax cuts go to the wealthiest 10 percent of Americans—and that’s not the kind of tax relief that Americans need,” he said. Despite his wife’s inherited wealth, he criticized proposals to repeal the estate tax for the same reason, noting that such legislation “would provide massive benefits solely to the wealthiest and highest-income taxpayers in the country.”

As the chance to run for president again drew closer, however, McCain shifted toward conservative orthodoxy. In 2005 he voted for cuts in capital gains taxes that he had previously opposed, and in 2006 voted for essentially the same estate-tax repeal he had once denounced. And today his economic platform extends to the Bush tax cuts and makes them still more regressive—and more expensive.

According to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center, the McCain proposals would render almost one-quarter of their benefits to the top one-tenth of 1 percent of taxpayers. Those are households with annual incomes over $2.8 million. Families in the lower 60 percent of the income scale would receive 8 percent of the McCain plan’s benefits. This scheme would result in the loss of at least $4 trillion in revenue over the coming decade, as our physical infrastructure crumbles.

Even more troubling than those numbers, however, is the contorted rhetoric that the Republican nominee-to-be has used to justify his policy reversal. Over the past several months, you see, he has discovered that he never really opposed the Bush tax cuts as unfair. He only opposed them because there weren’t enough spending cuts to balance the revenue reductions.

At the same time, however, he now insists that cutting taxes actually increases federal revenues—the discredited supply-side mumbo-jumbo that he must endorse to win over his party base. But if reducing taxes actually raises revenues, then why is he so worried about spending cuts?

Intellectual honesty was the currency of the straight talker, yet he has squandered that great asset by pandering to the most irresponsible ideologues. How he can bear to do this to himself is a mystery.

Dems caving on FISA

I respect the fact that we need some type of FISA bill to deal with the thorny issue of surveillance. I can also appreciate the fact that we need more compromise and less polarization in Congress. Having said that, it is my view that granting immunity - even packeged as limited immunity - to the telecom companies for their role in illegally spying on American citizens, is reprehensible. Anyone who votes for this measure should be ashamed of themselves.

Once again, Congressional Dems forgot why the American people gave them control of the legislative branch in 2006. It would be nice if they would figure it out.

Deal Reached in Congress to Rewrite Rules on Wiretapping
By ERIC LICHTBLAU
Published: June 20, 2008

WASHINGTON — After months of wrangling, Democratic and Republican leaders in Congress struck a deal on Thursday to overhaul the rules on the government’s wiretapping powers and provide what amounts to legal immunity to the phone companies that took part in President Bush’s warrantless eavesdropping program after the Sept. 11 attacks.

The deal, expanding the government’s powers in some key respects, would allow intelligence officials to use broad warrants to eavesdrop on foreign targets and conduct emergency wiretaps without court orders on American targets for a week if it is determined important national security information would be lost otherwise. If approved, as appears likely, it would be the most significant revision of surveillance law in 30 years.

The agreement would settle one of the thorniest issues in dispute by providing immunity to the phone companies in the Sept. 11 program as long as a federal district court determines that they received legitimate requests from the government directing their participation in the warrantless wiretapping operation.

Full story here…

OMFG… are you kidding me?

I knew that this presidential campaign was going to end up becoming the most racist in American history, but one company has already taken hate to a new low.

A company called Republicanmarket was selling its wares at the Texas Republican Convention. One of the items being sold was the following item:

Racist button

Unfreaking-believable.

Needless to say, the geniuses at Republicanmarket have earned a “Moron of the Moment” Award. And beyond that, they have earned my eternal disdain for their ignorance.

Baracknophobia

posted with vodpod

Thinking about our future

Here is a great article from Truthdig that offers a truly realistic yet novel idea for pursuing answers to humanity’s greatest challenges. It is worth the read:

50 New ‘Manhattan Projects’
Posted on Jun 17, 2008
By Vladimir Keilis-Borok and Michael D. Intriligator

Imagine another major earthquake of the magnitude of the 1994 Northridge quake in Southern California, but this time centered in downtown Los Angeles or San Francisco or Tokyo. Or imagine a series of major terrorist attacks on New York or London, but this time using nuclear or biological weapons. Or imagine a repeat of the influenza pandemic of 1918-1919 that killed more people than both world wars combined. Or imagine an international financial crisis, such as the 1997-98 one that spread from Thailand to many other nations, including the Philippines, Indonesia, South Korea and eventually even to Russia, but this time starting in the U.S. and spreading worldwide, repeating the experience of the Great Depression, which started in October 1929. Or imagine the accidental launching of a nuclear weapon or a massive release of radioactivity from the enormous nuclear wastes in both the U.S. and Russia.

These threats and others pose dangers as great as any we have ever faced, yet the truth is that we are not prepared to cope with any of them. Indeed, these acute or chronic dangers keep escalating despite the billions of dollars devoted to contain them using existing technologies.

Both history and common sense teach us that to overcome these threats requires innovative research at the frontier of basic science. Such research has again and again rescued humankind from immediate dangers through decisively better new technologies. We would like to propose a new approach to setting up such research that would address the major threats humanity faces.

The Manhattan Project to develop the atomic bomb during World War II provides a useful model of how we might now mobilize science to address these major global dangers. The military threats of a world war led to international cooperation of distinguished scientists to work in large-scale efforts to achieve scientific breakthroughs. Such international scientific cooperation has tremendous potential to develop creative ways of dealing with many of the challenges that we now face. There are also other instances of such international scientific cooperation, not only the building of the atomic bomb, which was a major technological accomplishment, regardless of whether one supports or deplores the atomic bomb itself. These include the development of hybrid strains of rice, wheat and corn in the agricultural experimental stations of the Rockefeller Foundation in Mexico and the Philippines as part of the Green Revolution. Another example is the genetic/genomic revolution that led to new vaccines and other approaches to medical research as developed by private pharmaceutical houses using scientists worldwide. All three of these examples show the potential for such a massive and focused scientific approach that could be initiated and funded by a government, as in the case of the Manhattan Project; or by a foundation, as in the case of the Green Revolution; or by the private sector, as in the case of the genetic/genomic revolution.

With appropriate policies and actions, the scientific establishment can be organized to focus its resources on current global threats. To conduct such research, however, it would be necessary to mobilize our relevant intellectual resources and research facilities with the same determination that drove the wartime projects. A program of global scientific cooperation has tremendous potential to address many of the threats and challenges we face.

Now may be the right time to establish some 50 new “Manhattan Projects.” Each would focus on a specific problem of immense global significance and urgency, like those above and many others, relying on international and interdisciplinary teams of outstanding scientists. Such global scientific cooperation could lead to significant breakthroughs that no nation would be able to accomplish alone.

These new projects could target a wide range of issues using recent developments in science and technology. Some might focus on the dangers identified earlier, while others might focus on other global challenges. These may include:

• Developing alternatives to the global reliance on fossil fuels of oil, gas and coal as our major energy source, particularly renewable nonpolluting energy sources, including the development of new technologies for the incineration of industrial and municipal wastes that can, in effect, turn garbage into fuel, both eliminating solid wastes and generating electric power and thermal energy with no environmental damage.

• Addressing the issues of global warming and climate change.

• Creating new materials and recovering mineral and other resources of the continental shelf.

• Developing novel forms of transportation, such as using dirigibles to replace trucks.

• Addressing internal conflicts (civil wars), especially those in Africa, and global trade in both large and small arms. The latter might include a further development of the proposal of Nobel Peace Prize winner Oscar Arias that there be an embargo on arms shipments to sub-Saharan Africa to help reduce the conflicts in that region, including some of the largest wars being fought on the planet today .

• Treating global water resource supply and how to avoid possible future water wars.

• Addressing global hunger and malnutrition, including global food supplies and food security, implying the possibility or necessity of a second Green Revolution to develop new agricultural technologies and also providing micro nutrients to prevent disease and malnutrition.

• Dealing with the problem of failing or failed states, such as Somalia, Zimbabwe and Myanmar.

Innovative approaches in any of these areas would have enormous value for the entire global population.

But are the crises we face of sufficient enormousness to justify such large-scale efforts? Absolutely! Just consider the possibilities of future natural disasters, such as those mentioned earlier, that could have global repercussions. Natural disasters are, however, only one of many threats of similar if not larger scale. Never before has the world lived with such huge risks. The focus of cooperation in these various new projects should be on areas of transcendent importance for our very survival.

To establish these projects would require a bold new initiative. We suggest a simple, straightforward mechanism to help scientists develop such proposals and begin the process of initiating them. First, we would suggest inviting the submission of brief pre-proposals that are adequately based on previous studies. Second, we would recommend having them reviewed by a panel of outstanding scientists that would award grants to work out detailed proposals. Some deviation from the usual review process would probably be necessary. For example, recent achievements of the authors of proposals should be given a larger than usual relative weight; and the authors should be invited to discuss objections. This would help to ensure that the most outstanding ideas were not rejected because they were too unusual and had been rejected by the usual peer review process but still had great potential.

These proposals would be the final product of this venture. The history of basic research gives us assurance that some of them would be sufficiently compelling to be funded by an appropriate source. Depending on the nature of a proposal, this source could be a government agency, an international organization, a nongovernment organization, a consortium of private foundations, etc. This new approach would be a major success if even a few of the proposals generated their own support; that is, if the decision-makers concluded that they could not afford to reject them.

We have to realize that we are already in the midst of a new type of world war when considering the combined threats of natural and man-made disasters. What will be decisive in this war, however, are intellectual resources, with frontier research providing a springboard for new technologies. Through establishing new and cooperative global projects, we can tackle these threats. Overall, we are suggesting a way of mobilizing science in a new type of cooperative effort to deal with some of the gravest challenges facing humanity as a whole.

Vladimir Keilis-Borok is Distinguished Professor at the Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics and the Department of Earth and Space Science, University of California, Los Angeles. Michael D. Intriligator is Professor of Economics, Political Science, and Public Policy, University of California, Los Angeles, and Senior Fellow at the Milken Institute in Santa Monica, Calif. They presented this paper at the New School of Athens/Global Governance Group conference in Athens on April 4, 2008. It is based on their article (in Russian) with colleagues from Russia, France and the U.S.: “Basic Science for the Survival of Humanity in the Third World War,” by Mikhail V. Alfimov, Robert Corell, Vincent Courtillot, Vladimir E. Fortov, Michael D. Intriligator and Vladimir Keilis-Borok, in Kommersant Daily, Nov. 29, 1997. The article above has been edited by Truthdig.

Celtics slaughter Lakers, claim first NBA title in 22 years

Not even close.

The Boston Celtics dismantled the Los Angeles Lakers tonight, resulting in one of the biggest blowouts in NBA Finals history, and the Celtics claimed their first championship in 22 years with a 131-92 victory in Game Six. That’s right… they won by 39 points.

In the process the Celtics claimed the greatest franchise turnaround in league history. The Celtics won only 24 games in 2006-2007. But the complete re-vamping of the roster in the off-season led to 66 wins this year, capped by the Celtics record 17th NBA championship.

The Celtics are back.

As a long-time Celtics fan, I remember the 1986 championship team. And I remember being at a party celebrating their win. We had a banner made up with the names of all the players and enjoyed the success of another championship season. But I will never forget looking at those names later and thinking that I just couldn’t see Len Bias’ name in with likes of Bird, McHale, and Parrish. It was inexplicable, but it was a real feeling. And shortly thereafter Len Bias died from a cocaine overdose. And the franchise hasn’t been the same since.

Until tonight.

Tonight a new breed of Celtics’ player, demonstrating the age old Celtics’ pride, rose to the challenge and destroyed their age-old nemesis. And thus are the names Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett, Ray Allen, Rajon Rondo, Kendrick Perkins, and Doc Rivers permanently etched into the Celtics’ storied history.

The Celtics win a championship. The Red Sox won the World Series. The Patriots won eighteen straight games before losing the Super Bowl. Hell, even the Bruins made the playoffs this year. Is there any doubt that Boston is now the center of the professional sports universe?

I am a happy sports fan.

Kevin Garnett scores in Game Six

C’s Claim 17th NBA Title in Record Fashion
How Sweet It Is

A trip back to Boston was just about all the Celtics needed to claim their 17th NBA Championship in franchise history.

In front of an electric home crowd, Kevin Garnett exploded for 26 points and 14 rebounds as the Celtics dismantled the Lakers in Game 6, 131-92, on Tuesday.

The Celtics captured the NBA Championship in record fashion. Boston’s 39-point win the most lopsided close-out triumph in Finals history, eclipsing the mark it set in 1965 also against the Lakers. Ray Allen also hit seven treys to set a new mark for most 3-pointers in a Finals series (22) and the Celtics’ 18 steals were the most in a Finals contest.

Paul Pierce scored 17 and Rajon Rondo filled up the stat sheet with 21 points, seven rebounds, eight assists and six steals as Boston captured its first title since 1986.

Box Score
Image source: NBA.com

I’m voting Republican

Before you have a stroke, just watch this:

And here is some more video fun with Republicans:

Pentagon sought harsher torture of detainees

Wow, this is just priceless.

Would someone please explain to these mindless drones that the war against terrorism can and MUST be fought by staying within the framework of the Constitution of the United States as well as international law? I don’t really care what techniques our enemies employ, there is absolutely no reason for us to sacrifice our principles for the sake of national security. Not only will those torture methods not improve our national security, but they undermine the principles of this great nation, and it is these principles that make us uniquely American.

There are two people worth noting as disgraceful, even if they only represent a larger problem within the military and intelligence communities. The first is CIA lawyer John Fredman, who “explained that whether harsh interrogation amounted to torture ‘is a matter of perception.’ The only sure test for torture is if the detainee died. “If the detainees dies, you’re doing it wrong,” Fredman said.

Really? Trial and error with death as the determiner of success? Are we talking about lab rats here? Hey Mr. Fredman, how about we practice some of these techniques on you? Better pray we don’t say “oops… I guess we got it wrong.”

The second is Pentagon general counsel William “Jim” Haynes, who “sought information as early as July 2002 regarding a military program that trained U.S. troops how to survive enemy interrogations and deny foes valuable intelligence.” According to the story, “Pentagon officials wanted to know if the program could be used to develop more effective interrogation methods at Guantanamo Bay… Haynes testified that he remembers receiving the information, but he did not recall requesting it specifically. In response, SERE officials provided Haynes’ office a list of tactics that included sensory deprivation, sleep disruption and stress positions.”

Thankfully there were enough people with conscience to object to such methods, even if not always for the right reasons. In November 2002, Col. John Ley of the Army’s Judge Advocate General office wrote, “Whatever interrogation techniques we adopt will eventually become public knowledge… If we mistreat detainees, we will quickly lose the (moral) high ground and public support will erode.”

Even though these are old deeds, their revelation requires a new Golden Momo presentation.

Probe: Pentagon sought harsh interrogations
Senate investigation finds techniques drew warnings from military lawyers
Associated Press

WASHINGTON - The Pentagon in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks pursued abusive interrogation techniques once favored by such U.S. enemies as North Korea and Vietnam, despite stern warnings by several military lawyers that the methods were cruel and even illegal, according to a Senate investigation.

The findings, detailed in a hearing Tuesday, brought rebukes of the Pentagon effort from Democrats and Republicans alike.

“The guidance (administration lawyers) provided will go down in history as some of the most irresponsible and shortsighted legal analysis ever provided to our nation’s military and intelligence communities,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., an Air Force Reserve colonel who teaches military law for the service.

Full story here…