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Archive for June 17th, 2008

MI5′s Al Qaeda operative to be released

Posted by kandylini on June 17, 2008

This story makes no mention that Abu Qatada was exposed as an MI5 double agent back in 2004. Hat tip to Signs of the Times.

Source: Agence France Presse.

A radical Muslim cleric once described as “Osama bin Laden’s right-hand man in Europe” will soon be released, but on strict conditions including a ban on attending mosques, officials said Tuesday.

The Home Office announced last month that Abu Qatada, who first arrived in Britain in the early 1990s but disappeared before new anti-terror laws came in after September 11, 2001, would be freed on bail.

On Tuesday the Special Immigration Advisory Commission (SIAC) published the detailed bail and curfew conditions, including wearing an electronic tag and being subject to a 22-hour-a-day curfew at an undisclosed location.

“He will be released today or tomorrow,” said a SIAC press officer, releasing the eight-page bail conditions.

The document notably bans Qatada from attending “any mosques”, as well as from leading prayers, giving lectures, or “providing religious instruction” to anyone except his wife and children.

Qatada, who has been convicted of terrorist offences in Jordan, is also banned from associating with a list of named people, including Osama bin Laden, as well as the Al-Qaeda leader’s deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri.

Qatada — who was labelled bin Laden’s “right hand man” by a leading Spanish anti-terror judge — is also banned from publishing any document or making any statement without the Home Secretary’s approval.

Born Omar Mahmud Mohammed Otman in Bethlehem, Qatada arrived in Britain in 1993 on a forged United Arab Emirates passport and claimed asylum, gaining refugee status in 1994.

He disappeared before new anti-terror laws came in after the September 11 attacks in 2001, but was arrested in October 2002 and spent three years in the high-security Belmarsh prison in south-east London.

At the end of the prison term he was released, although made subject to a control order, but returned to jail in August 2005 as part of a crackdown against Islamist extremism after London bombings.

Qatada appealed against his planned deportation to Jordan — where he has been sentenced in his absence to life imprisonment for terrorist offences — at the SIAC court in May last year.

The Home Office is appealing against a decision to block the cleric’s deportation, based on the risk of mistreatment to him in Jordan.

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Arizona says no to REAL ID

Posted by kandylini on June 17, 2008

Source: War on You.

Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano signed a bill today that prohibits the implementation of the REAL ID in Arizona. SB2677 received a Final vote of approval in the House last week by an overwhelming margin of 51 to 1. Napolitano’s signature was uncertain until today when she signed the bill into law.

The bill prohibits implementation of the REAL ID Act of 2005, which was passed by Congress as part of a supplemental spending bill for tsunami relief and the War on Terror. The bill did not receive a hearing in either the House or the Senate, and the public was largely unaware of it until it had already been signed into law.

“Everyone thinks that the REAL ID is just about protecting us against terrorism,” said co-sponsor Senator Karen Johnson (R-18). “But it really represents a cash cow for technology companies as well as the birth of the National ID card, complete with all the biometric information that technology can handle – face recognition, fingerprints, etc.”

“Corporations which specialize in selling identity cards stand to gain millions of dollars in profits if the Real ID Act is implemented,” said Johnson, “so, of course, they’re eager for everyone to be required to carry a National ID card everywhere they go.” Two of those corporations are Digimarc ID Systems and L-1 – the Number 1 and Number 2 companies for the manufacture of state driver’s licenses and identity cards. L-1 is considered the main driver behind the REAL ID and last year had nearly $100 million in federal contracts involving identity cards. Digimarc spent $350,000 in the first six months of 2007 lobbying Congress on the Real ID Act. Apparently the two companies are soon to be merged, resulting in a powerhouse corporation, pushing the “identification-as-security” concept to the maximum in order to increase company profits as they add more and more biometric features to state driver’s licenses.

“It’s misguided to think that identification equals security,” says Johnson. “Identification is just identification – it doesn’t prove intent and it doesn’t stop terrorists. Indeed, terrorists will forge documents – as they always have – to obtain the identification they want to commit crimes. Making U.S. citizens carry identity papers to board a plane or enter a government building stinks,” says Johnson. “It’s odious, onerous, and a violation of our civil liberties.”

“I refuse to be tagged and numbered,” said Johnson. “Requiring people to carry papers takes away their freedom. There are other, better ways to stop terrorism and to protect us against criminals. The federal government needs to butt out and let the states handle driver licensing. It’s not the business of the Dept. of Homeland Security to tell us how to run our state.

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‘Disposable Heroes’: Veterans Used To Test Suicide-Linked Drugs

Posted by kandylini on June 17, 2008

Source: BRIAN ROSS and VIC WALTER, ABC News.

An ABC News and Washington Times Investigation Reveals Vets Are Being Recruited for Government Tests on Drugs with Violent Side Effects

Mentally distressed veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan are being recruited for government tests on pharmaceutical drugs linked to suicide and other violent side effects, an investigation by ABC News and The Washington Times has found.

The report will air on Good Morning America and will also appear in The Washington Times on Tuesday. (click here to read the Washington Times coverage of “Disposable Heroes”)

In one of the human experiments, involving the anti-smoking drug Chantix, Veterans Administration doctors waited more than three months before warning veterans about the possible serious side effects, including suicide and neuropsychiatric behavior.

“Lab rat, guinea pig, disposable hero,” said former US Army sniper James Elliott in describing how he felt he was betrayed by the Veterans Administration.

Elliott, 38, of suburban Washington, D.C., was recruited, at $30 a month, for the Chantix anti-smoking study three years after being diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. He served a 15-month tour of duty in Iraq from 2003-2004.

Months after he began taking the drug, Elliott suffered a mental breakdown, experiencing a relapse of Iraq combat nightmares he blames on Chantix.

“They never told me that I was going to be suicidal, that I would cease sleeping. They never told me anything except this will help me quit smoking,” Elliott told ABC News and The Washington Times.

On the night of February 5th, after consuming a few beers, Elliott says he “snapped” and left his home with a loaded gun.

His fiancee, Tammy, called police and warned, “He’s extremely unstable. He has PTSD.”

“Do you think that he is going to shoot or attack the police?” the 911 dispatcher asked.

“I can’t be certain. I don’t know,” she said. (click here to hear part of Tammy’s 911 call)

“He was operating as if he was back in theater, in combat theater,” she told ABC News. “And of course, a soldier goes nowhere without a gun.”

When police arrived, they found Elliott in the street, with the gun in the front pocket of his hooded sweatshirt.

“Are you going to shoot me? Shoot me,” Elliott said, according to the police report. (click here to see the police report)

Police used a Taser gun to stun Elliott and placed him under arrest.

It wasn’t until three weeks later that the Veterans Administration advised the veterans in the Chantix study that the drug may cause serious side effects, including “anxiety, nervousness, tension, depression, thoughts of suicide, and attempted and completed suicide.”

The VA’s letter to the veterans, on February 29, 2008, followed three warnings from the FDA and Chantix’ maker Pfizer, that were issued on November 20, 2007, January 18, 2008 and February 1, 2008. (click here to read the FDA warning and click here to read Pfizer’s statement on Chantix)

“How this study continued in the face of these difficulties is almost impossible to understand,” said Arthur Caplan, director of the Center for Bioethics at the University of Pennsylvania.

Doctors at the Veterans Administration say they acted as quickly as they could.

“This didn’t justify an emergency warning at that level,” said Dr. Miles McFall, co-administrator of the VA study.

Dr. McFall said there is no proof that Elliott’s breakdown was caused by Chantix and he sees no reason to discontinue the study. Some 140 veterans diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder continue to receive Chantix as part of a smoking cessation study.

Dr. McFall says the VA decided to continue the Chantix study because “it would be depriving our veterans of an effective method of treatment to help them stop smoking.”

Caplan, one of the country’s leading medical ethicists, said he was stunned by the VA’s decision to continue the Chantix experiment.

“Why take the group most a risk and keep them going? That doesn’t make any sense, once you know the risk is there,” he said.

Chantix is one of the drugs being used in an estimated 25 clinical studies using veterans by the VA.

Pfizer maintains that “the benefits of Chantix outweigh the risks” and that it continues to do further studies on the drug.

The FAA has prohibited commercial airline pilots from using Chantix because of its possible side effects.

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How Breast Cancer Became Big Business

Posted by kandylini on June 17, 2008

Source: Anne Landman, Alternet.

“Shopping for a cure” often does more harm than good. Don’t let slick advertisers sucker you into it.

You’ve heard the term “greenwashing.” It refers to corporations that try to appear “green” without reducing their negative impact on the environment.

Since 2002, the group Breast Cancer Action has promoted its “Think Before You Pink” campaign. It’s fighting “pinkwashing,” which is when corporations try to boost sales by associating their products with the fight against breast cancer. Pinkwashing is a form of slacktivism — a campaign that makes people feel like they’re helping solve a problem, while they’re actually doing more to boost corporate profits. Pinkwashing has been around for a while, but is now reaching almost unbelievable levels.

The worst pinkwashers exploit the intense emotions associated with breast cancer while selling products that actually contribute to breast cancer.

So how can the average person recognize pinkwashing? Here are some examples.

BMW’s “Ultimate Drive” and Ford’s “Warriors in Pink” Campaigns

Test drives for the cure? Test drives for the cure? Automaker BMW is in its 12th year of a promotion called “The Ultimate Drive,” in which the company encourages people to test drive luxury BMWs to support breast cancer research. For the promotion, BMW sends a pink-striped fleet of BMW luxury cars to various locations around the country and encourages people to test-drive them, promising to donate $1 per mile driven to breast cancer research.

Besides selling more cars, BMW’s goal is to rack up one million test-driven miles and donate $1 million to cancer research. A laudable goal, but it ignores the fact that the campaign encourages more and unnecessary driving, not to mention that automobile exhaust contains polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, harmful chemicals known to cause cancer. Adding to the purchasing hype, BMW’s “Ultimate Drive” website links to a shopping page where visitors are encouraged to buy pink keychain fobs, pens, handbags, polo shirts, lapel pins and tote bags and other trinkets from “BMW’s Pink Ribbon Collection.”

Ford is also using breast cancer as a marketing tool, promoting a special “Warriors in Pink” Mustang car featuring pink-stitched seats, floor mats with pink breast cancer awareness ribbons, pink pinstriping and a pink ribbon behind the Mustang horse logo. The website for the car states, “Winning the race against breast cancer is going to take a whole lot of horsepower. … Now, the limited edition 2008 V-6 Mustang with Warriors in Pink Package adds more muscle to the fight.” A whopping $250 from the sale of each car will go to Susan G. Komen for the Cure.

Cosmetics sales campaigns

Cosmetic companies also use breast cancer to market their products, especially during October, Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Revlon has a campaign called “Kisses for the Cure” that urges women to buy lipstick to fight breast cancer. Revlon tells women they can “Pucker up and Kiss Breast Cancer Goodbye.”

Shiseido promises to “empower” women by donating a portion of sales of its “Bare Pink Hydro Power Eye Shadow” to a program that supports women who work after their breast cancer treatment.

Estee Lauder sells a $45 “Pink Ribbon Compact” that comes with a little pink ribbon charm attached to it. The company also promotes its “Global Landmarks Illumination Initiative,” in which it bathes the Mall of America, among other landmarks, in pink floodlights to “raise awareness of breast cancer.”

Everyone Is Getting Into the Act

The “Breast Cancer Site” sounds like a website to get information about the disease, but is really a shopping site where visitors can donate towards mammograms by buying products like pink ribbon bamboo socks, goggles for your dog or pink ribbon hologram flip-flops. Ironically, recent research has shown that the ionizing radiation in mammograms may contribute to the onset of breast cancer cancer in women genetically predisposed to the disease.

Breast cancer awareness toasterBreast cancer awareness toasterIf you visit the Target website and search for “breast cancer awareness,” you can purchase everything from pink toasters to pink kitchen mixers to pink bicycles and pink tool kits online. … The list goes on and on.

The Target product descriptions say that “A portion of the Proceeds of the Sale of this Product will be Donated to Further Breast Cancer Awareness Initiatives.” I phoned Target’s customer service department to ask exactly how much is donated to breast cancer programs. Twenty minutes and three customer service representatives later, I finally got someone who told me that the portion donated was five percent, and he “thought” it went to the National Breast Cancer Foundation. According to their website, the National Breast Cancer Foundation also partners with Coca Cola, MasterCard, Lexus, Circuit City, Carl’s Junior, Hardees and Snap-On-Tools, among many other businesses.

It’s All About the Money

How did breast cancer become such big business? Corporations have plunged headlong into re-framing purchasing as a way to fight disease, spurred on by groups like the Susan G. Komen Foundation, which partners with big business to raise money.

Few if any pinkwashers mention ways women can help prevent breast cancer — for example, by quitting smoking, changing their diet, or avoiding unnecessary exposure to harmful chemicals. Some critics say the almost total lack of focus on prevention is because prevention doesn’t make money. It’s much more profitable to make people believe that their consumer purchases are contributing to a “cure.”

Participate Critically in Philanthropy

Breast Cancer Action, an advocacy group that was one of the earliest and most effective critics of pinkwashing, suggests that people ask themselves the following questions before taking part in pink-ribbon campaigns:

  • How much money from my purchase will actually go to the cause?
  • What is the maximum amount that will be donated?
  • How much money was spent marketing the product I want to buy?
  • What organization will get my donation, and what types of programs do they support?
  • What is the product manufacturer doing to assure that its products are not contributing to causing breast cancer?

One thing is absolutely certain: More money will go towards fighting breast cancer if people drop shopping from the equation and send even a minimal contribution directly to a reputable breast cancer research or advocacy organization.

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Jim Goodman: Why you should care how your meat is raised

Posted by kandylini on June 17, 2008

We need to see more articles like this. Not only are you what you eat, you are what the animal you eat ate!

Source: The Capital Times.

I have farmed for 30 years, land that has been in my family since 1848. Farming has gotten pretty intensive; small farms with kids and dogs and sheep and chickens running around are mostly just a fond memory.

Back in the ’70s, U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz urged farmers to plant commodity crops “fence row to fence row” and told us “adapt or die.” It was bad enough when USDA Secretary Ezra Taft Benson told us (in the ’50s) to “get big or get out,” but “adapt or die”?

No matter. American farmers were listening to these two guys because getting big and planting fence row to fence row became gospel. Farms, almost all of them, have become very specialized. Most function as part of the animal production chain, either housing and feeding cattle, pigs and poultry or growing the grain commodities (corn and soy) for all those animals to eat.

Commodity crop farms have gotten large, thousands of acres, and they generally plant corn one year and soy the next, which is pretty hard on the soil. Animals are often raised in concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs), which characteristically confine large numbers of animals either in specialized buildings or outdoor feedlots. Animals may not have access to pasture, outdoors, fresh air or natural light.

Feed may be grown miles or states away from the CAFO, which makes the operations very fossil-fuel-intensive. Hauling manure long distances is not cost-effective since it is mostly water, so CAFO operators may find it difficult to get rid of the manure, which has become a liability. With manure unavailable locally, grain farmers buy commercial fertilizer, which is petroleum-based. Again, fossil-fuel-intensive. Hardly a sustainable system when compared to integrated small farms growing their own crops and recycling the manure.

Farming has evolved to this, it’s gotten big, it’s gotten very dependent on fossil fuel — and if you live next to a CAFO, it has gotten very smelly. The Centers for Disease Control notes that, if you work on or live near a CAFO, it has gotten potentially hazardous to your health as well.

Specialized manure-holding facilities are required, but due to the large volumes produced, heavy rain, snow, storage leaks or improper handling, CAFOs create a very real potential for big manure spills. Thousands of animals, millions of gallons of manure, and you could be asking for problems. According to the CDC, manure can contain pollutants such as antibiotics, pathogens, nitrates, pesticides, hormones, trace elements and heavy metals — none of them good, especially if they enter the drinking water.

CAFOs are convenient for large-scale production that looks to cut costs by packing maximum numbers of animals into minimal space, lowering labor costs and taking advantage of economies of scale. They are also great customers for the corporations that profit from selling fertilizer, crop chemicals, animal feed, hormones and drugs.

Contrary to what the “get big or get out” crowd would have us believe, CAFOs and industrial agriculture are not necessary to feed the world. Small farms are typically more efficient food producers, especially in developing countries where they farm their land more intensively and can achieve four times greater output per acre, while still farming in a sustainable manner.

CAFOs are said to be an efficient cost-effective farming system (if one ignores the cost to the environment, animals living in unnatural conditions, potential for pollution and possible human health concerns). They are necessary only as long as we demand large amounts of grain-fed meat, dairy and eggs. If cheap food is the only priority, they meet the challenge. Most consumers happily hunt for bargains, never questioning the production practices that made the bargains possible. So really, consumers asked for CAFOs, they wanted cheap food, and they weren’t all that concerned where it came from.

If that idea bothers you, start learning about how food is produced, where and by whom. Farmers will operate CAFOs only as long as consumers choose to buy what the CAFO produces.

Jim Goodman is a farmer in Wonewoc and a policy fellow for the Food and Society Fellows Program.

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Increasing Signs of GOP Desperation

Posted by kandylini on June 17, 2008

I get the anti-Obama e-mails Weiner mentions below. I reply by sending some of the articles I post here. The silence is deafening—no responses yet. The average far right voter must know Obama’s going to be winning by a large margin in November, which may be behind all the nasty talk about assassination.

By Bernard Weiner, Co-Editor The Crisis Papers.

Given how low the Republicans have fallen in popularity in the past several years — mainly because of the dire economy, the endemic corruption, the never-ending war in Iraq, the extremist snooping on ordinary Americans, a government that doesn’t function well in emergencies, torture as state policy, etc. — given all that, one would think that the GOP higher-ups would realize that John McCain is heading for an ignominious defeat unless some major policy shifts in the party move it back closer to the middle.

But, no, almost as if they have an uncontrollable death-wish, the Republicans remain locked into a self-destructive separation from the popular will. Either that or they simply are incapable of thinking straight after eight years of sensory-deprivation in the dark CheneyBush spin chamber.

The public in general has moved ahead of the politicians in so many areas: opposing the endless Iraq occupation, tolerant of same-sex relationships, eager to move beyond divisive race politics, desirous of effective regulation of food and product safety, even more supportive of Social Security and Medicare, open to major health-care reform, etc. Yet those in charge of the Republican Party continue to hitch their wagon to the old extremist shibboleths that play well mainly to the fundamentalist and Old South base, which by this time is barely 25% of the electorate.

This status-quo tropism in the GOP may be great for Democrats in the November election, but may be horrifically bad for the body politic in general, keeping in play the worst sorts of divisive, hate-filled rhetoric both for the presidential campaign and the next four years in Congress.

Indeed, one could make the case that at least a good share of Barack Obama’s popularity rests on the public’s perception that he is trying to move America away from the extreme rhetoric practiced by both major parties in the past several years and back to a more rational, positive way of conducting politics in the 21st century so that something positive actually can be accomplished in Washington.

SPREADING THE MANURE

McCain occasionally makes little noises about trying to rein in the rabid rightwing pundits and agitproppers out there acting on his behalf, but he takes no practical steps, for example, to stop the filth from spewing out against Obama. The clear implication is that he’s happy to seem to be keeping his hands clean, while he gains from the noxious bile and lies spread by those supporting a McCain presidency.

It’s the tried-and-true dirty politics tactics perfected by the GOP masters of the trade: Roger Ailes, Lee Atwater, Karl Rove, et al. Rove, by the way, is not as divorced from the political campaigns as he pretends to be; he is serving the McCain campaign as a consultant.

Staring at a possible Democratic sweep in November and facing increasing unpopularity in the electorate, GOP strategists are using all the old Roveian techniques of smear and distortion against Obama, hitting him and wife Michelle with all sorts of claptrap bullbleep (“terrorist fist-jab,” “flag-lapel pins,” “baby mama,” “whitey,” “Pastor Wright,” “not reciting the Pledge of Allegiance,” “not born in America”, etc.)

All that nonsense about Obama being a Muslim, or not being a native-born American citizen, or not reciting the Pledge of Allegiance, or not supporting Israel with enough fervor — all the effects of those false rumors could be stopped in their tracks if McCain, supposedly Mr. Integrity, stepped up to the plate and forthrightly condemned them and those passing them around the internet. But he doesn’t, and, sad to say, he probably won’t.

ROVE’S BIG-LIE TECHNIQUE

Rove’s theory of how to ruin your opponent goes something like this: It’s OK to tell the most outrageous lies about someone, even if those rumors can be countered by actual facts, because you’re not after voters necessarily believing what you say. What you want to do is to confuse them over time — so that eventually they might think where there’s smoke, there might well be fire, that type of reasoning. It’s propaganda chaff you’re dispersing. Some of it will stick and be believed, some of it will simply be ignored, some of it will remain floating out there in peoples’ minds. Since most voters don’t pay attention all the time, the meme might actually influence what and how they believe and could pay off on Election Day.

For example, I don’t know about you but I’ve received countless anti-Obama emails aimed at voters, especially Jewish voters, that assert that Obama is a Muslim (“check out his middle name”), and that he got hate-indoctrinated in extremist “madrassa” schools in Indonesia.

When I was in South Florida recently, I asked a politically-connected Jewish leader how Obama was doing among Jewish voters in that state. “Not well,” he said. “A lot of Jews, especially older Jews, will not vote for him.” “Is it because he’s black?” I asked. “Yes, many believe that way. But so many also believe Obama is, by association, anti-Semitic, that he’s Muslim, and/or that he would sell Israel down the river to placate militant Islam. The facts don’t matter. They want to believe all this nonsense.” The beneficiary of this way of thinking, of course, is McCain, even though some of his religious advisors have made clearly anti-Jewish (and anti-Catholic) statements, which, of course, were not well-reported by the mainstream media. The point for many older Florida Jews seems to be that McCain is white, old, and a gung-ho advocate of wars against Muslims in the Middle East. Ergo, even though Jews historically have voted overwhelmingly Democratic, there will be fewer such Florida votes than expected for Obama in November, though the Illinois senator is picking up much of the younger Jewish vote.

More examples of Rove’s technique of spreading the Big Lie have surfaced in recent days. So desperate is the lame-duck CheneyBush Administration and its huge energy conglomerate supporters to start pumping for oil offshore and in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) that such GOP luminaries as Dick Cheney, George Will and Congresswoman Jean Schmidt last week stated unequivocally that China was now drilling for oil 60 miles off the U.S. coastline. Pure B.S., not happening, but these GOP heavies just say whatever they want in an effort to move their extreme agenda. Even if they have to retract, the time-release meme is already located deep in the recesses of the collective mind of the electorate and, they hope, could pay off down the line.

THE INCITEMENT OF MURDER

But often, using such national leaders as Cheney, Bush and Rove as role-models (after all, they were able to lie and deceive America into an unnecessary war and occupation), it’s not just lies and innuendo and rumor being peddled by the agitprop pundits of the HardRight. Sometimes the activity and speech of the GOP operatives crosses over the line into downright incitement of illegal acts, for which nobody ever is criminally charged, of course.

For example, taking off from Ann Coulter’s earlier incitements (she said that liberals are “traitors” who deserve to be shot, a Supreme Court justice should be poisoned, the New York Times building should be bombed with the reporters and editors inside it, etc.), two noted conservative pundits in recent weeks seemed to be suggesting that assassination of political opponents was a reasonable political option in the name of victory.

Fox News’ veteran reporter Liz Trotta recently said: “If it could,” the U.S. should “take out” both Barrack Obama and Osama bin Laden. And radio talk-show host Michael Reagan (Ronald Reagan’s son) said that an anti-war activist trying to influence U.S. military forces in Iraq should be tied to a post on a firing range and shot by the American troops.

In a similar vein, Andy McCarthy at National Review said, in response to the Supreme Court ruling that Guantanamo detainees have the right to contest their imprisonment in civilian courts, the U.S. should round up all the detainees there and just slaughter them en masse.

Laura Ingraham on Fox News was more circumspect about the court’s decision last week, confining her opposition to recommending a violation of the presidential oath to faithfully execute the laws of the land: If she were President, she averred, “I would have said at this point, that’s very interesting that the court decided this, but I’m not going to respect the decision of the court because my job is to keep this country safe.”

CAN WE ASSUME AN HONEST ELECTION?

There are more such examples, but you see the pattern. The Far Right, which has had its way with the law and with controlling the ideological parameters during the past eight years, could well lose those powers via the ballot box, so it’s pulling out all the stops in a desperate attempt to stop the future or, at the least, to minimize GOP losses.

We all, but especially Republicans this time out, have to expand our thinking beyond the damage we can do to our opponents. A former McCain stalwart parses it this way:

“Simply put: Republican strategists who think that business-as-usual — i.e., the slanderous politics of the past 30 years — will take care of matters this time around are deluded. Worse than that, they will doom the reputation of the Republican Party and turn it into a marginal footnote of American history if they keep trivializing this historic event. That is too bad because, as I said, we need a two party system.”

As everyone understands, there is so much riding on the November election, which, one would think from the early polls, should yield a major defeat for the Republicans. But this assumes that the November election is reasonably honest and that, despite the GOP’s voter-suppression maneuvers, Democratic or third-party voters come out in such massive numbers that, seeing the overwhelmingly anti-GOP pre-vote polls and the post-election exit polls, vote-manipulators would not dare fiddle with the tabulations. But if that Democrat/third-party surge doesn’t happen and McCain were, say, to take 45% of the actual vote, the mainstream-media spinners could hype the possibility of a GOP victory in key states and the Republican corporations that tabulate the votes with their secret software could serreptitiously make up the needed percentage points for victory. (For more on all this, see Mark Crispin Millers’ new book, “Loser Take All: Election Fraud and The Subversion of Democracy,” and Ernest Partridge’s articles “Where’s the Outrage?” and “According to Plan?”).

Would Bush&Co. be willing to try something fraudulent like that in November? Aside from the fact that the evidence suggests they already have in previous elections, imagine yourself facing possible criminal indictments and time in the federal slammer, standing in the war-crimes dock at The Hague, and losing all the riches and power you’ve built up over eight years — you might be tempted, too.

MR. FLIPPITY-FLOPPITY

Even John McCain, supposedly Mr. Straight-Talker, has turned into Mr. Flippity-Floppity, as he, desperate to nail down the GOP base vote, tries to run from his former, somewhat more moderate positions.

As Digby writes: “There is nothing — nothing — that John McCain won’t do or say to get elected.” It’s clear that McCain sold his political soul to the Dark Side when he decided in 2006 to make another run for the White House, and he isn’t going back to the principled GOP maverick so many once knew and admired. How he lives with himself these days, I can’t even guess.

The lesson in all this is that when a candidate or party is staring at likely defeat, it is not uncommon for them to flail out in desperation against their opposition. That either works or, in this case, is so obvious and short-sightedly mean-spirited that the public, in revulsion against such tactics, turns against them even more eagerly at the ballot box.

Let it be so.

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Bad Cow Disease

Posted by kandylini on June 17, 2008

When push comes to shove, it seems, the imperatives of crony capitalism trump professed faith in free markets.” The free market is never truly free from the heavy hand of government, especially if it looks like Big Business will take a Big Hit. But you and me, we’re “free” to fail without any bailouts.

Source: PAUL KRUGMAN, New York Times.

“Mary had a little lamb / And when she saw it sicken / She shipped it off to Packingtown / And now it’s labeled chicken.”

That little ditty famously summarized the message of “The Jungle,” Upton Sinclair’s 1906 exposé of conditions in America’s meat-packing industry. Sinclair’s muckraking helped Theodore Roosevelt pass the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act — and for most of the next century, Americans trusted government inspectors to keep their food safe.

Lately, however, there always seems to be at least one food-safety crisis in the headlines — tainted spinach, poisonous peanut butter and, currently, the attack of the killer tomatoes. The declining credibility of U.S. food regulation has even led to a foreign-policy crisis: there have been mass demonstrations in South Korea protesting the pro-American prime minister’s decision to allow imports of U.S. beef, banned after mad cow disease was detected in 2003.

How did America find itself back in The Jungle?

It started with ideology. Hard-core American conservatives have long idealized the Gilded Age, regarding everything that followed — not just the New Deal, but even the Progressive Era — as a great diversion from the true path of capitalism.

Thus, when Grover Norquist, the anti-tax advocate, was asked about his ultimate goal, he replied that he wanted a restoration of the way America was “up until Teddy Roosevelt, when the socialists took over. The income tax, the death tax, regulation, all that.”

The late Milton Friedman agreed, calling for the abolition of the Food and Drug Administration. It was unnecessary, he argued: private companies would avoid taking risks with public health to safeguard their reputations and to avoid damaging class-action lawsuits. (Friedman, unlike almost every other conservative I can think of, viewed lawyers as the guardians of free-market capitalism.)

Such hard-core opponents of regulation were once part of the political fringe, but with the rise of modern movement conservatism they moved into the corridors of power. They never had enough votes to abolish the F.D.A. or eliminate meat inspections, but they could and did set about making the agencies charged with ensuring food safety ineffective.

They did this in part by simply denying these agencies enough resources to do the job. For example, the work of the F.D.A. has become vastly more complex over time thanks to the combination of scientific advances and globalization. Yet the agency has a substantially smaller work force now than it did in 1994, the year Republicans took over Congress.

Perhaps even more important, however, was the systematic appointment of foxes to guard henhouses.

Thus, when mad cow disease was detected in the U.S. in 2003, the Department of Agriculture was headed by Ann M. Veneman, a former food-industry lobbyist. And the department’s response to the crisis — which amounted to consistently downplaying the threat and rejecting calls for more extensive testing — seemed driven by the industry’s agenda.

One amazing decision came in 2004, when a Kansas producer asked for permission to test its own cows, so that it could resume exports to Japan. You might have expected the Bush administration to applaud this example of self-regulation. But permission was denied, because other beef producers feared consumer demands that they follow suit.

When push comes to shove, it seems, the imperatives of crony capitalism trump professed faith in free markets.

Eventually, the department did expand its testing, and at this point most countries that initially banned U.S. beef have allowed it back into their markets. But the South Koreans still don’t trust us. And while some of that distrust may be irrational — the beef issue has become entangled with questions of Korean national pride, which has been insulted by clumsy American diplomacy — it’s hard to blame them.

The ironic thing is that the Agriculture Department’s deference to the beef industry actually ended up backfiring: because potential foreign buyers didn’t trust our safety measures, beef producers spent years excluded from their most important overseas markets.

But then, the same thing can be said of other cases in which the administration stood in the way of effective regulation. Most notably, the administration’s refusal to countenance any restraints on predatory lending helped prepare the ground for the subprime crisis, which has cost the financial industry far more than it ever made on overpriced loans.

The moral of this story is that failure to regulate effectively isn’t just bad for consumers, it’s bad for business.

And in the case of food, what we need to do now — for the sake of both our health and our export markets — is to go back to the way it was after Teddy Roosevelt, when the Socialists took over. It’s time to get back to the business of ensuring that American food is safe.

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