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Archive for June 25th, 2008

Patriot Act Used as Excuse to Withhold Dam Safety Inspection Information from Press

Posted by kandylini on June 25, 2008

Comment from Michael Rivero:

Translation: The dams, like the levees and bridges, have been neglected by the government for going on 8 years now. Some are in danger of immediate collapse. But, we don;t want to warn the people downstream that they may be in danger because it might lower property values aid Al Qaeda.

Source: Joe Strupp, Editor and Publisher.

NEW YORK News outlets seeking inspection and safety data on local dams, in light off the recent string of floods in the Midwest, have been stonewalled by government officials who have withheld such data as part of the Patriot Act, according to Investigative Reporters and Editors.

IRE Data Base Library Director Jeremy Milarsky, who oversees the group’s handling of data requests from news organizations, said at least a dozen news outlets requested such background data on dam inspections from IRE in the last week. He said that is up from the usual three or four in any given year.

Such information, however, has been unavailable since 2002, when the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers began rejecting such requests as part of a U.S. Patriot Act stipulation.

“Among other things, the data included when each dam was last inspected, whether there was an evacuation plan for the area, and whether there was populated area close to the dam that would be impacted,” Milarsky said. “It is basically a list of dams with information about how safe the dams were.”

Milarsky said the data for nearly 70,000 dams is in the data base, which IRE had access to prior to 2002 when the Patriot Act changes took effect. He adds that IRE has annually requested access to the data, being rejected each time.

“The searchable database comprising the NID (National Inventory of Dams) concerns dams that meet the definition of ‘critical infrastructure’ as defined by the USA Patriot Act of 2001,” the last rejection letter from the Department of the Army, sent to IRE in June 2007, stated. It later adds that the requested database “contains certain information that constitutes a vulnerability assessment.”

Timothy L. Felker, the Army Corps of Engineers counsel who wrote the letter, could not immediately be reached for comment Wednesday.

Milarsky said keeping such information from the press, and the public, adds to safety concerns. “Reporters last week, all over the country, were asking officials about the infrastructure designed to protect people during flooding,” he explained. “This is one more category of infrastructure that is a very useful tool for investigations.”

James Wilkerson, a data editor for the Des Moines Register, is one of the journalists who recently sought the dam data from IRE, only to find it was withheld. “With all of the problems with the flooding, the information would be very useful,” he told E&P. “It makes it hard for the public to understand how these dams are maintained.”

Among IRE’s many activities is maintaining such data for reporters to access. Last year, after the tragic Minnesota bridge collapse, the organization was swamped with requests for bridge inspection data, which was available.

“The public interest in being updated on the condition of these dams outweighs the security concerns about giving out the information,” said IRE Executive Director Mark Horvit. “Our concern is that this information is important to the public because it talks about inspection data and safety.”

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Homage to Muckraker Izzy Stone: Secrets & Lies

Posted by kandylini on June 25, 2008

By Bernard Weiner, Co-Editor, The Crisis Papers.

Lies, big or small, are corrosive worms that can weaken foundations of trust, influence how events are framed, injure the liar as well as those lied to. When those untruths come from private individuals, the consequences usually are contained. When public officials lie, the moral dry-rot can be wide-ranging, sometimes leading to catastrophic results (read: Iraq).

I.F. Stone, one of my journalistic heroes from the ’50s and ’60s (“I.F. Stone’s Weekly”), believed, correctly, that all governments lie and it is up to reporters to ferret out the truth. Izzy, who died in 1989, once regaled me by confessing that his greatest journalistic joy was in finding hidden truths in public documents at the local library or Library of Congress or in one-paragraph fillers in the newspapers or buried amidst the final paragraphs in long stories in the mainstream press. A good journalist, he said, doesn’t have to make anything up; the truth of what’s really going on is right there in the open, ripe for the picking if you know where to look, and how to look. And, most importantly — do you hear, mainstream-media reporters?? — if you’re willing to look.

So what I’d like to do here is to browse through some current events and see what can be learned politically, socially, personally, from nuggets of news unearthed from the daily newspaper in the past few days. Here we go:

1. “DISAPPEARING” THE ANGER

What happens, and what is being said, when bureaucrats bring political sensibilities into the designs of a public artist?

It often happens. For example: Maya Lin’s emotionally powerful Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., a black granite wall emerging from the earth with the names of the fallen etched into its reflective surface. Lin was forced by conservative opposition in the early 1980s to share the memorial grounds with a traditional sculpture of three soldiers. The two memorials don’t mesh at all. (If you hang around and watch where the three million annual visitors to the memorial grounds go, it’s directly to Lin’s non-traditional Vietnam Veterans Wall, with few even paying attention to the aesthetically irrelevant three-soldiers sculpture next to it.)

Now the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial is being planned for the National Mall in Washington, D.C. An artist recently showed his rendering of the Rev. King sculpture to the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts, the federal panel that oversees monuments and memorials on the Mall. According to a three-paragraph story in my local newspaper, the commissioners indicated that the statue made King look “confrontational” and suggested that the sculpture be altered “both in form and modeling.” The reaction of the artist was to alter the design by turning up King’s mouth slightly to indicate the hint of a smile.

That was the extent of the little story. What can we learn from this?

The demand by the commissioners reminds one of Stalinist editing. Someone out of favor with the Soviet dictator? Airbrush him out of the photo. Don’t like the way a novelist writes? Send him to the gulag. Object to a playwright’s words? Have the censor remove them.

In this instance, the forces of reaction are demonstrating that they don’t like blacks to be seen as angry or confrontational (formerly called “uppity”). So a softening smile appears on the civil rights activist who probably was one of the most confrontational social leaders in American history, able to transform justifiable African-American anger into a non-violent confrontational movement of huge and lasting impact.

Much of white America in 2008 would prefer to believe that the racial problem is over and done with or at least well on its way to being solved. Barack Obama is a candidate for the presidency — therefore, they reason, black anger and frustration are unnecessary.

If you want more evidence of where this anger comes from, and why it won’t disappear for a long long time, check out a new book by the award-winning Wall Street Journal writer Douglas Blackmon, “Slavery By Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II.” Blackmon convincingly argues that a brutal era of economic/political “neo-slavery” took hold in the American South after the Civil War, and was largely tolerated by whites in the North and by the federal and state judicial systems up until post-World War II. Only after the fallout from that war, the integration and affirmative-action rulings by the Supreme Court and the historic voting rights- and civil rights-legislation pushed through in the mid-1960s by President Lyndon Johnson as a result of courageous civil-rights activists, did the Jim Crow system finally begin to break apart. (I grew up in the post-war South, so can vouch for the accuracy of Blackmon’s thesis.)

Here’s the transcript of a fascinating interview with Blackmon on PBS’ “Bill Moyer’s Journal” from last Friday.

So, public artists, you’ve been given your marching orders. Remember: Public art should make people feel good — and “patriotic.” When in doubt, add an American flag. Yep, that’s what the U.S. Commission on Fine Arts did to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, just in case visitors get confused as to what country they are living in.

2. DEMS’ WAR-FUNDING CAVE

By now, everyone has heard the essence of the news about the House Democrats’ total cave on two vital legislative issues: continued funding for the Iraq Occupation and the passage of so-called “compromise” FISA legislation — the latter generally approved of by no less than the now-titular head of the party, Senator Obama.

All that was covered in the headlines. But below the surface, what’s going on?

On the war-funding bill, the Democrats, with a straight face, claim they got huge “concessions” from the Administration by getting Bush to allow them to add funds for Iraq veterans’ education and better post-battle health care, plus extended benefits to the unemployed in this dire economy and aid to flooded-out Iowa farmers — as long the Dems provided the monies to continue the war/occupation. In other words, CheneyBush got what they wanted: an unfettered OK to continue waging war without Congress constantly breathing down their necks trying to get a withdrawal started.

But why were the Democrats so conciliatory on the war issue? At least a good share of the reason has to do with the coming November balloting, scared of going into the general-election campaign without having supplied “our brave young men and women” in Iraq the required funds for their armed support. Conveniently ignored is the fact that the corrupt Iraq rathole, which has eaten up an estimated $1 trillion, has sucked up at least $15 billion that the Administration cannot account for. The Pentagon auditors have absolutely no idea which corrupt contractors, subcontractors, warlords or government officials ripped them off. Nor does the Bush Administration even profess to care much about the obvious thievery — hey, it’s just taxpayers’ money.

But whatever the Dems’ public rationalization for continuing to fund the war without at least adding some language to get U.S. troops out of that quagmire soon, the point is that even though Bush has the support of barely 23% of the population on the war and most every other issue, the Democrats continue to behave as if they must bow to his superior will. No wonder the public holds Congress in such disfavor as craven, self-destructive wimps. This is why progressives this time out are running against a good many Blue Dog Democrats, who tend to vote with the Republicans on key issues.

3. THE WEAK-KNEED CAVE ON FISA

But what about the revamped FISA bill, which the Democratic leadership and the White House referred to as a “compromise” that both sides could agree to? As far as I can see, rhe Democrats essentially gave CheneyBush all that they asked for: retroactive legalization of what they’ve done in terms of warrantless domestic spying, and retroactive immunity to the telecom giants for their cooperation in the lawbreaking, even without a court first determining what those corporations actually did.

The White House claims that under the “exclusivity” rule now passed, the White House can no longer act totally on its own when it wants surreptitiously to tap citizens’ phone calls, read their emails, rifle through their computer files. Under the new bill passed by the House, from now on all such domestic spying must be done through the rules established by Congress under FISA.

But those rules are an open invitation to further abuse by the Executive Branch. For one thing, those rules are pretty much what Congress authorized in 1978 when setting up the FISA (Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act) Court as a reaction to the gross misuse of intelligence and secret files by the Nixon Administration. George W. Bush, even prior to 9/11, broke the law by authorizing domestic spying outside of the FISA requirements. He paid no penalty then, and apparently will not now, for his criminal behavior — not even an impeachment hearing on the charges. So in the bill passed last week, Congress is saying to the Chief Executive: “Don’t ever do that again,” but has provided no penalties if Bush or the next President decides to do it again anyway. And, they will, of course. If you build it, they will come.

And what of the Democratic leadership, especially Obama, going along so meekly as the Fourth Amendment and other Constitutional protections against autocratic rule were being shredded in this bill? What’s going on? (Obama says he’ll fight against the telecom immunity provision in the Senate, but he knows he’ll lose there; the real fight was in the House, where Hoyer and Pelosi aggressively engineered the deal.)

It’s possible that Obama, seeing the Oval Office in his near future, doesn’t want to be boxed in by Congressional restrictions. Maybe he even believes in the need for draconian legislation to keep an eye on the Bad Guys, with the constitutional rights of ordinary citizens considered unfortunate “collateral damage.” But he’s given no such indications in previous speeches and actions, and he did vote against telecom immunity in last year’s version of a similar bill. But candidates who become office-holders, swooning with the perfume of power in their nostrils, have been known to alter their principles.

Or maybe what we’re witnessing is merely the time-honored dance to the center by candidates who’ve emerged victorious in the primaries by playing to their party’s more narrow activist base and now must try to guarantee the election by going after the large middle part of the electorate, who are more cautious and moderate in their views. The blogger Digby calls Obama’s current position a conscious political “strategy” rather than a capitulation. My guess is that shortly we’ll start to see more such maneuvering toward the center by John McCain, once he’s pandered and coddled the Republicans in the extreme rightwing of the party, who regard the former GOP “maverick” McCain with some suspicion about the depth of his conservative beliefs. Even with all the flip-flopping to the right from his former more-moderate positions, he’s still looked at askance by the “true conservatives.”

I think the blogger Atrios summed up the situation well in terms of our expectations of a President Obama: “It’ll be no shock to most of us if Obama is less than all we want him to be in many ways. Let’s just hope he’s more than we expect him to be in others.”

I think Obama, despite his built-in weaknesses and the usual politician’s tendency to try to be all things to all people, has within him the potential for greatness. But we progressives and independents sure are going to have to be alert and constantly keep his feet to the political fire, lest he wander off into the usual Beltway byways, beholden to too many establishment interests.

Too bad I.F. Stone isn’t still around. He would salivate at the possibility of dealing with a good but wavering Democrat.

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Health Benefits of Japanese Cuisine: “Vegetarian” Superfoods

Posted by kandylini on June 25, 2008

Nothing gets my hackles up more than health articles that don’t get the facts right. Many of them, like this one, imply that Japanese cuisine in general is vegetarian. Nothing could be farther from the truth. What is the foundation of Japanese cooking? Dashi stock made with fish. Miso soup is traditionally made with dashi, and it is used as a base for many dishes, even ones that don’t contain meat. This goes for other Asian cuisines as well.

So a dish that looks like this:

has lots of this:

The article has a recipe for miso that doesn’t contain fish stock. No Japanese person in her right mind would make such a travesty.

Source: Neil McLaughlin, Natural News.

The vegetarian choices at your favorite sushi restaurant are both earth-friendly and extremely nutritious. In this article (the first of a two part series) we will examine some of the many vegetables and fermented foods used in Japanese Cuisine. At the end of this article is a recipe for miso soup.

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Heel prick blood tests DO hurt your baby, says study

Posted by kandylini on June 25, 2008

File under “duh.”

Source: David Derbyshire, Mail Online.

Babies may find heel prick blood tests far more painful than doctors realise, a study suggests.

Researchers say some procedures often carried out on newborn infants trigger a pain response in the brain – even though the children appear to be unperturbed.

The findings could have implications for the way seriously ill babies are treated in hospital, particularly those given repeated injections or blood tests.

Past studies have shown that babies who do experience a lot of pain in the first few months of life can develop extreme sensitivity to pain as they get older.

Dr Rebeccah Slater, who carried out the study at University College London, said doctors needed better methods for assessing the suffering of babies.

Conventional measures of infant pain, which look for changing heart rates and grimaces, may underestimate what they are feeling.

‘Some babies go through many painful procedures each day,’ she said. ‘There is a risk it can change the way that they respond to pain in the future.’

Dr Slater and colleagues studied the reaction of 12 premature babies in hospital while having a heel prick test, a technique used to take blood from the feet of infants.

Every newborn baby is given the heel prick within the first couple of days of birth.

The blood samples are used to detect a range of rare life-threatening diseases including cystic fibrosis, sickle cell disease and congenital hypothyroidism.

Some babies cry and grimace when having the heel prick test. But others appear oblivious.

The scientists looked for signs of pain during 33 heel prick tests.

The researchers compared the results of standard techniques of measuring pain – such as changing heart rate, grimacing, flared nostrils and narrowed eyes – with near infra-red spectroscopy brain scans, a technique that detects changes in brain activity.

They found that the scans of parts of the brain involved in handling pain recorded far higher pain levels than the standard tests, they report in the journal Public Library of Science Medicine.

On ten occasions the brain scan revealed that the baby was in pain even though they did not grimace or cry.

Although the study was small, the scientists say doctors could underestimate the pain experienced by babies.

‘We really don’t know what a baby is feeling when it appears to be in pain,’ said Dr Slater. ‘But in adults, activity in the same part of the brain is strongly correlated with pain.

‘We want to develop better techniques to understand infant pain. Adults can tell each other when they are in pain, but babies cannot.’

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