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February 25, 2003
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(AP Photo/Jerome Delay)
The LA Times today tells the story of 68-year-old
Godfrey Meynell
, MBE, a British aristocrat who has lived and worked in Yemen and has a lifetime
of experience as an activist. Part of the first red double-decker bus full
of voluntary human shields to arrive in Iraq, Meynell has taken up residence
in a South Baghdad power plant that was bombed during the 1991 Gulf War.
Meynell is no fan of Saddam.
Meynell to me represents what the voluntary human shield movement is really
about. Please read his story and what he has to say. I wish I had his courage.
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7:38:46 PM
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AlterNet explains why
hydrogen is not
, at least in the short run, a clean or renewable energy alternative, and
may in fact detract from important renewable energy programs already getting
traction.
In the International Herald Tribune, 80-year-old
Norman Mailer weighs in
with a warning that the U.S. has already attained a "pre-fascistic atmosphere"
and that, alas, fascism, not democracy, may be the natural state for nations.
Robert Scheer brings to our attention this remarkable excerpt from
Colin Powell
's 1995 autobiography:
"I recently read
Bernard Fall's book on Vietnam, 'Street Without Joy.' Fall makes painfully
clear that we had almost no understanding of what we had gotten ourselves
into. I cannot help thinking that if President Kennedy or President Johnson
had spent a quiet weekend at Camp David reading that perceptive book, they
would have returned to the White House Monday morning and immediately started
to figure out a way to extricate us from the quicksand of Vietnam."
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1:05:38 PM
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The U.S.
supreme court
just sent the case of a black Texas death row inmate back to a lower court,
ruling that the judge and the lower court unfairly allowed systematic racial
bias in jury selection to go unchallenged. Three guesses who the only dissenting
judge was?
The Economist reports a
breakthrough in fibre optics
(subscriber-only story) called Photonic Crystal Fibres (PCFs)
, which may enable tremendous advances in the miniaturization of testing
equipment, increased efficiency and longevity of fibre cabling, and the manipulation
of single atoms.
In the search for blame for accounting regularities of
Royal Ahold NV
, the world's third largest retailer, which resulted in restatements of at
least $500 million and the collapse of Ahold's share price, the BBC says
the problem may lie in loose regulations governing foreign operations of
Dutch parent companies. Many companies base their global or European operations
in the Netherlands for tax reasons and to simplify regulatory requirements.
The discrepancies involve overbooking of promotional allowances (amounts
kicked back to the retailer by suppliers for promotion of their brands) in
U.S. and possibly South American operations.
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11:56:27 AM
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CNet is
praising
new blogging tools that will allow bloggers to phone in an audio clip to
their blog (audioblogging) and/or post wirelessly (moblogging or mobile blogging).
Since one of the critical elements of blogs is links, I'm not sure how either
of these will work. Anyone tried this? |
2:37:14 AM
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© Copyright 2004
Dave Pollard.
Last update:
19/02/2004; 2:39:34 PM. |
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