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7 entries this month
 

09:06 Feb 28 2011
Times Read: 708


Everyone should watch this. It's about time the mainstream media showed the TRUTH!




COMMENTS

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17:51 Feb 13 2011
Times Read: 727


"I want to tell Americans that they can sleep safe tonight because this man, I, am willing to stand in the gap, to do the violent and necessary things to keep you safe. We here are willing to forfeit our lives in order to keep our boarders secure and our enemies from breaching. So rest safe."



Thought that was nice.


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07:18 Feb 10 2011
Times Read: 733


Question, if capitalism is so horrid and socialism so great why then are the rabid socialist states piles of dog doo?



Last I recall at the hight of Soviet power the bulk of their population lived in poverty. The bulk of the population in China, N. Korea, Venezuela and others are all poor, their working conditions dreadful, economies weak, infrastructure either non-existent or breaking down, major environmental damage and the places lack basic human rights protections and corruption control.



Our system may not be perfect but it's a hell of a lot better.



I'm paraphrasing Ronald Reagan, 'we must have a basic economic foundation where no citizen should live below it.'

That doesn't mean we take money from everyone else and give it to others, it doesn't mean the government should send them a check each month and it doesn't mean the government should regulate our system and make it its responsibility to hold up every single person.

It means that we, the private sector, should build our nation, should grow our industries, should create opportunities and increase educational options so that no US citizen should be faced with not being able to live a decent life, according to their own ability to work and better themselves.



The government regulated and signed treaties that sent the jobs overseas and made it worth the giant CEOs while to send the work over.



As for the government creating jobs:



The U.S. Post Service was established in 1775. They had 234 years to get it right and it is broke.



Social Security was established in 1935, had 74 years to get it right and it is broke.



Fannie Mae was established in 1938, had 71 years to get it right and it is broke.



War on Poverty started in 1964, had 45 years to get it right; $1 trillion of our money is confiscated each year and transferred to "the poor" and they only want more.



Medicare and Medicaid were established in 1965, had 44 years to get it right and they are broke.



Freddie Mac was established in 1970, had 39 years to get it right and it is broke.



The Department of Energy was created in 1977 to lessen our dependence on foreign oil. It has ballooned to 16,000 employees with a budget of $24 billion a year and we import more oil than ever before. They had 32 years to get it right and it is an abysmal failure.



Get the story right and remember the history.


COMMENTS

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ToiletDuc
ToiletDuc
07:23 Mar 03 2011

Socialism is crap. Communism would be great if it could ever actually work.





 

On Egypt and the Middle East, 2011

01:16 Feb 08 2011
Times Read: 741


On Egypt and the Middle East, 2011



Over the past several weeks and indeed months the expanded Middle Eastern world, stretching from Pakistan in the east to Morocco in the west, has begun to catch fire. I’m not an expert on the dealings of the Middle East but I know a good bit about politics, history and the desires of people on many sides of the ideological spectrum. These are just some observations I’ve made and all the facts can be easily verifiable with much of the information being hard not to find so it’s not like this is just some random invented conspiracy theory. But I do want to stress that this is just a train of thought and potential connections to try and explain the interesting nature of the events in Egypt particularly.



Here is a timeline of events;

Dec 2010- Jan 2011: Tunisia

Jan 9-15/30, 2011: Sudan

Jan 14- present: Jordan

Jan 25- present: Egypt

Jan 26- present: Syria

Jan 27- present: Yemen

There are a number of smaller protests & riots in at least 4 other regional countries.



-- In Tunisia after a number of large protests and riots the president was ousted and forced to leave the country.



-- The events in Sudan have been going on for many years. After a 20 year civil war and widespread ethnic cleansing, primarily from Islamic and government forces against the minority Christian and tribal peoples, southern Sudan voted for independence. Between Jan 9-15, 2011 the people of southern Sudan held a referendum and the final results released Jan 30 showed that 98.8% of the southern population supported independence. One group that has been linked to the troubles in Sudan is known as the Muslim Brotherhood.



-- In Jordan similar protests occurred and the Jordanian king fired his Cabinet members in hopes of appeasing the people. There is also a Muslim Brotherhood connection.



-- The events in Egypt have been very complex and will have widespread results. Egypt has long been a US ally and a relatively stable force in the Middle East. Since Hosni Mubarak took power some 30 years ago Egypt has also taken a fairly peaceful stance toward Israel. Although the protests are new the problems leading up to them have been building for a long time. Despite the government’s pro-US stance and period of general economic success (compared to other countries) the government has also kept tight control over the media, political dissent and the military instead of the people have held control for much of Egypt’s modern history. Because of higher food prices, unemployment and a dictatorship the people have been ready to revolt however the reasons why they revolted now, 30 years after Mubarak took over, is something we should look into.



-- Syria has seen protests and deaths but the result and end of protests has yet to be seen.



-- Yemen, there have been relatively minor protests and their president pledged he wouldn’t seek another term.



Now back to Egypt. Egypt has been a US strategic ally for many years and they’ve had the same autocratic regime for decades. When you look at the whole situation, the way its unfolded, how it started, its current status, it all seems to be a bit suspect.



For example, this has been the largest demonstration in Egypt for many many years. If 250 people gathered in protest in Nov. 2009 they would have been met with a crushing police and even military response. But for some odd reason hundreds of thousands of people have been allowed to gather now with extreme tolerance by the government.



The protests began Jan 25th , a day chosen to coincide with the holiday “National Police Day”, but during that time the Egyptian military (which pretty much controls the nation) was preparing for very important talks here in the US about their military foreign aid. On Jan 29th their top brass were all at the Pentagon and so any response to these protests would have been slow and indeed the Egyptian government was very slow to respond. Anyone who has access to information and who knows about foreign aid talks would have known that the leaders of the Egyptian military would be out of the country for a period of time and it would be a relatively safe period to launch or at least inflame the protests.



Another curiosity is that Egypt has a population of 80 million and yet large protests only erupted in Cairo and Alexandria. Even though the police and military were ordered to not fire on the protestors the growth of the gatherings remained localized in those 2 cities with a smaller demonstrations and riots in a few others. In Europe & the US during the start of the Iraq war there were hundreds of protests some including tens of thousands of people.



Why then, in a nation with such a history of “horrors” would these protests be so small relative to the population AND compared with the grievances they claim it to be about, especially when they know that police and military forces wouldn’t stop them? It just doesn’t make sense unless perhaps these events began naturally but were inflamed by outside forces in order to try to topple the government. If any people lived utterly dreaded lives for decades when given the chance to speak out they would but in Egypt it has just been a modest affaire with some of the groups involved coming from outside Egypt or were banned in the country such as the Muslim Brotherhood.



There has been increasing evidence that the extreme left in the US and Europe has been courting extremist Islam as a means to end the dominance of America, capitalism and true freedom. One such group is the US based “Code Pink” an organization of women who claim to be against war and for peace. Why then would Code Pink have placed an ad on the English site for the Muslim Brotherhood which asks them to “Help us Cleanse our Nation”?



The Muslim Brotherhood is a radical group that opposes the state of Israel, supports extremist Islamic law and has connections with many other groups, some known terrorist organizations. The MB has been banned in Egypt for several years and has very little popular support there. Why then has there been so much news talking about their potential power? I personally believe it’s because the MB and similar groups have been getting outside support, which has been seen.



One way you solidify support for your movement is by showing how bad the other side is. Most demonstrations have been fairly peaceful and as I’ve stated before the military have official orders to not engage in conflict with the demonstrators. A method of gaining popular support is by having more radical supporters pose as the “enemy”, in this case out of uniform and retired police/government people, and cause trouble. Then you can claim that while your protestors have been good and only want peace the evil government and your opposition have engaged in violence. This was a tactic used by Nazi Germany and helped justify the invasion of Poland.



Now I’m not suggesting that it isn’t possible for government supporters to engage in violence and I’m sure some have but I also know that by posing as your enemy and doing something violent it’s a great way to gain support.



Another interesting thing is the way our government has reacted to this situation. The Obama administration has said many times throughout the years that they would support any nation or people who wanted to be free. So why has the Obama admin. taken a “deer in headlights” approach? Neither the president nor State Dept. said anything definitive for days in the beginning and the limited words they have said since have all been a bit of “duck & cover”, not saying anything in strong support for the end of the Mubarak regime or for Mubarak’s people to stay in power. All they’ve said is that the demonstrators’ demands should be heard; that free elections need to be held, there needs to be a peaceful transition and that Mubarak should probably stand down. Obama’s gov. only began being vocal about Mubarak stepping down when Mubarak himself said he wouldn’t run for another term.



Of course some of the biggest backers of this administration has come from the far left and include former domestic terrorists and people like George Soros.



Soros and his many organizations have for years talked about the need to end capitalism, restructure the US and have been fairly vocal and direct with flat out socialist (politically & economically) rhetoric. One of the “leaders” to come out of the throng of protestors is a man named Mohamed ElBaradei. ElBaradei was born in Egypt but has lived in London for decades. He is also on the board, along with George Soros, of the International Crisis Group.



The ICG is a leading NGO and is a large source of advice for foreign governments, the UN, World Bank and EU. I’m not saying the ICG has anything to do with this in the least but it’s a big link between ElBaradei and Soros; the two also have connections with the Council on Foreign Relations.



In 1992 Soros was largely responsible for the devaluation of the pound Sterling and earned over $1 billion off the damaged finances of 50 million British. He has consistently said and been reported saying how amused he was at the whole thing and how he had actually planned to devalue the pound far more. He also had a part in the 1997 Asian financial crisis which at its end the affected nations lost a total of 32% of its nominal GDP.



There has been a great deal of reports and papers showing the increasing connection & friendly behavior between the liberals in the US & Europe and radical extremist groups like the Muslim Brotherhood which though banned in Egypt actually have a fair chance of greatly exploiting the unrest in Egypt to their benefit. Not to mention extremist groups across the Middle East. Groups Soros donates to or runs gives around $600 million annually and much of the money goes to far left causes including the destruction of Israel and to wage war on the west & capitalism (according to their own people & websites).



Mohamed ElBaradei told the media at the beginning that he had no intention of running for president of Egypt but several days later he changed his story saying that if the people wanted him to run he would.



The Mubarak regime has been one of limited rights and crushing opposition but it has also been one of the most stable governments in the entire region. Egypt has been an ally to the US and has treaties with Israel. Under Mubarak the Egyptian economy has grown and is comparably wealthy (excluding oil dominate economies). Despite a recent downturn in their economy (which was the main cause for the demonstrations at the beginning) Egypt has things pretty good when you look at places like Sudan, its southern neighbor. This brings me to my final point:



The demonstrations did start over the economy but as you watched things unfold it became more and more about the overthrow of the government. This coincided with an influx of foreign supporters like ElBaradei and an increasing presence of the illegal Muslim Brotherhood. The MB has also had a hand in similar protests and riots across several countries.



So I think the start of the events began fairly organically but was influenced by outside and extremist groups at a time when the government was ill-prepared to act. The goal, I believe, was the overturn of the government in Egypt as well as other nations in order to set up further extremist and anti-American/anti-free market states. All helped by the support of people like Soros (either directly or in directly) and groups like Code Pink that are generally behind the scenes.



If these protests were all ran by the people of Egypt without extremist or outside influence, given that the government has promised to let them demonstrate, why have they not taken off in many other cities? If a 20% unemployment rate was the primary factor why the limited extent of the protests? And why after only 14 days has the number of protestors dropped dramatically? Mubarak has said he will step down at the end of his term but they still lack an “opposition” government and there’s a threat that his supporters will take over so reason would suggest that the size and strength of the movement would be growing, not shrinking, and not being taken over (at least on the front and in the eyes of the west) by the MB, a group with little public support in Egypt.



Perhaps there is much more here than meets the eye.



--Xzavier, 2/7/2011


COMMENTS

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17:16 Feb 07 2011
Times Read: 748


A thought on the future of wars using robotics and un-manned devices.



The US military has been working fairly hard to develop un-manned weaponry since the 1980's although the idea has been around for longer. And since 2000 we've seen a number of unmanned machines go into the field. In field something like a Predator drone, should it be destroyed, isn't going cause one of our guys to die either, it's just a deadly remote control toy. The issue is that it still takes a person to pull the trigger and we've been working on taking people out of the mix altogether.



Aside from any number of ethical and other potential problems with totally unmanned, non-direct control, war devices running about making life and death choices on its own there is another issue.



Obviously the idea of a war where very few, if any, people die sounds like a great one. But really a war where people and infrastructure (including civilian infrastructure) is not destroyed is a pretty pointless war. In reality a "robotic" war would be little more than an expensive game and it would be better to just have opposing sides take their most intelligent computers and wage war via a game of Chess or Go and whoever wins, wins.



The problem of course is that it's highly doubtful the US, China, or any other nation would simply capitulate just because they lost all their robots. Can you imagine the US giving up an extremely important goal/resource just because the enemy wiped out R2D2? No we wouldn't. And so the moment it appeared our robotic divisions are about to lose we would be sending in thousands of human troops, thus turning a metal war into one of flesh and death once again.



Can we ever have a fully robotic war, one where no human has to die? I doubt it. The goal of war is to inflict pain and loss and knocking out a dozen or even 100,000 automatons just won't cut it.



War must involve the death of people and the destruction of cities or else it's a totally pointless affair. So until we understand that nearly all wars have always been totally pointless affairs when compared to the potential for peaceful solutions we must always send the best of our youth to fill in the ranks and be slaughtered.


COMMENTS

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PAGAN
PAGAN
17:22 Feb 07 2011

hmmm...food for thought. I agree. A truly advanced civilisation will be the one who makes peace and not war with technology.





 

08:17 Feb 04 2011
Times Read: 770


Omg, CODE Pink is offering awards for people who attempt to make citizens arrests of US "war criminals". Are these people totally insane?



Among their list of so called war criminals they encourage people to arrest are:



Karl Rove, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Condoleezza Rice, Colin Powell, George Bush, Jay Bybee, John Yoo, Paul Wolfowitz, Paul Bremer, Alberto Gonzalez, Ehud Olmert, and more!



I've never heard of such absurdity.



http://codepinkalert.org/article.php?id=5145

http://codepinkalert.org/article.php?id=5591



Now buried within their site they tell you to not actually touch these "criminals" and let the cops arrest them but seriously folks you honestly think a cop is going to arrest Colin Powell for crimes against humanity!?!? It would be laughable but when you hear some of the incredibly violent speech members of CODE Pink and related groups give this can't be taken as just "making a statement".



If Glenn Beck & Sarah Palin were responsible for the shooting in AZ then what about the fact that these groups support and/or are funded/ran by the founders of the Weather Underground who bombed and murdered members of police stations and government offices? The key being Beck & Palin never killed anyone, the WU has and their former leaders never said they were wrong to do it.



http://foia.fbi.gov/foiaindex/weather.htm


COMMENTS

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MAMA
MAMA
09:27 Feb 04 2011

dick cheney i get, he is an asshole.





PAGAN
PAGAN
13:06 Feb 04 2011

LMAO at MAMA!



gee wizz, it never ceases to amaze me what folk come up with eh. Making a 'statement' or not, what CODE Pink is doing is inciting all sorts of trouble, there are complete nut jobs out there who'd not think twice about taking matters into their own hands. Oh wait...CODE Pink are the nut jobs. Total lunacy.





 

00:21 Feb 01 2011
Times Read: 748


Channel island named first 'dark sky' community



LONDON (AFP) – The Channel Island of Sark has been designated the first dark sky community in the world in recognition of the lack of light pollution that allows clear views of the stars at night, officials said Monday.



The tiny island, located west of France's Cotentin Peninsula and about 80 miles (130 kilometres) off the south coast of England, hopes the designation from the US-based International Dark-Sky Association (IDA) will help boost tourism from star gazers.



"Sark becoming the world's first dark sky island is a tremendous feather in our environmental cap, which can only enhance our appeal," said Paul Williams, chairman of the Sark government's agricultural committee.



The island, which is three miles long and 1.5 miles wide, has no cars and no public street lighting, but local residents and businesses have also made an effort to reduce the amount of light spilled upwards.



As a result, the Milky Way is clearly visible stretching from horizon to horizon and streaking meteors can be picked out among bright stars.



After an audit last year, Sark now joins a select group of global dark sky sites, although it is particularly special, according to Martin Morgan-Taylor, chairman of the IDA's international committee.



He notes that all the other sites are uninhabited natural parks, with the exception of Flagstaff, Arizona, which has a major observatory -- making Sark the first "dark sky community".



"Here we have a living, thriving community that has made a conscious effort that they themselves will help to protect and help to restore the view of the night sky," Morgan-Taylor told AFP.



Hungary's Hortobagy National Park has also been newly designated by the IDA, Morgan-Taylor said. The other two dark sky sites in Europe are Galloway Forest in Scotland and Zselic Park in Hungary.



"This is a great achievement for Sark," said Professor Roger Davies, president of the Royal Astronomical Society.



"People around the world are become increasingly fascinated by astronomy as we discover more about our universe, and the creation of the world's first dark sky island in the British Isles can only help to increase that appetite."





http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20110131/wl_uk_afp/britainhungaryenvironmentspace



Very cool :)

COMMENTS

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Selkie
Selkie
12:54 Feb 01 2011

Pretty cool. I read about this and its one of these places I'd love to go see.








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