Anybody not yet insulted?

Here is Ann Coulter in her persona as Legal Affairs Correspondent for Human Events talking about the YouTube Democratic debate:

CNN commentators keep telling us how young and hip the audience was for last week’s YouTube Democratic debate, apparently unaware that the camera occasionally panned across the audience, which was the same oddball collection of teachers’ union shills and welfare recipients you see at all Democratic gatherings.
Noticeably, Gov. Bill Richardson got the first “woo” of the debate — the mating call of rotund liberal women — for demanding a federal mandate that would guarantee public schoolteachers a minimum salary of $40,000…

So what is with the putdown for school teachers? I saw a position announcement the other day coming to a teacher education department that was seeking a person trained as a public school teacher to work as a nanny for 3 kids in Washington, D.C. The offered salary was $50,000.00, and there was a retirement account and health insurance as well as room and board, with two days off a week and holidays. Wait till teacher’s union shrills hear about that!
And I know a few rotund liberal women who could squash Ann Coulter like the biting bug she is. Even liberals get mad once in a while.

Retirement

Democrats.org posted “Disclosing 401(k) Fees“:

Workers deserve to retire with the dignity and comfort that they have earned, but as the Associated Press reports, incomplete information about hidden fees can drain thousands of dollars from 401(k) plans.

I have been looking around for some information on how these work and how people are using them. I found a site at http://www.efmoody.com/ where Errold F. Moody Jr. has gathered a lot of information. I also found an interesting article on MSN.money by Sottt Burns references Brooks Hamilton, titled How the 401(k) System Fails Most People at http://moneycentral.msn.com/content/RetirementandWills/P90046.asp.
Apparently, we have a problem here since so many employers have moved from defined benefit plans to 401(k) plans which people can’t understand or can’t afford. Add to that the first link above, in which the hidden fees have made the system look more like a scam than a pension plan.
If you are depending upon a 401(k) plan and actually have time to inform yourself about it, that will be time well spent. If you are working 2 jobs and don’t have time to check on your 401(k), just plan to work a lot longer than you expect…

Molasses to Rum to Slaves Redux

From the LA Times: U.S. bending rules on Colombia terror? By Josh Meyer, Times Staff Writer, July 22, 2007

Several lawmakers say multinationals that aid violent groups in return for protection are not being prosecuted.
The Bush administration has declared that a hallmark of its counter-terrorism policy is to go after the financiers of terrorism just as aggressively as the terrorists themselves ? anywhere in the world. But the situation in Colombia underscores the difficulty in prosecuting such goals when it conflicts with American economic interests abroad and trade relations with friendly governments. Making the matter particularly sensitive, the U.S. is in the midst of negotiating a free-trade agreement with Colombia, and sends it billions annually in military and other aid.
“Do our economic interests trump the war on terror? Are we making trade-offs?” Delahunt asked. “If we are, at the very least the public should know about it.”
Lance Compa, an international trade specialist at Cornell University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations, acknowledged that there were many competing priorities in Colombia.
“But the general proposition that gross human rights violations should be weighed against trade policy and foreign policy is a mistake,” Compa said. “The paramilitaries have infiltrated the highest levels of the [Colombian] government, and the Bush administration is looking the other way.
“It makes it all the more incumbent on U.S. policymakers to put a stop to any corporate dealings with paramilitary death squads.”

So we are financing them over there so we can fight them over there2 so we can get rich over here. I see. Another magic triangle.
And did we ever expect to hear “It makes it all the more incumbent on U.S. policy makers to put a stop to any corporate dealings with paramilitary death squads”? Excuse me, I thought they were killing people only with fake food, denial of medical care, contaminating the environment, freezing wages, guzzling gas, dropping retirement plans, exporting jobs, downsizing, and outsourcing. Who thought ??corporate dealings with paramilitary death squads??

Sicko

Go to revolutionhealth to read what others are saying about Sicko, to rate the comments, and to add your own comments! Be careful with the ratings and look at the numbers that appear above your cursor. Each block in the rating scale is a couple of numbers, and you can rate a number lower or higher than you intend if you click the blocks without looking at the actual numbers.

Blood for oil

From Australia on July 5th, 2007, in a story titled “Iraq deployment linked to oil: Nelson” Australian Defence Minister Brendan Nelson said that “securing the world’s oil supply” is one of his government’s “considerations as it decides how long to keep troops in Iraq.” The story continues:

Speaking ahead of the release, Dr Nelson confirmed the Government viewed Australia’s involvement in Iraq as partially driven by the need to secure oil supplies, although he said the main reason was to ensure that the humanitarian crisis did not worsen.

If you are reading Al Gore’s new book Assault on Reason you will come across the information that prior to the Iraq invasion a map of Iraq that was passed around in the planning sessions did not even have cities marked on it. It was entirely a map of the oil fields and exploration areas.
I am fairly certain that the Bush administration promoted the Iraq war primarily for oil. If we were pursuing terrorists, why would we abandon operations in Afghanistan where we had Osama bin Laden essentially cornered and move our forces to Iraq where there were no terrorists? Why would our government after 9/11 assist Saudi embassy personnel in leaving the U.S. before they could be questioned? Why did our government work so hard to establish a non-existent link between Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden? Why the lies? Why Iraq? Iraq has oil, Afghanistan has no oil. Bush and his cronies are heavily invested in oil.
For that matter, why a war at all? Oil is again a logical reason. The world is on the cusp of new energy technologies that are renewable, cleaner, and cheaper than oil. A war increases demand for oil, raises the profit potential, and slows research and development into alternatives.
In the war of blood for oil, oil is not cheap.
On July 7th as the 2007 national 4th of July holiday passed into history and I spent a midnight with my restless newborn grandson, a web site named The Iraq Body Count recorded 66,939. There is no speculation about this number. Each database entry has a record identifier, a date and time, a location, the name and identity of the person(s) who died if that was reported, how the person(s) died, and the number of people dead in that incident. The latest entry in the database on July 7th was for May 28, 2007, so the count is a shade over a month behind in counting actual deaths. In this May 28 entry, at 9:30 p.m. in Al-Musalla, northern Kirkuk, Mahmoud Hakim Mustafa, the editor-in-chief of a weekly newspaper, died in a drive-by shooting.
The Iraq Body Count is a ?comprehensive public database of media-reported civilian deaths in Iraq that have resulted from the 2003 military intervention by the USA and its allies. The count includes civilian deaths caused by coalition military action and by military or paramilitary responses to the coalition presence (e.g. insurgent and terrorist attacks). It also includes excess civilian deaths caused by criminal action resulting from the breakdown in law and order which followed the coalition invasion.? It is located on the Internet at www.iraqbodycount.org.
Sometimes the number of deaths in an incident is not certain, and so the database holds two numbers, low and high. In the entry for Editor-in-Chief Mustafa has a numeral 1 in each of these columns, since one person was killed and the number is certain. An example of an uncertain number is the entry for a suicide car bomb attack on May 24 between 9:00 and 11:30 a.m. This attack was directed at a funeral procession in Andalus, central Falluja, for Allawi-al-Isawi that killed, according to media reporting, either 33 or 34 people. So in this entry on this date the column for the minimum number killed has 33, and the column for the maximum number has 34.
The 66,939 above is the minimum total. The total of the maximum column today is 73,253. For purposes of comparison, the current population of Bristol Virginia is 17,367. Bristol Tennessee is 24,983.
Deaths of civilians who are part of the American occupation, people who go to Iraq to work for the companies to whom the U.S. government contracts work or invites to work in Iraq, are tracked on an Internet site located at icasualties.org/oif . These now total 404, and include entries like this:

  • 14-Jun-2007 Vasconcellos, Joao Jose, Brazilian; kidnapped 1/19/05 – body identified 6/14/07 in Beiji; Engineer employed by Odebrecht
  • 12-Jun-2007 Butler, Michael W., American; IED – roadside bomb near Tikrit; Security Contractor employed by DynCorp

The same site tracks American military deaths, now at 3,606, and military dead of other Coalition nations, now at 286
The tracking of Coalition and Iraqi casualties on these two sites is reliable, but there is no reliable source for the number of wounded, not even of American wounded. The casualty tracking site says that over 26,000 wounded have been officially recorded, but the total may be as high as 100,000. These are Americans wounded in war. If you are listening to the television news, listen closely for the number of wounded. It is unlikely you will even hear the word.
American media, under-reporting the Iraq war to focus on celebrities and ?human interest? content that better serves the marketing interests of their sponsors, has ceased to report any military wounded in Iraq. Instead, they report ?injuries.? An injury is what you get when you miss a step on the stairs or your car bounces off the guardrail. It is the result of carelessness or accident. In military action, the word is ?wounded,? not ?injured,? and an administration that is counting how many troops are needed for continued operations should at least be able to count their wounded.
In place of a number and the names of our American wounded, the official tracking site tells us, ?U.S. lacks the mechanism to accurately track troops wounded in Iraq.? This lack is either gross stupidity or a calculated intention to under-count and under-report, because the mechanism for counting the wounded, like the mechanism for counting anything else, begins with ?one? for the first person who is wounded and increases by one for each subsequent person. It is no wonder at all that we aren’t treating our wounded in the way they need to be treated if we cannot even say who they are.
On the site, UPI reports :

As many as 1 of every 10 soldiers from the war on terror evacuated to the Army’s biggest hospital in Europe was sent there for mental problems.
Between 8 and 10 percent of nearly 12,000 soldiers from the war on terror, mostly from Iraq, treated at the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany had “psychiatric or behavioral health issues,” according to the commander of the hospital, Col. Rhonda Cornum.
That means about 1,000 soldiers were evacuated for mental problems.

Actually I want to question that meaning, since as the story reads, the 1,000 soldiers with mental problems could also have physical wounds from a bullet or a bomb.
The UPI story explains that this one hospital has treated 11,754 soldiers. Of that number, 9,651 came from Iraq and the rest from Afghanistan. Where do the rest of the wounded go? Home? Back into Iraq? We don’t know, because we can’t even count them.
So the price of gas is still going up, oil companies are getting rich and buying senators, and people are dying every day.

More cuteness, no blogging




CoryJPG

Originally uploaded by Thirdlayer

You aren’t supposed to blog when you have a new grandson. You are supposed to show off pictures!

Keeping my attention elsewhere

Glen’s storytelling performance, Fumbling With the Blues was fun too, and here is a trailer for the DVD:
http://flash.revver.com/player/1.0/player.js?mediaId:327565;affiliateId:100438;height:392;width:480;

Other reasons not to blog

Before I started playing with the baby to keep from blogging, I was distracting myself with C. Glen Williams and No Sleep ‘Til Minsky’s. Footage here is from the original performance on stage in the Bud Frank Theatre at East Tennessee State University:
http://flash.revver.com/player/1.0/player.js?mediaId:302597;affiliateId:0;height:392;width:480;

Fun with the baby

My inattention to my blog lately has come from several causes. Currently it is just that I am busy playing with the baby. Here is your chance to share in the fun! http://www.jigzone.com/zes?i=2F1308D9908&m=566A3E.21B317&z=0&y=B7cory Jigsaw Puzzle

Shakespeare and Friends




100_1181.JPG

Originally uploaded by Thirdlayer

The start of the Queen’s Parade — Click on this photograph to see the set!

This is the ren faire in Rodgersville, TN.