Samuel Alito: Review And Act Accordingly

George W. Bush has appointed his latest, and final, Supreme Court nominee. As concerned citizens, we need to act… quickly. If you haven’t already done so, please take a moment to review Judge Samuel Alito’s record (.pdf)
If you feel he’s not the right choice for the highest bench in the land, sign the petition at SaveTheCourt.org to stop the nomination.
(link via joetrippi.com, image via REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque)
0 CommentsWhat Happened To The Levees?

(originally uploaded by ACKemp)
I’ve now come across two separate stories of levees being torn open (or bombed) by the federal government, so the predicted flooding would spare the tourist areas.
I don’t know if either story can be substantiated, but given the fact that evacuees (not refugees) are being held in the city of New Orleans, not free to leave, one has to wonder if there’s a connection. I’m going to refrain from forming an opinion until I hear a few more, separate corroborating stories.
Original stories:
Boing Boing
Versionist.com
Louisiana 2005
Randy Newman’s song Louisiana 1927:
What has happened down here is the wind have changed
Clouds roll in from the north and it started to rain
Rained real hard and rained for a real long time
Six feet of water in the streets of EvangelineThe river rose all day
The river rose all night
Some people got lost in the flood
Some people got away alright
The river have busted through cleard down to Plaquemines
Six feet of water in the streets of EvangelneCHORUS
Louisiana, Louisiana
They’re tyrin’ to wash us away
They’re tryin’ to wash us away
Louisiana, Louisiana
They’re tryin’ to wash us away
They’re tryin’ to wash us awayPresident Coolidge came down in a railroad train
With a little fat man with a note-pad in his hand
The President say, “Little fat man isn’t it a shame what the river has done
To this poor crackers land.”CHORUS
Chills don’t describe what I feel right now.
0 CommentsImpeach Bush NOW!
George Bush: "No one could have anticipated the breaching of the levees."
Really?
2001
Preliminary Public Health Issues
2002
PBS Special
City in a Bowl
2002
NOLA.com
Washing Away
2003
New Orleans Hurricane Impact Study
2004
National Geographic
Gone With The Water
2004
Independent Weekly
Disaster In The Making
June 2005
New Orleans City Business
New Orleans District of the US Army Corps of Engineers Faces
It took me 10 minutes on Google to find those references. I’ll just chalk up your statement as another lie, Mr. .. eh-hem… President.
But while we’re talking about the levees, let’s discuss what happened to the funding for the Army Corp of Engineers to finish the construction. Apparently, there was a specific article in the Times-Picayune on June 8th of 2004 which detailed the federal cuts for hurricane preparedness and levee construction and improvement in New Orleans. It’s not available on-line, but TMPCafe put together excerpts of the piece here. Here’s a taste:
The Bush administration’s proposed fiscal 2005 budget includes only $3.9 million for the east bank hurricane project. Congress likely will increase that amount, although last year it bumped up the administration’s $3 million proposal only to $5.5 million.
"I needed $11 million this year, and I got $5.5 million," Naomi said. "I need $22.5 million next year to do everything that needs doing, and the first $4.5 million of that will go to pay four contractors who couldn’t get paid this year."
[…]
The challenge now, said emergency management chiefs Walter Maestri in
Jefferson Parish and Terry Tullier in New Orleans, is for southeast Louisiana somehow to persuade those who control federal spending that protection from major storms and flooding are matters of homeland security."It appears that the money has been moved in the president’s budget to handle homeland security and the war in Iraq, and I suppose that’s the price we pay," Maestri said. "Nobody locally is happy that the levees can’t be finished, and we are doing everything we can to make the case that this is a security issue for us."
So apparently, occupying a country that had nothing to do with 9/11 and had no weapons of mass destruction is a higher priority than shoring up a defense structure to ensure that the largest homeland disaster ever doesn’t occur. Your President, George Bush, moved FEMA into the Homeland Security classification bucket so he could draw potential disaster protection/relief funding into his War for Oil… er… Against Terror.
How’s that for blatant disregard for public safety? How many people are in American jails for simple possession of narcotics, while this man runs loose destroying our nation, murdering innocent people around the world, while lining his own pockets?
How pompous and disrespectful is this guy?
George Bush, Governor of Texas, giving the "one finger victory salute" before he addressed the state.
George Bush, President of The United States of America, flipping off the press and anyone watching.
No, Fuck You Georgie Boy. WHEN WILL THIS POMPOUS, INCOMPETENT, MURDEROUS, CRIMINAL, COKE-HEAD BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE!?
To the House and Senate: Your constituents are becoming furious. It’s time to relieve this man of his power.
2 CommentsFire Michael Brown Today!
Michael Brown, Director of FEMA, needs to be fired. Now.
I’m not one for firing individuals to placate a populace; that’s the bullshit move of governments and corporations throughout the annals of history.
The difference with this Michael Brown firing would be its basis in explicit evidence of inept preparation, leadership and execution. The 2004 National Response Plan (pdf) outlines his (the Federal Government) responsibilities in situation of natural disasters.
Brown’s non-existent plan for evacuating the under the poverty line populace of the New Orleans area once Hurricane Katrina hit the radar, is a scathing example of poor leadership. While a death count was unavoidable due to years of overlooking the issues surrounding the integrity of the city’s levees, his analysis-paralysis greatly added to the numbers.
If Brown were on the ball, doing his job as outlined, he would’ve factored the impoverished population of New Orleans into the evacuation plans. He didn’t. People without the means to leave were left behind to drown, floating about town in a watery grave. And if Brown wasn’t the ultimate decision maker in this scenario, then he needs to step up and expose the machine which was responsible.
President Bush has no recourse but to fire Brown and launch an immediate investigation into the preparation model for potential natural disasters in this region and across the rest of the United States. Even Michelle Malkin is calling for his dismissal.
Accountability. Now.
9 CommentsLego My Country

(originally uploaded by Antifluff Superstar)
While I wholeheartedly agree with the sentiment from the left blogosphere, nothing that the Bush administration has done (or not done) surprises me.
Why?
Because a large percentage of the American public will continue to allow themselves to fall into the trappings of the Bush administration’s lies, no matter the dark alley we are led to.
It’s called fear.
And even though Bush’s overall approval ratings are unbelievably low, his hardcore support continues to be there in force for one simple, but powerful, reason:
The wealthy and powerful stick with the wealthy and powerful to keep and create more wealth and power.
Only when it is not in their best interests will they act otherwise.
These strategic relationships — private industry to public service and back — provide vast resources and networks in keeping the masses in consume and desire mode, while providing each other the cover of a shared vocabulary to continuously spin themselves clear of criticism.
And when I say consume, I don’t necessarily mean eating drug-laced poultry or purchasing unnecessary material products.
This administration has perfected the consumption of propaganda regarding what it means to be an American — or more precisely — they’ve generated clear symptoms of an anti-American as any person who dissents from the party line.
Back To The Future State
Towards the end of the Athenian Empire, Socrates was sentenced to death because he had the bad habit of questioning his surroundings. He was viewed as dangerous, particularly because of his ability to influence the youth of his time.
So he was offed with a swig of hemlock.
Thankfully, we’ve evolved as a society to where outspoken voices such as Noam Chomsky can debate the origin and potential results of foreign policy, while question the motives of all parties involved without the possibility of being put to death by the rulers of our times.
Dissent forms priceless threads of discourse that are necessary to continuously evolve a moral Republic.
But there are other ways to silence a person in this modern age.
Chomsky is a rock star overseas for his political essays and speeches, but he can barely get an interview from the mainstream American media. So without sentencing good ol’ Noam to death, the collective will of the US media — with editors focused on advertising dollars and corporate sponsorship — has created a passive method of forcing hemlock upon our independent minds.
So, how does this tie back to our government?
The very freedoms and rights that our soldiers are fighting to protect have already begun deteriorating through conglomerate ownership of conglomerate media empires.
Unless voices with challenging perspectives are able to creep into the media conversation and the periphery of the average American, middle-America will continue to be ripe for rallying support by the serial spinners of big business and government.
Unless this administration is held accountable to the illegal war and domestic messes they’ve birthed, I can’t envision where this degradation of our moral fiber will end.
It’s almost as if each move the Bush administration makes that concludes without legal or mass public recourse, they consciously create an even greater climate of fear and mistrust within our own society to further propagate their unimpeded actions.
Moving Forward
So, how can we each work towards breaking this unnatural ecosystem of immorality as a nation — breaking through the spin climate of Karl Rove and President Bush’s managementof “global extremism?”
- Either turn off your TV or remain an active participant with critical, deconstruction of the media
- Use the web to find and connect with real people that share your perspectives
- Meet and share ideas off-line, in the real (leave the web for connections and community discourse)
- Influence non-political citizens to become involved in making a difference
- Most importantly: Walk your talk in the daily choices you make in your own life
/soapbox
9 CommentsFareed Zakaria: My Sentiments Exactly
I came across an extremely well written article in Newsweek which eloquently supports my stance on US foreign policy (i.e. we’re now bullies and have thrown diplomacy to the wind).
On so many levels, Fareed Zakaria illuminates the wrong turns America has made under the present administration, which has practically ostracized us from both the majority of citizens and governments of the world. Our “go it alone” attitude can be justified simply through our standing as the lone superpower in the world, but in flexing such an option, Zakaria argues that not only do we create a poor perception of ourselves, but our actions contradict the positions of the democratic states we are supposedly attempting to support.
An example: Need an air-base in Turkey? Just bribe the government with billions of dollars of support to make it happen, but as a “democracy,” the Turkish government is actually trying to represent the will of it’s people — an overwhelming 90% of which are against the war in Iraq.
It’s schizophrenic at best.
I’m not doing Zakaria justice, read the article. We’re in a very tenuous position in world history.
0 CommentsPBS: The Only Bright Spot In TVland
So I ended up watching PBS Frontline last night about the Saddam/Iraqi crisis going back 25 years.
Either our government is perpetually run by a bunch of short-sighted morons or we’ve always had long-term vision for conflict and strife. I really don’t know which one is more frightening, but at least one is the truth.
The CIA gave Saddam power. Our tax dollars went to overthrowing the previous Iraqi government (which in the process led to close to 1,000 executions by Sadaam on coming to power) and handing the reigns of a strategically important country in the Middle East to a wanna be dictator, who frequently and vociferously declared that he longed to be the “Sword of the East” to destroy the West.
Now please answer this question for me: Were the men running this nation at the time so stupid to think that this wouldn’t come back to haunt us? OR were they so obsessed with overthrowing Iran that putting a maniac like Saddam in office was just an afterthought as long as he could do the job? That seems to be the standard operating procedure for our government; insert dictator in land a to accomplish disputable goal b so our hands don’t smell like c.
I went to art school, but hell, even I took Algebra. If a=b and b=c then a=c. Karma is fuzzy math, our actions are not.
So now we swoop in to “defend the safety of Americans.” Oh yeah, we also want to end an era of human suffering in Iraq. I guess it only took us 12 years to realize that there were human beings there, and not just brown people. I mention that because after we kicked the shit out of Sadaam the first time around in Desert Storm, we urged the Iraqi people to overthrow the government… from the decks of our aircraft carriers.
And what happened when the people actually rose up to take back their country? General Stormin’ Norman gave the Iraqi’s permission to fly armed helicopters in the just established “no-fly zone,” leading to the systematic killing of the resistance movement.
All the while the Iraqi people are pleading for us to come in and finish the job of taking out Saddam, Colin, Daddy Bush and the rest of the world sat back in containment mode.
Look, I’m not against removing Saddam, but this country has made so many blunders in Iraq since the 70’s, I’m just discusted how we’re attempting to storm in there and sweep the proverbial dirt under the proverbial rug.
Sadaam is our Frankenstein. Where’s the accountability?
0 CommentsHome Sweet Home
North Carolina was, well… interesting to say the least.
My brother moved from Greensboro to a small rural town 45 minutes outside of the city, where the entire population lives off of one textile factory. God forbid it closes down; the town would disappear. After a few days of playing ball and watching baseball on the tube, we were finally introduced to some NC culture.

On a mild afternoon, we hiked to the top of a rocky overhang in a nearby state park — a good mile straight up steep rock strewn steps. I huffed and puffed like a smoker on a treadmill, but it was well worth it, as the view from the summit was amazing. Sitting on a rock, with my legs draping over a 1,000ft drop, looking out over Carolina, watching hawk after hawk glide by, I was moved to write some post-breakup poetry.
Stop laughing.
So, after pulling myself out of Nirvana, we made our way down the mountain and back to civilization to check out… an Arena Football League game.
Those guys are terrible — the best they could muster was a decent spiral. We sat on the equivalent of the 50-yard line — the 25(?) — with 300 other people, watching drunken fans, one after the other, chanting and screaming like idiots for the Prowlers to score.
It felt like a tailgate warm-up for NASCAR.
Following the game, we continued the journey of the stereotype and headed out to a country bar — in the middle of nowhere — to watch my brother’s girlfriend perform in her cover band. Now, don’t get me wrong, I had a great time watching her sing (she’s got a mad set of lungs), but the bar they played was too funny. As my friend Darren put it:
I’m embarrassed to be white.
I practically rolled on the ground laughing as people line danced to a cover of Montel Jordan’s, This Is How We Do It. Darren then compared the festivities to a wacky Bar Mitzvah, noting that no one in the joint would get that reference.
As the night rolled on, Brooklyn seemed like a distant planet; I caught an 85 year old couple dirty dancing, a set of middle aged people humping each other in a group and one young, attractive woman dancing a jig, alone, fending off every approaching male in sight.
Baseball caps weren’t allowed; cowboy hats were.
We were in the inner sanctum; I was truly amazed that they let us live after witnessing their ritual behavior.
So now I’m back and New York City doesn’t seem quite as crazy anymore.
0 Commentssponsored by…
the world has changed.
no shit, glad you’ve woken up.
we don’t all drink from the same fountain
or even from the same cup
but if the music’s right
and the air is clear
why confuse the good times
with political matters
we fear
nothing.
at all…
because "no fear" is a fucking brand
manufactured for morons
living in a testosterone dreamland
yeah, we’re all now awake
we now have an enemy to curse and blame
but do we really understand why
"they" burn our flag and name?
no.
but who cares?
we’ll bomb ‘em till they quit.
yeah that’s a solid tactic
a top five rotation hit
now all the brands are buzzing
pulling at our patriotic strings
the marketing is subtle
yet sick and deafening
"united" is just that
ready to serve you across the land
and since they’re so "united"
they want us to go lend a helping hand
because, you see, they’re "with us"
and not just a part of our verbal psyche
but what if their name was continental?
or fuddruckers?
or nike?
brand opportunity
awareness at an all time high
higher than they used to go
when consumers weren’t afraid to fly
so come on out and support ‘em
get the business back on track
while you’re at it buy a rolex
shit, get a new cadillac
because money is all that matters
to a society built on exploitation
i wonder what "those people" would say
if we opened up actual lines of communication?
yeah right…
too late…
it’s all about annihilation.
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