09 October 2006

Reality On the Ground

Awaiting the Rebellion
by Fred Reed

When, one wonders, will mutiny begin among the troops in Iraq?

Recently I talked by email about the war with Jim Coyne, an airborne-infantry friend who served two tours as a gunship door-gunner in Viet Nam and then made a career in journalism. I asked, “Do they [I meant the officer corps, the official military] actually believe the optimistic twaddle this time around? Do they really not know what is happening?”

Jim’s response: “In my opinion, they really don't know; they may not even want to know on some level. You know as well as I, these are mission-oriented folks; can do folks; failure and its introspective handmaidens are not options to them. And in a tactical mission-oriented world our military doesn't really fail very often; in a strategic military/political world such as the Mideast and Iraq, however, we simply cannot win.

”Again, as in Viet Nam, the career officer corps salutes and marches toward the sound of battle. Eventually however (and it won't be long now) it's the grunts who will begin to revolt, first in small ways (as in the 101st in late 1968, "No sir. We are not going up that hill again.") and then, quickly thereafter (As in 1973, "Fuck you, asshole.") By that time the media may get wind of things and spin it exponentially out of control. That’s what I think.”

So do I ...


And so do we. Read the rest here.

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The Monday Movie - Celebrating Greenspan's Retirement

A Perfect Martini

Somehow this recipe goes with today's movie. I can't say how exactly; it's just a feeling I have. The movie's title is The Money God.

Into a well-chilled shaker, pour a couple of tablespoons of the best white (dry) vermouth you can find. Swirl vermouth to coat all sides of the shaker completely. Sit down and rest for two minutes.

Pour vermouth down the sink, or save it for the next time. In shaker, place 6 large ice cubes, then add 3 jiggers of the best gin you can find. Tanqueray is one of the best. Close shaker, do a Maquarena with your partner for just twenty seconds with the shaker in your hand (be sure not to break any bones), then immediately strain the result into martini glasses that have been chilled in your freezer for two hours. You can finish dancing now if you want.

Garnish with large pitted green olives on toothpicks (with or without the pimiento or other cool or hot stuffings, or pickled onions - I believe any garnish except olive makes a slightly different drink).

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Steve Irwin



And if that isn't enough for you ....

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08 October 2006

Support Anti-Racist Columbia Students!!

On October 4, the College Republicans at Columbia University hosted Minuteman Project founder Jim Gilchrist. The Minutemen are known for inciting racist violence against immigrants. In an exercise of free speech, students unfurled a banner on the stage reading "No One is Illegal", prompting audience members to join them on the stage with another banner with the message, "No to Racism". These peaceful protesters were violently assaulted. Below is their initial statement published the night of the protest as well as a link to a video showing parts of the event. They are now under attack from the administration and potentially face disciplinary charges. Please support them by signing the online petition at this URL. The students are also soliciting letters of support and solidarity, which can be sent to them at nominutemen@... .

Statement of the Student Protestors:

We celebrate free speech: for that reason we allowed the Minutemen to speak, and for that same reason we peacefully occupied the stage and spoke ourselves. Our peaceful protest was violently attacked by members of the College Republicans and their supporters, who are the very same people who invited the Minutemen to our campus in the first place. The Minutemen are not a legitimate voice in the debate on immigration. They are a racist, armed militia who have declared open hunting season on immigrants, causing countless hate crimes and over 3000 deaths on the border. Why should exploitative corporations have free passes between nations, but individual people not? No human being is illegal.

Links to coverage, including video:
Columbia Spectator

http://nyc.indymedia.org/en/2006/10/76890.html

http://www.bwog.net/index.php?page=post&article_id=2265


Police Go Nuts: Six Arrested after Anti-Minutemen Demo at Mexican Consulate

10/7 | One guy was charged with "spitting"; the others were grabbed after the demo as they stood on the sidewalk. If wednesday night was a people's mini-riot at Columbia, this was a mini-police riot.

About 6 anarchist and sds folks were arrested today at the anti-minutemen demo at the consulate. One of them is being charged with spitting on the floor, and the other five are charged with 1 misdemeanor count of inciting a riot and 2 misdemeanor counts of disorderly conduct. They were at the 13th precinct at 21st st between 2nd and 3rd, but they're being moved to the tombs at 100 centre st i believe. There are gonna be folks outside the criminal courts there from now till morning, i presume, waiting until they get out. If anyone wants to get out there and show support, go for it. There are NLG people and mds and sds and nymaa and others working on getting bail, figuring out the next step.


To read more, go here.

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MDS - Tools for Chapter Press Work

Chapters, caucuses and organizers may access a broad range of press contact information at these websites.

I have been working on compiling an email address directory for press releases and letters to the editor. It is a work in progress, but anybody requesting a copy of the current draft will be sent one. I am also interested in collaborating on this project with others in SDS. It is something people can do, regardless of proximity (or lack thereof) to an active local chapter.

Yours in solidarity from my (now officially illegal even if on appeal) NSA party line,
Monty Reed Kroopkin
San Diego

PRESS CONTACT INFORMATION SOURCES

Congress.org Media Guide home page:
http://www.congress.org/congressorg/dbq/media/

The CP Network (College Publisher)
http://cpsite.collegepublisher.com/thecpnetwork/index.cfm

Current U-Wire Members (University Wire)
http://www.uwire.com/members/currentmembers.html

Independent Press Association's Campus Journalism Project (List of Alternative/Independent Newspapers)
http://www.indypress.org/cjp/papers.html

Campus Progress member publications (Center for American Progress)
http://www.campusprogress.org/tools/90/campus-progress-publications

Alternative Press Center's Online Directory
http://www.altpress.org/direct.html

and Alternative Viewpoints on the Internet
http://www.altpress.org/links_a.htm

AAN Directory (Association of Alternative Newsweeklies)
http://aan.org/alternative/Aan/NewsweeklyDirectory

ZNET's Alternative Media Resources
http://www.zmag.org/altmediaresources.htm

ZNET's Alternative Media Watch
http://www.zmag.org/altmediawatch.htm

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Good Hair, Ding Dong, Granny Goose, and ....




Different format, same stump speeches
By JOHN MORITZ, ANNA M. TINSLEY and AMAN BATHEJA
Star-Telegram Staff Writers

DALLAS -- The four leading candidates for governor clawed for attention Friday night, with each staking out contrasting views on how to combat illegal immigration, improve Texas' public schools and change the ethical climate in Austin.

There were few surprises, and despite some spirited sparring and entertaining moments, no apparent knockout punches were delivered.

Republican incumbent Rick Perry, seeking to become the first Texas governor to serve 10 consecutive years in the state's highest elected office, absorbed most of the punishment. But independent Kinky Friedman was also hammered for his use of remarks that some have found racially insensitive.

"Everybody's ganging up on me," the singer-songwriter-entertainer said at one point. Friedman said the others were tackling him because he's the one carrying the ball, rather than Perry, whom he described as still being on the sidelines. He added another of his stock stump speech quips in which he breaks down the word politics: "Poli means more than one. Ticks are bloodsucking parasites."


Read the rest here.

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The Inherent Double Standard

Castro Foe With C.I.A. Ties Puts U.S. in an Awkward Spot
By MARC LACEY, The New York Times

EL PASO (Oct. 8) -- Thirty years ago, long before liquids and gels were restricted on airliners, a tube of Colgate toothpaste may have brought a plane down from the sky.

Cubana Airlines Flight 455 crashed off the coast of Barbados on Oct. 6, 1976, killing all 73 people aboard. Plastic explosives stuffed into a toothpaste tube ignited the plane, according to recently declassified police records.

Implicated in the attack, but never convicted, was Luis Posada Carriles, a Cuban exile who has long sought to topple the government of Fidel Castro.

Today, Mr. Posada, 78, is in a detention center in El Paso, held on an immigration violation while the government tries to figure out what to do with him. His case presents a quandary for the Bush administration, at least in part because Mr. Posada is a former C.I.A. operative and United States Army officer who directed his wrath at a government that Washington has long opposed.

Despite insistent calls from Cuba and Venezuela for his extradition, the administration has refused to send him to either country for trial.

Intensifying the problem is that Mr. Posada, who was arrested last year in Miami after sneaking into the country, may soon go free because the United States has been reluctant to press the terrorism charges that could keep him in jail.

That prospect has brought a hail of criticism of the Bush administration for holding a double standard when it comes to those who commit terrorist acts.

“The fight against terrorism cannot be fought à la carte,” said José Pertierra, a Washington lawyer who is representing the government of Venezuela in its effort to extradite Mr. Posada. “A terrorist is a terrorist.”

The Bush administration has stopped short of prosecuting him as a terrorist, however, even though the Justice Department called him as much this week. In papers filed in federal court in El Paso on Thursday, it described him as “an unrepentant criminal and admitted mastermind of terrorist plots and attacks on tourist sites.”

Instead, Mr. Posada faces immigration charges, as the Bush administration tries its best to deport him somewhere else, where he would walk free.


Read the rest here.

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Have You Had Enough?

I'd flat run out of ideas when I found this ditty two days ago. As I listened to it for the first time, I thought, "This is perfect for Singin' on Sunday." I looked for copyright information and this tune is public domain. Thank you to whoever put this together. And thank you for another little synchronous event that brings it to me just when I need it. Hey, Mariann - would you like to dance with me? I bet we're singin' the chorus by the end of the tune ....


Have You Had Enough?


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07 October 2006

The Slime in the White House

This article reports an incident that is significant – the corruption is clearly in the White House, the trail of slime leads right to Karl Rove’s office. The statement by the official White House spokesperson in the last paragraph is as nice a summary as I’ve ever heard of the attitude of these criminals toward the American people. Matt of TiI

"Susan B. Ralston, a former aide to the disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff who went on to work for the presidential adviser Karl Rove, has resigned from the White House in the wake of a report that she served as a conduit between the two men.

Ms. Ralston submitted her resignation to President Bush on Thursday night, saying the time had come “to pursue other opportunities.”

But administration officials acknowledged that she quit as a result of a Congressional report, released last week, that documented hundreds of contacts between Mr. Abramoff and the White House.

A protracted discussion of the report was not in anyone’s best interest, and when she chose to step down, we supported her decision,” a White House spokeswoman, Dana Perino, said today."

h/t to Today in Iraq

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Let's Talk About Sustainability on Saturday

Today, I found a story that has big implications. I listen to CBC Radio 2 in my little car, and I had to go to the post office this morning. It turns out that Stuart McLean, of The Vinyl Café, was talking about the Arthur Awards as I backed out of the driveway. He was awarding all the Moms and Dads across Canada who took their kids on a road trip this Summer an Arthur Award. Because my daughter did just that to visit all her Family in the Pacific Northwest, I sent her an e-mail about it. And that led me to look for the Vinyl Café Web site, which led me to find this story that is posted there:

*****
Tall Grass Prairie Bread Company

...

So they started their bread co-op, and they baked bread every Saturday night in a kitchen they rented at the St. Margaret’s Church, and it became a neighbourhood thing … not a church thing. Neighbourhood people joined the co-op ... and you could work in the co-op and get work credits, and people who were well-off were invited to pay a little more for their bread to carry those who couldn’t, and neighbourhood kids delivered bread around the neighbourhood in little red wagons … and the co-op grew over two or three years. And they were actually supporting one family farm. And having fun. Just as they had hoped.

And this provoked more discussion. It began with the question: What is good stewardship of the land? And what did that mean to people who live in the city? If you believed, as Tabitha and her friends did, that herbicides and pesticides were not God’s best idea, how should you proceed if you are city folk? How much should those who live in the city be paying for grain, ethically? What would things look like if instead of having farmers begging city people for pennies, city people were begging farmers for grain.

Finally they asked … what could they do? Could they do anything to support farmers in some larger way?


To read the entire story, which is well worth the time, please click here.
*****

My daughter Rachel happens to live in Winnipeg, so maybe she can go find the Tall Grass Prairie Bread Bakery. And maybe all of us can give some thought to sustainability and what we might like to do to promote it in and bring it to our communitities. Me, I believe this is just another example of a small synchronous event on a Saturday morning.

Richard Jehn

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Our Saturday Snapshot - A Warning

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How Many Did You Kill?


Sailor Says He Watched Marines Kill Iraqi
By LINDA DEUTSCH, AP

CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. (Oct. 7) - A Navy corpsman testified Friday that Marines in his patrol seized an Iraqi civilian from his home, threw him into a hole and put at least 10 bullets in his head and chest after growing frustrated in their search for an insurgent.

Petty Officer 3rd Class Melson J. Bacos said he saw a Marine put fingerprints from the victim onto a rifle and on a shovel to implicate him as an insurgent.

"I was shocked and I felt sick to my stomach," Bacos said.

Bacos, a medic who had been on patrol with the squad, was charged along with seven Marines in the slaying of Hashim Ibrahim Awad last spring in the town of Hamdania. But Bacos struck a deal with prosecutors under which he pleaded guilty to kidnapping and conspiracy and agreed to testify Friday at his court-martial about what he saw.

"I knew what we were doing was wrong," Bacos testified, speaking nearly in a whisper. "I tried to say something and then I decided to look away."

Bacos said he asked the Marines to let Awad go, but Cpl. Marshall L. Magincalda told him in crude terms that he was being weak and should stop protesting.


Read the entire article here.

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06 October 2006

Depleted Uranium - Worse Than 9/11

In 1979, depleted uranium (DU) particles escaped from the National Lead Industries factory near Albany, N.Y.,which was manufacturing DU weapons for the U.S military. The particles traveled 26 miles and were discovered in a laboratory filter by Dr. Leonard Dietz, a nuclear physicist. This discovery led to a shut down of the factory in 1980, for releasing morethan 0.85 pounds of DU dust into the atmosphere every month, and involved a cleanup of contaminated properties costing over 100 million dollars.

Imagine a far worse scenario. Terrorists acquire a million pounds of the deadly dust and scatter it in populated areas throughout the U.S. Hundreds of children report symptoms. Many acquire cancer and leukemia, suffering an early and painful death. Huge increases in severe birth defects are reported. Oncologists are overwhelmed. Soccer fields, sand lots and parks, traditional play areas for kids, are no longer safe. People lose their most basic freedom, the ability to go outside and safely breathe. Sounds worse than 9/11? Welcome to Iraq and Afghanistan.


To read the complete article, go here.

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He is Back. Be Very Afraid.



by Al
October 6, 2006

The recent disclosures by Bob Woodward in State of Denial alarmingly note Henry Kissinger’s access to George W. Bush and reputation as an esteemed foreign policy advisor. We should all be very afraid.

Maureen Dowd [See here, also. rdj] has masterfully reminded us why we should be afraid as has Molly Ivins.

It is time to re-cycle the art of a bygone era when Kissinger’s visit to Austin, Texas prompted the poster by Puerto Rican artist, Carlos Osorio. Kissinger is shown, sporting a Wall Street ring, walking his dictator dogs.

The poster was drawn to publicize a protest at the LBJ Auditorium in Austin, Texas on Monday, November 7, 1977. A leaflet provided background on the disastrous foreign policy of Henry Kissinger, in particular his support of the apartheid regime of Vorster in South Africa.

Kissinger’s famous quote, “Power is the ultimate aphrodisiac,” may seem dated as we look at the face of the 83 year old today. But his January, 1969 quote on Vietnam is chillingly pertinent “No matter how irrelevant some of our political conceptions or how insensitive our strategy, we are so powerful that Hanoi is simply unable to defeat us militarily.” Now we find in Woodward’s book, that the man is grinding the same old axes in yet another foreign policy disaster, advising the Bush du jour and Vice President Cheney on Iraq, saying that “Victory is the only meaningful exit strategy.”

As time has marched on, the bad influence of Henry Kissinger has as well. The movie, “The Trials of Henry Kissinger,” by Alex Gibney and Eugene Jarecki documents more of the Kissinger legacy: the scuttling of the peace process in Vietnam for partisan political gain, the horrific air war in Cambodia, and the covert involvement in the assassination of General Schneider in Chile, which prepared the way for the toppling of the democratic government of Salvador Allende on September 11, 1973.

By March 22, 1984, Henry Kissinger was back again at the LBJ Library in Austin. The protest poster was recycled with different dictator dogs. Only Chile’s dictator, Pinochet, remained in power. Fifty-three protestors were arrested when Kissinger spoke.

Kissinger was invited for a return visit to the LBJ Library in Austin, February 1, 2000. In the face of planned protests, this visit was cancelled. When the President of the University issued a statement of regret, implying that free speech had been sacrificed, two of the protest planners, Rahul Mahajan and Robert Jensen (UT Professor of Communications) took offense, noting that they wanted to hear what Kissinger had to say. “We wanted to ask him what he said to Gen. Suharto in a meeting two days before the Indonesian dictator used U.S.-supplied weapons to begin the genocide in East Timor in 1975. Why did he work so hard to undermine the democratically elected government of Chile in the 1970s? How does he feel knowing that hundreds of thousands of Cambodians died in the "secret" war he planned there in 1969?”

Kissinger hasn’t returned to Austin, but he apparently has made his way countless times to the Bush White House.

Original post also here.

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Cherry-Almond Scones for FF

These are intended to go with the video posted earlier in the week.

Cherry-Almond Scones (26 December 2004)

Actually, you can make any flavour combination you wish, from sweet to savory. These are sweet, but you are not limited to the fruit/nut combination I chose. As with many things, these are not exactly “bread,” but I’ve no idea where else to put them.

2 cups all-purpose flour, sifted
1/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
1/2 teaspoon Chinese five spice

Mix dry ingredients thoroughly in a large bowl.

8 tablespoons COLD unsalted butter
1/2 cup dried cherries
2 tablespoons slivered almonds

Preheat oven to 400° F.

Cut butter into small pieces with a sharp knife. Using a pastry cutter or two table knives, mix the butter into the dry mixture until the little bits are pea-size or smaller (I usually try for rice-sized).

When you’re to that point, mix the cherries and almonds into the ‘about-to-be’ dough. Form a well in the center.

1 large egg
1/2 cup plain yoghurt (or substitute light or regular sour cream)
1/2 teaspoon vanilla (I use very high quality, organic)

In a separate bowl whisk the egg, yoghurt, and vanilla together until it is a very smooth mixture. Add the liquid to the ‘dry’ and mix with a spatula, then your hands, pressing it all together, until a dough forms.

On a very lightly-floured surface, form the dough into a disc about 8-inches in diameter and 3/4-inch thick. Using a very sharp, long knife, cut the ‘cake’ into 8 symmetrical wedges, place each piece onto a large baking sheet covered with parchment paper (1-inch between them), optionally sprinkle lightly with a little more sugar, and bake for 15 to 17 minutes, until golden-brown on top.

Let cool for 5 minutes and serve with Earl Grey tea.

Note: FF = Foodie Friday

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05 October 2006

Free Fraud Zone



Nothing I could say can adequately prepare you for the mind-boggling fate of billions upon billions of Iraqi dollars under US supervision.


"American law was suspended.

Iraqi law was suspended.

And Iraq basically became a Free-Fraud Zone.

In a Free-Fire Zone you can shoot at anybody you want.

In a Free-Fraud Zone you can steal anything you like."


[snip]

This is not just 'water under the bridge' as one US official in the clip would have us believe. Even the word 'failure' does not adequately describe it.

This is perhaps the greatest war-time swindle in history - a testament to just how criminal our government has become.


To read the entire post from 'The Truth Will Set You Free,' click here.

From the person who posted the video on YouTube:

The coalition was given trusteeship of nearly 20 billion dollars of Iraq's money, nearly all of it was spent with no accountability and records. Fraud and corruption rampantly consumed much of these funds. Paul Bremer who headed the Coalition Provisional Authority made certain that as much of the money was spent as possible. Has some heartbreaking stories of actual Iraqi citizens and their children. Shows that the infrastructure, especially water and hospitals, which supposedly had billions spent on it though is still in shambles. Where did the money go!?

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Protesters Going to Olympia

PORT TOWNSEND -- A scattering of North Olympic Peninsula protesters are expected to join in 'The World Can't Wait' protest Thursday in Olympia, said Brinnon resident Kenn Dzaman.

Dzaman is one of several organizers of the event being staged near the state Capitol to protest a White House administration they believe is no longer representing them.

"I've got eight people coming from Brinnon," said Dzaman, who was buying on Tuesday large quantities of water and snacks to take to participants involved in the event.

Dzaman said the protest, which is taking place in conjunction with others around the country, is because of distress and anger over White House policies concerning war in Iraq, torture, domestic spying and other issues.

Organizers are urging students to walk out of school and businesses to close their doors in protest.

Protests are also planned in Everett, Seattle, Tacoma, Spokane, Twisp and Wenatchee.

The Olympia protests and demonstrations will be staged on the Capitol's West Campus Lawn at Tivoli Fountain.

For more information, check the protest Web site at this location.

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Wildlife Wednesday Thursday - R. Jehn

This was one of those remarkable photo opportunities that one is occasionally fortunate to find. The hummers loved the red hot pokers in the front yard in Shelton, and they were there frequently. This was near dusk which made the lighting very interesting. The downside is that I don't know which species this is, Anna's or rufous. It's one of the two, and very busy, as hummingbirds typically are. The pic was taken on 1 June 2004.

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04 October 2006

The Demise Of American Freedom - E. Cohen

George W. Bush has repeatedly warned, "Either you're with us or you stand with the terrorists." Now he has gotten through legislation that allows him to back it up. On Thursday, September 28, 2006, in a hastily drawn decision that will likely live in infamy, the Senate nodded assent to the Military Commissions Act (PDF).

According to this Act, an "unlawful enemy combatant" is to be defined as: "an individual engaged in hostilities against the United States who is not a lawful enemy combatant."

This basically means that if a person is not a soldier in the service of a foreign government, but is nevertheless engaging in "hostilities" against the United States, then this person is an unlawful enemy combatant. Notice that this definition does not require that such a person be an "alien," which accordingly leaves open the possibility that this designation could also be applied to an American citizen.

[snip]

According to the definition approved by the Senate, you don't even have to be part of a terrorist organization. Nor does your "hostile" act have to be done to aid such a force; nor do you have to have supported such acts. Nor do you have to be in violation of the "law of war." Nor is there anywhere in the act where the term "hostilities" has itself been defined. For example, is an anti-war activist an unlawful enemy combatant? What about an American journalist who publishes leaked information damaging to the Bush administration? What about an anti-Bush blogger? In short, the definition is broad (and vague) enough to include any American citizen who is acting in a way the President deems "hostile" to the United States. As such, it is difficult to imagine a single piece of legislation with greater potential to undermine freedom and democracy in America. (emphasis added)

Eliot Cohen

Read the full article here.

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Thunder on the Mountain - C. Floyd

Who are these people? Who are these useless hanks of bone and fat that call themselves Senators of the United States? Let’s call them what they really are, let’s speak the truth about what they’ve done today with their votes on the bill to enshrine Bush's gulag of torture and endless detention into American law.

Who are they? The murderers of democracy.
Sold our liberty to keep their coddled, corrupt backsides squatting in the Beltway gravy a little longer.


Chris Floyd

Read more from this venerable Southern gentleman here. Or, if you would like to hear Chris read this piece himself, click here.

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A New Sense of Direction - C. Loving





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Max and the Mummy - T. Dreyer

This was the first draft of Thorne's story. The final version is here.

Max and the Mummy
By Thorne Dreyer

It’s half past chow and the guys in Pod 6F2 at 1200 Baker Street, Harris County Jail, are spread around the day room writing letters to their girlfriends or their moms, catching a sitcom rerun on the television or leaning against the back wall talking on one of the pay phones.

Delgado is standing by the phones, half heartedly kicking the wall. For the third straight night his girlfriend isn’t home and he wonders where she is. That, more than just about anything else, conveys the desolation and helplessness of being locked up: Where the Hell is she?

Otherwise, it’s a pretty mellow night. It’s an off-night for the Rockets, so the guys aren’t packed around the television, barking instructions at the screen, cheering or howling their displeasure. Tonight the artists are out. A short black guy, bald, his face sporting several days’ jailhouse growth, is hard at work on a high concept Mickey Mouse, blending together blues and browns and reds made from dyes he has extracted from the food coloring on M&Ms and skittles. Paco, a tattoo artist in “the world,” is creating a bouquet of finely detailed roses on an envelope addressed to his wife.

Stoney, meanwhile, is working on a portrait of the tattooed Paco. It’s a contract job, for which he will be paid in Ramen noodle soups, the jailhouse standard of exchange. The likeness is excellent. Stoney is good; he has no formal schooling in art, but he has an eye, and excellent technique considering the limited materials he has to work with. His canvas is a Commissary handkerchief which he has primed and stiffened in milk; then he works it with pencil and ballpoint pen.

Stoney, a friendly, intelligent fellow who fights weight and drug problems, lives on West Bell in Houston’s Montrose, traveling about the neighborhood on a bright red bicycle when he isn’t locked up. Stoney has been spending time in the clinic: his leg is severely swollen and a bandage covers a raw abscess the size of a silver dollar. The hole in his leg is the result of his shooting methamphetamine without taking the care needed to hit the vein correctly.

“My girl shoots up first, then she hurries me so we can have sex together while we’re both rushing.” It’s not the first time he’s hit it wrong, and he knows he could lose a leg or worse.

“I know the only way I can stop this shit is stay away from her,” he says. “But God I love her.”

As he speaks he feathers some finely textured shadows to the handkerchief portrait of Paco.

I see that my water is boiling so I remove the stinger from my tumbler and head back to the “house” – one of five eight-man cells that open off two sides of the day room. The cell doors remain open all day, shut only at rack time. I add coffee and chocolate to my hot water and sit on my bunk, taking it all in and jotting some of it down, when out of the blue wildly-bearded Max turns to me from the mattress which he chooses to keep on the floor, and says, “Pop, what time is it?”

Why Max – the sole resident of his own private universe, who hasn’t spoken a coherent sentence in hours – is suddenly in need of the time of day I do not know. But I respond with my best guess and he quickly jots this information on one of the hundreds of sheets of lined paper surrounding him on the floor. Pages – which we all freely give him when he runs short – filled with multitudes of words and symbols. Much of it appears to be gibberish, or at least is indecipherable to the layman. For pages it is neat and linear then suddenly swirls into postmodern typographical chaos.

Wild ravings or great wisdom in some highly sophisticated code? Even money, I’d say.

Max, a ruggedly handsome man with elegant salt-and-pepper hair and sweeping beard, has an almost regal look beneath his wildness. Probably Hispanic – maybe Castilian – he’d look quite comfortable in a Havana street café, sharing cigar and brandy and tales of women and other past glories with cronies of Fidel.

Max pores over his manuscript for hours on end, often working and reworking the same page, fine-tuning. When he’s not composing or editing, his art becomes verbal. Sometimes he mumbles, or carries on complex conversations with unseen (by us) comrades or adversaries and at other times he emotes, often with Shakespearean authority. He delivers his soliloquies while marching around the cell, punctuating the high points with graceful dramatic gestures. And sometimes at night he chants: soulful, calming, tribal incantations. “Uhm BAH hah lah. Uhm BAH hah lah.”

Though jailhouse culture can be thoughtless and cruel, it is also capable of surprising generosity and respect, and there is a protective attitude towards Max that is touching. We’ve got his back. For instance, if someone tries to cheat him – like pushing him into a bad trade at chow time (“Hey Max. My carrots for your chocolate moon pie!) -- we rush to his defense. (Everybody trades, but nobody would accept that deal.)

Max isn’t stupid. He just has other things on his mind.

Watching Max, I think once more of the old man I met during booking. While Max has more life in him than two men, this fellow was virtually a ghost. A gaunt wisp of a once black man, easily in his 90’s, he wasn’t gnarled or pocked or wrinkled. He had simply become so pale, his features so softened, that there was hardly any outline left to him. He just seemed to be rescinding into nothingness.

Above each ear was an electrified tuft of white hair, as if someone had gently placed a stun gun to each temple, terrifying the unsuspecting follicles. His strange distant eyes darted around in deep sockets and when he took a step he did it in distinct increments, like he was climbing up and then down a ladder before his foot once more touched ground. His lips quivered as if continuously rehearsing his next word and when he spoke his voice was so soft and distant that the words fluttered from his lips like feathers.

We were held in this processing tank for several hours. It was a concrete room with cold concrete benches, if you were lucky enough to get one. It was a winter night and most of us were physically shaking from the chill. I watched as the old man took a roll of toilet paper and methodically – as if this were something he did every day of the year – wrapped tissue around and around his feet and ankles and up his legs until the white strips disappeared into the legs of his orange county jail pants. Then the took the tissue and carefully wrapped his neck up to his chin and ears and dropped strips like a straggly necktie into the v of his chest left bared by the flimsy orange top.

The old man simply stood there, his lips slightly quivering, looking for all the world like a mummy that had started to unravel…

I’m stirred from my reverie as Max comes to life beside me, rifling the pages of his manuscript, searching with a newfound urgency, seeking some precise passage. Apparently he finds what he’s looking for. He ceremoniously raises his hands until they freeze, palms down, fingers spread, three feet above his opus. His fingers begin to move, to roll, as if he’s playing a particularly expressive passage on the piano. Done, he folds them gently on his lap, clearly satisfied with his efforts.

This new calm is suddenly shattered by a high pitched crackle from the PA, as a deputy in the picket exclaims: “Roberts. Pack your stuff. You’re on the chain.”

My friend Shane is leaving. Like many of the men in this tank, Shane Roberts was incarcerated for a minor technical parole violation, and now he’s headed for a 45 day stint at an “Intermediate Sanction Facility.”

Shane quickly gets his stuff together and, rolled blanket under one arm, a brown bagful of his jailhouse possessions in the other, heads for the pod exit – one step closer to home.

And yes, we all follow after him, beseeching, “Shane. Shane. Come back Shane.”

But Shane’s gone and I’ve finished my coffee. And Max is peacefully curled up on his mattress, his manuscript now neatly stacked beside him.

So I pluck my ragged paperback from beneath my bunk and settle back, rolled blanket under my head, to find out if Chief Inspector Jack Oxley has finally managed to outmaneuver the Russian mafia and the treacherous yet breathtakingly beautiful Galina Lysenke to gain possession of Peter Faberge’s legendary and incredibly valuable final egg commissioned and cursed by the grand monk Rasputin just before his demise.

Whew! The plot alone tires me out. Think I’ll take a nap.

I’m dreaming of the breathtakingly beautiful Galina Lysenke when suddenly my bliss is shattered. The tank is awash with glaring light, the steel doors slam open and a phalange of deputies in riot gear comes rushing in.

“Shakedown!” somebody shouts.

“Everybody up. Down to your shorts. Single file in the day room,” they scream. Now!” We are searched, one by one. “Shoulders on the wall, eyes straight ahead. Open your mouth. Raise your tongue. Pull your ears forward. Lift your right foot. Left foot. Now drop your shorts. Bend over and spread your cheeks.”

While we’re being routinely humiliated, other guards enter the cells and rip everything apart. They tear off the sheets and throw the mattresses on the floor – as well as all the personal effects we keep under the mattresses. They are looking for weapons – homemade shanks – and contraband.

They paw through all of our stuff then kick most of it into the dayroom where trustees pack it into garbage bags and cart it away.

I hear what sounds like a flock of startled pigeons wildly taking flight. And the day room is suddenly swimming in white as hundreds of sheets of paper fill the air, flutter about the tank and fall to the grimy floor.

The steel doors to the pod crash shut and the guards are gone. And we return to the devastation of the cells.

Much of our stuff is history, including the stash of ratty paperbacks under my mattress, kind of a lending library I maintain for the guys. Books aren’t easy to come by in Harris County Jail.

Meanwhile, the scattered remains of Max’s manuscript are being swept with push brooms to one corner of the day room where they will be neatly disposed of. Max sits calmly on his mattress and begins to chant as we clean up the house and then crawl back into bed.

When I awake to the sounds of breakfast being served next door I see the floor in front of Max’s mattress is covered with tufts of black and gray and splashes of red. Max has taken a disposable razor and hacked away at his stately beard; his face is now covered with patches of hair and streams of blood from ragged gashes where he’s slashed more than beard.

As our breakfast – an orange, a small box of cereal and a pint of milk – is served, Max is led off to the infirmary. I won’t see him again.

Later that day it’s my turn to say goodbye. “Pack your stuff. You’re out of here. All the way.” That means I’m going home.

When I finally hit the street, I see the old black man from booking, a mummy no more. An ancient black woman as round as he is thin, her eyes full of tears, throws her arms around him.

He looks at me and winks.

I cross the street to McDonalds and wait for my ride.

########

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A Field Trip for Wildlife Wednesday

I inadvertently found this the other day. I'd found Web things about it, but not ever a lovely little video. It's a beautiful place and evokes very fond memories for me of young women, relaxed living, and youthful fun. Take a walk with me down into the bowl of Hamilton Pool.

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03 October 2006

Help Me Help Others


Dear friends,

For those of you who don't know what the AIDS Walk is, its a 5 kilometer walk that raises money for Aids Services of Austin (ASA), a nonprofit organization that helps people with AIDS. I first got involved in the AIDS walk and ASA when my mom worked at ASA. This is my seventh year participating in it and probably my last because I will be in college next year. I would love for you to sponsor me this year. Anything helps. People have donated anywhere from 1 dollar to 100, so I appreciate anything you can afford to give. There is still no cure, but our efforts can help feed, clothe, and give hope to those with AIDS!

Did you know that every minute - every sixty seconds - FIVE people around the world die with HIV/AIDS? Did you know that more than 60 million people across the globe are living with HIV/AIDS, and more than 20 million individuals have already died from the disease? These statistics are staggering, but you and I can HELP.

I recently accepted the challenge to raise funds to support AIDS Walk Austin in its efforts to raise critically needed funds for HIV/AIDS prevention, education and support services in Central Texas. As part of this program, I will also take part in a 5K walk. AIDS Walk Austin gives you the opportunity to help me and help our neighbors living with HIV/AIDS.

Please support me in this important project by contributing as much as you can afford to AIDS Walk Austin 2006. It is faster and easier than ever to support this great cause - you can make your donation online by simply clicking on the link at the bottom of this message. If you would prefer, you can also send your tax-deductible contribution to the address listed below. More information on AIDS Walk Austin and its beneficiaries can be found at this link.

Whatever you can give will help - it all adds up! I greatly appreciate your support and will keep you posted on my progress.

Thank you,

Nora Hansel

Click here to visit my personal page.

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The GOP


But, of course, there are reasons such that we don't really have to take full responsibility for our lives: "Disgraced former Rep. Mark Foley said through his lawyer Tuesday that he was sexually abused by a clergyman as a teenager, ..." (Associated Press) After all, the Repuglicans are 'the party of God' whose leader takes his guidance directly from The Big Man, right?

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Sectarian What? - C. Loving

Sad to acknowledge that the first toon explains a fair part of the second ...



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02 October 2006

Food, Not Lawns

Now Available! Food Not Lawns, How to Turn Your Yard into a Garden and Your Neighborhood into a Community, by Heather Coburn Flores. The premier guide for ecological living in the city through paradise gardening and shared resources by a co-founder of the original Food Not Lawns grassroots gardening project in Eugene, OR. (Chelsea Green, 2006, 334 p.) ISBN 1-933392-07-X

Order your author-signed first editions today by sending a check or money order for $25 plus $3.85 S&H ($28.85) to Heather Coburn Flores, 31139 Lanes Turn Road, Coburg, OR 97408. Estimate 5-8 business days for delivery.

See this for more information.

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SDS Convention in Chicago

SDS meets in Chicago
Jenny Brown
September 2006

Chicago--Student organizers representing dozens of chapters around the country gathered here for the first national meeting of Students for a Democratic Society since 1969. The legendary student group was founded in 1960, and by the late 60's its name became synonymous with the student movement and the New Left. That 'first iteration SDS,' as SDS northeast regional organizer Thomas Good called it, split and scattered in 1969. Local chapters continued to be active for a couple more years.

In 2006, 150 students from University of Central Florida in Orlando, Pace University in New York, Howard Community College near Baltimore, Loyola in Chicago, and many others from Washington State, Ohio, Virginia, North Carolina, Connecticut and elsewhere spent three days, August 4-7, telling each other about their organizing and strategizing about where to go with a national radical student group.

The call for a national SDS meeting came in January from several chapters of student radicals that had formed under the name "SDS" more or less independently. Pat Korte, a high school student, noted in the January 16th announcement that "several fellow activists from across the country and myself decided to form a national SDS movement, only to discover that chapters already exist! Because of this we decided to hold a national conference."

Why SDS in particular? Many students felt there needed to be a multi-issue radical student group that was about student power, there was a need on their campuses, and there was a need in the country. Korte said, "Although I have been an active participant in the anti-war and student activist movement, I have become frustrated with the groups collective inability to unify enough people under a common goal/vision to address the overall problems in our society. Historically, SDS was able to address many of these issues pertinent at the time through Tom Hayden's Port Huron Statement."

To read more, click here.

There is also additional information at the SDS and MDS Web sites (see the links in the right-hand sidebar), as well as here.

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Storms in Heaven

I watched "In the Realms of the Unreal," Jessica Yu's descriptive film of Henry Darger's life, over the weekend. It's left me in a strange, fanciful sort of mood. Perhaps Earl Gray tea and cherry, almond scones with this odd video ....

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01 October 2006

Uncle Lucius Is Back

And in case you don't get the hint, Ragamuffins, this means I'm now flat out of ideas for Singin' on Sunday. I need your help .... This song is titled 'Somethin' They Ain't.'



Once again, Uncle Lucius' Web site is here if you'd like to learn more about them, book a gig, buy their music, etc.

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