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Repetitions of Petitions

Dear Blog,

Tis the eve of the Summer (Sumer) solstice today. I count the 21st, not the 20th, as the day of actual Summer Solstice so it is moot that I overcome Net Inertia and write something that might endure. Endurance, perseverence, comes after hard pushing that which doesn't want to be pushed - like aching muscles.

Yesterday I took a long hike out into the Sacred Mounds territories surrounding my place. During the first half mile or so it was really tough to get the body motivated into what I knew was to come aka hard trekking but I pushed on past the muscle aches and lack of will into the hinterlands. After the second high hill I was into it!

Learned a rather salient lesson there as later on I did find a Viking funereal flint on a side trail, made by wild animals, of one of the higher mounds. Little known fact about this area is that there were Viking settlements here ages ago. Most of the 'Runen Stones' found in this area have been classified as 'Indian(A misnomer)Petroglyphs' but aren't.

Of course the classifiers have, mostly, never studied Viking Runes and don't know the difference. So be it... I know.

The Saturday of May 31st was a horrible day for me. It was a beautiful sunny day with no wind blowing, calm, peaceful. Then...came the crash! An old tree fell under its' own weight across our power lines. The telephone lines are very close to the power lines so...the static charge was sent back via the telephone lines and it zapped my modem. Knocked it out, fried it.

Since we are so far out in the sticks it took me a few weeks to get another modem. That was a hassle all in its' own right. After I installed it I found I still couldn't connect to the net! I'd already been gone for 13 days and needed to get back to take care of business so to speak.

Well, it took lots of trouble shooting to trace down the problem but I finally found that the zap had also knocked out my PCI slot! Oh joy! So I reinstalled the new Lucent Win Modem (Wasn't my choice!) in my other PCI slot and went through some more tech hell till finally I got it up and running and was reconnected to the net!

During all the downtime I had a good chance to reconfigure my own head as regards the net, what it means, or doesn't mean, to me and to generally get on with life. I found that my addiction to the net takes days to resolve but that through careful reading and deep meditation it is possible to see forward to a time when I will not need it at all.

Look around you at the world that we have created full of misery and homelessness and death. How close we are to the brink of totally annihilating ourselves and our planet doesn't need to be mentioned by me at all but I'm gonna mention it anyway. Oh, the pundits blame it on lots of things none of which are correct.

Mass media meant to control the behavior (Perception Modification) of those watching it includes the internet. All the so called freedoms of the net are illusory. I call the net 'the Matrix' - remember that movie? How are you being benefitted by 'the Net' which was created by DARPA!?

After a few days of being off the net I noticed my energy returning to higher peaks and my joy increasing. Simple things like trees and rivers and streams and lakes and clouds and dogs and so forth started meaning something deeper, again, to me. My vision started to return to normal and I actually began to feel alive again!

Unplugged I felt myself being plugged in once again to core me, to core self, to my own innate humanity then I began to think of exactly what insidiousness the net as it is today actually reeks on our accepting minds.

I made the chance to listen to a six CD set I have of Eckert Tolle on being in the now. I read Karla Turners' three works on alien abduction including her and her families experiences. I read Cory Doctorows' "Little Brother" which you can download from the net and in general I went through a lot of inner changes grasping firmly, yet again, that which is myself and which is reality beyond the agreements we make as progenitors of 'societies.'

Now I'm back on the net. I twitter, I socialize, it's all hollow. I downloaded Opera 9.5, a killer browser, the best of all, and I also downloaded Firefox 3 and tweaked the hell out of it so it now runs, mostly, the web really well, yet not as well as Opera.

I downloaded the new Flock beta 2 which utilising Firefox technology and promises to be better than it was before... yet, all this leaves me with an empty feeling inside.

With a "So what?" Where's the realtime communication? What do I care about Facebook or MySpace or Yahoo or any one of a dozen other 'startups?' Do they make my life better? Have they ridded this world of war? Or...are they just more of the Matrix trying to vampirize my electricity so they can in turn make billions while the rest of us starve?

Just some thoughts. Just wanted to add something to the blog. Yo blog! Hope that will suffice for awhile unless I get inspired to write something worth while. AS for Opera 9.5 it isn't exactly what I want but I can truly say it's the best browser out there and it is a pleasure to use.

It angers me, somewhat, that it doesn't have greater acceptance by the technorati out there but like the dumbed down here where I live...most things Norse are forgotten, then buried further in forgetfulness, that the Matrix might go forth with its lies evermore.

Well...Nagalfari cometh and with that fated ship comes mighty Fenriz, too, and Loki, to cause change and rebirth and...

See ya

Repetitions of Petitions

Dear Blog,

Tis the eve of the Summer (Sumer) solstice today. I count the 21st, not the 20th, as the day of actual Summer Solstice so it is moot that I overcome Net Inertia and write something that may endure. Endurance, perseverence, comes after hard pushing that which doesn't want to be pushed - like aching muscles.

Yesterday I took a long hike out into the Sacred Mounds territories surrounding my place. During the first half mile or so it was really tough to get the body motivated into what I knew was to come aka hard trekking but I pushed on past the muscle aches and lack of will into the hinterlands. After the second high hill I was into it!

Learned a rather salient lesson there as later on I did find a Viking funereal flint on the side trail made by wild animals of one of the higher mounds. Little known fact about this area is that there were Viking settlements here ages ago. Most of the runen found in this area have been classified as 'Indian (A misnomer) petroglyphs but aren't. Of course the classifiers have, mostly, never studied Viking Runes and don't know the difference. So be it...I know.

The Saturday of May 31st was a horrible day for me. It was a beautiful sunny day with no wind blowing, calm, peaceful. Then...came the crash! An old tree fell under its' own weight across our power lines. The telephone lines are very close to the power lines so...the static charge was sent back via the telephone lines and it zapped my modem. Knocked it out, fried it.

SInce we are so far out in the sticks it took me a few weeks to get another modem. That was a hassle all in its' own right. After I installed it I found I still couldn't connect to the net! I'd already been gone for 13 days and needed to get back to take care of business so to speak. Well it took lots of trouble shooting to trace down the problem but I finally found that the zap had also knocked out my PCI slot! Oh joy! So I reinstalled the new Lucent Win Modem (Wasan't my choice!) in my other PCI slot and went through some more tech hell till finally I got it up and running and was reconnected to the net!

During all the downtime I had a good chance to reconfigure my own head as regards the net, what it means, or doesn't mean, to me and to generally get on with life. I found that my addiction to the net takes days to resolve but that through careful reading and deep meditation it is possible to see forward to a time when I will not need it at all.

Look around you at the world that we have created full of misery and homelessness and death. How close we are to the brink of totally annihilating ourselves and our planet doesn't need to be mentioned by me at all but I'm gonna mention it anyway. Oh, the pundits blame it on lots of things none of which are correct. Mass media meant to control the behavior of those watching it includes the internet. ALl the so called freedoms of the net are illusory. I call the net 'the Matrix. remember that movie? How are you being benefitted by 'the Net' which was created by DARPA!

After a few days of being off the net I noticed my energy returning to higher peaks and my joy increasing. Simple things like trees and rivers and streams and lakes and clouds and dogs and so forth started meaning something deeper, again, to me. My vision started to return to normal and I actually began to feel alive again! Unplugged I felt myself being plugged in once again to croe me, to core self, to my own innate humanity then I began to think of exactly what insidiousness the net as it is today actually reeks on our accepting minds.

I hmade the chance to listen to a six CD set I have of Eckert Tolle on being in the now. I read Karla Turners three works on alien abduction including her and her families experiences. I read Cory Doctorows' "Little Brother" which you can download from the net and in general I went through a lot of inner changes grasping firmly, yet again, that which is myself and which is reality beyond the agreements we make as progenitors of 'societies.'

Now I'm back on the net. I twitter, I socialize, it's all hollow. I downloaded Opera 9.5, a killer browser, the best of all, and I also downloaded Firefox 3 and tweaked the hell out of it so it now runs, mostly, the web really well yet not as well as Opera. I downloaded the new FLock beta 2 which utilising Firefox technology and promises to be better than it was before...yet, all this leaves me with an empty feeling inside. With a "So what?" Where's the realtime communication? WHat do I care about Facebook or MySpace or Yahoo or any one of a dozen other 'startups?' O they make my life better? Have they ridded this world of war? Or...are they just more of the Matrix trying to vampirize my electricity so they can in turn make billions while the rest of us starve?

Just some thoughts. Just wanted to add something to the blog. Yo blog! Hope that will suffice for awhile unless I get inspired to write something worth while. AS for Opera 9.5 it isn't exactly what I want but I can truly say it's the best browser out there and it is a pleasure to use. It angers me, somewhat, that it doesn't have greater acceptance by the technorati out there but like the dumbed down here where I live...most things Norse are forgotten, then buried further in forgetfulness that the Matrix might go forth with its lies evermore.

Well...Nagalfari cometh and with that fated ship comes mighty Fenriz, too, and Loki, to cause change and rebirth and...

See ya

Weirdness in Cyberspace

, , , ...

Hello blog:

The new year has started well and I'm glad to see 07 out of the picture. Here in the States the dog and pony show of electing the so called 'president' is on and Diebold has done the 'upset' in New Hampshire. Yes, New Hampshire is using Diebold Optical Scanners, so easy to hack, and calling the election results fair?

Learned that George Wackenhut had a yacht named "Top Secret" and that at one time he was meeting with a man named Michael Riconosciuto and a few other "company assets" to somehow repurchase it through the sale of 5 pounds of LSD that had been hidden somewhere on the Cabazon Indian territory: http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/sociopolitica/last_circle/0.htm Now that 'book' is a long read but well worth it as it will show you something about American politics and what they call, here, Democracy.

Democracies always end up as Tyrannies so that's why America is looking more and more like the old Soviet Union which, ultimately, Wall Street helped to build! Ah yes good old Dictatorships disguised, thinly, as Democracies. Actually the United States of America was established as a Constitutional Republic. No one seems to know what that means anymore nor that Democracy is it's antithesis! Oh well...

For more on the vote scam going on where the presidential runners are concerned try: http://www.blackboxvoting.org/ if that URL "don't shine (It does though.)" then google "black box voting" and check out "Bev Harris" and the girls and boys who do give a **** what goes on behind the scenes in the American Rigged Voting scene.

In other words I'm doing tons of research on 'Electro Static Sensory Manipulation'. Oh yeah...a company called 'LHS Associates' has 'Chain of Custody' for the Diebold optical scan machines and has exclusive contracts for ALL New Hampshire voting machines as well as Connecticut, Massachussets & Vermont! Ein schoner hintergrund for sure! Hack on MacGrundy!

As for the Hillery upsets Obama propaganda? Goto blackboxvoting then tell the TV pundits to get lost. All other vote scam pundits can do the same...there are no choices for president in this country. The 'president' is, ah, elected...by the Electoral College not the friggin 'people' most of whom don't vote for these pigs anyway cause they know it's futile! Do I smell the sweet sounds of a real revolution just around the corner? Not in the Supreme Soviet States of Amerika I don't!

PROMIS is an outgrowth of PERT and with that I'm gonna say g'day for now and hope you all have an extremely wonderful new year. Remember what Liberty and Freedom stand for and never ever let anyone take them from you!

Black Box Voting organized and produced a series of voting machine red team tests with Finnish security expert Harri Hursti (2005 & 2006). The Hursti I report is the one that was shown in the HBO special, "Hacking Democracy."

Hursti I report -- Critical security flaws in the Diebold optical scan (2005):
http://www.blackboxvoting.org/BBVreport.pdf
(1,118 KB)

Hursti II report -- Critical security flaws in the Diebold TSx (2006):
http://www.blackboxvoting.org/BBVreportIIunredacted.pdf
(350 KB)

Hursti II Supplement (2006):
http://www.blackboxvoting.org/BBVreportII-supplement-unredacted.pdf
(330 KB)

Storm

Posts Deleted?

Well, nice. Got back today to my opera blog only to find that all my posts have been deleted. How wonderful. Especially since the disclaimer says that the posts are our responsibility and that they will be left as is. I've done nothing, nor said anything that could be interpreted as in any way anto opera. Maybe the posts have been too political for some but...

So be it. Guess I'll just have to spend some time figuring out how to delete the blog in its' entirety. Won't change my opinion of the browser, which is great, but I've never been one to be politically correct and maybe big brother has gotten around to whatever and this little blog was targeted. Not saying that's the case. Maybe I've not been active enough here. I don't know. But this sux...

As a matter of fact the whole internet is beginning to feel just a little bit too much like Television for my taste. I don't have the time to get all cutesy on any of my blogs in cyber space and have been contemplating leaving the internet altogether as a total waste of time.

We'll see. I'll test this space for a few more days to see if this gets deleted also.

Not that any of what I mentioned above matters at all. Just shpieling...

http://www.newciv.org/nl/newslog.php/_v308

Andreeva Bay Timebomb

Strange that anyone in their right mind could worry about the 'cost' of protection! I think it is high time for the people of this world to get rid of the kinds of people "Leaders" who have done this. I don't mean just Russians, either, but politicoes worldwide that have brought our world to the brink of almost certain destruction.

And Bush wants a 'nuclear' shield in Europe? And Putin says no, and on, and on, these insane psychotics play their endless wargames for nothing but 'profit?' What the hell kind of profit is this? A nuclear cloud over the British Isles. Parts of Norway becoming uninhabitable, etc., etc.,! People, don't you think it is high time to get rid of these traitors who have sold human kind down the tubes of oblivion for a few lousy shekels? Read on, and weep, or take action!

===


Worse than Chernobyl: 'dirty timebomb' ticking in a rusting Russian nuclear dump threatens Europe
20,000 discarded uranium fuel rods stored in the Arctic Circle are corroding. The possible result? Detonation of a massive radioactive bomb experts say could rival the 1986 disaster. By Rachel Shields
Published: 10 June 2007

A decaying Russian nuclear dump inside the Arctic Circle is threatening to catch fire or explode, turning it into a "dirty bomb" that could impact the whole of northern Europe, including the British Isles.

Experts are warning that sea water and intense cold are corroding a storage facility at Andreeva Bay, on the Kola Peninsula near Murmansk. It contains more than 20,000 discarded fuel rods from nuclear submarines and some nuclear-powered icebreakers. A Norwegian environmental group, Bellona, says it has obtained a copy of a secret report by the Russian nuclear agency, Rosatom, which speaks of an "uncontrolled nuclear reaction".

John Large, an independent British nuclear consultant who has visited the site, told The Independent on Sunday: "The nuclear rods are fixed to the roof and encased in metal to keep them apart and prevent any reactions from occurring. However, sea water has eroded them at their base, and they are falling to the floor of the tanks, where inches of saltwater have collected.

"This water will begin to corrode the rods, a reaction that releases hydrogen, a gas that is highly explosive and could be ignited by any spark. When another rod falls to the floor and generates such a spark, an enormous explosion could occur, scattering radioactive material for hundreds of kilometres."

Mr Large, who was decorated by Russia's President Vladimir Putin for his role in the salvage operation that retrieved nuclear material from the Kursk submarine in 2000, added: "This wouldn't be a thermonuclear or atomic explosion, as in a bomb, but the outcome is just as bad. Remember Chernobyl? If you had the right weather conditions and wind pattern, this would mean a radioactive cloud drifting over the UK."

The three storage tanks contain more than 32 tons of radioactive material. But the Kola Peninsula is littered with relics of Soviet nuclear facilities, housing more than 100 tons of nuclear waste - the largest concentration in the world.

Experts predict that a major explosion at Andreeva Bay could destroy all life in a 32-mile radius, including Murmansk and a sliver of Norway, whose border is only 28 miles away. But a much wider area of Norway, north-west Russia and Finland would be rendered uninhabitable for at least 20 years, and huge quantities of radioactive material would be dumped into the Barents Sea.

"In the best case a small, limited explosion in just one of the stored rods could lead to radioactive contamination in a 5km radius," Aleksandr Nikitin, a Russian former submarine officer and nuclear safety inspector turned environmental activist, told the Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten. "In the worst case, such a single explosion could cause the entire tank facility to explode. We have no calculations for what that could lead to."

Mr Nikitin, whose work for Bellona led to continuing treason charges in Russia, added: "We are sitting on a powder keg with a burning fuse, and we can only guess about the length of the fuse." Nils Bohmer, nuclear physicist and head of Bellona's Russian division, told the newspaper: "It will at least, at a careful estimate, hit northern Europe. There are enormous amounts of radioactivity stored in these tanks."

Other activists have voiced concern about the security of stored nuclear waste in the Kola Peninsula, amid reports that some is left outside in barrels, protected by only a link fence and a couple of guards. Washington-based GlobalSecurity.org reported that in 1993 about 1.8kg of enriched uranium was stolen from the Andreeva Guba fuel storage area. Although the material was quickly recovered, the fact that some of the uranium is enriched to between 30 and 40 per cent, much higher than the 2 to 3 per cent used in civil nuclear reactors, could make it tempting to terrorists seeking to make a "dirty bomb".

Apart from the decay at the Andreeva Bay facility, said Ben Ayliffe, senior climate and energy campaigner at Greenpeace UK, "security is so lax that almost anyone who wants to can just walk in. It's like Homer Simpson meets Dad's Army."

As the 1986 Chernobyl disaster showed, drifting atmospheric radiation can contaminate crops and water supplies more than 1,000 miles from the site of the explosion. In the world's worst civilian nuclear incident, the four explosions that ripped through the power plant in what is now eastern Ukraine resulted in the dispersal of a radioactive cloud containing at least 100 times as much radiation as was released by the combined effect of the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Although only three people were killed by the Chernobyl blast, it has been estimated that around 100,000 people have since died from cancers caused by exposure to radiation, with thyroid cancers increasing by 88.5 per cent. A further 300,000 people have developed non-fatal tumours even though half a million people were evacuated immediately after the accident.

The economic and social effects remain devastating, despite large-scale international assistance. Many industries have collapsed, and 1.4 million acres of prime agricultural land and forest destroyed by the explosion are still unusable. Residents are banned from entering a zone some 20 miles around the site, yet hundreds of elderly people have ignored government restrictions and gone back to their homes in surrounding villages, where they raise animals and eat fruits and berries from the radiation-soaked land.

But experts using the Chernobyl "radioactive release" to predict the likely effects of a disaster on the Kola Peninsula point out that Britain and the rest of Europe escaped remarkably lightly. The 1986 explosion occurred on a still summer night sending radioactive particles straight upwards for the most part, until they encountered winds in the upper atmosphere.

Although the radiation was widely dispersed, there was little rainfall in the immediate area, or across Europe, in the following week. The only area of Britain where rain brought the radiation to earth is relatively lightly populated: north Wales, parts of Cumbria and south-western Scotland. Care still has to be taken with meat from the affected area, but there are no reliable statistics that show any impact on human health in Britain.

Another Chernobyl-type meltdown, this time in the Arctic, could have much more far-reaching effects. The worst case would be widespread fallout caused by rain in a densely populated area, causing untold social and economic disruption beyond the threat to life.

Even without a catastrophic explosion, contamination from the Kola Peninsula facility is spreading. The region is outstandingly beautiful, with jutting cliffs, snow-covered peaks and deep fjords. The soil is rich in minerals, the rivers swim with Atlantic salmon, and the land is home to reindeer and their nomadic Saami herders. But Andreeva Bay is already devoid of marine life, and much of the area around it, a landscape of rusting submarine hulks, cranes, workshops and a disused power station, now stands empty.

A rupture or fire in the storage tanks would spread radiation further, probably forcing the evacuation of the nearest town, Zaozersk, which is less than four miles away. But Andreeva Bay is merely one of five naval bases on the Kola Peninsula, a testament to the era when the Soviet Union vied for supremacy with the US and nuclear capability, both in weapons and energy, was seen as the means to that end.

The ice-free harbours of the White Sea have always been the base of the Northern Fleet, which has two-thirds of the navy's nuclear-powered vessels. Its submarines, which can circle the globe without surfacing or refuelling, were a source of pride in superpower days. But with this came an attitude of careless arrogance towards the environment - apart from the effects on land, many spent nuclear fuel rods were dumped into the Kola and Barents seas - and the region is now paying the price.

In the economic crisis that followed the collapse of communism and the breakup of the Soviet Union, the nuclear submarine fleet and its support structure were hit by drastic cutbacks. The decommissioning of submarines rapidly became a major national problem, with suitable storage facilities filled to capacity and little money to carry out the necessary expansion.

The fuel rods at Andreeva Bay first began to leak radioactive material in 1982, when they were stored in flimsy navy warehouses. In a precursor of the emergency action taken at Chernobyl, a startled government hastily erected three massive concrete tanks filled with metal pipes in which the rods could be safely stored. These facilities were intended only as a provisional measure, to last no more than five years, yet they have now been housing potentially lethal uranium for more than two decades. The problem has been compounded by confusion over who is directly responsible for the area: the nuclear agency Rosatom, which controls all Russian nuclear sites, or the defence ministry, which has authority over military bases.

President Putin's administration denied Norwegian claims that the tanks at Andreeva Bay were unstable, claiming that the nuclear waste posed no environmental hazard. This was echoed by Rosatom's deputy head, Andrei Malyshev, who declared that "the possibility of a nuclear event that is significant in terms of safety is excluded".

Mindful, however, that the Soviet authorities sought to deny there had been an accident at Chernobyl, Russia's neighbours have been pressing for action to tackle contamination in the Kola Peninsula for years. In the 1990s European leaders began efforts to help secure the region. A 2003 agreement between Sweden, France and Russia pledged more than £30m, a deal described by the Swedish Foreign Minister as "a historic event". But little has happened since, partly due to the enormous costs.

It is estimated that a clean-up of the Kola Peninsula, either by moving radioactive material to permanent storage facilities or transporting it to a reprocessing plant, will cost around £2.2bn. Although Britain, the EU and the US have offered help, with Norway saying last month that it would pay to decommission two nuclear submarines, Russia will still end up footing most of the bill. It also faces the hazardous task of shifting the waste to where it can be dealt with, making Britain's problems in handling waste from old, and possibly new, nuclear plants seem minor.

After the radioactive material has been extracted from the dumps by remote-controlled vehicles, it will have to be transported in sealed containers down the coast to Murmansk, where the government hopes to construct new long-term storage facilities. Material which can be reprocessed will be carried in trains hundreds of miles to Mayak, in the heart of the Ural mountains. The residents of the city, who face the prospect of having tons of highly dangerous material passing through for several years, formally learned of the proposals only last autumn.

The latest controversy shows, however, that doing nothing is no longer an option. Mr Ayliffe said: "The Andreeva Bay nuclear dump is incredibly dangerous... a disaster waiting to happen that underlines the intractable problem of how to deal with the thousands of tons of highly toxic waste created by nuclear power."

Danger Zone: What will happen if there is an explosion

Best scenario: a limited explosion of one rod could contaminate a three-mile radius around Andreeva Bay. Wildlife could die out. Worst scenario: the entire facility explodes, radiation could destroy life in a 32-mile radius and make areas of Norway, Finland and Russia uninhabitable. Contamination could reach the UK and beyond.

The threat within the tanks

7,000 nuclear fuel rods are stored in each tank. Each rod hangs separately, encased in a metal tube to prevent any uncontrolled reaction.

Seawater enters through cracks in the tank and erodes the rods, causing them to fall into the salt water that has collected in the tube.

Hydrogen is released when the rods corrode. A spark from another falling rod could ignite this highly explosive gas, setting off an "uncontrolled explosion".

Dirty bombs: the terror threat posed by nuclear materials

Unlike a nuclear bomb, which requires costly precision engineering, the construction of a "dirty bomb" requires only the combination of radioactive material with a standard explosive, which serves to scatter the particles.

Few people might be killed in the explosion, but the disruption caused by contamination in a city centre would be huge. Authorities in several countries claim to have foiled such plots by terrorists.

In 1995 Russian police said they had prevented Chechen separatists from detonating radioactive isotopes wrapped in explosives in a Moscow park. Londoner Dhiren Barot, jailed in 2004 for planning to detonate dirty bombs in underground car parks in London and New York, sought radioactive material from hospital equipment such as X-ray machines.

Further reading: 'The Russian Northern Fleet: Sources of Radioactive Contamination', by Nilsen, Kudrick and Nikitin (Bellona)

Democracy Is Fascism

, , , ...

It always amazed me how people can, year after year, rigged election after rigged election, go on believing that writing to their phracking 'Congressmen or Congresswomen,' or so called 'representatives' will do one iota worth of good. It is obvious, to me, that people, such as Mr Roland in the article below, are totally ignorant of the history of the so called United States.

Since the inception of this country it has been one war after another and I don't see an end to that anytime soon. America never stood for freedom and justice for anyone! Go ahead, proove me wrong! I'd love to be prooven wrong in t his well studied opinion of mine.

Democracy is just a facade for 'the totalitarian state.' Any nation, anywhere, any time, is nothing more than 'a legal fiction.' An entity created on paper, for the benefit of the few who ravage the worlds resources in whatever fictitious name said fictitious entity is made to go by in the world of fictitious people, called persons, created by it.

So when you read the below, I've no fear that anyone actually will read it, just know that all the representatives, all the titled men and women in suits that sit in their little boxes up on, ahem, "Capitol Hill" are the same regardless of how much they lie for they speak with forked tongues all and they are all, every single one, traitors to human kind, not only traitors to the ideals, espoused, of this "Nation" but traitors to the ideals of Human Kind everywhere.

May they never ever rest in peace but may they rot in infamy forever for they are all War criminals and murderers anxious to fill their own pockets with as much 'loot' as possible before they leave office, if ever!

RA

=====

"Iniquity, committed in this world, produces not fruit immediately, but, like the earth, in due season, and advancing by little and little, it eradicates the man who committed it. ... "Justice, being destroyed, will destroy; being preserved, will preserve; it must never therefore be violated." - Manu 1200 bc

Can you Imagine being thrown in jail with no explanation why. Sounds illegal, doesn't it ?

It should be. Congress made a more than terrible mistake last October, and allowed President Bush to damage one of the oldest founding principles of our democracy. They gave the president the authority to seize people and hold them without ever explaining why ~ despite the fact that the Constitution itself says he should not have that power.

Now some members of the House have recognized how big a deal this is, and they're trying to set it right. Congressman Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) is beginning a fight to restore the right of habeas corpus, which Congress gave away.

Tell your Representative to Restore our Constitutional rights to habeas corpus.

http://action.truemajority.org/campaign/habeas_corpus

Congressman Nadler is trying to add language to an existing bill which would restore habeas corpus. If that fails, he promises to bring it up again, as an amendment. If that fails, there are new bills waiting which would undo the damage of last October's Military Commissions Act. Send your message now to tell your Representatives to do what it takes to restore this cornerstone of American democracy.

Join with me and http://TrueMajority.org/ to pressure Congress to do the right thing and restore this fundamental right.

http://action.truemajority.org/campaign/habeas_corpus


Allen L Roland

=====

Where's Osama?

George Bush needs your help
Time is running out to find Osama bin Laden before November 2.

Join the National Initiative to find Osama bin Laden before November 2
and help fulfill the presidential vow to capture Osama bin Laden "dead or alive."

How can I help find Osama?
Research has indicated that artificial intelligence and image recognition technologies are no match for a human being when it comes to the task of scanning photos for signs of human activity, particularly in high snowfall areas. However, the number of images to scan has overwhelmed the available manpower to scan them. Until now.

You will be connected to our satellite server and randomly assigned a small section of the Eastern border of Afghanistan, or other location where our latest intelligence has indicated that Osama bin Laden is hiding.

Identifying targets
Your mission is to visually identify possible targets. Any signs of humanity should be considered a viable target. Since our intelligence is never wrong, there is no chance whatsoever that you will identify a civilian target which could lead to the death of innocent civilians. Civilian casualities http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/1740538.stm should not be your concern--there is an election at stake, and time is running out.

Requesting military action
If you identify a target on the satellite image, click on the satellite image, and a target image will appear. You may be given the option to request a variety of attacks. See the weapons systems http://www.wheresosama.org/weapons.html page for more information on some of the weapons used in Afghanistan.



http://www.wheresosama.org/

Bonded at Birth

, , , ...

Stormulf:
===

Bonded at Birth: How a CIA Coup d'État in Iran and My Life Became One

By Behzad Yaghmaian

I am a child of the coup d'état, born in Iran a few days after the CIA helped overthrow the popular, democratic government of Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh in 1953.

Not long before my birth, facing nationwide protests, the Shah of Iran was forced to abdicate his power and flee the country. My mother used to tell me how men and women celebrated in the streets, how strangers gave flowers and sweets to each other. "The Shah left," they cried with joy. However, the celebration did not last long. In just a few more days, the political landscape changed again. Men paid by the U.S. government began to roam the streets of Tehran, armed with truncheons and chains, assaulting Mossadegh's supporters. Soon the Shah returned and Mossadegh was put under house arrest. That was when I was born.

A witch-hunt for the followers of Mossadegh, communists, anyone who opposed the Shah and the coup d'état now began. Many were jailed – and tortured. Some opposition figures went underground or left the country; the rest lived in fear of the Shah and, within a few years, the SAVAK, his brutal secret police (also set up with CIA help).

Even as a child, I knew about the SAVAK. I remember adults whispering about it at family gatherings. The fear was palpable. I drew the obvious conclusion: The SAVAK was more powerful and far more horrible than Zahhak, a legendary Iranian monster with snakes growing out of his shoulders that I feared as a child.

My family did not respect the Shah or America; they feared them. My father forbade us to mention them at family gatherings. "Politics is not any of our business," he would say. It was his mantra. He feared being spied on by the SAVAK, our neighbors, or strangers. Later, I learned how the Americans helped create the SAVAK, trained the Shah's torturers, advised the Shah, and closed their eyes to everything that happened in his political prisons. I was told how young men and women were tortured in these jails and I came to agree with my father; politics was not any of my business.

When I was in the fifth grade, I first saw tanks, soldiers, and angry protesters – at the intersection by my home. Sticks in their hands, and throwing stones, these men broke the windows of our local phone booth and of the stores around the intersection. They were shouting, "Death to the Shah," "Death to America." I heard the gunshots – many of them. Scared, yet curious, I went to the rooftop of my house to watch the chanting men. "Come downstairs," my father shouted. "This isn't any of our business."

My home was near the main army barracks in Tehran, the elementary school I attended only a short walk away from the scene of serious street riots. The school was somehow an extension of my family: my uncle was the principal, my mother and aunt teachers. I understood the seriousness of what was happening on the streets only when, in the middle of taking an arithmetic exam, I noticed the vice principal and my aunt in our classroom, whispering to my teacher and glancing at me. I was only half-done when the teacher walked over, examined my test papers, and whispered the remaining answers to me.

Joining my aunt, I raced home through the tense, half-deserted streets of my neighborhood, leaving the other students struggling with the exam. "Too dangerous to be out. Everyone was worried for you," my aunt said. I did not leave home again that day or the next.

In the streets in those days – it was 1963 – people talked about a man they called Ayatollah Khomeini. Some liked him; others did not. I was too young to understand any of the adult discussions around me, but I could grasp the meaning of the tanks on our streets. Later, I learned that they were in my neighborhood to quell a rebellion by Khomeini's supporters. As a result, he was exiled to Iraq.

In high school, I would see police officers in helmets, swinging their truncheons outside the campus of Tehran University; sometimes I even saw them beating protesting students. But I would walk away, staying out of trouble just as my elders had advised me.

Onto the Streets

Then, one day in February 1970, I didn't walk away.

At six in the morning, my mother woke me and sent off on the chore I hated most, buying fresh bread for breakfast. In the neighborhood bakery, I was dawdling, enjoying the heat of the fire from the glowing oven, the intoxicating aroma of fresh bread, when a young man in black trousers, a suit jacket that didn't match, and a brown, hand-knitted V-neck sweater pulled over a shirt of a different color approached me. Short and unassuming, he had an instantly forgettable face that I remember vividly to this day.

"Sorry for intruding," he said politely, introducing himself as a student from Tehran University. I can't claim to recall the details of our conversation, only his question, the one that intrigued me, but left me uncomfortable and scared.

"Do you know about the student strike over the bus-fare hike?" he asked. I did not, I told him, but I certainly knew about the Shah's recently announced plan to increase fares by 150%. Everyone did. This threatened to make my life far more difficult. I was born to a lower middle-class family and the fare hike would have meant taking the bus to school, but walking forty-five minutes to get home. Like many in my school, I was, until that moment, prepared to do exactly that. End of story.

Quietly but passionately, the young man told me of the student decision to force the government to retract its new policy. "Will you come out and join us?" he asked, encouraging me to boycott my high-school classes that day and do just what I had always feared: protest. Although there were no other customers in the bakery, the pervasive fear of being watched by the SAVAK left me feeling uncomfortable. As soon as my bread had been slipped out of the oven, I paid the baker, shook the young man's hand, and rushed home – not, of course, mentioning a word about my unexpected encounter.

I took the bus to school that morning and was attending a lecture in physics when a sudden uproar in the hallway disrupted my peace. Stamping feet, banging on doors, hundreds of students were marching through the corridors, shouting, inviting everyone to join them in the school courtyard. The teacher, hoping to maintain order, continued his lecture, but his students simply packed up their books and stormed from the classroom. Following them without hesitation, I joined the protest. For a brief moment, my fears, it seemed, had vanished.

From that courtyard, we poured into the streets – against the Shah, against America, against everything that had once terrified me – disrupting traffic, joining others from nearby schools. Rumors circulated in the crowd. Arrests had been made at Tehran University. Students had attacked the Iran-America Society Cultural Center, breaking windows and chanting anti-American slogans. Later that day, we rode the bus home – free. The next day, the government announced a policy reversal: The bus fares would be left unchanged.

A World of Silences

In college in the early 1970s, some of my classmates would disappear for weeks or months at a time. No one asked why. Everyone knew they had been taken away by the SAVAK. When they returned, we still did not ask questions.

This happened to a classmate I respected. Like the young university student I met at that bakery, he was provincial. Most of the other students in the school wore jeans or more stylish Western outfits; he wore trousers and suit jackets, the typical outfit of provincial folks. Different as we were, he often engaged me in conversations about life and our studies.

One day, he stopped coming to school. A week passed, then another and another; still, his seat remained empty. There were whispers about his whereabouts, but no one discussed his absence openly. Soon, other students began disappearing: a petite woman, a tall bearded fellow, and a youth from a far-away province.

Three months passed… and then, one morning, I saw him sitting alone on a bench in the main lobby of our school, thin and frail. I embraced him, said a few words, and departed. I wanted to ask questions; I did not. He wanted to tell me stories; he did not. And life went on in that silence.

"No Gas for Iranians"

I left Iran for graduate studies in the United States in 1976. On February 9, 1979, an Islamic government replaced the Shah's regime. I watched the mass protests and shootings in Tehran from New York on television. Once again, there were those tanks in the streets and people chanting "Death to the Shah," "Death to America." Once again, they were joyously shouting "Long Live Khomeini." The Shah fled the country. I was happy to see him go, happy Iran was free of America.

I read how students and ordinary citizens stormed the Shah's prisons, unlocking every cell, freeing all political prisoners. Some had been in jail since the 1953 coup d'état. Those opening the prisons fancied turning them into museums, which would educate future generations in the wrongdoings of the Shah and his American supporters. No longer, they dreamed, would Iranians be tortured for opposing them.

Such hopes, unfortunately, did not last. By the time I returned to Iran in the summer of 1979, the country was already facing life under a repressive theocratic state, albeit an anti-American one. Iranians who took part in the mass movement in the streets which, miraculously, overthrew the Shah were now dealing with a government that wished to control every aspect of their lives. It promptly banned all music, foreign movies, and theater; subjected women to what it considered an Islamic hijab, forcing them to cover their hair and wear baggy robes in dark colors; it had no hesitation about shutting down newspapers and magazines that questioned its policies. Government militias and paid thugs raided the headquarters of oppositional political organizations, attacked bookstores, and burnt books.

By that fall, the Shah's political prisons were once again being used to jail and torture Iranians. Many of the freed political prisoners had been returned to their cells. Ironically, this time around, they were charged with being friends of America, aka "the Great Satan." Anyone who challenged the government was accused of helping the United States to undermine the Islamic Republic, the cold war with the Great Satan was now a convenient pretext for imprisoning journalists, writers, and student activists – anyone, in fact, who dared to disagree with the reining theocrats. They were labeled "enemies of the state," "agents of America." It was the beginning of a new era.

And yet much remained eerily the same. With many still being jailed and tortured, this time for liking America or being considered its voice in Iran, we Iranians remained hostages to the strange, entangled, never-ending relationship between the two countries.

In the U.S., Iran now underwent a similar transformation from ally to enemy after a group of student backers of Khomeini seized the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, holding 50 of its residents hostage for 444 days. I was back in the Bronx, attending Fordham University, when, during that crisis, Ronald Reagan termed Iranians "barbarians." If I was hurt by the label, the Iranian government welcomed it as the best proof of America's "animosity towards the Islamic Revolution."

The hostage crisis opened a new chapter in the Iranian-American relationship, evoking anger among some of my fellow students at Fordham. A long banner, for instance, hanging from a wall of one of the dormitories read: "Save Oil, Burn Iranians." Hoping to offer a sense of the Iranian grievances against the U.S. that lay behind these events, I agreed to be interviewed by the student paper. I explained the way the effects of the CIA's covert action in the 1953 coup had rippled down to our moment, how Iranian democracy had been a victim of American support for the Shah.

A few days after the interview was published, in a letter to the paper's editor, a group of students wrote, "The Iranian student must watch his back when he walks home alone late at night." Similar threats continued, along with occasional physical harassment. Meanwhile, Iranian students in southern states were reportedly denied service at restaurants and gas stations – "No Gas for Iranians," was a gas-station sign of the times; some were even beaten up.

The Reagan administration only increased its rhetoric against Iran in this period, matched phrase for phrase by the Iranians, as the war of words between the two countries became ever more intense. Action replaced words after Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein invaded Iran in 1980, starting an eight-year bloodletting between the two countries that would leave hundreds of thousands dead and wounded.

Hoping to weaken, or perhaps topple, the Islamic Republic, the U.S. and its regional allies – Saudi Arabia and the Arab Emirates – aided the Iraqi war effort, providing Saddam with large grants and credit. Later in the conflict, the Pentagon provided Iraq with invaluable operational and planning intelligence as well as satellite information about the movements of Iranian forces, even when it knew that Saddam would use nerve gas against them. Meanwhile, the besieged Iranian government continued to persecute its domestic critics, accusing them of being the agents of the "Great Satan."

Loving the Great Satan

Like many Iranians studying in universities in the West, I stayed away from Iran, later applying for U.S. citizenship and making this country my new home. In May 1995, after sixteen years, I returned as a visiting university lecturer, part of a special United Nations program. The Iran of my childhood was all but gone. Large murals of the "fallen martyrs" of the Iran-Iraq War, and anti-American posters were everywhere. The security forces and the bassij – the "moral police" – patrolled the streets in their jeeps and station wagons. The war with Iraq had long ended, but Tehran remained visibly under its shadow – a city of martyrs and anti-American warriors, the authorities proclaimed.

Even the street names had changed; many were now named after the martyrs of that brutal war. There was nothing left of my old neighborhood. My home, the bakery, my elementary school, everything had been razed. In their place were a freeway and new residential projects. I recognized only four homes at the far end of the alley where I grew up. On a discolored and bent plaque nailed to a wall was the name of one of my childhood playmates: "Martyr Ali Sharbatoghli."

Inside Tehran homes, behind closed doors, lay another Iran, startlingly unlike the façade so carefully constructed by the government. In the streets, women covered their hair and wore long, baggy robes to disguise their curves; inside they wore Western clothes – jeans and revealing dresses. They lived two lives.

A version of America, as filtered through Hollywood (and Iranian exiles in Southern California), was in every home. Through bootlegged music from LA, or the songs of Pink Floyd, Metallica, Guns N' Roses, and other Western rock icons of the time, Tehranis embraced what the government called "the infidel." They danced to his music and imitated the lifestyle they absorbed from satellite TV and pirated Hollywood films. Tapes of American movies sometimes made it to the Iranian capital before they were commercially released in the U.S. Even those who opposed the U.S. politically and could not forgive or forget its role in the 1953 coup and the Shah's prison state found joy in American pop culture. In private conversations, relatives, friends, even absolute strangers inquired about my life in the States or the possibility of somehow escaping to America.

It appeared that Iranians could not live without America. Even the government needed the Great Satan to repress its opponents, while Tehranis took refuge in American pop culture to escape the life created for them by that very government.

In 1997, two years after my visit, a smiling reformist cleric, Mohammad Khatami, became president. Iranians were energized. Hope returned. And when I visited in July 1998, it seemed that a new Iran was truly emerging. Khatami was but one of many original architects of the Islamic Republic who were now calling for a change in direction: a reversal of foreign policy, a freer press, and the expansion of civil liberties.

Khatami himself championed a radical change in Iran's foreign policy, advocating what was called a "dialogue of civilizations." He set a new tone, calling, in fact, for a rapprochement between Iran and the West, especially the United States. Khatami's presidency helped bring into the open deep divisions inside the country: between the government and the people as well as within that government itself. It also highlighted the touchstone role the U.S. continued to play in Iranian politics and society.

Now, however, for the first time in a quarter-century, many believed an opportunity existed to end the hostility that had only hurt the Iranian people. Young and old, Iranians seemed to welcome this chance. Even some among the former Embassy hostage-takers expressed regrets and became a part of the growing reform movement, while advocating rapprochement with America. Four years after Khatami was elected president, a poll administered by Abbas Abdi, one of the student leaders of the hostage-taking, revealed that 75% of Iranians favored dialogue with the American people. Abdi was subsequently jailed.

Despite resistance from conservatives, an independent press was emerging; old taboos were being questioned. There were political rallies that not long before would have led directly to jail; there were informal meetings, debates, protests, art exhibits, theater openings, and a burst of other forms of political and artistic expression. The fear and anxiety I had sensed everywhere two years earlier seemed to have abated. Young men and women openly defied the government through their body politics, their recurring protests, their fearless confrontations with the police. They broke taboos, expressed their feelings openly, and risked beatings and arrest. I encountered a small group of such young Iranians during my overnight detention in Tehran – a vision of what a new Iranian society might have felt like and a painful reminder that the forces of the old order were still alive and all too well.

My Night in Jail

It was a mild evening in February 1999. I was sitting on a park bench with a female friend when two members of the security forces walked towards me. By the time the thought of escaping crossed my mind, it was already too late. I imagined the worst. There I was in the park in the dark with a woman not related to me by blood or marriage. In those days, that was still a crime in the Islamic Republic of Iran.

"Get up, get up, let's go," one guard demanded.

I asked for an explanation.

"Shut up. Let's go," he insisted, demanding my identification card. All I had was my faculty ID from Ramapo College in New Jersey. Uneducated, the guards could not read the card.

"What is this?"

I responded that I was a professor from America visiting my ailing father in Tehran.

"America…" the guard repeated the word, still holding my card, but now staring at me. Had I thought about it, I would have realized that an American ID card would be used against me, and my appearance – I was wearing a fashionable winter coat and a long scarf – a cause of envy and anger.

My friend and I now had no choice but to follow the guards to a building on the north end of the park. We were ushered into a room where there were other arrested young men and women, a few uniformed officers, and a middle-aged man in plainclothes behind a desk.

"Against the wall! Stay right there!" shouted the arresting guard.

The man in plainclothes asked about us and the guard showed him our identification cards. "A professor from the United States," said the guard.

"Get over here!" the man shouted.

Approaching his desk, I began, "Why am I …?" but his heavy hand crashing into my face cut my question short. I hit the wall behind me.

"What's that fuzz under your lips?" the interrogator asked, pointing to the small patch of hair. "Did your mommy tell you to grow this?" Laughter erupted.

"I'll break you into pieces before I let you go," said the man. "Do you think this is Los Angeles? We'll show you where you are. This is Iran not America. We'll show you!" And he struck my face again with that heavy hand. Having nearly lost my balance, I leaned against the wall.

"I'll show you where you are," he kept repeating, staring at my faculty ID card, then turning and hitting me. By now he was smiling triumphantly, while armed, uniformed men kept wandering into the room to stare at me, inspect me from head to toe. "American," they would say, with a mixture of wonderment and contempt, looking at each other, laughing. My face was throbbing, my ears literally ringing from the repeated strikes. I remained silent, wishing this were a bad dream.

Two hours of insults and beatings followed before the interrogation ended. I was then handcuffed and two soldiers took me to a nearby temporary jail for those committing "moral deviance." A metal door opened. I entered. "Take off your belt and shoelaces," said the prison guard. I handed him my keys and other sharp objects. The metal door closed behind me. I was officially jailed.

"This is your home for the night," the guard said, opening the door to a small, stuffy, windowless cell. It was packed with young men, sitting on the dirty carpet, leaning against the wall. "Welcome," a number of them said.

"Please, here…" a thin man in his early twenties squeezed aside to open a space for me.

"What are you doing here? You don't seem to belong," said another man. Without hesitation, I told my story. Intrigued and excited by the presence of a visitor from America, they seized the moment. In no time, I was flooded with questions about life, music, girls, about all that was officially forbidden in Iran.

"Have you been to Los Angeles?" a talkative young man inquired. "I would do anything to go there!" Others floated the names of Iranian singers living in Los Angeles – the exiled singers of the Shah's time and new pop stars. "Have you ever seen Sandy in person?" a very young inmate asked about a singer I had never heard of. "How many times have you gone to Dariush's concerts?" he asked about the most popular singer among the young before the Islamic revolution. "How does he look in person? Give him my regards."

Another young inmate quietly inquired about Pink Floyd and Santana. "Have you ever gone to a Pink Floyd concert?" he asked in an awed whispered. I remembered my own youth, those long hours listening to Pink Floyd and Dariush, that same longing for a chance to see them in person. A generation later, in an Islamic republic, what had changed?

"How can I emigrate to America?" a man, who hadn't said a word, asked from across the room.

Suddenly, an older inmate began singing a popular song associated with Hayedeh, an icon from the Shah's time. She had died in exile in Los Angeles five years earlier. The cell fell into silence.

My night in prison ended and I was taken to court the next morning. As I left the cell, the inmates embraced me one by one, promising to remain in touch. "Say hello to Los Angeles," an inmate said jauntily. "Write about us in the newspapers. Tell people about our conditions. Don't forget us."

I was handcuffed, put in a van, and driven away to court. Later that day, I was released on bail; many of the men in my cell undoubtedly didn't have the same luck, remaining behind closed doors, dreaming of their favorite singers in America. My moment among them was a reminder of the gulf that separated our worlds. Soon enough – far sooner than I wanted – I would return to the U.S.; they would remain in embattled Iran, only dreaming about America.

How I left

My departure was unexpected. It came after a week of nationwide protests against the government. On July 8, 1999 – just as in my youth – a small contingent of students left the housing compound of Tehran University, marching in protest this time against the closure of the reformist newspaper Salam. It was a peaceful demonstration which ended without a confrontation with the authorities as the protesting students returned to their rooms that evening. In the early morning hours of July 9, however, the anti-riot police and plainclothes thugs burst into the housing compound, assaulting sleeping students with chains and batons, even setting rooms on fire. One student was killed; many were injured and taken away to jail.

By midday, news of the attack had reached university campuses all across the city; hundreds now joined the embattled students of Tehran University, setting up barricades, occupying the housing compound. By the time I arrived, ordinary citizens had already joined in, while the student protest had moved out of the university and been transformed into a full-blown street riot.

On July 10, thousands of students and youths gathered at the entrance of Tehran University, chanting slogans against the Supreme Religious Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, shouting "Death to the Dictator" and "Freedom Now." In the streets around the university's historic entrance, scenes reminiscent of the 1979 revolution were taking place. Stores were shut down for fear of violence.

On July 12, Ayatollah Khamenei responded by calling the protesters "agents of America" and ordering a clampdown. "Our main enemies in spying networks are the designers of these plots," he declared. "Where do you think the money that is allocated by the U.S. Congress to campaign against the Islamic Republic of Iran is being spent? No doubt that that budget and a sum several times larger are spent on such schemes against Iran."

Two days later, swinging their truncheons and thick chains, anti-riot police and bearded men in slippers attacked the demonstrators. More than two thousand of them were jailed. The student uprising was put down. Soon after, I received a call from a journalist friend.

"Do you have an exit visa on your passport? Leave Iran quietly and soon," he said.

A cell within the Ministry of Intelligence, he informed me, had compiled a "thick file" about my activities in Iran. The government was now looking for scapegoats, people they could blame for the student protests. My profile fit the bill perfectly for the Islamic Republic. After all, I was an American citizen, gave lectures on political economy, wrote weekly columns for reformist papers, traveled in and out of Iran, and had close ties with the students. "Spying for America" was a common charge for people like me in those days. I was to be framed and displayed to the public as an enemy of the state.

Fearing for my life, I went into hiding and, on July 19, flew to Dubai. A week later, I was back in New York. My short rendezvous with even a limited democracy in Iran had ended.

Dreams of War, Dreams of Peace

Many things have changed in Iran since 1999. The reformists have largely been pushed out of the government. The new president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and the people around him have been working hard to reverse whatever progress was made in the areas of foreign policy and civil liberties during Khatami's presidency.

Changes no less important occurred in the United States, which, of course, got its own fundamentalist government in 2000. In 2002, President George W. Bush declared Iran an official member of his "Axis of Evil," and, in the past few years, the anti-Iranian rhetoric has only escalated. Iran is now viewed by the current administration as the main threat to American interests in the Middle East, the premier rogue state in the region, a supporter of international terrorism, and enough of a menace to warrant war planning on a major scale. Officials in Iran have been using similar rhetoric about America. The war of words has reached dangerous levels. A real war seems conceivable.

For two years now, respected investigative journalists like the New Yorker's Seymour Hersh have been reporting on the existence of elaborate Bush administration preparations for a full-scale air campaign on Iran, possibly including the "nuclear option." The administration's obsession with Iran's nuclear ambitions, its rhetoric about the danger of a nuclear Iran to Israel and to world security, and its orchestrated efforts (and relative success) in referring Iran's case to the Security Council all seem like the prelude to a war against Iran. Adding to this impression are the administration's drumbeat of claims about Iranian "interference" in Iraq, its contribution to American casualties by supposedly supplying advanced elements for the making of roadside bombs to the Iraqi insurgency, as well as its support for terrorist movements in Lebanon and Palestine (as Mr. Bush repeated in his 2006 State of the Union Address). In addition, the dispatching of more aircraft carrier task forces to the Persian Gulf and the arrest of Iranian diplomats in Iraq only increase my fears of war. Is it truly possible that this administration could launch such a war against my childhood home, creating a new, more horrific version of 1953, another half-century-plus of bitterness, another half-century-plus of an Iranian obsession with America?

The specter of war is haunting me now. Recurring nightmares interrupt my sleep. I see those last houses in my old neighborhood reduced to rubble and dust, bridges destroyed, homes burned to the ground. In my solitude, I wonder how my neighbors in New York will treat me if a war breaks out. Will they display American flag decals on their windows? Will they tie yellow ribbons to trees? I think of my students, and wonder whether they will see me as an enemy the day the United States begins bombing Iran or will they think to consol me, to ask how my family is coping with the war? Will they sooner or later be dispatched to Iran to aim their guns at my loved ones?

I wish to tell my students and neighbors of the dream I have been carrying with me for years. I dream, someday, of returning to the place I've kept so close to my heart, of breathing the fresh air in the mountains surrounding Tehran, of drinking tea in the humble teahouses on the bank of the narrow stream that gives life to those barren hills. I dream of buying fresh parsley and tomatoes from the old man on the street corner next to my mother's home, greeting the baker with a smile.

Will American bombs kill my dream?

April 13, 2007

Tom Engelhardt [send him mail mailto:tomdispatch@yahoo.com ] is editor of TomDispatch.com http://www.tomdispatch.com/ , a project of the Nation Institute http://www.nationinstitute.org/ . He is the author of several books, including The Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch interviews. His new blog is The Notion. Behzad Yaghmaian is the author of Embracing the Infidel: Stories of Muslim Migrants on the Journey West (Delta Trade paperbacks 2006) and Social Change in Iran: An Eyewitness Account of Dissent, Defiance, and New Movements for Rights. He is a professor of political economy at Ramapo College of New Jersey.

Copyright © 2007 Behzad Yaghmaian

Tom Engelhard Archives

http://www.lewrockwell.com/engelhardt/engelhardt-arch.html

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"Feds" Press Case Against "Guru of Ganja"


SAN FRANCISCO (KCBS) -- Federal prosecutors are moving forward with their case against marijuana grower Ed Rosenthal, a month after a federal judge chastised the government for adding new charges soley to punish the self-proclaimed "guru of ganja".

Rosenthal was convicted of three felonies in 2003 for growing hundreds of plants for a medical marijuana program in Oakland and sentenced to a day in prison, which he served.

A federal appeals court overturned his conviction last year because of misconduct by a juror who consulted an attorney on how to decide the case.

But prosecutors indicted Rosenthal again on three growing charges in October over the same marijuana operation. They also added four counts of hiding money and five counts of filing false tax returns.

Those charges were tossed out last month, but prosecutors said in court today they will retry Rosenthal on cultivation charges.

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Was thinking of installing 3.20 on my USB Drive. I think I'll do that. I hear there are changes that have evolved into a newer browser. I still don't use Flash or that other problematic thing that starts with an S but since I upgraded to a Dual Core AMD with lots of space and XP Pro - maybe I should.

Opera, for me, on my other box had tons of problems with active X and flash etc., So... since upgrading I haven't even thought too much about incapatability of Opera with Active X. Google is still slow as a M*********

But there is a newer, nicer, friendlier feel to this place.


Hic alta, hic salta.

, , , ...

Hello all Opera lovers, hello +ORC, hello Fravia and all members of the old Academy. I'm flying with the Orion Krewe, now, and we're getting a lot of work done for the Aegis (AE-24) so I can finally begin the de-brief on Groups 2 here in the place where I am that I am. I'm gonna start the communion of minds off with a strange piece which, nevertheless, must be seen from the over all "OMNI" context of things in this otherwise VAST vortex in 3 Dimensional time.

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Rabbi Aharon Cohen speech to Holocaust Conference

Orthodox Jewish Attitude to the ’Holocaust’
(International Conference “Review of the Holocaust”, Teheran 11-12 December ’06)

Speech delivered by Rabbi Aharon Cohen of Neturei Karta

1. Honourable friends, peers and colleagues. We are gathered here to discuss and consider from many angles a tremendously prominent issue from among the tragic events of the 2nd World War. The issue which has become known as the ‘Holocaust’. As is known this issue revolves around the policy and actions adopted by Nazi Germany against the Jewish People. This is of course in the context of their much wider murderous activities at that time. My aim is to try and give you the Orthodox Jewish approach to this matter.

2. Firstly let me express my gratitude to the illustrious organisers of this valuable event for granting my colleagues and myself the opportunity to express our views on this matter and we consider this opportunity a very great privilege.

3. I and my colleagues are what is known as Orthodox Jews, that is Jews who endeavour to live their lives entirely according to the age old Jewish religion and way of life known as Judaism. We are here under the banner of the group known as Neturei Karta which is not a separate movement or organisation but propagators of the philosophy expressing the opposition by Orthodox Jewry to the idea known as Zionism – the secular nationalistic movement to form a sectarian State in Palestine. As is well known, Zionism and the Holocaust have become very much intertwined over the years and the Zionists make a great issue of the Holocaust in order to further their illegitimate philosophy and aims. I wish to talk briefly about both of these topics and their connection.

4. We put effort into attending occasions such as this because we feel that we have both a religious and religion based humanitarian duty to spread our message as much as possible. Consequently I pray that our discussions and conclusions at this conference will be correct and true in every aspect.

5. I would like firstly to recap briefly for everyone present, because of its relevance to the subject of the Holocaust, the fact that Judaism and Zionism are totally different and diametrically opposed concepts. Judaism is an age old G-dly way of life going back thousands of years full of moral, ethical and religious content. Zionism is a comparatively new – little over one hundred years – secular nationalistic concept completely devoid of ethics and morals. Although, it must be said that sadly there are religious groups among the Jewish People who have been affected and infected by the Zionist nationalistic philosophy and have ‘bolted’ Zionism onto Judaism, incorrectly and falsely against the teachings of Judaism as handed down through the generations.

6. Judaism teaches that although the Jewish People were promised the Holy Land, now known as Palestine, this was only subject to certain conditions, basically that we had to maintain the highest of moral, ethical and religious standards. Our religious teachings and literature – our Torah – are replete with warnings that if these conditions were not fulfilled then the Jewish People would be dispersed in a divinely decreed exile.

7. This is what took place. The conditions were not fulfilled to the required degree and the Jewish People were dispersed to the four corners of the globe, as history confirms. Right up to the present day the Jewish People are in a divinely decreed exile in which we are required to be loyal citizens of the countries in which we find ourselves and we are prohibited under oath from trying to force our way out of the exile by the efforts of our own hands. We are also prohibited under oath from trying to form a State of our own in Palestine. To contravene these prohibitions would constitute a rebellion against the wishes of the A-lmighty and we are warned of dire consequences of making any such attempt.

8. The philosophy of the secular movement of Zionism totally ignores and transgresses the clear Jewish teachings outlined and because of this, Zionism was condemned right from its inception by the great Jewish Religious authorities.

9. Furthermore, Zionism right from its inception completely ignored the fact that there was an indigenous population in Palestine comprising mostly Palestinians, and the Zionists have followed a policy of depriving the Palestinians of their hope for self determination on the land they had occupied for centuries. Depriving the Palestinians of their homes, livelihoods and lives. So committing a shocking contravention of religion based humanitarian justice.

10. Judaism however, preaches compassion and consideration for the property and certainly the lives of every fellow man.

11. It will of course be clear from the above firstly that the Zionists do not represent the Jewish People as a whole, and furthermore that anti-Zionism is to be applauded and not to be confused with the ancient bigotry of anti-Semitism. Something which we know is very well appreciated here in the Islamic Republic of Iran where the Jewish community lives peacefully with full civil rights and has done so for thousands of years.

12. Now one of the pillars of justification for Zionism is the event of the Holocaust, with the Zionists claiming that the Jews must have a State of their own in order to prevent (as they claim) the events of the Holocaust ever being repeated. ‘Never Again’ is their slogan. So I would like to set out the Orthodox Jewish view on the Holocaust.

13. Firstly, the facts. There is no doubt what so ever, that during World War 2 there developed a terrible and catastrophic policy and action of genocide perpetrated by Nazi Germany against the Jewish People, confirmed by innumerable eye witness survivors and fully documented again and again. I personally was spared the worst effects of the War because I was living in England which thankfully was not occupied by Nazi Germany. However, I and many many others lost countless friends and relatives who perished under the Nazi rule by intentional murder and genocide. Three million Jews in Poland, more than half a million in Hungary, many tens or hundreds of thousands in Russia, Slovakia, France, Belgium, Holland and more. The figure of six million is regularly quoted. One may wish to dispute this actual figure, but the crime was just as dreadful whether the millions (and there were millions) of victims numbered six million, five million or four million. The method of murder is also irrelevant, whether it was by gas chamber (and there were eye witnesses to this), firing squads or whatever. The evil was the same. It would be a terrible affront to the memory of those who perished to belittle the guilt of the crime in any way.

14. However, the Orthodox Jewish teaching and attitude is that the perpetrators of a crime, although fully guilty and responsible for their actions, would never have succeeded in their evil unless the A-lmighty wished it. So, to that extent the victim or victims have of course to attempt to avoid the evil, but if this proves impossible, then they have to accept the will of the A-lmighty. Our teaching is that part of the decree of exile divinely imposed upon us, is that it is not the task of the Jewish People to bring our persecutors to justice. That is the task of the A-lmighty. Our task is to accept the will of the A-lmighty and to strive to improve ourselves, removing from our behaviour the deeds that may have been the cause of our suffering. That has been the Jewish attitude during all the long history of Jewish suffering.

15. In no way can we have the audacity to, as it were, try to prevent the will of the A-lmighty and assume that we are capable of preventing such a thing from happening again. That would be heresy.

16. The Zionists, with their secular pompous approach behave in complete opposition to this philosophy and dare to say ‘Never Again’. They have the audacity to think that they can prevent the A-lmighty from repeating a ‘Holocaust’. This is heresy.

17. Furthermore, as we all know, they compound the wrong of this policy by imposing themselves in a most cruel and harsh manner on the Palestinian People.

18. I must add that the use by the Zionists of the Holocaust to further their aim of a sectarian State is the height of hypocrisy when one bears in mind that the Zionists turned each stage of Nazi oppression to their own advantage, to further the aim of forming a State. In the thirties when the Nazi policy was to expel the Jews from Germany, it is well documented how the Zionists cooperated by working together – yes together - with the Nazi authorities to evacuate ‘suitable’ Jews i.e. young healthy pioneer material, from Germany to Palestine. Then during the war when the killing was proceeding, it is again well documented how their attitude was one of callousness, not helping when they could even though they were able to. They needed the suffering and the deaths in order to be able to push for their State when the war would end. Finally, after the war they turned the whole issue of the Holocaust and the pity and sympathy it evoked into almost an article of faith in order to ensure as much as possible the acquisition of their State. Claiming that Zionism was there in order to prevent another Holocaust, when in fact Zionism predated the Holocaust by decades. They then proceeded to justify their atrocities against the Palestinians in order to further their cause.

19. To sum up, the Orthodox Jewish view is that yes there was a Holocaust to a terribly significant degree whatever that was. But in no way can it be used to justify the illegitimate and criminal cause and actions of Zionism.

20. My friends I wish to end with the prayer that the underlying cause of strife and bloodshed in the Middle East, namely, the State known as ‘Israel’, be totally and peacefully dissolved. To be replaced by a regime fully in accordance with the aspirations of the Palestinians. When Arab and Jew will be able to live peacefully together as they did for centuries.

21. May we then merit the time when the glory of the A-lmighty will be revealed to all and all mankind will be at peace with each other.


Neturei Karta
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http://www.nkusa.org/activities/Speeches/2006Iran-ACohen.cfm




Copyright ©2003 - 2006 Neturei Karta International

===

"So, Voyetkin, as you can see there is an oblique form working on the overall over all."---Das Chou

Blue, Green, Red:

Wow... a whole year has passed, albeit silently, since my last blog entry! Well, this blog anyway. http://www.newciv.org/nl/newslog.php/_v308 -is more current and you can join us, too, over there...

My thoughts are on how to regenerate my fading love for all things internet or is that world wide web? Same, same? Not even but that's purely a semantical distinction. Semantical web?

Who owns the Central Bank of China? Who cares? You should!

Shan't rant on that just now for no one will ever read this post anyway. I mean like how the Frak is it that a whole darned year went by without my posting a thing here? I just don't understand that!

At least I've upgraded my Opera experience to the same old headaches. Using 9.02 8585 upgraded from 9.01 8585. WTF? 8585 must be significant. *+*+%+%=26! That's it! YHVH 10+5+6+5=26! Yes I've studied Qaballah. Mount Tzion, Breshlav, ++ also been beyond the Abyss (ABSU) a few times and counting... So? Just thought I'd mention it. It's the numbers thing... Gematria, don't ya know?!

So... still having problems with Shockwave Flashes' NPSWF32.DLL module/plugin. Nice crashes like:

OPERA executed an invalid instruction in
module NPSWF32.DLL at 0167:3000f34d.
Registers:
EAX=02b16358 CS=0167 EIP=3000f34d EFLGS=00010246
EBX=02b16358 SS=016f ESP=0065de0c EBP=0065de18
ECX=0239f180 DS=016f ESI=023965e0 FS=0ebf
EDX=00000000 ES=016f EDI=0065de38 GS=0000
Bytes at CS:EIP:
0f 77 8b 47 1c 83 f8 24 0f 87 67 01 00 00 0f 84
Stack dump:
02382608 02382000 02382000 0065deac 30089f1a 0065de38 02bdc31e 0239f180 02382000 00000000 3007de8c 02382000 02b16358 00000001 0065de24 00000000

Isn't that pretty? I've about 10 of them over the past few days that really make me want to get rid of Opera again for the thousandth time! (I always come back, though, especially in recent years) Which says a lot about Opera. Hey, I still haven't reverse engineered Opera.DLL or NPSWF32.DLL! Still haven't found a solution either! Maybe it's time to fold some space? No I don't mean according to Einsteins' blunders...

Weird how I can be thinking about Opera on the eve of an all out Nuclear conflagration?!

But with the goodly, well pork-fed, Senators and globerants of the U.S. Con-Job on vacation... well? Ha! Government, the word, comes from the Greek word Kubernetes.

Kubernetes simply means 'steersman' like in steering, or navigating, a ship. The u there is an u-psilon pronounced as a y so they made it an 'O' changed the 'K' and the 'B' and added a bit of 'ment.'

Ment seems to be close to Mentes, something the good representatives (What?) seem to lack a lot of! Since The real origin of the word, and meaning too, can be found in the ancient Norse Mugin (Hugin and Mugin) I thought it appropos...

Congress likes to Hug and then Mug especially the good citizens of the USA. But we can also see that they, and their cronies, love to Hug and Mug everybody else in this world too! Hug and then Nuke... that's their policy - if the truth were to be known.

Firmly ensconced in the delusion that this land, USA, is free... the Frei-Korps go marching on. Onward, then, to Teheran! But that is only in preperation for the whole of 'Eurasia!' That's the real prize in all this saber rattling and political mumbo-jumbo.

http://www.spacewar.com/

Dissent is treason! So sayeth Mr Bush and his cabinet of fellow Luciferian, Diabolist, Inner Shrine, mumbledepeggars (all Ubermensched by the Moneylenders, and creators 'Cabal' of greedy thieves and misfits). Now that's class! Yeah, class warfare! Neo Cons and Neo Brahmins have a lot in common. Common folk all just beggaring a lie...

See ya folks. Got to go and sip some Sunna! BBL, if you're lucky...


Luv unto you all.
For your eyes only.
Code is what code does...

Firefox portable?

:wink:

Storm Wulf
Sun/01/Oct
3:01 EST

Sound of Jewells

A BOAT, beneath a sunny sky
Lingering onward dreamly
In an evening in July --

Children three that nestle near,
Eager eye and wiling ear
Pleased simple tale to hear --

Long has paled that sunny sky:
Echoes fade and memories die:
Autumn frosts have slain July.

Still she haunts me, phantomwise,
Alice moving under skies
Never seen by waking eyes.

"Through the Looking-Glass" by Lewis Carroll
http://www.textlibrary.com/download/thru-loo.txt


Summaries

All summaries taken from video cases

Navi: We're all connected.
There is a world around us, a world of people, tactile sensation, and culture. There is the wired world, inside the computer, of images, personalities, virtual experiences, and a culture all of its own. The day after a classmate commits suicide, Lain, a thirteen-year-old girl, discovers how closely the two worlds are linked when she recieves an e-mail from the dead girl: "I just abandoned my body. I still live here..." Has the line between the real world and the wired world begun to blur?
Layers: "Weird," "Girls," "Psyche," "Religion"


Knights: Fulfill the Prophecy...
"KNIGHTS" - a super hacker group that has large effects in the wired. No one knows who the members are, but they control information and sometimes develop and distribute illegal information equipment. The KNIGHTS are trying to make Lain do something... When Lain metaphorizes her physical self into the wired to search for an answer of incidents that kids commit suicide. She finds that the KNIGHTS are behind these incidents. One day, a group of men in black suits make contact with Lain. They ask "Are those people who you live with really your parents?" "Are you the Lain of the wired?" and "Who are you really?"
Layers: "Distortion," "Kids," "Society"


Deus: I am God in the wired... I created you, Lain.
There are rumors that Lain is stealing people's secrets and spreading them in the wired. Her friends, including Arisu [Alice], abandon Lain, and even her parents leave, telling Lain that they are not her real parents. Then Lain discovers the one in the wired causing the trouble- her other self. "Which is the real me!?" Lonely and confused, Lain then encounters a man who calls himself "God" in the wired.
Layers: "Rumors," "Protocol," "Love"


Reset: "I'll delete myself and reset everyone's memory."
Who am I? The question is asked over and over again throughout the noise. Lain destroys her own creator and loses her best friend, now Lain must decide what to do. Should she delete herself from everyone's memory? If she does, the real world should remain exactly the same, but if no one remembers her, did Lain ever really exist?
Layers: "Infornography," "Landscape," "Ego"

http://www.cjas.org/~leng/lain.htm


:devil:


Load and Run High-tech Paganism

Digital Polytheism
By Timothy Leary and Eric Gullichsen

We place no reliance
On virgin or pigeon;
Our Method is Science,
Our Aim is Religion.
Aleister Crowley, from the journal "Equinox"

People jacked in so they could hustle. Put the trodes on and they were out there, all the data in the world stacked up like one big neon city, so you could cruise around and have a grip on it, visually anyway, because if you didn't, it was too complicated, trying to find your way to a particular piece of data you needed. Iconics, Gentry called that.
William Gibson, Mona Lisa Overdrive

Information is more basic than matter and energy.
Atoms, electrons, quarks consist of bits --
Binary units of information
Like those processed in computer software
And in the brain.
The behavior of these bits, and thus of the universe,
Is governed by a single programming rule.
Edward Fredkin

http://deoxy.org/l_digpol.htm

Aeons ago, in the lost era of our Ancient Heritage, ALIEN SPACE BEINGS arrived and impregnated our planet with the seeds of their future harvest. They were Aliens because they are not originally from this planet. They were Space as they were extremely intelligent. They were Beings as long as they held conscious intention, which they did. As interdimensional shapeshifters, Alien Space Beings travelled between the third, fourth, and fifth dimensions; changing form to adapt to the diverse survival conditions of their daily lives.

They elected a council of spirit farmers to be responsible for feeding and nurturing their interstellar family. Spirit farming entailed the locating of a biologically responsive planet and the planting of spirit seed inside suitable neuro-muscular organisms to eventually produce a non-stop crop of spiritual food. Since Alien Space Beings were essentially immaterial spiritual entities, their survival depended on certain high-frequency, vibratory substances...


The Proposal

CyberCraft, An Interpretative Metaphor

Welcome to the CyberCraft Manual. We hope you will enjoy and benefit from this little exploration into the majikal mind-body complex. Our purpose is to help others operate at higher levels on all planes of life. It isn't our purpose to help them just feel better. Witchcraft has some very positive and life affirming teachings. The authors of this document hope to interpret those metaphors bringing them into a late 20th century framework from which we can springboard into the 21st century...

http://deoxy.org/cc-toc.htm

Stable Datum

Let me see...ah, third entry to the opera blogosphere. Not cool, eh? Initially I had planned (.plan) on doing this every day! Ah so? Yup...''the 'well' laid plans...'' Really? :devil:

Still having trouble with the 'rss' feeds in opera 8.02 but I think it may be due to my having installed 8.02 over opera 7.23 directly. Not sure. Not sure of a lot of things of late. Maybe I have some old notes, yesterday, day before, etc., that might help me overcome this 'writers block' fuzziness of mind that makes me want to just run wild in the woods and forget about the internet like---for the rest of my life. Information overkill, info-smog, you name it...internet kills.

Well, I've been on the net for far too long. It's like really being wired to my navi, so to speak..."Thought Experiments Lain" might clue you into what that means. Next thing we'll be able to do is get a 'net implan't so that we wont even have to interface via desktop or wifi or...yeah, it'll be translucent menus at the 'though't of a button, here and there, and everywhere, right before your eyes... The whole world will be your holo-box infochamber, Kurzweil AI feedback adapter, fresh from Tachibana labs, wetware-hardcore-brainware-interface...wired! Light not copper.

So opera6.ini is in "C:\Windows\System\?"; or if you are using that other OS...

Just been looking for any and all info on how to get the damned RSS really operating like it is supposed to and I'm getting frustrated by the lack of real information concerning it. So it is supposed to work with M2 eh? Right...what else is new? It doesn't! Works off the panel, sidebar, whatever you want to call that bunch of, oi...not simple. I love zen-plicity! Yeah, the smell of Tachibana bread - cooking in the cyberbrain factory - muse let me loose - love the smell of the wind - and the feeling that I get when shooting a hundred foot wave on the high, high seas of neverearth...Cyberia can-not compare with the real holo-zistored-worldoid of TeeGeeAck. Not in the least!

Communication? Doesn't that mean perfect duplication from the terminal at X to the receiver at Y and back again? Affinity, reality, communication...but if there is no affinity and no agreement as to what constitutes reality then can there really be any Opera? It's not over till the fat lady sings? Are all Opera Divas fat? Hey, just musing here... <http://my.opera.com/>

Theta programming? Alpha, Beta, Delta, Theta...who came up with the schema? And theta is between 4 to 6 Hz and the Schumann resonance illicits what at 7.8? Misery? Besides I hear that the Schumann resonance is now up to 13-14 Hz? Yeah, no matter that we're all being subtly influenced via ELF waves to vote this way or that or to jump off a bridge in the middle of a starry night or to accept weather war as something natural and death as...conciliatory?

Where Cheney's Halliburton gets ''ALL'' the contracts for cleanup and KBR (Kellog Brown and Root) Mercenaries its' way across the infantoworlds' mindless bliss! No mind control? Oh yeah, right, how many hours of TV do you watch a day? How many hours do you devote to 'newsfeeds?' News? Hah! I am beginning to see the ''net (is that the same as the internet cum WWW? right? :wink: )" as just another 'mind control' tool in the 'hip' pockets of the contollers, implanters, exploiters, enslavers of humankind.

I mean like what the heck do you really get from the 'web?' Tell the truth now...what? Eye strain? Yup...aches and pains? Maybe...and a whole lot of crap! Information? For what? How does the internet make life any better? Some stinking online 'games?' Ten thousand useless bits of information clogging up your psychic arteries when all you wanted was a touch from a warm living human being? Are there any more of those left in this insane world?

Oh, you don't think that this world is totally nutzoid? Nothing at all un-natural about USA blowing the hell out of Iraq and spending billions upon billions of so called dollars worth of 'fiat' currency, debt based of course, to rebuild what they daily destroy yet -- can't help their own people in a disaster like Katrina? Oh, not crazy at all?

Ran-Ting: Hyper dimensional warfare. Yeah, 5-D warfare. Neat, eh? E-Rings revenge? Ha! Red cross? Bad nightmare! Holly-wood? Rip off! I dream of Holly.Q.Wood slipping off into the sea, quietly, some night...and never again returning! LALA land submerged, someday, and vacations to the sunken city of LA...scuba diving there. Alex and Janus end time programming by the mothers of invention. Screed? Holo baloons filled with German water or?

A sodium/lithium powered high frequency receiver/transducer coupled with a multi range discharge capacitor placed into the brains of all Monarch agents. The composite case? Electro magnetic flux. Try email. Yeah...RSS? Nah...<http://keygen.us/> Yo, Safi!

Semiotic proposal writing. Got to get it down...chown. Gtalk? Win 2000 and above? Hah! Think I'll install Slackware 10.0 and to the big H with Dozer...but, then again, I dream of a different web. A higher frequencied web. A real web...of kindness, of peace and delight. Where creation is as simple as...

[USER PREFS]

*Demos-Kratein--
*Ai-Ki-Do--
*Semantic Web--
*TeleForce--
*NanoTeslas--
*Blackwater Security Group patrolling NOLA? Right!-- :wink:
*Knights of the Eastern Calculus--
*Thought Experiments Lain--<http://www.cjas.org/~leng/open.htm>
*Tachibana Labs--
*Iwakura Lain

<http://my.yahoo.com/>

End For Now...

Sayonara WiFi Chan---

Wow!

Been flying so high on Opera for the past week that my intial resolve to 'journal' eveyday got squelched in the heat of this very hot South Carolina summer! 114 degrees on the heat index almost everyday. I've kept on keeping on though...

I've finally totally fallen in love with Opera, version 8.02, and am having a blast finding out all the many little secrets of its' handling that do come with use. Use! Yes!

I must say that Opera eclipses every single browser that I've ever used to the ultra max! Lots of my fun is in learning the many variants of the toolbars and menus that can really add to utility. And notes, and a journal and...

Everything one could ever dream of in a web-tool-application Opera has, or is developing...

Well, I've also been Wiki mad for a few days. Would include the URLS but I'm rather a bit tired, at the moment, and they are not yet in my MOC (Map Of Contents), so I will add things as time goes by...

I have things of consequence spread throughout so many different notebooks that I've been really looking for a notbook where I can center all my thoughts and ideas without worrying what anybody thinks about it...Opera is becoming a part of my total 'WebOS' and I'm excited about that.

An URL I can add immediately is <http://www.markschenk.com/opera/o8intro/> oh, yeah, and nontroppos marvelous Wiki <http://nontroppo.org/wiki/> both places have tons of good stuff about configuring Opera. At the WIki you can play in the sandbox, too, and learn WikiLanguage. Cool...

<http://nontroppo.org/wiki/JekyllAndHyde/> has a marvelous 'setup' you might really get into. It's not exactly the history of the ten thousand ton gadget but it is something that will turn your head around.

Power searching cuts past 'data smog.' Disciplining this body doll is kind of fun when you've got Opera. For me Opera really has switched my 'Web-Experience' totally around. Now it is fun again! I've been on the web since 87 so I've seen it all. IRC was born around 87 so...that was my first taste.

"Technology existed before science and engineering."---wikipedia <http://en.wikipedia.org/> is an org with class. So...need I say it? Ah priming the flow! I knew an URL gem, or two, would come forth with a bit of coaxing.

I don't pretend to be a writer. I write. I write a lot. In fact writing is the one single activity that I do not seem to be able to live without! I mean if I didn't have a 'notebook' and pen I'd feel very lost even with all the marvelous technolgy I use with my computer, my box...

Bits and Qubits ... quantum information theory. Quantum entanglement. Topological computing. GBG (Glass Bead Game). Information Theory, Xanadu, Ted Nelson...a very fine being/man. Basecamp <http://www.basecamphq.com/>

37 Signals from so called 'outer space' which are possibly indicative of 'extra terrestrial intelligence.' How silly to think that only 'Man-Kind' is intelligent! Sentient life abounds in the Multi-verse. Break the crayons draw outside the lines.

Later Journal...

A wet week

Well, there is the old conundrum that "It ain't over till the fat lady sings" and I would like some how to apply that to our Opera (browser) because of the subtext, though hidden, in that famous old adage. However before I do that I'll have to meditate for awhile.

Suffice it, then, to say that I've come across some annoyances in the newest 8.02 version which have got me contemplating another 'Opera ditch.' Only this time around, I've been using Opera ever since it came out so long ago, off and on (more off than on), and mostly it has been easy to ditch and return to my trusty old IExplorer. This time around is not so easy.

There are so many things that I love about this browser that, I'm sure, you all love too. Not least of which is tabbed browsing. All the various toolbars, the addition of the email client, and all the wonderful skins plus the ability to just kick butt where configurations are concerned and the .css is killer too...

But GMAIL is something I use and Opera, frankly, falls far short in this department. Finally, though, I can use advanced GMAIL, thanks to Opera, but Opera just doesn't handle GMAIL very well. Slow as a HOG! I don't know if this is due to a memory leak or quite what, just yet, as I haven't applied softice, or any kind of debugger, and haven't reversed the engine to peek and poke so...

Anyhow, overall I like this browser very much and, for the moment, at least, I'll give it a run for the money. And maybe in the next version, or one thereafter, this GMAIL bug will be corrected. Also after awhile surfing, 4 to 8 hours (which I often do), Opera just seems to die and gets slow as a pig wallowing around in mud. So then I delete the cache files and shut the browser down and start it up again...this seems to be 'memory leak' or over bloat in the cache department.

All in all this is a first entry to this journal so...

See ya at dusk, in that high old place, to light the bon fire and dance the dervish dances.
September 2008
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