"Even Pat Robertson's Friends Are Wondering..." if he's stark raving mad? That question isn't noted in Laurie Goodstein's article in this morning's New York Times. Another thing not noted is Robertson's latest business plan. From Democracy Now! (pay attention to the last sentence):
Robertson, Ahmadinejad Suggest Sharon Deserves Ailment
Sharon's ill health has drawn a mixed reaction, with well-wishes from leaders from around the world including the Palestinian Authority. In Iran, state media reported Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said: "Hopefully, the news that the criminal of Sabra and Chatilla has joined his ancestors is final" -- a reference to the Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon where over 1,000 Palestinians were killed in 1982. An Israeli commission on inquiry concluded Sharon bore "personal responsibility" for the incident. Meanwhile, Christian broadcaster Pat Robertson indicated Sharon’s condition was a consequence of his decision to withdraw from the Gaza Strip.
Christian broadcaster Pat Robertson, on his program "The 700 Club" : "Ariel Sharon, who was again a very likeable person, a delightful person to be with. I prayed with him personally. But here he is at the point of death. He was dividing God's land, and I would say woe unto any prime minister of Israel who takes a similar course to appease the EU, the United Nations or United States of America. God said, 'This land belongs to me, you better leave it alone.'"
The Guardian of London reported on Wednesday Robertson is heading a consortium in talks with the Israeli government over building a sprawling biblical theme park by the Sea of Galilee.
Heading a consortium hardly tracks with the mixed picture the Times presents this morning. (But then they also don't note his other outside businesses.)
Elaine talked about this topic on Friday and, I feel, did so more straight forwardly than the majority (possibly all) of the people quoted in today's article. What the people in the article seem to be wondering is he's able to present his 'ideas' more rationally and, if not, how much harm is he doing to the movement. (Again, go to Elaine's entry.)
Carl Hulse tells you that Tom DeLay's not trying to become House Majority Leader currently. (Never count the bug man out -- or believe what he says. Short of a defeat in 2006, it's likely he'll attempt to claw his way back to the top of the dung heap.) Listeners to RadioNation with Laura Flanders heard about this topic last night (including comments by Chris Bell who lost his House seat due to the DeLay engineered redistricting plan). (Remeber that Katha Pollitt will be on RadioNation with Laura Flanders today.)
Clint was listening to RadioNation with Laura Flanders last night. It was his first time listening. He writes that he enjoyed the show ("and I get what all the fuss is about") and notes an article Flanders mentioned last night, Anne E. Kornblut and Glen Justice with "Officials Focus on a 2nd Firm Tied to DeLay:"
The firm, Alexander Strategy Group, is of particular interest to investigators because it was founded by Edwin A. Buckham, a close friend of Mr. DeLay's and his former chief of staff, and has been a lucrative landing spot for several former members of the DeLay staff, people who are directly involved in the case have said.
[. . .]
The firm openly promoted the idea that it could deliver access to Mr. DeLay, who has denied any wrongdoing but abruptly announced Saturday that he would not try to regain his leadership post. Now the very connections with Mr. DeLay that formed the backbone of Alexander Strategy, put together with Mr. Abramoff's help, have put the future of the firm in doubt.
He is the Bug Man, he is the Bug Man
He is the cockroach, GOO GOO GOO JOOB
GOO GOO GOO JOOB GOO GOO
GOOOOOOOOOOOJOOOOOB.
(Swiping from Lennon & McCartney's "I Am the Walrus.")
Brenda notes Julia Preson's "Appeals Court, Reversing Itself, Holds 2 Salvadoran Generals Liable in Torture Case:"
A federal appeals court has reversed its own ruling and upheld a $54.6 million jury verdict against two retired generals from El Salvador who were held responsible in a 2002 trial for the torture of three Salvadorans during the country's civil war in the 1980's.
The opinion, issued Wednesday by the United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in Atlanta, was a surprising turn in decade-long efforts by American human rights groups to punish abuses that occurred during the conflict between the United States-backed security forces and leftist guerrillas in El Salvador.
A three-judge appeals panel acted without prompting from lawyers for either side to overturn a ruling it issued on Feb. 28. 2005, that nullified the trial verdict against the two generals, José Guillermo García and Carlos Eugenio Vides Casanova.
Urano Teixeira Da Matta Bacellar, who headed the UN forces in Haiti, is dead, according to Ginger Thomas in the New York Times, from gun shots wounds but no conclusions have yet been made whether or not they were self-inflicted.
Billie notes Tim Golden's "Case Dropped Against U.S. Officer in Beating Deaths of Afghan Inmates:"
The Army has dropped its case against the only officer to face criminal charges in connection with the beating deaths of two prisoners held by the United States in Afghanistan, military officials said yesterday.
The officer, Capt. Christopher M. Beiring, led a reservist military police company that was guarding the main American detention center in Afghanistan when the two men were killed within days of each other in December 2002. The prisoners died after guards kneed them repeatedly in the legs while each was shackled to the ceiling of his cell.
Now some good and bad news. The public account (common_ills@yahoo.com) is wiped out of any e-mails that were in it. When finally accessed there is nothing in the inbox. That's good news in that today won't be spent trying to read them. That's bad news in that there were some things worth noting and people had taken the time to write. (I still can't get into the private account for members. Member should continue using the backup account which is published only the round-robin. If you're a member who doesn't get the round-robin, e-mail Elaine at likemariasaidpaz@yahoo.com because we'll be on the phone tonight and I'll ask her to check it while we are.)
The public account is also the acount where people send notices. One that I intended to note here (but you know how that goes) can still be noted because when I mentioned it to Ty, he said they had the same e-mail sent to The Third Estate Sunday Review.
Soft Skull Press will be releasing a book by Karen Pittelman and Resource Generation entitled Classified. From the e-mail:
When Karen was 25 she dissolved her mammoth trust fund and started a foundation for low-income women activists. The book, which acts as a guide for other 'cool rich kids' will be released in January, with a release party at Bluestockings on January 14th.
Bluestockings is in NYC at 172 Allen Street between Stanton and Rivington. For more information, you can check their website. And Brandon may be thinking "Soft Skull Press? I recommended a book to The Third Estate Sunday Review from that publisher two months ago." The book is on the list. There are many books on the list. The hope is to get to another Robert Parry book for next week. That suggestion leaped ahead of Brandon's due to readers of The Third Estate Sunday Review e-mailing about a Parry book that was discussed recently. It also helps to have a strong advocate among those who'll be discussing. Rebecca is a huge, and admitted, fan of Robert Parry's so when his name is suggested, she uses her vote for that. (I don't usually vote for anything. There have been two that I've nixed since the book discussions started, otherwise, I'm fine with anything.) (Which isn't that I'm so serene. It's that I read a lot of books and have usually read most of the books that make it into the discussions before they're suggested by readers of The Third Estate Sunday Review for a discussion.) Brandon, if March rolls around and you're suggestion hasn't been reviewed, please e-mail me and I'll remind everyone. It's a long list but books coming off an independent press should get a nudge up the list. (Also note that many are utilizing their local libraries and delays can also result from waiting on interlibrary loan requests.)
Joke for the day: The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
the new york times
anne e. kornblut
glen justice
tim golden
carl hulse
laurie goodstein
ginger thompson
karen pittleman
classified
radionation with laura flanders
laura flanders
radio
katha pollitt
sex and politics and screeds and attitude
like maria said paz
the third estate sunday review
Sunday, January 08, 2006
Ruth's Morning Edition Report
Ruth: I am going to focus on three things for this report. First, a programming announcement from Pacifica:
Mon., Jan. 9 through Fri., Jan. 13
The Pacifica Radio Network is bringing you the Samuel Alito Senate Hearing for nomination to the United States Supreme Court live!
Verna Avery Brown teams with Mitch Jeserich from Free Speech Radio News and Pacifica National Affairs correspondent, Larry Bensky, to bring you the controversial nomination hearing of Samuel Alito for United States Supreme Court, live.
Anchors: Larry Bensky, KPFA; Verna Avery Brown, WPFW; Mitch Jesserich, FSRN.
The schedule of hearings includes a one hour pre-show on the opening day, and an half-hour wrap-up show each evening. Live analysts will join us in the booth and via telephone throughout the hearings.
Most members of the community know that you can listen to Pacifica programming over the internet but in case a visitor passes through, you do not need to live in area that has a Pacifica radio station or to know the call letters. You can listen simply by utilizing the link to Pacifica.
Now I am going to note two programs. First up is CounterSpin which devoted the half hour to a discussion with Jonathan Kozol who is the author of Shame of the Nation: The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in America. This program, which is archived, is an important one that addresses the damages that No Child Left Behind is doing to our children. That is only one of the many topics in the discussion. Standardized testing itself is addressed as is the state of our school systems and the refusal of the press to cover the issue beyond "test scores." Even with regards to test scores, Kozol makes the point that there are certain self-pleasing tales that the press loves to cover at the expense of facts and information that is needed.
CounterSpin's current episode is still airing in some markets but if you've missed it in your area or you don't have a station that broadcasts it, you can listen, free of charge, online by clicking on the link.
The second program I would like to note is Law & Disorder which airs on Pacifica's WBAI each Monday as well as on other stations on other days and times. As Ty was advised, Law & Disorder is now a weekly program. If you have not sampled the show, you are missing an hour's worth of strong discussions about issues of grave importance to the nation.
The program is hosted by Michael Ratner, Dalia Hashad, Michael Smith and Heidi Boghosian. The four are attorneys and represent themselves on the program, which is to say that their opinions are their own opinions and they are not speaking for any organization. Off the program they hail from the Center for Constitutional Rights, the National Lawyers Guild and the ACLU.
If those credits do not raise your interest, how about what was discussed Monday?
John Sifton, of Human Rights Watch, took part in the discussion of renditions. Renditions are when people are captured by the American government with no arrest warrant and secretly taken to an undisclosed location. Or we can go with the shorter definition kidnappings done by our government. Mr. Sifton had many interesting points but the one that I found most interesting was his statement about the reaction in Europe to news that Poland and Romania may have housed secret prisons. Mr. Sifton feels that some of the reaction by government officials in other European countries has less to do with the actual activity and more to do with membership in the European Union with the revelations being used to damage both Poland and Romania. Mr. Sifton also made comments that Human Rights Watch's investigations on renditions are still under weigh and that more news may be forthcoming.
Sabin Willet is an attorney representing Chinese Muslims held in Guantanamo Bay who were kidnapped in Pakistan. Hopefully, the fact that they are in Guantanamo does not make any member or visitor think, "Well then they must be guilty." But if someone is thinking that,
the fact is that the American government reached the conclusion, nearly two years ago, that the men were not enemy combantants. So why are they still in Guantanamo?
The men cannot go back to China without risking torture or execution. None of the countries that the United States has contacted have been willing to take the men. So they remain prisoners at Guantanamo. The United States government even attempted to conceal their change in status.
Arsalan Iftikar, the national legal director of CAIR, discussed the issue of the government monitoring Muslim sites for radiation. The issue of fear mongering to advance the administration's aims were addressed as was the ongoing demonization of Arab-Americans. Michael Ratner stressed that the "dirty bomb" in the backpack was a creative fiction because the amount needed to do a great deal of damage would be impossible to carry around in a backpack.
Yet when we are all kept frightened and distrustful, the Bully Boy can reap benefits. Also addressed were the administration's efforts to undermine requests under the Freedom of Information Act.
Lisa Graves was the guest to the discussion I enjoyed most. Ms. Graves is the senior counsel at the ACLU. The discussion she participated in addressed the issue of the NSA spying.
If you missed that broadcast, you can listen to it online at the Law & Disorder home page.
I have focused on those two programs due to the fact that special, live coverage of the Samuel Alito hearings will pre-empt the regular programming starting on Monday. If you caught Pacifica's live coverage of the John Roberts Jr. hearings, you heard strong broadcasting.
As Rebecca has noted, it will be business as usual at NPR this week. Confirmation hearings for a Supreme Court judge are not important enough for that branch of public radio to cover live. If they are important to you, please sample Pacifica's live coverage.
law and disorder
wbai
pacifica
counterspin
samuel alito
sex and politics and screeds and attitude
Mon., Jan. 9 through Fri., Jan. 13
The Pacifica Radio Network is bringing you the Samuel Alito Senate Hearing for nomination to the United States Supreme Court live!
Verna Avery Brown teams with Mitch Jeserich from Free Speech Radio News and Pacifica National Affairs correspondent, Larry Bensky, to bring you the controversial nomination hearing of Samuel Alito for United States Supreme Court, live.
Anchors: Larry Bensky, KPFA; Verna Avery Brown, WPFW; Mitch Jesserich, FSRN.
The schedule of hearings includes a one hour pre-show on the opening day, and an half-hour wrap-up show each evening. Live analysts will join us in the booth and via telephone throughout the hearings.
Most members of the community know that you can listen to Pacifica programming over the internet but in case a visitor passes through, you do not need to live in area that has a Pacifica radio station or to know the call letters. You can listen simply by utilizing the link to Pacifica.
Now I am going to note two programs. First up is CounterSpin which devoted the half hour to a discussion with Jonathan Kozol who is the author of Shame of the Nation: The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in America. This program, which is archived, is an important one that addresses the damages that No Child Left Behind is doing to our children. That is only one of the many topics in the discussion. Standardized testing itself is addressed as is the state of our school systems and the refusal of the press to cover the issue beyond "test scores." Even with regards to test scores, Kozol makes the point that there are certain self-pleasing tales that the press loves to cover at the expense of facts and information that is needed.
CounterSpin's current episode is still airing in some markets but if you've missed it in your area or you don't have a station that broadcasts it, you can listen, free of charge, online by clicking on the link.
The second program I would like to note is Law & Disorder which airs on Pacifica's WBAI each Monday as well as on other stations on other days and times. As Ty was advised, Law & Disorder is now a weekly program. If you have not sampled the show, you are missing an hour's worth of strong discussions about issues of grave importance to the nation.
The program is hosted by Michael Ratner, Dalia Hashad, Michael Smith and Heidi Boghosian. The four are attorneys and represent themselves on the program, which is to say that their opinions are their own opinions and they are not speaking for any organization. Off the program they hail from the Center for Constitutional Rights, the National Lawyers Guild and the ACLU.
If those credits do not raise your interest, how about what was discussed Monday?
John Sifton, of Human Rights Watch, took part in the discussion of renditions. Renditions are when people are captured by the American government with no arrest warrant and secretly taken to an undisclosed location. Or we can go with the shorter definition kidnappings done by our government. Mr. Sifton had many interesting points but the one that I found most interesting was his statement about the reaction in Europe to news that Poland and Romania may have housed secret prisons. Mr. Sifton feels that some of the reaction by government officials in other European countries has less to do with the actual activity and more to do with membership in the European Union with the revelations being used to damage both Poland and Romania. Mr. Sifton also made comments that Human Rights Watch's investigations on renditions are still under weigh and that more news may be forthcoming.
Sabin Willet is an attorney representing Chinese Muslims held in Guantanamo Bay who were kidnapped in Pakistan. Hopefully, the fact that they are in Guantanamo does not make any member or visitor think, "Well then they must be guilty." But if someone is thinking that,
the fact is that the American government reached the conclusion, nearly two years ago, that the men were not enemy combantants. So why are they still in Guantanamo?
The men cannot go back to China without risking torture or execution. None of the countries that the United States has contacted have been willing to take the men. So they remain prisoners at Guantanamo. The United States government even attempted to conceal their change in status.
Arsalan Iftikar, the national legal director of CAIR, discussed the issue of the government monitoring Muslim sites for radiation. The issue of fear mongering to advance the administration's aims were addressed as was the ongoing demonization of Arab-Americans. Michael Ratner stressed that the "dirty bomb" in the backpack was a creative fiction because the amount needed to do a great deal of damage would be impossible to carry around in a backpack.
Yet when we are all kept frightened and distrustful, the Bully Boy can reap benefits. Also addressed were the administration's efforts to undermine requests under the Freedom of Information Act.
Lisa Graves was the guest to the discussion I enjoyed most. Ms. Graves is the senior counsel at the ACLU. The discussion she participated in addressed the issue of the NSA spying.
If you missed that broadcast, you can listen to it online at the Law & Disorder home page.
I have focused on those two programs due to the fact that special, live coverage of the Samuel Alito hearings will pre-empt the regular programming starting on Monday. If you caught Pacifica's live coverage of the John Roberts Jr. hearings, you heard strong broadcasting.
As Rebecca has noted, it will be business as usual at NPR this week. Confirmation hearings for a Supreme Court judge are not important enough for that branch of public radio to cover live. If they are important to you, please sample Pacifica's live coverage.
law and disorder
wbai
pacifica
counterspin
samuel alito
sex and politics and screeds and attitude
Ruth's Morning Edition Report
Ruth: I am going to focus on three things for this report. First, a programming announcement from Pacifica:
Mon., Jan. 9 through Fri., Jan. 13
The Pacifica Radio Network is bringing you the Samuel Alito Senate Hearing for nomination to the United States Supreme Court live!
Verna Avery Brown teams with Mitch Jeserich from Free Speech Radio News and Pacifica National Affairs correspondent, Larry Bensky, to bring you the controversial nomination hearing of Samuel Alito for United States Supreme Court, live.
Anchors: Larry Bensky, KPFA; Verna Avery Brown, WPFW; Mitch Jesserich, FSRN.
The schedule of hearings includes a one hour pre-show on the opening day, and an half-hour wrap-up show each evening. Live analysts will join us in the booth and via telephone throughout the hearings.
Most members of the community know that you can listen to Pacifica programming over the internet but in case a visitor passes through, you do not need to live in area that has a Pacifica radio station or to know the call letters. You can listen simply by utilizing the link to Pacifica.
Now I am going to note two programs. First up is CounterSpin which devoted the half hour to a discussion with Jonathan Kozol who is the author of Shame of the Nation: The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in America. This program, which is archived, is an important one that addresses the damages that No Child Left Behind is doing to our children. That is only one of the many topics in the discussion. Standardized testing itself is addressed as is the state of our school systems and the refusal of the press to cover the issue beyond "test scores." Even with regards to test scores, Kozol makes the point that there are certain self-pleasing tales that the press loves to cover at the expense of facts and information that is needed.
CounterSpin's current episode is still airing in some markets but if you've missed it in your area or you don't have a station that broadcasts it, you can listen, free of charge, online by clicking on the link.
The second program I would like to note is Law & Disorder which airs on Pacifica's WBAI each Monday as well as on other stations on other days and times. As Ty was advised, Law & Disorder is now a weekly program. If you have not sampled the show, you are missing an hour's worth of strong discussions about issues of grave importance to the nation.
The program is hosted by Michael Ratner, Dalia Hashad, Michael Smith and Heidi Boghosian. The four are attorneys and represent themselves on the program, which is to say that their opinions are their own opinions and they are not speaking for any organization. Off the program they hail from the Center for Constitutional Rights, the National Lawyers Guild and the ACLU.
If those credits do not raise your interest, how about what was discussed Monday?
John Sifton, of Human Rights Watch, took part in the discussion of renditions. Renditions are when people are captured by the American government with no arrest warrant and secretly taken to an undisclosed location. Or we can go with the shorter definition kidnappings done by our government. Mr. Sifton had many interesting points but the one that I found most interesting was his statement about the reaction in Europe to news that Poland and Romania may have housed secret prisons. Mr. Sifton feels that some of the reaction by government officials in other European countries has less to do with the actual activity and more to do with membership in the European Union with the revelations being used to damage both Poland and Romania. Mr. Sifton also made comments that Human Rights Watch's investigations on renditions are still under weigh and that more news may be forthcoming.
Sabin Willet is an attorney representing Chinese Muslims held in Guantanamo Bay who were kidnapped in Pakistan. Hopefully, the fact that they are in Guantanamo does not make any member or visitor think, "Well then they must be guilty." But if someone is thinking that,
the fact is that the American government reached the conclusion, nearly two years ago, that the men were not enemy combantants. So why are they still in Guantanamo?
The men cannot go back to China without risking torture or execution. None of the countries that the United States has contacted have been willing to take the men. So they remain prisoners at Guantanamo. The United States government even attempted to conceal their change in status.
Arsalan Iftikar, the national legal director of CAIR, discussed the issue of the government monitoring Muslim sites for radiation. The issue of fear mongering to advance the administration's aims were addressed as was the ongoing demonization of Arab-Americans. Michael Ratner stressed that the "dirty bomb" in the backpack was a creative fiction because the amount needed to do a great deal of damage would be impossible to carry around in a backpack.
Yet when we are all kept frightened and distrustful, the Bully Boy can reap benefits. Also addressed were the administration's efforts to undermine requests under the Freedom of Information Act.
Lisa Graves was the guest to the discussion I enjoyed most. Ms. Graves is the senior counsel at the ACLU. The discussion she participated in addressed the issue of the NSA spying.
If you missed that broadcast, you can listen to it online at the Law & Disorder home page.
I have focused on those two programs due to the fact that special, live coverage of the Samuel Alito hearings will pre-empt the regular programming starting on Monday. If you caught Pacifica's live coverage of the John Roberts Jr. hearings, you heard strong broadcasting.
As Rebecca has noted, it will be business as usual at NPR this week. Confirmation hearings for a Supreme Court judge are not important enough for that branch of public radio to cover live. If they are important to you, please sample Pacifica's live coverage.
law and disorder
wbai
pacifica
counterspin
samuel alito
sex and politics and screeds and attitude
Mon., Jan. 9 through Fri., Jan. 13
The Pacifica Radio Network is bringing you the Samuel Alito Senate Hearing for nomination to the United States Supreme Court live!
Verna Avery Brown teams with Mitch Jeserich from Free Speech Radio News and Pacifica National Affairs correspondent, Larry Bensky, to bring you the controversial nomination hearing of Samuel Alito for United States Supreme Court, live.
Anchors: Larry Bensky, KPFA; Verna Avery Brown, WPFW; Mitch Jesserich, FSRN.
The schedule of hearings includes a one hour pre-show on the opening day, and an half-hour wrap-up show each evening. Live analysts will join us in the booth and via telephone throughout the hearings.
Most members of the community know that you can listen to Pacifica programming over the internet but in case a visitor passes through, you do not need to live in area that has a Pacifica radio station or to know the call letters. You can listen simply by utilizing the link to Pacifica.
Now I am going to note two programs. First up is CounterSpin which devoted the half hour to a discussion with Jonathan Kozol who is the author of Shame of the Nation: The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in America. This program, which is archived, is an important one that addresses the damages that No Child Left Behind is doing to our children. That is only one of the many topics in the discussion. Standardized testing itself is addressed as is the state of our school systems and the refusal of the press to cover the issue beyond "test scores." Even with regards to test scores, Kozol makes the point that there are certain self-pleasing tales that the press loves to cover at the expense of facts and information that is needed.
CounterSpin's current episode is still airing in some markets but if you've missed it in your area or you don't have a station that broadcasts it, you can listen, free of charge, online by clicking on the link.
The second program I would like to note is Law & Disorder which airs on Pacifica's WBAI each Monday as well as on other stations on other days and times. As Ty was advised, Law & Disorder is now a weekly program. If you have not sampled the show, you are missing an hour's worth of strong discussions about issues of grave importance to the nation.
The program is hosted by Michael Ratner, Dalia Hashad, Michael Smith and Heidi Boghosian. The four are attorneys and represent themselves on the program, which is to say that their opinions are their own opinions and they are not speaking for any organization. Off the program they hail from the Center for Constitutional Rights, the National Lawyers Guild and the ACLU.
If those credits do not raise your interest, how about what was discussed Monday?
John Sifton, of Human Rights Watch, took part in the discussion of renditions. Renditions are when people are captured by the American government with no arrest warrant and secretly taken to an undisclosed location. Or we can go with the shorter definition kidnappings done by our government. Mr. Sifton had many interesting points but the one that I found most interesting was his statement about the reaction in Europe to news that Poland and Romania may have housed secret prisons. Mr. Sifton feels that some of the reaction by government officials in other European countries has less to do with the actual activity and more to do with membership in the European Union with the revelations being used to damage both Poland and Romania. Mr. Sifton also made comments that Human Rights Watch's investigations on renditions are still under weigh and that more news may be forthcoming.
Sabin Willet is an attorney representing Chinese Muslims held in Guantanamo Bay who were kidnapped in Pakistan. Hopefully, the fact that they are in Guantanamo does not make any member or visitor think, "Well then they must be guilty." But if someone is thinking that,
the fact is that the American government reached the conclusion, nearly two years ago, that the men were not enemy combantants. So why are they still in Guantanamo?
The men cannot go back to China without risking torture or execution. None of the countries that the United States has contacted have been willing to take the men. So they remain prisoners at Guantanamo. The United States government even attempted to conceal their change in status.
Arsalan Iftikar, the national legal director of CAIR, discussed the issue of the government monitoring Muslim sites for radiation. The issue of fear mongering to advance the administration's aims were addressed as was the ongoing demonization of Arab-Americans. Michael Ratner stressed that the "dirty bomb" in the backpack was a creative fiction because the amount needed to do a great deal of damage would be impossible to carry around in a backpack.
Yet when we are all kept frightened and distrustful, the Bully Boy can reap benefits. Also addressed were the administration's efforts to undermine requests under the Freedom of Information Act.
Lisa Graves was the guest to the discussion I enjoyed most. Ms. Graves is the senior counsel at the ACLU. The discussion she participated in addressed the issue of the NSA spying.
If you missed that broadcast, you can listen to it online at the Law & Disorder home page.
I have focused on those two programs due to the fact that special, live coverage of the Samuel Alito hearings will pre-empt the regular programming starting on Monday. If you caught Pacifica's live coverage of the John Roberts Jr. hearings, you heard strong broadcasting.
As Rebecca has noted, it will be business as usual at NPR this week. Confirmation hearings for a Supreme Court judge are not important enough for that branch of public radio to cover live. If they are important to you, please sample Pacifica's live coverage.
law and disorder
wbai
pacifica
counterspin
samuel alito
sex and politics and screeds and attitude
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