Sunday, June 29, 2008

The Israel Lobby and American Foreign Policy


Here's a documentary about the role of the Israel lobby in American politics. It's informative.


The Israel Lobby Video

The Price of Hunger


Millions of Americans live at or below the poverty line. They subsist on a average of $3 per day of food stamps. These are, largely, working Americans. This documentary outlines their plight. Hunger in America is simply not a viable political issue. Since we have the means to end it, hunger ought to be high on the political agenda. Have a look.


Thursday, June 26, 2008

The Iran Nuclear Issue


The entire Iran nuclear topic has strong elements of Deja-vu. The US contends that Iran is building a bomb, though utterly without proof. Under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (which Iran has signed) a nation is allowed to enrich uranium for reactor fuel. That's what Iran claims it's doing, and we've utterly no proof to the contrary, nor has any been offered. Indeed, the US Intelligence Estimate concluded recently that the Iranian nuclear weapons program was abandoned years ago. Still, here we are at this date ever more loudly rattling the sabre. In this November 2006 video, the Australian Broadcasting Company presents a portrait of the MEK, an Iranian exile group lobbying for regime change, and claiming to have firm evidence of nuclear weapons programs. This sounds the Ahmed Chalabi and the Iraqi National Congress which fed us false evidence about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction to such devastating effect in the lead up to the Iraq war.

Iran and the MEK video

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

The Day the Dollar Falls


I talk a fair bit in my econ classes about the plight of the dollar. Globalization has made it a competitive necessity for American manufacturers to move production off shore. The result is an increase in imports, and a decline in our ability to export manufactured goods, or to make the goods we buy in country. We are faced with a perpetual balance of payments deficit. This situation is not sustainable. Here is a Dutch broadcast video about that problem. It's largely done with subtitles, but is quite good. Good enough to merit the inconvenience of a bit of reading. Have a look:

The Day the Dollar Fell Video

Monday, June 23, 2008

R.I.P. George Carlin

I've always liked George Carlin..from the beginning. Even when he sank into such bitterness as to no longer be truly funny, he was tremendously insightful. Here's a clip from, I think, the Life is Worth Losing tour. It's a perfect example of the late Carlin. It cuts to the quick. It's hyperbolic, but it rings with essential truth. Here it is.


Saturday, June 21, 2008

Just What Needs Doing With Scott Mcclellan's Testimony

The Real News Network
has released a three part series of interview with Bruce Fein (I think a fairly conservative guy) who argues that Congress must impeach. It's the only way to move the process forward. I hadn't thought about the process in this way, it's compelling. Have a look.

What's the importance of Scott's Testimony 1




What's the Importance of Scott's Testimony 2






What's the Importance of Scott's Testimony 3


Friday, June 20, 2008

Buying The War


This 2007 report on Bill Moyer's Journal gives the best description I've seen yet about how and why the mainstream media failed to do it's job in the lead up to the Iraq war. We're probably all familiar with the subject, but this video presents the problem in a very clear and understandable, and disturbing way. Have a look.

Buying the War Video

Thursday, June 12, 2008

US Contractor Corruption Rampant in Iraq

Here's a BBC story about contractor corruption in Iraq. We don't get to hear much about this especially as the US Government has a "gag order" covering ongoing trials. Have a look.




Saturday, June 7, 2008

Hillary Does the Right Thing


Had we any doubt, Hillary Clinton pieces together a pretty damn good concession speech, but then didn't she say she was "suspending her campaign rather than ending it...more to be revealed.

View the Clinton "concession" speech here.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Revealed: Secret Plan To keep Iraq Under US Control


Bush wants 50 military bases, control of Iraqi airspace and legal immunity for all American soldiers and contractors

By Patrick Cockburn

05/06/08 "
The Independent" --- A secret deal being negotiated in Baghdad would perpetuate the American military occupation of Iraq indefinitely, regardless of the outcome of the US presidential election in November.

The terms of the impending deal, details of which have been leaked to The Independent, are likely to have an explosive political effect in Iraq. Iraqi officials fear that the accord, under which US troops would occupy permanent bases, conduct military operations, arrest Iraqis and enjoy immunity from Iraqi law, will destabilise Iraq's position in the Middle East and lay the basis for unending conflict in their country.

But the accord also threatens to provoke a political crisis in the US. President Bush wants to push it through by the end of next month so he can declare a military victory and claim his 2003 invasion has been vindicated. But by perpetuating the US presence in Iraq, the long-term settlement would undercut pledges by the Democratic presidential nominee, Barack Obama, to withdraw US troops if he is elected president in November.

The timing of the agreement would also boost the Republican candidate, John McCain, who has claimed the United States is on the verge of victory in Iraq – a victory that he says Mr Obama would throw away by a premature military withdrawal.

America currently has 151,000 troops in Iraq and, even after projected withdrawals next month, troop levels will stand at more than 142,000 – 10 000 more than when the military "surge" began in January 2007. Under the terms of the new treaty, the Americans would retain the long-term use of more than 50 bases in Iraq. American negotiators are also demanding immunity from Iraqi law for US troops and contractors, and a free hand to carry out arrests and conduct military activities in Iraq without consulting the Baghdad government.

The precise nature of the American demands has been kept secret until now. The leaks are certain to generate an angry backlash in Iraq. "It is a terrible breach of our sovereignty," said one Iraqi politician, adding that if the security deal was signed it would delegitimise the government in Baghdad which will be seen as an American pawn.

The US has repeatedly denied it wants permanent bases in Iraq but one Iraqi source said: "This is just a tactical subterfuge." Washington also wants control of Iraqi airspace below 29,000ft and the right to pursue its "war on terror" in Iraq, giving it the authority to arrest anybody it wants and to launch military campaigns without consultation.

Mr Bush is determined to force the Iraqi government to sign the so-called "strategic alliance" without modifications, by the end of next month. But it is already being condemned by the Iranians and many Arabs as a continuing American attempt to dominate the region. Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, the powerful and usually moderate Iranian leader, said yesterday that such a deal would create "a permanent occupation". He added: "The essence of this agreement is to turn the Iraqis into slaves of the Americans."

Iraq's Prime Minister, Nouri al-Maliki, is believed to be personally opposed to the terms of the new pact but feels his coalition government cannot stay in power without US backing.

The deal also risks exacerbating the proxy war being fought between Iran and the United States over who should be more influential in Iraq.

Although Iraqi ministers have said they will reject any agreement limiting Iraqi sovereignty, political observers in Baghdad suspect they will sign in the end and simply want to establish their credentials as defenders of Iraqi independence by a show of defiance now. The one Iraqi with the authority to stop deal is the majority Shia spiritual leader, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. In 2003, he forced the US to agree to a referendum on the new Iraqi constitution and the election of a parliament. But he is said to believe that loss of US support would drastically weaken the Iraqi Shia, who won a majority in parliament in elections in 2005.

The US is adamantly against the new security agreement being put to a referendum in Iraq, suspecting that it would be voted down. The influential Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr has called on his followers to demonstrate every Friday against the impending agreement on the grounds that it compromises Iraqi independence.

The Iraqi government wants to delay the actual signing of the agreement but the office of Vice-President Dick Cheney has been trying to force it through. The US ambassador in Baghdad, Ryan Crocker, has spent weeks trying to secure the accord.

The signature of a security agreement, and a parallel deal providing a legal basis for keeping US troops in Iraq, is unlikely to be accepted by most Iraqis. But the Kurds, who make up a fifth of the population, will probably favour a continuing American presence, as will Sunni Arab political leaders who want US forces to dilute the power of the Shia. The Sunni Arab community, which has broadly supported a guerrilla war against US occupation, is likely to be split.

Copyright The Independent