Archive for May, 2009

The Porn Myth

An article by: Naomi Wolf

In the end, porn doesn’t whet men’s appetites—it turns them off the real thing.

At a benefit the other night, I saw Andrea Dworkin, the anti-porn activist most famous in the eighties for her conviction that opening the floodgates of pornography would lead men to see real women in sexually debased ways. If we did not limit pornography, she argued—before Internet technology made that prospect a technical impossibility—most men would come to objectify women as they objectified porn stars, and treat them accordingly. In a kind of domino theory, she predicted, rape and other kinds of sexual mayhem would surely follow.

The feminist warrior looked gentle and almost frail. The world she had, Cassandra-like, warned us about so passionately was truly here: Porn is, as David Amsden says, the “wallpaper” of our lives now. So was she right or wrong?

She was right about the warning, wrong about the outcome. As she foretold, pornography did breach the dike that separated a marginal, adult, private pursuit from the mainstream public arena. The whole world, post-Internet, did become pornographized. Young men and women are indeed being taught what sex is, how it looks, what its etiquette and expectations are, by pornographic training—and this is having a huge effect on how they interact.

But the effect is not making men into raving beasts. On the contrary: The onslaught of porn is responsible for deadening male libido in relation to real women, and leading men to see fewer and fewer women as “porn-worthy.” Far from having to fend off porn-crazed young men, young women are worrying that as mere flesh and blood, they can scarcely get, let alone hold, their attention. Read the rest of this entry »

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Sunday Afternoon

Stopping back at the pad after going with a girlfriend to get pedicures.  Fluffy, feeling mild, still not completely caught up on sleep with three errands to run scheduled to begin in approximately 1-2 hours.  Then it’s home again, home again, jiggity-jig—staying in for the night, relaxing, before kicking off another busy week.  Sounds good to me.  :) Read the rest of this entry »

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Reading about Ancient Rome

Just perusing this lecture about the fall of Rome before hitting the hay.  Got an early morning and a reasonably busy day tomorrow.  No biggie, but I’m exhausted already.  And my butt and thighs seriously hurt from doing squats yesterday.  hehe  Poor me.

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War is a Force That Gives Us Meaning

The following are excerpts from Chris Hedges’ book War is a Force That Gives Us Meaning, which I’m currently halfway through.  Beginning on pages 74-75:

The effectiveness of the myths peddled in war is powerful.  We often come to doubt our own perceptions.  We hide these doubts, like troubled believers, sure that no one else feels them.  We feel guilty.  The myths have determined not only how we should speak but how we should think.  The doubts we carry, the scenes we see that do not conform to the myth are hazy, difficult to express, unsettling.  And as the atrocities mount, as civil liberties are stripped away (something, with the “War on Terror,” already happening to hundreds of thousands of immigrants in the United States), we struggle uncomfortably with the jargon and clichés.  But we have trouble expressing our discomfort because the collective shout has made it hard for us to give words to our thoughts.

This self-doubt is aided by the monstrosity of war.  We gape and wonder at the collapsing towers of the World Trade Center.  They crumble before us, and yet we cannot quite comprehend it.  What, really, did we see?  In wartime an attack on a village where women and children are killed, an attach that does not conform to the myth peddled by our side, is hard to fathom and articulate.  We live in wartime with a permanent discomfort, for in wartime we see things so grotesque and fantastic that they seem beyond human comprehension.  War turns human reality into a bizarre carnival that does not seem part of our experience.  It knocks us off balance.

On a chilly, rainy day in March 1998 I was in a small Albanian village in Kosovo, twenty-five miles west of the provincial capital of Pristina.  I was waiting with a few thousand Kosovar Albanian mourners for a red Mercedes truck to rumble down the dirt road and unload a cargo of fourteen bodies.  A group of distraught women, seated on wooden planks set up on concrete blocks, was in the dirt yard.

When the truck pulled into the yard I climbed into the back.  Before each corpse, wrapped in bloodstained blankets and rugs, was lifted out for washing and burial I checked to see if the body was mutilated.  I pulled back the cloth to uncover the faces.  The gouged-out eyes, the shattered skulls, the gaping rows of broken teeth, and the sinewy strands of flayed flesh greeted me.  When I could not see clearly in the fading light I flicked on my Maglite.  I jotted each disfigurement in my notebook. Read the rest of this entry »

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Bush was wrong, and now so is Obama

Heard about this yet?  I hadn’t either.

Obama Is Said to Consider Preventive Detention Plan

Copied from The New York Times /By Sheryl Gay Stolberg / Published May 20, 2009

WASHINGTON — President Obama told human rights advocates at the White House on Wednesday that he was mulling the need for a “preventive detention” system that would establish a legal basis for the United States to incarcerate terrorism suspects who are deemed a threat to national security but cannot be tried, two participants in the private session said.

The discussion, in a 90-minute meeting in the Cabinet Room that included Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. and other top administration officials, came on the eve of a much-anticipated speech Mr. Obama is to give Thursday on a number of thorny national security matters, including his promise to close the detention center at the naval base in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.

Human rights advocates are growing deeply uneasy with Mr. Obama’s stance on these issues, especially his recent move to block the release of photographs showing abuse of detainees, and his announcement that he is willing to try terrorism suspects in military commissions — a concept he criticized bitterly as a presidential candidate.

The two participants, outsiders who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the session was intended to be off the record, said they left the meeting dismayed.

They said Mr. Obama told them he was thinking about “the long game” — how to establish a legal system that would endure for future presidents. He raised the issue of preventive detention himself, but made clear that he had not made a decision on it. Several senior White House officials did not respond to requests for comment on the outsiders’ accounts.

“He was almost ruminating over the need for statutory change to the laws so that we can deal with individuals who we can’t charge and detain,” one participant said. “We’ve known this is on the horizon for many years, but we were able to hold it off with George Bush. The idea that we might find ourselves fighting with the Obama administration over these powers is really stunning.”

The other participant said Mr. Obama did not seem to be thinking about preventive detention for terrorism suspects now held at Guantánamo Bay, but rather for those captured in the future, in settings other than a legitimate battlefield like Afghanistan. “The issue is,” the participant said, “What are the options left open to a future president?”

Mr. Obama did not specify how he intended to deal with Guantánamo detainees who posed a threat and could not be tried, nor did he share the contents of Thursday’s speech, the participants said.

He will deliver the speech at a site laden with symbolism — the National Archives, home to the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence. Across town, his biggest Republican critic, former Vice President Dick Cheney, will deliver a speech at the American Enterprise Institute.

Mr. Cheney and other hawkish critics have sought to portray Mr. Obama as weak on terror, and their argument seems to be catching on with the public. On Tuesday, Senate Democrats, in a clear rebuke to the White House, blocked the $80 million Mr. Obama had requested in financing to close the Guantánamo prison.

The lawmakers say they want a detailed plan before releasing the money; there is deep opposition on Capitol Hill to housing terrorism suspects inside the United States.

“He needs to convince people that he’s got a game plan that will protect us as well as be fair to the detainees,” said Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, who agrees with Mr. Obama that the prison should be closed. “If he can do that, then we’re back on track. But if he doesn’t make that case, then we’ve lost control of this debate.”

But Mr. Obama will not use the speech to provide the details lawmakers want.

“What it’s not going to be is a prescriptive speech,” said David Axelrod, Mr. Obama’s senior adviser. “The president wants to take some time and put this whole issue in perspective to identify what the challenges are and how he will approach dealing with them.”

[pink emphasis mine]

___________________________________

Same problem, different asshole-in-charge.  You people do realize this is a continuation of policy very similar to that hustled by Bush, right?  Doesn’t matter that Obama’s a Democrat–he can still be just as corrupt as the next person and appears to be so.  I won’t defend this man by blaming his advisers–it’s not that shocking that he’s turned out as he has, though I did assume the unveiling/switch-a-roo would take more time to finesse.  Apparently not.  So, it looks like into the cauldron we go, children.  This is what happens when we choose between “the lesser of two evils.”

Ugh.  Why, America?  Why do we keep electing scumbags??  Are we completely incompetent as a citizenry??  Almost ALL of our senators supported the military budget increase despite 70% of the people declaring themselves against continuing the war and wanting to bring the troops home.  Do we not realize we’ve dropped the reigns somewhere along the way?!  Our elected officials are barely even pretending to give a damn what the American people want.

But nevermind–go back to your sports network, your “Sex and the City” and “Everybody Loves Raymond,” and pretend none of this is really happening.  Up with “positive thinking” and boosting each other’s self-esteem.  Bleh.  Can we even comprehend how spoiled we’ve become as a nation?  As a people?

Legislation solves fewer problems than it creates, and it isn’t possible to buy our way out of this one.

Values are backwards, morals are screwed, and the wicked are being rewarded at the expense of decent folk everywhere we turn.  People keep chattering about the “end times” and “the second coming of Jesus” not being far off and I’m tempted to ask them if perhaps this–life today–isn’t precisely what it looks like.  Just a thought from an agnostic wondering what the fuck is going on in modern societies.  But it’s not as though this all began last week…we Americans have been headed toward deep shit for many decades, long before many of us were born.  We know other decadent societies came before that met destruction, so maybe this is just how the cycle will go until…until what?  Nuclear war?  A meteor collision?  Extreme climate change reducing human population?  Hard to say what’s in store, but it certainly didn’t have to be this way.  We humans could live better than this and enjoy better relations with one another if we’d ever STOP electing leaders who cause strife for their own political gain.

It’s bullshit and we know it.

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Senate passes $91.3 billion war funding bill

No money for Gitmo closure, but offers funding for flu fight, IMF credit

Copied from MSNBC – Associated Press – updated May 21, 2009

WASHINGTON – The Senate on Thursday passed a $91.3 billion military spending bill, shorn of money President Barack Obama wants to close the Guantanamo Bay prison but allowing him to significantly ramp up the U.S. war in Afghanistan.

The Senate voted 86-3 to pass the bill, which provides money for military and diplomatic operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, setting up House-Senate talks on a compromise measure to present to Obama next month.

The spending measure closely tracks Obama’s request for war funds, although the $80 million he was seeking to close the U.S. naval prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, was dropped Wednesday.

A three-day Senate debate on the bill featured little of the angst over the situation in Afghanistan that permeated debate in the House last week on companion legislation.

Obama is sending more than 20,000 additional troops there and, for the first time next year, the annual cost of the war in Afghanistan is projected to exceed the cost of fighting in Iraq.

With support forces, the number of U.S. forces in Afghanistan is expected to be about 68,000 by the end of the year — more than double the size of the U.S. force at the end of 2008.

Among the few cautionary voices was Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif.

“I want to give this administration … the resources it needs to successfully end these wars,” Boxer said. “I don’t support an open-ended commitment of American troops to Afghanistan. And if we do not see measurable progress, we must reconsider our engagement and strategy there.”

Debate fizzles
Debate pretty much fizzled after Democrats retreated and moved to delete from the bill money to close Guantanamo, where about 240 terrorism suspects still are held. The companion House bill had already taken that step.

The underlying war funding measure has gotten relatively little attention, even though it would boost total approved spending for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars above $900 billion.

The Pentagon would receive $73 billion under the legislation, including $4.6 billion to train and equip Afghan and Iraqi security forces; $400 million to train and equip Pakistan’s security forces, and $21.9 billion to procure new mine-resistant vehicles, aircraft, weapons and ammunition, among other items.

The House version adds $11.8 billion to Obama’s request, including almost $4 billion for new weapons and military equipment such as eight C-17 cargo planes, mine-resistant vehicles, Bradley Fighting Vehicles and Stryker armored vehicles. The House measure also adds $2.2 billion to Obama’s request for foreign aid, much of which appears to be designed to get around spending limits for 2010.

The Senate measure contains less for weapons procurement and foreign aid, setting up potentially nettlesome negotiations.

Wrestling with amendments
The Senate the floor was often empty Thursday as senators wrestled privately over what final add-ons would make it into the bill.

In the end, several amendments were added, including one by Sens. Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., to block the release under the Freedom of Information Act of government photographs showing the abuse of detainees. The administration is fighting the American Civil Liberties Union in federal court over the release of the photos, and the move was intended to bolster the government’s legal position.

Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., won approval Thursday of an amendment requiring the president to set forth U.S. objectives in Afghanistan and Pakistan and issue quarterly reports detailing whether those goals were being met.

The Senate bill includes $1.5 billion as cautionary funding to fight a possible flu pandemic, including the current outbreak of H1N1 swine flu.

The bill also contains $350 million for various security programs along the U.S.-Mexico border. But the money would not be awarded to the Pentagon, as Obama requested.

Bipartisan rebuke
By a 64-30 vote earlier Thursday, the Senate rejected an amendment by Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., to kill a proposed $100 billion line of credit for the IMF to shore up the ability of countries around the globe cope with financial crises, along with $8 billion for existing commitments.

DeMint earned a bipartisan rebuke from the Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., along with Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., who said the IMF funding was critical to avoiding financial instability in the world that could harm the U.S. economy.

“The fact is that if those emerging markets start to fade, not only do we lose the economic upside of those markets but we also run the risk that governments fail,” Kerry said.

Both Kerry and Gregg said the true cost to taxpayers would be small, since the U.S. government is given interest-bearing assets in return and has never lost money on investments in the IMF. They said even the $5 billion cost estimate by the Congressional Budget Office was too high.

House Appropriations Committee Chairman David Obey, D-Wis., said again Thursday that he’s “very, very reluctant” to support any additional IMF since European countries have been slow to take deficit-financed steps to stimulate their economies.

Sens. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., Russ Feingold, D-Wis., and Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., voted against the measure war spending bill.

[pink emphasis obviously mine]

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Amazing how the shit just keeps piling on…

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American Veterans Speak Out

“Iraq War Veteran Charlie Anderson describes his anger at how the administration has treated those who have returned from Iraq. Charlie tells government that he now fights for the people and not corrupt politicians..”

Demond Mullins, a member of the National Guard sent to Iraq, speaks out against recruiters and war:

**Break to email my state senators using the Friends Committee on National Legislation website, as I urge anyone reading this to do as well.  Only takes a few minutes to send emails to your Congresspeople letting them know where yet another American stands on these issues.  They don’t know for certain unless we tell them.**

Wish this one hadn’t been cut short, but here’s a clip of U.S. Marine Cloy Richards speaking about war, conscience, and peace in light of possibly  deploying on a 3rd tour to Iraq:

Cloy Richards, Adam Kokesh, and Liam Madden on Good Morning America (June 3, 2007):

Adam Kokesh speaking on behalf of Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) on July 17, 2007:

To donate to IVAW, a reputable organization of American veterans speaking out against the wars, please click here.  I sent ‘em $35 this evening – it’s not much but I have it to share at this time.  Feels good to provide some sort of support for the voices of people who’ve served during wartime and live to tell the tale.

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Antiwar Liberty Stickers

From a favorite site of mine: www.LibertyStickers.com Ordered from them a couple times now and was provided fast shipping and quality bumper stickers that do not fade from rain and sun exposure.

Here are a few that caught my attention:

iraq-is-waco-every-day-536

is-it-vietnam-yet-542

repeal-the-military-sh-719military-recruiters-lie-sh-603bring-them-home-now-778

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Memorial Day 2009

Went to a cookout at a friend’s house earlier in the evening and have been mad as a hornet since reading about KBR’s latest fuck-ups, resulting in the accidental electrocution of two American soldiers stationed in Iraq.  Pure bullshit.  And now I’m on here, wandering around, pondering what to do with the rest of the night.

Just rewatched that video on the Political Spectrum from August of ‘08 before venturing off to find related videos.  What better day to do so than Memorial Day…not a holiday but a day of remembrance that we have people on the other side of the earth fighting for what we claim is supposed to be FREEDOM.  But we don’t know what we’re talking about.  Our soldiers are dying, getting maimed, not to mention jacked up by KBR’s faulty wiring, and being taken on the psychological trip of a lifetime because they’ve been ordered to do so by political hotshots and their corporate buddies, the only true beneficiaries in the situation.  It’s a sham–a tragic lie fed to the public to misuse our military brethren for unjust causes (e.g., political gain, economic interests, etc.).  And yet, no one cares to talk about it.  Too controversial for polite conversation.  Bah!

We’re gonna fuck around until our troops are so messed up we’re afraid to recall them, fearing what psychoses will be brought back in tow.  Like to think not, but it makes you wonder.  Especially if they come back to law enforcement positions and/or are greeted with public disrespect.  Who knows what the future holds?

Anyway, onto the first video, a quick summary of the founding of the U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights:

And the next segment from the same video, on the fall of Rome:

Continuing on about capitalism and free enterprise vs. monopolistic, state-controlled economies:

Read the rest of this entry »

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Thursday night update

Just finished hanging out with a galpal this evening.  Obviously not the same one I griped about in the last post; we’ll call that one “Primadonna” for reference purpose.  Let’s call this one “Ginger” – generic-sounding but I like it.  So Ginger came over for watermelon, cheese, and roasted hazelnuts before we headed out on a short walk.  Read the rest of this entry »

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Rambly follow-up

Let’s try this again, less “fluffy” this time.  hehe Read the rest of this entry »

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“Easy Money”

It’s one of those stupid comments thrown around by people who have no idea how you live and work: “easy money.”  As in, for example, a galpal repeatedly referencing my job as an escort as “easy money” in a smarmy tone like she was talking about a trustfund baby.  She began saying that shit when we met a couple years back and continues to slip it in among other snide comments to this day, apparently with the intention of dismissing me as not really having to work.  Irritates the crap out of me when she implies that, and yeah, I tell her though it doesn’t do much good. Read the rest of this entry »

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What we’re eating

The first talk is from Ann Cooper, “the renegade lunch lady,” on the food being served to kids in our schools:

The second video from TED is from the New York Times food columnist, Mark Bittman, in a speech on what’s wrong with the food we eat:

Both videos are from the December 2007 TED conference.

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Brian Greene on superstring theory

About this clip:

Physicist Brian Greene explains superstring theory, the idea that minscule strands of energy vibrating in 11 dimensions create every particle and force in the universe.

From TED’s bio-page on Brian Greene:

Greene was a math prodigy and a Rhodes scholar, who has written several best-selling and non-technical books on the subject, such as The Elegant Universe, a Pulitzer finalist, Aventis winner and the basis for a three-hour Nova special. He is a professor at Columbia University’s Institute for Strings, Cosmology, and Astroparticle Physics.

[emphasis theirs]

NOVA special, huh?  That might be the same one I watched on string theory a few months back, discussed elsewhere on this blog.

It’s a very interesting idea.  I’ll be curious to learn what they come up with in future years.

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Check out what the CIA’s dabbling in

Our Central Intelligence Agency never ceases to amaze me, even when they follow “conspiracist” predictions but especially when they come right out and admit it.  This guy, Bruce Bueno de Mesquita, is a consultant for the CIA and Department of Defense, and here in a video on TED explains how he uses psychology, mathematics, and computers to “predict outcomes of international conflicts,” supposedly with “bewildering accuracy,” telling February 2009 of the possible future of Iran:

TED has this to say on Bruce Bueno de Mesquita’s bio page:

A specialist in foreign policy, international relations and state building, he is also a leading — if controversial — scholar of rational choice theory, which says math underlies the nation-scale consequences of individuals acting for personal benefit. He created forecasting technology that has, time and again, exceeded the accuracy of old-school analysis, even with thorny quarrels charged by obscure contenders, and often against odds. (One example: He called the second Intifada two years in advance.)

Bueno de Mesquita’s company, Mesquita & Roundell, sells his system’s predictions and analysis to influential government and private institutions that need heads-ups on policy. He teaches at NYU and is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.

[emphasis theirs]

Hrmm.  Smooth talker.  “If you can predict what people will do, you can engineer what they will do, and if you can engineer what they do, you can change the world.  You can get a better result,” says Bruce at 16:50.  Chilling when you consider where else this technology is being applied and how much data is likely harvested from the Internet.

Interesting predictions about Iran too, though not too telling, saying nothing about Israel as a hostile variable.  Makes me curious what other matters his firm consults with the CIA and DoD on.

Amazing when you stop and think of the scale technology has reached in recent years.  It’s all global from here on out.

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