mambo

Alternative News


Blog For Free!


Archives
Home
2008 September
2008 August
2008 July
2008 June
2007 August
2007 May
2007 April
2007 March
2007 February
2007 January
2006 December
2006 November
2006 October
2006 September
2006 August
2006 July
2006 June
2006 May
2006 April
2006 March
2006 February
2006 January
2005 December
2005 November
2005 October
2005 September
2005 August
2005 July
2005 June
2005 May
2005 April

My Links
Capitol Hill Blue
The Scotsman
ZNet
The Guardian
911 Soundbyte
Daily Heretic
Baghdad Burning
Counterpunch
Democratic Underground
Global Research
Serendipity
Signs of the Times

tBlog
My Profile
Send tMail
My tFriends
My Images


Sponsored
Blog



Israel's New Middle East: Kill All Arabs
07.28.06 (12:58 pm)   [edit]

 Kurt Nimmo
ANother Day in the Empire
Friday July 28th 2006

As expected, Israel plans to completely flatten southern Lebanon and murder anybody who remains there, no matter there are thousands of people unable to leave-the sick, elderly, and those without resources.

"Everyone remaining in southern Lebanon will be regarded as a terrorist, Israel's justice minister said yesterday as the military prepared to employ 'huge firepower' from the air in its campaign to crush Hizbollah," reports the Telegraph.

read more

1 Comments
 
The call that tells you: run, you're about to lose your home and possessions
07.28.06 (12:42 pm)   [edit]
I have to ask--who is the real terrorist???

Conal Urquhart in Gaza City
Friday July 28, 2006
The Guardian

The voice sounded friendly enough. "Hi, my name is Danny. I'm an officer in Israeli military intelligence. In one hour we will blow up your house."

Mohammed Deeb took the telephone call seriously and told his family and neighbours to get out of the building. An hour later, an Israeli helicopter fired three missiles at the four-storey building in Gaza City, destroying the ground floor and damaging the upper storeys.

Mr Deeb was on the receiving end of a new Israeli tactic of using telephone, radio and leaflets to warn Gazans of impending attacks. The army claims it is an attempt to minimise civilian casualties, but Palestinians say it is a new way of terrorising the population.

Raji Serrani, the director of the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR), which has collected several examples of the tactic, described it as "psychological warfare", adding: "Since when did Israel feel the need to warn people that they were about to bomb their homes? They are simply playing with people's minds and inflicting a new panic in Gaza."

LINK
0 Comments
 
Mysterious wounds from Israel shells
07.28.06 (12:18 pm)   [edit]

By Jennie Matthew in Gaza City

July 28, 2006
 

"WHEN the bomb exploded from the plane I felt I was in hell, real hell," shouts 31-year-old Ghassan stabbing the air with his finger and straining over the side of his grubby hospital bed.
Professing allegiance to Palestinian national security but parroting ideology attune to armed factions, Ghassan went to Gaza's Maghazi refugee camp last week to fight the Israelis during a particularly bloody incursion.

"I feel chemicals. I feel high heat, I feel high pain," he elaborates in English, both legs heavily bandaged, as patients and visitors brush past in a crowded corridor of Gaza's Al-Shifa hospital.

"They found shrapnel with 'test' written on it," he shouts.

Accusations abound that the Israelis, pressing a nearly five-week offensive in which 130 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza, are using a new weapon.

Doctors say they have never before seen such specific burn injuries, concentrated so much on the lower body and causing such a high propensity of amputations. The Health Ministry has already called for an independent inquiry.

read more

0 Comments
 
California blackout threat
07.26.06 (9:09 am)   [edit]

From: Reuters
By Bernie Woodall And Leonard Anderson in Los Angeles and San Francisco

July 26, 2006
 

CALIFORNIA has sweltered under record-breaking, 50-plus temperatures again, pushing up the heat-related death toll and straining the state's power grid.
With temperatures soaring as high as 51.6C in parts of the state since Sunday, about 50 deaths have been blamed on the heat, but the actual death toll remained uncertain.

Most victims were elderly people living in California's central valley, which was under its fifth straight day of excessive heat warnings.

Weather forecasters expected a slight cooling trend in the next few days.

"This is a historic heat wave," Joe Desmond, undersecretary of energy affairs for the California Resources Agency, said.

Mr Desmond said this was the first time in 57 years that both Northern and Southern California had endured record-breaking heat at the same time.

About 66,000 homes and businesses were without power yesterday in scattered outages resulting from neighbourhood transformers blowing rather than key infrastructure failing.

The Fresno County Coroner said today so many bodies had arrived in the past few days that she could not give an accurate figure for heat-related deaths.

"We cannot keep up. We have had an incredible influx in the last few days. We have capacity for 50 and we have no room for anyone else," Coroner Loralee Cervantes told Reuters.

Ms Cervantes said she was considering renting a refrigerated truck to cope, adding that most of the deaths were probably related to the excessive heat but tests were needed to determine the cause for sure.

more

0 Comments
 
Amazon rainforest 'could become a desert'
07.25.06 (2:17 pm)   [edit]
25 July 2006 16:21

And that could speed up global warming with 'incalculable consequences', says alarming new research

By Geoffrey Lean in Manaus and Fred Pearce
Published: 23 July 2006

The vast Amazon rainforest is on the brink of being turned into desert, with catastrophic consequences for the world's climate, alarming research suggests. And the process, which would be irreversible, could begin as early as next year.

Studies by the blue-chip Woods Hole Research Centre, carried out in Amazonia, have concluded that the forest cannot withstand more than two consecutive years of drought without breaking down.

Scientists say that this would spread drought into the northern hemisphere, including Britain, and could massively accelerate global warming with incalculable consequences, spinning out of control, a process that might end in the world becoming uninhabitable.

The alarming news comes in the midst of a heatwave gripping Britain and much of Europe and the United States. Temperatures in the south of England reached a July record of 36.3C on Tuesday. And it comes hard on the heels of a warning by an international group of experts, led by the Eastern Orthodox " pope" Bartholomew, last week that the forest is rapidly approaching a " tipping point" that would lead to its total destruction.

read more
0 Comments
 
The Real Ememy
07.20.06 (3:24 pm)   [edit]

Joe Quinn
Signs of the Times

20/07/2006

At the moment, many writers in the alternative media are feeling extremely angry, depressed and frustrated at what is happening in Palestine and Lebanon. Despite hundreds of editorials and essays eloquently decrying Israeli aggression and provocation and spelling out the very obvious reason for the long-standing violence in the Middle East, Israel continues its murderous rampage, killing almost 70 Lebanese civilians yesterday.

Yesterday's attacks involved Israeli bombing of entire Lebanese villages, such as Srifa in the south west of Lebanon where Israeli F-16 jets, supplied free of charge by the US government, destroyed 15 houses, killed at least 20, and wounded at least 30, men women, young and old alike. The truly horrifying thing however is that the inhabitants of the villages were fleeing on the orders of the Israeli government itself, yet as the villagers attempted to leave in their cars and vans, they were targeted by Israeli jets and blown to pieces...

~ Read More ~

0 Comments
 
Acts of war, or war crimes?
07.15.06 (11:43 am)   [edit]

Eli Stephens
Left I on the News
July 13, 2006

Israel says the seizing of two Israeli soldiers by Hizballah is an "act of war" (on the part of the Lebanese government). I wonder what they consider this to be, then?

    Police said 52 Lebanese civilians, including 15 children, were killed in attacks on Hezbollah targets in Beirut's southern suburbs and across southern Lebanon.

    Security sources said the air strikes in south Lebanon also wounded 100 people. Ten members of a family were killed in Dweir village and seven family members died in Baflay.

Note that Israel has not declared war. Therefore these acts can be nothing other than war crimes. Not that most of the Israeli attacks wouldn't qualify as war crimes even if they had declared war.

read more

4 Comments
 
Meteor explosion recorded over Oslo Fjord area
07.15.06 (11:34 am)   [edit]

Astronomers were fending off scores of calls on Friday from Norwegians who reported hearing what experts are calling a meteor explosion over southeast Norway, somewhere over the Oslo Fjord area.

NORSAR, in Kjeller, has registered a signal from the explosion. Officials at NORSAR and at the University of Oslo said there likely are remnants of the meteor lying on the ground between Gardermoen to the northeast of Oslo and Askim to the southeast.

"I urge people to search for particles that may have fallen to earth," astronomer Knut Jørgen Røed Ødegaard told Aftenposten.no. He said the stones would be black and magnetic.

Seismologist Johannes Schweitzer was on duty at NORSAR Friday morning, when the meteor is believed to have exploded around 10:15am.

He said he got a signal from one of NORSAR's stations about 10 minutes after the explosion. "That correlates to information we have had from astronomers," he said. He thinks the meteor explosion was probably somewhat less forceful than the one recorded at NORSAR stations on June 7 in northern Norway.

Calls streamed in all day from Strømstad, Sweden in the south to Notodden and Jessheim in the north, placed by people who heard the explosion or saw a flash streaking through the bright blue sky Friday morning.

It was said to have been travelling in a north, northwest direction.

"This sounds extremely exciting," said astronomer Kaare Aksnes of the astro-physics institute at the University of Oslo.

He received a call from Stein Kjetil Overrein in Halden, near the Swedish border, who reported seeing a flash hurtling through the sky, and hearing an explosion minutes later. After calling the police, he called Aksnes.

E-mailed reports of the incident were also streaming in to the university from all over the Oslo area.

It's at least the second meteor incident in Norway in recent weeks. A meteorite was photographed streaking through the light night sky east of Tromsø on June 7, and last week a resident of Stavanger reported finding a meteorite in his yard. The latter report, however, hasn't been confirmed and may have been a hoax.

LINK

0 Comments
 
"Let them Hate Us"
07.11.06 (11:08 am)   [edit]

July 11, 2006

INTERVIEW WITH A DIXIE CHICK

"Let them Hate Us"

Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks discusses her group's new album and her outspoken criticism of US President George W. Bush, the boycotts, the death threats, their betrayal by Nashville and why the group is "not ready to make nice."

The Dixie Chicks began their careers in the late 1980s as tradition-conscious country darlings. They fiddled Bluegrass numbers and warbled harmless tunes like "I Want To be a Cowboy's Sweetheart." Their career took off in 1995, when singer Natalie Maines joined the band, which was formed by sisters Martie Maguire and Emily Robinson. Their album "Wide Open Spaces" sold 12 million copies in the United States alone. But later, they became a lighting rod for controversy, with songs like "Goodbye Earl," a ditty about domestic violence in which an abused wife takes deadly revenge on her no-good husband and gets away with it. But the fun became a nightmare after a Dixie Chicks concert in 2003 in London, where singer Maines told the crowd and the world that she was "ashamed" that President George W. Bush came from her home state of Texas. Some American conservatives claimed that Maines's remarks were equivalent to treason, and the group faced massive boycotts from country fans and Nashville and death threats.

With the release of "Taking the Long Way," their first album since falling from grace in large parts of America, the group has departed from its country roots. But the group is no less angry, and the album's first single, "Not Ready to Make Nice," is a call to arms. In the song, Maines, 31, sings: "I'm still mad as hell and I can't bring myself to do what it is you think I should." Despite modest radio play, the album still topped the US pop charts and in Germany it is in the top five.

In a recent SPIEGEL interview in Cologne, Maines discussed the boycotts, the drama and why she remains one of Bush's most outspoken critics.

SPIEGEL: Ms. Maines, three years ago, at a Dixie Chicks concert in London, you drew an enormous amount of criticism for railing against US President George W. Bush. In the United States, you were boycotted, your records were destroyed and you even received death threats. Now you're back with a new single, "Not Ready to Make Nice." Haven't you taken enough beatings?

Maines: This song had to be written because it did us good. And we also took our time on it because it wasn't easy to find the right tone. It wouldn't have been a good song if it sounded like we were scared. Some time had passed, we had more perspective what happened and this album gave us a chance to reflect and take a stance.

SPIEGEL: Are people buying your new album, "Taking the Long Way," to make a political statement against Bush?

Maines: To me, the statement is more about having the right to freedom of speech in America. We get lots of letters from people who say that I don't agree with what you said, but you have the right to say that and what is happening to you is both horrible and un-American.

SPIEGEL: Have you ever regretted making your comments about President Bush?

Maines: If they had offered me an opportunity to take it back and make it go away the next day, I probably would have. I would have done it just to have peace for myself, my family and the band. It wasn't anything that I had been planning. I just went off at the concert in London. But when I realized what I had caused, I certainly got scared. It was a turbulent time back then -- nobody knew if (Iraq) really had weapons of mass destruction or not. I just thought it was suspect that they let this evil person (Saddam Hussein) live in peace for years and years and suddenly they couldn't wait another week (to get rid of him). I've always had a big mouth, but it is my legal right to express my opinion.

SPIEGEL: If the right to freedom of expression is an untouchable fundamental American right, does that not make your critics the people who are truly unpatriotic?

Maines: It seemed like traditional values had been temporarily suspended. I didn't recognize this country, we didn't know what year it was and we didn't know what country we were in. The Republicans and right-wing groups were very organized and they knew exactly what they were doing. It seems like our media is dominated by right-wing media moguls like Rupert Murdoch (Fox News). If you don't share their opinions, they label you as a terrorist or a person who doesn't have any family values. Unfortunately, people in the US who don't have the time to seek out the truth through neutral news sources have a real problem.

SPIEGEL: So perhaps the conservatives are the more patriotic ones?

Maines: Not in my view. These people may think they are patriotic, but I think they are irresponsible. And this whole episode has fundamentally changed my definition of patriotism. Do I have a flag on my car? No. Do I stand up for my rights as an American? Yes.

SPIEGEL: Is that why you continue, unperturbed, to give interviews that are critical of Bush?

Maines: Well, these days there's no danger in that, anyway. Recently, the far-right tried to take me on again over a statement I made to Time magazine about not having respect for the president. But their campaign didn't work this time. It's not news that I don't like the president and everyone who was going to hate us already does. You know, we definitely lost fans forever, but we also gained some new ones.

SPIEGEL: Still, the Wall Street Journal recently reported that you had to cancel half of your US tour because of poor ticket sales.

Maines: That was everywhere, but it isn't true. Unfortunately, everyone believed it. The truth is that our last tour sold out in a day and sales on this one are taking a bit longer.

SPIEGEL: Do you take special security precautions at your concerts?

Maines: Yes, it's sad. We have metal detectors at the entrance, just like at an airport. But we wouldn't feel safe up on stage without them. We are very vulnerable.

SPIEGEL: Is it true that you come from a Republican family?

Maines: Sort of. My parents are the exception, but most in my family are Republicans. But that was never a problem. A lot of members of my family probably don't share my political views, but the nasty and hurtful personal attacks against me angered them. They know who I am, they love me and they stood up for me. Unfortunately, there are crazy people out there who have enough time on their hands to spend their entire days hating us and who go on to the Internet to try to get other people to do the same.

SPIEGEL: You're acting very casually about all this now, but you have also been the recipient of death threats. How do you deal with that?

Maines: It made me choke up when I read the death threat to myself. But I wasn't scared -- no more so than any other day. We already knew there were people out there who were just nuts. At that point, I already had 24-hour security outside my house. But it was really troubling that other people in my family, including my parents, had to suffer with me. One politician in South Carolina wasted the state's time by proposing a bill in the legislature demanding that the Dixie Chicks play a free concert to ask for the forgiveness of soldiers and their families in the state. Just imagine, the nonsense actually passed. And that wasn't the worst of the lunacy.

SPIEGEL: How much worse did it get?

Maines: Look at what happened with the Red Cross. We tried to donate $1 million to them and they wouldn't take it. We were treated like lepers. We received a letter from them saying it wasn't possible to accept our money. One mustn't forget, of course, that the acting president of the United States is also an honorary chairman of the American Red Cross.

SPIEGEL: Have these incidents changed your perception of America?

Maines: They did -- at least temporarily. I realized that my country and its people were different than I thought they were. I was disappointed and, at the time, I didn't have much hope that things would change. But after the disaster caused by hurricane Katrina, a lot of people woke up and started seeing that things clearly weren't going right in our country. The images of Katrina on our television screens were as unbelievable as Sept. 11, but this time it was something we had done to ourselves. People also started to ask themselves what the point of the Iraq war had been.

SPIEGEL: What was especially startling about the outrage over your comments is the fact that cultural and political criticism has had a long tradition in country music. During the 1960s, Johnny Cash created controversy for his support of American Indians. And country super star Garth Brooks even made gay rights an issue in one of his songs.

Maines: I always kept thinking about that. When it first emerged, country music was very rebellious. But today, most country singers are automatically conservative. We never fit into this image and it's a relief for us that that has all been settled now.

SPIEGEL: There's hardly any link to country music left in your new album. Are you abandoning your previous audience for good?

Maines: Well, I think they turned their backs on us. They dropped us like a hot potato the day after this happened, even after we had a seven year relationship with them -- at least the ones in the US. But this didn't happen anywhere else. We weren't going to make an album that catered to them; we didn't trust them. We were stars in this scene for years and we loyally followed the unwritten rules of the country radio world. We catered to country first and we never tried to cross over. We kept our distance from the traditional pop radio stations because that kind of ingratiation never went down well in Nashville. We felt totally betrayed by the country music industry. And none of the country radio stations are playing our new single "Not Ready to Make Nice." Instead they asked our label for an alternative single -- a request that we, of course, turned down.

SPIEGEL: During the last election, countless musicians and artists took part in the campaign against Bush. But those efforts didn't make much of a difference. Was that disillusioning?

Maines: I don't think we ever thought that we could have that much of an impact. Still, it was still important to try. We have to create an alternative voice to counter the media concentration of people like Rupert Murdoch.

SPIEGEL: Will Hillary Clinton become the next president?

Maines: It would be crazy for the Democrats to make her their candidate. I don't think the country is ready to vote for a woman in the White House.

The interview was conducted by Christoph Dallach and Matthias Matussek.

LINK

0 Comments
 
The Failed Administration of George W. Bush
07.03.06 (10:26 am)   [edit]

July 3, 2006
Rodrigue Tremblay
The New American Empire

"We now live in a nation in which the president has the omnipotent power to ignore all constitutional restraints on his power."

Jacob Hornberger ( Future of Freedom Foundation)

"Simply stated, there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction,"

Vice President Dick Cheney, August 26, 2002

"The defense policy of the United States is based on a simple premise: The United States does not start fights. We will never be an aggressor."

President Ronald Reagan

George W. Bush has failed as president. Indeed, it looks like the political legacy that George W. Bush will leave behind will be a terrible heritage. His administration, (which should more appropriately be called 'the Bush-Cheney administration' because of the predominant and crucial role played by Vice President Dick Cheney) will be remembered as an administration built on lies, fabricated "evidence", duplicity, deception, manipulation, propaganda, improvisation, bad policies and gratuitous warmongering. In other words, the 'Bush-Cheney administration' is the reverse of what you would like a democratic government to be. The end result is an administration that has profoundly corrupted the daily working of the U. S. government.

read more

0 Comments
 
GIs may have planned Iraq rape, slayings
07.02.06 (11:16 am)   [edit]

By RYAN LENZ, Associated Press Writer Sat Jul 1, 3:00 PM ET

BEIJI, Iraq - Investigators believe American soldiers spent nearly a week plotting an attack in which they raped an Iraqi woman, then killed her and her family in an insurgent-ridden area south of Baghdad, a U.S. military official said Saturday.

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing, said the attack appeared "totally premeditated" and that the soldiers apparently "studied" the family for about a week before carrying out the attack.

According to the official, the Sunni Arab family had just moved into a new home in the religiously mixed area about 20 miles south of Baghdad. The Americans entered the home, separated three family members from the woman, then raped her and set fire to her body, the official said. The three others were also slain. A senior Army official who also requested anonymity because the investigation is ongoing said one of the victims was a child .

read more

0 Comments