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Yellow Pages Sat Apr 12 2025 06:39:26 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time).

 

Freedom quote for 4/12/2025
Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it's the only thing that ever has.
(Margaret Mead)

Friday, December 30, 2005

Calling all bloggers: These documents need publishing

Highly recommended
Background:
The UK government has been quick to deny that we practice, or tolerate the practice of Torture. So it is perhaps not suprising that they are determined that you should not see the following documents:
Click (PDF) :: Image

Craig Murray was the UK ambassador to Uzbekistan, untill his complaints and protest at the use of intelligence gained by torture got too much for Jack Straw and the Foreign Office, who set about attempting to unsuccessfully smear him, and to successfully remove him from office.
Click :: Click

The Foreign Office has had the draft of Craig's book for clearance for over 3 months now, and they are doing everything they can to try and prevent him from publishing his side of the story. Their latest attempt to cover their own backs was to inform him, the night before Christmas Eve, that these two documents cannot be published, and that he was to return or destroy all copies immediately.

What are these documents?
The first document is a series of Telegrams that Craig sent to the Foreign Office, outlining his growing concern and disgust at our use of intelligence passed to the UK by the Uzbek security services.

The second document is a copy of legal advice the Foreign Office sought, to see if they were operating within the Law in accepting torture intelligence, and according to Michael Wood the FCO legal adviser; it is fine, as long as it is not used as evidence.

Faced with this heavy handed censorship by the FCO, in an attempt to cover up our use of and complicity in torture, Craig has decided to fight back, and has asked us all to publish this information, so it cannot be suppressed.

Compare and Contrast the government's public position on Torture, with the information they were recieving at the time from their own Ambassador, and the legal advice they were seeking.
We have archived a selection of government spin and lies on the use of torture in these 4 pages:
http://www.blairwatch.co.uk/node/708
http://www.blairwatch.co.uk/node/709
http://www.blairwatch.co.uk/node/710
http://www.blairwatch.co.uk/node/711

and you can listen to Jack Straw and Tony Blair deny what you read in these hitherto 'secret' documents here.
http://www.blairwatch.co.uk/down/strawhust.mp3
http://www.blairwatch.co.uk/down/blairrend.mp3

What you can do:
We have published the documents in full here, and ask that anyone who can will do the same.
http://www.blairwatch.co.uk/node/715
http://www.blairwatch.co.uk/node/714

If you could publish, host and link to these documents on your own webspace, then it will be harder for anybody to be prosecuted here in the UK, and ensure that they get maximum coverage.

BlairWatch (reprinted in full)

Blogs Help Foil UK Censorship
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Update:
Craig Murray's site is temporarily down for reasons as yet unknown. What was at first looking like a problem due to the volume of traffic, is now looking more ominous.

[Thanks Nora from Extra!Extra! for the tip-off.]

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Friday, December 23, 2005

UN threatened with budgetary shutdown

Highly recommended
"Less than two weeks before a Dec. 31 deadline, the United Nations is in danger of beginning the new year inauspiciously - without an approved budget and unable to pay staff salaries.

United Nations - "I am not sure if the light in this room can and will be on," U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan told reporters Wednesday.

"Annan was hinting at an impending financial crisis which could shut down the world body, dimming the lights in the 39-story U.N. Secretariat, come January.

"'I really, really hope that member states understand the implications of a budget crisis and will do everything to avoid it,' the secretary-general said at his year-end press conference.

"The potential crisis has been sparked by implicit threats by the United States that it will not support the U.N.'s biennial budget for 2006-2007 if member states refuse to back proposals for a radical overhaul of the world body, including management reforms.

"Since the budget is traditionally approved by consensus by all 191 member states, a single country can withhold its support, thereby throwing the entire process into disarray.

"John Bolton, the abrasive U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, has said the U.N.'s biennial budget for 2006-2007 should be shrunk into a three-month budget giving member states a deadline of Mar. 31 to agree to a set of U.S.-inspired reforms.

"But the 132-member Group of 77, comprising developing countries, is refusing to conform to artificial deadlines or rush into a decision under threats.

"Last month, Bolton warned U.N. member states, specifically the 132 developing nations, that if they don't play ball with the United States, Washington may look elsewhere to settle international problems."
TruthOut (thanks Extra!Extra!)

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Wednesday, December 21, 2005

The Long March of Dick Cheney

Highly recommended

"The hallmark of the Dick Cheney administration is its illegitimacy. Its essential method is bypassing established lines of authority; its goal is the concentration of unaccountable presidential power. When it matters, the regular operations of the CIA, Defense Department and State Department have been sidelined.

"Richard Nixon is the model, but with modifications. In the Nixon administration, the president was the prime mover, present at the creation of his own options, attentive to detail, and conscious of their consequences. In the Cheney administration, the president is volatile but passive, firm but malleable, presiding but absent. Once his complicity has been arranged, a closely held 'cabal' - as Lawrence Wilkerson, once chief of staff to former Secretary of State Colin Powell, calls it - wields control."
Sidney Blumenthal, Salon.com opinion piece via TruthOut

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Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Spies warned of Tube attack


"Spymasters warned Tony Blair before the July 7 suicide bombings that Al-Qaeda was planning a 'high priority' attack specifically aimed at the London Tube.

"A leaked four-page report by the Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC), which oversees all spying, is the first definitive evidence that the intelligence services expected terrorists to strike at the Underground.

"The disclosure will fuel critics’ suspicions that Blair decided to rule out a public inquiry into the bombings last week because it could expose intelligence failings at the highest level."
The Times

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'No President is Above the Law'

US Senator Robert C Byrd

December 19, 2005

Americans have been stunned at the recent news of the abuses of power by an overzealous President. It has become apparent that this Administration has engaged in a consistent and unrelenting pattern of abuse against our Country's law-abiding citizens, and against our Constitution.

We have been stunned to hear reports about the Pentagon gathering information and creating databases to spy on ordinary Americans whose only sin is choose to exercise their First Amendment right to peaceably assemble. Those Americans who choose to question the Administration's flawed policy in Iraq are labeled by this Administration as domestic terrorists."

We now know that the F.B.I.'s use of National Security Letters on American citizens has increased one hundred fold, requiring tens of thousands of individuals to turn over personal information and records. These letters are issued without prior judicial review, and provide no real means for an individual to challenge a permanent gag order.

Through news reports, we have been shocked to learn of the CIA's practice of rendition, and the so-called "black sites," secret locations in foreign countries, where abuse and interrogation have been exported, to escape the reach of U.S. laws protecting against human rights abuses.

We know that Vice President Dick Cheney has asked for exemptions for the CIA from the language contained in the McCain torture amendment banning cruel, inhumane, and degrading treatment. Thank God his pleas have been rejected by this Congress.

Now comes the stomach-churning revelation through an executive order, that President Bush has circumvented both the Congress and the courts. He has usurped the Third Branch of government - the branch charged with protecting the civil liberties of our people - by directing the National Security Agency to intercept and eavesdrop on the phone conversations and e-mails of American citizens without a warrant, which is a clear violation of the Fourth Amendment. He has stiff-armed the People's Branch of government. He has rationalized the use of domestic, civilian surveillance with a flimsy claim that he has such authority because we are at war. The executive order, which has been acknowledged by the President, is an end-run around the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which makes it unlawful for any official to monitor the communications of an individual on American soil without the approval of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.

What is the President thinking? Congress has provided for the very situations which the President is blatantly exploiting. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, housed in the Department of Justice, reviews requests for warrants for domestic surveillance. The Court can review these requests expeditiously and in times of great emergency. In extreme cases, where time is of the essence and national security is at stake, surveillance can be conducted before the warrant is even applied for.

This secret court was established so that sensitive surveillance could be conducted, and information could be gathered without compromising the security of the investigation. The purpose of the FISA Court is to balance the government's role in fighting the war on terror with the Fourth Amendment rights afforded to each and every American.

The American public is given vague and empty assurances by the President that amount to little more than "trust me." But, we are a nation of laws and not of men. Where is the source of that authority he claims? I defy the Administration to show me where in the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or the U.S. Constitution, they are allowed to steal into the lives of innocent America citizens and spy.

When asked yesterday what the source of this authority was, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had no answer. Secretary Rice seemed to insinuate that eavesdropping on Americans was acceptable because FISA was an outdated law, and could not address the needs of the government in combating the new war on terror. This is a patent falsehood. The USA Patriot Act expanded FISA significantly, equipping the government with the tools it needed to fight terrorism. Further amendments to FISA were granted under the Intelligence Authorization Act of 2002 and the Homeland Security Act of 2002. In fact, in its final report, the 9/11 Commission noted that the removal of the pre-9/11 "wall" between intelligence officials and law enforcement was significant in that it "opened up new opportunities for cooperative action."

The President claims that these powers are within his role as Commander in Chief. Make no mistake, the powers granted to the Commander in Chief are specifically those as head of the Armed Forces. These warrantless searches are conducted not against a foreign power, but against unsuspecting and unknowing American citizens. They are conducted against individuals living on American soil, not in Iraq or Afghanistan. There is nothing within the powers granted in the Commander in Chief clause that grants the President the ability to conduct clandestine surveillance of American civilians. We must not allow such groundless, foolish claims to stand.

The President claims a boundless authority through the resolution that authorized the war on those who perpetrated the September 11th attacks. But that resolution does not give the President unchecked power to spy on our own people. That resolution does not give the Administration the power to create covert prisons for secret prisoners. That resolution does not authorize the torture of prisoners to extract information from them. That resolution does not authorize running black-hole secret prisons in foreign countries to get around U.S. law. That resolution does not give the President the powers reserved only for kings and potentates.

I continue to be shocked and astounded by the breadth with which the Administration undermines the constitutional protections afforded to the people, and the arrogance with which it rebukes the powers held by the Legislative and Judicial Branches. The President has cast off federal law, enacted by Congress, often bearing his own signature, as mere formality. He has rebuffed the rule of law, and he has trivialized and trampled upon the prohibitions against unreasonable search and seizures guaranteed to Americans by the United States Constitution.

We are supposed to accept these dirty little secrets. We are told that it is irresponsible to draw attention to President Bush's gross abuse of power and Constitutional violations. But what is truly irresponsible is to neglect to uphold the rule of law. We listened to the President speak last night on the potential for democracy in Iraq. He claims to want to instill in the Iraqi people a tangible freedom and a working democracy, at the same time he violates our own U.S. laws and checks and balances? President Bush called the recent Iraqi election "a landmark day in the history of liberty." I dare say in this country we may have reached our own sort of landmark. Never have the promises and protections of Liberty seemed so illusory. Never have the freedoms we cherish seemed so imperiled.

These renegade assaults on the Constitution and our system of laws strike at the very core of our values, and foster a sense of mistrust and apprehension about the reach of government.

I am reminded of Thomas Payne's famous words, "These are the times that try men's souls."

These astounding revelations about the bending and contorting of the Constitution to justify a grasping, irresponsible Administration under the banner of "national security" are an outrage. Congress can no longer sit on the sidelines. It is time to ask hard questions of the Attorney General, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, and the Director of the CIA. The White House should not be allowed to exempt itself from answering the same questions simply because it might assert some kind of "executive privilege" in order to avoid further embarrassment.

The practice of domestic spying on citizens should halt immediately. Oversight hearings need to be conducted. Judicial action may be in order. We need to finally be given answers to our questions: where is the constitutional and statutory authority for spying on American citizens, what is the content of these classified legal opinions asserting there is a legality in this criminal usurpation of rights, who is responsible for this dangerous and unconstitutional policy, and how many American citizens lives' have been unknowingly affected?

Monday, December 19, 2005

Bush "effectively created a Police State" in 2002

"Bush Secretly Signs Law Allowing Unlimited Spying on Americans Without Warrants: In a blockbuster revelation, the NYT yesterday broke the story of the year: That early in 2002 Bush introduced a secret law allowing the NSA foreign spying agency to spy on ordinary Americans without limit, without warrant, without notification, and without the need to demonstrate cause. He effectively created a Police State in America without telling anyone. The law, which is clearly unconstitutional, essentially proclaims:

* That the American people have no rights or freedoms, in the eyes of the Bush neocon regime, and
*That the US Government considers itself in all respects above the law.
"In any other democracy this kind of action, introduced subversively without notification to the people, would be grounds for immediate impeachment of the president and criminal charges against the perpetrators. But the reactions to this astonishing revelation have been unbelievably meek -- the mainstream media have provided little editorial commentary, lobbing softball questions to the government and merely reporting verbatim what government leaders of both parties have said. Bush's Minister of Torture Alberto Gonzales shrugged it off, saying it was all necessary in the 'war on terror'.

"What is equally remarkable was the fact that the NYT sat on this story for a year at the government's request, essentially allowing Bush to be reelected. They chose to release it just in time for the revelations to block Senate renewal of the abominable Patriot Act -- an act for incursion on civil liberties that, at least, the public was told about. But the Republican leaders see no problem getting the Patriot Act renewed indefinitely, viewing the revelation as a mere setback ..."
Dave Pollard, Salon.com

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Bush torture compromise: "Media got it wrong"

Huffington Post:

"Today, for two separate reasons, has been an incredible day in America. First, the United States has legitimized torture and secondly, the President has admitted to an impeachable offense.

"First, the media has been totally misled on the alleged Bush-McCain agreement on torture. McCain capitulated. It is not a defeat for Bush. It is a win for Cheney.

"Torture is not banned or in any way impeded.

"Under the compromise, anyone charged with torture can defend himself if a 'reasonable' person could have concluded they were following a lawful order ...

"The Bush-McCain torture compromise legitimizes torture. It is the first time that has happened in this country. Not in the two World Wars, Korea, the Cold War or Vietnam did the government ever seek or get the power this bill gives them.

"The worst part of it is that most of the media missed it and got it wrong.

"Secondly, the President in authorizing surveillance without seeking a court order has committed a crime. The Federal Communications Act criminalizes surveillance without a warrant. It is an impeachable offense. This was also totally missed by the media."

[Martin Garbus is a partner in the law firm of Davis & Gilbert LLP and one of the country's leading trial lawyers.]

Information Clearing House via Extra!Extra!

Torture
"Apart from being ethically and legally repugnant, these revelations are also disastrous for America’s moral standing in the world. For the US, as for other democracies confronted with the threat of terrorism, the question of torture has become a crucial political dilemma."
Le Monde

Torture's long shadow
"One nasty morning Comrade Stalin discovered that his favorite pipe was missing. Naturally, he called in his henchman, Lavrenti Beria, and instructed him to find the pipe. A few hours later, Stalin found it in his desk and called off the search. 'But, Comrade Stalin,' stammered Beria, 'five suspects have already confessed to stealing it.' ..."
Washington Post

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Saturday, December 17, 2005

US Govt broke laws in spy crackdown: report


"Top aides to US President George W Bush have declined to confirm or deny a media report that he had ordered an unprecedented spy effort targeting US and foreign citizens inside the United States.

"But amid congressional calls to look into the matter, they insist Mr Bush always acted lawfully and protected civil liberties in his efforts to prevent a repeat of Al Qaeda's September 11, 2001 terrorist strikes.

"The New York Times says the President authorised the National Security Agency (NSA) in 2002 to monitor the international telephone calls and email messages of hundreds, perhaps thousands, of people inside the United States without getting warrants previously required for internal spying.

"US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice says she is "not going to comment on intelligence activities, because intelligence activities by their very nature are activities that are sensitive and that should not be compromised".

"'The President of the United States acted lawfully in every step that he has taken to defend the American people and to defend them within his constitutional responsibility,' Dr Rice told NBC television.

"At any given time since the order, the NSA monitored 500 people inside the United States and 5,000 to 7,000 people overseas suspected of having terrorist ties, the daily reports."
ABC

Bush silent over spy claim

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Patriot Act renewal blocked


USA: "The Senate, bowing to pressure from civil libertarians of all political stripes, delivered a staggering blow to President George W. Bush on Friday by blocking reauthorization of the Patriot Act's eavesdropping provisions, which expire on Dec. 31.

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.), working with the White House, fell eight votes short of getting the 60 necessary to stop Democrats and conservative Republicans from filibustering the act's reauthorization."
Newsday

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The Psychology of Global Warming: Alarm-ist Versus Alarm-ing


By Bill Blakemore

"One expert warns temperatures could climb to highest level in 500,000 years.

"Journalism has no precedent for a story of the scale or seriousness of global warming.

"The vast majority of credible climate scientists - well over 95 percent, according to specialists in assessing scientists' opinions - agree that the average temperatures of the oceans, the land surface of the planet and the lower atmosphere (anything lower than the tip of Mount Everest) have been climbing at an accelerating rate.

"The same specialists say that nearly as many scientists agree that manmade greenhouse gas emissions are a significant factor - and a good many say the only significant factor - in the dangerous global warming now under way.

"If 95 of the world's best, most experienced experts in child well-being were to tell you that your child was under lethal attack - and with dramatic signs already visible if you only look - would you say, 'I think I'll wait until the other five experts are convinced before I do anything about it?'

"It would be the other way around, and yet that is how a lot of people -- and some parts of what's called "the mainstream media' -- often seem to be reacting to what the vast majority of scientists are telling us.

"The latest news includes a study by one of the Galileos of global warming, NASA's Dr. James Hansen, who told the 11,000 Earth systems scientists at their annual meeting that mankind has at most 10 more years within which significant emissions cuts must get well under way or else the planet's temperatures will, within the next 30 to 40 years (by the time today's toddlers are entering middle age), climb to levels higher than at any time in the last 500,000 years. Civilization is less than 10,000 years old.

"At the worldwide global warming talks in Montreal, scientists elaborated on surprising new reports that the Atlantic currents' "conveyor belt" system has already slowed down - one of the predicted effects of global warming, possibly spurred by fresh water pouring in from the melting Greenland ice cap ..."
TruthOut

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Bush said WHAT??!!

30,000 Iraqis More or Less

By Lucinda Marshall

"George's face was eerily matter-of-fact as he said it. '30,000 Iraqis more or less' have been killed so far in the 'War on Terror'. No remorse or sadness, he seemed wholly unaffected in any way by the enormity of such a loss of life, let alone that he might bear some responsibility for it happening. But it was major news that during his remarks to the World Affairs Conference in Philadelphia, the President had finally put a figure on the number of 'enemy' war dead and my local newspaper duly ran the story on Page One ...

"In response to other questions, he also mentioned the number of American war dead, and that he thought Iraqis responsible for prison torture should be held accountable. But it wasn't until the 3rd from last paragraph in the wire story that appeared in my local paper that this chilling statement was reported, 'The long run in this war is going to require a change of governments in parts of the world'.

Hello? Wait a minute, stop the presses, HE SAID WHAT??"

Continues here at Information Clearinghouse

Lid dip to Extra!Extra!


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Tuesday, December 13, 2005

Pat Robertson calls war criticism 'treason'


On the December 7 edition of Christian Broadcasting Network's The 700 Club, host Pat Robertson, founder of the Christian Coalition of America, said Democratic criticism of the Iraq war "amounts to treason" and that "carping criticism ... just doesn't cut it."

PAT ROBERTSON: We've won the war already, and for the Democrats to say we can't win it -- what kind of a statement is that? And furthermore, one of the fundamental principles we have in America is that the president is the commander in chief of the armed forces and attempts to undermine the commander in chief during time of war amounts to treason. I know we have an opportunity to express our points of view, but there is a time when we're engaged in a combat situation that carping criticism against the commander in chief just doesn't cut it. And I think that yes, we have freedom of speech -- of course we do -- but this has gone over the top and I think the Republicans are -- well, they've taken advantage.

Media Matters

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Monday, December 12, 2005

Cronulla: Only people can stop John Howard's mob

Now that racist violence has broken out in Cronulla (southern suburb of Sydney), Australia's reactionary Prime Minister John Winston Howard must be made accountable by the citizens.

We can not expect the media to do it because of the high concentration of media ownership among Howard-supporting conservative owners. (According to Reporters Without Borders in 2004, Australia is in 41st position on a list of countries ranked by Press Freedom.)

The first thing he must do is publicly condemn John Stone (former treasury secretary and National Party senator) for his article 'Some will not integrate' and Stone's statement: "I am thinking of founding the Queen Isabella Society" -- referring to Isabella of Castile, the notoriously cruel ruler of Spain who, with her equally horrendous husband Ferdinand, created the Spanish Inquisition, ordered 150,000 Jewish subjects to convert to Christianity or face expulsion, expelled Muslims, and so on.

Queen Isabella is a heroine of the Neo-Nazi Stormfront organisation (see this discussion page) for "liberating" Spain from the Muslim Moriscos (one of history's bloodthirstiest chapters of two-way oppression and racism).

Then sack Alby Schultz

Then he must sack Liberal backbencher Alby Schultz who told The Australian: "We've got to tighten up on the way all people that come into this country -- particularly those people coming from a country with a history of anti-Christian behaviour -- apply for citizenship".

Of course, neither of these men is responsible for racist violence, and John Howard's statement today that "Australia hasn't suddenly become a racist country" is risible (see pix). It has long been a racist country. Today, December 12, happens to be the anniversary of anti-Chinese riots that broke out in Australia in 1860, leading to the dreadful Lambing Flat Massacre of 1861.

Then, in the early 1890s, John Norton (a prominent publisher and long-serving Member of Parliament) and the Anti-Chinese League helped organise a march of tens of thousands (sources differ, perhaps 50,000) of Australians through the streets of Sydney with the purpose of kicking Asians out of Australia. Even the motto of The Bulletin (Australia's best-known magazine) was "Australia for the white man", and writers like Henry Lawson wrote terrible racist things with impunity.

John Howard uses race to divide and rule

Then, let us not forget Howard's own Children Overboard scandal, his MV Tampa scandal, and his SIEV-X scandal, all predicated on using latent and actual Australian racism as a wedge issue in order to attain and extend personal, party and class power.

There is more, much more, that can be told of appalling racial violence in this country, almost always manipulated by cunning politicians to entrench their power by the old "divide and rule" tactic. As John Lennon wrote, "Only people know just how to change the world", and only people can force John Howard's distasteful extreme right-wing government to change and rein in those who sow division in society for whatever sick purposes. Howard will definitely not do it unless forced, and that means relentless pressure from all quarters.

Howard incites Racial Hatred with Racist Laws
Race Riot Nationalists spread to third Sydney suburb
"Ugly face of racism in Australia'' -- Premier Morris Iemma

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Firestone hit with lawsuit over slave-like conditions

Tire Giant Firestone Hit with Lawsuit over Slave-Like Conditions at Rubber Plantation

"UNITED NATIONS - Firestone, a multinational rubber manufacturing giant known for its automobile tires, has come under fire from human rights and environmental groups for its alleged use of child labor and slave-like working conditions at a plantation in Liberia.

"Recently, the International Labor Rights Fund (ILRF), a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group, filed a lawsuit charging that thousands of workers, including minors, toil in virtual slavery at Bridgestone's Firestone rubber plantation in Liberia ..."
Common Dreams

Sunday, December 11, 2005

The Power of Nightmares

Highly recommended
Have you seen it yet? Better than Fahrenheit 9-11. As we suspected, Al Qaeda doesn't exist. It's a neo-con wet dream. Thanks, Baz le Tuff for showing me this BBC documentary.

The Power of Nightmares

"A 2004 documentary series by Adam Curtis, "The Power of Nightmares; The Rise of the Politics of Fear seeks to overturn much of what is widely believed about Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida. The latter, it argues, is not an organised international network. It does not have members or a leader. It does not have "sleeper cells". It does not have an overall strategy. In fact, it barely exists at all, except as an idea about cleansing a corrupt world through religious violence." --Andy Beckett for The Guardian, 15 October 2004 (http://www.guardian.co.uk/terrorism/story/0,12780,1327904,00.html)"
Sourcewatch

Links
Audio & Transcript
BBC, The Power of Nightmares, audio part 1 (http://www.radio4all.net/proginfo.php?id=10406)
BBC, The Power of Nightmares, audio part 2 (http://www.radio4all.net/proginfo.php?id=10407)
BBC, The Power of Nightmares, audio part 3 (http://www.radio4all.net/proginfo.php?id=10409)
The Power of Nightmares programme transcripts (http://silt3.com/index.php?id=573) (in three parts).
[edit]
Video
from Archive.org (http://www.archive.org/details/ThePowerOfNightmares)
Google Search for .avi downloads
.torrents (http://avoyager.freeshell.org/ThePowerofNightmares/)
[edit]
Reviews
"The making of the terror myth," (http://www.guardian.co.uk/terrorism/story/0,12780,1327904,00.html) The Guardian/UK, October 15, 2004.
Thom Hartmann, "Hyping Terror For Fun, Profit - And Power," (http://www.commondreams.org/views04/1207-26.htm) Common Dreams, December 7, 2004.
[edit]
Related
Terror's Greatest Recruitment Tool (http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0812-21.htm), Naomi Klein, 12 August 2005, The Nation

View the three-part BBC documentary Power of Nightmares free at links below: Real Player required, free download available at http://www.real.com/freeplayer/?rppr=rnwk
Each episode is one hour. If you have time for only one, Part 3 is the most revealing.
Power of Nightmares Part 1 - The Making of the Terror Myth: http://novakeo.com/?p=131Power of Nightmares Part 2 - The Phantom Victory Myth: http://novakeo.com/?p=132
Power of Nightmares Part 3 - The Shadows in the Cave: http://novakeo.com/?p=133For a full written transcript of The Power of Nightmares, click here For transcripts, audio & video downloads, and other excellent information on the series, click here

For an excellent review of Power of Nightmares in the Los Angeles Times:
http://www.WantToKnow.info/050111latimes

For a high quality download of the entire documentary Power of Nightmares:
http://www.isohunt.com/torrents.php?ihq=%22the+power+of+nightmares%22&ext=&op=and

Source

Buy it through Wilson's Almanac Cafe Diem! store

The making of the terror myth :: More :: More :: And more

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Thursday, December 08, 2005

Pinter demands war crimes trial for Blair

"The Nobel prize-winning playwright Harold Pinter has called for Tony Blair to be tried for war crimes, in his acceptance speech to the Nobel committee.

"The 5,000-word speech excoriates the US government over Guantánamo Bay and its attempts to destabilise Nicaragua in the 1980s.

"But he saves his most savage comments for the UK, described as "pathetic and supine" and a 'bleating little lamb' tagging along behind the US in its support for the Iraq war.

"'The invasion of Iraq was a bandit act, an act of blatant state terrorism demonstrating absolute contempt for the concept of international law,' he said.

"'The invasion was an arbitrary military action inspired by a series of lies upon lies and gross manipulation of the media and therefore of the public ... a formidable assertion of military force responsible for the death and mutilation of thousands and thousands of innocent people.

"'We have brought torture, cluster bombs, depleted uranium, innumerable acts of random murder, misery, degradation and death to the Iraqi people, and call it "bringing freedom and democracy to the Middle East".'

"The 75-year-old will not be attending Saturday's award ceremony at the Swedish Academy in Stockholm because of poor health. He will be sending his publisher, Stephen Page, in his place to receive the 10m kroner prize.

"But the author of The Caretaker and The Birthday Party has recorded a video of himself reading the speech, looking frail in a wheelchair with a red blanket over his legs.

"In recent years he has been treated for cancer, and appeared with a bandaged head earlier this year when it was announced that he had been awarded the prize.

"One of the original 'angry young men' who revolutionised British theatre in the 1950s, he has lost none of his fury in the speech.

"'How many people do you have to kill before you qualify to be described as a mass murderer and a war criminal? One hundred thousand? More than enough, I would have thought,' he said.

"'Therefore it is just that Bush and Blair be arraigned before the international criminal court of justice. But Bush has been clever. He has not ratified the international criminal court of justice ...

"'But Tony Blair has ratified the court and is therefore available for prosecution. We can let the court have his address if they're interested: it is Number 10, Downing Street, London.'"

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Wednesday, December 07, 2005

MP wants talks on CIA 'torture flight' stops

"EDINBURGH MP John Barrett has called for an urgent parliamentary debate on the use of Scottish airports as re-fuelling stops for so-called CIA torture flights.

"Mr Barrett made the call following warnings from legal experts that the British Government may be guilty of breaking international law if it has allowed the flights to land.

"The CIA has been accused of transporting suspected terrorists to Eastern Europe so aggressive interrogation techniques outlawed in the US can be deployed. Edinburgh Airport has been named by the American authorities as one of several Scottish airports used for so-called "rendition" stops.

"US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice yesterday insisted that America did not practise torture or transport detainees to places where they believed they would be tortured.

"But Mr Barrett said:

"'Condoleezza Rice must not be allowed to dodge the issue. I will keep up the fight.'"
Scotsman

More on CIA 'torture flights'
Keep quiet about secret flights to secret jails, Rice tells Europe

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