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Yellow Pages Fri Apr 11 2025 14:16:51 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time).

 

Freedom quote for 4/11/2025
Heresy is only another word for freedom of thought.
(Graham Greene)

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

New Chinese regulation exposes organ removal


CHINA — "On March 21, 2007, the State Council Executive Meeting passed in principle a draft of the 'Human Organ Transplant Ordinance.' The ordinance particularly specified a strict ban of taking organs from citizens under 18 years for transplant.

"Experts outside of China speculate that the Chinese Communist Party had no choice but to respond to the organ harvesting crimes which have shocked the world in the lead up to the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Analysts have pointed out this regulation shows that live organ removal is common in China and it happens to minors who are not supposed to be on death row."
Epoch Times

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Tuesday, March 27, 2007

UK aides backed study that placed Iraq toll at more than 600,000

Read about the lies and myths of the War on Terror
"British government officials backed the methodology used by researchers who concluded that more than 600,000 Iraqis had been killed since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, the BBC reported Monday.

"The government publicly rejected the findings, published in The Lancet medical journal in October. But the BBC said documents obtained under freedom of information legislation showed that advisers concluded that the study had used sound methods.

"The Lancet study, conducted by researchers from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and Al Mustansiriya University in Baghdad, estimated that 655,000 more Iraqis had died since March 2003 than one would expect without the war. The study estimated that 601,027 of those deaths occurred as a result of violence.

"The researchers, reflecting the inherent uncertainties in such extrapolations, said they were 95 percent certain that the real number lay somewhere between 392,979 and 942,636 deaths.

"The conclusion, based on interviews of households and not a body count, was disputed by some experts, and rejected by the U.S. and British governments."
AP (This link was correct at time of posting, but several hours later the story on that page was changed.)

Iraqi deaths survey 'was robust'

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Sunday, March 25, 2007

Billboarding the Iraqi Disaster

From 'Four Years Later... And Counting:
Billboarding the Iraqi Disaster
'

By Anthony Arnove

"Given the disaster that Iraq is today, you could keep listing terrible numbers until your mind was numb. But here's another way of putting the last four years in context. In that same period, there have, in fact, been a large number of deaths in a distant land on the minds of many people in the United States: Darfur. Since 2003, according to UN estimates, some 200,000 have been killed in the Darfur region of Sudan in a brutal ethnic-cleansing campaign and another 2 million have been turned into refugees.

"How would you know this? Well, if you lived in New York City, at least, you could hardly take a subway ride without seeing an ad that reads: '400,000 dead. Millions uniting to save Darfur.' The New York Times has also regularly featured full-page ads describing the "genocide" in Darfur and calling for intervention there under 'a chain of command allowing necessary and timely military action without approval from distant political or civilian personnel.'

"In those same years, according to the best estimate available, the British medical journal The Lancet's door-to-door study of Iraqi deaths, approximately 655,000 Iraqis had died in war, occupation, and civil strife between March 2003 and June 2006. (The study offers a low-end possible figure on deaths of 392,000 and a high-end figure of 943,000.) But you could travel coast to coast without seeing the equivalents of the billboards, subway placards, full-page newspaper ads, or the like for the Iraqi dead. And you certainly won't see, as in the case of Darfur, celebrities on Good Morning America talking about their commitment to stopping "genocide" in Iraq.

"Why is it that we are counting and thinking about the Sudanese dead as part of a high-profile, celebrity-driven campaign to 'Save Darfur,' yet Iraqi deaths still go effectively uncounted, and rarely seem to provoke moral outrage, let alone public campaigns to end the killing? And why are the numbers of killed in Darfur cited without any question, while the numbers of Iraqi dead, unless pitifully low-ball figures, are instantly challenged -- or dismissed?

"In our world, it seems, there are the worthy victims and the unworthy ones. To get at the difference, consider the posture of the United States toward the Sudan and Iraq. According to the Bush administration, Sudan is a 'rogue state'; it is on the State Department's list of 'state sponsors of terrorism.' It stands accused of attacking the United States through its role in the suicide-boat bombing of the USS Cole in 2000. And then, of course -- as Mahmood Mamdani pointed out in the London Review of Books recently -- Darfur fits neatly into a narrative of 'Muslim-on-Muslim violence,' of a 'genocide perpetrated by Arabs,' a line of argument that appeals heavily to those who would like to change the subject from what the United States has done -- and is doing -- in Iraq. Talking about U.S. accountability for the deaths of the Iraqis we supposedly liberated is a far less comfortable matter ..."

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Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Iraq: A country drenched in blood

Read about the lies and myths of the War on Terror
From the article, Iraq: A country drenched in blood (March 20, 2007), by Patrick Cockburn in Khanaqin, Diyala Province. Cockburn has proved to be one of the most reliable journalists writing from Iraq.

"A difficulty in explaining Iraq to the outside world is that since 2003 the US and British governments have produced a series of spurious turning points. There was the capture of Saddam Hussein in December 2003, the supposed hand back of sovereignty in June 2004, the two elections and the new constitution in 2005 and -- recently -- the military 'surge' into Baghdad. In all cases the benefits of these events were invented or exaggerated.

"After Sunni fundamentalists blew up the golden-domed Shia al-Askari shrine in Samarra in February last year, central Iraq was torn apart by sectarian fighting. Baghdad broke up into a dozen hostile cities, Sunni and Shia, which fired mortars at each other. Government ministries, if controlled by different communities, fought each other. The Shia-controlled Interior Ministry kidnapped 150 people from the Sunni-held Higher Education Ministry and killed many of them.

"For a brief moment last November, after the mid-term elections in the US and the Baker-Hamilton report, it seemed that the US was going to be start negotiations with its myriad enemies in around Iraq. But in the event President Bush refused to admit failure. Some 21,500 troop reinforcements are being sent to Baghdad and Anbar province to the west. So far there is little sign that the 'surge' will really change the course of the war.

"Diyala, its once-prosperous villages now becoming heavily armed Sunni or Shia fortresses, is a symbol of the failure of the occupation that began four years ago. From an early moment it was evident that only the Kurds in Iraq fully supported the US and British presence.

"The invasion four years ago failed. It overthrew Saddam but did nothing more. It destabilised the Middle East. It tore apart Iraq. It was meant to show the world that the US was the world's only superpower that could do what it wanted. In fact it demonstrated that the US was weaker than the world supposed. The longer the US refuses to admit failure the longer the war will go on."

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Saturday, March 17, 2007

Jurists conclude that Hicks charge is retrospective

Fair Go For David Hicks
The only remaining charge against Australian Guantanamo Bay detainee David Hicks is retrospective, according to expert legal advice released on March 8 by the Law Council of Australia.

"All previous charges against Mr Hicks have been abandoned, leaving only the new charge of 'providing material support for terrorism'.

"Law Council President Tim Bugg said, 'The advice, authored by nine of Australia’s leading international law experts, concludes that, without doubt, this offence is not a crime known to the law of war.'

"According to the advice, prior to the enactment of the Military Commissions Act last September the offence simply did not exist in its current form. Furthermore, the legal experts are of the view that the domestic US offences, on which the charge is roughly based, had no application to David Hicks in Afghanistan in 2001.

"'The disturbing conclusion reached is that, although the charge against David Hicks violates the US Constitution, because Mr Hicks is a non-US citizen held in the legal black hole of Guantanamo, the Constitution may not protect him,' Mr Bugg said.

"The advice was authored by Peter Vickery QC, Professor Tim McCormack, the Hon Alastair Nicholson AO RFD QC, Professor Hilary Charlesworth, Gavan Griffith AO QC, Professor Andrew Byrnes, Mr Gideon Boas, Professor Stuart Kaye and Professor Don Rothwell.

"'When advice this important from jurists of this calibre is made available to us, we believe it should be shared. The debate should be informed, and we have provided the advice to all Australian MPs' Mr Bugg concluded."

Law Council to MPs: Release Hicks Now – the Clock is Ticking
Now that US authorities have conceded that there is no evidence to prosecute David Hicks for war crimes, he should be released and returned to Australia.

In a letter to Australian Members of Parliament, the Law Council has urged quick action to ensure Mr Hicks avoids a trial by military commission. Such a trial would violate the Geneva Conventions.

Law Council President Tim Bugg said, “US authorities have, after five years of military detention, essentially conceded that Mr Hicks’ alleged activities in Afghanistan in 2001 were not illegal at the time.”

“If the US Supreme Court had not intervened and declared the previous military commission system unlawful, one of our own citizens, with the consent of the Australian Government, may have already been tried and convicted on charges that have since been abandoned,” Mr Bugg said.

“This should be of great concern to all Australians.”

Mr Bugg said the only offence Mr Hicks was now alleged to have committed was created last year and is simply a “cobbled together” version of two US domestic offences, which authorities are now trying to apply to him retrospectively.

“It appears that regardless of what new information emerges, or what turn circumstances take, the Australian Government steadfastly refuses to take action to defend David Hicks’ right to a fair trial,” Mr Bugg said.

“If Mr Hicks is not released within a month he will face an ad-hoc military tribunal designed to try non-US citizens according to an unacceptably low standard of justice,” Mr Bugg concluded.

The Law Council’s letter to MPs is available at www.lawcouncil.asn.au

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Sunday, March 11, 2007

Bush may have ordered torture of terror suspects

"The US government began hearings on Friday to determine if 14 accused terrorists currently being held at Guantanamo Bay can be deemed enemy combatants. The hearings, which have been closed to independent observers, are receiving heavy criticism for their secretive nature and what some are calling pre-determined outcomes.

"'The administration has been almost pathological in trying to find ways to keep these people from ever seeing a real judge or a real lawyer,' John Turley, a law professor at George Washington University, told the Associated Press, 'and the reasons are obvious.'

"Turley, among many legal analysts, believes that the likelihood that torture tactics were used on the detainees has heightened the administration's state of secrecy for fear of public retribution. The law professor also suggested that President Bush not only knew about the torture program but may have ordered it ..."
Source

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Israel 'on a war footing'


"According to London's Daily Telegraph, Israel is already on a 'war footing' and is negotiating with the United States for permission to fly over Iraq as part of a plan to attack Iran's nuclear facilities.

"The objective: Surgical air strikes that will set Iran's nuclear program back at least 10 years. To conduct the strikes, Israel needs to co-ordinate the plan with the U.S. so that an 'air corridor' over Iraq is cleared.

"But there's more evidence Israel is planning an attack ...

"Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert recently persuaded Meir Dagan, the head of Mossad for the past six years and one of Israel's leading experts on Iran's nuclear program, to defer his retirement until at least the end of next year.
Olmert has also given control of the military aspects of the Iran issue to Eliezer Shkedi, the head of the Israeli Air Force and a former F-16 fighter pilot ..."
The Market Oracle

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Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Zbigniew Brzezinski Calls Iraq War a calamity



February 1, 2007

Mr Chairman:

Your hearings come at a critical juncture in the U.S. war of choice in Iraq, and I commend you and Senator Lugar for scheduling them.

It is time for the White House to come to terms with two central realities:

1. The war in Iraq is a historic, strategic, and moral calamity. Undertaken under false assumptions, it is undermining America's global legitimacy. Its collateral civilian casualties as well as some abuses are tarnishing America's moral credentials. Driven by Manichean impulses and imperial hubris, it is intensifying regional instability.

2. Only a political strategy that is historically relevant rather than reminiscent of colonial tutelage can provide the needed framework for a tolerable resolution of both the war in Iraq and the intensifying regional tensions.

If the United States continues to be bogged down in a protracted bloody involvement in Iraq, the final destination on this downhill track is likely to be a head-on conflict with Iran and with much of the world of Islam at large. A plausible scenario for a military collision with Iran involves Iraqi failure to meet the benchmarks; followed by accusations of Iranian responsibility for the failure; then by some provocation in Iraq or a terrorist act in the U.S. blamed on Iran; culminating in a "defensive" U.S. military action against Iran that plunges a lonely America into a spreading and deepening quagmire eventually ranging across Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan.

A mythical historical narrative to justify the case for such a protracted and potentially expanding war is already being articulated. Initially justified by false claims about WMD's in Iraq, the war is now being redefined as the "decisive ideological struggle" of our time, reminiscent of the earlier collisions with Nazism and Stalinism. In that context, Islamist extremism and al Qaeda are presented as the equivalents of the threat posed by Nazi Germany and then Soviet Russia, and 9/11 as the equivalent of the Pearl Harbor attack which precipitated America's involvement in World War II.

This simplistic and demagogic narrative overlooks the fact that Nazism was based on the military power of the industrially most advanced European state; and that Stalinism was able to mobilize not only the resources of the victorious and militarily powerful Soviet Union but also had worldwide appeal through its Marxist doctrine. In contrast, most Muslims are not embracing Islamic fundamentalism; al Qaeda is an isolated fundamentalist Islamist aberration; most Iraqis are engaged in strife because the American occupation of Iraq destroyed the Iraqi state; while Iran -- though gaining in regional influence -- is itself politically divided, economically and militarily weak. To argue that America is already at war in the region with a wider Islamic threat, of which Iran is the epicenter, is to promote a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Deplorably, the Administration's foreign policy in the Middle East region has lately relied almost entirely on such sloganeering. Vague and inflammatory talk about "a new strategic context" which is based on "clarity" and which prompts "the birth pangs of a new Middle East" is breeding intensifying anti-Americanism and is increasing the danger of a long-term collision between the United States and the Islamic world. Those in charge of U.S. diplomacy have also adopted a posture of moralistic self-ostracism toward Iran strongly reminiscent of John Foster Dulles's attitude of the early 1950's toward Chinese Communist leaders (resulting among other things in the well-known episode of the refused handshake). It took some two decades and a half before another Republican president was finally able to undo that legacy.

One should note here also that practically no country in the world shares the Manichean delusions that the Administration so passionately articulates. The result is growing political isolation of, and pervasive popular antagonism toward the U.S. global posture.

It is obvious by now that the American national interest calls for a significant change of direction. There is in fact a dominant consensus in favor of a change: American public opinion now holds that the war was a mistake; that it should not be escalated, that a regional political process should be explored; and that an Israeli-Palestinian accommodation is an essential element of the needed policy alteration and should be actively pursued. It is noteworthy that profound reservations regarding the Administration's policy have been voiced by a number of leading Republicans. One need only invoke here the expressed views of the much admired President Gerald Ford, former Secretary of State James Baker, former National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft and several leading Republican senators, John Warner, Chuck Hagel, and Gordon Smith among others.

The urgent need today is for a strategy that seeks to create a political framework for a resolution of the problems posed both by the US occupation of Iraq and by the ensuing civil and sectarian conflict. Ending the occupation and shaping a regional security dialogue should be the mutually reinforcing goals of such a strategy, but both goals will take time and require a genuinely serious U.S. commitment.

The quest for a political solution for the growing chaos in Iraq should involve four steps:

1. The United States should reaffirm explicitly and unambiguously its determination to leave Iraq in a reasonably short period of time.

Ambiguity regarding the duration of the occupation in fact encourages unwillingness to compromise and intensifies the on-going civil strife. Moreover, such a public declaration is needed to allay fears in the Middle East of a new and enduring American imperial hegemony. Right or wrong, many view the establishment of such a hegemony as the primary reason for the American intervention in a region only recently free of colonial domination. That perception should be discredited from the highest U.S. level. Perhaps the U.S. Congress could do so by a joint resolution.

2. The United States should announce that it is undertaking talks with the Iraqi leaders to jointly set with them a date by which U.S. military disengagement should be completed, and the resulting setting of such a date should be announced as a joint decision. In the meantime, the U.S. should avoid military escalation.

It is necessary to engage all Iraqi leaders -- including those who do not reside within "the Green Zone" -- in a serious discussion regarding the proposed and jointly defined date for U.S. military disengagement because the very dialogue itself will help identify the authentic Iraqi leaders with the self-confidence and capacity to stand on their own legs without U.S. military protection. Only Iraqi leaders who can exercise real power beyond "the Green Zone" can eventually reach a genuine Iraqi accommodation. The painful reality is that much of the current Iraqi regime, characterized by the Bush administration as "representative of the Iraqi people," defines itself largely by its physical location: the 4 sq. miles-large U.S. fortress within Baghdad, protected by a wall in places 15 feet thick, manned by heavily armed U.S. military, popularly known as "the Green Zone."

3. The United States should issue jointly with appropriate Iraqi leaders, or perhaps let the Iraqi leaders issue, an invitation to all neighbors of Iraq (and perhaps some other Muslim countries such as Egypt, Morocco, Algeria, and Pakistan) to engage in a dialogue regarding how best to enhance stability in Iraq in conjunction with U.S. military disengagement and to participate eventually in a conference regarding regional stability.

The United States and the Iraqi leadership need to engage Iraq's neighbors in serious discussion regarding the region's security problems, but such discussions cannot be undertaken while the U.S. is perceived as an occupier for an indefinite duration. Iran and Syria have no reason to help the United States consolidate a permanent regional hegemony. It is ironic, however, that both Iran and Syria have lately called for a regional dialogue, exploiting thereby the self-defeating character of the largely passive -- and mainly sloganeering -- U.S. diplomacy.

A serious regional dialogue, promoted directly or indirectly by the U.S., could be buttressed at some point by a wider circle of consultations involving other powers with a stake in the region's stability, such as the EU, China, Japan, India, and Russia. Members of this Committee might consider exploring informally with the states mentioned their potential interest in such a wider dialogue.

4. Concurrently, the United States should activate a credible and energetic effort to finally reach an Israeli-Palestinian peace, making it clear in the process as to what the basic parameters of such a final accommodation ought to involve.

The United States needs to convince the region that the U.S. is committed both to Israel's enduring security and to fairness for the Palestinians who have waited for more than forty years now for their own separate state. Only an external and activist intervention can promote the long-delayed settlement for the record shows that the Israelis and the Palestinians will never do so on their own. Without such a settlement, both nationalist and fundamentalist passions in the region will in the longer run doom any Arab regime which is perceived as supportive of U.S. regional hegemony.

After World War II, the United States prevailed in the defense of democracy in Europe because it successfully pursued a long-term political strategy of uniting its friends and dividing its enemies, of soberly deterring aggression without initiating hostilities, all the while also exploring the possibility of negotiated arrangements. Today, America's global leadership is being tested in the Middle East. A similarly wise strategy of genuinely constructive political engagement is now urgently needed.

It is also time for the Congress to assert itself.
Source

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The Big Green Lie

Discover the Permaculture solutions
"Fuel worries inspire several front pages today but the anxieties take rather different forms.

"The Independent's front page fret is 'the big green fuel lie'. It reports that the ethanol business is booming, with George Bush preparing to attend a summit in Brazil this week to kick start the creation of an international market in the biofuel - a kind of Opec for ethanol. The White House has committed itself to substituting 20% of the petroleum it uses for ethanol by 2017 but is this clean-burning renewable energy source really the answer to the planet's prayers? The Independent is doubtful.

"'The problem is that many Americans, and Europeans for that matter, seem to think it is just a matter of flicking a switch: one moment fossil fuel, the next moment, sugar cane-plus-corn. Lifestyle - unaltered,' it comments.

"And 'sugar cane-plus-corn' is not so green anyway, says the Indy. The ethanol industry has been linked with air and water pollution on an epic scale along with deforestation in the Amazon and Atlantic rainforests. In addition, there is competition for grain between the world's motorists and its poorest people. So is it a 'big green fuel lie'? Well, yes, concludes the paper.

"To simply shift from fossil fuel use to ethanol is not going to get us out of our dilemma. It's not going to 'save the planet', or not alone. That will require a sharp reduction in fuel consumption, too."
The Wrap (Guardian)

UK plans to cut CO2 doomed to fail
George Monbiot: Just a lot of hot air
Independent: The big green fuel lie
Independent: A switch to biofuels will not save the planet

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Monday, March 05, 2007

China to increase military spending by 17.8 pc


"China will boost military spending by 17.8 percent this year, a spokesman for the national legislature said Sunday, continuing more than a decade of double-digit annual increases that has stirred unease in Washington and some of China's neighbors.

"Underscoring such concerns, Jiang Enzhu also lashed out at the president of Taiwan, the self-governing island claimed by China, accusing him of manipulating Taiwan's political divisions to steer it toward formal independence, something Beijing has vowed to prevent using military force if necessary."
Washington Post

China's Defense Budget
Military budget of the People's Republic of China

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Saturday, March 03, 2007

War on Terror is the leading cause of terrorism

It's official: A new report shows that the U.S. has made the world more dangerous -- not just for Americans, but for everyone.

"Innocent people across the world are now paying the price of the 'Iraq effect,' with the loss of hundreds of lives directly linked to the invasion and occupation by American and British forces.

"An authoritative U.S. study of terrorist attacks after the invasion in 2003 contradicts the repeated denials of George Bush and Tony Blair that the war is not to blame for an upsurge in fundamentalist violence worldwide. The research is said to be the first to attempt to measure the 'Iraq effect' on global terrorism.

"It found that the number killed in jihadist attacks around the world has risen dramatically since the Iraq war began in March 2003. The study compared the period between 11 September 2001 and the invasion of Iraq with the period since the invasion. The count -- excluding the Arab-Israel conflict -- shows the number of deaths due to terrorism rose from 729 to 5,420. As well as strikes in Europe, attacks have also increased in Chechnya and Kashmir since the invasion. The research was carried out by the Centre on Law and Security at the NYU Foundation for Mother Jones magazine.

"Iraq was the catalyst for a ferocious fundamentalist backlash, according to the study, which says that the number of those killed by Islamists within Iraq rose from seven to 3,122. Afghanistan, invaded by US and British forces in direct response to the September 11 attacks, saw a rise from very few before 2003 to 802 since then. In the Chechen conflict, the toll rose from 234 to 497. In the Kashmir region, as well as India and Pakistan, the total rose from 182 to 489, and in Europe from none to 297.

"Two years after declaring 'mission accomplished' in Iraq President Bush insisted: 'If we were not fighting and destroying the enemy in Iraq, they would not be idle. They would be plotting and killing Americans across the world and within our borders. By fighting these terrorists in Iraq, Americans in uniform are defeating a direct threat to the American people.'

"Mr Blair has also maintained that the Iraq war has not been responsible for Muslim fundamentalist attacks such as the 7/7 London bombings which killed 52 people. 'Iraq, the region and the wider world is a safer place without Saddam [Hussein],' Mr Blair declared in July 2004.

"Announcing the deployment of 1,400 extra troops to Afghanistan earlier this week -- raising the British force level in the country above that in Iraq -- the Prime Minister steadfastly denied accusations by MPs that there was any link between the Iraq war an unravelling of security elsewhere.

"Last month John Negroponte, the Director of National Intelligence in Washington, said he was 'not certain' that the Iraq war had been a recruiting factor for al-Qa'ida and insisted: 'I wouldn't say that there has been a widespread growth in Islamic extremism beyond Iraq, I really wouldn't.'

"Yet the report points out that the US administration's own National Intelligence Estimate on 'Trends in Global Terrorism: Implications for the United States' -- partially declassified last October -- stated that 'the Iraq war has become the "cause célèbre" for jihadists ... and is shaping a new generation of terrorist leaders and operatives.'

"The new study, by Peter Bergen and Paul Cruickshank, argues that, on the contrary, 'the Iraq conflict has greatly increased the spread of al-Qa'ida ideological virus, as shown by a rising number of terrorist attacks in the past three years from London to Kabul, and from Madrid to the Red Sea' ..."
AlterNet

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