• Pete Stark for President

    Wow! Salon has the text of the speech he gave on the floor of the House yesterday opposing the Iraq war resolution.

    “Let us not forget that our president — our commander in chief — has no experience with, or knowledge of, war. In fact, he admits that he was at best ambivalent about the Vietnam War. He skirted his own military service and then failed to serve out his time in the National Guard. And, he reported years later that at the height of that conflict in 1968 he didn’t notice ‘any heavy stuff going on.’”

    “So we have a president who thinks foreign territory is the opponent’s dugout and Kashmir is a sweater.

    I’ve resisted the temptation to quote more, so go on over there and read it!

    I worked on one of his campaigns when I lived in Texas.

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  • Anti-war protest in Hilary’s office

    Two stories:

    1010 WINS

    NYC Indymedia

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  • Signing away the Constitution

    Having relinquished the power to decide war and peace, the House moves on. They have passed a resolution saying the President can decide when, or if, to attack another country. I consider this abandonment of Congress’s right to declare war illegal. Every person voting yes should be impeached.

    As the Senate prepares to do the same, we have this ridiculous statement from Daschle:

    Across the Capitol, where the Senate was moving toward passage of the same resolution, Majority Leader Thomas A. Daschle (D-S.D.) said Americans will return attention to the economy “once we get this question of Iraq behind us.”

    How is going to war putting it “behind us”?

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  • Satchmo

    I was waiting for the subway at 23rd/7th tonight, when the resident entertainer, a blind singer named Bobby Blow, started talking about how “all singers have big mouths”. I learned a new fact from Mr. Blow. “Satchmo” is short for “Satchellmouth”.

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  • Trip photos

    I think I’m done (or mostly done) with my trip photos. It’s pretty impressionistic. You’re as likely to see pictures of pretty people as famous tourist sites. I figure you can see those, with much better photographs, online or in books. For Vienna especially, everywhere you turn is worthy of a photograph.

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  • Finally something amusing on my block

    Having endured Krispy Kreme, Boston Market, and Trailer Park, finally something interesting has opened. We have a new Ricky’s.

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  • Burn This

    “Make it personal, tell the truth and then write ‘Burn this’ on the bottom.”

    We saw Burn This last night, and it was awesome. I’ve been going to Signature Theatre for years, and this was not the typical crowd for one of their plays. This was much more like a Broadway audience, and believe me that’s not a compliment: plenty of scary suburban New York Magazine types. It was a gayer crowd than usual, but I suspect that was as much a function of having Ed Norton in it (who was great despite someone’s opinion of him), rather than the fact that it was a gay-themed play by a great playwright. I don’t typically see that many pretty, blank Chelsea boys at a serious play — perhaps they were brought as arm candy by more serious playgoers. I much prefer smart pretty boys.

    I first saw Ed Norton in 1994, in the world premiere of Eward Albee’s “Fragments” at Signature. I still remember how he looked and talked, and not just because he was hot. Apparently this was Catherine Keener‘s stage debut, and she was excellent, with a great presence on stage. I would not have guessed that she had concentrated only on film before. I’ve only seen her in one movie, “Being John Malkovich”. Given that Mr. Malkovich played the Ed Norton role in the play’s debut, there is a nice symmetry at work here. The entire cast of four was pretty amazing.

    There were a few celebrities in the crowd. The ones I spotted: Monica Lewinsky (I think I was cruised by her!), Paul Lombardi (yes Sam he’s quite hot in person too), and Paul Rudnick.

    Here are some reviews.

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  • Chomsky interview

    Znet has a very informative interview with Noam Chomsky on Iraq. He sounds pretty reasonable for a man many paint as a lefty fanatic madman.

    A few highlights:

    Saddam’s worst crimes, by far, have been domestic, including the use of chemical weapons against Kurds and a huge slaughter of Kurds in the late 80s, barbaric torture, and every other ugly crime you can imagine. These are at the top of the list of terrible crimes for which he is now condemned, rightly. It’s useful to ask how frequently the impassioned denunciations and eloquent expressions of outrage are accompanied by three little words: “with our help.”

    The crimes were well known at once, but of no particular concern to the West. Saddam received some mild reprimands; harsh congressional condemnation was considered too extreme by prominent commentators. The Reaganites and Bush 1 continued to welcome the monster as an ally and valued trading partner right through his worst atrocities and well beyond. Bush authorized loan guarantees and sale of advanced technology with clear applications for weapons of mass destruction (WMD) right up to the day of the Kuwait invasion, sometimes overriding congressional efforts to prevent what he was doing. Britain was still authorizing export of military equipment and radioactive materials a few days after the invasion. When ABC correspondent and now ZNet Commentator Charles Glass discovered biological weapons facilities (using commercial satellites and defector testimony), his revelations were immediately denied by the Pentagon and the story disappeared. It was resurrected when Saddam committed his first real crime, disobeying US orders (or perhaps misinterpreting them) by invading Kuwait, and switched instantly from friend to reincarnation of Attila the Hun. The same facilities were then used to demonstrate his innately evil nature. When Bush 1 announced new gifts to his friend in December 1989 (also gifts to US agribusiness and industry), it was considered too insignificant even to report, though one could read about it in Z magazine at the time, maybe nowhere else. A few months later, shortly before he invaded Kuwait, a high-level Senate delegation, headed by (later) Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole, visited Saddam, conveying the President’s greetings and assuring the brutal mass murderer that he should disregard the criticism he hears from maverick reporters here. Saddam had even been able to get away with attacking a US naval vessel, the USS Stark, killing several dozen crewmen. That is a mark of real esteem. The only other country to have been granted that privilege was Israel, in 1967. In deference to Saddam, the State Department banned all contacts with the Iraqi democratic opposition, maintaining this policy even after the Gulf war, while Washington effectively authorized Saddam to crush a Shi’ite rebellion that might well have overthrown him — in the interest of preserving “stability,” the press explained, nodding sagely.

    That he’s a major criminal is not in doubt. That’s not changed by the fact that the US and Britain regarded his major atrocities as insignificant in the light of higher “reasons of state,” before the Gulf war and even after — facts best forgotten.

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  • Those wacky Christians

    I love stories like this:

    Grade tampering scandal hits Christian college

    Gardner-Webb University has been embroiled in controversy ever since the school’s president admitted he wrote a memo two years ago ordering a star basketball player’s GPA to be calculated without an F he received for cheating — in, of all things, a religion class.

    Without the change, Carlos Webb would have been ineligible in 2000-01, the season Gardner-Webb won the National Christian College Athletic Association championship.

    … and we all know how important Christian athletic leagues are in the grand scheme of life.

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  • What corporate scandals? Let’s talk War!

    I feel the need to quote TBOGG‘s title for this:

    We’d love to look into this…but we’ve got a war to fight…

    Harvard University’s financial relationship with President Bush’s former oil company was deeper than previously understood, with the university’s management fund creating a separate ”off the books” partnership with Harken Energy Corp. that helped keep afloat the financially troubled company, according to a report to be released today.

    HarvardWatch, a student-alumni group that monitors the school’s investments, plans to issue the report and say that it has analyzed documents showing that the Harvard fund, an independent entity that manages the university’s endowment, formed a partnership in 1990 with Bush’s oil firm called the Harken Anadarko Partnership. The partnership effectively removed $20 million of debt from Harken’s books, relieving the Texas company’s short-term financial problems.

    About the same time, the Harvard fund invested about $30 million in Harken, which also helped keep the firm afloat. The partnership has not been mentioned in recent accounts of Bush’s financial dealings in the oil business.

    The Boston Globe article may be found here.

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