Wednesday, January 05, 2005

Advance in Collective Technology Provides Hope in Wake of Tsunami



American Street:
Advance in Collective Technology Provides Hope in Wake of Tsunami

by Jude Nagurney Camwell
LINK

The most recent advances in collective technology have come about out of necessity, and those who have lent their time and effort deserve much credit for their respective contributions.

Cell phones with text messaging can be much more effectively utilized during emergencies. Text messaging is also called SMS - (Short Message Service) - a feature available with some wireless phones that allow users to send and/or receive short alphanumeric messages. The recent tsunami has proven the need for this improvement in communications technology.

Taran Rampersad, a former Hospital Corpsman in the United States Navy, is showing how SMS systems can be put to more practical use. His favorite phrase is taken from the great artist Michaelangelo: “Criticize by creating.” When Taran imagines, he puts that imagination into practical and helpful use to the world. At his website, KnowProse.com, he explains that the Alert Retrieval Cache system (further discussed below) is meant to recieve messages from people on the ground in the affected areas and use human moderators to take actions based on the content of the messages recieved.

Taran was a recent guest on BBC News where he discussed his latest ideas, of great public interest in the aftermath of the tsunami disaster in Southeast Asia. LISTEN TO THE BBC SEGMENT HERE. Taran has quickly understood the need to centralize text messages and redistribute them in such a way that relief can be best brought to those who need it most.

The fact that people like Taran and Dan Lane of Great Britain, known as “SMS guru” , have caught the attention of a non-techie like me is no accident or odd coincidence. I have found them through common pathways on the internet. My expressive desire to see a change in the world has met with those who have created the means to make that dream come true, in small, realistic steps. Too often, the genius behind cutting-edge technology goes unnoticed, not properly credited, and/or misunderstood.

Dan Lane helped to create the ARC system (Alert Retrieval Cache), in less than 24 hours after the onset of the tsunami indicated a monster of a crisis. It was mentioned in a recent Boing Boing blog entry:
One approach to a solution, created in the span of about 24 hours by an impromtu volunteer geek corps -- A tech system called Alert Retrieval Cache (ARC) (socialtext.net), which collects, sorts, and routes SMS messages for the puposes of alerts and relay communication. An early warning system based on SMS, short message service.

The ARC Team is:

Dan Lane - Technical Architect and SMS Specialist
GV - ARC Developer
Rohit Gupta - Original Concept
Taran Rampersad - Project Coordinator

The following is just one small example of how SMS technology is shining through. At Malaysia’s Star Publications, there is currently an SMS hope/charity-based campaign (which will run through January 14) called “From The Heart” which utilizes SMS technology for the dual purpose of lifting victims’ spirits and providing financial relief.
“Hope all victims can overcome the problems they’re facing now, and know that there is always new hope ahead, it’s just the matter of time. Frm LKY”, read one message that was received for the campaign, which is organised by DiGi Telecommunications, The Star and ntv7. Some 225 messages were sent in yesterday, with most of them encouraging those affected by the disaster to continue to look for the silver lining in the midst of their suffering. “BE STRONG. LOOK AT THE BRIGHT SIDE. THERE’S ALWAYS S/THING TO LEARN,” wrote VEROLISA, while a message from KUMARAN read: “May GOD bless you. There is a future waiting for you.”
The Blogging World Responds to the Challenge

This new technology carries naturally over to the blogging world, and is becoming an extension of the old "tribal word-of-mouth" method of social networking.

The Asia Times recently published an article by James Borton, which describes, in detail, the effectiveness of blogs as independent media at a time when marginalized peoples are facing the aftermath of a great disaster.

Borton credits open source journalism, including humanitarian "smart-mobs", who are bringing troubled populations just one click away from the assistance they require. Although far from perfect, there is early proof that the concept will be an elemental part of the future of world communication.

In the article titled Tsunami bloggers in tribal news network, James Borton writes:
Malaysiakini.com [an independent news organization launched in 1999, offering daily news, opinions, editorials, etc. Since its launch, the website has become the leading source of independent news and views on Malaysia.. ] and bloggers as independent media are providing effective forums for marginalized people in Asia at a time when ordinary lives have been devastated by this natural disaster in which each tide washes ashore more victims. This band of online tribalists brings together a deeper appreciation of shared humanity and continues to open the flow of vital news arteries.


"[....] It is a marvelous demonstration of the collective intelligence of humanitarian smart mobs," blogger Rohit Gupta from the www.worldchanging.com website said in an Asia Times Online interview from Bombay. According to Gupta, Sri Lankan bloggers Morquendi [Sanjay Senanayake] and LastNode are building a Short Message Service (SMS) news and alert service, where they are recruiting more citizen reporters at www.wavesofhope.org."

[...]Blogger Nick Lewis [also Founder and Chief Administrator of The Progressive Blog Alliance and One World] has established a website called Emergency Action Blog, which provides some exemplary action steps, updates on tsunami information, collected personal stories and links to aid-relief sites.

Other bloggers, such as Jon Lebkowsky , are even more committed to discussions on what went wrong since the world knows all too painfully that there was no available tsunami detection information in the Indian Ocean and apparently no one at the warning center had the telephone numbers of their neighboring scientists in Indonesia, Malaysia and eastern India.

[...]"We are truly witnessing the tribal word-of-mouth network return as a dominant medium in a heavily connected world. Blogs are a natural extension of that," added Malaysian blogger Jack Tuan from Penang, an area also hit by the killer tsunami…"

[...]Bloggers such as Malaysian Jeff Ooi and Nanda Kishore, a contributor to sumankumar.com from Chennai, India, along with scores of others at www.worldchanging.com, are sentries on the digital frontline, examining the impact of the regional tsunami that spilled over parts of South and Southeast Asian on December 26.

[...]"It's nice to see lots of learning on social software over the last two years implemented here; linking blog to wiki and wiki to blog, working with the limitations of using Blogger (though Google has been so so kind and offered us unlimited bandwidth), using blogrolling to enable links to wiki pages, putting up a Flickr Zeitgest on missing persons. We still need a button/logo. We still need cross-referencing between blog posts and wiki pages. We still need easy migration of data from blog to wiki ... We're now considering transitioning to another platform that enables easy integration between blogs and wikis ... prototyping some ideas at this point ... let's see how that emerges," [Dina] Mehta said."

Proof of success can be found in the words of families around the world in this one example, seen at the Tsunami Help Workspace. In a message from the SEA-EAT-Volunteers list:
Two more individuals, Lori Gustafson from London and Lindsay Francis from Seattle are fine and doing well.. their families have this to say to us:

"Thank you so much for your information. It is so nice to know there are so many people in the world who are still caring enough to take their time to respond to our request. We managed to conatct Lori and she is doing well. We wish you a Very Happy New Year."
Margaret Eastman (Lori's Mother)

"Thank you for your kind words. Lisa has be confirmed as safe. Please do convey my deepest regards and good wishes to all those who are putting so much time and effort to maintain this mammoth of task. We are all so happy to know that such amazing people live in this world too."
Lindsay's sister

I’d like to extend a personal thanks to the people, many with day jobs, who lose so much sleep; who work non-stop (losing all track of time); who devote so much of their personal lives and caring intelligence to alleviating the suffering of their fellow men and women. Let it go on the record that their efforts are very much appreciated. The future is dependent upon global people-to-people communications, and the efforts of these men and women to provide a technological venue to facilitate this communication is the stuff of which history books will be someday be comprised.

Tuesday, January 04, 2005

Will Boxer Stand Up for Voters?



Will Boxer Stand Up for Voters?
Will ANY Senator?

William Rivers Pitt is officially blogging now, and I couldn't be happier. If I guessed that I'd mentioned him sixty times in the past year, I would bet that would be an underestimation. When Will speaks, I listen. And now I can listen - every day.

Joy!

Will's latest article at Truthout is a must see. It's titled Stand Up, Senator.
"Four years ago, members of the Congressional Black Caucus ran deliberately and vociferously into a brick wall when they chose to stand and protest the deplorable election calamity in Florida. They sought the name of one Senator, just one, which they could append to their complaints. Had they gotten that one name, a debate and discussion on what happened in Florida would have taken place in the House and the Senate. No Senator came forward, and the debate never happened.

Now, four years later, another election has come and gone. Now, four years later, there are rafts of evidence which point, once again, to overwhelming disenfranchisement of minority voters. Now, four years later, members of the Congressional Black Caucus, along with several other House members, plan to stand once again and protest an election that failed to live up to the standards required of participatory democracy. Now, four years later, they seek a Senator to stand with them.

This time, a Senator must answer the call."


At the American Street, there is word that Sen. Barbara Boxer has indicated she will stand with Congressman John Conyers in questioning the electoral vote (it only takes one rep and one senator) if she receives enough feedback.

This is very important news. See the related Daily Kos diary, which urges you to call Boxer's office if you care.

All Senators should be contacted about this. Here is an easy way to fax a letter or send an e-mail about the topic to your Senator.


Gutting CIA: America strays further from truth



Gutting the Old CIA
America strays further from truth


I am quoting Laura Rozen on this entry (see below). Her recent post is telling you that the old CIA has recognized and communicated, all along, the folly of the Bush administration's disastrous foreign policy toward Iraq. It's because they know it that they are getting the axe from new director Porter Goss. How is that supposed to make us feel, as Americans? Since when does the act of our government overtly closing their eyes to crucial/bitterly honest truths bring about any positive/realistic outcomes?

Beware!

Laura's post:

______________________
Former CIA station chief Haviland Smith, writing in the WaPo:

Given the way the Bush White House has handled intelligence during the past three years, it makes sense that it is angry at the clandestine service. The officers in that service are often required to give their opinions about policies in advance of their implementation. It is unlikely that any clandestine service officer, having spent a career in the Middle East, would see our current policy there as flawless. Thus many in the White House probably see the clandestine service as a nest of enemies. They might just want to consider an alternative possibility: that the service is made up of professionals who would like to save their country from the further embarrassment and potential difficulties of a truly flawed and dangerous Iraq policy...

Given his dogged adherence to the righteousness of that policy, it makes sense that the president would be angry with the clandestine service. It seems quite possible that the service is being punished for having been right... The agency's statutory responsibility is to speak the truth, whether the truth supports the president's plans or not. It would appear that this concept is not shared by this administration
.


'Cutting off our nose to spite our face,' is how Smith sums up Porter Goss's White House ordered purge of the clandestine service underway.

--Laura Rozen
______________________________


Progressive Blog Alliance by Location



Progressive Blog Alliance by Location


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Monday, January 03, 2005

Fisk Freely Discusses Ugly Reality of Iraq Endgame



Fisk Freely Discusses Ugly Reality of Iraq Endgame
"...The Americans will soon, if they have not already, establish contact with the insurgents, and that will mean the beginning of end. It means that the project is over. That they have accepted, as I think, you know, they have already in terms of soldiers on the ground. If you are going to talk to the colonels, and they may -- the majors and the generals in Iraq, they know that the game is up. But the generals back at the Pentagon and the Centcom and down there in old Florida and the gentleman in the State Department and at the White House, they don't accept this because this is a screen of self-delusion between them and the reality on the ground. But it's over in Iraq. It's finished. What we're going to see this year is the beginning of the endgame, which is how do we get Americans out without losing face and ultimately - I should say faith as well - and ultimately, how do you start negotiation with the insurgents...[..]

[..]..when I'm in Baghdad, and I read the American press or I turn on the television and watch CNN, what I'm reading and what I am seeing bears absolutely no physical, moral, political, or military relationship to the place that I'm living in...[..]

[...]"..it's getting worse all the time. But at least let us tell our readers and our viewers that we cannot move. But the [mainstream media] journalists don't do this, and of course neither does Mr. Allawi, who cannot even move around Baghdad. Neither does Mr. Rumsfeld, who for a long time wouldn't venture into Iraq. So, an illusion is created of calm and progress and well, things may get more violent, but that's because things are getting better, which is the most ludicrous topsy turvy I ever heard
.."
--Robert Fisk, in an interview today with Amy Goodman of Democracy Now

Tsunami: Sixth Sense and Foreseeing Disasters



Tsunami: Sixth Sense and Foreseeing Disasters
" There was the account of two European tourists who were warned by an astrologer in Sri Lanka that they should avoid the beaches at all costs. The couple ignored the warning and were forced to flee for their lives the following day, but at least managed to survive. An English school girl on holiday with her parents in Thailand noticed bubbling water and a change in the pattern of the tide that coincided with the geography lesson she had absorbed at school about the lead up to a tsunami.

Her subsequent warning cries led to the immediate clearing of the local beach where an estimated 100 people were sunning themselves only minutes before the deadly waves struck the shore. Most remarkable of all are the claims that large numbers of wild animals and some pre-historic tribes people from the Andamans took evasive action to avoid being struck down by the tsunamis.





The strong implication is that these tribes people and the wild animals retain an instinct, that has vanished from the rest of the world, which allows them to sense impending physical danger... "

source: Deccan Herald

The Words of a Great US General and President



The Words of a Great US General and President



I'm all for these arms..."



"Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. This world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children. This is not a way of life at all in any true sense. Under the clouds of war, it is humanity hanging on a cross of iron."

--April 16, 1953 Dwight Eisenhower

This quote was seen at The Moderate Man, a new blog that I've recently discovered, thanks to Blog Explosion.


Too Great





"The roaring of lions, the howling of wolves, the raging of the stormy sea, and the destructive sword, are portions of eternity too great for the eye of man.....Every thing possible to be believ'd is an image of truth.....The tygers of wrath are wiser than the horses of instruction. Expect poison from the standing water. You never know what is enough unless you know what is more than enough.."

--William Blake
from The Marriage of Heaven and Hell.

In his ideology of the need for progress, William Blake, through his writing, drew to the idea that what some may call "Evil" is actually better than what some call "Good", because it allows progress and growth, whereas this "Good" only stunts progress. In "The Marriage of Heaven and Hell", Blake wanted to reveal the duality that exists in life and he believed that true enlightenment and understanding come from the marriage of the contraries. I chose to use the tsunami photo because our minds cannot easily grasp any meaningful "good" that could come from such a horrific occurrence. One of my own hopes for "good" is that we see, with new eyes, the United Nations once again as a very necessary and worthy world organization.



A Renaissance of the Commons




credit-gaiti.com


"In our fixation on free-market dogma, we are enacting our very own ghost dance."


A Renaissance of the Commons
How the New Sciences and Internet Are Framing A New Global Identity and Order
by John Clippinger and David Bollier
pdf Link
*Thanks to Nick Lewis for the reference.


My fellow One World participant David Bollier, along with co-writer John Clippinger (Senior Fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society
at the Harvard Law School), has explained how the ideas of "new insurgencies" - including the hard sciences, behavioral economics and complexity theory, robust new types of Internet-based communities, and startling new trans-national social movements - are converging around some common principles which challenge the status quo. I found Mr. Clippinger and Mr. Bollier's overall statement to be not only on the visionary cutting edge, but inspiring and exciting to people like myself. I have created a news aggregator category at One World called The New Prophesy. Read this piece and understand that you are reading two of "the new prophets". Culture can move only one way. It can only progress forward, as much as the far right in our own nation tries to use political rhetoric to hold back the tide. A tsunami is coming to wash away the old order. The internet will provide the earthquake. As long as the internet remains a free force, no fear-mongering or antiquated jargon will be able to stop the rock.


Sunday, January 02, 2005

Meet Philoblogger



Meet Philoblogger

I'd like to introduce you to Philoblogger (known by some as "the world's sexiest philosopher.") A recent UNC honors grad ( *magna cum laude, Philosophy ) , he has just arrived on the blogging scene, and I know you'll be hearing great things from him. I have heard great things from him myself, including (but not limited to) his Shins and Modest Mouse CDs. I've also once seen a grand fireworks display, which was a mere backdrop to the dark and glorious silhouette of his wisdom-packed head.

Some of My Favorite Films of 2004



Some of My Favorite Films of 2004

After reading Robert Stribley's comprehensive list of 'love-'em'/'hate-'em'/'have yet to see 'em' films for 2004, I decided to jot down some of my own favorites. I haven't seen all that many, and I found that I enjoyed this year's documentaries more than the selection of feature films.

Documentaries:

Control Room - My favorite overall film of the year. A must-see for anyone who doesn't know what goes on behind the scenes at al Jazeera. They are not who many of you may think they are. You get to see a rare glimpse of the human faces behind the cameras.

Fahrenheit 9/11 - The list would not be complete without Mr. Moore's documentary. He may have pissed some people off with his hyperbole and humor, but he certainly made a difference in waking people up to some facts they may have missed had it not been for the film.

Fog of War - I just saw this.


Feature Films:

Finding Neverland - Johnny Depp played JM Barrie with finesse. An enchanting and touching film.

Eternal Sunshine Of The spotless Mind - Jim Carrey was wonderful in this role.

Garden State - Great film. Best music, for sure.

Shrek 2 - My kind of fairy tale.

Napoleon Dynamite - One of my top picks. All the curly-topped Napoleon D had to do was squint and stand au naturelle -- he had me at his deadpan "hello". His chat-room-hangin' brother was pasty, puny, and perfect. And oh, how Napoleon can dance.

Saved - Mandy Moore was hilarious as a Jesus-lovin' evangelical bitch in this comedy produced by REM's Michael Stipe.

Osama (2003, released Jan 2004 in US)- Takes you directly into a young girl's world..in a society much unlike my own. Well done.

Big Fish - A wonderful fantasy; a touching story.

Polar Express - Reminded me of the childhood 'magic' that should never be lost, no matter how old you grow to be.

Ladykillers - Tom Hanks was amusing in a role that was quite unusual for him. His co-actors supported him well.

The Notebook - A sweet film. Sentimental. Reminded me of the way they made films in days of old.

Anchorman - Tim Robbin's cameo as a pipe-smoking PBS Afro-coifed anchorman was enough to make this one of the funniest.

*I haven't seen Sideways, Maria Full of Grace, or Ray yet. Want to.


*I liked Around the World in 80 Days,
even though no one else did.

It's probably because I had a wicked crush on Steve Coogan. ;)




RON BRYNAERT'S BEST-OF LIST IS HERE.

COMMON ILLS HAS A GREAT BEST OF/WORST OF LIST.

Sri Lanka: HEADLINES





Above: Ports Aviation and Media Minister Mangala Samaraweera consoling a member of the fishing community in Dondra who broke out with his tale of woe to him when he visited the Dondra Fisheries harbour to assess the damage caused by the tidal wave and make arrangements to reconstruct the harbour. Second: Collapsed buildings and houses in Mullaitivu. Pictures by P. Piyadasa and Ajantha D. Sanjeewa

Sri Lanka: HEADLINES

• --Time for soul-searching
"Distress and disaster very often activates the innate creativity of mankind. Faced by cruel, overwhelming calamities, the more insightful and sage among us rise to heights of wisdom and knowledge which prove a resplendent guiding light for the rest of society..

[..] In the quest for material advancement and self-aggrandizement, social groups of this country have failed to realise that "life is but a walking shadow" and that "it is a tale told by an Idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."

Ironically, although these thoughts are dinned into the popular consciousness from religious daises, pulpits and even public platforms, it has taken the worst natural disaster so far, in this country, for both the rulers and ruled to realise that they are only momentary phenomenon who need to come together in a spirit of humility and charitableness to work towards the common good - disregarding all man-made barriers, such as, caste, creed, religion and community.
..."
Other News:

• --Immediate rehabilitation, relief for tsunami victims
• --Tsunami destroys 37 schools in 13 districts
• --'Foreign troops will engage only in humanitarian activities'
• --Pakistani PM on disaster
• --US$ 500 m Japanese grant for tsunami disaster
• --Relief from the International Community Updated: December 31, 2004
• --UN to make major appeal for tsunami-hit nations - Wahlstrom
• --Sweden helps tsunami victims
• --Quick relief for tsunami disaster from Norway
• --Relief from Bangladesh arrives
• --'Orphaned children should be adopted legally'


Source: Daily News

Democrats are talking about...



Democrats are talking about...

"....Kerry's ultra-cautious campaign made things difficult for Democrats all over. Kerry's campaign was so much about himself. He ran on biography rather than by standing up for Democratic principles. I cannot recall him ever using his position as the nominee to help other Democrats in any meaningful way.

Kerry's campaign was SO the opposite of "You have the power." To the extent that he thought at all about those of us who were drawn to Dean, he thought "you have the money (and I want it)." And that's exactly how he treated us. Pelosi and Reid's support of [Tim] Roemer suggests that nothing has changed and nothing will change unless WE change it."


--Kos commenter known as "JIM IN CHICAGO"...
..in a discussion at Daily Kos about Nancy Pelosi and her alleged "hedging" on her choice for DNC Chair; along with a discussion of the general unpopularity of Tim Roemer with progressive Democrats as the prime choice for the Chair.

The thread is titled What Dems Need to Do.

Saturday, January 01, 2005

Top Stories Ignored By U.S. Media



Top Stories Ignored By U.S. Media
from: Independent Media TV


Poll: Most Americans Now Say War Was a Mistake


Earthquake: Coincidence or a Corporate Oil Tragedy?

Emails Reveal More Abuses in Iraq, Guantanamo Bay

US disclosures signal wider detainee abuse

Torture at the Top

What do the CIA, the Pentagon and the UN Have in Common?

U.S. to Take Bigger Bite of Iraq's Economic Pie

Part one: Broken Promises

War Crimes

Newly Released Documents Show Possible Investigation Interference by Commander

IMTV Comment: So Are The New Findings Being Reported On?

The CIA and the Media: A Complex Relationship

Today's Top Headlines

Scalia Says Religion Infuses U.S. Government and History

Asian $$ - Prince Neil Bush Gets Media Protection

2001 Memo Reveals Push for Broader Presidential Powers

Florida Rep. Feeney Implicated in Vote Fraud

...and more..


Also:

PROJECT CENSORED-
Censored 2005: The Top 25 Censored Media Stories of 2003-2004

Hope



Hope

--"Run away!" her husband screamed from a rooftop after he spotted the colossal waves. It was a simple command that smothered Sangeeta in a nightmarish dilemma: She had three sons, but just two arms. She grabbed the two youngest and ran — reasoning that 7-year-old Dinakaran, the oldest, had the best chance of outrunning the giant waves. When the boy didn't follow, Sangeeta was crushed by grief, believing she would never see him again. The family dog made sure she did. Dinakaran had not followed her but ran instead to the safest place he knew — the family's small, concrete-walled hut just 40 yards from shore. While water lapped at Sangeeta's heels as she rushed up the hill, the scruffy yellow dog named Selvakumar ducked into the hut after the boy. Nipping and nudging, he did everything in his canine power to get the boy up the hill.

"That dog grabbed me by the collar of my shirt," the boy said from under some trees at Pondicherry University, where the family waits for relief aid. "He dragged me out." Sangeeta said she wept with joy when she saw her son walking up to her, with Selvakumar by his side. The Tamils of south India believe that talking about the death of a living person can make it so, so Sangeeta didn't want to speak of her decision or speculate how she would have felt had her son not survived. She did say that she believes some special spirit, perhaps her brother-in-law's, resides in the young yellow dog. "That dog is my God," said Sangeeta — with Dinakaran sitting on the ground at her feet. Selvakumar slept on the warm asphalt next to him.


Source- World/AP Yahoo



--Knowledge of the ocean and its currents passed down from generation to generation of a group of Thai fishermen known as the Morgan sea gypsies saved an entire village from the Asian tsunami, a newspaper said Saturday.


Source: Yahoo News


--On India's remote Andaman and Nicobar islands, a woman who fled the killer waves gave birth in the forest that became her sanctuary. She named her son Tsunami.





--In the historic port town of Galle, Sri Lanka, several Buddhist statues of cement and plaster were found unscathed amid collapsed brick walls in the centre of the devastated city. To many residents, it was a divine sign.


--The Indonesian Red Cross reportedly dug out a survivor buried since the tsunami struck in the ruins of a house in Banda Aceh. The rescuers heard Ichsan Azmil's cries for help. After being pulled out, he asked for water and was taken to a hospital for treatment of cuts and bruises.

source: Globe and Mail

Misery Upon Misery



Misery Upon Misery


Photo credit - Digital Globe/AFP/Getty Images

This combination of handouts of satellite images shows the before image, top, taken June 23 and the image taken on Wednesday after the tsunami hit Banda Aceh, Indonesia.

At one refugee camp on the grounds of the airport of Banda Aceh, hundreds of people spent a wet night under plastic sheets. Mothers nursed babies while others tried to light a fire with damp matches.
"With no help, we will die," one refugee, Indra Syaputra, said. "We came here because we heard that we could get food, but it was nonsense. All I got was some packets of noodles."

The rain pummelling the corpse-littered provincial capital was creating conditions ripe for cholera and other water-borne diseases to spread. Boxes of aid at Banda Aceh's airport soaked up water, making it difficult for workers loading cartons of drinking water, crackers and noodles onto delivery vehicles.


Rain drenches tsunami victims amid strong aftershocks
After the devastation wreaked by water from the seas, a deluge from the skies deepened the misery for tsunami-stricken survivors shivering in relief centres Saturday and triggered flash floods in Sri Lanka that sent residents fleeing once again.


Update: Confirmed Deaths

Confirmed Death Toll (BBC):

1. Indonesia: 80,246
2. Sri Lanka: 28,627
3. India (inc Andaman and Nicobar Is): 8,955
4. Thailand: 4,812
5. Somalia: 142
6. Burma: 53
7. Maldives: 73
8. Malaysia: 66
9. Tanzania: 10
10. Seychelles: 1
11. Bangladesh: 2
12. Kenya: 1


US Election: Fertik's Open Letter to Sen. John Kerry



The U.S. Election -
Fertik's Open Letter to Sen. John Kerry


Democrat.com's Bob Fertik has written an open letter to Senator John Kerry on leading a challenge to Ohio's electors on January 6th.

Mr. Fertik is not satisfied with a Kerry-Edwards campaign attorney Daniel J. Hoffheimer's follow-up (e-mail) statement to MSNBC after a recent appearance on one of their news shows:
"The Bush-Cheney ticket has won. The Kerry-Edwards campaign has found no conspiracy and no fraud in Ohio, though there have been many irregularities that cry out to be fixed for future elections. Senator Kerry and we in Ohio intend to fix them. When all of the problems in Ohio are added together, however bad they are, they do not add up to a victory for Kerry-Edwards. Senator Kerry's fully-informed and extremely careful assessment the day after the election and before he conceded remains accurate today, notwithstanding all the details we have since learned."
On December 27th, an attorney representing the Kerry/Edwards presidential campaign filed two important motions, along with other concerned plaintiffs on the Ohio recount cases, to preserve and augment evidence of alleged election fraud in the November election. Attorney John Bonifaz serves as general counsel for one of the plaintiffs, the National Voting Rights Institute. He has invited the Bush Cheney campaign to join the motion to preserve all of the ballots and election machinery in the presidential election in Ohio and to investigate the potential tampering of voting machines by Triad Governmental Systems, Inc, prior to the start of the recount.


Further Down The Path: War Becomes Unthinkable



Further Down The Path: War Becomes Unthinkable

Why should it have to take the most deadly tsunami in history to lead us to understand how war will soon no longer be a viable option for mankind?
"It is very odd that nations cooperate to help each other in the face of natural disasters. But when they become angry over some minor dispute, they are perfectly happy to inflict far more damage on each other than mother nature ever did. Pakistan and India were seriously contemplating using nukes on each other as recently as 2002. Now Islamabad is sending rupees to Delhi, and Delhi is expressing gratitude.

Now that nukes are becoming so common, humanity has to find a way to move into permanent cooperative and helping mode. War is gradually becoming unthinkable. The massive tsunami's toll has now risen to 150,000, but an Indo-Pak nuclear exchange would have killed 10 million
."

---Juan Cole

William Blake: "On Another's Sorrow"



William Blake: "On Another's Sorrow"

Can I see another's woe,
And not be in sorrow too?
Can I see another's grief,
And not seek for kind relief?
Can I see a falling tear,
And not feel my sorrow's share?
Can a father see his child
Weep, nor be with sorrow filled?

Can a mother sit and hear
An infant groan, an infant fear?
No, no! never can it be!
Never, never can it be!



And can He who smiles on all
Hear the wren with sorrows small,
Hear the small bird's grief and care,
Hear the woes that infants bear --

And not sit beside the next,
Pouring pity in their breast,
And not sit the cradle near,
Weeping tear on infant's tear?

And not sit both night and day,
Wiping all our tears away?
Oh no! never can it be!
Never, never can it be!

He doth give his joy to all:
He becomes an infant small,
He becomes a man of woe,
He doth feel the sorrow too.

Think not thou canst sigh a sigh,
And thy Maker is not by:
Think not thou canst weep a tear,
And thy Maker is not near.



Oh He gives to us his joy,
That our grief He may destroy:
Till our grief is fled an gone
He doth sit by us and moan."


The Sea Gods must be angry..so some fables say



The Sea Gods must be angry..so some fables say

Noah's Ark : One of the best recognised stories from the Old Testament.

Matsya Avtaar : According to legend, the Vedas , which helped Bramha with creation, were eaten up by the demon Hayagriva.

Samudra Manthan : Enraged with Indra for rejecting his gift, Sage Durwasa cursed Gods, saying they would lose their powers. Lord Vishnu then advised them to persuade the demons to perform 'samudra manthan' i.e., churn the sea to bring out 'amrit' (elixir of life), which alone could restore their powers. Therefore, the 'samudra manthan' was carried out.

Sethu bandhan : As he led his army to Lanka, Rama reached the shores of the Indian Ocean. Rama then prayed to the ocean to provide him a passage. But after three nights, the ocean still refused to oblige. Enraged, Rama decided to dry up the ocean, and unleashed the Indra astra (arrow resembling a powerful thunderbolt of Indra).

Moses & the Red Sea : As a baby, Moses was put in a basket and floated down the Nile because the Pharoah had ordered that all Jewish male children be drowned. He was pulled out by an Egyptian princess and named Moses because he was drawn (mashah) out of the water.

Poseidon adventures : Poseidon, the Greek God of the Sea, is one of six siblings who “divided the power of the world". Poseidon not only ruled the sea, he was also the god of earthquakes. Poseidon was relied upon by sailors for safe voyages. However, he was a moody God, and his temperament could sometimes result in violence.

The Legend of Atlantis : The island-nation of Atlantis is said to have existed over 11,000 years, in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. Apart from being abundant in natural resources, it was also a major centre of trade and commerce. It's people were described as well-educated, using advanced technology and fabulously wealthy. It is asid to have disappeared into the sea, due to an earthquake caused by gigantic submarine volcanic explosions, triggering off a massive flood.

Source: Times of India


"I saw waves take away my parents."



"I saw waves take away my parents."

One child's story of how he lost his family:
"For a long time, my parents had been planning a visit to Velankanni. They had taken a vow to shave my head at the shrine, a promise they managed to keep this year," Pratheesh says, weeping all the while. He escaped the tsunami but lost his family to it.

"After the tonsuring, we all went down to take a dip in the sea. I don't remember the exact time but I think it was around 9.30 am. As we were bathing, we saw a huge wave coming towards us. It seemed like fun at first; we understood the danger only when it came near," relates Pratheesh. The family fled for to higher ground, but the waves were too strong and fast for for them. The first wave swept over them. Before they could recover, it was receding.

"All of us were clinging to each other. But we got separated and I could see waves taking away my parents.

"Then came another wave, which again pushed me back to the shore. I lost my consciousness. I don't know how many hours passed. But when I opened my eyes, I was lying in a pool littered with dead bodies," says Pratheesh, whose battered body hurts all the time."

Friday, December 31, 2004

Poem for Mothers / Tsunami Charity for Women



Poem for Mothers / Tsunami Charity for Women


AP photo

When she awoke he was not there
She recalls a man with a mask shaking her
To a consciousness she'd wished she'd not regained

For all the pain that followed when memory fell
back in, like the flood that swept him away
from her desperate arms, his cries drowned by the sea

If she'd only been carried along with him
She would not be left here, cursed with knowing
she'll leave without his body, miraculously saved, alone.


--Jude Nagurney Camwell

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



There are many agencies ready and waiting to take donations for tsunami relief. I have posted a list of these agencies, with links, at my personal website. Sri Lanka and Indonesia are likely to have the greatest need for humanitarian support. In Sri Lanka alone, over one million people have been displaced. Among them are tens of thousands of pregnant and nursing women, who are especially susceptible to waterborne diseases and require emergency medical attention and trauma counseling.

I want to make readers aware of one of those agencies, which is called MADRE.
MADRE is an international women’s human rights organization that works in partnership with women’s community-based groups in conflict areas worldwide. MADRE specializes in assisting displaced women and families, offering them crucial trauma counseling which will help them cope with the deaths of their children and other loved ones, gradually heal from their trauma, and begin to rebuild.

MADRE has chosen to partner with INFORM. They are part of a regional network of women’s groups that can reach out immediately to many different communities at at time such as this.

MADRE can be found on several websites (including Charity Navigator and GuideStar) that rate the business practices and overall effectiveness of charities.

Donation information can be found HERE.


Mosul: Independent Electoral Commission Walks Away



Mosul: Independent Electoral Commission Walks Away

Al Jazeerah is reporting that the entire staff of Iraq's Independent Electoral Commission in the northern city of Mosul, amounting to about 700 employees, have resigned amid growing violence in the country.

Also, Shia leader Muqtada al-Sadr's political office announced it was taking legal action against the interim Iraqi government for alleged torture and murder of its members.


Thursday, December 30, 2004

Sorrow Beyond Words




A father found the body of his eight-year-old son today on the beach in Cuddalore, India.
Photo credit: NY Times/Arko Datta/Reuters


Sorrow beyond words

One year ago...

Tsunami Blogs You Can Rely On



Tsunami Blogs You Can Rely On

At The American Street, Kevin Hayden has compiled some comprehensive information about the latest in blog technology and how, side-by-side with mainstream journalism, the blogosphere is positively effecting the efficiency and speed of relief for the tsunami victims through on-line activism.

Tsunami Blogs you can rely on, Pt. 1
Tsunami Blogs you can rely on, Pt. 2


Kevin Sites is Blogging Again



Kevin Sites is Blogging Again

This time he's in Thailand. His latest blog is a must-read.

Tsunami: "Mysterious Forces"




Praying for a lost loved one in Thailand
AP photo


Tsunami: "Mysterious Forces"

"There are mysterious forces out there that are not fully understood by our oh-so-rational selves. I am reminded of the strange signs and omens that historians recorded before calamities: for instance the rain of frogs in Vietnam preceding the cataclysmic war. Or the odd celestial signs that preceded the death of Julius Caesar.

It is said that the very elements can be affected by the mystical powers of sages who have acquired superhuman powers through meditation and sadhana. I think we should all tread carefully, for now we are treading on things we do not know
."


--Rajeev Srinivasan

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


"There is no drop of water in the sea—not even in the deepest part of the abyss—that does not respond to the mysterious forces that create the tides. No other forces that affect the sea are so strong."


--From The Sea III—Wind, Sun, and Moon by Rachel L. Carson, where she considers the science of waves, and the relationship between the earth and the sea.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"One can almost hear the Hindu gods in one editorial from the Times of India. "Such stupendous forces beyond conception can inspire only awe," the paper wrote. "And ultimate humility in the face of a mysterious creation which, to make itself complete, must inevitably contain the seeds of its own eventual dissolution."

...."If you have seen the swirling, swelling and churning waters of the ponds on that fateful day you would have understood that it was nothing but the workings of the supernatural forces. We rushed to the local soothsayer and he said it was all because of our sins of this age of indiscipline and hedonism."


..."If today I talk about God's fury, I would be ridiculed," the priest says. "But in our Hindu religion there is 'karmaphal,' the result of our actions, good or bad. There is a constant human effort to tame nature in the sky, land and water. We are cutting trees, we are destroying the mangroves.... Our actions unleash an imbalance in the ecology and then such things perhaps happen.


--from: Eco-Disaster, or God's Wrath? Indians React to Tsunami by Sujoy Dhar and Sandip Roy

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


In the news:


'Earthquakes don't kill; human error does'
"the death toll in Chennai and towns is high because without regard to elementary rules, people have been settling down on the beach and this has been encouraged by the politicians."



'Earthquakes do not give prior warning'
"The Indian Meteorological Department today cautioned that after-shocks of the massive earthquake that struck Indonesia and Andaman and Nicobar islands would continue in the coming days."

Tsunami Updated Information, Collected Stories, Death Toll




BBC News image

Tsunami Updated Information, Collected Stories, Death Toll

"The BBC's Rachel Harvey, in Banda Aceh, reported seeing ten truck-loads of bodies delivered to one mass grave in just 20 minutes..."

News Trove (Indonesia)

New York Times: The year the earth fought back by Simon Winchester

India Daily- Tsunami effect: Days get shorter


I learned about an excellent piece of journalism by the WP's Michael Dobbs from Roger Mellen via Anonymoses.
Thanks to both. This is a first-hand accounting of a nightmare-turned all too real.




BBC News photo

BBC- Survivors tells of tsunami train horror "The Queen of the Sea was nearing its destination when the waves knocked it sideways.."



NOAA REACTS QUICKLY TO INDONESIAN TSUNAMI



BBC-Swallowed Up by the Savage Sea by Soutik Biswas-
"Within five minutes, Khan and his team work through the debris to bring out Pakirammal, cover her face with a red jumper, daub her with DDT and cart her off to the hospital.

"You have left me, you have left me," howls a disconsolate Shanmugham. His son weeps for the first time during the day.

Then, father and son follow their decomposed mother on her last journey.

There is even less dignity in death for the poor than in life.

After tagging her in hospital, a track will dump her inside a big hole in the ground on top of other bodies and the earth poured in hastily.




About NOAA and Tsunamis



An excellent website: INDONESIAN TSUNAMI AIDS

Some facts from CNN:


CNN photo
- Death count from tsunamis at 80,427, more than half of those in Indonesia
- One in four in some parts of Indonesia’s Aceh province killed, according to United Nations
- About $220 million in cash donations received or pledged so far for the relief effort, U.N. says
- Two tourists killed for every one Thai, according to Thai government
- As many as one-third of the dead may be children, aid workers say
- Aid workers say clean water the priority, and warn of threat of typhoid, malaria, cholera

LINK
via sketches of the mind

Devastating Quake Redraws Map

Rare Tribes May Have Been Lost Forever in Tsunami


Tsunamis and Nuclear Power Plants
by Russell D. Hoffman
t r u t h o u t




CONFIRMED death toll

Sri Lanka: 22,493
Indonesia: 45,268
India: 3,500
Thailand: 1500
Maldives: 67
Malaysia: 65
Burma: 90
Bangladesh: 2
Kenya: 1
Tanzania: 10
Seychelles: 3
Somalia: 100

Source BBC
and The SEA-EAT blog.

Wednesday, December 29, 2004

Emergency Action Blog Update



Emergency Action Blog (EAB) Update

LATEST NEWS

We think Jon Lebkowsky summed up the goal of EAB best as "a go-to resource for blogger coordination when disasters/catastrophic situations occur." In addition, his post at Global Voices provides a good background for those who might have just stumbled upon this site.
After the tsunami disaster in Southeast Asia, bloggers from India quickly set up The South-East Asia Earthquake and Tsunami blog for news and information about resources, aid, donations and volunteer efforts. This blog’s an invaluable coordination effort, and it pointed to the need for a more robust and permanent site for ongoing coordination of bloggers and other online resources in response to other catastrophic situations that might occur in the future. Nick Lewis of the Progressive Blog Alliance is working on such an “Emergency Action Blog” site. We’ve set up an email list (eab at activist-tech.org) for a collaborative effort to define requirements and taxonomy and produce the site using something like CivicSpace. To subscribe, send a blank email to eab-subscribe at activist-tech.org. This will hopefully be an international collaboration of bloggers and techs, therefore a good early project for those who support the Global Voices intiative.
Site creator and founder Nick Lewis states:
"...if the internet in fact has the potential to build a new world, what is the next step in fufilling that potential? My answer: we need to start building more bridges, taking a more experiemental approach to our work (to put it another way, not launching projects because we want them to be successful, but rather launching projects because we’re curious as to what will happen), embracing pockets of low level bloggers that would normally be ignored (you wouldn’t believe how willing many of them are to give hours to a project, if you just bother letting them know that you recognize their work, and appreciate their thoughts.), Taking ourselves less seriously (we’re monkeys with keyboards after all) .And finally instead of asking ourselves “how do we create the movement?” we should be asking ourselves, “how can we discover the movements that aren’t even aware that they are a “movement” yet – and what tools, and strategies can we use to facilate their rise?"


Emergency Action Blog: Reviewing Our First Day

The Blogs & Music that Healed the World


We are living in Kuhnian times. Revolutions are happening by the hour. Blogpolitics is already ancient history, even while having a much greater future. Now blogs are tying together newspapers, artists, musicians and such that can and should be marshalled to create, very rapidly, a vast amount of financial and informational relief.

Newspapers can give free advertising for a Tsunami Aid concert, featuring local, national and world acts, which is then carried over blogs, with links for charitable giving. In exchange, the blogs can carry an ad for the newspaper, bla bla bla. Work it out. It's for a good cause. And an urgent one at that
.

--Anonymoses
At the Global Voices blog, Ethan comments:
"I think it’s critically important to connect with someone personally affected by the disaster as a way of understanding it better."
This is something I think we bloggers should aspire to accomplish, along with putting forth effort to ease the pain of this disaster by advertising, coordinating, and supporting all related relief efforts.


Monday, December 27, 2004

Tsunami Relief List



Tsunami Relief List


I join in prayer and concern for the millions affected by the earthquakes and tidal waves in South Asia. Thanks to already-compiled internet lists, I offer you links to organizations that are responding to the crisis. (This list is by no means complete or exhaustive of all worthy organizations.)

+ United Nations


+ Catholic Relief Service

+ Christian Aid

+ Church World Service

+ Lutheran World Relief

+ Mennonite Central Committee

+ Mercy Corps

+ World Concern

+ World Relief

+ World Vision

+ World Emergency Relief

+ Intl Red Crescent

+ Intl Red Cross

+ Plan USA

+ Doctors without borders

+ CAFOD

+ CARE INTERNATIONAL

+ OXFAM

+ SAVE THE CHILDREN

+ Food For The Hungry Inc

+ UNICEF

+ Brother's Brother Foundation

+ Baptist World Aid

+ B'nai B'rith International

+ Christian Children's Fund

+ Medecins Sans Frontieres

OTHER RESOURCES:

SEA EAT (The South-East Asia Earthquake and Tsunami Blog) - Packed with important resource information.

EMERGENCY ACTION BLOG - This project got underway in the past 48 hours. Designed to handle future relief coordination activities, within a few hours of arising need.

ACT FOR CHANGE: Urge President Bush to Increase Tsunami Aid



Blogger Corps - A New Idea



Blogger Corps - A New Idea

What is Blogger Corps, you ask?

Who thought of the idea?

How is the young idea evolving?

Who is talking about Blogger Corps?

BuzzFlash Failure of the Year: George W. Bush




Click on photo for link



Sunday, December 26, 2004

Exit polls give pro-West Yushchenko big win



Exit polls give pro-West Yushchenko big win in Ukraine vote

Good news! Perhaps, if the fickle fingers of fraudulent fiddling are kept off the voting process in Ukraine today, the exit polls will prove themselves to be perfectly accurate, unlike the highly
questionable
AMERICAN election.

2004 Farce of the Year



2004 Farce of the Year


This wins my Medal of Farcedom


Oh, but have no fear! It will all be over soon.


Chris Wallace Disappoints



Chris Wallace Disappoints
Fox News worthless tripe

Chris Wallace looks like a completely watered down version of his father. In an interview with Lynne Cheney on Fox News this morning, with a completely straight face, he compared the Iraq war to 1776. He claimed the Americans were "defending their country". That is not what they are doing. The 1776 spirit is MISSING where it belongs - in the hearts of the Iraqi people. This is where the rubber of lies meets the road of reality, and there's nothing the Bush administration can do to supplement that spirit, other than to continue using our men and women as surrogate Iraqi "independence seekers".

Our troops are there based on the blatant lie (told again and again by Ms. Cheney's husband) that there was a connection to the 9/11 attacks. Let's not get carried away with patriotic fervor in such a way that we lose all sense of reality.

Chris Wallace should be ashamed of himself. He worked very hard to magnify the division of our fine American people with his entire line of questioning.

Worthless journalism.


Friday, December 24, 2004

I wish you peace at Christmas





I wish you peace at Christmas

"And in despair I bowed my head;
'There is not peace on earth,' I said
'For hate is strong and mocks the song
Of peace on earth, good will to men"

Then pealed the bells more loud and deep
'God is not dead, nor doth He sleep,
The wrong shall fail, the right prevail
With peace on earth, good will to men
.'"

--From I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day, written during the American Civil War

There is not peace on earth today, but it is a hope that was laid down in the New Testament. Peace on Earth was the angel's cry.

Peace.

May we strive for it.

May we demand it.

May we find it.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

May we also care for the earth for which peace was intended.

When you "hear the bells on Christmas Day", my highest hope is that you heed the words of victorian philosopher John Ruskin:

"God has lent us the earth for our life; it is a great entail. It belongs as much to those who are to come after us, and whose names are already written in the book of creation. We have no right, by anything we do or neglect, to involve them in unnecessary penalties, or deprive them of benefits which it was in our power to bequeath."


I wish you a Merry Christmas.


--Jude



Riverbend's Christmas Wishlist



Riverbend's Christmas Wishlist

Riverbend has a Christmas list, too. Here it is, in part:

"I have to make this fast.

No electricity for three days in a row (well, unless you count that glorious hour we got 3 days ago...). Generators on gasoline are hardly working at all. Generators on diesel fuel aren't faring much better- most will only work for 3 or 4 straight hours then they have to be turned off to rest.

Ok- what is the typical Iraqi Christmas wishlist (I won't list 'peace', 'security' and 'freedom' - Christmas miracles are exclusive to Charles Dickens), let's see:

1. 20 liters of gasoline
2. A cylinder of gas for cooking
3. Kerosene for the heaters
4. Those expensive blast-proof windows
5. Landmine detectors
6. Running water
7. Thuraya satellite phones (the mobile phone services are really, really bad of late)
8. Portable diesel generators (for the whole family to enjoy!)
9. Coleman rechargeable flashlight with extra batteries (you can never go wrong with a fancy flashlight)
10. Scented candles (it shows you care- but you're also practical)

When Santa delivers please make sure he is wearing a bullet-proof vest and helmet. He should also politely ring the doorbell or knock, as a more subtle entry might bring him face to face with an AK-47. With the current fuel shortage, reindeer and a sleigh are highly practical- but Rudolph should be left behind as the flashing red nose might create a bomb scare (we're all a little jumpy lately)."


The Rebel Jesus



The Rebel Jesus
by Jackson Browne

All the streets are filled with laughter and light
And the music of the season
And the merchants' windows are all bright
With the faces of the children
And the families hurrying to their homes
As the sky darkens and freezes
Will be gathering around the hearths and tables
Giving thanks for God's graces
And the birth of the rebel Jesus

Well they call him by 'the Prince of Peace'
And they call him by 'the Savior'
And they pray to him upon the seas
And in every bold endeavor
And they fill his churches with their pride and gold
As their faith in him increases
But they've turned the nature that I worship in
From a temple to a robber's den
In the words of the rebel Jesus



We guard our world with locks and guns
And we guard our fine possessions
And once a year when Christmas comes
We give to our relations
And perhaps we give a little to the poor
If the generosity should seize us
But if any one of us should interfere
In the business of why there are poor
They get the same as the rebel Jesus

But pardon me if I have seemed
To take the tone of judgement
For I've no wish to come between
This day and your enjoyment
In a life of hardship and of earthly toil
We have need for anything that frees us
So I bid you pleasure
And I bid you cheer
From a heathen and a pagan
On the side of the rebel Jesus


LINK



Thursday, December 23, 2004

Supporting Troops: My column at American Street



Supporting Troops: My Column at American Street

My American Street column for Thursday, December 23, is here: Supporting the troops with concern and truth at Christmas

Excerpt:
It’s because I want a strong military and because I support our troops that I would appeal to our leaders to rethink the Neocon democracy-utopianism that has brought such tangible and disastrous result in Iraq. We are virtually hanging solo out on a limb in the Middle East by our own choosing. The nations that border upon Iraq are not our strong diplomatic partners. I’d wager, in their hearts, the governments of those nations want to see us fail in Iraq. We aren’t going to get very far with an overstretched military and no support from the nations that exist all around Iraq’s young and fragile democracy.
“…Meanwhile, Syria endeavors to strengthen its solidarity with other Arab and friendly countries as a “first choice” under pressure and its efforts seemed to have paid off. President Assad made visits to Turkey, Spain, China, Iran, in addition to trips to neighboring countries, during which he reasserted his country’s principled stances and garnered support.
Arab foreign ministers on Sept. 14 voiced “full solidarity” with Lebanon against any attempt to sever Lebanon-Syria ties and renewed rejection to a unilateral US sanction against Syria. LINK
There is no adequate or realistic effort on the part of Iraqi citizens to stand up and fight the insurgents, even with the mighty support of the US military. In his press conference this week, President Bush said: “The Iraqi force is not ready to fight.” [...]

[..] As Christmas approaches, I want all our troops and their families to know they do have a friend in those who would question the way this war is being handled by Washington D.C. It’s my firm belief that it’s people like us are the best friends and supporters of the men and women who would give all and anything - for us. We watch each other’s backs. We fight for freedom, even if freedom requires debate and dirt-honest truth.

My Christmas wish for the troops is that they come home safely and are asked to serve only for truth and high moral purpose.

As for Iraq, if we can’t get it right, then GET THEM HOME.


Patty Ann Smith has a holiday message about our troops at Hope4America.


The Real Grinch





The Real Grinch

Rabbi Michael Lerner reveals the real Grinch who has stolen Christmas.

Excerpt:
"There is a beautiful spiritual message underlying Christmas that has universal appeal: the hope that gets reborn in moments of despair, the light that gets re-lit in the darkest moments of the year, is beautifully symbolized by the story of a child born of a teenage homeless mother who had to give birth in a manger because no one would give her shelter, and escaping the cruelty of Roman imperial rule and its local surrogate Herod who already knew that such a child would grow up to challenge the entire imperialist system. To celebrate that vulnerable child as a symbol of hope that eventually the weak would triumph over the rule of the arrogant and powerful is a spiritual celebration with strong analogies to our Jewish Chanukah celebration which also celebrates the victory of the weak over the powerful. And many other spiritual traditions around the world have similar celebrations at this time of year.

The loss of this message, its subversion into a frenetic orgy of consumption, rightly disturbs Christians and other people of faith.

Yet this transformation is not a result of Jewish parents wanting to protect their children from being forced to sing Christmas carols in public school, or secularists sending Seasons Greeting cards. It derives, instead, from the power of the capitalist marketplace, operating through television, movies and marketers, to drum into everyone's mind the notion that the only way to be a decent human being at this time of year is to buy and buy more."

Internet Quiz-What crappy gift are you?





You Are a Losing Lottery Ticket!

*Geez, I've never been called a cheap letdown before. Really, I haven't.





Full of hope and promise.
But in the end, a cheap letdown.




tip of the hat to dot.