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Wednesday, December 4, 2002 
categories: Financial, Culture, Legal, World

Thousands of newly released personnel files show the Archdiocese of Boston went to great lengths to hide priests accused of abuse, including clergy who allegedly snorted cocaine and had sex with girls aspiring to be nuns.
The life of a violent South Shore priest is detailed Boston Globe
New Revelations In Boston Sex Scandal CBS News
Hampshire Gazette - WMUR-TV - New Zealand Herald - Sydney Morning Herald - and 208 related »
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The perversion and cover up is much greater than everyone imagined. Did Bernard Law break the LAW? Seems so to me. These latest revelations dragged from the Diocese by court order will, in my opinion, guarantee that the Boston Diocese will declare bankruptcy to limit the losses and protect assets. Which if that happens will further diminish the RC church.

When are they gonna get it? Just come clean, get rid of the perpetrators and the administrators who covered it up, and make celibacy a personal choice between a priest and GOD. Why not do these things?


  4:45:11 PM  Google It!  comment


categories: Financial, Legal, Politics, War

Bush transfers regional cost-of-living pay differentials to defense budget. So the FBI agent forking over $3000 a month for a Manhattan studio will get paid the same as her counterpart paying $500/month for a two bedroom in Iowa. Accomodate regional differences if you want a flexible work force.

Mr. Bush, know that the federal workforce is telling the millions of people they serve that you just put your political expediency (tax cuts for the richest Americans and companies) ahead of your workforce's bread and butter needs.

Just more shrubbery.
  4:44:22 PM  Google It!  comment



Washington Post - The Bush administration decided earlier this year to reinstitute the awarding of large cash bonuses to political appointees, a practice that had been abandoned during the Clinton administration because of concerns over abuse, ...
Bonuses Are Back For Political Workers CBS News
Cash bonuses OKd for federal political jobs San Francisco Chronicle
Reuters - WSOC - WTVJ - WKRN - and 135 related »
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WHOA! It's my tax money that's getting passed out here. I'm ready willing and able to work yet I am not and now this administration is passing out bonus monies for POLITICAL APPOINTEES? Looks like, sounds like, smells like stealing to me.

  4:12:30 PM  Google It!  comment

categories: Legal, Politics, War, World

by Lucy Komisar American Reporter Correspondent

Colombian journalist Ignacio Gomez told a roomful of America's most influential journalists Tuesday how Washington-supported Colombian president Alvaro Uribe is connected to drug traffickers and how U.S. military trainers helped organize a massacre in his country.

Among the 1,000 guests at the Committee to Protect Journalists' annual dinner at the Waldorf-Astoria grand ballroom were NBC's Tom Brokaw, CBS's Dan Rather, Time-Warner's Walter Isaacson, Reuters CEO Thomas Glocer and executives and reporters from the nation's major TV networks, newspapers and newsmagazines.

Gomez, 40, has twice gone into exile after death threats. The media "stars" applauded him for his courage. But did they put his revelations into print or on air? If you didn't see the stories he recounted in the American press, don't be surprised.

As they do every year at the CPJ event, "leading" U.S. journalists lauded the courage of people chancing death for telling the truth, but continue to pull punches in their own news organizations for fear of endangering their multi-million-dollar salaries.

Here's more of what Gomez unveiled for colleagues.

After he investigated a 1997 massacre in Mapiripan, in which 67 people were decapitated, Gomez reported in 2000 that the Colombian military officer accused of masterminding the crime had been accompanied "at all times" by a dozen U.S. military trainers. He also linked the massacre to paramilitary leader Carlos Castano.

Gomez has written frequently about the role of Colombian military and paramilitary in massacres though Washington downplays their connection. Several months after the report was published in the Bogota daily El Espectator, Gomez was almost kidnapped while entering a taxi. He was forced into exile.

Last year, as director of investigations for a public affairs television show "Noticias Uno," he reported that U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) had discovered an airplane belonging to then-presidential candidate Alvaro Uribe and his brother at a drug lab belonging to the Medellin cartel.

Uribe, eschewing peace talks in favor of a military response to Colombian rebels - something the Bush administration wants - suffered no Washington displeasure. But Gomez and the station news director got death threats, and Uribe declared ominously that "a free press is one thing, and a press at the service of ... shady deals is something else."

As he accepted the CPJ award, Gomez told the audience that "Colombian journalists first exposed the corruption of the war on drugs, but because of an information monopoly tied to the current government, truth is dying in Colombia. We are no longer allowed to be heard." He said that one of the two national papers and 23 TV news shows had been shut down.

"The picture of war," Gomez said, "is getting blurry - and Americans, whose taxes and whose drug consumption fuel this war, should be concerned." He said that seeing the audience, he felt Colombians were not alone, that they could "still prevail against the powerful forces who want to keepus mute."

Brokaw, Rather, Isaacson and other media chiefs readily showed up, in black tie, to support the CPJ fundraiser, and their conscience money is needed. But their commitment might be taken more seriously if they stopped being "mute" in print and on air about stories - by Gomez and others - that challenge U.S. policy and actions in Colombia.
  3:19:55 PM  Google It!  comment


categories: Financial, Politics, War, World

BBC - As US Secretary of State Colin Powell holds talks with Colombian President Alvaro Uribe on tackling illegal drugs and terrorism, one of the country's leading dailies complains the country is not getting the help it deserves.
Powell Discusses Narco-Terrorist Crackdown in Colombia Voice of America
Powell supports crackdown on lawlessness, opposes rights abuses Ha'aretz
International Herald Tribune - EastDay.com - Washington File - Scoop.co.nz - and 100 related »
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If you have read the previous two stories you may be wondering like me "where is the truth?". If you find it please let me know where. Thanks.

  3:01:51 PM  Google It!  comment

categories: Culture

Will Smith is going to star in "I, Robot," an adaptation of the 1940s Isaac Asimov short-story collection. Alex Proyas will direct the film which starts shooting in April 2003.

The original "I, Robot" contained nine short stories that Asimov wrote for various magazines throughout the 1940s, brought together thematically by the author's three laws of robotics. Those laws hold that a robot may not injure a human or, through inaction, allow a human to come to harm; a robot must obey orders given to it by a human, except where it would conflict with the first law; and a robot must protect itself, as long as that protection doesn't violate either the first or second law.

The movie is a futuristic thriller in which a detective investigates a crime that might have been perpetrated by a robot, even though that seems an impossibility given those three prevailing rules.
  2:58:07 PM  Google It!  comment


 
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