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30/1/2006; 6:37:53

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Radio UserLand

  Tuesday, 8 April 2003

.< 1:15:03 PM >

Flag-O-Rama! 'Hammer of Justice - It's hammer time!  Whether you're building a new church or constructing a killer new spice rack in your basement, you can be sure that your nails will be driven with the power of an all-American hammer.  And if you're in the mood, this baby is awesome for braining non-flagwavers and other anti-American scum.'

One American's attempt to save his flag from marketing scum.


.< 12:49:12 PM >

The Reason Why 'War profits are booming, as is the case in all wars. While young Americans die, profits go up. But our economy is not booming, and our stock market is not booming. Our wages and incomes are not booming. While waging a war against Iraq, the Bush Administration is waging another war against the well-being of America. Following the 9/11 tragedy at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, the entire world was united in sympathy and support for America. But thanks to the arrogant unilateralism, the bullying and the clumsy, unimaginative diplomacy of Washington, Bush converted a world of support into a world united against us, with the exception of Tony Blair and one or two others.'
A righteous rant from former US Senator and WWII vet George McGovern.


.< 11:54:09 AM >
World Bank not invited to Iraq

One of the world's leading financiers of overseas developmet says it has not been asked to help in the reconstruction of Iraq. [BBC News | World | UK Edition]



.< 11:53:51 AM >
UN slams aid 'double standards'

The West is forgetting 40 million Africans, while helping post-war Iraq, says the head of the World Food Programme. [BBC News | World | UK Edition]

No oil in Africa?



.< 11:51:12 AM >
It's a free country ... isn't it?

Iraq diary: When Jo Wilding went to RAF/USAF Fairford to protest against the use of British bases to bomb Iraq she found our much-talked about freedom in short supply. [Guardian Unlimited] 'The troops are destroying the Saddam statues as they go along. Surely that is the right of the Iraqi people. Surely the power and emotion of the moment when those symbols are torn down belongs to them in the way that the hammering and chipping away of the Berlin wall belonged to the separated people of that city.'

The quote is off topic from the thrust of the story but I thought it was worth noting. A missed opportunity. Some idiot also raised a US flag again though he was quickly told to take it down.



.< 11:40:49 AM >

CBC News: Journalists killed in U.S. tank fire on Baghdad hotel 'At least two journalists were killed on Tuesday when a U.S. tank fired on the hotel in Baghdad where they and other journalists have been staying. Another died in a bomb blast elsewhere in the city. Three other journalists were wounded when a single tank round hit the Palestine Hotel. U.S. soldiers said snipers on the hotel's roof were shooting at them. Journalists in the building at the time said they heard no shots coming from the hotel.'
The War on Journalists


.< 11:37:28 AM >
Latest 'Bin Laden' tape urges suicide attacks

World: A new cassette tape purporting to be from Osama bin Laden urges suicide attacks calls on Muslims to rise up against Arab governments that support the attack on Iraq. [Guardian Unlimited]

Our Osama's really out to make friends. Another reminder of the failure of the US to get the people actually responsible for 11 Sept.



.< 11:35:45 AM >

Guardian Unlimited | World dispatch | Know thine enemies 'I assured him he need not worry, the Iraqis were not about to mount an invasion on California. Yes, he said, but what about the French?

It was only when I was about to tell him that French troops were already making their way south from Quebec and that Napoleon was confident they would be in Long Beach by Easter that I realised he was serious.

There has certainly been a lot of silliness about the French in the media here of late, but I had not realised some people thought the US was at war with them as well as the Iraqis.'

Well, if people believe Iraq was behind 11 Sept, why not? Apparently they'll believe anything.


.< 1:46:47 AM >

Interview on ZDF-TV of Germany
'Interview on ZDF-TV of Germany Secretary Colin L. Powell Brussels, Belgium April 3, 2003'

.< 1:40:27 AM >

HEATHER NEWMAN: Recording industry has warning: File-sharers have to face the music 'The damages sought by the suits are astronomical: $150,000 per song, the maximum allowed by law. Multiply that by the 652,000 or so songs the RIAA alleges student Joseph Nievelt offered to other Michigan Tech students on his service, and the scope of the suit is clear.

That total? About $97.8 trillion -- yes, trillion with a T -- or enough money to buy every CD sold in America last year over again for the next 120,000 years, according to RIAA statistics. And that's just Nievelt's case.'

.< 1:34:53 AM >

Thin Ice 'We're on the banks of a FROZEN RIVER on a cold, sunny day. Trees along the riverside drip with melting snow. Far off toward the horizon, almost out of sight, an emaciated OLD WOMAN lies on the ice, moaning feebly for help.

GEORGE W. BUSH stands before a WINNEBAGO and addresses the gathered CROWD.

BUSH: Hey everybody! You remember that old woman who's been stranded on the ice these past 6 months, who we've been ignoring up until now? Today, I'm sending this Winnebago fulla Boy Scouts out there to RESCUE HER!

THE CROWD roars and cheers: WOO! LET'S GO! WE'RE GONNA BE HEROES! LET'S SAVE THAT OLD LADY!

One guy, a PROTESTER, speaks up:

PROTESTER: Umm.. Mr. President... It's the middle of April... You think it might be unwise to drive a Winnebago onto the ice? '

.< 1:31:16 AM >

Workers Who Feel Discarded ' Among the many things overshadowed by the war is the substantial human toll that is quietly being taken by the faltering U.S. economy. Putting Americans to work is not part of the agenda of the Bush administration, and the fallout from this lack of interest is spreading big time.'

It's the economy, stupid.


.< 1:18:43 AM >
Sony Revisits Online Offer of Custom CD's

Sony Music Entertainment has started a Web site where online shoppers can buy CD's that contain songs of their own choosing. [New York Times: Technology]



.< 1:17:44 AM >
New Fusion Method Offers Hope of New Energy Source

Scientists from Sandia National Laboratories have reported that they achieved thermonuclear fusion, in essence detonating a tiny hydrogen bomb. [New York Times: Technology]



.< 1:13:24 AM >
For Sale: Beethoven's Scribbles on the Ninth

Sotheby's London is prepared to sell an original musical manuscript of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. [New York Times: Arts]



.< 1:12:34 AM >
Günter Grass Worries About the Effects of War, Then and Now

Breaking a taboo, Günter Grass's latest novel implicitly concludes that it's time to acknowledge that some Germans were also victims of World War II. [New York Times: Arts]



.< 1:04:10 AM >

BBC NEWS | World | Middle East | Nine civilians killed in Baghdad blast 'Witnesses quoted by several news agencies said at least three houses in the Mansour neighbourhood had been flattened in what they said was a US air raid. Some reports have put the death toll at 14.

Nine members of a family - including at least one child - were said to have been killed in the attack, which occurred at 1500 local time (1100 GMT).'

.< 1:01:29 AM >

Intellectual Speaks of the Arab World's Despair ' "People in Egypt and many parts of the Arab world used to love America, and now they have a sense of being betrayed, misunderstood, taken lightly," he said. "And when it comes to the central problem of the Middle East - the Arab-Israeli conflict - we feel that even a minimum of American even-handedness is missing."

Mr. Aboulmagd is one of Egypt's best-known intellectuals, a senior aide to former President Anwar el Sadat, consultant to the United Nations and ever-curious polymath whose interests range across the fields of Islamic jurisprudence, comparative religions, literature, history and commercial law.

Like many educated Egyptians of his generation, he is a man whose views on democracy and political values were shaped by reading the United States Constitution, the Federalist papers and the writings of Thomas Jefferson and Woodrow Wilson. [...]

When speaking of President Bush and his administration, Mr. Aboulmagd uses words like narrow-minded, pathological, obstinate and simplistic. The war on Iraq, he said bluntly, is the act of a "weak person who wants to show toughness" and, quite frankly, seems "deranged."

.< 12:55:49 AM >
Blair tells Bush: take rest of world into account

Politics: Tony Blair last night appealed to George Bush to combine America's quest for its own security with the wider needs of international justice. [Guardian Unlimited]



.< 12:55:03 AM >
'Saddam caught in blast'

A US bomber struck a building in Baghdad where the Americans believe Saddam Hussein and his sons were meeting. [Guardian Unlimited]



.< 12:41:52 AM >
Conflict in Congo has killed 4.7m, charity says

World: Starvation and disease multiply toll from fighting. [Guardian Unlimited]



.< 12:36:24 AM >
U.S. Seizes Palace and Says It Intends to Remain in Baghdad

U.S. tanks and armored personnel carriers roamed into Baghdad, seizing three presidential palaces in or around the Iraqi capital. [New York Times: NYT HomePage]



.< 12:02:45 AM >
Windows key leak threatens mass piracy

A key code for installing Microsoft's Windows Server 2003 leaks onto the Internet, a loss that could lead to rampant piracy of the software. [CNET News.com]






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