Wednesday, October 29, 2003

More women with fewer children.
Posted here Wednesday, October 29, 2003 at 4:24:11 PM    

The logic is distressing. No source needed.

The proportion of American women ages 40 to 44 who remain childless increased from 10% in 1976 to 18% in 2002. Mothers in this age group now have considerably fewer children: an average of just 1.9, compared with 3.1 in 1976.

According to a new Census Bureau report, 44% of all U.S. women of childbearing age (15 to 44) are childless. The statistics may be good news for the economy: 71% of these childless women participate in the labor force. (In 1975, the total labor-force participation rate for women, with or without children, was just 46%.)

SOURCE: U.S. Bureau of the Census: http://www.census.gov/

comment: the idea, that it is good for the economy because of labor participation, without reference to the quality of life issues, is unfortunate.That we have doubled the participation by halving the salaries is a great slight of hand achieved over the last fifty years.


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Bush alienating critical support
Posted here Wednesday, October 29, 2003 at 3:25:08 PM    

This is part of a pattern that is creating hotile opinion in the military and intelligence worlds.It may be hard to run an empire if you create this kind ofalienation.

Bush disavows background banner in May speech

WASHINGTON President Bush tried to distance himself Tuesday from a banner proclaiming "Mission Accomplished" that hung on an aircraft carrier where he staged a fighter-jet landing May 1. He said the banner was the Navy's idea and a reference to the mission of the USS Abraham Lincoln.

Military officials agreed that the banner was their idea but said White House aides signed off on it, made it and positioned it prominently behind the spot where Bush made his remarks.

Bush, at a news conference, also said he had never suggested that the war in Iraq was over when he landed on the Abraham Lincoln. Since then, 115 American troops have been killed in action and hundreds more wounded.

"I think you ought to look at my speech," Bush said. "I said Iraq's a dangerous place, got hard work to do, there's still more to be done."

During his remarks on the aircraft carrier as he stood in front of the banner, Bush said, "Major combat operations in Iraq have ended." He went on to say, "We have difficult work to do in Iraq. ... The transition from dictatorship to democracy will take time, but it is worth every effort."

On Tuesday, Bush said the banner was put up by the crewmembers of the Abraham Lincoln to say that their mission was accomplished. "I know it was attributed somehow to some ingenious advance man from my staff they weren't that ingenious, by the way," Bush said.

Cmdr. Conrad Chun, a Navy spokesman, said the banner was "the ship's idea. The banner signified the successful completion of the Lincoln's deployment."

But Bush's advance staff did have a hand in the banner, said other military officials who asked not to be identified. Personnel aboard the Abraham Lincoln asked the White House to make the banner because there were no art supplies aboard the ship, the officials said. The White House advance team then brought the banner to the ship and positioned it behind Bush.

White House communications director Dan Bartlett confirmed some of those details. "I received a phone call from the ship. They asked if they could have something that recognized that they had accomplished their mission. We agreed and helped develop a banner that reflected that," he said.

The White House communications office, well-known for the care it takes with the backdrops at Bush's speeches, created the "Mission Accomplished" banner in the same style as banners the president uses in other appearances, including one in Canton, Ohio, just a week before the carrier speech. That banner, with the same typeface and soft, brush-stroked American flag in the background, read: "Jobs and Growth."


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Greenpeace and Ashcroft.
Posted here Wednesday, October 29, 2003 at 3:17:51 PM    

no comment necessary

Date: Wed, 29 Oct 2003 02:07:19 -0500

From: John Passacantando <listreply+206433+659_@greenpeaceusa.org>;

Reply-To: Greenpeace USA <listreply@wdc.greenpeace.org>;

Subject: Ashcroft vs. Greenpeace

 

From: John Passacantando, executive director Greenpeace USA

Re: The Justice Department's Unprecedented Attack on Greenpeace

In the past you have been there to support Greenpeace. Now we need you to make your voices heard. It's important that you know about a serious battle we are facing to continue to do the work you support us for: taking action to stop crimes against our environment.

Yesterday, MV Esperanza, arrived in Miami Florida. However, rather than pulling into port, as Greenpeace ships do throughout the world, she will remain at anchor.

The Port of Miami has refused us entry because John Ashcroft's Justice Department is prosecuting us for a protest action last year. The prosecution is unprecedented. Never before in U.S. history has an entire organization been prosecuted for a peaceful protest of its supporters.

As you know, for years we have worked to end environmental destruction and human rights abuses in Brazil's Amazon rainforest. Destruction of these habitats threatens clean air and water, animal and plant species, and the people and cultures who depend on forests for their way of life. Large criminal enterprises, using bribery, extortion, slavery, and murder, continue to ravage the Amazon and export their contraband.

Last year, two Greenpeace activists climbed aboard a ship carrying Amazon mahogany wood. They held a banner that said "President Bush: Stop Illegal Logging."

Amazingly, instead of halting the shipment, the government is prosecuting Greenpeace in federal court in Miami. It has charged Greenpeace under an obscure 19th century law never intended for this purpose. A trial is now set for December.

Leading legal experts, quoted in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and publications around the world, agree that this prosecution is disturbing and poses a threat to free speech.

From the Boston Tea Party to the civil rights movement, public protest actions have helped bring positive change in the U.S.

Our actions worldwide have played a critical role in, for example, stopping atmospheric nuclear testing, protecting Antarctica from exploitation, and banning radioactive waste dumping at sea.

But if this prosecution succeeds, non-violent protest may become yet another casualty of John Ashcroft's attack on civil liberties.

Please help us to ensure that freedom of speech isn't taken away from all of us.

-- Take action:

Contact President Bush and John Ashcroft and tell them to prosecute illegal loggers, not Greenpeace:

http://www.greenpeaceusa.org/bin/view.fpl/10048/action_id/195.html

Contact the authorities in Miami and tell them that they should allow the Esperanza to dock in Miami:

http://www.greenpeaceusa.org/bin/view.fpl/10048/action_id/196.html

For more information and to stay updated as events unfold, visit:

http://www.greenpeaceusa.org/trial

Sincerely,

John Passacantando

Executive Director

Greenpeace USA


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Syrian entry to Iraq - washington post..
Posted here Wednesday, October 29, 2003 at 3:03:10 PM    

It is important to be accurate about Syria

Commanders Doubt Syria Is Entry Point

Officers See No Sign Of Foreign Fighters

By Vernon Loeb

Washington Post Staff Writer

Wednesday, October 29, 2003; Page A19

 

 

SINJAR, Iraq -- Commanders of U.S. military forces responsible for monitoring the border between Iraq and Syria say there is no evidence from human intelligence sources or radar surveillance aircraft indicating that significant numbers of foreign fighters are crossing into Iraq illegally.

 

 

 

U.S. and Iraqi forces are working together to secure Iraq's borders against infiltration by foreigners intent on assisting attacks against troops and civilians associated with the occupation. U.S. officials blamed foreign fighters for four suicide car bombings in Baghdad on Monday that killed at least 35 people.

 

Along Iraq's 300-mile border with Syria, the 101st Airborne Division is guarding the northern portion of the frontier and the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment is watching the southern portion.

 

A 60-mile stretch of border north of the Euphrates River remains unpatrolled by U.S. forces or Iraqi border police but is being monitored by air. Under a project that the U.S. military calls Operation Chamberlain, sophisticated Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System (JSTARS) planes are gathering information about vehicle movement and relaying it to ground forces.

 

Commanders from the 101st Airborne repeated this week that neither the aircraft nor human intelligence sources show significant infiltration from Syria. Foreign fighters could still be reaching Baghdad from Syria, Jordan, Turkey or Kuwait by passing through border posts with valid or forged travel documents, but concerns about illegal infiltration along the Syrian border appear unfounded, the officers said.

 

 


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Paglia interview.
Posted here Wednesday, October 29, 2003 at 1:34:58 PM    

From Camille Paglia. I recommend this inerview

-- and the "delusional narcissists" in the White House who led an out-of-his-depth president into a disastrous war..


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Staying in Iraq or pull out?
Posted here Wednesday, October 29, 2003 at 1:31:03 PM    

On the iraq withdrawl discussion

October 29, 2003

Staying The Course

Staying The Course

Never, in my wildest dreams, did I believe the Bush Adminstration would countenance withdrawing from Iraq before we finished the job. But that seems to be what they are considering--at least the political operatives.

There seem to be a lot of rumors floating around to that effect.

I hope they are not true.

Yes, I opposed the war in Iraq. I felt that the costs would outweigh the benefits. And to a certain degree I feel vindicated. The situation that The Agonist has documented and will continue to document is ugly, no matter the spin.

The issue of the day is not whether we should withdraw but how we win. And I believe it is still possible to win. Although I opposed the war, one immutable fact remains to keep us there until the job is finished: We broke it and now we must fix it.

Do I like it? No.

Am I happy about American boys and girls dying everyday? No.

Am I pleased with the way the Bush Adminstration has conducted operations in Iraq after May 1st? No.

Should the Bush Administration be run out of Washington for their deceit and ineptitude? Oh yeah, you better believe it.

However, all of that does not take away from the moral imperative we face in Iraq. In the words of Carol Mosley-Braun: "We blew the place up; we have to fix it back."And I agree with Chris Suellentrop that this idea is one of the primary moral repsonsibilities of those who wage war.

If this Administration decides to cut and run in Iraq they will have crossed a moral chasm that no American should allow. They will simply be beyond the pale.

Withdrawing from Iraq, no matter how attractive that option might be is simply immoral and unacceptable. And it is beneath this country to consider it.

Let me add a little to and clarify my previous post.

When I said that the United States cannot withdraw from Iraq before fixing it I failed to mention one scenario in which the United States could withdraw, maintain our moral position and do the right thing in Iraq.

It's a kind of win-win-win scenario that I will flesh out in a later post. Suffice it to say here, that if, and it is a big if, we are able to fully internationalize the situation in Iraq by bringing in the U.N. or at the very least NATO, then I could forsee a case for withdrawing a great deal of our troops in the very near future.

I'll develop this a bit more, later.

end of quoting


 


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India should join the train... lester Thurow
Posted here Wednesday, October 29, 2003 at 10:47:27 AM    

More on "if you don't join up,get out of the way.." The logic of globalization is that there is one game in town, and the real struggleis who controls the game.Tbat there is only one game seems to me fairly short sighted, since that game leads to environmental collapse and or fascism.It is simply thelogic of the control possibilities if we have one coherent system.

 





Message to India: Globalize Or Be Left Behind
MIT economist Lester Thurow says that despite India's thriving software industry the country is in peril of falling behind China in the knowledge economy.

By Venkatesh Hariharan
October 29, 2003

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Pakistan and India
Posted here Wednesday, October 29, 2003 at 10:15:14 AM    

good news from the other tense trigger place on the planet.

ISLAMABAD, Oct. 29 (Xinhuanet) -- Pakistan Wednesday accepted mostof India's proposals for normalizing relations with Islamabad, including opening bus service in the disputed Kashmir.

@@Briefing a news conference here, Foreign Secretary Riaz Khokharsaid the realization of real peace between the longtime rivals wasonly possible by resolving the Kashmir problem through dialogue.

@@New Delhi announced a series of proposals last week to ease tensions with nuclear rival Pakistan. The 12-point proposals included expanding travel and sports links and easing visa regulations.

@@The most sweeping proposal, however, concerned opening the roadfrom Srinagar to Muzzafarabad, respective capitals of India- and Pakistan-held Kashmir.

@@Khokhar said Pakistan accepted India's proposals in principle for bus service between Srinagar and Muzzafarabad, but said it should be monitored by the United Nations checkpoints.


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