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This is the home page.
This web page is devoted to providing rational, fact-based opinions on political and other
matters. The orientation is progressive, but a sincere effort is made to avoid rumors, emotion, invective,
and anger. Much of the material examines how the new conservatives have gained control of the United States.
Attention is also given to stories that have been neglected by the mainstream press.
If you are put off by the liberal politics, you may find the material on religion and American
ideas interesting.
Your writer , a retired gentleman with too much time on his hands, is not very good at editing
his own material. It is hoped that the gentle reader can live with some typos and missing words.
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Friday, March 25, 2005
2:47 pm est
Monday, March 7, 2005
INTERESTING FACTOIDs--
The most recent Republican deployment of the filibuster against a judicial
nominee occurred in March, 2000. when it was used against Richard Paez, Clinton's pick for a Ninth
Circuit seat.
Before the 2004 election, the late Hunter Thompson said, "If this president is re-elected we are facing
the total death of the American Dream as I know it...."
8:37 pm est
Saturday, March 5, 2005
Some Previous Blog
IF ONLY A US DIPLOMAT WOULD EMULATE MURRAY's CONDUCT
While George W. Bush was lecturing the international community about human rights and democracy, his CIA was flying detainees
into Uzbekistan where cooperatives Uzbecs helped extract information by the "immersion of limbs in boiling liquid" and by
"drowning and suffocation."
Craig Murray is now the former United Kingdom ambassador to Uzbekistan. He was suspended and then removed after a memorandum
he sent to the Foreign Office was leaked. In it he complained that information gathered from tortured prisoners in Uzbekistan
was being relayed by the U.S. to Great Britain and that it could be used to jail people in the United Kingdom. By accepting
such information, he told his superiors "we are selling our souls for dross."
The British government did not deny that this kind of tainted information could be used, not did it claim that people were
not being tortured there. Rather, efforts were made to minimize the problem by attacking the 46 year-old diplomat. Reports
surfaced that he was giving out visas in return for sex, that he was drunk on the job, and that he had somehow abused an embassy
car while driving it. An affair he was having with a 23 year old Uzbek hairdresser somehow made the news. In the end he received
severance pay ( "redundancy payment") as well as a pension.
While the U.S. ambassador there praises the country’s advances toward democracy, Murray claims it remains a totalitarian
state ruled by its old Communist boss, Islam Karimov. He notes that opposition parties were prohibited from participating
in its previous election. Torture is routinely used there to obtain confessions. Ripping out nails and placing body parts
in boiling water are known techniques there. CIA agents witness the torture of Uzbecs it has flown in (extraordinary rendition"
via a "Ghost Plane" in from Afghanistan. This plane mad at least ten trips into this torturer's paradise.
Murray claims the UK no longer has its own well-defined foreign policy and is content to be the best friend of the world’s
only super power. As a private citizen, he plans to run for Parliament to remedy this situation and hold leaders of his own
party responsible for helping to dummy up the case for the invasion of Iraq. Don’t look for anyone in the US foreign policy
establishment to follow his example.
For more on this story, check the Village Voice, April 26, 2005.
8DUBIOUS CHARACTERS FROM THE IRAN-CONTRA ERA ARE REWARDED BY BUSH
For a time Admiral John Poindexter, of Iran-Contra notoriety, occupied a high
profile position in George W. Bush's Pentagon, charged with operating a dubious intelligence gathering operation. Three of
his appointments to foreign policy positions raised eyebrows. The Chief Executive obviously sought to reward those who sought
to evade the law in the Reagan years. These appointments were made in his first term but appeared all the more ominous in
the second, when there was much talk of reemploying the brutal and deadly strategies developed in Central America under Ronald
Reagan.
Three of Bush’s foreign policy appointments should have raised more
than a few eyebrows in the press. The younger Bush became the first president to appoint a pardoned criminal to a high White
House post. President Bush the Elder had pardoned Elliott Abrams, who had been convicted of two counts of lying to Congress.
Abrams had been involved in the Iran Contra scandal, channeling illegal funds to the right-wing death squads in El Salvador
and Guatemala. This misguided policy produced 70,000 dead in El Salvador and 100,000 in Guatemala. Abrams denied the validity
of reports about the El Mozote massacre, which claimed the lives of 700 unarmed people, including children, and was highly
critical of reports of the UN truth commissions and Catholic human rights committees about the bloody results of U.S. policy
in El Salvador and Guatemala. Bush the Younger appointed Abrams senior director of the office for democracy, human rights,
and international operations at the National Security Council. He later became senior advisor on the Middle East, and in 2005
he became deputy national security advisor. A half-way vigilant press would have publicized this case, and editors would have
insisted that the price of rehabilitation should be providing a full and truthful account of all of his dealings with Lt.
Colonel Oliver North in sending Iranian arms money to the Contra rebels in El Salvador. Two other Bush nominations should
have raised questions about the administration’s intentions toward Latin America and concern for human rights. Otto Reich,
who was head of the State Department’s Office of Public Diplomacy for Latin America and the Caribbean in the 1980s. Reich
engineered the unsuccessful effort to oust President Hugo Chavez in Venezuela, neand was subsequently for appointment as Assistant
Secretary of State for the Western Hemisphere by Senator Richard Lugar. John Negroponte was nominated to be ambassador to
the United Nations. He was U.S. ambassador to Honduras from 1981 to 1985 when Battalion 3-16, a U.S. trained death squad,
was on the loose. Negroponte, had at his disposal a briefing book by his predecessor on Honduran military’s human rights violations.
There were hundreds of stories about their bloody activities in the Honduran papers. Nevertheless, he quashed reports about
their abuses and denied he had any information about these matters. Negroponte also helped arm Nicaraguan Contras who were
working out of Honduras. The Los Angeles Times investigated his activities when Bush the Younger nominated him, but
few other newspapers pursued the matter. Reich, a former teacher at the School of the Americans and another Cuban-American,
took his orders from Lt. Colonel Oliver North in the National Security Council. Reich’s task was to plant materials in the
press that would discredit the opponents of Ronald Reagan’s policies in El Salvador. The General Accounting Office reported
in 1987 that Reich’s office had "engaged in prohibited, covert propaganda activities…." He was never prosecuted.
4 pm estJohn Negroponte
Central American human rights advocates protested when John Dimitri Negroponte was appointed the US national intelligence
director. They claimed he had been involved in human rights abuses when he was ambassador to Honduras from 1981 to 1985. The
mainstream press and leading Democrats generally praised the appointment and did not mention the charges against him. These
matters were touched upon when he was confirmed first for Ambassador to the United Nations and then ambassador to Iraq. It
is also claimed that he helped the Reagan administration circumvent the law banning aid to the Contras, right-wing rebels
in Nicaragua.
It cannot be proven that Negroponte was directly involved in human rights abuses in Honduras. Jack Binns, his predecessor,
left for him an extensive brief of mounting violence, but Negroponte ignored the warnings. In his time there, death squads
killed dissidents; people disappeared, and others were beaten and tortured. Thirty nuns savagely beaten by the Honduran
Secret Police ( DNI) sent to their deaths by being pushed out of helicopters. One of the women pushed out a helecopter
door was the secretary to Archbishop Oscar of El Salvaror, who had been killed by a CIA funded group in 1980. She had fled
to Hondoras for safety. Negroponte helped form Battalion 3-16 ( or 316), which provided most of the death squads. The ambassador
repeatedly gave Honduras good marks for its human rights record, praised its military, and denied that anything was amiss.
Negroponte worked to thwart the families of three American victimed–one was Fr. James Carney–from learning what had happened
to their loved ones.
Perhaps the U .S. administration thought it had no choice but to turn a deaf eye to the violence and repression. This was
a time when the United States was using Honduras to train and supply the Contra rebels. Negroponte supervised the building
the the El Aguacate base, where Contras were supplied and trained. Prisoners were tortured there and 185 bodies were later
excavated.
A cable sent by Negroponte to the State Department in 1985 makes it clear that he knew about the death squads, which he
called "secret operating cells." Yet he has continued to deny to Congress any knowledge of what was going on around him. He
also denied that Vice President George H.W. Bush ever mentioned resupplying the contras when he visited the country after
Congress banned further US involvement. Hondurans called him the "pro-consul" which suggests he was not far removed from what
was going on in the country. as late as 2001, he told Congress that death squads had not operated in Honduras. When
he was nominated to the UN post, two Honduran officers who could have testified were deported, and the former Honduran deputy
ambassador to the UN was denied a visa that would have enabled him to come to Washington to share what he knew.
As national intelligence director, Negroponte will provide Bush with daily intelligence briefings and he will coordinate
the activities of the nation’s fifteen spy agencies. It has been reported that as ambassador to Iraq, Negroponte worked
to prevent gloomy reports from the CIA station chief from reaching Washington. How much bad news will he report to Bush?
Recently a former high ranking intelligence official reminded Seymour Hersh that the U.S. had supported military
hit squads in Central America in the 1980s and added, "The objective now is to recruit locals in any area we want. And we
aren’t going to tell Congress about it." In addition U.S. Special Forces "action teams" will operate in many countries on
intelligence missions. A former military officer told Hersh, "We’re going to be riding with the bad boys." Will Negroponte
inform Congress about these activities? It has just come to light that the CIA had used a Boeing 737 to transport detainees–
chained to the floor– to various outposts for interrogation, often by brutal foreign intelligence services. One wonders if
Negroponte will permit this practice to continue. Will he reign in the military intelligence officers and civilian intelligence
contractors whose misdeeds at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo have been documented? We know that he tolerated human rights abuses
in the 1980s and years later continued to tell Congress that he knew nothing about these horrors. Are there circumstances
under which he would fail to respect the rights of American citizens? Will he be truthful in the future when testifying before
Congress?10:47 pm est
8:40 pm est
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