Shades of Blue

Tuesday, January 31, 2006

No-Spy List

You've heard of "no-call" lists. Now you can sign up for a "no-spy" list, courtesy of ProgressNow Action.

If you have found little to laugh about over President Bush's illegal domestic spying program, turn up your speakers and click here to watch ProgressTV's 2 minute Bush Spy Video. Then take action to protect your privacy.
Over 50 million American citizens in twenty-eight states already are signed on to telephone "No-Call Lists" that protect them from unwanted telemarketing calls. But when it comes to protecting ourselves from being spied on by President Bush and the National Security Agency we have no protections.
Until Now. To ask for protection from unwanted domestic eavesdropping, click this form to
sign up for the No-Spy List:

Casual Cruelties

A man killed himself in the neighborhood last night. He wasn't a particularly good man and he wasn't a particularly bad man. He was just a man.

He decided that it was harder facing every day than facing an uncertain night. So he found his rommate's gun, put it to his head and pulled the trigger. No one there; just him and his fate.

You see he was kind of homeless except for the kindness of another who let him stay in his house when the days and nights were too cold to be elsewhere. He had a lot of problems that overwhelmed him. But I know he hadn't started out that way.

He had probably been a good son and hopeful young man. Then he shipped off to war for someone else's ends. What he was when he came back was not what got shipped out. What came back was the man who would ultimately sit in the backyard on a January night and decide to put an end to the internal pain. It was a man wounded by casual cruelties.

All along the way others' casual cruelties had influenced his paths. The people who decided to send strangers they never knew to fight other strangers they never knew over things the people really didn't need inflicted the first and most crushing of the casual cruelties. When he came back he was forgotten, another casual cruelty, by the government that had so easily tossed him into harms' way to begin with. His pension and medical care was cut, casually and cruelly, oftentimes by people who had found ways to avoid fighting the other strangers.

All along the way, this man was buffeted by casual cruelty, one after another. There was no great evil intention, no blistering hatred of the man, to cause his pain. Just one casual cruelty after another inflicted by people who would never know him. Drip, drip, drip. Until it was less painful to taste the used gunpowder as he put one bullet into his brain than to endure this extended water torture of a life.

So as you consider what you've heard during the State of the Union Address tonight and as its discussed during the coming days, ask yourself -- how will these ideas and proposals inflict or heal the casual cruelties in our world?

We can't help the man who's death sounded like nothing more than the particularly hard banging of a dumpster lid as he felt the one bullet cut into his head, but maybe, just maybe, we can find ways to stop some of the casual cruelties crushing others around us.

BOA meeting Friday - a packed house?

On Friday's agenda:
PS B.B.#69 - Kennedy/Flowers/Troupe/Bosley/Shelton/Griffin/Reed/McMillan/King/Boyd/ Williamson/Carter, An ord. establishing a Civilian Review Board containing definitions and a severability clause.

St. Louis Oracle has posted on this issue as well. Our Alderman Conway was undecided as of that post.

Coretta Scott King Passes On Today

Will there be any memorials in St. Louis?

Coretta Scott King, first known as the wife of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., then as his widow, then as an avid proselytizer for his vision of racial peace and non-violent social change, has died, her sister in law, Christine King Farris, said today.

Click here for full NYT article

Monday, January 30, 2006

Keystone Cops at least knew when cameras were running

How dense (or high on your own testosterone) do you have to be to NOT notice a news helicopter hovering over you?

Okay, I have hunting dogs and I understand the "thrill of the chase" but even my dogs know when they get called off their prey to back off. Did these cops just forget they didn't have jurisdiction in St. Louis? (Interesting they don't want to live or work here but they sure don't seem to mind when its time to kick somebody's bottom in St. Louis.) And the St. Louis cop, was it just that the smell of blood got to him?

Now in all fairness to St. Louis cops, most of the ones I've dealt with have been very good. Most of the cops in our neighborhood are sensible, intelligent, friendly and on-the-ball folks. Some of the guys patrolling around the 8th Ward really are the best and brightest. (At the very least they would have looked up, seen the helicopter and had the good sense to think several times before they jumped in the fun-for-all in front of them.) Maybe that's why this seems just soooo wrong. We've come to expect more from OUR guys in blue.

Hard choices for young women stationed in the Middle East -- Dehydration and death OR rape by their fellow soldiers

Thanks to the topnotch journalists at Truthout for their report on the following atrocity of military management.

Picture this. You're a young woman right out of high school. You've joined the military and now you're stationed in the Middle East. Now you might not be on the front lines in terms of getting shot at by Iraqi insurgents but don't let your guard down. You're still very much in danger of getting raped by the same guys who came over on the transports with you-- your fellow American soldiers.

That's right. Our young women serving in Iraq and Afghanistan are often MORE in danger from the guys stationed with them than the guys they are supposed to be there to defeat.

How's that you say? Well, as it turns out the military doesn't seem to care about the women who serve or their safety. The women's latrines are outside and away from the barracks so when a woman has to, as they used to say, water the daisies, she takes her life and physical safety into her hands to do so. So many women are getting raped while trying to take care of their natural needs at night that, according to Lt. Col. Janic Karpinski testifying in New York, several young women have died due to dehydration. In fear of losing their lives and/or being raped they refuse to drink liquids late into the afternoon or at night. In this way they hoped to avoid having to venture into the dangerous areas between their baracks and latrines. The result in 120 degree temperatures was predictable and tragic. They died of deydration in their sleep.

On top of this horrendous fact, Karpinski says that military leaders are covering up the causes of these young girls' deaths.

Would you think that if the people in charge knew that young women were being raped and beaten or dying in their sleep to avoid being raped and beaten that someone in charge would do something? Think again.

Let's see, They give those who've been raped an 800 number that rings into the States and is never answered by a human, only a machine. There is no military justice focused on the rapers. And no one seems to have even considered having women's latrines close enough to the barracks (maybe even inside for a novel, sort-of modern touch) so that young women don't have to choose between their bodies or their lives.

I could go on and on but I won't. Instead let me refer you to the Truthout article itself. The reality is much harsher than any anger I could express.

I do have two questions. What's going to happen when the rapers return home? Are we looking at a segment of this generation that thinks its okay to rape and assault young women in their own neighborhoods and cities? And we won't know who they are because, ahem, no one ever thought it important enough to catch and prosecute these guys.

And what about the women who've been exposed to this institutionalized form of abuse? How do they fit back into society? Even if they haven't been raped, how can they ever trust that American society will protect them? It didn't in Iraq so why should it in St. Louis or Chesterfield or Arnold? When they were protecting us, the military was hanging them out to be raped.

Sunday, January 29, 2006

If you're in the Bush administration, its more important to keep it quiet than keep it real

Did you ever hear the stories about how Stalin's civil servants used to go to great lengths to keep foreign visitors, and sometimes even Stalin himself, from knowing just how bad things were in the countryside? When visits were scheduled into areas outside Moscow, the toadies would put up fake sideboards along the route with painted pictures of sweet little homes and prosperous-looking businesses. Of course anyone looking at the pictures would know it was less than smoke and mirrors. But I doubt anyone ever spoke up to let them know THEY could see that the emperor had no clothes and no houses either. In fact the Russians didn't have much in the way of food or hope either.

That's what its like in the States now when it comes to global warming. Bush's folks don't want us talking about the very real problems and changes headed our way and into the future of the next generations. Instead, as the following New York Times article from today's paper shows, they would much rather the very people who's job it is to warn us do nothing. I guess if you can't use happy talk then don't talk at all.

January 29, 2006

Climate Expert Says NASA Tried to Silence Him
By ANDREW C. REVKIN
The top climate scientist at NASA says the Bush administration has tried to stop him from speaking out since he gave a lecture last month calling for prompt reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases linked to global warming.

The scientist, James E. Hansen, longtime director of the agency's Goddard Institute for Space Studies, said in an interview that officials at NASA headquarters had ordered the public affairs staff to review his coming lectures, papers, postings on the Goddard Web site and requests for interviews from journalists.

Dr. Hansen said he would ignore the restrictions. "They feel their job is to be this censor of information going out to the public," he said.

Dean Acosta, deputy assistant administrator for public affairs at the space agency, said there was no effort to silence Dr. Hansen. "That's not the way we operate here at NASA," Mr. Acosta said. "We promote openness and we speak with the facts."

He said the restrictions on Dr. Hansen applied to all National Aeronautics and Space Administration personnel. He added that government scientists were free to discuss scientific findings, but that policy statements should be left to policy makers and appointed spokesmen.
Mr. Acosta said other reasons for requiring press officers to review interview requests were to have an orderly flow of information out of a sprawling agency and to avoid surprises. "This is not about any individual or any issue like global warming," he said. "It's about coordination."
Dr. Hansen strongly disagreed with this characterization, saying such procedures had already prevented the public from fully grasping recent findings about climate change that point to risks ahead.

"Communicating with the public seems to be essential," he said, "because public concern is probably the only thing capable of overcoming the special interests that have obfuscated the topic."

Dr. Hansen, 63, a physicist who joined the space agency in 1967, directs efforts to simulate the global climate on computers at the Goddard Institute in Morningside Heights in Manhattan.
Since 1988, he has been issuing public warnings about the long-term threat from heat-trapping emissions, dominated by carbon dioxide, that are an unavoidable byproduct of burning coal, oil and other fossil fuels. He has had run-ins with politicians or their appointees in various administrations, including budget watchers in the first Bush administration and Vice President Al Gore.

In 2001, Dr. Hansen was invited twice to brief Vice President Dick Cheney and other cabinet members on climate change. White House officials were interested in his findings showing that cleaning up soot, which also warms the atmosphere, was an effective and far easier first step than curbing carbon dioxide.

He fell out of favor with the White House in 2004 after giving a speech at the University of Iowa before the presidential election, in which he complained that government climate scientists were being muzzled and said he planned to vote for Senator John Kerry.

But Dr. Hansen said that nothing in 30 years equaled the push made since early December to keep him from publicly discussing what he says are clear-cut dangers from further delay in curbing carbon dioxide.

In several interviews with The New York Times in recent days, Dr. Hansen said it would be irresponsible not to speak out, particularly because NASA's mission statement includes the phrase "to understand and protect our home planet."

He said he was particularly incensed that the directives had come through telephone conversations and not through formal channels, leaving no significant trails of documents.
Dr. Hansen's supervisor, Franco Einaudi, said there had been no official "order or pressure to say shut Jim up." But Dr. Einaudi added, "That doesn't mean I like this kind of pressure being applied."

The fresh efforts to quiet him, Dr. Hansen said, began in a series of calls after a lecture he gave on Dec. 6 at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco. In the talk, he said that significant emission cuts could be achieved with existing technologies, particularly in the case of motor vehicles, and that without leadership by the United States, climate change would eventually leave the earth "a different planet."

The administration's policy is to use voluntary measures to slow, but not reverse, the growth of emissions.

After that speech and the release of data by Dr. Hansen on Dec. 15 showing that 2005 was probably the warmest year in at least a century, officials at the headquarters of the space agency repeatedly phoned public affairs officers, who relayed the warning to Dr. Hansen that there would be "dire consequences" if such statements continued, those officers and Dr. Hansen said in interviews.

Among the restrictions, according to Dr. Hansen and an internal draft memorandum he provided to The Times, was that his supervisors could stand in for him in any news media interviews.

Mr. Acosta said the calls and meetings with Goddard press officers were not to introduce restrictions, but to review existing rules. He said Dr. Hansen had continued to speak frequently with the news media.

But Dr. Hansen and some of his colleagues said interviews were canceled as a result.
In one call, George Deutsch, a recently appointed public affairs officer at NASA headquarters, rejected a request from a producer at National Public Radio to interview Dr. Hansen, said Leslie McCarthy, a public affairs officer responsible for the Goddard Institute.

Citing handwritten notes taken during the conversation, Ms. McCarthy said Mr. Deutsch called N.P.R. "the most liberal" media outlet in the country. She said that in that call and others, Mr. Deutsch said his job was "to make the president look good" and that as a White House appointee that might be Mr. Deutsch's priority.

But she added: "I'm a career civil servant and Jim Hansen is a scientist. That's not our job. That's not our mission. The inference was that Hansen was disloyal."

Normally, Ms. McCarthy would not be free to describe such conversations to the news media, but she agreed to an interview after Mr. Acosta, at NASA headquarters, told The Times that she would not face any retribution for doing so.

Mr. Acosta, Mr. Deutsch's supervisor, said that when Mr. Deutsch was asked about the conversations, he flatly denied saying anything of the sort. Mr. Deutsch referred all interview requests to Mr. Acosta.

Ms. McCarthy, when told of the response, said: "Why am I going to go out of my way to make this up and back up Jim Hansen? I don't have a dog in this race. And what does Hansen have to gain?"

Mr. Acosta said that for the moment he had no way of judging who was telling the truth. Several colleagues of both Ms. McCarthy and Dr. Hansen said Ms. McCarthy's statements were consistent with what she told them when the conversations occurred.

"He's not trying to create a war over this," said Larry D. Travis, an astronomer who is Dr. Hansen's deputy at Goddard, "but really feels very strongly that this is an obligation we have as federal scientists, to inform the public."

Dr. Travis said he walked into Ms. McCarthy's office in mid-December at the end of one of the calls from Mr. Deutsch demanding that Dr. Hansen be better controlled.

In an interview on Friday, Ralph J. Cicerone, an atmospheric chemist and the president of the National Academy of Sciences, the nation's leading independent scientific body, praised Dr. Hansen's scientific contributions and said he had always seemed to describe his public statements clearly as his personal views.

"He really is one of the most productive and creative scientists in the world," Dr. Cicerone said. "I've heard Hansen speak many times and I've read many of his papers, starting in the late 70's. Every single time, in writing or when I've heard him speak, he's always clear that he's speaking for himself, not for NASA or the administration, whichever administration it's been."
The fight between Dr. Hansen and administration officials echoes other recent disputes. At climate laboratories of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, for example, many scientists who routinely took calls from reporters five years ago can now do so only if the interview is approved by administration officials in Washington, and then only if a public affairs officer is present or on the phone.

Where scientists' points of view on climate policy align with those of the administration, however, there are few signs of restrictions on extracurricular lectures or writing.
One example is Indur M. Goklany, assistant director of science and technology policy in the policy office of the Interior Department. For years, Dr. Goklany, an electrical engineer by training, has written in papers and books that it may be better not to force cuts in greenhouse gases because the added prosperity from unfettered economic activity would allow countries to exploit benefits of warming and adapt to problems.

In an e-mail exchange on Friday, Dr. Goklany said that in the Clinton administration he was shifted to nonclimate-related work, but added that he had never had to stop his outside writing, as long as he identified the views as his own.

"One reason why I still continue to do the extracurricular stuff," he wrote, "is because one doesn't have to get clearance for what I plan on saying or writing."
Copyright 2006The New York Times Company

I never thought when I was getting that degree in Soviet Studies all those many years ago that I would be using it to understand my own country. Too bad.

Saturday, January 28, 2006

Congratulatons Jim Talent!

This just in from Kansas City... Senator Talent has been named (drum roll please) the Most Bigoted Senator! Way to go Jim!!!! Working hard to attain low goals!!!


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:Contact: William Rosen 816.363.5417
DontAmendKC@hotmail.com
PLEASE FORWARD TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: Senator Jim Talent (R-MO) Is Awarded The Most Bigoted Senator Award

(Kansas City, MO) DontAmend Kansas City has awarded Senator Jim Talent (R-MO) the Most Bigoted Senator Award. "It's frankly time to tell the truth about our national representatives." says William Rosen spokesperson for the Kansas City Chapter. "Senator Talent, by his own record, has been the most virulently anti-gay Senator in the United States Senate." "His original co-sponsorship of the Federal Marriage Amendment ([S.J.RES.13.IS]), and his flat out lies about his promises to not cut Federal Medicaid show to his Missouri constituents that he is not only bigoted, but also lies about what he is going to do for Missouri."

In March 2005, Talent wrote in a Letter to the Editor that he would "continue to support increased federal funding for this critical program." [St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Letter to the Editor, 3/21/05] [1]. The St Louis Post-Dispatch editorial board slammed Talent's decision to vote against protecting Medicaid: "One would have thought that Missouri's Sens. Christopher S. `Kit' Bond and Jim Talent would have joined the effort, in light of the Medicaid crisis in Missouri. But both stuck to the hard GOP line of cutting taxes on the rich while cutting health care for the poor." [St. Louis Post-Dispatch Editorial, 3/20/05]."

Thanks to Steve Belosi with the St. Charles Democrats for passing this on to us!

Medicare scandal brought to you by Abramoff and the Republicans

Think the problem with the Medicare prescription program was a bi-partisan mess? Think again!

Think the Abramoff scandal is bipartisan? Think again!

Think neither of these have much to do with how YOU voted? Think again!

Truthout has published a letter from three good Democrats (as opposed to the Republican-lites like one Senator from Connecticut) calling for an investigation into the Abramoff's Alexander Strategy Group and how they helped to engineer the current Medicare prescription fiasco for the benefit of their Pharma clients. Pelosi, Waxman and Hoyer have laid it out in their letter to Senate Majority Leader Hastert why Abramoff's involvement in the Medicare mayhem should be investigated, along with his good buddy Tom Delay.

Tom Delay, he's old news right? Wrong! He's not out of the picture yet and more importantly it looks like his successor might just be another "friend to Pharma," Roy Blount. Our own PG Matt's daddy. According to reports, Roy Blount plans on carrying forward Delay's gameplan. So don't worry big donors. The Republicans will still get to YOUR needs. Roy may be a different face but he's still Delay's boy.

So when you hear the news media talking about a "bi-partisan Abramoff scandal," just laugh. This is no more 'bi-partisan" than Tom Delay's and Roy Blount's list of favorite lobbyists and causes. Either the media commentators are too stupid to know better, too lazy to look for themselves or perhaps just too loyal to other masters than the American people. Roy Blount knows which is the real reason mainstream media won't tell you the truth and you should too.

Friday, January 27, 2006

British report Israel preparing to attack Iran

I hope all those folks who have been supporting Israel are ready for what Israel is about to unleash on the world. The British Sunday Post reports that The Jerusalem Post has reported that the Israeli Air Force (IAF) is ready to rock and roll into burgeoning nuclear Iran.

That's what the world needs, a total escalation of Middle Eastern tensions into a religious war! This isn't the 60's and Iran isn't Entebbe. If the Israelis do their little two-step into Iran you've got to know the fecal matter will be propelled into the rotating blades. There's no quicky in-and-out going to happen no matter how good the IAF is. Why, because it WON'T be just Iran retaliating.

Too bad we don't have a President who knows how to stop wars rather than inflame them. (Gosh, I miss Bill C. and his peace brigades!).

Thanks to the ever-vigilent Truth-Out independent news feed for news you won't see on Channel 5, 4 or 2.

Robert Cray releases anti-war video!

Whether or not you're a blues fan, and more importantly a Robert Cray fan, it doesn't matter. If you have doubts about the US involvement in Iraq check out Cray's new video on the American Friends Service Committee site!!! Classic Cray! Also bound to be one of the classic anti-war videos as well.

Cray's wife Cray-Turner directed the video and she used an actual returning vet as the focus. Fearful war footage is intermixed with moving images.

Seems to me I remember that once Americans started hearing strong anti-war anthems and seeing real photos and film of the actual terror of war, they decied it was time to get out. Are we nearing that point with Iraq yet?

Things that make you go hmmmmm

Black Republicans aren’t getting state appointments [P-D reprint]
Z. Dwight Billingsly

I’ve been watching to see how Missouri’s governor would reward long-time black Republicans who have worked tirelesslyfor our party’s candidates — from Ronald Reagan through George W. Bush and, at the state level, from John Ashcroft through MattBlunt. When the party wins, the party activists expect to win, too. Looking at Governor Blunt’s record in this regard at the one-year mark, there is much for black Republicans to be concerned about. President Bush has appointed highly qualified, black Republicans to powerful positions in his cabinet and numerous critical subcabinet positions. I admire his inclination to ignore the ultraliberal organizations such as the NAACP in favor of the more centrist groups such as the Black Chamber of Commerce. And the president’s decision to empower conservative black faith-basedinstitutions was brilliant; it has opened a Republican pipeline into a part of the black community that was especially tired of beingtaken for granted by Democrats who are out of step with the community’s values. Likewise, Republican Sen. Jim Talent has paid particular attention to having regular meetings with black Republicans and hasreached out through those black Republicans to others who appreciate his pro-economicdevelopment, pro-small-business agenda. The governor, however, has yet to follow these examples. Indeed, when it comes to appointments to state boards and commissionsor even the most basic outreach, Blunt appears to have forgotten Missouri’s loyal black Republicans. Blunt’s victory completed GOP control of state government, and black Republicans expected to see appointments to positionsthat refl ected their commitment to the party. That hasn’t happened, despite the presence of exceptionally well-qualifi ed candidates for openings. Black Republicans I’ve spokento have almost unanimously expressed disappointment with the lack of opportunities made available to them. Most of them havebeen approached only for slots traditionally reserved for blacks: the Martin Luther King Holiday commission, for example. Late in November, I asked James Harris, Blunt’s director of boards and commissions, for names and positions of people that thegovernor has appointed to boards, commissions and judicial posts and those in his cabinet and to identify each appointee bypolitical affi liation. I also asked which of the appointees are African-Americans. Harris told me I would get the information by the end of December, and then he started telling me why more black Republicansweren’t being appointed: There aren’t that many black Republicans (the easier to identify them, I’d think); there aren’t that manyqualified black Republicans (insulting and untrue); they’re interested in the best-qualified people, regardless of color (uh-huh); they’re interested in the best-qualified blacks, regardless of party (political appointments are all about partisanship). We’ve heard these kinds of reasons before — from people who aren’t really interested in inclusion. Imagine my surprise when December came and went without my receiving the information I’d requested. The Republican Party says it wants to attract more black support, but how much credibility can it have with the voting public when it doesn’t even take care of its own? Missouri Republicans are fl ying high now, but term limits and a presidential election in 2008 without a Republican incumbent and no Senate race could change that. This is the ideal time for the party to place black Republicans in signifi cant, influential positions to prove that it understands the need to use all of its assets to maintain power and grow.

Z. Dwight Billingsly is a principal of Branford Gateway Investment co., a longtime activist in local Republican politics and a regular contributor to the Commentary page.

Kerry leads charge against Alito -- Go John Go!

John Kerry couldn't have found a better time to find a missing part of his anatomy.

Looks like John Kerry has a backbone after all. Many of us wondered if the Vietnam Vet had it removed after Vietnam when we saw his wimpy, lackluster presidential campaign but NOOOOOO. He just had it parked in the other vacation home I guess. Seems the butler must have found it and dusted it off for him to use to lead the fillibuster against Alito. Wherever it was, I'm just glad its attached to his body for the moment.

Now let's see some other Democrats find their "spines" and jump into the fray.

And oh, in case your Repub friends have you wondering if the Dems have just gone bonkers after a "nice guy" as one of my Repub friends describes him, think again. Alito's stands on supporting an imperial presidency should be chilling your spine. In Alito's world illegal presidential phone taps are okay and illegal torture of prisoners is part of doing world business. Hmm, sounds like something one of Stalin's boys would have said, doesn't it?

And if you haven't let our Senators know that you aren't ready for a fascist state, today's a great day to dial 'em up. Heck, you know Talent and Bond's staffs are just dying to hear from us!

Changing face of the 8th Ward

When I moved into the 8th Ward some few years ago, the political flame was only being kept alive by a relatively few number of people who had faithfully supported the group. But now it seems we are one of, if not THE, hotbed of Democratic and progressive activity in the region! Now let's really shake it up! We need to hear from as many of you as possible about what's on YOUR mind about politics locally, nationally and internationally. To paraphrase Buzz LightYear "To the 8th Ward and Beyond!"

Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Operation SafeStreet Closes

Tomorrow Operation Safestreet is closing it's doors after more than twenty one years of service in our community. The Home Security Program (Smoke Detectors, Dead Bolt Locks, Door repair (after burglaries),Metal Bars for Basement Windows for the Elderly (free of charge) and a minimum cost to others along with Graffiti removal and the Car collard and Steering Wheel Club Programs will need to furnished by other sources. Please contact the NSO office (622-4628) in City Hall for follow up.

Monday, January 23, 2006

Open Letter to Chris Matthews

Chris Matthews has repeatedly compared Americans who are concerned about the war in Iraq to Osama bin Laden. The undersigned are asking companies to refrain from advertising on Matthews' MSNBC TV show "Hardball" until he publicly apologizes and promises to stop his right-wing bias. The original open letter is here. READ MORE

Ford Closing Hazelwood Plant

January 23rd, 2006
from the Post-Dispatch:
Ford Motor Co. reportedly will close at least 10 assembly and parts plants, including those in Hazelwood and Atlanta, and lay off close to 30,000 hourly and salaried employees over the next four years, according to an article on the Wall Street Journal Online.
Citing anonymous sources “familiar with the plan,” Wall Street Journal said the automaker may not identify all the facilities that it plans to close when Ford announces its “Way Forward” restructuring plan on Monday morning. However, the Journal said the Hazelwood plant — where about 1,450 work — would be among those facilities that Ford plans to close. A Ford spokeswoman declined to comment on the story, saying the automaker would unveil its restructuring plan on Monday.
Declining market share and the sudden loss in popularity of its truck-based sport utility vehicles have left Ford with too many North American factories and workers to operate efficiently and profitably. Analysts say Ford could shutter as many as five assembly plants — shaving off rough a quarter of the automaker’s current production capacity.Other assembly plants mentioned for possible closure are those in Wixom, Mich.;St. Paul, Minn.; Cuautitlán, a suburb of Mexico City; and St. Thomas, Ontario.

Thursday, January 19, 2006

Could Harry Hursti hack St Louis?

The Harri Hursti Hack and its Importance to our Nation
By Susan Pynchon, Florida Coalition for Fair Elections
January 19, 2006
I was one of ten people present at the “hack” of the Leon County,Florida voting system, which took place on Tuesday, December 13,2005 around 4:30 in the afternoon at the county elections warehouse.Leon County’s voting system is the Diebold Accu-Vote OS 1.94w (opticalscan).
The Leon County Supervisor of Elections, Ion Sancho, authorized a“test” of his Diebold voting system to see if election results could bealtered using only a memory card. Harri Hursti, a computer programmerfrom Finland facilitated the test and it has come to be known as the“Harri Hursti Hack.” Following is a description of that hack and its significance for ournation, which I hope will correct much of the misinformationcirculating regarding this event.
full text of the article