Thursday, February 10, 2011

Davids Daily Dose - Thursday February 10th


Some good articles today, and I would recommend #1 and #3 if you want to be informed about what is really going on.....






1/  If you read one thing today, read this column from Bob Herbert. He encapsulates the anger, the frustration, the blatant unfairness of our allegedly democratic system that celebrates the rich and powerful, and leaves the average worker and the middle class twisting...... 

Look out the window. The Ronald Reagan crowd loved to talk about morning in America. For millions of individuals and families, perhaps the majority, it’s more like twilight — with nighttime coming on fast.
More and more Americans are being left behind in an economy that is being divided ever more starkly between the haves and the have-nots. Not only are millions of people jobless and millions more underemployed, but more and more of the so-called fringe benefits and public services that help make life livable, or even bearable, in a modern society are being put to the torch.
Employer-based pensions, paid vacations, health benefits and the like are going the way of phone booths and VCRs. As poverty increases and reliable employment becomes less and less the norm, the dwindling number of workers with any sort of job security or guaranteed pensions (think teachers and other modestly compensated public employees) are being viewed with increasing contempt. How dare they enjoy a modicum of economic comfort?
...................................
For a variety of reasons, there are not enough tax revenues being generated to pay for the basic public services that one would expect in an advanced country like the United States. The rich are not shouldering their fair share of the tax burden. The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq continue to consume an insane amount of revenue. And there are not enough jobs available at decent enough pay to ease some of the demand for public services while at the same time increasing the amount of taxes paid by ordinary workers.
The U.S. cannot cut its way out of this crisis. Instead of trying to figure out how to keep 4-year-olds out of pre-kindergarten classes, or how to withhold life-saving treatments from Medicaid recipients, or how to cheat the elderly out of their Social Security, the nation’s leaders should be trying seriously to figure out what to do about the future of the American work force.
..............................................................

For American corporations, the action is increasingly elsewhere. Their interests are not the same as those of workers, or the country as a whole. As Harold Meyerson put it in The American Prospect: “Our corporations don’t need us anymore. Half their revenues come from abroad. Their products, increasingly, come from abroad as well.”
American workers are in a world of hurt. Anyone who thinks that politicians can improve this sorry state of affairs by hacking away at Social Security, Medicare and the public schools are great candidates for involuntary commitment.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/08/opinion/08herbert.html?emc=eta1


Here's a view on how the middle class are coping - from Derfcity
















2/  Two themes to this column from Frank Rich - one is the assumption by a lot of the media the revolution in Egypt is being driven by Twitter and Facebook social media - it isn't. 
The second is the demonisation of anything Muslim has made the vast majority of Americans completely ignorant of anything to do with the Middle East.....one of the amazing stats is that even now, after 9 years in this pisshole, only 30% of Americans can find Iraq on a map.....

A month ago most Americans could not have picked Hosni Mubarak out of a police lineup. American foreign policy, even in Afghanistan, was all but invisible throughout the 2010 election season. Foreign aid is the only federal budget line that a clear-cut majority of Americans says should be cut. And so now — as the world’s most unstable neighborhood explodes before our eyes — does anyone seriously believe that most Americans are up to speed? Our government may be scrambling, but that’s nothing compared to its constituents. After a near-decade of fighting wars in the Arab world, we can still barely distinguish Sunni from Shia.

The live feed from Egypt is riveting. We can’t get enough of revolution video — even if, some nights, Middle West blizzards take precedence over Middle East battles on the networks’ evening news. But more often than not we have little or no context for what we’re watching. That’s the legacy of years of self-censored, superficial, provincial and at times Islamophobic coverage of the Arab world in a large swath of American news media. Even now we’re more likely to hear speculation about how many cents per gallon the day’s events might cost at the pump than to get an intimate look at the demonstrators’ lives.
Perhaps the most revealing window into America’s media-fed isolation from this crisis — small an example as it may seem — is the default assumption that the Egyptian uprising, like every other paroxysm in the region since the Green Revolution in Iran 18 months ago, must be powered by the twin American-born phenomena of Twitter and Facebook. Television news — at once threatened by the power of the Internet and fearful of appearing unhip — can’t get enough of this cliché.














3/  Fox News - There's no such thing as climate change.......

There is of course the other 98% of the world who realise there are strong forces afoot in our global climate that are changing our lives, and one of the major effects is on the food supply, which is one of the causes behind the Egyptian demonstrations.
Paul Krugman says this is just the beginning.....

We’re in the midst of a global food crisis — the second in three years. World food prices hit a record in January, driven by huge increases in the prices of wheat, corn, sugar and oils. These soaring prices have had only a modest effect on U.S. inflation, which is still low by historical standards, but they’re having a brutal impact on the world’s poor, who spend much if not most of their income on basic foodstuffs.

The consequences of this food crisis go far beyond economics. After all, the big question about uprisings against corrupt and oppressive regimes in the Middle East isn’t so much why they’re happening as why they’re happening now. And there’s little question that sky-high food prices have been an important trigger for popular rage.
So what’s behind the price spike? American right-wingers (and the Chinese) blame easy-money policies at the Federal Reserve, with at least onecommentator declaring that there is “blood on Bernanke’s hands.” Meanwhile, President Nicolas Sarkozy of France blames speculators, accusing them of “extortion and pillaging.”
But the evidence tells a different, much more ominous story. While several factors have contributed to soaring food prices, what really stands out is the extent to which severe weather events have disrupted agricultural production. And these severe weather events are exactly the kind of thing we’d expect to see as rising concentrations of greenhouse gases change our climate — which means that the current food price surge may be just the beginning.















4/  This is the Black Eyed Peas halftime show at Superbowl, all 12 1/2 minutes of it......if you're like most people, about the time this came on you had eaten a huge, unhealthy but delicious "football" meal and washed it down with a few adult beverages....so here's the chance to see this show again in case you were distracted. Or in the bathroom. 

This show got mixed reviews, but if you consider the venue and the pressure they are under it's pretty good. The dancing is excellent, Will.I.Am does his political song about the 9 minute mark and the closing number is amazing .... B+.....

But they could have got Usher pants that at least fit him....oh well.....
















5/  You may have heard the phrase "peak oil", and what this means is that the worlds oil supply is at it's maximum and the supplies will soon start to diminish, leading to price rises we haven't seen before. According to a Wikileaks cable Saudi Arabia is very close to it's limit.....
This makes the lack of policies in place in this country to conserve oil so incredibly irresponsible, and reflects the big oil oligarchy's influence on our legislators. Belay that - Congress and the entire government are wholly owned by the large energy corporations.

A Wikileaks cable has reportedly revealed that Saudi Arabia may not have enough oil to stop prices from skyrocketing. That is, depending on how you define the country's oil reserves.
Cables from the U.S. embassy in Saudi capital Riyadh reviewed by the Guardian, describe a warning from a senior Saudi oil executive, who said the country's crude oil reserves have been overstated by nearly 40 percent, some 300 billion barrels.
The Guardian reports that Sadad al-Husseini, former head of exploration at the Saudi oil monopoly Aramco, told the U.S. consul general in Riyadh that the Saudi oil company could not keep up with the 12.5 million barrels a day needed to keep prices low. Peak oil, he said, could be reached as early as 2012.















6/  Here's a video you haven't seen.....and it's obvious why. This is up for 1/ best new song and 2/ best video in the Grammy awards.....it's Ce Lo Green with "Fxxk You"......
It's actually a charming video if you like very large guys in electric blue suits, and seeing a 12 year old sing the title of the song for a while.....3 minutes....

Watch this, and the Roman Empire, or the ancient City of Babylon might come to your mind.....but hey you may like it.....we're like Fox News here...."we report, you decide"......















7/  If you're an intelligent and aware person and have the occasional medical problem, you will probably go on line to check symptoms, treatments etc. 

You may be visiting Web MD - but this article says don't......Web MD has been captured by the drug industry and a lot of their medical recommendations are pharmaceuticals. There is a better alternative......so read on......

If you’re looking for the name of a new pill to “ask your doctor about,” as the ads say, the Mayo Clinic HealthInformation site is not the place for you. If you’re shopping for a newly branded disorder that might account for your general feeling of unease, Mayo is not for you either. But if you want workaday, can-do health information in a nonprofit environment, plug your symptoms into Mayo’s Symptom Checker. What you’ll get is: No hysteria. No drug peddling. Good medicine. Good ideas.
This is very, very rare on the medical Web, which is dominated by an enormous and powerful site whose name — oh, what the hay, it’s WebMD — has become a panicky byword among laysurfers for “hypochondria time suck.” In more whistle-blowing quarters, WebMD is synonymous with Big Pharma Shilling. A February 2010 investigation into WebMD’s relationship with drug maker Eli Lilly by Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa confirmed the suspicions of longtime WebMD users. With the site’s (admitted) connections to pharmaceutical and other companies, WebMD has become permeated with pseudomedicine and subtle misinformation.
















8/  Paul McCartney's upcoming death is getting his fans very excited......Onion News has the rather ghoulish story.....2 minutes.....


















9/  This makes sense - making airport security more efficient.....as the article says the present system assumes everyone, grandmothers, kids, people in wheelchairs, all are treated as potential terrorists.....
The bad news is that to get pre-cleared means giving all kinds of personal information to Homeland Security.....so what have you got to hide? Eh?

But in the wake of the furor last fall over pat-downs and body scanners, several industry organizations are working on proposals to overhaul security checkpoints to provide more or less scrutiny based on the risk profile of each traveler.
While the proposals are in the early stages, they represent a growing consensus around a concept that has the support of John S. Pistole, the head of the Transportation Security Administration: divide travelers into three groups — trusted, regular or risky — and apply different screening techniques based on what is known about the passengers.
“Today we have T.S.A. agents looking at TV screens, but they don’t know anything about the person going through the system,” said Steve Lott, a spokesman for the International Air Transport Association. “The idea is to take data that the government and the airlines are already collecting about passengers and bring it to the checkpoint.”














10/  In the market to buy a new house? Know anyone who is in the process of getting a mortgage? Is it a Pulte home? Walk away now.....slowly, then pick up the pace and get out of there!!! They are going to screw you.....here are some case histories that will get your attention.....

Her local bank approved her for amortgage. But then a Pulte Homes saleswoman told her that she would get a $4,000 credit toward closing costs if she took out aloan with the homebuilder’s banking unit instead. Ms. Calderone, 38, agreed. She deposited $20,000 in earnest money and set aside $80,000 more for a down payment on the $347,000 house. Her closing date, documents show, was scheduled for late summer, about six months later.
Then her troubles began. Although she had been “preapproved” by Pulte, the company ultimately denied her the loan. Then, contending that Ms. Calderone had defaulted on the purchase agreement by failing to close on time, Pulte kept her $20,000 deposit. The house went back on the market.














11/  Of all of the countries in Africa, the Congo is the nightmare - no functioning government at all, lots of easily acessable riches - gold, diamonds, copper, tin. One of the nastiest problems is the rampant sexual violence on the women of the Congo....
But there's hope - fragile, just a beginning, but hope.....

For years, diplomats, aid workers, academics and government officials here have been vexed almost to the point of paralysis about how to attack this country’s staggering problem of sexual violence, in which hundreds of thousands of women have been raped, many quite sadistically, by the various armed groups who haunt the hills of eastern Congo.
Sending in more troops has compounded the problem. United Nations peacekeepers have failed to stop it. Would reforming the Congolese military work? Building up the Congolese state? Pushing harder to regulate so-called conflict minerals to starve the rebels of an income?
............................................
Eastern Congo is one of the poorest and most dysfunctional places on earth, but it is also one of the most beautiful, a land of sculptured green mountains and deep, clear lakes and trees upon trees. It is teeming with riches: gold, diamonds, timber, copper, tin and more. And though the people here, especially the women, have been brutally abused for years — many have had assault rifles thrust inside them, others raped with chunks of wood and left incontinent and sterile for life — their spirits have hardly been crushed.














12/  Ah Florida......low information voter heaven.......

Amusing Fred Grimm column from the Miami Herald on some of the more looney gun bills introduced into the Florida legislature.....

Boredom, maybe. What else explains the confounding flurry of gun bills bobbing up in the Florida Legislature?
It’s almost as if the National Rifle Association, having dismantled even the most tepid gun-control measures and won all the big battles in the courts and legislatures, now tosses out ever more outlandish proposals just for the hell of it.
No legislator has been able to quite explain just why Florida needs a gun law (a felony with a $5 million fine) to gag physicians, even psychiatrists treating suicidal teenagers, from inquiring about firearms in the home. It’s not as if lawmakers suspected Florida doctors were compiling a secret gun registry (to feed UN invaders in black helicopters swooping down to seize Uncle Elbert’s deer rifle). No. The NRA, bored, wants to measure the far parameters of its unassailable political power.
Another inexplicable gun bill percolating through the 2011 legislative session (and endorsed by Gov. Rick Scott) would allow Florida gun slingers to tote firearms openly, in holsters. One might wonder why a state beholden to tourists, many from nations where vigilante justice is not a celebrated ideal, would want such infamy splashed across newspapers in London or Paris or Madrid or Berlin.
The same bill, poking a sharp stick into the eye of those outside the gun culture, would also legalize guns on college campuses. The legislation does include a special gun toting exception. No one can carry a gun “into any meeting of the Legislature or a committee thereof.”





 Our Governor, Big Rick, really is an easy target......this "budget" is a joke.....Scott Maxwell from the Orlando Sentinel calls him out....

But first, the lies.

That's actually a word I don't use very often. In fact, I checked our archives to confirm that, in all my years of writing a column for theSentinel, I've never called someone a flat-out "liar."

That changes today.

Rick Scott claimed time and time again that he wouldn't cut school spending.

He said it a variety of different ways. He vowed to "keep the school budgets the same." He said he'd hold education harmless. He even summed up his entire education budget plan in two words: "No cuts."

Those assurances allowed moderate and conservative voters who also cared about education to feel comfortable voting for him.

And yet, on Monday, he unveiled a budget that proposed more than $3 billion worth of cuts to Florida schools.

He cut it based on nearly every measure — total revenue, general state revenue, even per-pupil funding, a category in which Florida already lags the rest of the nation.

Scott tried to rewrite history this week by claiming he never really promised not to cut school funding. But the Pulitzer Prize-winners over at Politifact.com shot down that claim, too, rating it "False."

















13/  Good book - "A Discovery of Witches" by Deborah Harkness......romance, vampires, witches, demons......it's got everything!!! Well almost everything...there's no zombies.....but overall sounds like a very enjoyable read.....download it today!!!

Does this sound familiar? A woman falls in love with a moody, chiseled vampire with a great wardrobe and a quick temper. Of course it does, and comparisons between Twilight and Deborah Harkness' extraordinarily fun debut — the first in a planned trilogy — are unavoidable. But A Discovery of Witches, a thoroughly grown-up novel packed with gorgeous historical detail, has a gutsy, brainy heroine to match: Diana Bishop, a renowned scholar of 17th-century chemistry and a descendant of accomplished witches. Diana has spent most of her life resisting the magic within her. The power she's long denied swirls to the forefront, however, when she opens a bewitched manuscript in Oxford's famous Bodleian Library. Suddenly every vampire, witch, and daemon — yes, they walk among us; we humans are just oblivious to their presence — is up in her grill, hungry for the secrets she's unknowingly unlocked. It's 1,500-year-old vampire Matthew who makes the biggest impression. Diana falls madly for him, breaking every rule about interspecies dating. 












Todays video.....referee training.....










Todays church joke

Church Fart
This says it all about getting older & the whole aging thing.

An elderly couple are attending church services…

About halfway through, she writes a note and hands it to her husband.
It says,   "I just let out a silent fart, what do you think I should do?"

He scribbles back, "Put a new battery in your hearing aid."













Todays Tommy Cooper jokes [a British comedian from the 60's/70's]

1.  Two blondes walk into a building..........you'd think at least one of them would have seen it.

2  Phone answering machine message - '...If you want to buy marijuana, press the hash key...'

3.  A guy walks into the psychiatrist wearing only Clingfilm for shorts. The shrink says, 'Well, I can clearly see you're nuts.' 

4.  I went to buy some camouflage trousers the other day but I couldn't find any. 

5.  I went to the butchers the other day and I bet him 50 quid that he couldn't reach the meat off the top shelf. He said, 'No, the steaks are too high.' 

6.  My friend drowned in a bowl of muesli. A strong currant pulled him in. 

7 .  A man came round in hospital after a serious accident. He shouted, 'Doctor, doctor, I can't feel my legs!'
The doctor replied, 'I know you can't, I've cut your arms off' 

8.  I went to a seafood disco last week and pulled a muscle. 

9. Two Eskimos sitting in a kayak were chilly.. They lit a fire in the craft, it sank, proving once and for all that you can't have your kayak and heat it. 

10. Our ice cream man was found lying on the floor of his van covered with hundreds and thousands. Police say that he topped himself 

11.  Man goes to the doctor, with a strawberry growing out of his head.
Doc says 'I'll give you some cream to put on it.' 

12.  'Doc I can't stop singing 'The Green, Green Grass of Home'
'That sounds like Tom Jones syndrome.  '
'Is it common?'
'It's not unusual.' 

13. A man takes his Rotteweiller to the vet. 'My dog is cross-eyed, is there anything you can do for  him?'
'Well,' said the vet, 'let's have a look  at him'
So he picks the dog up and examines his eyes, then he checks his teeth. Finally, he says, ‘I’m going to have to put him down.' 'What?  Because he's cross-eyed?'
'No, because he's  really heavy'

14. Guy goes into the doctor’s. 'Doc, I've got a cricket ball stuck up my bottom.'
'How's that?'
'Don't you start.' 

15. Two elephants walk off a cliff...boom, boom! 

16.  What do you call a fish with no eyes? A fsh. 

17.. So I was getting into my car, and this bloke says  to me 'Can you give me a lift?'
I said 'Sure, you look great, the world's your oyster, go for it..' 

18. Apparently, 1 in 5 people in the world are Chinese. There are 5 people in my family, so it must be one of them.  It's either my mum or my Dad, or my older brother Colin, or my younger brother Ho-Cha-Chu.  But I think it’s Colin. 

19. Two fat blokes in a pub, one says to the other ‘Your round.' The other one says 'So are you, you fat .................!' 

20.  Police arrested two kids yesterday, one was drinking battery acid, and the other was eating fireworks. They charged one and let the other one off. 

21. ‘You know, somebody actually complimented me on my driving today. They left a little note on the windscreen. It said, 'Parking Fine.' So that was nice.' 

22.  A man walked into the doctors, he said, 'I've hurt my arm in several places'
The doctor said, ‘Well don't go there anymore’ 

23. Ireland ’s worst air disaster occurred early this morning when a small two-seater Cessna plane crashed into  a cemetery. Irish search and rescue workers have recovered 2826 bodies so far and expect that number to climb as digging continues into the night.  
 







Todays aging joke

Will I Live to see 80?

Here's something to think about:

I recently picked a new primary care doctor.  After two visits and exhaustive lab tests, he said I was doing 'fairly well' for my age. (I just turned sixty-something.)

A little concerned about that comment, I couldn't resist asking him, 'Do you think I'll live to be 80?'

He asked, 'Do you smoke tobacco, or drink beer, wine or hard liquor?

'Oh no,' I replied.  'I'm not doing drugs, either!'

Then he asked, 'Do you eat rib-eye steaks and barbecued ribs?

I said, 'Not much... my former doctor said all red meat is very unhealthy!'

'Do you spend a lot of time in the sun, like playing golf, boating, sailing, hiking, or bicycling?'

'No, I don't,' I said.

He asked, 'Do you gamble, drive fast cars, or have lots of sex?'

'No,' I said...

He looked at me and said...'Then, why do you even give a shxt?







Monday, February 7, 2011

Davids Daily Dose - Monday February 7th






All Egypt, all the time....our media this week has been obsessed with 1/ Egypt and 2/ snow.....anyway here are some interesting Egyptian stories....not the riots, but the background....


1/  The first is about the military aid we have given Egypt for the last decades so Mubarek could equip his military.....but most of the money ended up being given to US corporations. This is the way the US has kept the world safe for the corporate oligarchs for years.....throw money at dictators, who then feed it back to the military industrial complex....

But even as the political situation unfolds on the streets of Cairo, the question of U.S. support for Mubarak's 30-year rule looms large. And much of that support has come in the form of military aid, $1.3 billion per year like clockwork throughout that entire period. And as Middle East expert Juan Cole noted in a recent appearance on Democracy Now!, most of that aid has been simply a pass through that goes to Egypt and then right back into the coffers of U.S. corporations.
According to lists of arms sales notifications compiled by the Pentagon's Defense Security Assistance Agency, in the last decade alone, the Department of Defense has brokered over $11 billion in U.S. arms offers to the Egyptian regime on behalf of weapons makers like Lockheed Martin, General Dynamics, Boeing, Raytheon, and General Electric. Aside from some leftover Soviet equipment from the pre-Camp David era (before 1979), the Egyptian military is virtually made in the USA.
Now that the Obama administration has at least suggested that U.S. aid may be reconsidered based on how harshly the Mubarak regime continues to crack down on democracy protesters, it is possible that this gravy train for contractors could come to an end. Post-Mubarak, the question will arise as to whether a new government wants to keep such close military ties to the U.S., and even if it does, whether it wants to maintain Mubarak's bloated, made-in-the-U.S.A. arsenal. But there will no doubt be efforts by Washington to use its ties to the military in Egypt to shape the potential outcome there, and dangling more weapons deals while selling support services and spare parts to maintain Egypt's existing weapons might become part of that strategy.
















2/  If you thought my comments were a little paranoid about the first story, read this.....

WASHINGTON — If the United States is, as so many presidents have said in so many speeches, the world’s pre-eminent champion of democracy, then why does the drama unfolding in Cairo seem so familiar?

A Washington-friendly dictator, propped up for decades by lavish American aid as he oversees a regime noted for brutality, corruption and stagnation, finally faces the wrath of his people. An American administration struggles over what to say, what to do and what to expect if the strongman is toppled.
The agony of Hosni Mubarak’s Egypt raises again the question of whether such a pattern can ever be broken. More than mere misjudgment or duplicity is behind it; the embrace of dictators has been so frequent over the last half-century that it obviously results from hard-headed calculation.
Supporting Egypt’s military-led regime over four decades, first under Anwar el-Sadat and then Mr. Mubarak, offered strategic benefits to seven American presidents. They got a staunch ally against Soviet expansionism, a critical peace with Israel, a bulwark against Islamic radicalism, and a trade- and tourist-friendly Egypt. What they did not get was a functioning Egyptian democracy. The apocryphal comment about a foreign strongman often attributed to Franklin Delano Roosevelt sums it up nicely: he may be a son of a bitch, but he’s our son of a bitch.
History is rich with precedents. In 1959, there was Fulgencio Batista of Cuba, darling of American corporations and organized crime, fleeing with an ill-gotten fortune of $300 million as Fidel Castro’s troops reached Havana.












3/  Two Western journalists were detained by the Egyptian secret police during the demonstrations in Cairo......not a nice bunch of lads....

CAIRO — We had been detained by Egyptian authorities, handed over to the country’s dreaded Mukhabarat, the secret police, and interrogated. They left us all night in a cold room, on hard orange plastic stools, under fluorescent lights.
But our discomfort paled in comparison to the dull whacks and the screams of pain by Egyptian people that broke the stillness of the night. In one instance, between the cries of suffering, an officer said in Arabic, “You are talking to journalists? You are talking badly about your country?”
A voice, also in Arabic, answered: “You are committing a sin. You are committing a sin.”
We — Souad Mekhennet, Nicholas Kulish and a driver, who is not a journalist and was not involved in the demonstrations — were detained Thursday afternoon while driving into Cairo. We were stopped at a checkpoint and thus began a 24-hour journey through Egyptian detention, ending with — we were told by the soldiers who delivered us there — the secret police. When asked, they declined to identify themselves.
Captivity was terrible. We felt powerless — uncertain about where and how long we would be held. But the worst part had nothing to do with our treatment. It was seeing — and in particular hearing through the walls of this dreadful facility — the abuse of Egyptians at the hands of their own government.
For one day, we were trapped in the brutal maze where Egyptians are lost for months or even years. Our detainment threw into haunting relief the abuses of security services, the police, the secret police and the intelligence service, and explained why they were at the forefront of complaints made by the protesters.













4/  This story is on the recurring theme of how the US Government's aims and the aims of powerful US corporations are identical.....our government wants control of foreign regimes like Egypt's, and our corporations want profits......
This blog jumps around a bit, but you will get the overall theme....
The illusion of 'benevolence' and the reality of foreign 'aid'
In Confessions, Perkins, himself a self-described former "Economic Hit Man" (EHM) reveals how he, and other EHMs, persuade corrupt foreign "leaders" to accept "loans to develop infrastructure --- electric generating plants, highways, ports, airports, or industry parks. In essence, most of the money never leaves the United States; it is simply transferred from banking offices in Washington to engineering offices.":
Despite the fact that the money is returned almost immediately to corporations that are members of the corporatocracy (the creditor), the recipient country is required to pay it all back, principal plus interest. If an EHM is completely successful, the loans are so large that the debtor is forced to default on its payments after a few years. When this happens, then like the Mafia we demand our pound of flesh. This often includes one or more of the following: control over United Nations votes, the installation of military bases, or access to precious resources such as oil…Of course, the debtor still owes us the money and another country is added to our global empire…
In Secret History, Perkins explains that the key to the U.S. corporate Empire's success is its invisibility. "Most of its own citizens are not aware of its existence; however, those exploited by it are, and many of them suffer extreme poverty. On average twenty-four thousand people die of hunger and hunger-related diseases every day. More than half the planet's population lives on less than two dollars a day..."
Among the beneficiaries of foreign aid, as identified by Perkins, is the San Francisco-based Bechtel Corp., the largest engineering firm in the U.S, whose corporate executives include former U.S. Secretary of State George P. Schultz. In 2010, Bechtel, with $30.8 billion in revenue, was working on projects in some 50 countries.
Bechtel, which maintains an office in Cairo, has been involved in the construction of numerous Egyptian power plants. In 2002, it was awarded a $900 million contract for a liquid natural gas project.














5/  Funny Superbowl commercial.....Star Wars fans will love it....last night they showed the 30 second version, this is one minute and far funnier.....















6/  Well the unemployment figures were in, and they were a little baffling - unemployment fell from 9.4% to 9%, but only 36,000 jobs were created. The bloviators yammered away, but missed the point - the middle class is still in big trouble, but the wealthy and the corporate oligarchs are doing just fine.....Bob Herbert takes them to task.....

The policy makers who rely on the data zealots are just as detached from the real world of real people. They’re always promising in the most earnest tones imaginable to do something about employment, to ease the awful squeeze on the middle class (policy makers never talk about the poor), to reform education, and so on.
They say those things because they have to. But they are far more obsessed with the numbers than they are with the struggles and suffering of real people. You won’t hear policy makers acknowledging that the unemployment numbers would be much worse if not for the millions of people who have left the work force over the past few years. What happened to those folks? How are they and their families faring?
The policy makers don’t tell us that most of the new jobs being created in such meager numbers are, in fact, poor ones, with lousy pay and few or no benefits. What we hear is what the data zealots pump out week after week, that the market is up, retail sales are strong, Wall Street salaries and bonuses are streaking, as always, to the moon, and that businesses are sitting on mountains of cash. So all must be right with the world.
Jobs? Well, the less said the better.
What’s really happening, of course, is the same thing that’s been happening in this country for the longest time — the folks at the top are doing fabulously well and they are not interested in the least in spreading the wealth around.
The people running the country — the ones with the real clout, whether Democrats or Republicans — are all part of this power elite. Ordinary people may be struggling, but both the Obama administration and the Republican Party leadership are down on their knees slavishly kissing the rings of the financial and corporate kingpins.
















7/  Here we are with a new Republican Congress, and are they interested in jobs? Nope, their focus is and always will be the wedge issues that fire up the right wing base, like abortion. Gail Collins with an excellent and unusually serious [for her] column, and points out the hypocrisy of the anti-abortion movement - the foetus is sacred, but once the child is born it and the mother are on their own......

Planned Parenthood doesn’t use government money to provide abortions; Congress already prohibits that, except in cases of rape, incest or to save the life of the mother. (Another anti-abortion bill that’s coming up for hearing originally proposed changing the wording to “forcible rape,” presumably under the theory that there was a problem with volunteer rape victims. On that matter at least, cooler heads prevailed.)
Planned Parenthood does pay for its own abortion services, though, and that’s what makes them a target. Pence has 154 co-sponsors for his bill. He was helped this week by an anti-abortion group called Live Action, which conducted a sting operation at 12 Planned Parenthood clinics in six states, in an effort to connect the clinic staff to child prostitution.
“Planned Parenthood aids and abets the sexual abuse and prostitution of minors,” announced Lila Rose, the beautiful anti-abortion activist who led the project. The right wing is currently chock-full of stunning women who want to end their gender’s right to control their own bodies. Homely middle-aged men are just going to have to find another sex to push around.
......................................................
The people trying to put Planned Parenthood out of business do not seem concerned about what would happen to the 1.85 million low-income women who get family-planning help and medical care at the clinics each year. It just doesn’t come up. There’s not even a vague contingency plan.
“I haven’t seen that they want to propose an alternative,” said Richards.
There are tens of millions Americans who oppose abortion because of deeply held moral principles. But they’re attached to a political movement that sometimes seems to have come unmoored from any concern for life after birth.
There is no comparable organization to Planned Parenthood, providing the same kind of services on a national basis.













8/  The deficit - the Treasury announced this week the nations gold reserves were being turned into cash......Timothy Geithner saw a commercial for Cash4Gold and made the decision immediately - Onion Financial News reports....2 minutes....














9/  The Chinese wheat crop has failed due to a nasty drought in northern China......think food prices are bad? Wait till a billion Chinese start bidding on the world supplies of grain.....

HONG KONG — A severe drought in northern China has badly damaged the winter wheat crop and left the ground very dry for the spring planting, fueling inflation and alarming China’s leaders.

President Hu Jintao and Prime Minister Wen Jiabao separately toured drought-stricken regions this week and have called for “all-out efforts” to address the effects of water shortages on agriculture, state media reported on Thursday. Mr. Wen made a similar trip just 10 days ago and called for long-term improvements in water management.
Rising food prices were a problem last autumn, even before the drought began, prompting the government to impose a wide range of price controls in mid-November. The winter wheat crop has been parched since then in northern China while unusually widespread frost has hurt the vegetable crop in southern China. State media began warning a week ago that price controls on food might not be effective.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/04/world/asia/04china.html



And on this theme - global food prices are rising according to a UN report, and this is one of the flash points to watch in the coming years, along with energy costs and water supplies.......part of the problem with food is that the diets of India and China are changing as their middle class broadens and gets richer - they all want to eat like Westerners, more meat and grains......this is of course at the same time our scum in Congress have extended subsidies for ethanol from grain in the US, so instead of feeding the world we're filling our SUV's.....smart, huh?

UNITED NATIONS — Global food prices are moving ever higher, hitting record levels last month as a jittery market reacted to unpredictable weather and tight supplies, according to a United Nations report released Thursday.
........................................
Riots and demonstrations erupting across the Middle East are not directly inspired by rising food prices alone, experts noted, but that is one factor fueling the anger directed toward governments in the region. Egypt was among more than a dozen countries that experienced food riots in 2008.
The F.A.O. price index, which tracks 55 food commodities for export, rose 3.4 percent in January, hitting its highest level since tracking began in 1990, the report said. Countries not dependent on food imports are less affected by global volatility. Still, food prices are expected to rise 2 percent to 3 percent in the United States this year.
Four main factors are seen as driving prices higher: weather, higher demand, smaller yields and crops diverted to biofuels. Volatile weather patterns often attributed to climate change are wreaking havoc with some harvests. Heavy rains in Australia damaged wheat to the extent that much of its usually high-quality crop has been downgraded to feed, experts noted.
This has pushed the demand and prices for American wheat much higher, with the best grades selling at 100 percent more than they were a year ago, Mr. Abbassian said. The autumn soybean harvest in the United States was poor, so strong demand means stocks are at their lowest level in 50 years, he said.
Brokers are waiting to see how acreage in the United States will be divided between soybeans, corn and cotton, with cotton fetching record prices, Mr. Abbassian said.
Sugar prices are also at a 30-year high, he said. Prices for cereals are rising but still below their April 2008 peak. Oils and fats are up and close to their 2008 level, and dairy is higher but still below its 2007 peak, the report said. Even positive news, like good rains in Argentina and a strong harvest in Africa, has failed to keep prices from rising.













10/  Well if you like sheepherding at night with the sheep wearing lights to help the border collies, this video is for you..... quite interesting, if ultimately pointless.....but hey, it's just a cool video......














11/  The Supreme Court is supposed to be fair and above the fray, superior to the politicians below them braying their BS and vying for power....but the Court we have now isn't fair or balanced......the conservative majority is as political as Congress and don't care who knows it.....this is a New York Times editorial....

When it comes to pushing the line between law and politics, Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas each had a banner month in January.
Justice Scalia, who is sometimes called “the Justice from the Tea Party,” met behind closed doors on Capitol Hill to talk about the Constitution with a group of representatives led by Representative Michele Bachmann of the House Tea Party Caucus.
Justice Thomas, confirming his scorn for concern about conflicts of interest and rules designed to help prevent them, acknowledged that he has failed to comply with the law for the past six years by not disclosing his wife’s income from conservative groups.
In Supreme Court opinions, they showed how their impatience for goals promoted in conservative politics is infecting their legal actions. They joined in an unusual dissent from a court decision not to take a case about the commerce clause that turned into polemic in favor of limited government. In an important privacy case, NASA v. Nelson, they insisted the court should settle a constitutional issue it didn’t need to.
Constitutional law is political. It results from choices about concerns of government that political philosophers ponder, like liberty and property. When the court deals with major issues of social policy, the law it shapes is the most inescapably political.







And the worst of them all is Justice Clarence Thomas, who should be impeached for being blatantly corrupt and an all-around asshole.....but here's the prediction - nothing will be done, folks.....

Virginia Thomas, the justice’s wife, said on libertyinc.co, a Web site for her new political consulting business, that she saw herself as an advocate for “liberty-loving citizens” who favored limited government, free enterprise and other core conservative issues. She promised to use her “experience and connections” to help clients raise money and increase their political impact.
Ms. Thomas’s effort to take a more operational role on conservative issues could intensify questions about her husband’s ability to remain independent on issues like campaign finance and health care, legal ethicists said.
Justice Thomas “should not be sitting on a case or reviewing a statute that his wife has lobbied for,” 














12/  TV Monday [tonight]..."Chicago Code", 9pm on Fox. What gives me hope for this one is that it's produced by Shawn Ryan, who did "The Shield", one of the best cop shows ever.....

Two years later that curiosity has given birth to “The Chicago Code,” an hourlong drama that is to have its premiere on Monday at 9 p.m. on Fox. And true both to Mr. Ryan’s initial creative impulse and his childhood impressions of the city, the series has a story line set right at the intersection of politics and crime, derived from the notorious maxim attributed to an alderman and saloon keeper named Paddy Bauler, “Chicago ain’t ready for reform.”
“The Chicago Code,” shot on location, has three main characters. Teresa Colvin, played by Jennifer Beals, is the city’s first female police superintendent. Her efforts to bring down the corrupt, Mafia-friendly alderman Ronin Gibbons (Delroy Lindo) lead her to grant her former patrol car partner, Detective Jarek Wysocki (Jason Clarke), license to combat wrongdoing wherever he finds it.













Todays video - A man in the kitchen.....






Todays Viagra joke


A woman asks her  husband at breakfast time, "Would you like some bacon and eggs, a slice of toast, and maybe some grapefruit juice and coffee?" He declines. "Thanks for asking, but I'm not hungry right now. It's this Viagra," he says. "It's really taken the edge off my appetite."

At lunchtime, she asked him if he would like something. "How about a bowl of soup, homemade muffins, or a cheese sandwich?" He declines. "The Viagra," he says, "really trashes my desire for food."

Come dinnertime, she asks if he wants anything to eat. "Would you like a juicy rib eye steak and some scrumptious apple pie? Or maybe a rotisserie chicken or tasty stir fry?" He declines again. "No," he says, "it's got to be the Viagra. I'm still not hungry."

"Well," she says, "Would you mind letting me up? I'm starving."







Todays Old Jewish Comedian jokes
  
 
* I just got back from a pleasure trip. I took my mother-in-law to the airport.


*  I've been in love with the same woman for 49 years! If my wife ever finds out, she'll kill me!
 
 
* What are three words a woman never wants to hear when she's making love? "Honey, I'm home!"
 
 
* Someone stole all my credit cards but I won't be reporting it. The thief spends
less than my wife did.
 
 
* My wife and I always hold hands. If I let go, she shops.


  * My wife and I went back to the hotel where we spent our wedding night; only this time I stayed in the bathroom and cried.

 
* My wife and I went to a hotel where we got a waterbed. My wife called it the Dead Sea.


* She was at the beauty shop for two hours. That was only for the estimate. She got a mudpack and looked great for two days. Then the mud fell off.
 
 
*  The Doctor gave a man six months to live. The man couldn't pay his bill so the doctor gave him another six months.

 
* The Doctor called Mrs. Cohen saying, "Mrs. Cohen, your check came back." Mrs. Cohen answered,  So did my arthritis!"
 

 
* Doctor: "You'll live to be 60!" 
Patient: "I am 60!"
Doctor: "See!  What did I tell you?"
 
 
*  Patient: "I have a ringing in my ears." 
  Doctor: "Don't answer!"
 

* A drunk was in front of a judge. The judge says, "You've been brought here for drinking."
  The drunk says "Okay, let's get started."
 
 
* Why do Jewish divorces cost so much?
They're worth it.

 
The Harvard School of Medicine did a study of why Jewish women like Chinese food so much. The study revealed that this is due to the fact that Won Ton spelled backward is Not Now.
 

There is a big controversy on the Jewish view of when life begins.  In Jewish tradition, the fetus is not considered viable until it graduates from medical school.
 

Q: Why don't Jewish mothers drink? 
A: Alcohol interferes with their suffering.
 .
 
Q: Why do Jewish mothers make great parole officers? 
A: They never let anyone finish a sentence!
 

A man called his mother in Florida,
  "Mom, how are you?"
  Not too good," said the mother. "I've been very weak."
  The son said, "Why are you so weak?" She said, "Because I haven't eaten in 38 days."
  The son said, "That's terrible. Why haven't you eaten in 38 days?"
  The mother answered, "Because I didn't want my mouth to be filled with food if you should call."
 

 
A Jewish boy comes home from school and tells his mother he has a part in the play. She asks,
  "What part is it?"
  The boy says, "I play the part of the Jewish husband."
  "The mother scowls and says, "Go back and tell the teacher you want a speaking part."


 
Q: How many Jewish mothers does it take to change a light bulb?
  A: (Sigh) "Don't bother. I'll sit in the dark. I don't want to be a nuisance to anybody."


  Short summary of every Jewish holiday: 
 
 They tried to kill us. We won. Let's eat. 
 
Did you hear about the bum who walked up to a Jewish mother on the street and said, "Lady, I haven't eaten in three days."
 "Force yourself," she replied.
 
 
Q: What's the difference between a Rottweiler and a Jewish mother?
  A: Eventually, the Rottweiler lets go.
 












Todays philosophical sort of joke

An Obituary printed in the London Times - Interesting and sadly rather true

Today we mourn the passing of a beloved old friend, 
Common Sense, who has been with us for many years. No one knows for sure how old he was, since his birth records were long ago lost in bureaucratic red tape. He will be remembered as having cultivated such valuable lessons as:
- Knowing when to come in out of the rain;
- Why the early bird gets the worm;
- Life isn't always fair;
- and Maybe it was my fault. 


Common Sense 
lived by simple, sound financial policies (don't spend more than you can earn) and reliable strategies (adults, not children, are in charge).

His health began to deteriorate rapidly when well-intentioned but overbearing regulations were set in place. Reports of a 6-year-old boy charged with sexual harassment for kissing a classmate; teens suspended from school for using mouthwash after lunch; and a teacher fired for reprimanding an unruly student, only worsened his condition. 


Common Sense 
lost ground when parents attacked teachers for doing the job that they themselves had failed to do in disciplining their unruly children.

It declined even further when schools were required to get parental consent to administer sun lotion or an aspirin to a student; but could not inform parents when a student became pregnant and wanted to have an abortion.


Common Sense 
lost the will to live as the churches became businesses; and criminals received better treatment than their victims. 

Common Sense 
took a beating when you couldn't defend yourself from a burglar in your own home and the burglar could sue you for assault. 

Common Sense 
finally gave up the will to live, after a woman failed to realize that a steaming cup of coffee was hot. She spilled a little in her lap, and was promptly awarded a huge settlement. 

Common Sense 
was preceded in death, by his parents, Truth and Trust, by his wife, Discretion, by his daughter, Responsibility, and by his son, Reason. 

He is survived by his 4 stepbrothers
;
I Know My Rights
I Want It Now
Someone Else Is To Blame
I'm A Victim 


Not many attended his funeral because so few realized he was gone. If you still remember him, pass this on. If not, join the majority and do nothing.