Monday, December 31, 2007
Elections Face Possible Delay as Pakistani Tensions Grow
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Looking at America
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After a Son's Death, a Shared Mission in Politics
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‘Perfect storm’ of cliches make bad English list
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U.S. Experts Criticize Bhutto Post-Mortem
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New Questions Arise in Killing of Benazir Bhutto --- NY Times Front Page.
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Bhutto's Husband and son chosen to lead party in elections
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Unstable Materials Check List
By John Deering, The Akron Beacon-Journal
© Cartoonist Group, 2006
Lee Camp's Pranktivism:Where Comedy And Activism Meet VIDEO
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Already deprived Iraqis facing sharp cut in food rations
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Drug Warrior's Shadow Looms Over California's Pot Clubs
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Sunday, December 30, 2007
FOR THOSE WHO TAKE LIFE TOO SERIOUSLY
1. Save the whales. Collect the whole set
2. A day without sunshine is, like, night
3. On the other hand, you have different fingers.
4. I just got lost in thought. It was unfamiliar territory.
5. 42.7 percent of all statistics are made up on the spot.
6. 99 percent of lawyers give the rest a bad name.
7. I feel like I'm diagonally parked in a parallel universe.
8. You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say will be
misquoted, then used against you.
9. I wonder how much deeper the ocean would be without sponges.
10. Honk if you love peace and quiet.
11. Remember half the people you know are below average.
12. Despite the cost of living, have you noticed how popular it
remains?
13. Nothing is foolproof to a talented fool.
14. Atheism is a non-prophet organisation.
15. He who laughs last thinks slowest.
16. Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm.
17. Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines.
18. The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the
cheese.
19. I drive way too fast to worry about cholesterol.
20. I intend to live forever - so far so good.
21. Borrow money from a pessimist - they don't expect it back.
22. If Barbie is so popular, why do you have to buy her friends?
24. Quantum mechanics: The dreams stuff is made of.25. The only substitute for
good manners is fast reflexes.
26. Support bacteria - they're the only culture some people have.
27. When everything's coming your way, you're in the wrong lane and
going the wrong way.
28. If at first you don't succeed, destroy all evidence that you
tried.
29. A conclusion is the place where you got tired of thinking.
30. Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it.
31. For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism.
32. Bills travel through the mail at twice the speed of checks
33. Never do card tricks for the group you play poker with.
34. No one is listening until you make a mistake.
35. Success always occurs in private and failure in full view.
37. The hardness of butter is directly proportional to the softness
of the bread.
38. The severity of the itch is inversely proportional to the
ability to reach it.
39. To steal ideas from one person is plagiarism; to steal from many
is research.
40. To succeed in politics, it is often necessary to rise above your
principles.
41. Monday is an awful way to spend 1/7 of your life.
42. You never really learn to swear until you learn to drive.
43. Two wrongs are only the beginning.
44. The problem with the gene pool is that there is no lifeguard.
45. The sooner you fall behind the more time you'll have to catch up.
46. A clear conscience is usually the sign of a bad memory.
47. Change is inevitable except from vending machines.
48. Get a new car for your spouse - it'll be a great trade!
49. Plan to be spontaneous - tomorrow.
50. Always try to be modest and be proud of it!
51. If you think nobody cares, try missing a couple of payments.
52. How many of you believe in telekinesis? Raise my hand...
53. Love may be blind but marriage is a real eye-opener.
54. If at first you don't succeed, then skydiving isn't for you.
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The Year In Review, And 2008 Will Be Worse
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Bush's Sham of Democracy in Pakistan (and Iraq)
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Bin Laden says U.S. seeks to exploit Iraqi oil
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Turkey arrests five for al Qaeda links: report
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Pakistan poll delay seen, Bhutto family appointed
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Bhutto's son named as successor
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Benazir Bhutto in quotes - Times Online
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Learning to Give - Quotes by Benazir Bhutto
"You can imprison a man, but not an idea. You can exile a man, but not an idea. You can kill a man, but not an idea."
- Bhutto, Benazir Prime minister of Pakistan (1953– )
- -More quotes about [Ideas] [Women]
Saturday, December 29, 2007
Bin Laden warns Iraqi Sunnis, threatens Israel
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Millions in Earmarks Purchase Little of Use
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Norman Horowitz: Wouldn't It Be Great...
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Amy Spies: When I First Knew Benazir
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Machiavellian Musharraf by Ramzy Baroud
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Did Bush Risk Bhutto To Save Musharraf?
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Vermont Group Wants Cheney, Bush Charged With War Crimes
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David Sirota: The Path to a National Popular Vote
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Creeping Fascism: From Nazi Germany to Post 9/11 America
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Immigration Hardliners Try to Unhinge America
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Bhutto aides accuse government of cover-up
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Friday, December 28, 2007
Enemies at the gate
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How did Pakistan's Bhutto die?
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Guantanamo convict walks free in Australia
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Clinton calls for probe of Bhutto killing
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Bush to veto defense bill after Iraq objects
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More Questions Than Answers - Updated
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Amy Wilentz: Benazir Bhutto: A Killing and Three Funerals
As for the motivations of the killers. Their real targets were secular liberalism, the Bhutto dynasty, and the U.S. What they feared was a Bhutto premiership, beginning in about ten days, when the elections were to take place. Whoever they are exactly, they see an opening to power and control now, and they would not permit Benazir to stand in their way.
LA Times: The Benazir I Knew
Amy's profile of Benazir Bhutto appears in the December/January issue of More magazine.
Read more reactions from HuffPost bloggers on Benazir Bhutto's assassination
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Democracy movement in Pakistan not dead
Aijaz Ahmad: The democracy movement did not start with Bhutto and will not end with her death
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Violence spreads across Pakistan
Dec. 28 - Elections in Pakistan are still due to go ahead as planned despite a night a violence following the assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto.
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Pentagon says Pakistan nuclear arsenal secure
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Ron Paul: "We're Getting Ready to Bomb Iran"
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Republicans and Democrats React to Bhutto Assassination
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'A Wrong Must Be Righted': Bhutto's Last American Interview
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How to Erode & Destroy Democracy- a Dozen Tested Strategies
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The Bhutto Assassination: A Human Rights Perspective
by Mary Shaw Page 1 of 1 page(s)
http://www.opednews.com/
On Thursday, December 27, Benazir Bhutto, former Prime Minister of Pakistan and the current opposition party leader, succumbed to an assassin's bullet. Chaos has ensued.
Will this be a step backwards in efforts to restore democracy in nuclear Pakistan? I hope not, but Bhutto's assassination is not a good sign.
Benazir Bhutto was good for Pakistan and good for the world. She worked tirelessly to promote democracy in her country, and to stand up for the rights of the poor and the needy. This is in stark contrast to Pakistani President Musharraf's preferred method of governance by military dictatorship.
As the first woman ever elected to lead a Muslim state, Bhutto was also a symbol of progress for women's rights in the Islamic world.With Bhutto's death, the human rights community has lost a strong and steadfast ally.
In response to the assassination, Ali Dayan Hasan of Human Rights Watch said, "Benazir Bhutto was a democrat who believed in the supremacy of constitutional rule and, throughout her career, sought power through the ballot box. She died campaigning for votes and calling for a free election."
Amnesty International (AI) is calling on Musharraf's government to uphold the rule of law and the rules of democratic behavior in the aftermath of the Bhutto assassination. AI's Catherine Baber stated, "The killing of Benazir Bhutto must not be allowed to become a setback to civilian governance or indeed lead to a further crackdown on civil liberties."My condolences go out to Bhutto's family and political followers.
May she rest in peace.
###
http://www.maryshawonline.com/
Mary Shaw is a Philadelphia-based writer and activist, with a focus on politics, human rights, and social justice. She is a former Philadelphia Area Coordinator for the Nobel-Prize-winning human rights group Amnesty International, and her views appear regularly in a variety of newspapers, magazines, and websites. Note that the ideas expressed here are the author's own, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Amnesty International or any other organization with which she may be associated.
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Clinton: Politics shouldn't play role in Pakistan tragedy
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The Politics of Murder, The Politics of Humanity
Then I read this post by Garlin II - Cliff Schecter - Friday December 28, 01:57 AM;
The murder of Benazir Bhutto leaves the world with many questions, puzzles the world with many implications, and presents to the world both challenges and opportunities. There are political realities in Pakistan, throughout the Middle East, and across the world that now exist due the killing of this woman. However, these are neither the most sensible nor the most appropriate issues to be discussed at this point. What we, the media, and anyone conversing on this subject should be grappling with is the fact that a woman, a daughter, a wife, a mother of three, was murdered because she had different ideas.
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"Cowboy Up As Followers of Jesus" [VIDEO]
Studies show that 60% of regular churchgoers are women, and one group of men believes the reason is that "Christianity is too soft."
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Al-Qaida figure behind attack, Pakistan says
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - Pakistan's interior minister on Friday blamed al-Qaida and the Taliban for the assassination of Benazir Bhutto and said another key opposition leader, Nawaz Sharif, is also under threat of militant attack.
“We have the evidence that al-Qaida and Taliban were behind the suicide attack on Benazir Bhutto,” Interior Minister Hamid Nawaz said.
The government also reported that Bhutto died from a skull fracture suffered when her head slammed against her car during a suicide attack — not from bullet wounds.
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Bhutto joins long list of assassinated leaders
Benazir Bhutto's father was prime minister of Pakistan in the 1970s and, before he was hanged, he would tell her to study the lives of great women as inspiration. She sometimes told reporters that story, including the names of Joan of Arc and Indira Gandhi as study subjects suggested by her dad. The French revolutionary was burned at the stake; the Indian prime minister was assassinated by her bodyguards.
Their violent ends did not deter Bhutto, nor did the murders of her father and brother. A Harvard graduate with a sharp knowledge of history, she would have known that The Assassination has been around a lot longer than the ballot and is often more influential.
The Assassination is almost universally denigrated as a "cowardly act" (as President Bush described Bhutto's killing yesterday). But the historical record shows it to be a dramatic, low-cost, highly symbolic means of communication -- and murder -- that disaffected people use to try to dramatically sway national or even international affairs.
It can work or backfire or just disappear, like a bloody drop in a bucket. Pakistan will be unstable in the coming days, as it has been in the past and will be again. Who can say if Bhutto's slaying is the pinball that leads to destruction, the painful agent of positive change, or just a killing, like most, full of sound and fury and signifying nothing more than murderous nihilism?
The descent into regional conflagration could have been triggered "by 'shock and awe' in Iraq, or the assassination of [prime minister Rafik] Hariri in Lebanon in 2005, or Israel's battles with Hezbollah," says Mustafa Aksakal, assistant professor of history at American University, who is writing a book about the Ottoman Empire's descent into World War I. "But the region has so far been able to absorb these shocks. It's just impossible to say what will be the straw that breaks the camel's back."
"Anyone who thinks they can predict the consequences of a political assassination is a damn fool," says Eric Rauchway, author of "Murdering McKinley: The Making of Teddy Roosevelt's America" and a history professor at the University of California, Davis. "All it provides is an opportunity. However, the opportunity it provides is often not one the assassin intended."
This has been true from the Ides of March forward.
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Pakistan Undergoes Year of Turmoil
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Thousands weep as Bhutto buried
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Two dozen dead in Bhutto protests
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2007: Top Ten Tales of War and Empire
At AlterNet, we did our best to bring some critical discourse to the debaate surrounding the so-called "Long War." Here are your most popular stories on the subject from 2007…
10. Accustomed to Their Own Atrocities in Iraq, U.S. Soldiers Have Become Murderers
By Chris Hedges, Adbusters
After four years of war, American Marines and soldiers have become socialized to atrocity. The war in Iraq is now primarily about murder. There is very little killing.
9. Top Military Recruitment Lies
By Aimee Allison, David Solnit, Seven Stories Press
The new book Army of None reveals the scummy truth about the military recruitment complex.
8. Majority of Iraqi Lawmakers Now Reject Occupation
By Raed Jarrar, Joshua Holland, AlterNet
More than half of the members of Iraq's parliament rejected for the first time on Tuesday the continuing occupation of their country. The U.S. media ignored the story.
7. Bush-Cheney Really Are Planning to Attack Iran!
By Jim Hightower, Hightower Lowdown
Bush & Buckshot are riding their little stick horses, demonizing another Muslim nation -- and the Dems are supporting it. We've got to shut them down.
6. As Bush's War Strategy Shifts to Iran, Christian Zionists Gear Up for the Apocalypse
By Sarah Posner, AlterNet
Is Bush pushing for a second war or a Second Coming?
5. Neocons in Cheney's Office Fund al Qaeda-Tied Groups … and No One Cares?
By Tom Engelhardt, Tomdispatch.com
Seymour Hersh's recent report that Iran-Contra veterans working out of Dick Cheney's office are using stolen funds from Iraq to arm al Qaeda-tied groups and foment a larger Sunni-Shia war is a very big deal.
4. White House Leak: Cheney's Plan for Iran Attack Starts With Israeli Missile Strike
By Gregor Peter Schmitz, Cordula Meyer, Der Spiegel
High-ranking military experts say an attack would lead to world economic chaos, or even what Bush calls 'World War III.'
3. Can We End the American Empire Before It Ends Us?
By Chalmers Johnson, Tomdispatch.com
Brilliant historian and essayist Chalmers Johnson argues that unless we face up to the tremendous strain our empire is having on America, we will lose our democracy, and then it will not matter much what else we lose.
2. 737 U.S. Military Bases = Global Empire
By Chalmers Johnson, Metropolitan Books
With more than 2,500,000 U.S. personnel serving across the planet and military bases spread across each continent, it's time to face up to the fact that our American democracy has spawned a global empire.
And, drumroll please, the top story of war and empire for 2007 was …
1. The Mega-Lie Called the "War on Terror": A Masterpiece of Propaganda
By Richard W. Behan, AlterNet
The fraudulence of the "War on Terror" is clearly revealed by looking at the pattern of actions that preceded and followed its launch.
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Benazir Bhutto: An Age of Hope Is Over
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Thursday, December 27, 2007
Former Texas home of Bushes burned by arsonist
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Bhutto's body flown to home province
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U.S. population to hit 303.15 mln on Jan 1: census
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Web site to carry new bin Laden tape on Iraq
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World condemns Benazir Bhutto assassination - Times Online
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Police state descends on Pakistan: Four dead in rioting
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The Torture Tape Cover-up: How High Does It Go?
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EDWARDS IS THE ONE FOR 2008
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RON PAUL IS NO SAVIOR
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Get Real Americans -- You're Being Ripped Off!
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Bhutto Assassination Sparks Riots
Some of her supporters smashed windows and doors at the hospital, chanting: "Dog, Musharraf, Dog."
It is the first major attack since President General Pervez Musharraf lifted emergency rule two weeks ago.
He has appealed for calm in the country and declared three days of mourning.
But there have already been riots in cities across Pakistan, and Sky News Asia correspondent Alex Crawford believes there is more bloodshed to come.
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U.S. Officials See Waste in Billions Sent to Pakistan
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Wars Cost $15 Billion a Month, GOP Senator Says
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Bush to Personally Promote US Image Abroad in '08,
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National Archivist Who Challenged Cheney Tells All
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Bill Shaheen’s Obama Attack Hurts Wife’s Senate Campaign
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2007: Seven Things We Should Pretend Never Happened
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The Top Ten Myths About Iraq in 2007
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The Funniest Stories of 2007
Okay. Just so you know: the Top Ten Comedic News Stories of the Year are as different from the Top Ten Legitimate News Stories of the Year as Peppermint Mini Marshmallow Froot Loops are from porridge. For instance, the Pakistani government transition didn't make our list. Why? Because it has the humor quotient of cider vinegar foot baths. Except for President Musharaff's first name being Pervez. Short for Perv? Prez Perv. Nice alliteration there. But funny? No. Subprime mortgage crisis? Yeah, right. Rusty-nail-through-the-bottom-of-your-Reeboks funny. Myanmar, Virginia Tech, you see my point. So let's go my route. Here are the stories of '07 that were the most lampoonable.
10. Jimmy Carter called President Bush the "worst President ever." And by the very nature of that statement, that would have to include... Jimmy Carter. "Worst President ever" by Jimmy Carter. That can't be good--like having your drug intervention hosted by Lindsay Lohan.
9. David Petreaus, the Surgin' General said Iraq looks more and more like America every day. Apparently they want us out of there too. Claims the government is paralyzed by petty partisan squabbling, so maybe they are getting the hang of a western style democracy.
8. Hillary Clinton asked the public to help pick her official campaign song. Here's some additional suggestions. The Theme from Shaft. Its Too Late Baby. Devil with a Blue Dress. She's Cold as Ice. The Bitch is Back.
7. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad demonstrated the concept of free speech in America. Both he and Bush at the UN on the same day. Think of it: a religious fanatic who sponsors secret prisons and has antagonized the whole world and an Iranian, both addressing the General Assembly.
6. Rudy Giuliani tried to espouse traditional family values on the campaign trail. And the fact that he's had three wives just means he's extra traditional. The Christian Coalition threatened to form a third party if Rudy Giuliani becomes the Republican nominee. Wonder what they'll call it? Too bad "the Taliban" is already taken.
5. Karl Rove and Attorney General Alberto Gonzales both resigned. I'm thinking the only reason he kept supporting Gonzales is because "Attorney General" and "Alberto Gonzales" both start with AG, and it was the only way he could remember who was filling the position. Like a mnemonic device. Karl Rove: proof positive that the Devil and the Pillsbury Dough Boy had more than a passing acquaintance.
4. Mitt Romney's tried to run a perfect campaign. Looks like he's been dipped in a polyurethane bath. Flip-flopped so much he's in danger of triggering a Stage Four John Kerry Alert. His campaign ads should close with "I'm Mitt Romney, and I both approve and disapprove of this ad."
3. Paris Hilton was offered community service, but the community declined. Q. What's the difference between Paris Hilton and Scooter Libby? A. 23 days.
2. Dick Cheney's Chief of Staff Scooter Libby was fined a quarter million dollars which was paid for by the Scooter Libby Defense Fund, which you and I know as Halliburton. His 30-month sentence was then commuted by President Bush, who apparently is not just the Decider, he's also the Commuter.
1. Idaho Republican Senator Larry Craig isn't gay and didn't quit. He may be homosexual, but he is so not gay. Like a Rorschach blot of not gay. Said he was entrapped. Cop must have worn some fetching footwear. Italian design, really shiny and the laces were perfect. Should have gone with the Restless Leg Syndrome defense.
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'Al Qaeda Killed Bhutto'
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U.S. Troops to Head to Pakistan
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Pakistan: Bhutto's Death and Impending Elections
At this tragic moment in the history of Pakistan, we at the Emergency Times are shocked beyond words at this intolerable and brutal act of the murder, along with others, of possibly the most popular leader of our country. No words can adequately condemn this barbaric act, which can only lead to more death and destruction for this tortured land. Her death will leave a gaping chasm in our country's leadership. One can only hope, beyond hope, that the perpetrators are brought to justice.May God help us all.
Pickled Politics links to the news and a commenter writes “Assassination of leading political figures is a very bad sign for a society, for it shows a clear and direct lack of trust and respect for the institutions of the state and society. One can only hope that the perpetrators are brought to justice.”
Some other perspectives have also emerged, looking at Bhutto both as a possible leader and a mover in international politics. Counter Terrorism Blog says
She was someone who the U.S. could actually work with to seek a way forward for Pakistan in light of the profound challenges posed by religious intolerance and political extremism, the drug trade, governmental institutions that do not provide essential services in many areas of the country, and Pakistan's troubled relationships with of its immediate neighbors — Afghanistan, India, and Iran.
Her faults were also profound, as the well-documented grand corruption cases brought against her and her husband attest. She did indeed treat her country like it was a family-owned business, with corrosive results. These includied her removal from power in 1990 and again in 1996 as the corruption both weakened her politically and played a significant role in her inability to deliver the reforms needed to make Pakistan's government responsive to the needs of its people
The Moderate Voice has a bio on Benazir Bhutto, including information on her father who was also the Prime Minister of Pakistan, and was sentenced to death in the 70s for charges similar to the ones Benazir faced much later.
From across the border, Indian Muslims comment on the assassination, and debate various conspiracy theories.
The hands of Nawaz Sharif cannot be completely ignored as he too had his reason for her removal: He now is the only national level leader who has experience as a Prime Minister. He is now sure to take over as PM of Pakistan. The chances of this conspiracy are rare but you never know with these opportunistic and individualistic politicians.
Meanwhile, Sepia Mutiny's post on Bhutto's death already has over a hundred comments. One commenter says
One wonders if she truly felt she would be safe in Pakistan. Love of country and desire to contribute aside, is there some shred of a risk-taking thrill inherent in this endeavor she had embarked upon? Some level of martyrlike delusion, however deeply buried? Can any of us imagine being devoted enough to any political cause to risk our life so boldly? Was it worth it, Benazir?
Truly sad. Whither Pakistan?
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Analysis: Bhutto Death Deals Blow to US
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U.S. condemns attack on Pakistan's Bhutto
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Saudi arms sale may spark Bush-Congress battle
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Expelled EU, U.N. officials leave Afghanistan
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Pakistan's Bhutto killed in gun, bomb attack
By Augustine Anthony RAWALPINDI, Pakistan (Reuters) - Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto was killed in a gun and bomb attack after a rally in the city of Rawalpindi on Thursday, her party said. ''She has been martyred,'' said party official...
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Monday, December 24, 2007
Santa goes to the White House
An email action from The Center for Constitutional Rights...
This past month over 37,000 Americans asked CCR to send a copy of the U.S. Constitution to George W. Bush as an early holiday present in the hope that he might actually read it. We hadn't really figured out how we were going to deliver all of them, but with so many people insistent that we remind President Bush of the oath he swore to uphold the Constitution, we pulled some strings. We made an urgent appeal to Santa Claus, who made the trip down from the North Pole in his sleigh just to deliver our gift to Bush. Click here to watch the video and see Santa as he tries to deliver the law.
Santa, played by prominent civil rights attorney Bill Goodman, said: "These Constitutions will make some great holiday reading. I want to be sure that the President will have plenty of time to look at them before he decides on his New Year's resolutions."
Watch CCR's video of Santa delivering the Constitutions. We think it might be just the holiday cheer you and your loved ones need. Make sure to listen to the last 10 seconds!Send a holiday card of the video to your friends and family to and help us make it the #1 video on You Tube this holiday season!
Saudis biggest group of al Qaeda Iraq fighters: study
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U.S. Officials See Waste in Billions Sent to Pakistan
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Iran's Peace Museum: the reality vs. the glories of war
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Afghans detain woman with bomb under burqa
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No let-up for Christmas for U.S. troops in Iraq
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Israel weighs change to free Palestinian prisoners
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George W. Bush Stars in Xmas Classic
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Mutiny in Baghdad by US Soldiers
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If Tobacco Regulation Works, Why Not Regulate Marijuana?
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Dollar's fall is felt around the globe
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Sunday, December 23, 2007
'Santa died for your MasterCard'
BREMERTON, Wash. - Art Conrad has an issue with the commercialism of Christmas, and his protest has gone way beyond just shunning the malls or turning off his television. The Bremerton resident nailed Santa Claus to a 15-foot crucifix in front of his house.read more digg story
Israel unveils settlement plans on peace talks eve
By Adam Entous
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel unveiled plans on Sunday to build hundreds of new homes on occupied land near Jerusalem next year, drawing protests from Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on the eve of renewed peace talks. Israel also...
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"Freedom to Facism" Mentioned by Ron Paul on Meet the Press
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Iran Cited in Iraq's Decline in Violence
Tehran's decision does not necessarily mean the flow of those weapons from Iran has stopped, but the decline in their use and in overall attacks "has to be attributed to an Iranian policy decision," David M. Satterfield, Iraq coordinator and senior adviser to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, said in an interview.
U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan C. Crocker said that the decision, "should [Tehran] choose to corroborate it in a direct fashion," would be "a good beginning" for a fourth round of talks between Crocker and his Iranian counterpart in Baghdad. Although the mid-December date scheduled for the talks was postponed, Crocker said he expects that the parties will convene "in the next couple of weeks."
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Saturday, December 22, 2007
Where Did All the Good Journalism Go?
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David Sirota: Suspicion of Politicians Is Justified
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What If America Were Invaded and Occupied?
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Thursday, December 20, 2007
Chertoff plans to turn spy satellites on Americans
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U.S. releases Iranian detained in Kurdish city in 2004
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MoveOn.org Civic Action: Can you give $15 to buy a phone card for our troops?
A MoveOn.org Civic Action: Can you give $15 to buy a phone card for our troops?...
This winter, thousands of U.S. servicemen and women are spending the holidays far away from their families, and calling home can cost them a large part of their paycheck. Troops stationed in Iraq, Afghanistan, and around the globe actually have to pay for phone calls to the U.S.—and many of them just don't have a lot of money to spare. Imagine being stuck in Iraq, Afghanistan, or Korea and being unable to afford a call to your spouse or kids on Christmas or New Year's Eve.
Troops stationed in Iraq, Afghanistan, and around the globe actually have to pay to call home for the holidays—and many of them just don't have a lot of money to spare. That's why we're helping the USO to provide thousands of phone cards to servicemen and women to let them call their friends, family and loved ones this holiday season.These phone cards don't cost a lot—only $15 each (plus a $3 transaction fee), but they are incredibly valuable, providing about 45 minutes of talk-time and holiday wishes for service members.
Can you give $15 to buy a phone card for our troops?
U.S. Investigating Marine in Iraqi Policeman’s Death
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Bush, Maliki Break Iraqi Law to Renew U.N. Mandate
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First clashes in Iowa set tone over immigration
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Bush says won't discuss CIA tapes as slams critics
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CORRECTED: ''Don't Tase Me, Bro'' tops '07 memorable quote list
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Cancer Kills Uninsured Americans More Quickley Than Insured

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New Orleans police, protesters clash
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Bush says not satisfied with Iraq political progress
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Here come the Jingle Cats
Dec. 19 - Perennial holiday favorites the Jingle Cats are back, meowing on about good tidings and cheer.
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Bush, Clinton, Bush, & now Clinton?
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A NEW SONG FOR AMERICA
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Already 100,000 voices for Impeachment Hearings for Cheney
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We Need A Leader; To Protect Us From Our Leaders!
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Truth, Lies, Errors and Bullshit About Iraq and Iran
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"There's No Place Like Home for the Holidays" by Stuart Carlson

Meet Stuart Carlson
As a youngster growing up in West Bend, Wis., Stuart Carlson exhibited a knack for cartooning at a tender age, sometimes drawing on the walls of his parents' apartment with lipstick.
Before joining the Milwaukee Sentinel in 1983, Carlson was a reporter, cartoonist and editor for a weekly newspaper and a small daily newspaper in Wisconsin.
Carlson's ability to translate current events into cogent visual statements has won him several awards, including the 1995 John Fischetti Award; his selection as the nation's best cartoonist in 1991 by the National Press Foundation; numerous best cartoon of the year honors from the Milwaukee Press Club; the 1986 Robert W. Gillespie Sentinel Staff Award for Excellence; and the 1988 University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee's Young Alumni Award.
Slate Magazine - Editorial and Political Cartoons, Comic Strips
Bush, Maliki Break Iraqi Law with U.N. Mandated Occupation
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U.S. and Iranian Governments Block Citizen Peace Talks
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It's Time to Legalize Drugs
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Wednesday, December 19, 2007
Momentum Building for Cheney Impeachment
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Dear New Hampshire, Please Draft Al Gore
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MAXINE & TED - DON'T CALL US IF YOU CALL US TERRORISTS!
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FOX: Edwards is a phony and a socialist. Obama, a terrorist.
FOX News wonders why Edwards and Obama won't appear on their shows after repeatedly calling Edwards a "phony," "fool," "pinhead," "socialist," and "intellectual lightweight," and Barack Obama a "domestic terrorist."
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Apathetic Youth? I Ask the Candidates.[VIDEO]
Over the past two weeks, I have compiled interviews with Presidential candidates and other politicians asking them if young voters are apathetic to this election. Their answers were very interesting.
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PolitiFact | PolitiFact's greatest hits
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House approves $70 billion for wars
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Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson on...
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Ron Paul on Huckabee Holiday Ad:
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The Audacity of Oprah
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Dennis Kucinich's brother found dead
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Time magazine names Russia's Putin as 'Person of the Year'
TIME Magazine unveiled its Person of the Year live Wednesday on the TODAY Show, Russian President Vladimir Putin.
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Magna Carta Sells for $21.3M in New York
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Tuesday, December 18, 2007
A Must-See Movie
An email from Kevin Bacon supporting John Edwards and announcing a new video by the Edward's campaign...
Dear Friend,
Last weekend, I was proud to travel through Iowa with John Edwards during his "Main Street Express" bus tour as he met with caucus goers and discussed his specific ideas for providing universal health care, ending the war in Iraq, stopping global warming, and taking back our government from the powerful corporations and special interests who run it.
Now, I am happy to help him kick off his final push before the caucuses. Today, John's campaign is launching a great new video you really should check out. It's a movie trailer, actually -- a preview of all that will be possible when John is our next president:
www.johnedwards.com/watch/trailer
With only 16 days left until the caucuses, it's critical that we all step up and help John Edwards right away. This is a crucial time in American history -- and we need real change. In the past, I've felt that I haven't always stepped out as soon or as actively as I should have. But now, after getting to know John, and getting to hear his strong dream and strong plan for our country, I've decided to join him and do everything I can to help.
It was exciting to see the growing energy behind John while I traveled with him over the weekend. Iowans were coming out by the hundreds to meet him, listen to what he had to say, and ask him tough questions about his plans for our country. And I was thrilled to hear that, just yesterday, John received the endorsement of a wonderful Iowa leader -- First Lady Mari Culver. It's clear that John is gaining momentum across the state, but he needs help from all of us now to keep that momentum going.
Additionally, the latest polls show John Edwards as being the one Democrat who can defeat all of the Republicans running for president.
So please take a minute to watch this powerful movie trailer and then pass it along to your friends and tell them how critical it is that we all step up to help John during these final days:
www.johnedwards.com/watch/trailer
Thank you for joining me in supporting John Edwards. I am confident that when he is in the White House, he'll be a leader we will all be proud to call our president.
Have happy and healthy holidays,
--Kevin Bacon
December 18, 2007

Santa, played by prominent civil rights attorney Bill Goodman, said: "These Constitutions will make some great holiday reading. I want to be sure that the President will have plenty of time to look at them before he decides on his New Year's resolutions." 
