The Mother Machines

In 2000, America dodged a bullet in Al Gore. In 2004, they dodged a bullet and a flowerpot throwing crazy old aunt in the attic.

“Two brothers own 80 percent of the machines used in the United States,” Heinz Kerry said. She identified both as “hard-right” Republicans. She argued that it is “very easy to hack into the mother machines.”
“We in the United States are not a banana republic,” added Heinz Kerry. She argued that Democrats should insist on “accountability and transparency” in how votes are tabulated. “I fear for ’06,” she said. “I don’t trust it the way it is right now.”

(Via Drudge)
James is on it too.

More dominos: Kyrgyzstan, Kuwait, Pakistan…

Publius has been following protest worldwide.

  • After years and years of waiting, the Kuwaiti parliament is speeding up legislation for women’s suffrage. About 500 women demonstrated.
  • Demonstrators here [Egypt] are protesting against the new election law that would have Mubarak run against other candidates. The basis? They believe it will be rigged. I tend to agree.
  • [Nepal] Even after the declaration of a military dictatorship and the oppression of media, the democratic opposition to the king is preparing for a huge protest tomorrow.
  • Thousands of women rallied in eastern Pakistan on Monday to demand justice and protection for a woman who said she was gang-raped at the direction of a village council, after a court ordered the release of her alleged attackers
  • Lots more there.

    Totten is right – the western media, pundits and the democratic left would do well pay more attention Victor Davis Hanson. They won’t of course – they’ve shown an unhealthy fondness for worse-case-scenerio wishful thinking punditry. independent.jpg

    Garrett Graff’s First Day

    A blogger’s first day in the White House press corp.

    McClellan said Graff was believed to be the first blogger to be credentialed to attend his morning press gathering and his televised briefing later in the day. McClellan ran into Graff in the press room in the afternoon and greeted him as “the mystery man.” The two went up to McClellan’s office to chat.
    On his blog, Graff wrote: “Our first impression this morning? As glamorous as the beat itself may be, there’s little glamour to be found in the briefing room. The conditions of the briefing room, famously built over the old White House swimming pool, um, leave something to be desired.”

    Or read his own report, at DCFishbowl

    Pew: Internet Overtakes Radio

    Via OTB, (who I’m linking to as the source site requires registration).

    The Internet surpassed radio as a source for political news in the United States last year as more people went online to keep up with the presidential election campaign, according to a new report released today. Twenty-nine per cent of US adults used the Internet to get political news last year, according to the Pew Internet and American Life Project. That’s up from 4 per cent in 1996 and 18 per cent in 2000.
    Television remained the dominant medium for most voters, but 18 per cent said they got most of their political news from the Internet, compared with 17 per cent who said they turned to the radio for their news. For those with a broadband connection at home, the Internet rivalled newspapers in importance.
    Most Internet users surveyed said they voted to re- elect Republican President George W Bush, but supporters of Democratic challenger Sen John Kerry were more likely to say the Internet helped them settle on a candidate.

    The information is broken down further;

  • 52% of internet users, or about 63 million people, said they went online to get news or information about the 2004 elections. We call them online political news consumers.
  • 35% of internet users, or about 43 million people, said they used email to discuss politics, and one of the most popular email subjects was jokes about the candidates and the election.
  • 11% of internet users, or more than 13 million people, went online to engage directly in campaign activities such as donating money, volunteering, or learning about political events to attend.
  • Pew Research PDF’s available here.
    From Editor and Publisher;

    A Pew Center study released today found that using the Internet to get news of politics during the 2004 presidential contest grew sixfold from 1996, while the influence of newspapers sank.
    In 1996, only 3% of those surveyed called the Web one of their two leading sources of campaign news. In 2004, the figure was 18%. Reliance on TV rose slightly from 72% to 78% but prime use of newspapers plunged from 60% to 39%.
    […]
    About one in ten said the Internet had information not available elsewhere. They were more likely to visit blogs or campaign sites for information. Blogs “are having a modest level of impact on the voter side and probably a more dramatic impact on the institutional side,” Lee Rainie, author of the study, told the Associated Press. “Blogs are still a realm where very, very active and pretty elite, both technologically oriented people and politically oriented people go.”

    Reached for comment;
    normandesmond.jpg

    Swarm Warning

    Today, the dinosaur continues his retreat, but not without braying his displeasure from behind the safe haven provided by the Globe and Mail.

    The vast majority of blogs are akin to teenage diaries that attract a few dozen readers a day. Space for immediate reader feedback suggests what talk radio would be without the seven-second delay or the host’s ability to disconnect vexatious callers.
    […]
    But the weakness of Canadian conservatism — a coalition united principally in opposition to lefties and Liberals — explains the failure of Canadian bloggers to strike any significant blows against mainstream media.
    Amongst conservatives, you’ll find a fair degree of despair bordering on loathing for Canada; neither is a good recipe for convincing one’s compatriots about media bias or anything else. A few conservatives, deeply alienated from the mainstream, propose retrenching behind firewalls or even broach the possibility of separating from Canada and joining the U.S.

    The swarm gathers.
    None of this is new material to anyone who has followed the great scaly creature’s stumble through the blogosphere… his walnut sized brain stubbornly seized on the post-Rathergate notion that bloggers exist to “take down” the media or get favoured political parties elected, and that nothing short of this achievement constitutes blogging “success”.
    But this latest, more public cry from the swamp (an echo of a similar column in the Vancouver Sun a couple of days ago) merits a more straightforward explanation. In this case, I shall allow Norm to do the honours himself with this BlogsCanada.ca announcement explaining his exit from the Shotgun;

    “A couple of hours after�filing�the Vancouver Sun�column�posted below, I was notified that I was being suspended for 3 months …. “

    Posted at 03/04/2005 09:12:57 EST.
    The before vs after timeline he provides might be a little fudging on Norm’s part – there’s no way to know, outside of asking the Vancouver Sun when he submitted it. I was informed of his suspension at around 5pm Mountain time the day before.
    But this is the blogosphere, and in true blogger fashion, Sean says it best.
    preview.jpg
    Nibble, nibble.

    Paul Martin Luther King

    Conservative politicians take note – this is how you write a blog entry.

    Never mind that Canada/US relations may have reached their lowest point since we burned down the White House. That’s not important. The real issue is that Mr Paul Martin Luther King is going to defend the Charter from those barbarians who would strip away the “right” to same sex marriage and return us to those backward times of, say, last Tuesday when only opposite sex couples could marry. Those were the days when knuckle draggers like Paul Mart….oh never mind. That’s in the past now. He didn’t understand about the fundamental human right thing. He was ignorant. Actually he was where a third of his own caucus is today. I guess they hadn’t heard that Paul Martin Luther King has now decided that same sex marriage is a fundamental human right that is protected by the Charter. It was all along. We just didn’t know about it until PMLK proclaimed it from the mountain top. Let freedom ring.

    Now, Monte, you too, need to add a blogroll, and trackbacks, so we can start shovelling readers your way.

    Giuliana Sgrena And US Military Incompetence

    Has anyone seen any Canadian TV reports on this that mention that Sgrena works for El Manifesto, a communist paper? (I was otherwise occupied with my head in the toilet, after watching CBC report on the “sharp divisions” in the population in Lebanon, giving sympathetic coverage to chanting Hezbollah “activists”.)
    The Moderate Voice pulls together developments, and OTB looks more closely at checkpoint protocols from a military perspective. Probably the most relevant new information to come out of this incident is that the Italians kept the ransom and rescue operation secret from the US – along with gross incompetence of US military personnel. Jay Tea;

    An anti-American “journalist” for a Communist newspaper is allegedly “captured” by insurgents, then released. On her way out, our forces shoot 300 to 400 rounds at their car. And the result of all that firepower? One killed, three injured – none apparently very seriously. Then they treat them and send them home. Obviously all that money we’ve spent on training and equipment has gone to waste if our forces are performing that poorly.

    Freedom Is Never Mentioned

    Ammar Abdulhamid is blogging from Damascus, Syria. I’m not in the habit of quoting entire posts, but on the chance that it disappears, I’m going to do so here.

    Rumors, Facts and Heresies!
    The City’s air is rife with all sorts of untoward rumors, everything is now possible: there is talk of arrests, purges, coup d��tats, assassinations, sanctions, invasions, anything and everything, except, of course, freedom. Everything is possible except freedom. Freedom is never mentioned. Freedom never comes to mind. Freedom remains a distant dream.
    The world is changing around us, but we, Damascenes, Syrians, Sunnis, �Alawis, Muslims, Christians, Arabs, Kurds, Circassians, or however we define ourselves these days, including perhaps heretics, can�t feel any hope in that. Nothing has touched us so far. Nothing seems to loom in the air, except for rumors and hearsays, none of which particularly inspired or inspiring. The face of an ugly and malevolent god still stares down upon any possibility of hope within us.
    A reported wave of arrests has already swept a variety of “low-key” dissidents, that is, those whose arrest is not likely to generate much notice abroad, or even here, no matter how terrible this may sound. But then, everything sounds terrible these days. Despairingly terrible. There is hope all around us, but somehow there always needs to be some pit of despair somewhere meant to serve as a continuous reminder of how things were or could again be. But those whose fate is to live in such a pit have themselves to blame as well. If history teaches anything it�s that such punishment is always earned somehow. We earned it with our long and studious silence.
    Being a potentially high-profile case, not to mention, of course, a heretic, my punishment is doubled, tripled and quadrupled: I have to watch others arrested while I am spared, I have to live in the anticipation of a potentially worse fate when the “right” time finally comes, I have to face the look of sickly blame on my sullen wife’s face, and I have to come back home at the end of another long day feeling numb and defeated, regardless of any achievements made.
    Khawla and I have indeed reconciled ourselves to the fact that things seem to be like a race against time now: our decision is not simply about leaving the country, but about leaving it before it’s too late, that is, before events catch up with us and prevent us from traveling, together, or at all�
    All these years I spent abroad without ever trying to obtain if not another citizenship then simply another residency seem increasingly wasted to me now. All this misplaced love for and belonging to the homeland is coming back to haunt me.
    But then, idealists never prosper, do they? Do they?
    On the positive side though, I feel like I have enough materials for a quite a few bestselling novels. One day this should make us all rich. One day.

    Hat tip – Michael Totten.

    Lousy Shots

    Guardian;

    Sgrena told colleagues the vehicle was not travelling fast and had already passed several checkpoints on its way to the airport. The Americans shone a flashlight at the car and then fired between 300 and 400 bullets at if from an armoured vehicle. Rather than calling immediately for assistance for the wounded Italians, the soldiers’ first move was to confiscate their weapons and mobile phones and they were prevented from resuming contact with Rome for more than an hour.

    sgrena-car.jpg
    Full story here.
    UPDATE – it turns out that the car pictured was only tangentially related to the original kidnapping. LGF unravels the whole mess, created by a misleading AP video.

    If you watch the Associated Press video linked above, you’ll see a medium shot of this car, changing to a closeup, as the voice-over says, “Coalition forces fired on a vehicle that was approaching a checkpoint at a high rate of speed.”

    Is The White House Pushing Back?

    I’ve been watching the debate developing this week around two closely related developments – mutterings about regulating blogs through Federal Election Commission and the fallout of the Apple case.

    In a case with implications for the freedom to blog, a San Jose judge tentatively ruled Thursday that Apple Computer can force three online publishers to surrender the names of confidential sources who disclosed information about the company’s upcoming products. Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge James Kleinberg refused to extend to the Web sites a protection that shields journalists from revealing the names of unidentified sources or turning over unpublished material. …
    The case raises issues about whether those who write for online publications are entitled to the same constitutional protections as their counterparts in more traditional print and broadcast news organizations.

    Dan Gilmor;

    I apparently stopped being a journalist the day I left my newspaper job after a quarter-century of writing for newspapers.

    Drudge this evening:

    FLASH: White House press corps admits its first ‘blogger’…Developing…

    It’s bit early to know what this means, or if it’s even accurate. But if it is, could it be that the White House has decided to weigh in on the debate on behalf of the “citizen” press?
    Stay tuned.
    update – more info in the comments about Garrett M. Graff. (I was kind of hoping it would be Bill Ardolino….)

    Man Bag

    Just the gift for my brothers next Christmas – a chance to stroll into the High House carrying a purse.

    Guys are grasping the benefits of carrying, go ahead and say it, a purse
    It takes a big man to carry a lady-like bag.
    Wallets, cell phones, keys, PDAs, laptop computers – even the deepest of pockets can’t hold everything the average guy is hauling around these days. While no-frills nylon gym totes or ho-hum pleather business cases would suffice, men are increasingly open to carrying a bag with a bit of style … something more refined.
    Enter the murse – a masculine version of the purse.
    “I use one as a necessity,” says Michael Gargiulo, 43, of Manhattan. Gloves, papers, scarf, cigarettes – it all gets tucked into a trendy leather, denim or canvas over-the-shoulder bag as he runs errands or commutes to work in the Bronx. “Why should [only] women get to have one? I need one.”
    Sure, it might feel a little strange at first.
    “It’s not like you’re carrying a teacup poodle,” says “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” fashion guru Carson Kressley. “Get over it.”
    “It’s a matter of practicality and fashion,” says Cargo magazine’s style director Bruce Pask, who personally favors Lambertson Truex’s collection of sumptuous leather and canvas bags. But since the market is brimming with offerings of sleek designer satchels from the likes of Gucci or Bottega Venetta and simple structured carryalls from Jack Spade and Manhattan Portage, men in the market for a murse or manbag can be choosy.
    Or not.
    Constantine Karonis, 25, who lives in Manhattan, estimates he owns about 15 bags. “I’ve been carrying one since high school,” he says.
    His favorite is a slim, checkerboard-print Louis Vuitton shoulder bag that retails for about $1,200. “Men are willing to make a bit of an investment,” Pask says. A high-end designer suit may be too expensive, but a classy, well-made manbag from the same line is probably going to be more attainable, and a man will use it far more often.
    For the uninitiated, a tailored messenger bag is a good start. “Leather always looks great,” Kressley says, and there are masculine nylon styles as well.
    Though Kressley will break out a Louis Vuitton clutch or short-handled satchel when traveling or running from show to show during Fashion Week, his daily murse is often a simple suede messenger bag.
    “You don’t have to spend a lot of money to get a great one,” Kressley says.
    Bold designer handbags and smaller purse-like totes are great accessories for fashion-forward men, but Kressley and Pask acknowledge the average Joe needs a healthy dose of self-confidence to carry them.
    “They can look a little too girly for most guys,” Kressley says. “That’s a look reserved for the true meterosexual.”

    Alone In The Playground

    A day or so after Paul Martin ended his dithering on missile defense to settle on “flop”, a pair of left-leaning local radio announcers were discussing the potential consequences to US – Canada relations. With the border opening to live cattle again in doubt, and other trade disputes still bogged down, one of them mused that the relationship had changed.

    “I don’t think the US is our best friend anymore”

    The other agreed. I waited for the discussion to procede to the next logical step.
    Well…?
    And…?
    Yet nothing more was said. The sentence left hanging as a conclusion, the topic changed and soon they were on to sports or something. The question I was waiting for was never asked.
    Who is Canada’s “next best friend”?

    Defenseless

    IN the Ottawa Sun Douglas Fisher minces few words.

    New thinking on defence? Ask yourself: What other nation doesn’t provide a separate chapter in its budget for defence? In our 400-page document this bold, new era for our forces got five, buried in a 25-page chapter entitled Meeting our Global Responsibilities. Our military was lumped in with — and symbolically followed — tsunami relief and other foreign aid.
    And then there is the language used. The budget speaks of “conflict situations” not wars. Our allies may be “fighting a war on terrorism” in Afghanistan but we are there to re-establish “peace and security.” If anything, this budget strengthens the notion that our military’s true role is to be an alternate delivery mechanism for foreign aid.
    The notion the military is receiving an immediate and desperately-needed infusion of cash is a joke. Fully $10.2 billion of the $12.8 billion “promised” won’t arrive until 2008-10, which is budgetary never-never land. The minority Liberal government is preening over a promise to deliver cash relief to the forces after its own re-election, and this with the proviso that only if the country is still posting enormous surpluses at that time. This is an empty, despicable boast, given the military’s plight.
    […]
    Perhaps most stunning of all in this budget is its lack of any new money over the next two years for new equipment.

    Laurie Hawn fleshes this out.

    We should also be aware of what is happening to our fighter force. For fifty years, we have had Canadian fighters patrolling our airspace, or sitting on alert to react to Soviet incursions or other air traffic situations. The focus changed on 9/11 from looking outward to also looking inward. Our ability to look anywhere has steadily eroded.
    We will soon be down to 80 operational CF-18s, the number that we can afford to upgrade. We are also critically short of fighter pilots, many having left in disillusionment. Flying time has been cut back to the point where we no longer train at low level and intensity of training has been reduced to preserve safety. Preserving safety under these circumstances also makes us ineffective. No matter how fast we can spin the earth, the new simulators we’re buying will never fly and nothing in the new budget addresses the erosion of our aerospace sovereignty.
    Most people probably don’t know that 433 Squadron in Bagotville will shut down this summer to make one larger 425 Squadron. It won’t be long before some bean counter or other non-warrior sees a source of further personnel cuts. Heck, if you’ve got 400 people, surely you can make it work with 375, or 350, or………… The same thing will happen in Cold Lake next summer, with the shutdown of 416 Squadron. That will leave Canada with two, count ’em, two operational fighter squadrons. Billy Bishop weeps!
    These shutdowns will free up a handful of positions to help start a new air warfare college. What’s the point of having a college about air warfare if you have no Air FORCE to apply it? I’m sure that the office equipment, pens and paper in Winnipeg will strike fear in the hearts of our enemies and respect in the hearts of our allies.

    Laurie – you need a blogroll. Your viewpoint deserves more readership, and that won’t happen if you move into the blogosphere proper. Outgoing linkage = incoming traffic.

    Shifting Tides?

    Poll results in Indonesia show that US sponsored tsunami relief may be having an effect on public opinion.

    In the first substantial shift of public opinion in the Muslim world since the beginning of the United States’ global war on terrorism, more people in the world’s largest Muslim country now favor American efforts against terrorism than oppose them.
    […]

  • For the first time ever in a major Muslim nation, more people favor US-led efforts to fight terrorism than oppose them (40% to 36%). �Importantly, those who oppose US efforts against terrorism have declined by half, from 72% in 2003 to just 36% today.
  • For the first time ever in a Muslim nation since 9/ 11, support for Osama Bin Laden has dropped significantly (58% favorable to just 23%).
  • 65% of Indonesians now are more favorable to the United States because of the American response to the tsunami, with the highest percentage among people under 30.
  • Indeed, 71% of the people who express confidence in Bin Laden are now more favorable to the United States because of American aid to tsunami victims.
  • hat tip – Bill Strong

    Open Letter To That Stupid Bitch In The White House

    To those Americans who mistakenly perceive our nuanced, sophisticated and uniquely Canadian world view as “anti-Americanism”, former Canadian foreign minister Lloyd Axworthy (Liberal) would like to explain more thoroughly, in this open letter to the US Secretary of State, Dr.Condoleeza Rice.

    Dear Condi,
    I’m glad you’ve decided to get over your fit of pique and venture north to visit your closest neighbour. It’s a chance to learn a thing or two. Maybe more.
    I know it seems improbable to your divinely guided master in the White House that mere mortals might disagree with participating in a missile- defence system that has failed in its last three tests, even though the tests themselves were carefully rigged to show results.
    But, gosh, we folks above the 49th parallel are somewhat cautious types who can’t quite see laying down billions of dollars in a three-dud poker game.
    As our erstwhile Prairie-born and bred (and therefore prudent) finance minister pointed out in presenting his recent budget, we’ve had eight years of balanced or surplus financial accounts. If we’re going to spend money, Mr. Goodale added, it will be on day-care and health programs, and even on more foreign aid and improved defence.
    Sure, that doesn’t match the gargantuan, multi-billion-dollar deficits that your government blithely runs up fighting a “liberation war” in Iraq, laying out more than half of all weapons expenditures in the world, and giving massive tax breaks to the top one per cent of your population while cutting food programs for poor children.
    Just chalk that up to a different sense of priorities about what a national government’s role should be when there isn’t a prevailing mood of manifest destiny.
    Coming to Ottawa might also expose you to a parliamentary system that has a thing called question period every day, where those in the executive are held accountable by an opposition for their actions, and where demands for public debate on important topics such as missile defence can be made openly.
    You might also notice that it’s a system in which the governing party’s caucus members are not afraid to tell their leader that their constituents don’t want to follow the ideological, perhaps teleological, fantasies of Canada’s continental co-inhabitant. And that this leader actually listens to such representations.
    Your boss did not avail himself of a similar opportunity to visit our House of Commons during his visit, fearing, it seems, that there might be some signs of dissent. He preferred to issue his diktat on missile defence in front of a highly controlled, pre-selected audience.
    Such control-freak antics may work in the virtual one-party state that now prevails in Washington. But in Canada we have a residual belief that politicians should be subject to a few checks and balances, an idea that your country once espoused before the days of empire.
    If you want to have us consider your proposals and positions, present them in a proper way, through serious discussion across the table in our cabinet room, as your previous president did when he visited Ottawa. And don’t embarrass our prime minister by lobbing a verbal missile at him while he sits on a public stage, with no chance to respond.
    Now, I understand that there may have been some miscalculations in Washington based on faulty advice from your resident governor of the “northern territories,” Ambassador Cellucci. But you should know by now that he hasn’t really won the hearts and minds of most Canadians through his attempts to browbeat and command our allegiance to U.S. policies.
    Sadly, Mr. Cellucci has been far too closeted with exclusive groups of ‘experts’ from Calgary think-tanks and neo- con lobbyists at cross-border conferences to remotely grasp a cross-section of Canadian attitudes (nor American ones, for that matter).
    I invite you to expand the narrow perspective that seems to inform your opinions of Canada by ranging far wider in your reach of contacts and discussions. You would find that what is rising in Canada is not so much anti- Americanism, as claimed by your and our right-wing commentators, but fundamental disagreements with certain policies of your government. You would see that rather than just reacting to events by drawing on old conventional wisdoms, many Canadians are trying to think our way through to some ideas that can be helpful in building a more secure world.
    These Canadians believe that security can be achieved through well-modulated efforts to protect the rights of people, not just nation-states.
    To encourage and advance international co-operation on managing the risk of climate change, they believe that we need agreements like Kyoto.
    To protect people against international crimes like genocide and ethnic cleansing, they support new institutions like the International Criminal Court — which, by the way, you might strongly consider using to hold accountable those committing atrocities today in Darfur, Sudan.
    And these Canadians believe that the United Nations should indeed be reformed — beginning with an agreement to get rid of the veto held by the major powers over humanitarian interventions to stop violence and predatory practices.
    On this score, you might want to explore the concept of the ‘Responsibility to Protect’ while you’re in Ottawa. It’s a Canadian idea born out of the recent experience of Kosovo and informed by the many horrific examples of inhumanity over the last half-century. Many Canadians feel it has a lot more relevance to providing real human security in the world than missile defence ever will.
    This is not just some quirky notion concocted in our long winter nights, by the way. It seems to have appeal for many in your own country, if not the editorialists at the Wall Street Journal or Rush Limbaugh. As I discovered recently while giving a series of lectures in southern California, there is keen interest in how the U.S. can offer real leadership in managing global challenges of disease, natural calamities and conflict, other than by military means. There is also a very strong awareness on both sides of the border of how vital Canada is to the U.S. as a partner in North America. We supply copious amounts of oil and natural gas to your country, our respective trade is the world’s largest in volume, and we are increasingly bound together by common concerns over depletion of resources, especially very scarce fresh water.
    Why not discuss these issues with Canadians who understand them, and seek out ways to better cooperate in areas where we agree — and agree to respect each other’s views when we disagree.
    Above all, ignore the Cassandras who deride the state of our relations because of one missile-defence decision. Accept that, as a friend on your border, we will offer a different, independent point of view. And that there are times when truth must speak to power.
    In friendship,
    Lloyd Axworthy

    For those who may not recognize the name, Lloyd Axworthy is the man credited with bringing about the sweeping economic, democratic and human rights reforms in Cuba in 1997.
    hat tip – Greg
    ouch.

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